3hp* stattftsanum

6
Firtl In A S«rle» By BOB REID AtMclatf, Editor I)a\ dents drink. And it's not "just up the road," More likely lt'« on campus II In fra- in the i mon. in coni Faculty Code ol dent ictly forb nkmu ih<' town ol D.i\ Id "ii s for its i is opposed to the u e of alcoholic bi tudents,' in; 1 tn Section Five ol the gentle- maul) conduct clao* \ student will ordinarily be suspended if be ta found guilt) "t violating (this regulation)." lie student Honor I tod* prohl bition against drlnl ited oul by tudenl body la 1986, the faculty ten enfoi ed with ilili, i>r uniformity n after t h. aboil mi hiding the son fi an mii'ii atial trusti ;ed with \'oi.itiii. the Cacult; tpufl securil ". en caoipusi d d to tin- earlier policy a mspention Since then several itudenU have been ised for violating the roll i$ut in most eases the securit) offieers, who en the (acuity rtiios, apparentl) do not m< u mforcemenl irt the rtaJt a u! thru primal j do! i Most i eel :ti;tt U i mi in tiii- words "i "'"' " I il Ihc tliiiiKtiig rule Although ' tdi wild drunk- tn tB< i. .m\ do drink either m Ihetr ru ui traternit) i i M;m\ wander why ihf ioiii;r authorities do nol acci fad and .iimii-ii tin' faculty mil' too. Workman Challenges Students On Tokenism Students Aim Boycott At Local Barber Shop By ROBBIE HOOKER Editor in Chief Picketing continued today as -i studenl boycotl of Ralpli Johnson')! barber shop reached Its fourth du In wh;ii Davidson Mayor I' l- Jackson called the flttl nt protest march here in r>o y Thf boycott, which w.i.s organized i>> a I3*man studenl mniii l<'il bv ,. senior.- Na. Howard and "'" policy of racia Bubb) Lane i, aimed at pracUced by .Idlinso.i, ii i in 'II ' n'f i Policy Termed 'Unjust, Unfair Workman, chairman of the faculty fraternity committee, presented hu proposate ta two psychology classes the mominjj after the papei printed the editori WORKMAN . challenges ttudenti' terlousness By FRANKLIN ANDERSON Managing Editor Psychology professor \V. O, Work- man has offered to match $2400 raised by students with $100 for a scholar- ship fur ;i Negro student if tin- stu- dents will raise the money. Be also said that DC id't "confident that lo or 12 others (faculty mem- bers) would he willing to do the same thing." Reading to U editorial in the March 21 Lasus of THE Davidson IAN. In 1 challenged students to prove >f their criticisms by supplying the money, Tin- editorial accused the college of "evading the responsibility it has tn the nation and to the South lo ttfw and develop ible Negro Lead- Richardson Program Gains Nine Freshman Members Faculty Supports Students In Boycotting Barber Shop (Photo b> Georiie Robinson > DEMONSTRATIONS CONTINUE Peter Hobbie carries placard as Johnson and Dean Burts observe i Tin- 'tmii 'I' group pli iii i oalinue II ramp Johnson u,m " in Joh - 11 11 11 1 1 n 1 1 > r i , ,n ii ii Bi - I Ii.im i,. usjuiaU IB) liti mi SI .ii i mmIiiii: in uli.u lll\ I II .lllllHl 'S.llll III Hi .iImi di( Iimi il OajHIIIHItl ln(l.i\ mi .i ri'ixiH th,ii In- Ii id .1.(1 In i lu-r Ills IliirlMT u..|i to Nei-ru 'tudinls In il «rltten -tatemeul. Ne urn studi ui l.rslii' Brown -..ml Johnson MM Im" ttu nfter noon thnt "In- fitioi si t"1 ] n«M is no ItuiKer u|H-ri tO tl"' Bluk .student . of ttu- .nl Issjb ' The pitketinn ht>gaii Tues- day when Johnson refused service to two Negroes who liv. in the local community hut was Interrupted shortly afterward* by u town police mon because the students did i Mil have a parade permit Piekcttng resumed Wednes- day morning when the group (See BOYCOTT. Page Six) Tin- diehard an Ft Uou PiafjfsMu i »D iii ii.uuril l.\ 'In R^ClUTI l-.n.i.. Mflt Mil dent^ from " in Ii Ireshmaii with well di\cl(i|ici| ir;idiT\lii|i ( S]MR ilv or ii |«> llllll.l! lul ll-JllIlT lll|l Klglll ta twelve men are chosen from each bUHB, The Fellows arc glvi-n op|M)rtunitir% lo dr ve-lop their IimiIii -lil|. r.i|un ity through tut Ii things as contacts with recocin/.i-d leaders in various fields ,iml summer IlllWII prograniR The M-ltrtmn ( uiiiliulti .- consisted of buxmessmen, Dn- vidson faculty, represent.i- tives ul the Kichardson Koun diilion. Mike MimH.v. student director of tin progiam. and Dr William McCavock. tac ulty director Prrncnll.v. the Fellows are studying facet!> or North Car olinn such as its history, eth nlc group*, industry and edu cation. Till 1 Kl( ll.il'il-iin KrllOMH l'rn(jiniu BM .iiinniim t<I iln nun uf tune (rt'shmrn to join the progr.ini Tltf nine wert- seltTi<il ..n.-r .i iwo dt>) M.uoh 28 10 Mnrch 31. Those si'liitid ,irr Q Cash. Oxford. N C; Richard D»wart, Radnor I'n.: Grnr Karl\ . Mrmphis. Tenn.; Hnr riMin HofftaSs Richmond. Vn.; Rob Ho>% WrMhrook. Me ; Wei don Schcnck, Greensboro. N. C: Joe Smith, Dunbar. W. Va . and Jimmy Trusscll, Columhu'. Ga. Thi- final xcleclion WSJ made from a group of 24 freshmen, chosen from » group of SO freshman who had responded to an invim tion to the entire class lo ap ply for the program. The 24 finalists went through u «e- rirs cif intensive intirviewn. group situation*, and con tacts with the members of the selection committee. Boyte Says Davidsonian Failed To Communicate Letters Back Boycott Two letters one signed i»r was signed by B. A. by IS studtnl leaders and Aiken. Mike B«tt». Sam Hie »lh»r by It Richard Darby, Tom Earahartit. \*n Scho4ars— w«r« being Paler Hobble. Robbie circulated on campus lo. Hooker, Ron Hunt, Sobfcy d.y in support of ih. key *"»«« *"«" *"'"»- * lk » catf Ralph Johnson's M *°' v> J ** M " rphy' **^" dy M«wsom, Tom P«4di. barter shop. cer- K(fk R--d a||d Ta<n THo sludont loaders' lot- Yaungdal*. and Randy Phillips, and pro rpssors H. C. Burts, David Kaylor. Norman Johnson, Stroud. and A A Wolf Phillips Initiated the reso lutiun. The Student Life Commit bM Wednesday unanimously passed a resolution support Ing the student boycott of Johnson's barber »hop. ac lording to Dr. J. B Slroud. committee secretary The resolution read: "The Student Life Committee sup- ports the boycott of Johnson's Barber Shop «o long a* the barber shop continues its pol icy of racial segregation." The committee plans to present the resolution to Ralph Johnson, owner of the barber shop. Stroud said. Other copies will possibly be distributed to the faculty. Ail the members of the student -faculty group present signed the statement They wtre student* BUI Andrew! Student Life Committee Raps Policies Of Barber cuts. Dr. .1 I) Emhry. protrssur of French, expressed somr doubt about the method Ifcfl students arc MBftBJ to intr Krntr the barber shop t »»" - boycott, "I think Its a very odd sit ualion," he said. "I don i think there ought to he MS} relation, but as to fomnn A random vnmpllng of ffic ulty menilK-rs revealed con MdrrnbU- support Sf the stu- dent boycott of Johnson's Barber Shop which began Tuesday. Two professors marrhed in the picket line Friday si" dents said "three oi four" professors hnd crosMMi the picket line and Rotten hair Negro b;iilHTs to cM Ml grots n, iit it doesn't td tv ,i BSSI ft rm.i-.rM I don t know whflli.T th.it Kin- boymtti is the jnswer or not" "It will be interesting to we liciu the -.indents support the boycott." said Dr H. I). Kay lor. assistant profrtsor of Bi blc and rrliRion. "I'm vrr\ much in sympathy with n Or. K C. Cole, professor of English, expressed his ap proval u( tkfl effort. "I think It'H a Rood project." be com merited "I would hope that It would K> successful." Or O. O. Rhodes, proles sor of Bible nnd religion, stated, "I think thnt In the town of Davidson we would be better off with Integrated barber .\hops " "Lousy" was Sam Boyle's description of the year he spent as editor-in-chief of THE DAV1DS0NIAN. "Because of the competence of the staff, the paper was basically sound, but it didn't communicate with the students," he said. "It wasn't an important influence on the campus " He termed the campus newspaper tech- nically "attractive" and called it "a very necessary thing." but, be said, a paper .should "report the news and raise a little bell— especially in a place which is as cloistered as Davidson. There has tn be something or someone around to stir the place up." Although disappointed with the paper during bis tenure as editor, Boyte said he didn't think it was entirely the news- paper's fauH By BOS TRAVERS AiMCialt Editor "One of the most useful things we could have done would have been to be the organ for students' demands to be made public." he explained. "Students should be aware that a wailing wall' exists in THE DAVIDSON IAN." Bovte said he has been especially dis- appointed that students will complain in private about college policies, but they won't go out on a limb to change things. "One thine anyone who gets involved in anything here learns to develop is a real attitude of Impatience with these kind of people. " he said "It can make you awfully bitter about this place." "I think what this campus needs is a lunatic, activist element," Boyte con tinued. He said be thinks one thing necessary to correct the situation is for the college to get a more diversified student body (SUtr Photo by Wnmi) "ACTUALLY, IT WAS LOUSY." Former Editor Swn BoyN nNninitcM *n \h* papor. Davidson Campus Is Dry 9 With A Large Damp Spot WILL DRINKING RVL'< CHANGE? VOL LVII M'MBER TWENTVTIIHKr: The News And Editorial Voice Of The Davidson College Student Body DAVIDSON COLLEGK. 1>.W IPSt )V \ C 28036. FRIDAY. AI'Hll. r. 1968 REPORT EXAMINES ROTC (See Page Thn 3Hp* Stattftsanum LESESNE URGES 'NEW BLOOD' (See Page Two) "Everybody knows we drink." saul cum Minlenl as hie sat in I mom di .ii"■< I with empty liquoi bottles 'The faculty is beli h i! the) believe there will pill ill iiil lied " "People lh.it waill to rlrmk do il now am " .^ Idon't think ni.nr, mon i kiiuM rtarl ill inkin.: on I tin rule were gone " I haI numbei in i!i<- rcci iiiiirni i' iion included iuch a plank in their platforms Suggestions range ttota ;i complete!} wei campus i allowing restricted drinking on dance weekei l-'oi now the student bod> has ting f " r " u ' ( '<»nmittee on Rules and Punishment! wh a re- \ iewing i imp " regulat lot public i " tiona Moal bmurk i K \r will present -i pl»n for mod III!' ' llf In UmO ill lin drioklfl probabl} iuch dee happening in "■' . ui ' imagine .> school like tin- one ryin.u so n :i> rule " CASH COWART EARLY EMGSTROM HICGINS HOY SCHENK SMITH TRUSSELL v,^g^£j V "N ■■■■■■■■■afjaj^HB^BMgJ^hflJ^SflBa SB^ftSB^llIll^* ""* 1 i M %~~^B It MBfc I

Upload: others

Post on 19-Oct-2021

9 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 3Hp* Stattftsanum

Firtl In A S«rle»By BOB REID

AtMclatf, EditorI)a\ ■ dents drink.

And it's not "just up the road," Morelikely lt'« on campus II In fra-

in the imon.in coni Faculty Code ol

dent ictly forb nkmuih<' town ol D.i\ Id "ii

■ s for its

i is opposed to theu e of alcoholic bi tudents,'

in;1 tn Section Five ol the gentle-

maul) conduct clao* \ student willordinarily be suspended if be ta foundguilt) "t violating(this regulation)."

lie student Honor I tod* prohlbition against drlnl ited oul by

tudenl body la 1986, the facultyten enfoi ed with ilili,

i>r uniformityn after th.

aboil mi hiding theson fi an mii'ii atial trusti

;ed with \'oi.itiii. the Cacult;tpufl securil

". en caoipusi dd to tin- earlier policy a mspention

Since then several itudenU have been

ised for violating the roll i$ut inmost eases the securit) offieers, who en

the (acuity rtiios, apparentl) donot m< u mforcemenl irt the rtaJt au! thru primal j do! i

Most i eel :ti;tt U imi in tiii- words "i "'"'

" I il Ihc tliiiiKtiig rule

Although ' ■ tdi wilddrunk- tn tB< i. .m\ do drinkeither m Ihetr ru ui traternit)

i i M;m\ wander why ihf ioiii;rauthorities do nol acci fad and.iimii-ii tin' faculty mil' too.

Workman ChallengesStudents On Tokenism

Students Aim BoycottAt Local Barber Shop

By ROBBIE HOOKEREditor in Chief

Picketing continued today as -i studenl boycotl ofRalpli Johnson')! barber shop reached Its fourth du Inwh;ii Davidson Mayor I' l- Jackson called the flttl

nt protest march here in r>o yThf boycott, which w.i.s organized i>> a I3*man

studenl mniii l<'il bv ,.senior.- Na. Howard and

"'" policy of raciaBubb) Lane i, aimed at pracUced

by .Idlinso.i, ii i in'II ' n'f i

Policy Termed'Unjust, Unfair

Workman, chairman of the facultyfraternity committee, presented huproposate ta two psychology classesthe mominjj after the papei printedthe editori

WORKMAN

. challenges

ttudenti'

terlousness

By FRANKLIN ANDERSONManaging Editor

Psychology professor \V. O, Work-man has offered tomatch $2400 raisedby students with $100 for a scholar-ship fur ;i Negro student if tin- stu-dents will raise the money.

Be also said that DC id't "confidentthat lo or 12 others (faculty mem-bers) would he willing to do the samething."

Reading to U editorial in theMarch 21 Lasus of THE DavidsonIAN. In1challenged students to prove

■>f their criticisms bysupplying the money,

Tin- editorial accused the college of"evading the responsibility it has tnthe nation and to the South lo ttfwand develop ible Negro Lead-

Richardson Program GainsNine Freshman Members

Faculty Supports StudentsIn Boycotting Barber Shop

(Photo b> Georiie Robinson >

DEMONSTRATIONS CONTINUEPeterHobbie carriesplacardas Johnson and Dean Burts observe

i

Tin- 'tmii 'I' group pliiii ioalinue II rampJohnson u,m" in

Joh-11 111111n11>

ri, ,n iiii Bi -IIi.im i,. usjuiaU IB)

liti mi SI .iiimmIiiii: in uli.ulll\ III.lllllHl 'S.llll III

Hi .iImi di( Iimi il OajHIIIHItlln(l.i\ mi .i ri'ixiH th,ii In- Iiid

.1.(1 In ilu-r Ills IliirlMTu..|i to Nei-ru 'tudinls

In il «rltten -tatemeul. Neurn studiui l.rslii' Brown -..mlJohnson MM Im" ttu nfternoon thnt "In- fitioi si t"1 ]

n«M is no ItuiKer u|H-ri tO tl"'Bluk .student. of ttu- .nlIssjb '

The pitketinn ht>gaii Tues-day when Johnson refusedservice to two Negroes wholiv. in the local communityhut was Interrupted shortlyafterward*by u town policemonbecause the students didiMil have a parade permit

Piekcttng resumed Wednes-day morning when the group

(See BOYCOTT. Page Six)

Tin- diehardan FtUou ■

PiafjfsMu i »D i■ iiii.uuril l.\ 'In R^ClUTIl-.n.i.. Mflt Mildent^ from "

in Ii Ireshmaiiwith well di\cl(i|ici|

ir;idiT\lii|i (S]MR ilv or ii |«>llllll.l! lul ll-JllIlT lll|l Klglllta twelve men are chosenfrom each bUHB, The Fellowsarc glvi-nop|M)rtunitir% lo drve-lop their IimiIii -lil|. r.i|unity through tutIi things ascontacts with recocin/.i-dleaders in various fields ,iml

summer IlllWII prograniR

The M-ltrtmn (uiiiliulti .-consisted of buxmessmen, Dn-vidson faculty, represent.i-tives ul the Kichardson Koundiilion. Mike MimH.v. studentdirector of tin progiam. andDr William McCavock. taculty director

Prrncnll.v. the Fellows arestudying facet!> or North Carolinn such as its history, ethnlc group*, industry and education.

Till 1 Kl(ll.il'il-iin KrllOMHl'rn(jiniu BM .iiinniimt<I iln

nun uf tune (rt'shmrn tojoin the progr.ini Tltf ninewert- seltTi<il ..n.-r .iiwo dt>)

M.uoh 2810 Mnrch 31.

Those si'liitid ,irr QCash. Oxford. N C; RichardD»wart, Radnor I'n.: GrnrKarl\ . Mrmphis. Tenn.; HnrriMin HofftaSs Richmond.Vn.; Rob Ho>% WrMhrook.Me ; Weidon Schcnck,Greensboro. N. C: JoeSmith, Dunbar. W. Va. andJimmy Trusscll, Columhu'.Ga.

Thi- final xcleclion WSJmade from a group of 24freshmen, chosen from »group of SO freshman whohad responded to an invimtion to the entire class lo apply for the program. The 24finalists went through u «e-rirs cif intensive intirviewn.group situation*, and contacts with the members ofthe selection committee.

Boyte Says DavidsonianFailed To Communicate

LettersBackBoycottTwo letters

—one signed i»r was signed by B. A.

by IS studtnl leaders and Aiken. Mike B«tt». SamHie »lh»r by It Richard Darby, Tom Earahartit.\*n Scho4ars— w«r« being Paler Hobble. Robbiecirculated on campus lo. Hooker, Ron Hunt, Sobfcyd.y in support of ih. key *"»«« *"«" *"'"»- *lk»

catf o» Ralph Johnson's M*°' v> J** M"rphy'**^"dy M«wsom, Tom P«4di.

barter shop. cer- K(fk R--d a||d Ta<nTHo sludont loaders' lot- Yaungdal*.

and Randy Phillips, and prorpssors H. C. Burts, DavidKaylor. Norman Johnson,Stroud. and A A Wolf

Phillips Initiated the resolutiun.

The Student Life CommitbM Wednesday unanimouslypassed a resolution supportIng the student boycott ofJohnson's barber »hop. aclording to Dr. J. B Slroud.committee secretary

The resolution read: "TheStudent Life Committee sup-ports the boycott of Johnson'sBarber Shop «o long a* thebarber shopcontinues its policy of racial segregation."

The committee plans topresent the resolution toRalph Johnson, owner of thebarber shop. Stroud said.Other copies will possibly bedistributed to the faculty.

Ail the members of thestudent-faculty group presentsigned the statement Theywtre student* BUI Andrew!

Student Life CommitteeRaps Policies OfBarber

cuts.Dr. .1 I) Emhry. protrssur

of French, expressed somrdoubt about the method Ifcflstudents arc MBftBJ to intrKrntr the barber shop t »»" -boycott,

"I think Its a very odd situalion," he said. "I donithink there ought to he MS}relation, but as to fomnn

A random vnmpllng of fficulty menilK-rs revealed conMdrrnbU- support Sf the stu-dent boycott of Johnson'sBarber Shop which beganTuesday.

Two professors marrhed inthe picket line Friday si"

dents said "three oi four"professors hnd crosMMi thepicket line and Rotten hair

Negro b;iilHTs to cM Mlgrots n,iit it doesn't

td tv ,iBSSI ft rm.i-.rM

I don t know whflli.T th.itKin- boymtti is the jnswer

or not""It willbe interesting to we

liciu the -.indents support theboycott." said Dr H. I).Kaylor. assistant profrtsor of Biblc and rrliRion. "I'm vrr\much in sympathy with n

Or. K C. Cole, professorof English, expressed his approval u( tkfl effort. "I thinkIt'H a Rood project." be commerited "I would hope thatIt would K> successful."

Or O. O. Rhodes, prolessor of Bible nnd religion,stated, "I think thnt In thetown of Davidson we wouldbe better off with Integratedbarber .\hops "

"Lousy" was Sam Boyle's descriptionof the year he spent as editor-in-chief ofTHE DAV1DS0NIAN.

"Because of the competence of thestaff, the paper was basically sound, butit didn't communicate with the students,"he said. "It wasn't animportant influenceon the campus "

He termed the campus newspaper tech-nically "attractive" and called it "a verynecessary thing." but, be said, a paper.should "report the news and raise alittle bell— especially in a place whichis as cloistered as Davidson. There hastn be something or someone around tostir theplace up."

Although disappointed with the paperduring bis tenure as editor, Boyte saidhe didn't think it was entirely the news-paper's fauH

By BOS TRAVERSAiMCialt Editor

"One of the most useful things wecould have done would have been to bethe organ for students' demands to bemade public." he explained.

"Students should be aware that awailing wall' exists inTHE DAVIDSON

IAN."Bovte said he has been especially dis-

appointed that students will complain inprivate about college policies, but theywon't go out on a limb to change things.

"One thine anyone who gets involvedin anything here learns to develop is areal attitude of Impatience with thesekind of people." he said

"It can make you awfully bitter aboutthis place."

"I think what this campus needs is alunatic, activist element," Boyte continued.

He said be thinks one thing necessaryto correct the situation is for the collegeto get a more diversified student body

(SUtr Photo by Wnmi)"ACTUALLY,IT WAS LOUSY."

Former Editor Swn BoyN nNninitcM *n \h* papor.

Davidson Campus Is Dry9 With A Large Damp SpotWILL DRINKING RVL'< CHANGE?VOL LVII M'MBER TWENTVTIIHKr:

The News And Editorial Voice Of The Davidson College Student BodyDAVIDSON COLLEGK. 1>.W IPSt )V \ C 28036. FRIDAY. AI'Hll. r. 1968

REPORTEXAMINES ROTC(See Page Thn 3Hp* Stattftsanum LESESNE URGES

'NEW BLOOD'(See Page Two)

"Everybody knows we drink." saul cumMinlenl as hie sat in Imom di .ii"■<Iwith empty liquoi bottles 'The facultyis beli h i! the) believe there will

pill ill iiillied

""People lh.it waill to rlrmk do il now

am".^ Idon't think ni.nr, mon i

kiiuM rtarl illinkin.: on ■ I tinrule were gone "

IhaI numbei in i!i<- rcci■iiiiirni i' iion included iuch aplank in their platforms Suggestionsrange ttota ;i complete!} wei campus i"»

allowing restricted drinking on danceweekei

l-'oi now the student bod> hasting f"r"u' ( '<»nmittee on Rules

and Punishment! wh a re-\ iewing iimp " regulat lotpublic i " tiona Moal bmurki K \r will present -i pl»n for modIII!' ' llf

In UmO illlin drioklfl probabl}

iuch dee happening in "■'. ui' imagine .> school like tin- one

ryin.u so n :i> rule "

CASH COWART EARLY

EMGSTROM HICGINS HOY

SCHENK SMITH TRUSSELL

v,^g^£j V "N

■■■■■■■■■afjaj^HB^BMgJ^hflJ^SflBa SB^ftSB^llIll^*""* 1 i M %~~^B

It MBfc I

Page 2: 3Hp* Stattftsanum

From "Tim*" Maaaiin*Sir

Your article on oldPnrtcflUnt religion In UrnSouth, (u viewed by Enkin.Caldwtll (March U), ttrucfchome- t leach at n raniilatr tuppnrted colle*.stsabte portion of the studentbody comes from home* Uut<hotting lit preachers, dr |

or ciders, mi that arnneinmthe school has an aura of *Hlblv institute Studcm

ili'pt-ndrnt upon theirparents wncrrning all a<pert- of their social un<inomtc life.

Thr result I* an Imm.apathetic student wtw la vir

tiwilly uiuihli- tn think iDd)pendrntiy. With the did .imill Victorian rules and r»«m!.iIions, thr schools hiquash nny Ii»|M' tbtM mighth«- for Ha student* to bfree A* a result, thr mim

of chi- South change doand socialprogress con'to lag far behind

Edward H ItodiiKDoonr. N C

Behind Dorm Doors

BVfBtl this week have pointed outthat Davidson is still a small Southern

"go in a small Southern town, de-spite that placebo of intellectual pro-

mhrtnati that we <o often put on.The anachronism of a barber shop

in this little community owned and":t-ii hy Negroes that serves only

whites and black students is a throwback to the days of the Confederatesoldier

The student body will decide theissue. If students refuse to patronizeJohnson's Barber Shop, the boycottwill succeed because of the economicpower of the students. If most stu-dents do not observe the boycott.Johnson's policy of racial discrimination. and the status quo in the rest ofthe town, will become firmly fixedfor years to come

Now we will sec if Davidson stu-dents live in the South of today or arelaboring under the delusions' of 100years ago.

Progressive\nachronism

olina would'vc been in LABut Charlie Srolt is a Negro, and

that probably had a lot to do with hislast-minute decision to play ball else-where

Davidson is no place for a NegroI'ntil .i few yeara ago. they were barred from admission here by officialcollege policy, and rven now theynught as well be

Social benefits, limilril 10 whitevare practically nil for blacks There iflapparently no overt hostility shnwnto the current Negro students, butthen nobody is going out of his way tomake them feel welcome either Andwon! of all. despite their scant num-ber here, the college seems content torfl hack and shrug it off

It won't work. Davidson can m>longer ignore the Negro and otherminority groups.

A new day ig coming for Ametand especially the South, when Neg-roes will no longer be second-classcitizens. A good coUeje would acceptthe change as it materializes, a greatcollege would anticipate it and helpit along.

But Davidson is doing neither.Neg-roes are not coming here, for obviousreasons, and nobody is doing any-thing to rectify the situation.

There are qualified Negro studentsin the South, but we don't get thembecause they go elsewhere— to Caro-lina. Duke, the Ivy League We mustgo out after them, and once they arehere, we must do more to insure thatthey stay

Then if we do all that, maybe thenext time a Charlie Scott comes along,we'll get him instead.

Lefty Driesell wasn't thr oni\ l>><4'idson man squirming in his seat acouple of weeks back when Carolinawent to Ihe NCAA basketball finals inLos Angek-s

You see. Charlie Scott. Carolina'scrackerjack sophomore guard nearlytime to Davidson And the way itell ;in»i a lot of other folks had itfigured, if Scott had been j Wildcatand not a Tar Heel. Davidson and not

To The Editor:ROTC is good deals far

those who take thr advancedprogram. Fifty dollars mmonth a goodchancr at itdrfrrmrnt for graduate school,status as an officer in theArmy and a good chance tostay out of combat -it is agood way to go II you arcgoing into Uie Army, andwant to be an officer.

But what benefits ar* de-

ROTC Not 'Deal'

To Some-Pancakerived from HOTC by the rtudent who does MM go intothr advnncrd program'* Thrbenefits, for him. do notmake quite ax long a list.

Hin participation is man-hkv running in the CakeRace and wearing a fresh-man beanie He In requiredto participate in a coursewhich takes away from thrlime which he can spend onMs academic subject For

Davidson NeedsNew Blood-Grad

LETTERS

The proposal for open dorms sowidely distributed on campaign plat-forms and so easily forgotten afterwards has some definite merit

If for no other reason, it could beadopted U the only sure method ofguaranteeing the periodic cleaning of

■oms—

a much ificient w:iy than the sporadic empty-ing of waste baskets by (he college'sfaattinrM -taff

There are. of course, other adtages which might accrue from thradoption of such a proposal in addi-tion to increasing the efficiency ofthe janitorial system For instance,there i* the matter of privacy, a rarunknown situation for a Davidson stu-dent and his date while on campus.Those who have ever sought privacyin the College Union or in a fraternityhouse know the hopelessness of thesituation

Though the college provides a greatvariety of wide open spaces, the lesshardy and those who merely wish totalk to their date or listen to their own

choice of music would certainly findthe open dorms proposal agreeable.

The case for open dorms is not as"ig fur a school like Davidson as it

is for a coeducational institution, butDposal is feasible and proba-

bly desirable.But accompanying a program like

this U the old shibboleth of "studentPOT the program to

operate ly students must dls-pla> an level of maturity, a

which recent episodes of fire Inthe dtirn ty demonstrate to be

rt uiuttained.Finally. If mcfe a program is adopt-II must allow a large measure of

student freedom in implementing itTheopen dorms arrangementis worth-less unless the student is made re-sponsible for his own conduct ratherthan beingmonitored by an expandedsecurity force

The issues of student responsibilityand freedom will have to be faced ifthe proposal is seriously consideredBut. then, is anyone seriously considerlng It?

ED NOTE: The follvwlngIs a March M tell.r la WllDim F. MuIIIm, m Charl«tto trustee who Is a mun-b«r o( the irutlei presi-dential nominating commit""» Th» author ii■ formereditor in-chttl of THE DAVIDSONIAN

D.«r Mr Mulliss:The recent IrtUr inDas id

»on nlumni (mm Mr Hemphill Im» prompted me tuwrite \uu nut u* offer «n>.ipcci/ic nnmifuitiiHi to (ill tlu-vaCSsk] !«(i lis Dr M<irtlnbut to suggest a jtuulrlimthat might beuvful in rhoo--ing a suocotaor.

During a recent vM (aDavidson, t olucrvni that nilthe Minr> being nn-ntwnwlik possible candidate* forthe presidency had nne traitin common' they hare allbus associated with the col-lege in one MQI or another.Ibare observed thin sametendency in Uic past as on*unfailingly looks far a Da\idson graduate to fill vacan-cies that may occur.

While there Is nothing

SoundAndFurySignifyNothing

wrong with being a DavidsonBrnd (I iiikc great plraxurrinbring one myself) it seemsto me that it could be quit*profitable for the txiUrne tobring in "nru blind tl.not familiar with the collegeand its way of doing things..Muh an individual wouldduubUrsf fvvl less runxtratr.

B implementing trrads inUtter education when theyconflu i \»nh the i-vUting procvdum at the college.

Wiul Uie committeeshouldIcaik fur. [ llunk. m a profcaaianal Mlut-nUir who ha* hern, iil with winr of themore innovative programsthat hnve been undertakenatothercolleges that share withDavidson certain basic simi-larities.

Thank you for your interestand eansidcrauon. and goodhick in finding a aucctaear.Idon't envy the task of find-ing a tteiaeeaent for Dr.Martin

StMs»*lv,LaMls L. LatMM Jr., '"/US* RaUlah

lllbtpptnij a^^lBy BOB REID J^^Associate Editor .

The Prospect Of ActivismIn the past few years, columnists in this news

paper have served as wise sages who make profoundand meaningful statements on the world around themStudents read their words with the same awe andhumility with which they listen to the wisdom of pastROTC professors.

Well, not exactly. Wisdom and Imet once in 3

booth at Hatties. but the encounter was brief and Ihaven't seen him since. But every now and then, liktas long as the powers let me write.Ihope to presentsome interesting interviews with a variety of peoplefrom revolutionaries to Vietnamese students, with afew barbs and comments thrown here and there.

Whenever Iput off the column until the last min-ute, there will be the old bull that collegenewspapersthrive on. And far be it from DM to fail to make hockout of soini- features of life around here.

It will be a dry day at Matties when peoplearoundhere don't lake time to attack some of the anachronistic features of life in the piodmnnl pines Studentshave been attacking such relics as a dry campus, closeddorms and in loco parentis longer than Sgt. Rock ha>been in the Army.

But just like Vietnam saved comic book willfrom fighting Germany for 25 years, so the recentbarber shop controversy has saved the critics fromrehashing theold issues. At last students will be sparedanother lecture on the desirability of liquor in tin1

water fountains or the need for more drink machine.'-in the dorms.

According to the Charlotte Observer, studentshere are becoming more sympathetic to the strugglesof the Afro-Americans. But the result of the barbershop controversy will speak with more authority thanany newspaper. If students are actually Interested inprotecting human rights, they will-honor the boycott

But I'm afraid that students are basically conser-vative when their own personal habits are at stakeIhave heard too many students pledge to honor theboycott until they need a haircut— and then no moreFor them, the prospect of an afternoon under HoodNorton's shears holds little appeal.

Some of the boycott leaders are talking aboutproviding barbers in the dorm or Union for a fewhours each week. They also plan to provide transpor-tation to other barber shops In the area.

But if the boycott should prove successful, theresults will have far-reaching affects. Expect to seemore activism among.the Negroes in Davidson amiamong students here. Maybe even Davidson will beswept up by the activism that has covered some col-leges for years.

"Next gentleman, please"

two ;nn hr got* throuKhihe rigmarole or KOTC

Why does he » tu mbIearound the soccer field ever>week? Then" i* really onlyone reason -

to make sun-that the students who wishto may receive fifty dollarsthat month, to insure thatvery few of them go to Viet-nam.

He U required to puticlpate as a guinea pig for theadvanced student*, becauseunder the promt arrange-ment with the Army, thecol-lege is required to provideIndians for those who d*d(l«that they want to becomechiefs.

fm not opposed to srrlnfipeoplf get good deals fromthe Army, but I questionwhether it is the duty of Da-vidson College to require all-students help the advuncrdHOTC students sccurr thebenefits from that program.IqunUon whether a studentshould be required to uw tuxtime for t«x> years to learnto take apart an ohaofetcrifle, to write nn oprrationaorder, to stack arms.

The Army argue* that itis Impossible t« detrrminr■vluc h students will take ad-vanced ROTC when they airfreshmen, and therefore nilstudent* should be requiredto art adoae of the Army before they make this decision.

Few freshmen even thinkabout the advancedprogram,because the Army direct*Itsindoctrinationprogramat Ihesophomore* —

dm the fresh-rote.

Iwouldalso guess that fewsophomores take the advanc-ed cwrs* because of (Mr"sptrttnee with the basicprogram.Ican only hope that the

trustees will accept the fac-ulty's Blue Sky ■—

—«"-"-

datton that the collage getout of the business of provid-ing warm bodicn for ROTC.

Juhn Pancakt, '69Davldsen Callse*

The Fall Of Ivy-Covered WallsBy CHARLES McEWEN

Associate Editor

Call it what you will"Manner of Speaking." "TowardMore Picturesque

Speech." "Notes and Comment."

"Pots and Pans Topof My Head

"Words strung together, sometimes with a high

degree of art and style, sometimes not. like thesequotes.

From George Core's introduction la "Regionalismand Beyond." an edited volume of theessays of RandallStewart:

"It is easy to imagine Stewart having a glass ofchampagneand a cigar in the celestial grass with Mel-ville and Hawthorne, and joining them in the comicsongs Melville speculated about writing in paradiseOne can hear them talking far into th<- night — asMelville and Hawthorne once did in the sacred pre-cincts of Mrs Hawthorne's sitting room

—about all

possible and Impossible matters; and if he listens longand well, om- might hear Hawthorne and Stewart ap-plauding Melville a» he repeats, 'I stand for the heart!To the dogs with the head"

"And again, this time from a letter by Ray McMll-

Im tt» THE DAVIDSONLA"My immature friends, you arc quick to poi>

on bypocracy (sk) in others wherever you can ferretit out while youblandly allow yourselves the freedomto practice hypocraey (tie) of the grossest sort

"From "The Education of Henry Adams," by Henry

Adams:he chief wonder of education is that 11 does not

ruin everybody concerned in it, teachers and taught."But ftiarigfwra said it beat " full of aotnd

Credit Eugene McCarthy with thebest idea yet in the 19611 Presidentialcampaign.

Draft Director Lewis B Hershey.McCarthy says, should be canned.

It's not that he isn't getting themanpower to arm our national de-fense. Hershey always gets his men—and usually more And all the whilehe's spewing forth with that distortedphilosophy of his, glowing in theknowledge that he controls the livesof most of America's young males.

As Sen. McCarthy puts it "Menlike Hershey must be replaced by ad-ministrators who understand that theobject of the draft is to defend demo-cracy, not to wppreat tree speech "

s men like McCarthy we need inUgh national office Men like Her-" cm —11 do without

Gardner versus the calm, collectedyarn dealer. John Stickely— the firsthonest-to-goodness Republican pri-mary>n memory.

In the other, dairy farmer RobertScott, tagged with the "liberal" labelbut acting quite the opposite, versusMelviJle Broughton, labeled "OldSchool" whether he liked it or not—both tons of former Democratic gov-ernors.

And somewhere in the middle. DrReginald Hawkins, the Negro dentistMOO represents a faction no matterhow you cut it

But somehow all that promise andpotential just hasn't panned out

Oh. issues arc being discussed allright, but they are the same issuescandidates have parroted for yearsComing out for belter school*, betterroads and lower taxes has been fash-ionable for some U

Meanwhile, the state's importantproblems— race, unemployment, thecities

— are being ignored "As a p'cal science professor at the Universityof North Carolina observed the otherday. the candidates seem fixed on"God and motherhood with no taxraise-

Hawkins is in (act the only candidate so far with the honesty and forti-tude to express his con\ Theothers are only clinging to platitudes

It's a sorry state ofaffairs when canduiale* for the state's highest officebehave like Gardner. Stickely. Scottand BroujMas have been behavingGovernment In this state has neverbeen much to much to crow about,andafter watching this campaign, it's

The Same Old SongLooking for some excitement? Some

controversy"? .Some hardhitting, forth-right discussion of the issues this poli-tical year"

Then don't try the North Carolinagubernatorial campaign So (ar thefive candidates have provided all theexcitement of a dull chapel speaker

What started nut as the state's mostpromising campaign in decades justhasn't matcrializ'

Last fall, when it all started, iilooked like a natural In une corner.the headline - hogging, brash James

HersheyBarred

Old- TimeReligion

NEWS AND EDITORIAL VOICE OF THE DAVIDSON COLLEGE STUDENT BODY

mhMrtliii weekly by the students uf Davidson CoUeg* daring Ihe »chooJ year. ntvptdunnj hi>lKJ*) » and rinmwuiiwn period* Enetred a* second cUu milltt at Davidson.N. C MWO

Rophii H MiKi Johnson/ J/;ur in-Chitt liuttnttt Stanagtr

PAGE TWO FRIDAY APRIL 5. 1968

Ducking The Challenge

'. .. ondIsoy he doesn't exist. y* AAI AH^J5/1 ,-, ■, / / j^iI'nip^

y' / / / / \i / /I'■i

\ ft '̂ ■' / y' .^fll I*W: aflat L^^

"

/ V ar f^ - -

Page 3: 3Hp* Stattftsanum

ment in comparison withwhatcould be done with postgraduation uffuer training,said Patterson

Patterson went n to saythat only opposition hy colleges had thwarted the aitempts of the Department ofDefense to phase out theROTC program

Dr. SamuelMaloney, a profeKsor of Bible and religion,said he was ". . . .not unhappy thatROTC h.id been compulsory." He added he wouldlike to see a strong voluntary program at Davidson,adding that other srhooU ofDavidson's size have goodvoluntary programs.

Maloney said that nr hasnot objected to credit beinggiven for ROTC. He expressed concern over how creditcould be granted under theBlue Sky curriculum.

Maloney .said he sees nocontradictionin the existence

credit for one course wouldbe awarded for junior yearund on* course credit for sen101 Each of these would betaught within a single term

M any other coi:Interviews this week with

several faculty m e m librought out great difference-of opinion.

Patterson, professor of ecunnmuA, said be was diuppointed when the trusteesIMstponed their decision onthe Blue Sky proposal. Patteraon said he feels no college or university shouldh.ive ROTC.

Patterson said that militarytraining contradicts the purposes of a liberal arts college. "Anything of value in

the liberal arts that is taughtinROTC couldbe taught Ih-iter in the regular class,"added Patterson-

The HOTC program 1* un" ,I'liomical for the govern

have spoken lo the past inbehalf of acompulsoryROTCprogram with credit for bothbasic and advanced ROTC

In an interview this wrekOutlaw said he was notpersonally infl*«lble aboutchanges in the program,butthat he felt thata good ROTCprogram at DavidsonIs po*■Meonly If it remains compulton

On the question of academIc credit. Outlaw said. "Themilitary science program offers n skill whioh can be relevant lo a person's Ufe. andtherefore, though not part ofthe liberal arts. It warrantsacademic credit and shouldremain a compulsory part ofthe curriculum

"

Outlaw cited learning toipeak on their feet and ncceplance of responsibilitythrough leadership as theIhingn student* rould learn inthe ROTC program.

"Many Davidson graduateshave written me in the pastsaying they had benefitedfrom their completion ofthe ROTC program and wereglad they had had the opportunity to be in it." Outlawsaid.

Regarding the course nutterial. Outlaw said that axProfessor of Military Sciencehe has the freedom lo change25 per cent of the course content prescribed by the Army.

Outlaw outlined tentativeplans for the ROTC programunder the new curriculumThe basic course would beone hour per week for li\eof the student's first sixterms. Completion of the entire basic course would earnthe student academic creditfor one course

In the advanced eourw

man. Nor do Iexpect thisobligation to consiit of bultwo years service kn thenrmed forces.IIntend to servemy coun

try for the rest of my Ufebut have no desire to do soin the uniform of the behemoth United States Army

In the end Ichose the ae-

curity of freedomand uncer-tainty over that of commitment to an organization andcause Ifound opposed to myown way of life.

Being as 1 am.Ihave nev-er regretted my decision,though I Iihvo often wished Icould have chosen the easierway.

ED.NOTE: Tha Writer IsaMiilor net taking advancedROTC.

By RICK MILDNERIt is difficult to look back

now and determine the basison whichIdecided not to enter the advanced ROTC program in my Junior year atDavidson. I'm tempted todUmiss the entire quesuon byreplying "tt seemed like thething to do at the time".

Nor would this be inaccu-rate, except by omission, forit describes exactly how Iuppronched the question.

As littleas Ivnuy have nalined It at the time, however, many consider.ition-Mime significant, others trivinl— entered into my final declslon.Idid not refuse to enter

the program because of themorality question involved Inour position in Vietnam. ButI must admit that our posilion in Vietnam wm.v moreImmoral dally a< the possi-bility of my participation Init becomes more immediate.

In fact. 1 don't believe 1even allowed the possibilitythat Imight be forced toserve in Vietnam enter Intomy decision one way or theother.

Summer Camp Teaches StudentsThe Ways Of The Foot Soldier

It provided littlemore thana vividbackdrop, impressingme with the Importance ofmy decision.

My initial objections con-sisted of such apparentlytrivial things as my naturalaversion lomarching, takingorders and living "by thenumbers."

But most of all. I foundmyself overwhelmed by themonumental waste of time Itall seemed to be. The mostattractive Hspect wax Uie50 dollars u month, everymonth for two uholc years.

In the end Idecided thatalthough 1 may have wastedmy time for money in thepast and would no doubt do

: the future, the wast* oftimr tile Army representedwas worth decidedly morethan SO dollar: eiich month

Such reasons wem trivialeven lo me. In the end. ni>decision represented deeperthoughts and feelings.I found that I objected tu

the very concept of the citisens army raised by cmscrtption. 1 resented wastingtwo very important years,not in the service of mycountry, but In the service ofan organization whose wayof Ufe Idespised.

1 do not mean to shrinkfrom my responsibilities tomy country or my fellow

1Photo by ROTC Department 'BIVOUAC AT BRAGC

ROTC eadeti break camp.

By JOHN WILLIAMSAssaclat* Editor

l»ef«tre rrtcli pjirty weekendtheft i- "> 'i'"^ iin»- of Da

on studmu mil Id* the1 "i' '.iMirtment Tbt) are«.utii>r 10 irjiieiiirii tii<u reSQUH11 I'-r Ur ui-ekcml withthe J.iO 1-hrek «huh .iiK.inr. >l

KDTC sliidiiit-. WBgtVl eachinonili nf the school yoar.

Tin. money, and the deI.-i tm ui for j>rndunte adUMl» h 11 h llaMdSOn StU(l« -Hi

li.ur rrieucil \tt rei(ul.'irl> in

in |i«St. Mr*m ti) Ix- the pr«-dominant reawtns thai ttudents ent«r advanced ROIG

The problem of getting .1

deferment hns become moreacute recently with th<-Army's decision lo <lr a I1

crudurtte students before thenext xchool ye«r Many gradu.ii.- students have appliedfor admission to a speclflJ1year ROTC program. heKun

1 >■-id ui bad|«j

Thf atfvancsed itudeni willhave i" lake one 1 ■

..pl.it llf |UI, ..-In,,'

:i 'i ■ ■ nrrtinhiin II- nui-t ."I—■ t UttTiU .i

m\ \M-«-k mmnu 1Camp ■'' I"'"i" 11r.1 >.;. eithiTbefore d

ii< 1 1 ■ pmrnontti at tuninnr 1Uqp JjIh<l.\ OOOta |H-r mil, '

|>ens.- H\mi> ai 1 m'-o'lil lieutenant.

In It piiid $ ,ihia month, coml>.in-d tu th<- i'M) pM-i monthI'.lhl h, III:

[f he watts; until he fingraduate m tiool. hr will

enter th<- Army at a fiiMlieutenant and will n-i$700 a month

"The major dtiadvantnga I,■<<! '.e<- in thr dlv.iii,i-d pro

lirani r. that Hi,- ,t,jili.'ot is1 Offlsniltlng himself tohi- 111 the i ud Craw" and %ume \tudenLs ni.nnix tjrl .h to it, tin, wMta ii"■""

.Ml- .1' II.,(Mli. 1 d ujaa fre

(|Uetill> ..it.-d ,irr tin- rtl.itiwlv 'tiU-nor n.iture ul tlu-ROTC 1 urn,nl'iin .mil tin-i.ni !i ," lanti wlah

Bftl 1 .'"" \m li'.itHll nl

tnaad forStm pUn In

itu'diinli.'ii il" MM "

'.\i)l MHR■ Inhi iif nut h.iwni'

id IW4. wrmli would .illnv.Hi. in !■■ imiii (heir schooling

lirfon- lhc\ <iili r Ui>' Arun

Tin' H0T1 stepartnnno Winger W ds*niikIitiI. i,| tin- ilrlern.

■mi u.ii .i,i, 11 Crjtwksy aitin- Dauilson ROTC !).|..utumbI i"i' "■' Im 1 tin appeilunii\ lor >'ii>' i- .isMircd .in.ltin' chance; ol getting wu-.till in'. |pajd l'i-i M "I Usff|ii.iln> of tin mimIi-iisV her*.1

"The person ulm enlirs iid

\anifd ROTf <urr»-Mh hithe snmr ohlignllun ■ 'Inperson «ho 11 drnfted Bemust »vrK- I\ki yiar- on acin,' duty, two ycjir-. ol .1,

ti\e rvMT\i' and two yearsof inactive reserve. He canuork off the inactiyi r,

rixiuirement dunnil graduateschool

"The udvaricecl ROTC Mudint will nlniost surely getiinr of HM tlm-.- l.r.in. lies .,t

the Army he Ml«-rt . laid("rawley. 'utun-a1. th«' ill .11ti-e is pu( ulx-rivii men an-naadjad nnit musTflj in "■

combat branch."

DM of 'In fjMC lir.iii, h(UH .id\.mi 11I "luili-ni H "aj M bo ■> <o"iii.ii bnagh swuw Tin->< .ir Bvn ii in ita Dm "i ""

. ,rs t.ikiiij! KOTC £nt tlniiIllst 1 ll,.li.

Ill lll> O|(, -ml. 11'

will have a Magi Bhgttfiirtlur tn-. 1due ItlBB .md !■'

■hgl he ti.i- li iiriuil Ml

a hraiich wlmh pafOHal

ROTC Program ProvidesAdvantages, Disadvantages

■gf ami a wrong way. andihi ti■'-. Hii' Army way

"Whether he rwiliees it or

"lk'Hr >tu<l,inimii1 r .tirip Allh lh<- h

inlroduction to Arm y lift'\iim\ tuis presenl

ed. Summer camp It MMfoundation of Army ROTC

ED NOTE: TIm writer is asenior and a p*rt\Ovn\ In

the advanced ROTC program.

By TOM COOKCollege MuUenU take ad

vanced ROTC for reaaon*ranging from wanting tos*r\v as an officer to heatIng the draft, bul the prtcrthey pay for all the gooddeals" of ROTC Is summercm p

It is an equTtMtcr beat de"crtbod a» "barely totorabsp'during Its durationand modifird to "I'll never do Itagain." when reminiscingiiver in virtues.

ROTC summer camp is a« week feuion when futureofficers sir treated like thrman they will command andtaught the bare fundamental*uf being a junior Infantry ufnew.

Only a minority nf cadetsuiil fullnu a i»ur»e in theArmy winch «ill require ad(litimi.il Infantry training. s«most of summrr camp Is on

..Juctton bi the rule of thesmall iniantry unit nml tt.

,,at the ba»U unil oltile Ar

Davidson ttudonU ai

the Third Army camp at KtBragg during late June andJuly, and most of those whshaw been there fevl that If

then- U111 fvera place meantto be an Army reserveKi Bragg 1

Within 111 f-r flunp l»urtos. thereis said Ui »m- a tgcUon similar to e\-ery type ol»nr »noe imuginnbli- Wi-the windMow*. Ft Bragg isrelatively pleasant Wh*» itdoes not. Ft BragC can beunbearable

The Army's advance bulleUtu make Ft Bragg seemlike a resort with their llhcral mention of golf, tennisand swlmminit. Most cadetsnever see the tennis courts orthe swimming pool

ROTC camp Is business.■ad most of the time thatmeant an exhausting Uhourday. Frum rising well beforethr sun to polishing boufelate at night on a fire e»cape. 11 demnndn nil the e«i

crg>' a cadet run muster, andusually a tot man*

Thati* not u> say that »ummor camp r* inpeaalhle.ThrArm y. mnner of irmthat it u. oaks a CJtdrt to gflmithtnc that la IN Ifur linn to iW An mlclllgeni

*r sludrnt who l» in averagcphysical <h»[k-. inn negotiate lummiT camp withlittle trouble. The importantconflict k» within ihe cade!himself How much ciin hetahrT

ly do \fiy well <ll summerp, although "It" ' " '"!> '

lmt ked Id tUslDO! M ui«- -t>i til in-.trui

tm It rc<iin<vil pet year Butthe I.irk of practical Murk"how-. |n tlM early perform

.,1 III,- I)a 1,1 Mil """III).Ill

What he lade; in experience. he usually make* up inbrain* .Davidson tiuilcnugenemlly find thirm»elve*iimo IIt thr mii.iII "hr.ui.trust' of t-ach plubiori whichlead.% the members tif (hit

unit in iIa advance plamnicThough few west of Gear

Kt<* ha e beard .1 ')u <hool,it |g not hard for a Davidsonstudent Id itand out among

M-iitioa from Stetvjti.

Jackxonvillc State < M.i 1

Gordon Military College tfldKloniia State Whul llu- NurtliBmfltl cudeti «rv tii experi

Davidson U to leader

Wlirn u ROTC cadet nr.it Ft Bragg, the fun

and gam, *!." ROTC.if, i.-.11 Very tv* rudvUarc dropped from UM l'r"«r»m and many find thut

nduct deep intruipcc tion of thCOUWlve*.

Summer camp ncwr hurtsanyonr. hut it JorwtMddel who ottends tu accept theArmy motto "Thcrv'aa right

ROTO camji gtaON * premium mi Ml disciplineThere c.m hi nniir n( tin' Canualncft* on thr drill field ahere at Dm idvin Mistakes.in cauitlit In HOT «ho liveby the "Drill iiml Cenraflfl

field manual ufArmy.

Punishment is physical inthe form »f pu.'.h upv bul Hnmdividuul musi Iwm Id tak*correctiun und pUBWimW

gtvM, or lose the respectof his officers and peers.

Major nrtivitie.1 includemarksmanship, small uni;

tactr mfe Mi pa1r.il< and other related fieldswhich are viial to the infantry platoon lender Cadetleadership positions rotatethroughout 1hi- session.

A 2 day Held traimnu "

rise and a written exam illm.i« the training actmUllk- attention is given todrill and ceremonies because11 u an e\er>u\»y matter olmovir.r fnitn place to plan*

Thr amazing point aboutnurnmer m nni' liof thr hanrisid)p i« udiiiiii-.retained In tin

linn lnr nuUldc ill ■

trncltoru nuch as newip.nHe 1.1 aj close to isolaUon as

tiiibt) evar will beDavldsun uudents general

PRELUDE TO DRILLCadati draw arm* at armory.

<SUff Photo by McKetlarl

A 1W8IW8 rr III -trfcfCfUtf Jr IIIlit f

Of Davidson ROTC ProgramFirstSemester... Second Semester...

ADVANCED ROTC'S TWO FACESA Chief advantage of the advanced ROTC lUrtltao chin^i «ne semaslar tta advancedproaram her* Is the policy that junlon and student tt goog ho. the «th«r h«'i atten mU"enters have lo take ROTC for only onesemes- chlevous. But all the while, he fltU that SOtar a y—r. Naturally, the policy produces dollars a month.

Army's Waste Of Time WorthMore Than $50, Senior Says

"A college wUeh purportsto be Christian should ourslion ROTC on Christiangrounds." tmy* I>r Ernest ¥Patterson.' and Christianitylibasically part/to, not milJuristic."

"Davidson has existed as agoodcollege with compulsoryROTC far SO jwri." say*Dr. William O. Puckelt

Arguments Ilka these willbe in the minds of trustee*when they meet in May todecide the future of ROTC atDavidson.

The trustees mutt decideon n Blue Sky committeeproposal to make ROTC voluntary The trustees dcfinredthr decision when the reso-lution came before them in

December in order to prfjMnmrr tnformaliun and optnion

The faculty approved theHlue Sky recommendationsby a vote of 38 27

Colonel Frederick B Outlaw. Davidson's professor ofmilitary iclrnce, Is known to

By DAVID MVBATTMa«««i<«ff Editor

of an ROTC untt on thecampm of church related David-son. '

Davidson College is .i

Iulli-iii- .iikI not an instltu-ii.uihI church.

'xaid Malon

'">Puckctt expressed strong

support for the retention ofIhc compulsory basic course.ind for granting credit fornil ROTC courses.

Puckett describedROTC i". .. a worthwhile course, agood pad of « man's educatlon — It certainly was ofmine

"Puckrtl went on to say th.n

Davidson "has to preparepeople fur life in the world,und right now the military i*

a fact of We"

"A school as small as Davidson could possibly mainI.nti an ROTC unit on a roliint.irv basis right now duringthe- Vietnam war." xaidPuckwi. "but not later.

Ed

"IC JUMPTIm Tow»r Test

Shg JBautfigqttiatt

FRroAV,APRIL 5, 1968 PAGETHREE

11

ft 1

Pi i< m

Page 4: 3Hp* Stattftsanum

--whnt they need is ideas,explained Thacker.

The three student* haver.illrd a Reru'rnl meeting ofany students backing Kennedy ror 8 p.m. Monday In124 Chambers.

Thacker said that aftertalking to party membersatGreensboro, he felt thai thestudents "can be of great aidto them.

"

We really feel jfe can be

three Kennedy supportersPeter Hobble and senior

Sl.m Link joined Thacker inmaking » trip to GreensboroTuesday to talk with Democratic backers of Kennedy.

All three had visited Kennedy national headquartersIn Washington during springvacation, where they receivid the goahead for tryingwhatever they thought wouldhelp. They "left us free toact

.i inni' that can determinethings." Thacker concluded.

Hobbie described the situation in Washington at thrheadquarters as confusing.since the Kennedy group waxjust moving in. Both Kennedyand his brother. Senator TedKennedy of Massachusetts,have moved out or Senateoffires into the new officebuilding which will serve ascampaign headquarters.

Up 6n'Coming

By BILL WARRENStaff Writer

THE DAVTDSOflAN wasthe wily iMWspapai to capture two first place awardslast Saturday tn the 1M*College Press Awards contact!tion sponsored by The CharlotteObserver andThe Charlotte News.

The first award to THEDAVTDSONLAN was the firstplace for the Best Small ColU>g5 Newspaper in the CamUnas and was presented toedttor Sam Boytc by M SVnn Hecke. A small colleuewas defined iu one havingless than 1300 student- Theaward was fifty dollars.

The second award won b>THE DAVIDSONIAN w.i

individual award lo Bob Reidfor the Best Feature storyThi\ award Included all colleges that entered and wasfor twenty five dollars.

Reid's story' »«"» Picked bythe judges over 130 othersuch stories.

Representatives from twentv five college newspaperstaffs participated in thecompetition, with invitationsto compete being sent out toAll senior college newspapersin North and South Carolin.i

PaperTakesAwards

The Saxons, who blend thesounds of baritone and countrr tenor in a baroque style,will appear at the Hungry dApril 8 13 in the MorrisonRoom or the College Union.

Shows will be held nightlyTuesday through Saturday at8 and 9:15 except on Friday,when performances will besllght.y later, following theSouthern Folk Festival.

The Saxons— Marvin Sollyand Dan Goggin— accompanytheir program of yesterdayand today's music with harpsichord.and spice their concert with satiric dialogue be-tween numbers

Since their meeting in David Merrick's Broadway produclion "Luther" in whichthey both sang major role&.Solly and GogKin have re-corded an album, appenredon the Merv Griffin Show,and performed at numerouscolleges and clubt throughnut tin- 1'nilrrt Stnti-s nndCanadaIi iink r y d reservations

should be mitdc .it the Uniondesk. The admissionprice of$1 00 inclutli"! -ri.irk-. and

illatel

The football field will bethe scene of » slightly differmt kind of action for SpringFrolics this year.

Ray Charles and Jay andthe Americans will performnt Richnrdson Field duringSpring Frolics.

Jay tind the Americans perform Friday night. The grouphas produced such hits as"Only In America" andCome" Little Bit Closer."The Saturday night con<

will (feature Ray Churle* andthe H.mI.ii i, Included in theiliuw will tx- Billy Preston.

Ray, JayScheduledAt Frolics

a U carte.

Solloy and Goggin both at-tended colege before beginning their professional ca-reers inNew York. SoUey at-tending North Texas Stateand Indiana and Coffin Co-lumbia and Michigan.

Uhvrai writers and Intellectual* an exposing thetruth ahnut the Stalinistera.according to Dr Edmund T.Welant. professor of languages at Queens College, who»puk* Tuesday night at theSAE house In the 'Blow-upM" series.

WeUnt. who teaches Rimslan hUtory. literature andlanguage,uwella* German,has translatedmany modernRussian poems and read se-lections from poets such asAkhmatova and Yevtuahen.ko.

Welant said that there aretwoextremes of feelingabouttheStalin years, "one of horror and the other or adulation for thr goodold past."

Weiant said that the nduintionof the past was exemplifled by novelist Mikhail Sholukliovs call for a return todirect methods of revolutionary justice. Hr added thatother writers "expressed aferlinK of cold horror, thrkind thai slam* the door onthe dark corridors that leadto the past."

Boris Pasternak, author ofDr Zhlvago. had said thatthe Soviet literary reformwould come from the grassroots, according to Weianl.

"So when you read aboutliberalization of literature inRussia.

"Weiant said, "keep

your ere on the grass, forthat's where the action Is."

Welantreadselections fromseveral Russian poems, ineluding the highly amusing"Fire in the Architectural In"dilute", wheh describes theprocess by which one youngman became a poet.

The poem describes thefeelings of <i young architec-tural student watching hisdegree work going up Inflames along with all the restof the architectural InstituteAl the middle of the poemthe young man realizes lhAthe cannot redo all the workbeing destroyed in the fire,nnd he therefore decide* tobecome a poet.

Weiantsnid that many Russians bellesr |i<ictrv to be theMtfeM) Ut much ns paintIng Is the Krench nation.ilart.

O-M

Brook* Mill deliver his address "On the Design ofThinkers

" at 8 p.m. in HodsonHall.There will be a PhiHet»i Kappa dinner in theStudent Union before thespeech at which time newmembersof PBK will be formally recognised.

In announcing Brooks' arrival on campun. Dr. LockeWhite, president of Phi BetaKappa at Davidson, said thatBrooks "is Ireally eminentfigure in the world of com-puters." White felt that thename of the department thatBrooks heads nt Chapel Hill

information lotaM hi In-dicative of his depth andbroad appeal.

Ii b significant," saidWhite, and not just gamesmanship Hut his departmenti» named informationsciencerather than computer Hnr Mime «uch

As' flTIP in suport of

the n Ike diilincttoo.you might be interested tui.tinH Hi.ii .in. « ir Hi. [iivim in his departmentholdsa joint uppntntment in theDep.n | English, andjinolhcr In tlir Deportment ofSociology. White said

Brooks receivedhis degreeidphotic* (rumDuke Univer-yty and and hisI'dI),in applMlmatheraatlc*from Harvard l.'ntvrnUy.

He has held wvrral advis-ory position* with IBM andhas taught at Harvard, Vas-sar and Columbia before goIng to UNC in 1M4. Brook*ualso thecu authorof Automalic Data Proceaaiag."

Dr. Brooks To AddressPhiBetaKappa Meeting

Dr Frederick P Brooks,professor and chairman of"I.. I.'i-piirtmcnt of Inform.!tion IctMM at UNC in Chapel Hill will «ive the annualPhi Beta Kappa address hereon April 10.

Molecule Moves In History,Physicist Gordy Explains

includes Dave Powell, '66,has been named SLAM— Student Legal Aid MovementThe group at UNCCH. whichIs as yet unnamed, includes.Mike Abel and Dick Thur.vton, It7. and Tom Andersonand Tom White. '85.

So far the groups have beenlimitedto answering legal reqursU from prisoners undmanning v.iIImm- niihls inforiiiation centers around Dur-ham and Chnpel Hill. GoldThe gmup Bf Dukf. «huh

Several Davidson graduateshave joined forces with otherlaw students at Duke UniverMty and the University ofNorth Carolina at Chapel Hillin special programs to provide legitI aid to the poor.

Most of tin- pruitrmn* arein the planning stages, butKr.ink Golcl%milh. '67. a firstyear Mudent at UNCCH. saidOn mek ttwt thr uroup hop, ii M i>i- mare active next

Saturday. Apr.iiAll Day L»» School Admnsions Test

All Day Program for Interested High SchoolStudenu

« p.m. Bogart Films Morrison RoomMonday, AprilI

4:45 p.m. Chamber Music Concert College Church \t pnv Ted Bumiller Morrison Room

Jfcatf Around the World"

Twtsday. April «All Day «nd Night BunpJ t Morrison RoomI

The S.iv

10 M a m Chanel vc Auditoriu.,,""Al|.i, | V KnlcrUinmcnl"

7 p.m. German FUros Dome Room \

o n m. Phi 9m Kaaaal UMMte H.ni,,.,, n.(ilDr I T Brook<> Jr

AJ1 Day and Ni*h. HUBfn '1 Morrison RoomThe Sa-

Thursday. April 11All Day and Iflajtt llu«itr> d Morrison Room

The Saxono10 M a in Chapel Uve Auditorium

Male Chorus

8 pm. Fine FUms km Aaditorium

Mnilh said."Later on," he said, "we

would like to set up n downtown office somewhere to an*wer legal complaints fromtha underprivileged."

Response from other lawstudents at North Carolina'sfour law schools has not beenvery good, Goldsmith IflULAbout 20 an involvednt bothDuke and UNCCH and there

Mb or threo students atWake Forest University and

1 1 Carolina College, hesaid. 1

THE CELLAROPEN WEEK DAYS — 4:30-11:45

SUNDAYS—

2:30-11:45OPEN NIGHTLY

BANDS— WED., FRI., SAT., SUN.

Ikn10 Cards »«tf Over 11.N Cov»rc..Mvnraiii si. f?c< mci '.uncf

'

CKirl»H« Sad* ib»p

The Drama 32 workshopha* written n mixed totdlaproduction, enttlled 'Alpha-An EiiinCrraiiiuiuting IjHIItHllsi characio rangingIroni Tt«e r*ugs to Dcbusayand projections nl sii

"rt'iprrt T Barber Jr., a*nutant proltiaanr o( drama.

"unean* of ho wurkikhDp i-UuaMh.n i <i«n material(or prMHitaUun.

Tlir 11 dan memlicrs.alnag with Jam Crav«Iki phiyi Uw part of Ihave hern invited in presentthe production at the Cud

t*mi»»rar> DaeAna Festivalat WtnthrHp College today

Alpha A -lainmeat" will also he |iiusimlKiin chattel un TueMlay

Drama Group PreparesMixedMediaProduction

DR CORDY...Do*« priyilcitt

child Gordy went on ui saythat recent research hasshown thai what we learn isalso stored in molrculcs.thereby incremlnii the importance of the molecule tiiman.

Gurdy «Im> -poke Tuesdaynight tn Cigmii Pi Si|[m*.hJMMf] phy«»cv on "Technlqiii-i Fur Fraternity. (H>

Uiminj! Bi»locn-i«l Inf irmnFrom Molecule*."

Goniy in * |fe| dig a! luisnoozing nuduhoped h«» l* )varold son

!»a\idvMiHi- "> a HH

Gordy said, "because thereare no girls herr

"

Dr Waiter tiordy. Jam**B. Duke professor of phat Duke Ualversity. gjgjchapel Tuesday on the topic

The Molecule H the Me*luge."

Dr C'mrdv. who niJicU- »*veral oblique- "ailvtnpU atwphomoric humor uMhe had a great roped tor

ilrgo and It-.Hi shaven look

lii.i several referenceDa\i<|.nni pun > and reilgion teemed (a make bkminare >u)tHhl<- (ar the Thursday chaprl usually MM

irfagfaiuk Hieakas.Qordy't talk centered mi

the relationship of man'sknowledge of the molecule«it)i liu knowledge o(

M aruuml turn Sincetime hegan almo.t

ily aaseru*! man hasffared eiyjlerule*

Man. canunuwt Ci nI(fared fire and therefor* iniruled godk Earlr mar.Hnficed to the sun because hr

not understand the malteutas and chemicalreactions

>lv«L he saidModernm.m, hjuwW, with

hla greater linowle-dao ofcute* do** ant fear lire anymore, but Uv rasu w*» »et

drt». But the ki. rounding DUO, Ci.w u lound in

nalecuie.He referred to Uw genetic

moicoule which pntwueithet paaaad from iwrrn* to

By RICHARD HINSONSUM Writer

Stalinist EraEvokes'Horror, Adulation'

Page your April 5. 1968 9b* »■■!>— !■«

Students Endorse LBJ DecisionResponding to the question, "What do you think of President Johnson's announcement that he

will not run again'", Ihcse students saidBajBBjaa^^n Terrall PullUm, Saphama**.

Jalin Barter, Saefcamara: -John. pisasid that he's Dot running Bat heton's announcement was anhonorable oooU turn out to be a great Individualway to get out of a wrydelicate sit m history, particularly if the Northuation I'm personally glad that he Vietnamese decide to negotiate. Ifdid git out. tor it »u the only way not.behas mad* a wise political movefor him to save face in a bopekaa by leaving the next president holdingcause." the bag."

*y~W PULLIAM fMBBaa.BARBER Ot Wagers, Scuter: 'Johnson did

B7mZa.much sympathy a* he *» now force. Ntoan into a more,,. "^■^■■■■■■■^ hawkish stance which may be n du a^asnaBBBBaBBsw

had lotenaea WALLACE advantage with today'sdovishtrends." ROGERS

3 Students Organize To CampaignFor Robert Kennedy On Campus Saxons To Sing

Hungry dScene

(Staff Photon by Weems*TWO EXTREMES OF FEELING'

Wei»nt talk* on Soviet literary scene.

"What we'pr mainly working on is trying to get support at th* state conventionin North Carolina, explained John Thacker, one of the

T«o sophomore* anda senior »re organlitngIStudentsfor Kennedy group on the Davidxon campus, and have already moved toward including the University of NorthCarolina at Charlotte andQueens.

Graduates Help FormLegal Action Program

Whafe aWOldsdoing in this

1968 Olds advertisement?It'smaking th« point thatyou of other brands on theirconown anOldimobile. If not Value-Rated used car lot. Andanew on*, thtncertainlya should youdecide on one ofuied one. them instead...well,at least

Like the nifty 1967Oldt 4-4-2 we'llknow youpickedagoodyouseehere.Or asporty used place to doit.Cutlass convertible maybe.Or,even, one of thosegreatOlds Rocket 88s. jrf^^~~7^

Of course,Olds dealers jtfjf m 1 ~"^^l»^fevaltocarry a large stock joTi / BL [^

Drive a youngmoUefrtxn Oldsmobik(Neworused,it*a fun.car toown)

\/ d

4 nmpiiM 4 omnieiU

Page 5: 3Hp* Stattftsanum

closer than tin icort mdii .it"il with five of the mmm.-iU-lk-s Romi! the Tull thrt-t

Carolina GolfersDump Davidson

Benefactor Robert L. Slewe Jr., (L ) a Belmont banker,greeted visitor* during an »p«n house In thi- new tennis club-house dedicated in hit iwm« Wednesday "iicmoon The newclubhouse wai constructed with lundi provided by Sfowr In■" gIM lo Ihe icho«l las* fall. Construction was completed latlmonth. The lennit home is Stowe's second gift lo Ihe school;IIwas proceeded by hit gltl ol Ih* Slowe Art Gallerlet InIheCunningham Pin* Art* Center in 1*il The lieiiitalisn was

STOWE SMILES THROUGH DAMPENED DEDICATIONheld In Jatintlon Gym because ol Inclement weather. Oejn

flWills Johniton presided al the dedi««tlon. which drew ■»crowd ol about SO people. Stowe'i family «ccomp«nled himal the program. An open house followed the dedication, but>h« tennis match with Purdue which was lo follow BBS cancelled due lo Ihe rain which (ell all afternoon (Staff Photo*by McKellar).

Netters ToppleHarvard;FoglemanHalts Citadel

By BILL BERRY$OOTi» WrIMr

Vumrnws erttir«- and unearned runs dufnioated r»l»-tht» uet-k in thi r un v>,ikc-it

opening nf MAC «■rumprtllHifi

With ram forcitii: MBlion nf Wednesday i|;i;ni-ctghJ games werr played

Thr Ptil Cams put togethern ten run fifth inninf U> ■

uhi'lm Stema NuHrnn \\i iilni i id tin- BM

Hm tar »hi M fi»'runs were all unearnrd

Sigma Phi EpHlon edgedI, Mi, *TO'»

■ !|o\. , ,i-

run intn deep lilt tuhl .milISM hil* hv Tntntii'. !"lirl th, |P]

Th< Tau« pd ki,i up.,

run bu: put i-- lour

run vi .1nth ini.,n. m nutniTinn Si)

■ i closeJerr\ RnU'e t'

trippcr.> led Sigma ChiR|(in IdOBj o'. i ": I SAE'i

lii .i '.iii,< ' , conBeta Theta Pi

nuinir.Mi-- Independent trTOT*«ith hnlour innnu

Nesti id,i\. the KA v edby the tfK'i 2 I, tin'bent thr BSUS m. Xhf PhiIH-lts routed tl andthe Kiipp it th< I'dopendcniK their »i-tond lo»»

Dnvidson'■. Bull Mm mel l^iuin took th. numbrrtotiph rnmpi'litioii Mnmluy in two itiiiU li HI. md 1 > -. » t..■.

" match with it" Untew "«k in> B.tnn ".■ .-. i»'-ity of Nottl, ( irolinii Bad Big B0 R<( Boi As ''i,.ind.

.une out en I* ad m MHw tpasti bm I "■ r",, i;' ,i ,,,,, i)iiinoti in tit.- ii'inilier one

The BMll h Ml held in IJO* .'' ii

oven., ' a. ,1'n tm theChar I"'' Ol >«■'

■ V tin1,,'ti I'otiiitrv Clnli 11 I■

Oeorfe i "■'<■'" and Tucker Btntai kktuH..|toti ptdMl UP ■ 'in. .'!,■■

in. Ui

match nf the sruson ngalnxtMnrvaril'i numlirt om- sinKles pluyer. John Le\ in. withset Kcorrs of ti l. 4 (>, 8 10.

Sam Hatcher. Dan HearonWoody Faulk and Jim Cantrcll posted singlet wins forthe Wllllr.lt-, III |lU> will! llsaw six or eight mrttihfi n<>mi' thr full lln

rU mcr returned w itli ll.it<her In nuntlHT one doul'1'Inknock off the ll.irv ,irdduo.11, B4,

In noting Mwl U n Ha, , sod win in .i raw for Dsiid' on n,Ih, 11.o ,i.1 mm

i,.l(|] li.ll'IS |-o|'l|'III.Ol'..lid tll.lt Ml H.I

'■Alt' 'III.

.itli th, |il.t>

lilt III III. Ul',1. 111!,.nh

ill! Wl'll11

■ ,; ;

tun

Hr

By DAVIO BRANCHSport* Writer

Cullinc on their depth andconditioning, the Dav;dxontennis tram four'it off 1 <)<

termlned Harvard squad yesterdav iiflemonn to post it.'i .1 VKlcr\

It was the vei-mid game ofthe week for tin- tttCSbgOsm,n.s llwy returned homr fromii successful Florida tour tomeet two lough opponents.

George Berner lost his first

U.S.Olympic TryoutsUnfairTo Cage Players-Driesell

Saturday, April 4IIa.m Sailing Lake Campus

Dnvidson Iaviiutional ReitatiH2 p.m. Baseball Buseball Fit-Id

Davidson vs. Indiana (Pa i2 pm Tennis Tennt«. 0s

Davidson vs. E. Tenn SlateMonday. ApHI I

3 p.m. Baseball ft.i-ih.ill r i« IdD.ivhImhi VS. IndianaIMS

Tuesday, April tz p.m. Golf Winston Salem

Davidson vs. Wnkr Forest3 p.m. Baseball Bclmont

Davidson vs. Belmont Abbey3 p.m. Track Richardson Field

Davidson vs. East CarolinaWednesday. April 10

2 p.m. Tennis MeisenheimerDavidson v.v P(ciffcr

3 p.m. Baseball Baseball FieldDavidson vs. The Citadel

Friday, April 122 p.m Tcnnin Tennis Courts

Davidson vs. Hope College3 p.m. Baseball Baseball Fit-Id

Davidson v.v Marshall3 p.m- Gulf Charlotte CC

Davidson vs. Duke

Davidson hurltr Clark-i-raon was rrllevKl in

the ililh Inning with thi'scare It 1, evwi Uwugh hehad only given up one earntilma.

Soon after the game, sophomnre ijitrhrr Mil*. Kellyand junior Inficlder SandyQrenneman announced theirplans U> suspend their baseballplay In order tu purti,>pale in spring foolbnli dlflb.

Accordlnil in Brrnnrmmi.the only reason for the two'sderision to quit win the foulball practice which begin*Monday.

Krllv had beenbatttrvc hiphin the lineup and hail herntlir itnrtinK i:atchrr for lite'CaW whilr tirrnncnmn hadseen limited action as an infielder thus far In the season.

The Delaware game wan■ii< firit «ami' the Wildcatnine plnyed nftrt then KI.mIda spring t«nir. from uhnh

■"mrtjted with nnly one■ry

The Imir wmcame *u-Armslronf State College of.Savannah. Ga.

Against Artmtrnnv Dnvidtile to put tiitfrlln t

Mm of iuii in -mi."hutiuit pitching.

mil inier«fd from the gamemill ,i > II win

i d.iniiiMtitl thi-""titit-i ij.iiiii. linth defenilvt'K anil iifdii .uely. with Gordon Slade leading th. «,," p,

the hittin«Gempi.i Southern «uepi ■

douhlehi-mler from the 'Cafean they bombardedDavidsonpitihet. lor 13 run*.Inflblf lo put together .ins

lllllinK at!.i<k iinainit tin-rugged Southern cl» |squad fell 7 2 and 8 1.

JaokanvUk University nl«> took two from thr W il.lcaU. by scores of -4 3 Md

Throughout the tour !>.,vldiwn hnd trouhi. hiitinopposing pitchers. v»ilh SladeiH-ing the only consistent hntcr

With a 19 record, the Catxnow (ace the rougher half oftheir schedule against teams&uch us Clemson. South Carohna, and Kurman. all whichhave players aiming towardprofessional baseball

Coach Tom Stevens plansto put more emphasi.i on defenxr inpractice, in hopes ofdecreasing costly errors.

Troubles aciumUted rapidly for the Davidson baseballl«am (Ma weak aa they wn»defeated sabauntulty by ahardhitting Delaware squadand then were struck by Ik*loss of two pUymi Inspringfootball practice

In a game which team captain Jack Smith labeled aathe worst be had seenDavidson pl.ty. the University olDelaware all but dmvr theWildcat nine off Um- playingfield In winning 17 6.

Error* wrre thr story ofthe day as the 'Cat* commitU-d an un' r 14 errorsin thi field

'Cat Contests

THE WILDCAT DEN RESTAURANTPIZZAS & FRIED CHICKEN

Open TillMidnight Monday - Saturday

MIKE MALOY.,.llm» (actorThe real blame, according

to Oriesell. Um within thescheduling of the Olympic

In n riiiniMn >il the Ohm.I Inthin iiituiiiittei in

moreover. In « defrnxe of theOoDejtc bnski'th.ill piI),unison li.ir.ketb.ill cuachl.i II' ■ . . : nlly cumpinmd Ih.K t <ill»-«;i- glS

not being given a fair■ .■ In ti\ out for the

Olympic team

nriesell \ remarks werrlinked by thr decision of

iiiinu-rous players around litecountrv nol lo try out for theteam.

The selection committee.he said, is putting the blameon the players for variousreasons, including the raceissue, which has arisen during plans for a Negro boycott of the Olympic gamesthis summer.

By ROCKY CROSSWHITEAitiilant Sport* Editor

Three Prep Grid StandoutsSign Wildcat Grants-In-Aid

Iruilv Duriiij; Umw ■ i. it' in inin ill tiii.iuiili.. .,intr>h> inia n k nf ■

CMM.i «h,,

■ lined (lie iinn.iiinnI" If, nu I'll the te.illl IIIiIndiilay, -.Jini iimi )hiIlu ir ilr< iMiitM.in lln- .mimin!nl Mm, it would t,ik<' tip It

i". tn.ibility to.ither th.itt th<> race

iitsui- islii' li li., i"i,ad (hr

!)tir-"ii ..in] tli.r tii,

lertinti commlttrr IN t.ikihr;>(UnntA|Cf of the seasonalpopularity of basketball tomak«- money for the teamthroutfh these rxhibitior.\

"We pay enough Uxes for(he government to supportthr Olympic team like they

A 4 gad The Citadel hold'I I ad\;itit.i»!<- m whal icmld0P aci'Hiiit of dwrkncM. thusbavfl Ih-.t, tin doctdint set.KoKlein.in i.<ll>-<1 !ln- inalchOMKciing the unfinished lie

Ing m.itt'hKo»!liiinn explained that

the niiivr VMS perfertly lc«fllntiilii Soutliern Confii-in|r .I tulil TIk' Citadt-l coach «t

■U 0 'I'" k tll.tt Iwould IMW!I i .(up ill, in.ii.li M it tint

..- to dUtaCM." h'I till "11 mad turn at six thirU

that the time limit MS upAt « hat point the

i .it .1) in tbi1 fin.iltU Ih,;r ,

'ii.ii liMt " <l DMi ..In,nl and let tli<- plu>

,n|ii.it Uv pan *hUh■ , i i

fnIII:' l!., 'I■ ■ , i

"

H. vni r Hi "■ II.i'ui l\ Ur|II

. ■ lo

IMill > ,1

-iiiiu in < oi,',nm ■

i ii.uii|H '■ Hi- nui"■li

Kuril in.in Inn,.mil ..ili-lii il uilh li, Wild

I .ill thotvlnt!W|ill,In I |,l.i\ i Mrll .!'■

|N ll-,. ' l» ■■II I'l.iVIIll!, he' "UitmtitrdThe Wtldcnts did make a

ri.ml slKiwlng nn Ilu Klorid.itour, drfe.itnn; ("' u t tu a n.Jncksonvllle IimrrMty. andCorrH'll. losing only to a verv'.tninR tiNim from Kollin» by.' mure ol « I

Borner played whnt OoSfl l»KoKleniiin i-un.slderi-d htsbesttetiniH thus far againM Rollin-. Berner defeatedKoliins'Run Van Cielder. who curi"-

1111> r.iti-d .1- the numlHTInur player In Holliincl

Fojjlem.iti ,imiiiii(it. i! tint

tin n,.it.h witli Rjiiltn-

Sitfttia fin dm two ni.'k"up k.iiik Un WvvV In tu- Ilu-I'hi llfits for fit ;i pinI in

l.MAC v"lli\l).ill iiini|H'litionRoth i< miii

- iHwled idrnticnlII1 ricordv Tin- Mia IMonly tn the Miuln-.. «rbH< thelunr Mgm f'hi Iosm enme «ttin- hiind.s i'f I'lKn|ipn Alph.i

The regular BMumn coneluded March 22, but dm tu

several postponements reSUtts will nol bv annmmi <■()

until next week. Toninht »"«<set us lh<- deadline fur inakin« up postponedRanu- vvilltany gAmes remalnlnR .iftt-rthi'. i-Miiiiii' hi I'iri-dfnrfcits (or both ti'imis in\ dived.

SX's,IMlsTop IMACVolleyball

do la

II' II.(I

in,,! ahauld I tin.

Hi.Idn t be Ui

UiDn<M-ll p«laCl 'I ■".'

"I '"" I" ' ll If:,,;■

plrs id tin.si- uliu un ri f.inilii 11in ih. iu< H.iM.ii. |o

try tail for tin- tjMin

Lew Alcindor and MUMW.i f ii-(i uf N'C'AA <-hain|in>ii

Id of bmisvill.v (h.irln Scotl MM]Urr> Mill. r o( INC andMtta U-ui.1 ol Duki- all jmihed Mnloy in snyinn no to thetriaU.

"Owr 100 plnycrs »rr trying out (or the team." On*m-II said, "and only twelveare going to m.ikc it Atl.;iu tin- trial* should comeat a time convenient for tin-pliijrr-. no that tlmnc- wlmfail tu makr thr tfiini ulllmil |sjm linen up siiinctlnm:

[»irtanl a* school to irvnut

H' 'onoluded. Idon'<Hint uii> piaym ktadM feibl.iiTHit lor riliuiiu'. an inut.tti.in ilunntJ Um iyr.ii

WESTERN AUTOW«tl»rn Union Telegram*

PHONE: M2-4M1

UN student body ttt flhinHigh School, and will gruduati- with hunorv

"Diivid.son Collc(£i i- pittaed to have Handy ax .-■ vtudent athlete,"" Smith

mil st.incline record inthe clii.isrocin. student ho\crnment and on the nilIli-ld speuks for ttMsf. ll<should contribuie to all ureasof Uudent life here at DavWton."

Open 'til 12:30 a.m.

Monday— Friday

The Hub

wlwrli caused him to missthe first few games.

During hi* junior and senior yenrs. he amassed MMyards in rushing for a 6 4yard per carry average.

Jlcml Football Conch Boner Smith miipil Kihrts out

sinndlnt!performance Install1playoff cimiprlfllori, MiyiriKthat hr hits "thr »m- andipord to br a fine runningback In ihe Southern ConferSflM

Another three sport standnut. Parker averaged sixyank per carry and taught24 passe* for 4(10 yard;. Hescored U touchdowns torankhigh In scoring In Virglna,and received honorable men-tion all stale honon in hisjunior year.

Parker was president of

CAMP OEERHORNOn* ol Amarka't out-»l*ndl«o private boyscamps, located In north-■rn Wltcontin, an-nounce* a limited num-ber of opening* mi Ih*staff far Hm INIMMn.Dalu arc Jueia U ■ Aug«ai 14. CompensationIncludes salary, round(rip transportation, ||».lag quarter*, board, andlaundry. TM» li an un-usually attractive sstm-m*r >«b and wily m«n »fIk* Marten characterand Integrity trill baCeAMeareel.Far c»mplttrinftrmalieft, writ* D. C.BroadWrWa*. HU Shan.■■M faaaaitI Wdkf^B^kraa^kin. tmx-

'

Davidson added threemmhiRh ichuol grid standout* to

lu rising collectioniMs wHiwith the signing of two runnlng back* and a defensiveend to grant*-inold

Un>| Sikes. " defensivestar (own SUlcUwro Ga..and two baMbaclu. Johun-Rlwt. of Durham, and Hundy Parttcr i«f WiUiamsburg.Va.. ran thr loUlol signeeato MM9

Sikw' dsfenaive P»»y «"»",Mpi Ma high acnMi) to winfive piw> by shutouts enroute to the Georgia *»*champianahlp.He wmMm«ihonorable mention alMUiefor hi* play and wa« oanUln

An all around athlete.SlkeaaUo played basketball andlamhall He captained andM Ma naaliathall twin,

■Mat alao won the ****title with aSpoint* and IIrebnund* average per gameLait spring hr was votedmoat valuable player ol hUscbool t baseball team, onwMcn he pitcbea aad plays

RibM. a 6 1. 1I&poundhalfback fullback, was a stand-out Uit fall for NartsaraDurham Hi|h ScJaoi In apite

Delaware BarrageBuries Wildcat Nine

Mb* ■«ulb«mlan APril5- I9M **»«* nv«

ShowersSlow StartOfSoftball

Fine*! Steak" S»»Y«d Anywhcr*

SWAIN'S CHARCOALSTEAK HOUSE

1800 West Moreheod ShMtCHARLOTTE,N. C.

Phone332-2414

Car Buffs do it!

m.

ikfA I

STAMP ITIf^1"^ —^ iriMWH[jRCSULJMt

MOOCL SitfllisJ. £eathet;

T d£\ .. J

Come in now and let us help you find a new outfitfor the Spring Frolics weekend We have a fineselection of suits,sport coats, slacks and shirtsin thenew spring colon.

2Jush Wilson, HtfLDavidson,N.C Greenville, S. C.

Page 6: 3Hp* Stattftsanum

Thr IFC Imndled rout n...-,, in ,i -Ijurl -lu'i'tini!

Tuesdny night

The firM nirtttrr on tin.iKcnd.i uiis tin' (Innli/iitionof piling (or .in IFC retreat

Tin- NbMl «i" «!v-rjrc m apporttnlt] toses* Its poliiit^ Oils pa*r ;iml

to dianau ptan te '""*' y«nr.Thr influence of ■ new cur.rlculum and a new prcsidi-niwill !>"■ ill .< ii n.-[| in Dm reni."tesatin nt It t; tn l«- held InMontreal.Saturday afternoonnnd Sunday.

■DC I'lVMlll'flt HllllllV \ I.'imcrri that Imeeting

with tin- i-vti-ndril POafhWIwill bt heltl before the nextIKC rneetin« to deterinlni' tlu-wlaltat cf tin- rusheea.

IFC IHansTo ReviewIts Policies

BOBBY VACT. IFC President

Th« following homo*will be open this Sun-day at (:

G.-.hlr777 Virginia Au

Johimm434 Concord

\V,...«|.l.nnmer

OPEN HOUSE

Continued From Pag* Onci

T!i.

ami" 15 feti W[ ■

S

rhrr■

.I

I lht« uc«-k

ibly

Mo- " >wdypatronin- Johnson'» »hop.

Sorri? »Hld and there.fore i■■" muld hurt himeconomic ii! (liit n may

"n economical

Juhnion nlvi declined com.meni whendiked if he intend,vd to change U |th<-

■"f tin- pro-Tw been operating here

for 40 yt«rs Ihave a bigttake here but those hoyshave nothing to lose Idon't*ee wh\ tit.-) don't k>j tt Vietnam if they want to enlUt in

"It doetn'l make any difIvrencelo me whoIwait on."

...Boycott

i- mrrr.li. " ii-ClI this week to the nvu. ■ ■■

IiTf

n»in> rpn>,John PMSJOor'1 and Cnvey

DanHerd, i I

id Howitrd and ritins

■ it lo do wh

I'kiltii- training fit Dnvid.son iiiliiiiiiiiti-s in GreekWeek, wild gafj ivinufriini hiini-l rnlK BNM iiiuiitfj t.i BatthVl to sponsorini;.in Eiistcr egg hunt for 160Davidxon children.

All fl-nternitles iiiuticipiiti-in th<- Tlllll'liaynight pledgebamjurt. .iikI 'In- Kinl.n liolilday. vvim-ii iUmmum nv >tm ■<hont roc;ilt;i on I.ake Nor-iii.in

nciUM-r l.iiiir ,nr tr.tdi.'iiin.il. ;iml tlnv v.-.ir him- hi

eluded ■!'■ objects a live< hiiki-n ii w.itt-i tinvi'i runn

unc. .i 'rint juit-f K'"'4''full "I tin-n.ill'., un old ««r" i<-n ti.i' betmgtnj to < araptu

E N I"Hid tslouwoiin Inrvae.

However. pU-ii-'i-ii ii Hiciuiii' puiiin sen K ■"|iiii|.-ii I1

! K.i|i|i.i Alph.i■ .iBald da) m in

ihildran, and Kappa Alphu

l.ir tiin. it

SGA Government

..>i>liorniir.- Kd Dobb<. Ki'li1 i , '.ish

Murphy and Carter Mrwdmi this pnr*4 Student ODMBIII

TIik i- tin- Rnl 'mil th.it

representation io Um -ittidentgovernment. Also under the

UtaUon

man cl«»»

Klcrted chit-r! ,i<)« r mlUur.

Id

Kcrr

I SENATESGA President J«e Muri.li.SGA Vice President Peter Hobble

I Senator* Com> CaVtar, iimk Murphy.John P.i*»morf

Junior Seniiturx (' I. ObMUm n,in Herd,li.inl Him.inI

BJ Gary CumIi. Rich Cuwart.Bd Di.IjIi^

COURT OF APPEALS, Chuinnon Bud CousarMembtfU Dick Allison. Franklin Andersun.

Huh Diinli.mi. Hi.mi-'Ui BlggiBS, .l"li r>'.

Bra IHONOR COURT

IVice Tom Bwkrr

KNil nil Abill. Piit Hr.n Hi-ib Ck-KU.

Dttriuuti -i\, Wayne 11" li!mini-l. Gart'r 'ihomas

STUDENT GOVERNMENT COURTStew

■ ■■ ■■ *JBrigham: New Deferment PoliciesWill Not Affect Davidson Students

FABULOUS DININGInternational Cuisine

OPEN KITCHEN1318 W. Morehead

PIZZA

in thi- laS)) p;ir' uniorK.uii Rppl . ,.nt will be

retpoi ( n," tohe testun

Th.> tt-sl n-suli, «liicli «reinquired by man> graduate

schools for iidmitinncv anyu.iy will be sunt to the Armynlong with a iMNBmaodaMHby the commanding officer oftin.- ROTC Department foriimsulenitlon.

Negro pickcterLESLIE BROWN

Year's Registration Set

By EDWARD HAYStaff Wrif»r

Thi- Army'i nr», poliCj.. tin-nl tn

i<i. in ■iHOK ttaafM. :nn«. in procedure «M hvhould hnvr littU- effect on

daon iludcnti. accordingto Captain F. C Brijiham ofih«- KOT<~ r>epartment

The new policy, called thequota system, rncaiv; th.itxtudenu Uking the advancedROTC program will not re

iirxm ii ffrad-"i>1.

■ i ■ 'nredU) take ids Ur/idun'

iimlt-tiil In the Army The ntu-Mill he deferredon the bnf thin (ii-ld .«n<l tin Mure on

''"nnenu arc given hytlie Anny to student* ntily mtliusc- fields which the Armyfeels will be useful to it

Student* applying (or a de-ferment will take the GRE

Registration for all threeU>rm* of rn-vt >«.'.ir will beginIn two or three »■■cording U> Reniitrar .1 HOstwalt

The registrar explainedthat rc«!M ration would beearly in order for Mudents to

SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR OPENINGS: WantedCollege Men,Students for coastal Boys' Camp, June11 " August 17. Activity needs: Sailing, Motorboat-ing, Water Safety Instructors. Excellent characterreferences required. Good salary according to age.experience, and college classification. Room andboard furnished. Quick answer uponreceipt of appli-cation. Apply to Wyatt Taylor or Donald M. Cheek.Camp Sea GuU. Post Office Box 10976. Raleigh,North Carolina 27605.

Krt acquainted utth th« newsystem of courses and terms,

nnd to allow ample time forchaniie* and workinR out ufconflicts.

0<itufllt emphamtcd Ui.ustudents ciuirht in difficultyhy the changeover would bjallowed toalter their gradun-Him requirement.'., with theconsent Sf thrir major department and the appropriatefaculty committee

All rising juniors and sen-tori willremain under the oldgraduation requtrcmenU wltli

Pipe Smoker(racully and Stiidanta)

ThU ad. with your DavWsofi ID card, will «oUUe you to a20 PerCent Discount

on pipe (only) purcaaats.

I 375-9723ry~\ i/^r^z^ 217 n. tryon st.

IIV | |Vw/Iv3? CHARLOTTE, N a 28202

EASTER CANDIESRUSSELL STOVEROVER25 CHOICES

PARKS REXALL DRUGSDAVIDSON,N. C. PHONE ««-21 \1

respect to major requirv-merit.-, and basic- course rr-rinirt-miTiu. According to the

'n« approved In the BlueSky Report

Hiiwivrr. rising .viphnmorrs will be under the new*rr-a and major requirement*."Ithoufh they will not be required lo pass area enam^t.Next year's freshman clanswill he the first to lake thearea exams

Ostwalt noted the lessenednumber of courses requiredto graduate now— 32 insteadoT 41 -and said that the difference would be madeup hyintensifying each course.

Thin, the language re-quirement ix now two yearsinMaad of three

All rising juniors and sen-iors wtll be required to comptete one additional coursein a language if they havecompteted either the JZ or31 Irtel. bat rising sophs,mores are only required asecond year level.

OPENHOVISN'T Si

It un't even againsttjculty ruin.

But it ia good wayto spend a Sunday

evening.

Bautdaoman StaffAssociate Editor*: Copy Editor

JIM COOLEY JOHN PANCAKECHARLES McEWBNROBERT PYEATT PtKHography tdltor.BOB REID BlIJ- OLSONJOHN WILLIAMS ptoatogr.ph»r«

Mana«in« Bdttan: JOE FR1£BK.I.KFRANKLIN ANDERSON BOB McKELLAKDAVID SWEATT DAVID WEEMS

Asttstsnt ManagitiR Editors: Cartoonist*-DICK ANDERSON NAT HKYWARDJOHN BOUNCER CU1.LUM ROCERJ.

Sports Bittor""K P001^

BOB DUNHAM Assistant 8«ain*M Manafrr.AMtaUnt Sports Editor JACK WKLLMAN

ROCKY CROSSWHITEK* l\d\tor Circulation Munan-

GEORGE AU, TOM MO.IUI....

Casttrtbutors th« week: BUT Fine. Alien Lr^m. Ed SioifDajany Coltrane. Danny Wtuu-. I'wjIRanMaatf, BooTraven,HugliIfarT. R*h Krehbiel. Ed Hay. Julv Younj(. NorwoodPoland. Bill Berry. Don H<i>l. DavM Oflok, Luther Moore.Lewis Lartoe. Sterlloj AbernaUty and Don Seweil.

rmH: HMswr yw ("" MIM, %IM). Pa«aM«hi TNC DAVIMOMIAN, sW» W, D.vWm-.. N. C. MM

Page Six April 5. 1968 9b* lUltibmaU*IFC HEAD STRESSES VALUES

Vagt Explains IntangiblesVagt BlM ili'<( lit* PUum

had taken several childrenfrom n local orphanage toDavidson basketball %this season, and they had al

: p.irtici for thechildren

Id- flM mcniianrd SAKIHM Op ««" p r (i B r n m.

»lmh brlnui »pt>rtk<T<. I<> Hwrumpus, and sponsorship <Mit po (hill) in

AI'Ili1.1.In.i1 I think tin- D.iviiUun li I

tprnll> QnjfcVBl ■'■ »funli|i,thins «"'

-11"

It-ill .mi MKir. l)nl:. l( ■

\>.ll<mri Liiu't

Ix* rJiv\u!iflrrl i>tiled

Tin- i'. .mum, i. .11emold)l.'.i\ id uii -itu.-Uion,".nidi il

IK' .idniitU'd that MBMplsdj* HcUvMaa had had

lul . (ii ii.. hm hi-Unit tht-y MhWS um-IuI Inbuilding nun.ili- .unimij boththe ptrditi's .mil On- In"1

By DICK ANDEftSOMAmi. Managing Cditar

Bobby V«gt. nru pre-'"if the bXCffrati hii

ties lo br gained from (rater

nity lift ".hould tx- slnrsMd.Fraternitl*".pfl *ald short

v*r> i uplc .iri- quickin criticise that kkt Irairrni

irt inertly social organ/.it urns." \ngf. MidHe s«vm* Kfiiulnely con

crrncd with lu-lplliR tin-k kjll Moth ti<- n«l> I"

■M*in t4) |" i.--ii<n«-ii I

Mtlon

a ,,' i . mlty

;Ur iJM(l M)l'.in' II

Itin lln-

Immiv..pU' »oy that |atab

|i,ni.<ul.ii li.itiTinly <m tin.pa . luiui-. ymn ctrdfl at

friendi i don't fi'ii hi.I' ii,, ,,i ,:ii. paitfaniTtj.,n.. the fraternities hm.-

brxuii partying together."VaKt said "A. ■■ Ira-trrnity it mudr up of a v,i

o» people with dlff.grounds and interests.

"

The l>;nkKimind of fniternit v lifr loU you get to knowiiiir. t«tiI tyiH-i of people nIn'. better Ih.in >uu might ntherwise |{t*l U> know them.since you're cnruuntlv anoI i.iiing '*nh them.

" Vagt con.turned. "You Kt't to upprcci"It "Hut proplt \ point of

VuKl also iim-m!

a i.iih the frntrrnitir " li \Aratty

IpOlWutl -i 11>"■tinriiii ■ attributing

Irei- i iiir

I.-i inly ndiVitiM.

GreekWeekCloses

Two Incumbents ElectedFor Nine Senate Seats

Or. John P*l«r Monro* ran (he college doubled at Davidson't physician at the tint*. A grant from Preibyterlan womenin Charlotte in 1846 for an infirmary tUrled the college. (StaffPhoto by Weems)

OLD NORTH CAROLINA MEDICAL COLLEGEThli house, acroM from the DjvicIioii College Pr«tbyl*nan

Church on Concord Road, MM originally built fo house (he

North Carolina Medlc«l Colltgo Constructed In 1*01, II wrvedthat college until 1*07, when Ih* tthool moved Into Charlotte

a*f!

JADE1EAST*NEW" GOLDEN

UME

AFTW MAVBIran«J0 llO\jl^Jf\yOOUMNKfraai UJS fcrgMMr*^* —Sal* Dlfttflbwtar _5^a»x^^^^^^^^^^^fc^S

AftMslftMMtVffMfWMS, Lv^^^^^Y^^s^^TmbttryMMCAST wte4*iM« CORAL **\^J\^0~

In W

V [ I

'aaatJ

The 11

MOCK TURTLE fi BKnit Shirtis strong

in

solids '-* '^and stripe*

See our

New selections for the pace-setting traditionalist—in cottons, dacron 4 cotton, and banian

Our SOth Year—

Mooresville