St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC)

 - Class of 1971

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St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 296 of the 1971 volume:

KT.. mmm . St. Andrews Presbyterian College Laurinburg, North Carolina 1971, the tenth year Opinions 34 Faculty 64 Activities 114 Sports 172 Dormitories 202 Advertisements 250 Front cover: Knight, Death, and Devil, by Durer. Courtesy Of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Bacl cover: The Temptation of St. Antho- ny, by Schongauer. Courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of art. New York. Endsheets: Battle of Ten Naked Men, by Del Pollaiuolo. Courtesy of the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art, New York. H i . .i . 1... ! ••. a-i ' ;5iJ i5 Ten years old. Ten years of being a new cham- pion of an old faith. St. Andrews has come a long way from a swamp. It has risen from a natural wonder to an architectural one — a meta- morphosis of debatable value. What is St. Andrews now? What kind of an institution is this, and where has it been in the last decade? More importantly, where is it going? St. Andrews has reached a re- spected position among colleges as a progressive, innovative insti- tution. So far, the image has been, for the most part, a true one. SA has been a leader in establishing inter-disciplinary courses such as Christianity and Culture and the new American Studies program. The Selected Topics in Modern Science program has been studied and imi- tated by institutions all over the United States. In non-academic areas, SA has been comparatively open-minded, especially in the realm of dorm visitation and housing. (Caution: Signs of regression are numerous) It is true that students do not have sufficient influence over the formu- lation of the policies which directly affect them. The power of student government is largely illusory. Still, SA students have more to say about school policies than students at most other small church-related colleges. Some of us may expect the Presbyterians of North Carolina to turn SA over to us. But some of us may expect a bit too much. While St. Andrews has an ad- mirable record of open-minded- ness and innovation, there are dangers lurking in the years ahead. One of the reasons for the open atmosphere at SA has been the lack of traditions cluttering up the landscape. Students have not been forced to take Latin simply because all SA students have always taken Latin. St. Andrews started with an empty catalogue and was able to put in courses which were useful and relevant. But the catalogue is now full, and some courses, rules, and programs once thought useful and relevant have proven useless and irrelevant. These programs, courses, and rules are, however, in many cases still around. They are in danger of becoming traditional. And the in- novative men who initiated these programs are in danger of becom- ing committed to the programs themselves, rather than to the aims which the programs were set up to accomplish. There is a prayer for our times: God spare us the entrenched bureaucracy, which, like all brain- less beings, is bound and deter- mined only to survive. t. T i ' ■Jl A visitor to St. Andrews will be struck with the pre-pubic state of the trees. Our avenues of dogwood and magnolia trees cannot be de- scribed as tree-shaded. And yet the magnolia bushes are recog- nizable as future magnolia trees. St. Andrews is definitely growing up. And the world has grown up with St. Andrews. Or it has entered a new childhood. Which has actually happened is still unclear, but it is obvious that the world into which SA was born, the world of ten years ago, is gone forever. SA was born into a world so completely ruled by Hope that we even named ships for it. SA took its first breaths with the Peace Corps and the Test Ban Treaty. SA planned its future on the shiny promises of Keynesian economics, and naively thrust its enfant soul into the ancient world. Today St. Andrews is paying the price (as is the country as a whole) of the fail- ure of the American Dream. The first decade of SA graduates — the Concerned Generation who Marched on Washington and Banned the Bomb and broke down the lunch counter barriers — what has become of them? They have seen the air which they hoped to save from atomic poison made deadly by the exhaust of the Afflu- ent Society. They have begun to doubt that the famous Dream will ever become a reality. The pulse takers tell us that the prominent feature of the Concerned Genera- tion is no longer Hope, but Disillu- sionment. The present generation has been forced to face the truth at last. It is not a few of our laws, or a few of our leaders, or a few of our states which need reforming. It is our total environment and our en- tire way of viewing the world. Change — colossal, comprehensive, and immediate — is necessary if we are to survive as human beings. 5UPP0R PEOPLL VJH GHT l3 el - VICTMAfYlESE • BLAOC5 • W orkers snASH RECRUITERS mPFmnsn ' s visrf The role of the modern college must be to bring about an aware- ness In its students of the necessity of this change. The college must build in its students a New Human- ism — Consciousness III, if we may borrow a term. This is the chal- lenge which faces St. Andrews. It must be met in the second decade, because it has only begun to be recognized in the first. The great shortcoming of St. Andrews is that it has not actively sought to bring about a drastic change in the minds of its students, its employees, and its community. Laurinburg, after all, is still living in the Wild Wild West, and St. An- drews has done little to change the outlook of its citizens. But this shortcoming must be forgiven, be- cause SA ' s struggle has been for bare survival. So far. Your infancy is over, St. An- drews. The new wood has been broken, as Pound says, Now is a time for carving. «r— -•  «■ r I U Si.- mr IJI ,, ., -, ■tj 10 ■MH Iii Sa!?P= « Ml 11 1M ■a ii rm ! ' . ' ' fe? 13 ' . - m ■Mm. F -.: sm smmm 16 ,.a«.. s,«.  «.r m«« .  «,.,T 17 vs Davidson 20 I Bii HK v ' ll K O v. V x- . 5 V ..■ lSr- sai .. ■ J ' 23 Tfii f.i n-rrt -r,. !! 25 26 ?SfS5?r--S?-r- S m fill w g s Mi I y4 1. -v %« ' •? ' -x m ttvTT ji-9 t:s-: rm ,a5 ■ i ti •J- ' j,Ay j Ml 27 iri— I ■lY-Tf ■ ' KT 28 29 r 1—j. I 1 1-iri ■ b 1% ' ■- - x- - J i j. I n i-tci ■ t 1% 32 BE SERTER.TIS BT 0PIRI0R.IBUS i K H- s?«;i t.-:J: = - - arrTiri 1 -! a  S a kS ' Sl l!! kj ' a a ' d)S S Ideas have the potential of forming an integral part of any academic community. The formulation and expression of ideas are not entirely limited to the class in the context of a course. When those ideas discovered with- in a course replace or are synthe- sized with those beliefs already held and the product is supplied to individual action, ideas take mean- ingful form — form that has Influ- ence and implications that extend beyond the immediate to affect us and our lives in the future. St. Andrews Is a small school. The diversity of Its students is not as great as some larger universi- ties. However, various factions do occur and each group has an out- look that makes its members some- what distinct from other groups. Some of the Ideas that were found on the SA campus during 1971 are set forth in the following section. Set forth to act as a re- minder for when we have become complacent, set in our ways . . . traitors to both the educational and thinking process. DORMITORIES HEALTH CENTER PHYSICAL PLANT DEPT PHYSICAL ED CENTER STUDENT CENTER DEVELOPMENT OF FICE GUIDANCE CENTER LIBRARY LIBERAL ARTS MUSIC CONSERVATORY SCIENCE BUILDING ' ADMINISTRATION ADMISSIONS ri ■ ■ I 36 OPINIONS liiiia iiiiiMiii What is it about our generation that mal es us different from traditional Americans, and why are the chasms so deep? What is it first with the obvious: your genera- tion is not different from traditional generations! Not altogether. For instance, college generations are customarily idealistic, attracted to ideas of pure justice, concerned with broad improvement in a nar- row time period. Similarly, young people are typically fascinated with their expanding awarenesses — of self, identity, influence, power, community, fascinated, that is, with the species. Customarily, too, is a concern by those just bordering on economic independence with a proper redistribution of wealth and opportunity, a redistribution which, while explicitly providing for oth- ers, implicitly provides for self, too. And of course, each college age generation develops its own styles and fantasies about fashions, about adults, about how unbridgable are the troubled waters between gen- erations. These characteristics of your generation are commonplace. On these factors your generation is not different. ' TRADITIONAL YOUTH? 37 U - - . - m w-i Below right: Mr. George Fouke. author. What is particularly interesting about these four characteristics is that they are biologically oriented characteristics — aspects of the biologically regulated process of maturation more than socially de- termined characteristics. In this sense a false perception of gene- ration and self is easily developed by young persons: the young per- son who perceives himself (and his generation) as outgrowing society may, in fact, merely be growing into himself, into that larger sense of self and society which biologically distinguishes the twenty-two year old from the twelve year old. Still, a mere biological explana- tion is not sufficient to explain away the differences in college genera- tions. There are, if I am to be faith- ful to the multiple-causation thesis basic to 20th century social science explanation, many explanations. I would like now to focus on one. The revolution in attitudes, values, and beliefs which characterizes the still developing democratic movement of Western civilization. Proleterian society, mass socie- ty, democratic society is a new form of human organization. The species we belong to has never heretofore organized itself in such a way as to cater to the value, worth, and dignity of all human beings. This goal, still so incom- pletely realized, is revolutionary. It commands a religious approach to life from us. It prompts a caring re- lationship from humans. It evokes a fighting spirit. It invites opposing outdated structures and outworn patterns of behavior. It begs us to stand up and take exception to the felt injustices of our perception. Because this lofty vision is revolutionary, the gap between your generation and others is in- deed great. Sorokin tells us this. Coffin does. Rand does. The Bea- tles do. It is all about us to recog- nize. But this gulf your generation experiences is not so great as to inalienably separate us all. The very well-spring of your lofty vision is respect for the species, collec- tively and individually. And, where there is responsible respect, his- tory teaches that vision and reality melt Into democratic human ac- tion. — George Fouke 38 TRADITIONAL YOUTH? TRADITIONAL YOUTH? 39 . nr . f IV— rf- k -rm m, mi ' ' What is the significance of the Wo- men ' s Liberation Movement? 40 WOMEN ' S LIBERATION The word Nigger :sft t has for the most part been erased from the American vocabulary, but the terms broad , chick , etc., comprise many of the verbal utter- ances of the male population. The Women ' s Liberation Movement has focused its attention on these and other derogations of women. The modern women ' s movement arose from the growing awareness that all people are entitled to respect and equality, regardless of race, sex, or position on the social scale. In addition to fomenting outrage at the exploitation of women, the movement has raised questions and doubts which can not be ig- nored about our most basic societal traditions and institutions. The im- plications of a successful wo- men ' s movement make it one of the most important social events of our time. Being female in American socie- ty is a sometimes gruesome experi- ence. It means conforming to rigid standards of what nice girls should and should not do. It means being eternally aware of your ap- pearance because lipstick and make-up represent security. It means trying to ignore the loaded stares of the men you pass on the street. It means being given a pamphlet which tells of the facts of life , but purposely neglects birth control, information you some- times don ' t get until it is tragically too late. It means sacrificing your identity for the feminine role which you must play in order to achieve every woman ' s ultimate goal: get- ting a man. Contrary to popular opinion ex- pounded by the mass media. Wo- men ' s Lib is not hostile to men. It is hostile to the male role, a role fed by an ego which perpetuates and augments itself according to the number of chicks that get laid. Do you think the brand name Tro- jan has any significance? The male-female roles do not enhance the probability of a mature rela- tionship — they extinguish all hope. Relationships based upon this kind of game-playing at best only serve to maintain the false self-images which are the result of role-playing. As a consequence, the real identity which does not contribute to the role is denied. Though both sexes are injured, it is the woman who suffers more. In addition to having an abundance of lovers, men are encouraged to de- velop a career; women are only encouraged to develop. WOMEN ' S LIBERATION 41 rf£ 42 WOMEN ' S LIBERATION mi : ! j 1 1 1 ■ r ' m |jft iM_,: iar  ! — r— Right: Kathy Kearney. So who ' s to blame? It has been recognized by many that the exist- ing political structure is the cause of many of our society ' s ills. Social- ization is a means by which the present government maintains it- self. The epitome of American so- cialization is the institution of the nuclear family; it is also the focal point of the exploitation of women. Marriage in American society means monogamy for women and polygamy for men. If you ' re the wife it means being a live-in maid, mis- tress, and governess. The real tragedy falls upon the children of such a frustrated and stagnant re- lationship. But the influences of the family institution are disturbingly more profound. In the nuclear fam- ily the father exercises power over the other members. He learns to dominate and possess. Could it be this type of socialization which en- courages the people of larger countries to dominate, possess, and intervene in the affairs of smaller countries? Re-evaluation and change of our most basic societal institutions are necessary if we are to continue to exist. Summarized below are two examples. (1) The concept of monogamy must be re-examined. Monogamy as epitomized in mar- riage, provides security, security implies possession, and love should not be possessed. This is not to mean that two people should not love each other exclusively; it does imply that we should not be bound by absurd social conven- tions which dictate the number of people we can love. (2) The institution of the nuclear family must be abandoned. It is by nature exploitative of women and children, and its lasting deleterious effects cannot be under-estimated. Communes provide an alternative to the family institution. We must establish communal living situa- tions in which every member has the right and the responsibility to share in the making of decisions which will affect his life. This re-evaluation and change must necessarily begin with our re- lationships with others. We can never build a movement to better this society unless the very foun- dation of that movement is respect for all people. Absolutely no one has the right to exploit another person; implied in this assumption is the responsibility of everyone not to allow himself to be exploited. Women ' s Lib has stated the prob- lems; it is our responsibility to begin with the solutions. — Kathy Kearney ■sPss? ? ;. g ,ftiH- i- S WOMEN ' S LIBERATION 43 How does the college ' s program toward handicapped students fall short of its goals? This year the Rehabilitation Services Association is being phased out as an experi- mental project to aid physically handicapped students. The pro- gram will continue under the auspices of the college. With the experimental project go detriment- al and beneficial influences which are both inherent in the program. In general, the relationship of the project to its participants may be likened to a generation gap be- tween varying value systems. First it was inconceivable that such an experiment as the RSA project could be objectively carried out due to the very nature of the experiment itself. The project ' s goal was to determine the human desires of all its participants by se- lecting those necessary items the project team felt were the needs of the handicapped student living at St. Andrews. Thus the project made available funds to construct auto- matic doors for the benefit of stu- dents who could not open the heavier glass and metal doors. The new doors were placed where the architect, the college administra- tion, and the RSA project heads felt they would be most beneficial: for visual effect, for practicality and efficiency, and perhaps for great- est publicity. Little did these people realize that the placement of the doors did not fulfill the handi- capped students ' practical needs or desires. Participants in the pro- ject petitioned President Hart to place an automatic door on the northwest corner of the Liberal Arts Building, but the effort was to no avail. 44 REHABILITATION SERVICES 7 ie authors of this article are Charlie Pratt, top ten. and Eddie Smith, in car above. m m!i - ' :mill fSii Sii Also, it was presumed that the construction of the new science building and Avinger Auditorium was designed with the consultation of the project, keeping in mind the needs of handicapped students. But Avinger Auditorium currently has levels with steps connecting them. As well, the doors leading to each building of the new complex are too heavy for some of the par- ticipants in the project. Still further, the science laboratory facilities in- clude high tables designed for stand-up work. The height of the tables make impossible the inde- pendent work of handicapped stu- dents in laboratory sessions. Another assumption that the RSA project hoped to fulfill was to pro- vide its participants with the most independent college experience possible. In this, the project has been ambivalent. On the one hand, it has. for the most part, allowed the freedom to individual partici- pants as they have learned to ac- cept it. There was the necessity of col- lecting data and personal informa- tion from all the participants in order to fulfill the requirements of the experiment. This was essential in order to receive funds for the project to continue. It was ex- pected that the testing and consul- tation stipulated in the project would infringe on the participants ' independence. On the other hand, the project maintains certain prior- ities which do not include the most independent living conditions for handicapped students. Due to lack of funding, the mobile units for apartment-type living are not avail- able to the participants. These would seem to offer the necessary experience in coping with daily life once away from St. Andrews. But the project continues to emphasize only integration of participants in dorm life. REHABILITATION SERVICES 45 ifi4i r What precisely is the educational process that we, as students, are involved in? I will begin with a caveat. What follows is not a rig- orous statement, I am not a clinician pinning down a specimen. I am a participant in what I describe. It is the pinch in my shoe which aggre- vates me to write. I wish to put forward some possible reasons why we in our academic community often experience tensions, frustrations, and anguish. A contradiction forms the defini- tion of educational bodies in Amer- ica today. Our educational institu- tions ser ve both as seats of learn- ing and to fashion specialized la- borers. As students we are asked to become learned persons and to refashion ourselves so as to gain a rewarding position in our eco- nomic structure. Sometimes these aspects of our roles and the col- lege ' s are complementary. Usually, however, they are in some degree of tension. Occasionally we feel their intense opposition. What is learning? It is a kind of experience which eludes static def- inition. Learning has to do with taste, discrimination, analytical and critical skills, self-esteem and awareness, autonomy, mastery, creativity, spontaneity, wisdom, discipline, curiosity, appreciation of beauty, affirmation of existence, and integrity. Ultimately, learning leads to a stance of understanding and judgement which sustains ac- tion. College is the place where the learning experience is nurtured and defended. Teachers in this role are fellow students, more ad- vanced, who stimulate, activate, excite, and demand learning of those who interact with them. A teacher hopes to form the conditions for learning both directly in the class- room and in his office, and indi- rectly through the affirmation of his own life and its stance, under- standing, judgement, and action. 46 OPINIONS 1 ENT L J r U5E MRIN DDDR But teachers and colleges are not solely involved v ith the learn- ing experience. In order to survive in our society, colleges must per- form a service. Among those serv- ices, perhaps the most primary is our concern with the creation of a commodity, a laborer for a special- ized job market. Employers seek workers who, with a high degree of probability, will carry out most of the tasks assigned to them. They desire engineers who will deliber- ately design a faulty device guar- anteed to cease functioning after a period of time. They desire lawyers who will legally paper over or de- fend any operation no matter what its social consequence. They de- sire architects who will draw up plans for a profitable building and not express their worry over the damaging effect the building will have on the psyches of the people who will dwell within it. In other words, employers do not seek per- sons who might suffer from the burden of integrity. The employers seek our passive, obedient prod- ucts. For them the college de- gree is an excellent indication that its holder will dutifully obey the commands of his hirer. A college student ' s basic ques- tion is rarely the challenging how can you justify or prove that? Such a question comes from someone in the process of learning. The question most persistently asked of the professor is, What do you want? Student frustration is rarely higher than in a course where he cannot comfortably as- certain what the professor wants ' on a test or paper. In an excited state once, I jotted down some words. Every teacher who does not wince at the question what do you want? ' has surrendered his commitment to teach. Every teacher who demands that his stu- dents ask the question ' what do you want? ' and rewards those that re- spond is a fraud. In my doubting moments those words haunt my classes. Their biting challenge hurts. I might add they apply in re- verse to the student. Students feel the contradiction of education. They know that some- thing in the way of learning is sup- posed to be happening; they also know that it is probably not occur- ing. Or that if it is occuring, it is incidental to their classroom ex- perience. Most of the anguish of student life comes not, however, from the lack of a learning envir- onment. Nor does it come so much from the impersonal functioning of the educational factory. Most of the students ' pain comes from the death of the hunger to get ahead. The rewards of a good job no longer seduce sustained action. Yet, students see no other alterna- tive to getting better packaged. They do not desire a certain life, but they know of nothing to be had in its place. It is in the drift and anguish of this situation with its fear of the future that students turn to drugs, not for experience, but escape. Drugs short-circuit the world away and its lack of human choice. The college must adjust with replacements for sagging mo- tivation. Grades remain as carrots and sticks. Requirements substi- tute curiosity. Records and grade points push people along the proc- ess, or mark their lack of prog- ress. What any of these gadgets have to do with learning is unclear. Evaluation, yes. but permanent records? y 3i-. . OPINIONS ,47 WM k r ' What evidence could possibly be marshalled to support the absurd position that colleges are facto- ries? I experience it every day. I see it in my father ' s jib against ma- joring in English: What can you do with that degree? Try Business, now that ' s practical! I see it in my concern as a faculty member that my students improve their G.R.E. scores so that they can get better placed. I see it in the constant re- ferral of reforms to their effect on the marketability of the St. Andrews degree. I see it in the unwillingness of students to complain about a felt grievance to the Dean: I need his recommendation. I see it in the students lining up to take an easy course to raise their grade point. I see it in the blank and uneasy faces of my students when I pose a question requiring the application of an analytical skill. I see it, to re- peat, in their terrible question, ' What do you want? Where does this all lead? It leads to further questions. What is there about our society which makes an educational institution behave in a certain way to survive? What is the connection between society and college in our society? Or, better yet, what kind of society would sustain an institution dedicated to learning? These are questions around which learning could take place. These are questions which we should be concerned with as students and faculty. These are questions which need to be an- swered. They are questions which lead to action. And action based on understanding and judgement is the goal of learning. — Neal Bushoven j 48 OPtNIONS What is the relation of the black student to S.A.? Most of the nation ' s youth has been indoctri- nated with the White American ideal of self improvement through education (including the black mi- nority at St. Andrews). Through education, St. Andrews aids in the self-improvement process. None- theless, coupled with the construc- tive educational process at St. An- drews is a destructive one — that of forging a dichotomy in the per- sonality of the black students. ) OPINIONS 49 —  V-4 k Quite frequently, St. Andrews is unable to relate to its black stu- dents due to stereotyped ideas, lack of communication, and limited activities. This failure to relate fos- ters a dichotomy in the personality of the black students. This dicho- tomy in personality is manifested in the assumption of two roles — that of a black person in relation to the St. Andrews community and that of a black person in relation to other blacks outside the St. Andrews community. The assumption of a black identity in relation to the St. Andrews community compels blacks to be curious and to ques- tion, not only ideas, but people. Moreover, St. Andrews requires blacks to examine themselves as well. The new role compels blacks to examine whites — their motiva- tions and actions. Blacks are not deceived by the white girl who only dates brothers ; nor by the great white liberal who so willingly gives his one free day a week to tutor in Washington Park. Therefore, blacks demand that they are ac- cepted for their individual merits 50 OPINiONS rather than those persistent stere- otypes such as outstanding physi- cal prowess. Consequently, not wishing to be absorbed by the white culture of St. Andrews, which would make blacks more or less subject to pre- vailing stereotypes, black students isolate themselves. In their isola- tion the black students share a common identity and are able to maintain some semblance of a black culture on campus. This iso- lation is a way of rejecting middle- class life-styles. Though the black students accustom themselves to the middle-class conveniences in their daily lives, they can not forget the poverty and ghettos that exist among their own people outside the community of St. Andrews. They know their brothers and sisters exist outside the St. An- drews community and that they share a common cultural back- ground, but because of the middle- class values they are exposed to at St. Andrews, their relationship with blacks outside of St. Andrews is difficult to define. Invariably the black students feel that they have a sen ice to render to the outside black community but because they are in fact students at St. Andrews they are usually rejected by the community. Therefore, they are unable to relate to people who are just as black as they feel they are at St. Andrews. This is the dichotomy of person- ality the black students face simply because of St. Andrews ' image of being a middle-class educational system has caused others blacks to see them as superior. If the condi- tions did not exist, then the black students would be able to relate to this outside community and the barriers of misunderstanding would be broken. This relationship is difficult to define because the black student is unable to make this community aware that he really does not identify with this middle- class society; that he is indeed iso- lated. Thus, it can be seen that St. Andrews places the black student in a precarious situation. I J by: Dianne Ellison Elsie Mason Johnnie McLaughlin OPINIONS 51 m By Dave Beale. The Spiritual revolution is a change that comes about in a person when he realizes that the direction of his life can no longer be guided successfully by himself, but needs to be guided by someone else who can do a better job. That someone else is God. Some people here that have re- alized this revolution in their lives have been getting together to share what they believe and to get to know each other. Many times these people, including myself, have been referred to as Jesus Freaks, spiritual revolution- aries, or just plain fanatics. I find these references to my friends and me very humorous in the sense that at least a variety of names are used rather than one name which Keeps monotony from setting in. If I am going to be labelled, the label does not make a great deal of dif- ference to me so long as it is a cor- rect label. I cannot answer for others, but as for myself, of course I am a fa- natic. My life is totally devoted to God. If I were not a fanatic about God, I would be a complacent Christian, and for me complacency is the beginning of mediocrity, I am a Jesus Freak, too. It is not con- sidered to be cool or very intelli- gent to stand up now and say with sincerity, I believe in God. So many people who say they believe in God do not act like it, and many do not believe in God at all. For this reason, I and my Christian friends stand out. We are odd and different — freaks. It is hard to stand out because scorn rains down on you. Obviously a strong and active faith in God is going to make others un- comfortable and angry. Being referred to as a spiritual revolutionary is acceptable, too. I feel I have had a spiritual revolu- tion in my life; but one cannot have a revolution take place in himself and confine it to one section of his life. That change has been and is 52 OPINIONS smm XifT .•v ■ ' r r ' now spreading to other parts of my life, so that instead of just being spiritually revolutionized, I am being completely revolutionized. My relations to other people have become better. I am able to cope better vi ith my personality problems, I am more confident, and I am less arrogant and obnoxious than I used to be. As time passes. I improve on these things and oth- ers. Although all these good things are happening to me, I still get down sometimes, just like everyone does. Here, then, is another thing that the love of God through Christ is doing for me. When I get down, I am unhappy, frustrated, and dis- gusted with myself: but now with God in my life, I know that no mat- ter how I feel or what I do. He is still there. He will take care of me. Man, that ' s fantastic! Just to know that gives me a new way in which I can look at my life. This year, one of my friends told me that he would not be able to be around me if he did not believe in the love of God. His father is a ca- reer Marine who instilled in his son a prejudice against long hair. I could not stand him either, for I had a prejudice against short hair. We would not have been able to talk to each other if we did not share the same belief. Our belief in God gives us something to share and makes it possible to overcome these prejudices. That is one way God works through me. As a group, the Christians here on campus would not be a group if they all were not Christians. The people in it are so radically different except for their common belief in God. OPINIONS ; 53 ' ■ ' m mM This belief is not ideal; it is a pragmatic, real thing. 1 would not be a true Christian if I said I be- lieved In God and did not do any- thing about it. I would be a hypo- crite if I did that. I am not perfect. I do not always do what I should do or am supposed to do, but I try to; and because I never stop trying, some of the things I try to do be- come successful and complete. What do all these things I have said have to do with St. Andrews and our role as students here? It means that we need to be getting more involved in school politics, if such a thing exists. If we as Chris- tians are not relating to our envi- ronment and other humans, then Christianity is useless. It means that instead of talking about how bad everything is, we try to do things that will make this school and the surrounding community better. How can we do that? We can, as some Christians here are doing already, help with a Boy Scout troop, tutor children, provide food, money, or labor for the Free Breakfast Program in Laurinburg; teach a Sunday School class at one of the churches, direct a choir in a church, play the organ or piano in a church; be a friend to an older person who has no other friends; help plant, take care of, harvest, and distribute vegetables freely to the poor or needy in Laurinburg; and give a kid a chance to swim or to play basketball in a nice gymnasium. There are many other things one can do that are not listed here. One can also become involved in his dorm. One can be a suite leader, residence court member, dorm president, or vice- president, or even a dorm man- ager. One can become active in one of the student body offices or in one of the many advisory com- mittees appointed on campus. There are so many things people can do to help that it takes a while to decide what to do. 54 OPINIONS ; — - p -. — . i 0 r When the administration or any group does something that goes against our principles and beliefs, it is our duty to let them know that we feel they have done wrongly. For example, a Christian friend of mine disagreed with the adminis- tration ' s decision to let the Mor- row ' s contract run out. What did he do? He talked to several m embers of the administration, told them he disagreed with their action, and asked them for the reasons behind what they did. The administration ' s reasons satisfied my friend; but the point is, this guy became involved and demanded reasons for some- thing done with which he dis- agreed. If enough people agree with you when you disagree with a decision, then you can probably change what has happened. Action is the word and the answer. Talk, as usual, is cheap. So talk must be backed up by concrete actions for the Christian. One ' s beliefs mean nothing if one does not do some- thing with them. For those of you who read what I have said here and have not tried what I speak of, try it before you criticize and pass judgement. Give the love of God a chance; God will give you one. For those who al- ready believe in God, I ask you, precisely what are you doing with your belief in God? Believing in God does not mean a thing, unless you prove it, to God, to others, and to yourself. OPINIONS 55 •- - ' Tii ' -i — , I iv- -r4 k 57 = . ' =sjr- — .- r ' v- ri 9 58 s I I S i 11 a l I } 1 1 rW 4- ■taMMU 61 r- sjT ' T— ■. r Iff— -!!■ 62 i tMT It is the peculiar dilemma of the President of the College that he must keep in step with several drum beats, from the quiet roll of the Trustees to the staccato of the student body. This difficult task has been performed for two years by S.A. ' s President, Or. Donald J. Hart. President Hart ' s arrival two years ago was accompanied by procla- mations of new lines of communi- cation between students and ad- ministration. That these new lines have yet to be found, or have worked only moderately well, is perhaps due as much to a hardening of attitudes on the part of the students as to administrative neglect. What has been apparent in Dr. Hart ' s administration is a refreshing atti- tude toward education in genera and towards student involvement in particular. Dr. Hart brings to S.A. a determination to continue in the rejection of dogma, and the courage to welcome innovation. He repre- sents a continuing dedication to the qualities which have made St. An- drews unique. 66 PRESIDENT HART PRESIDENT HART 67 - '  ■■ A.B. from Davidson College, M.A. Rhodes scholarship from the University of South Caro- lina, Ph.D. from Oxford; first to be named to the Davidson College chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, author, editor, professor, dean, and schol- ar. Robert F. Davidson, Dean of the College, is a member of the intel- ligentsia, a man who has spent the majority of his life in the academic world — learning, teaching, and co-ordinating the academic affairs of St. Andrews so that others might profit. Hiding behind a facade of smiles since coming to S.A. in 1962, Dean Davidson has taken pride in his work and a rare, involved interest in the academic progress of indi- vidual students. He has efficiently executed the various functions of his position, from handling of facul- ty affairs to co-ordinating educa- tional policy. His skills have added much to the administrations of both Presidents Moore and Hart, and to S.A. as an intellectual community. His presence will be missed, his absence felt. 68 DEAN DAVIDSON - ; ; i iig£ s ; %-: DEAN DAVIDSON 69 - ' ' - ' I iy- J-H c C ' Dr. Rodger W. Decker, the Dean of Students, is a man who wears many hats on the St. Andrews campus. Besides presiding over the recently reorganized Office of Stu- dent Personnel Services, Dr. Deck- er kept his mental muscles toned in his chosen field by conducting a class in Introduction to Human Be- havior. Dean Decker is a man with a phrase and a grasp for every cir- cumstance. He is a man whose ef- forts to seize control in touchy sit- uations are always felt, a man who gives his all to every activity or project. Even during those ail-too frequent (or all - too - infrequent) times of crisis, Dean Decker seems to be everywhere with his smile and famous, meaty handclasp. We know that sometimes the smile may be forced and that the handclasp falls short of true communication, but the fact that he makes the effort is proof that, even when he is exas- perated, puzzled, and maddened by our seemingly inexplicable and insupportable actions, he actually has what he conceives to be our best interests and welfare at heart. 70 DEAN DECKER Dean McNair returned this fall to begin his second year as the Assistant Dean of Stu- dents. Expanding his duties, the Dean offered counseling services for those who had low draft num- bers and deferments that were ex- piring. The Dean was available to those who needed a listening ear and some thoughtful, constructive advice. In addition to his adminis- strative role, Dean (VlcNair also co- taught Psychology 200 with Miss Carolyn Snyder and Dean Decker, in hopes of imparting some of the knowledge he had collected over the years at Columbia University and through experience, to fresh- men and a few interspersed upper classmen. Periodically signs would appear in the stair wells of the dorms an- nouncing that a dorm inspection would occur shortly. It was always a reasonable guess that the order had descended from the Dean, hint- ing that it was either time to get the rooms cleaned up and back in order, or to get rid of the herds of pets that had accumulated since the last dorm inspection. Dean IVlcNair ' s silent presence could always be felt whether he was fulfilling administrative duties in his glass walled office, walking down the stairs to confer with one of the counselors or striding across the causewalk. i ' ' J DEAN McNAIR 71 1 r— T- , -J !iias_ -1 BELOW: Mrs. Alice McKenzie. RIGHT: Mr. Robert Urie. 35 PB9 ' ' The V.R.A. moved upstairs this Fall. The newly arranged counseling offices are lo- cated in the Offices of Student Per- sonnel Services, where handicap- ped students can easily reach the services provided. Mr. Robert Urie is the Director of t h e Rehabilitation Project and Health Services available at S.A. Mr. Urie, himself handicapped, is able to relate to others in similar situations, and in doing so is able to help them adjust to their condi- tion and to the S.A. curriculum and atmosphere. Co-worker and Super- visor of Aides, Mrs. Alice McKenzie, helps recruit and train those aides necessary to help the handicapped. The VRA this year was able to acquire six electrical doors to be distributed around campus allowing the now famous S.A. wheelie squad to gain entrance to various build- ings with considerable ease. 72 VRA The College Pastor ' s Office is filled again by Dr. Robert Davenport, returned to us from a year of study. Dr. Davenport ' s office has become one of thie most popu- lar visiting grounds on campus, and the flocks flock in record numbers fo r vi ords of vidsdom, inspiration, and comfort. In addition to his duties as Of- ficial Crying Shoulder, Dr. Daven- port conducted the regular Chapel Services, held each vs eek in the Student Union Alcove. Attendance this year was phenomenal in com- parison to past years, and Dr. Dav- enport ' s realistic approach to Chap- el Services made of them events actually worth attending. Some- times the Chapel Services even outdrew C C. COLLEGE PASTOR 73 -3 ' ™ ' Tr- J. ' ; jr-i ,i ■w— im . vs: BLACfC Anyone who has spent any time on the campus of an American college in the last ten years knows that the pressures on the students have become tremen- dous. St. Andrews is, to a certain extent, an exception; but only in a degree. The pressure is there, the frustration is there, the alienation is there. Unless we choose to es- cape reality with drugs or booze, we have to live with the pressures — it is not always easy. When the individual comes down with his or her particular problem of low grades, unsympathetic profs, or unyielding parents, the Counsel- ing Service stands ready. The Counseling Service consists of the gruesome threesome (Dr. Daven- port, Mrs. Overholser, and Mr. Vann Joines) plus one — Miss Ida Malloy — who is always available when the others ' schedules are filled. The Counseling Service is one of the busiest institutions on campus. Perhaps it is because we are be- coming more frustrated; perhaps we just ain ' t the men our daddies wuz; or perhaps the competence of the Counseling Service is just beginning to become public knowl- edge. For whatever reason, the vol- ume of counseling going on is elo- quent testimony to the effe ctiveness of the Counseling Service. What their magic is, no one can say for sure. But when someone comes for help, the very least that is offered is a listening and sym- pathetic ear. Often that is enough. 74 COUNSELING SERVICES LEFT: Miss Ida Malloy, Counseling Secre- tary. BELOW: Mrs. Grace Overholser, Col- lege Counselor. BOTTOM: Rev. Vann Joines, Assistant to the College Pastor. COUNSELING SERVICES 75 r ■ i - r An area on the S.A. campus previously unknown, ignored, or forgotten by many is ttie Presbyterian Guidance Center. Headed by Dr. Alfred E. Ttiomas, the Guidance Center is one of four counseling centers within North Carolina approved by the American Board of Counseling Services. Op- erating under a special agreement with St. Andrews, the Guidance Center offers structured programs of counseling, testing, and occupa- tional-educational research for any St. Andrews student desiring the services. Functioning on a walk-in or re- ferral basis, the Guidance Center serves over 200 S.A. students an- nually. In addition to S.A. students, over 800 high school students and adults also utilize the facilities pro- vided. TOP: Dr. Alfred Thomas. Director. CEN- TER: PsychometrisI Kathleen Davis super- vises a test session. BOTTOM: Elmer Patton and Lucylle Keyion watch as Dr. Thomas talks with a student. 76 GUIDANCE CENTER iiiiHftfafttv pminn M Um WEL BfU -PMSBmRm- mohmaNm PB i im I GUIDANCE CENTER 77 ; i— f -w- r BELOW: Mrs. Christine Hannas. RIGHT: Capt. James H. Roberson, US Army Re- cruiter, tallfs with students during October demonstrations. BOTTOM: Mr. Jim Ollis. Mr. Jim Ollis, former P. E. coach, has moved his blue car with the Vice President, United States Jaycees sign on the door to the opposite side of the traffic circle. Mr. Ollis now resides in the Office of Student Personnel Services as Director of the Student Union Building. One of the little rooms on the main floor of Big Jim ' s domain is the Placement Office, run this year by Acting Placement Officer Mrs. Christine Hannas. The Placement Office witnessed the year ' s first demonstrations in October as the Progressive Coalition took on the United States Army Recruiting Ser- vice. Peace prevailed and only verbal punches flew, and the Place- ment Office settled back into the routine of finding jobs that some- body really wants. i 78 ADMINISTRATION 9 OC ' OOIO ooFoo c The most popular and frequent pilgrimage on campus is the daily excursion to the Student Union Post Office. Behind the wall of mini-doors lurks Mrs. Leora Da- vis, who has S.A. ' s best opportu- nity for measuring the depth of af- fection of distant lovers by the vol- ume, weight, and sometimes the fragrance of mail. Mrs. Davis ' ef- ficient operation of the Post Office in the face of the usual list of mete- orological hazards has earned her the gratitude of all of S.A. ' s lonely hearts. Of the several commercial as- pects of the College, the one which touches the student most often and most directly is the Student Book- store, located in the Student Union Building. The bookstore is a con- venient place to buy needed sup- plies, both personal and academic, and is the only place in Laurinburg where books without racy pictures can be bought. Due to the monopoly of text book sales which the book- store holds, the effect of the book- store on S.A. students is considera- ble: Some think it too considerable. Despite the ravenous cash reg- ister at the door, a visit to the book- store can sometimes be a pleasant experience, thanks to the bookstore personnel, Mrs. Betty Jo Patton and Mrs. Mildred Maynor. TOP: Mrs. Leora Davis. CENTER: Mrs. Betty Jo Patton. BOTTOM: Mrs. Mildred Maynor. STUDENT SERVICES 79 The friendly people you see all over the campus doing weird things to buildings, bushes, and lamp posts are the personnel of the Maintenance Department, headed by Mr. Harold Babcock. Whether a room needs painting, the air conditioner needs adjusting, or a light bulb needs replacing, these are the men we call on. These are the men who do the things we are too busy, squeamish, or educated to do for ourselves. When they are not pampering the students, the men of the Main- tenance Department apply their considerable technical knowledge to keeping the physical plant of the College functioning. The magnitude of this task explains the little carts which speed dangerously around campus all day, making the cause- walk look like an outdoor Lincoln Tunnel. We have yet to lose a stu- dent to a hit-and-run Cushman. TOP: Mr. Harold Babcock, Director of Phy- sical Plant. ABOVE: Tighten Up: Mrs Bessie Murray, Meek; Mrs. Flora Jane Har- ris. Orange. RIGHT: Mrs. Lena McDaniel Liberal Arts Building. 80 MAINTENANCE TOP CENTER: Mr. Lacy M. Gay. TOP RIGHT: Mr. Jacques C. Reville. Chief of Security. BOTTOM: Mr. James H. Jacl son. Courageous! Loyal! Dedicated! Fearless! Protectors of the Weak, Guardians of tfie Peace, Defenders of the Faith! Such words and phrases can only describe the tireless, diligent, keen-eyed, wide- awake, uncorruptible, granite-like Campus Cops of the SA Security Force. These men are paragons of virtue, living examples of the American Ideal. Only men such as these can be trusted with the awe- some task of protecting our tender young minds and bodies from the onslaughts of friend and foe. They also give out parking tickets. i SECURITY FORCE 81 .f iy-T«-  . L¥ ABOVE: Julian M. Davis, Business Manager. RIGHT: Robert L. Chaiken. Assistant Trea surer. Jewel W. Peacock, Cashier. Hectic offices are not rare on the SA campus, but during certain periods the Busi- ness Office is in a class by itself The financial wizardry which manges to keep the lights on and the parking tickets tallied is stretched to the last cat claw when checks go out, bills come in, and screaming students line up for change — all at once. Proaedural and organizational refinements are now being insti- tuted by SA ' s new Business Man- ager, Mr. Julian M. Davis, and some of the turmoil shows signs of subsiding. This was the first full year in the new offices, which have also contributed to the increasing quiet. And, in spite of SA ' s financial diffi- culties, the checks still don ' t bounce. 82 BUSINESS OFFICE ABOVE: Mr. John Craig, Registrar. LEFT: Miss Terry Riddle, one of the student em- ployees in the Registrar ' s Office. BOTTOM: Miss Mary W. McNeill, Director of Finan- cial Aid. Green cards, white cards, all computer punched cards to be surrendered at the end of the infinitely long registration line. The Registrar ' s Office is the headquar- ters for the academic side of the campus. It is here that the courses are coordinated, the place they meet assigned, who will meet in them designated, and at what time they will convene decided. Inevi- tably, the courses needed for the semester by individual students conflict with each other, thus send- ing them scurrying — often for miles at a time — with a drop add slip to locate their mysteriously vacationing advisors. And just as inevitably they eventually accumu- late at the Registrar ' s Office be- sieging John Craig until he sur- renders a solution. In a somewhat more secure po- sition, hidden away in an office within an office, is Miss Mary Wells McNeill, Director of Financial Aid, who provides loans, scholarships, and workships to deserving stu- dents. ADMINISTRATION 83 Li v TOP: Mrs. Selah Ann Stephens. CENTER: Mrs. Blllie Lane. BOTTOM: The SA Health Center, on the edge of the woods. The St. Andrews Health Center is always the object of much criticism, valid and invalid. Nevertheless, the Health Center exists to serve the students, even if the service stops with two aspirin and a glass of water. For the few unlucky souls who have had to spend a night in the Health Center, the name conjures up memories of endless pills and impossible sleep, thanks to one of the campus ' many hard-rock bands which rehearses next door. Rare indeed is the patient who feels sick enough to spend two nights in the Health Center. 84 HEALTH SERVICES The Cafeteria is the focus of three mass marches every day, and Saga Food ' s Jim Samuels does his best. Neverthe- less, it is often noticed by visitors that students v alk more slowly after eating than before. Rumor has it that Saga is offering a prize to the student who can cor- rectly identify the food. The exist- ence of this prize is still debatable, however, since no one has yet been brave enough to guess. In spite of the food, visits to the cafeteria are pleasant diversions from the day ' s routine. Here we meet with, talk to, and sometimes bombard our friends and enemies, with few thoughts to the cafeteria workers who have to clean up our slop. (There is a theory that since most SA students are relatively af- fluent and used to a certain amount of decorum at home, table manners have deteriorated to a disgusting degree as a manifestation of rebel- lion. Who cares?) It is these work- ers, from the cooks to the dish- washers, who manage to serve us with food that is clean and effi- ciently prepared, even if it is almost inedible. They deserve better thanks than food fights. SAGA 85 .1 iy-rf- «k DeTamble Library is the place people go at ttie last possible minute. Like 9:30 (P.M.) to write a twenty-page research pa- per due at 9:00 (A.M.). There are several reasons for all the vacant space: some devil has located the heating control and is trying to get a head start on Hell: the open de- sign of the building ' s interior in- sures that the blink of every eye eventually gets around to every ear; and, the shelf content, while improving, is far from complete. The rumor that no one can read at SA is definitely false. Clockwise: Mrs. Lietz, Mrs. Holmes. Mrs Hix, Mrs. Ludlow. 86 DeTAMBLE LIBRARY .■piw I TOP LEFT: J. Bruce Frye, Development Of- ficer. TOP RIGHT: Fowler Dugger, Director of News and Publications. CENTER: Charles E. Parrish, Director of Alumni Af- fairs. BOTTOfVt: John H. Campbell. Public Information Officer. Hidden away by the Riding Club ' s stables is a group of enterprises collectively known as the Development Office. It is from here that money is raised by the College, Public Relations is han- dled, and Alumni Affairs are di- rected. The most that we ever hear from this office is an occasional memo, a strange newspaper which ap- pears several times a year, and letters to our parents. But wait until we have graduated, gotten old, and made money! I . ' 3. ' iixTr-, A iy-rf-f The faculty at SA is an interesting conglomerate. It contains people who are not only competent, but are sensitive to changing conditions and realities, and who act and teach accordingly. Unfortunately, the faculty also holds a few mental Neanderthal men, but they are in the minority and there are ample means of get- ting around and or ignoring them, so that they do not do too much harm. Faculty prestige measured in academia by position, tenure, publications, etc. — does not mean much to the SA student. Few of us know what our teachers have or have not written. More im- portant is what they can teach us. Most of the faculty is likewise con- cerned. Mr. George Fouke has only been at SA two years and yet stu- dents fight for space in his courses. Among students, Mr. Fouke is one of the most influential faculty members. This is not because he is easy (which he is not) or be- cause he bends to student opinion (which he does not), but because he gets things across in a way which makes learning a meaningful experience. The same could be said for many, many other faculty members. The opposite could be said of a few. The faculty — individually and collectively — is always on stage, especially in a small community such as St. Andrews. The students cannot help being sensitive and concerned in faculty matters. Fa- culty politics is always one of the most colorful shows around, and prof watching takes the place of football as SA ' s major spectator sport. The excitement was high this year, and while the students can only see the smoke ri sing from the volcano, the rumblings were loud enough to generate intensified in- terest. When the smoke cleared, (oddly enough, it was just around contract time) we were aware of only some of the turmoil which had just subsided. The relations between students and faculty are close and good. Of course, the ratio, and the relation- ship, is not what it should ideally be. No student-faculty ratio is ever ideal except in those rare Aristotle- Alexander instances. But most of the many transfer students at SA will compare our faculty favorably with those at other schools. There is an openness and friendliness about the SA faculty. The fa- mous hauteur usually associated with self-appointed demigods is rare. Whether that is because our faculty is not the type which insists that faculty always begin with a capital F, or because the SA student is not taken in by mere self-esteem, is not important. The fact remains that, for the student who knows which profs to listen to and which to write off as complete wastes, the SA faculty is a mme waiting to be dug. FACULTY 89 -r - ■ xr..f ly if-y E5 THIS PAGE: Below: Dr. Donald Barnes, Chemistry and Physics. Bottom: Dr. Arthur Applegate. Biology. OPPOSITE PAGE: Top: Dr. Carl Bennett, English. Bottom Left: Mr. Ron Bayes, English, Writer-in-Residence. Bottom Right: Mr. Aaron Earl Blair. Botany. 90 FACULTY ffiWTMmgWMT ' ' [ifiiHir , ' riiiafrrff FACULTY 91 -Mi -r ■ ' ssr r-, •, !- ■ t K TOP: Spencer S. Boyd, Physical Education. ABOVE: Linda H. Boyd. Mathematics. RIGHT: Monique H. Brockman, French. 92 FACULTY LEFT: Neal Bushoven. Politics. BELOW: Dr. Leslie Bullock, Religion. Division Chair- man. BOTTOM: Mr. Robert Carlile. English. FACULTY 93 -tM - y •  yr-v,r ly-rf- 94 FACULTY ' ' ' FACULTY 95 ' ay-grr -r -w-J-r iS 96 FACULTY ?(i L -nk ' BELOW: Dr. J. Rodney Fulcher, History, Divisiort Chairman. LEFT: George L. Fouke, Polillcs. BOTTOM: Dr. Robert F. Eastman, Psycliology. FACULTY 97  ■ -1 r?— ' T irrr-.r ir- rm TOP: Carl W. Geffert, German. BOTTOM: R. Gerald Griffin. Physical Education. 98 FACULTY 7 . , ._. ' . ;i ' ; tp f ' nf ip XX N 5 TOP: Jeffrey T. Gross. Englisfi. LEFT: Dr. Rufus Hackr)ey. Athfetic Director, Physical Educalion. ABOVE: Metin N. Gurol. Busi- ness and Economics. FACULTY 99 ..■fT yii!Ci:U ' il-3f-f 100 FACULTY TOP LEFT: Dr. Douglas Hix, Christian Thought, Director ol Christianity and Cul- ture. TOP RIGHT: Dr. Harry Harvin. History and Politics. BOTTOM: John E. Haluska. Computer Science. fk c V TOP: Dr. Herbert Horn. Piano. LEFT: Dr. James D. J. Holmes, Business. ABOVE: Betty S. Johnson. Sociology. FACULTY 101 J .. ' zr ' - azu i M-jt-t ot. ABOVE: Robbin K. Kinne, Physical Educa- tion. RIGHT: Dr. Charles W. Joyner, His- tory. 102 FACULTY L .. LEFT: L. Spencer Ludlow. Jr.. Philosophy. BELOW: Dr. Stuan A. Marks. Anthropology. BOTTOM: Thomas W. Lott. Spanish. FACULTY 103 jm . t -- -arcTr.f 1 1- ! TOP: Leta W. Mclntyre, Business Educa- tion. ABOVE: Dr. George E. Melton. His- tory. RIGHT: Arthur W. McDonald, Division Chairman, Speech and Theatre. 104 FACULTY TOP: Dr. David A. McLean, Anthropology. ABOVE: Dr. G. Tyler Miller. Jr., Chemistry. LEFT: Dr. William H. Morgan, Mathematics. FACULTY 105 ..d -im - 0 . MTT-. f 1 ABOVE: Lance F. Morrow, History and Pol- itics, and Margot D. Morrow, History and Politics. RIGHT: Derek S. Myers, Art. 106 FACULTY i TOP: Dr. Catharine E. Neylarts. French. LEFT: Dr. Robert A. Pedigo, Biology, Divi- sion Chairman. ABOVE: Steven F. Powell, Mathematics. FACULTY 107 .ry-- -aarK-i .f ft- ri ABOVE LEFT: David G. Singleton. Mathe- matics. ABOVE RIGHT: Mark L. Smith, Art. BOTTOM: Dr. Alvin H. Smith. Division Chairman. Psychology. FACULTY 109 : B f - -trr-- -atrt .-r • v- fK. BELOW: Dr. Clarence E. Styron, Jr., Biol- ogy. RIGHT: Thomas C. Somerville, Music. BOTTOM: Dr. James F. Stephens, Chemis- try. I 110 FACULTY kWUl. TOP: George W. Weimar, Music. A BOVE: Cornelius M. Swart, Education. LEFT: Grace W. Templeton, Education. FACULTY 111 -inrs r 17-rf- TOP LEFT: Jo Ann Williams. Physical Ed- ucation. TOP RIGHT: John E. Williams. Organ. BOTTOM LEFT: Dr. W. D. White, English and Religion, Division Chairman. BOTTOM RIGHT: Dr. David E. Wetmore, Chemistry. 112 FACULTY I . .rsasjjii- f .. The St. Andrews ' College Choir is the touring en- semble of the choral program. In January, the College Choir toured England and Scotland, singing in Cambridge, Liverpool and London in England; and in Edinburgh, St. Andrews, Aberdeen and Glasgow in Scotland. In addition to their tour program, the College Choir pre- sented two campus concerts in the spring: a pops matinee featur- ing selections from Oliver, Hair, Jesus Christ Superstar, and musical setting of poetry by Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost. The College Choir combined with the St. Andrews Chorale in the presentation of Haydn ' s Creation. The College Choir also led a chapel worship in the spring. 116 CHOIR ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ■ ' ' ' ■ ' ' Baangsj JL w ' W The St. Andrews ' Chorale served as the oratorio en- semble this year, combining with the Laurinburg Community Chorus at Christmas to present Handel ' s Messiah, and combining with the St. Andrews College Choir in the spring to present Haydn ' s Creation. The Chorale also serves as prepa- ration for membership in the Col- lege Choir, and a number of Cho- rale members entered the College Choir in the spring. I J -: ; jjj ' TfA The Student Cab- inet is the executive agency of the Student Association. It is com- posed of the Student Association officers, the presidents of the Stu- dent Union Board and the Student Christian Council, and a represen- tative of the Senate. The Cabinet theoretically coordinates student activities at the executive level. RIGHT: Left to right: Craig Barton, Joe Grebner. Ken Watkins, Betty Boykin. Rick Skutct). Jimmy Sleptiens. 118 STUDENT CABINET At sports events the S.A. Cheerleaders consistently filled those gapping moments In play known as ■time out. With catchy and witty, but frequently unintelligible chants, all too often they were asked to try and arouse an unenthused crowd of spectators with their short skirts, high kicks, handstands. Their boundless cour- age was, on occasion put to test, as they heroically flung themselves between the home fans and a near- sighted ref, or a wrong-doer of the other team, or even a coach thought not to be acting in a coachly manner. But, in either ex- tremity, the cheerleaders always tried to guide the energy (or lack of energy) Into vociferous support for the home team. Front Row. Left to Rigtit: Debbie Venable, Valerie Hastings. Leslie Downey. Back Row: Diane Downey. Jean Noland. Dairlyn Chelette. Vickie Koser. CHEERLEADERS 119 _.. z:; J l m JJiJ-nf-f :. Next to the Lance in halfassness is the Calm — St. Andrews ' student-run literary publication, manned by an incom- petent and uncreative staff of doped-up pretenders to Laurln- burg ' s avant garde. Attempting to combine graft, mismanagement and misappropriation of funds with ut- ter confusion, the editorial staff manages to stumble forth with two regurgitations or editions per year, usually late and seldom seen by the general campus public. As a satis- fled Cairn customer once put It, you call this poetry? Anybody who ' d publish a book like this ought to be shot. He ' s probably right about the summary execution, but In any event, we do call It poet- ry- the cairn staff Right: Kennie Stuart, Mat Braly, Wayne Warren, Ames Arnold, and kneeling, Todd Davis, Bruce Stuart, John Lawson. 120 The College Civi- tan Club is a service organization sponsored by the Laurinburg Civi- tan Club. Under tlie leadership of president Denny Dodson, the club conducted a re-organization which should facilitate an expanded pro- gram next year. 1970-71 was not completely idle, however. The club conducted a mixed nuts campaign and went trick-or-treating for UNI- CEF. CIVITAN 121 -r3 -3tSXJf-jf i . Aod£AftT ' h ' -:- :-- - ' ' - . ' .;: ■f= 3=F s r R£Fai lo k ' y f ' ' K m f? E fif w r T = i j ' i -, r r ' T rlT r g r s r w i (n P ) r ' i r j i  f xe , i ckMm ! Ai «. I 1 i i 1 L. r J 4. f =  . 9«hlni«r :i«. ' NtwTjrS d S via Ntt. S - Prtit « 1b tk« D. B. A iKPii C ) V J J ' r r f 1 f ' — 5 — rr r ■ - ,J J. j ,. ' ' ,f - V V ■ - =T i ' d ' i i i i 2__ •f f f J i ;■ J W = J J- ■,-x o £ vou  Ht 3 T •ry-r- 5- ' fl  -h ! V£)ir r ' 2 £i 3E3 1 ? f -y Tr- ?- 1 «: r=?T ' r ... 2ii -TS ' iSZJf- V. The Elections Board conducts elections of student gov- ernment officers and supervises referendums on amendments to the student government constitution. Martin Walker was this year ' s Chairman, and the Board was filled out by Sally Neil, Charlie Pratt, Gail Calloway, Henry DelTosto, John Roper, and Don Stroud. These public servants are cursed with the task of carting the ballot boxes around campus, but it ' s worth it. After the votes are counted, some lucky Bo ard member gets the priv- ilege of calling WSAP to announce the results. 124 ELECTION BOARD IHMPfl a ™ ' ' ' ' ' -- ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • ' ' The Gun Club is made up of those students who want to keep firearms on campus for various purposes. Mostly, these students limit their activities to hunting and target shooting. Thank God for small favors! The Gun Club oversees the use of the college ' s gun lockers, pro- motes gun safety on campus, and is generally always ready to defend the Country in case of invasion by the Swiss National Militia. GUN CLUB 125 fcjjy.- -- J . tT: j:sr e uLM- n _ Farrago was one of the few, if not the only organization on this side of the campus, that provided constant entertainment of a consistent quality throughout the year. Farrago finally found a perma- nent home this year in the old art building. With the help of dedicated members, most of the redecorating that required doing was accom- plished. Apart from the physical aspect of the building was the entertainment side of the operation. Joining the coffee-house circuit enabled Far- rago to not only display domestic- ally cultivated talent, but talent that was imported as well . . . providing entertainment for a campus that requires external stimulants in order to be entertained. w t-H ?5U Mk.Jm mjf h H %,. ' f ■ OSi f Br: ' Uit k hi f m 0 ' 126 A k Left: Mrs. Overholser, Mary Lynn Munday, Larry Byrne, Pattie Pledger, Mac CrosswelL ' l ' One of the first items issued to the new freshmen upon their arrival on the campus is the S.A. handbook, the Saltire. Traditionally, while still dazed at being in college, the freshmen have been commanded to read and memorize the words of wisdom that include the Constitution and its amendments, the code of rules the community members are in theory supposed to abide by, and a list of the clubs and services of- fered on the campus with a sum- mary of their purpose and func- tions. Working tediously into the summer in order to produce the exact phrasing found within the covers, their efforts were to little avail as the freshman class ' s apathy not only caused their re- fusal to read the book, but also caused the scheduled test to be called off. r i HANDBOOK COMMITTEE 127 KfTtf .i i y— jr :-, r iy- f . To call it a very good year for the Highland Players would be to understate the case. It was easily the most successful season the Players have ever pro- duced — and a memorable way to close the group ' s first decade of playmaking. Who could ever forget that five member quartet called the Apo- calypse, or Bill Forrest doing his own thing with fluttery birds and high kicks, or John Wayne swear- ing he could not tell the boys from the girls anyway? There was the largest cast that ever occupied our stage, with that Bible-beating bastard Brady col- lapsing in mid-speech, and That Old Time Religion, and Swanson, as Drummond, inheriting the wind and welcoming Forrest, as Horn- beck, as the Devil, to Hell. Then for those five glorious S.R.O. nights (a new record) we had a Hungarian Duncan Hines, a nervous mother, a phone man who did not want to be called back, a near-dead delivery man, and the fantastic Peggy Harp and Hugh Helm — who collectively ate kniches, swallowed pink pills, fought, made up, and walked bare- foot in the goddamn park. And finally Rosencrantz and Guildenstern played at questions, strutted and fretted their hour, and died — and the season came to a thoughtful close. HIGHLAND PLAYERS 129 .. nz SSa LAl-itfTt. 1 30 WSAP GIVE-AWAY Trying to outdo last year ' s aerial bombardment of the Holiday Inn, WSAP ' s K amakazi- in-residence, Bob Shurke dropped several hundred prize-winning sty- rofoam balls in the SA lake. Even before the balls had hit the water, students dove in and an amphibi- ous fleet was launched — all in the hopes of winning some of the booty. Other events of the day managed to keep the campus busy partici- pating, often without choice, in jello fights, scavenger hunts for wanted faculty and administration mem- bers and in kissing and body paint- ing contests. By the end of the WSAP Give- Away, the $3100 in prizes had been parcelled out and those who had gone swimming were able to pro- vide the STMS team sworn affida- vits concerning the lake ' s pollution. £2 Just a pickin away on their banjos and guitars, thie SA folk singers made ttieir presence known from time to time with the clarity of their songs. The official club sponsoring meeting was the Gum Swamp Pickers and Singers, but official get-togethers were far apart. Those who had an innate desire to practice or display their time-tried skills and express their feelings through songs gathered for semi-regular sessions of strum- ming, but even so they were more often spontaneous occurrences than not. GUM SWAMP PICKERS SINGERS 131 .acrr ' i rK .{ M- I k _ Judicial decisions approved by the President of the College are administered by the Judicial Committee, which is ap- pointed by the Attorney General and approved by the Senate. The Attorney General serves as Chairman of the Judicial Commit- tee. Other functions of the Judicial Committee are the investigation of all cases and the keeping of trial records. ABOME: Standing: Marvin Heery, Sally 1 Speer, Butch Stahlberger, Terry Riddle, l ■ ' Jane Blanchard, Craig Barton. Seated; Vickie Deck, Levis Bowden, Chuck Hard- esty, Larry Harding. 132 JUDICIAL COMMITTEE IHI ES gi LEFT: Standing: Sid Atldnson, Hewitt Gehres, Dave Bunn. and Mollie MacLeod, Chairwoman. Kneeling: Henry DelTosto John Roper. Sally Neil. The Student Judi- ciary Board is a group of students, elected by the student body, which functions each year under the illu- sion that it has judicial power in student matters, especially of- fenses involving the Honor Code. According to the Student Asso- ciation Constitution, the Judiciary Board makes recommendations to the President of the College or his own appointed representative. (Art. V, Sec. 5.) Presumably, the President follows the advice of the Board, but no one knows for sure since all meetings, trials, and rec- ommendations of the Board are kept secret. For a related illusion, see page 149. JUDICrAL BOARD 133 f:7 ' r - rx A ' J- f _ The closed huddle, fourty-two. fifty-three . . . hike, the snap of the ball, the handoff, the drive around the end linebacker, across the goal for another T.D., and a roar from the multitudes as the S.A. wheelies score again! Taking to their revised version of the gridiron, the S.A. wheelie squad continued in their efforts to prove that most games are adapt- able to any situation. While playing to keep their minds, bodies, and spirits active, they showed that there need be nothing considered immoral, amoral, uncouth, or wrong with a lively game of co-ed touch football. One veteran wheelie said after the game they were consider- ing taking up sky - diving next. m 134 WHEELIE FOOTBALL ■= ' g= ' 3miaMi ' Kg; The Lance, the school newspaper, was the object of two investigations by the Senate this year. The first occurred in September as the Senate struggled with its annual budget. At the sug- gestion of Hosea Jones, Senator for Winston Salem Hall, the Senate held a referendum on the Lance, from which the Lance emerged un- scathed. The referendum was repeated in December, and again the Lance was given a vote of confidence. This reaction on the part of the students did not mean that ever- yone was happy with the Lance. As usual, the Lance was unable to please everyone. Nevertheless, the suggestion by the Senate that the school could do without a news- paper was greeted by the students with an initial incredulity which soon turned to hostility toward the Senate — a hostility which was el- oquently displayed in the com- ments sections of the referendum ballots in a manner not fit for re- production in a family magazine such as this one. LEFT: Left to right: Charlie Pratt, Associate Editor: Marshall Gravely: Lonnie Burrell. Business Manager: Sara Lee. Editor: Hunter Watson: Mark Kleber. Sports Editor: Mike Reynolds: Mike McQuown, Photographer. NEWSPAPER 135 p.. p. ■ kt: s rtzAJi- iy The Mens ' Recreational Association kept the seasons active with intramural sports for those who failed to see the logic of, or lacked the time for, the strict training and discipline required for varsity sports. By co- ordinating and scheduling men ' s intramural sports this group helped the super-jocks, and the not-quite- super jocks to rack up points for their dorms. 136 MRA s m MS With the inaugura- tion of a new Code of Responsibili- ty in the Spring of 1970, the student courts of the college were faced with the enigma of interpreting the extent and meaning of the Code. The Mens Residence Court found itself faced with this predicament this year, and its decisions showed the court and its members to be well aware of the far-reaching ef- fects their interpretations of the Code would have on the students. What was once supposed to a rela- tively inconsequential judicial body of the student government has now become one of the most important courts on campus. With long hours of deliberation and concern for the college community, the Men ' s Res- idence Court has made a vague Code of Responsibility a very real and powerful set of laws. Top. left to right: Keith Hartke. Sally Speer, Rex McGuinn: Above, left picture, middle, Ron Hayden: Above: Van Joines. Jeff Ver- nooy: Left: Louis Swanson, Scott Brecken- ridge. MENS RESIDENCE COURT 137 . iM. ., r c ri j:M ' Ttn _ The Orientation Committee this year consisted of a devil-may-care group of escapees from thie S.A. funny farm. Co- ctiaired by Jim Pope and Cfieryl (Twiggy) Holt, this motley bunch of typical S.A.er ' s, set up activities to acquaint incoming freshman with the different opportunities both socially and academically that St. Andrews offers. The orientation was designed not only to give in- coming freshman and transfers knowledge of the physical localities of the buildings and services, but to also introduce them to a bit of college life and the normally cha- otic routine it follows. Clockwise: Louis Swanson, Carolyn Math- ews, Sid Atkinson, Twiggy Holt, Jennifer Brinson, Sara Hill, Jim Pope. 138 ORIENTATION COMMITTEE As part of the continuing efforts to instill a sense of cultural worth in its students, various programs, mainly initiated by the academic side of the cam- pus, brought speakers and poets, musicians and actors onto campus. In part, the intent of these pro- grams was to inform SA students of various movements and pro- blems that are occurring on a local, national, and international level. In addition to this function, the enter- tainers who performed hoped to extend a sense of proportion to contemporary trends in both art and literature. .irr ' -i rk ( if-Tf-rK. RIGHT: Mr. Robert Goralski, NBC News Washington Correspondent, addresses Parents ' Day Assembly. Parents ' Day is an annual event for which Davenport works overtime on behalf of sun- shine, and when faculty and ad- ministration personnel cross the lake to woo our parents. In addition to providing parents an opportunity to meet our mentors, Parents ' Day provides St. Andrews an opportu- nity to duly impress our parents, in hopes that they will send not only our little sisters and brothers, but some extra money as well. The highlight of Parents ' Day (not counting a steak at the HI) is the Dean ' s Cup Races, in which the more rambunctious residents of each dormitory make idiots of themselves in above-and or under- water boat races. The Cup was won this year by (who else?) Mighty Meek, thanks largely to the valiant efforts of Alan Coleman and Hewitt Gehres, and to the unnamed frog- men of another dormitory who managed to eliminate most of the competition. 140 PARENTS ' DAY _JL _- «i gry- t:ff Riding Club allows SA students to develop equestrian skills without having to leave campus. The Riding Club is open to all students and its facilities are available to members and their guests. This relatively new, but active organization teaches skills in riding as well as proper care and treatment of horses. Through raffles, timber sales, and lots of hard work, the Riding Club hopes to soon be established in its new facilities be- hind Granville Dorm. The facilities will include a new stable, meeting room, pasture, and riding areas, designed to be attractive as well as practical. Having come a long way in a short time, the Riding Club plans to go a lot further in the fu- ture. 142 RIDING CLUB ga :B3«3ii«giMPig - A hearty bunch of sea-farers, the SA sailing club bands together to dare the wiles of Lake Moore. Opportunities to raid coastal towns or to pirate ships fly- ing foreign flags, or even to dis- cover lands yet unfound are some- what limited by the land-locked physical nature of the lake. But these are not the reasons for the sailing club ' s existence. A light breeze often offers pleasant sailing and stiff winds, which are not un- known to SA, often add a great deal of challenge when coupled with the hazards of submerged or semi- submerged tree stumps. SAILING CLUB 143 _ IWk . ..r Zr ' ' l-Tf-f .. f =3 agg=av -3Af-«ta - ai-tc ' c TC _ — The Student Senate occupied the pinnacle of illussion- ary student power at SA. The main function of the Senate is the allo- cation of funds to the various stu- dent organizations. The Senate al- so passively acts as a screen for the administration ' s dictation of student policy. L i SENATE 145 trr -i- - yy .r n- rK. Above: Carolyn Matthews, Eddie Smith. Below: Craig Simmons, Maury Edwards. The financial strain that all organizations had to deal with this year also extended to the Student Center Board. Rick Skutch, president, and Tom Edge, vice-president, responsible for the funding, obtaining, and co-ordinat- ing of the calendar of campus en- tertainment during the year at- tempted to provide as many nights of activities with as wide a variety of events as possible. Starting off the first week with the big sounds of the Brooklyn Bridge seemed to dwarf those groups that followed during the remainder of the year. An increase in the quantity and quality of entertainment elicited by the Student Center Board is pos- sible for next year ... all that is needed is a $20 donation from all parents. I 146 STUDENT CENTER BOARD HiH Good-bye Spring Fling! Hello Bacchanalia! SA ' s spring cleaning this year included the sweeping out of the old idea of the big week-end, and the intro- duction of Bacchanalia, an updated Roman orgy of sorts, deriving its name from you-know-who. Festivi- ties began in the afternoon by the lake with motorcycle races, tugs of war, games, auctions, and beer. Dinnertime produced heaps of fresh roasted pigs, other goodies, and, of course beer. As evening progressed into night, the last drop of twenty kegs of beer was swilled to the round of frenzied bluegrass music. Despite the Schlitz girl ' s departure, Lucifer, a rock band, kept things going strong with high powered music and a light show. Old movies and Road Runner car- toons capped off an exhausting and very enjoyable day as Bac- chanalia established itself as a SA tradition. I J ACTIVITIES 147 _ . J . frr-- -strt r 19- rK. The SNCEA is not the Scrabble Club on campus. Those formidable initials stand for the Student North Carolina Educa- tion Association. The SNCEA is composed of those students who plan to go into the teaching pro- fession, and the club works closely with the Education Department in presenting workshops, speakers, and programs which prepare members for their future occupa- tion. I 148 SNCEA ilHf T t.Jik - — The Appelate Board is the highest judicial body of the College. Its function is to interpret the Constitution of the Student As- sociation and to hear appeals from lower judicial boards. The power of the Appelate Board, like that of the Judicial Board, is largely illusory, since the Appelate Board only makes rec- ommendations to the President of the College, or to his own ap- pointed representatives. (Art V Sec. 4.) TOP RIGHT: Martin Walker. LEFT: Carl W. Geflert. Faculty Representative: Charlie Pratt. Chairman: Dean David McNair, Ad- ministration Representative. BOTTOM: Dean McNair and Peggy Oliver. STUDENT-FACULTY APPELATE BOARD 149 - W- - - ' 1 • t- LLM- rx The Honor Society at St. Andrews recognizes those students of truly outstanding aca- demic performance. Full members are those who have maintained a 3.25 or better over-all average throughout their college career. Affiliate members of the Honor So- ciety must have maintained a 3.0 or better average. This spring, the Honor Society admitted a new type of member, the Associate Member. Associate Members are students who have not received ail of their credits while at St. Andrews, but have nevertheless kept an average of 3.0 or better. The Honor Society ' s activities this spring were highlighted at a banquet at which Dean Davidson delivered a speech on The Chris- tian College — Myth or Menace? Junior members of the Honor So- ciety serve as marshalls at gradua- tion exercises, and Seniors are honored at that time with honors or high honors, according to their academic standing. Top front: Sally Speer. Bottom. Left to Rigtit: Carolyn Warren. Janet Moses, Delia Durham. Sara Hill. Debbie Venable. Pat Carr. The Women ' s Recreational Association, led by Janet Moses, seek s a three-fold end. First to provide energy re- leasing events to relieve the frus- tration pent-up and caused by academics; second, to complement the hair dryer and mascara in the job of beautifying by helping to trim off excess pounds caused by Saga food; and finally, to provide activi- ties of fun and Interest to help break the monotony of watching t.v., studying, and dating. WOMEN ' S RECREATIONAL ASSOCIATION 151 This is your self-supporting campus radio sta- tion, WSAP, 640 on your A.M. radio dial; broadcasting from our newly renovated studios high atop the rise in the ground by the infirmary, complete with an ampex tape re- corder and an onslaught of DJ ' s that don ' t lack words which com- bined allows you to hear super-Sap 24 hours a day. Under sunny skies the WSAP time is now 12. midnight and the temperature is 140° so you better dress warmly for that first class. And now what you have all been waiting for, the WSAP number 1 moldy oldy going out to Van Penniger, Craig Simmons, Bob Schurke, Charger Charlie, Cherie McNeill, SAM, Randy Boyd, and Diane Downey: RUBBER DUCK- IE . . . (dead air). 152 WSAP mmm The Student Life Committee is a standing committee of the faculty with six student rep- resentatives and six faculty repre- sentatives. The powers of this committee are wide-ranging, due partly to their vague definition in the Faculty Handbook and the Student Association Constitution. The closest thing to a description of powers is found in the Saltire, which states that the SLC makes recommendations to, asks opinions of, and hears reports from any col- lege-related body; charters clubs, serves as a long-range planning group for student life; and develops policies and procedures necessary for a total program of student pub- lications. It is the long-range planning and the formulation of publications policies that make the SLC potentially dangerous. STUDENT LIFE 153 . -i- -jjn .cMi-j-ry The twice-yearly St. Andrews Review evolved from a germinal brainstorm on the part of our own agitator-for-art and poet-in-residence Ron Bayes. Not even pretending to go ttie slow, traditional route of struggling to its feet as a small, regionally-based arts and humanities magazine, it pushed immediately into the na- tional limelight, nudging its way between older, more staid and conservative magazines. This is the formula for immediate success or immediate failure, and the Review, after a fall and spring issue, is still enjoying the ravings of its enthusi- astic followers from across the country. In issue one, the editors bared their teeth with a sym pathet- ic and knowledgeable treatment of one of America ' s most controver- sial men of letters — Ezra Pound. Issue two hit hard again in the di- rection of ecology and scientific planning with works by and about R. Buckminster Fuller, including a ten page poem by the same. The Review ' s format of essays, poetry, music, fiction, graphics, letters, reviews, photography, and inter- views is a double-barrelled bom- barding of the senses edited by Bayes, with the help of a whole bevy of consulting editors and as- sociate editors, some of whom are also St. Andrews bred. M The scheduled retirement of Dr. Robert Davidson, Dean of the College, brougfit about the creation of the Committee in Search of a Dean. With both faculty and students represented, this committee had the task of finding a suitable replacement for the number two position in the admini- stration. Candidates for the posi- tion reached a number unexpected by the administration and included not only applicants from outside the college but also from among the SA faculty. Ultimately, any final candidate agreed upon by the faculty and student representatives in conjunction with the administra- tion will not only have to be a man of great tact, capable of handling the personalities, problems and needs of individuals, but also a man talented, skilled at coordinat- ing the curriculum and calendar of the college, the library and the Librarian, the faculty and faculty appointments, faculty organiza- tions and committees, the faculty handbook, and the content of the catalog. He is also responsible for the general academic program of the college. COMMITTEE FOR THE SELECTION OF A DEAN 155 The College Chris- tian Council was the parent of sev- eral smaller organizations and sought to co-ordinate those pro- grams under its jurisdiction, which included the Peace Corps, the Dia- logue, and Chapel. Each worked actively to bring student and stu- dents, man and God, and poor and middle class closer together for brief moments . . . their efforts us- ually culminated with each party returning to its respective corner. Top: Lavis Bowden. Jill Robinson; Below Right: Robert Davenport; Bottom Right: Banks Garrison; Below: Janie McLawhorn; Top Right, next page: Van Joines. yi ' i 156 COLLEGE CHRISTIAN COUNCIL COLLEGE CHRISTIAN COUNCIL 157 J c:LLM ' 7 r . 13- 3 Who ' s Who Among Students is an honor a priv- ileged few receive from the senior class. The nominations for this award were based on academic achievement, a wide variety of ex- tracurricular activities, and reputa- tion among the upperclassmen. S.A. has elected nineteen of their own to be submitted for publication this year. Following are their names and their achievements of the last four years. Craig Barton, an English major, has over the past four years, served on the Deputation team. Gradua- tion Committee, Student Life Com- mittee, Judiciary Committee, and the Committee for the Implemen- tation of the Code. He was also elected to the Cabinet, Vice- Presidency of the Honor Society, Chairman of the Judiciary Board, and Attorney General. Jane Cline, a drama major, was the choreographer for the hit play, Your Own Thing. She has served as suite leader in Albemarle Dorm, and was dormitory secretary. Among her other activities she served on the Executive Council of the Highland Players. Mac Crosswell majored in mathe- matics while he fulfilled duties as a member of the Cabinet, the Student Life Committee, and the Committee for the Selection of the Dean of the College. Other honors included Chairman of the Handbook Committee, Vice-Presi- dent of the Student Association, and President of the Senate. ♦ TOP: Craig Barton. ABOVE: Jane Cline. LEFT: Mac Crosswell. auMEimig Todd Davis, 1 . - an English major, worked on and contributed to the Cairn, and was invited to read his poetry at the South and West Literary Festival. For a time he was a member of the Student Life Committee and later became one of the founders of the Progressive Coalition. Majoring in Sociology, Denny Dodson was a suite leader in Meck- lenburg, Secretary for the Civitan Club, Captain of the Wrestling team, and President of both Men ' s Intra- mural Sports Council and the Civi- tan Club. A fellow President of the Civitan Club, Tony Fernandez, a Modern Languages major, was a member of the Senate and the Student Life Committee. He was also elected Vice - President and President of Mecklenburg Dorm. TOP: Todd Davis. ABOVE: Tony Fernan- dez. LEFT: Denny Dodson. WHO ' S WHO 159 _ . (1 h Tpf t c ' f-iiFn _ Banks Garrison, when not pursuing his American Studies major, was found fulfilling his duties as a member of the Cabi- net and as the President of the College Christian Council, which he filled for two years. Being an Ail-American and Cap- tain of the soccer team, Craig Man- nas ' basketball skills and his En- glish major have kept him busy most of the time. Wilburn Hayden, a WSAP and Gun Club enthusiast, served as a member of the Cabinet, the Senate, and the Faculty Executive Commit- tee. His leadership abilities won for him the positions of Presidency of Orange Dorm and the Presidency of the Student Association, as he pursued a Sociology-Anthropology major. TOP: Wilburn Hayden. ABOVE: Craig Han- nas. RIGHT: Banks Garrison. 160 WHO ' S WHO Hosea Jones, a history major, was elected chair- man of the Men ' s Residence Court and to the Presidency of Winston- Salem Dorm . . . making him a Sen- ator. Additional interests had Hosea serving as a member of the Library and Bookstore Committees. Tom Kipp was an English major who participated in the Gun Club, American Marketing Association, the Judiciary Committee and, as President of Kings Mountain Dorm, served in the Senate. While majoring in American Stu- dies, Sara Lee took an active in- terest in Women ' s Liberation and in the Progressive Coalition. She was President of the Q u i I I and Scroll for two years. Editor of the Lance, Chairwoman of the Hand- book Committee and held a seat on the Educational Policy Commit- tee. She was also elected Vice- President of Wilmington Dorm and served in the Senate. I : .?!V,r ' i. ' .i.-. ' .j ., . 1 i - , ' ,v. ■■. ; •:.,i,„ • ' •;V -. ' ..-.- i. ' i ' - .,. -. ' . TOP LEFT: Hosea Jones. LEFT: Tom Kipp. ABOVE: Sara Lee. WHO ' S WHO 161 _ ■ ■■ ■. -- , ' jjv t: r Tf-rf A history major, Sally Nell ' s interests were re- flected by her membership on the Judiciary Board, Elections Board and Senate. Her spirit and her de- sire to help everyone motivated her dorm mates to vote her Vice-Presi- dent of Concord. A suite leader in Kings Moun- tain, Charlie Pratt was a major in IVIathematics, Chairman of the Stu- dent-Faculty Appellate Board, As- sociate Editor of the Lance and a member of the Quill and Scroll. WSAP ' s deep-voiced John Roper was a history major during his stay at S.A. He was selected Vice-Chair- man of the elected positions of the Judiciary Board, and as a member of the Elections Board. Religion and Philosophy major Lucy Scott spent her junior year abroad studying at St. Andrews Uni- versity in Scotland. While she at- tended St. Andrews Presbyterian, she was a member of the Winter Term Committee as well as the College Union Board. 162 WHO ' S WHO TOP LEFT: John Roper. TOP RIGHT: Lucy Scotl. BOTTOM LEFT: Sally Neil. BOTTOM RIGHT: Charlie Pratt. mmmm A Business major, Rick Skutch served two years as President of the College Union Board and proved to be a valuable bowler for thie S.A. team. Louis Swanson, while pursuing his major in Politics, was a member oftheOrientation Committee, Chair- man of Men ' s Residence Court, a suite leader in Kings Mountain and a member of the Faculty Executive Committee. An English major. Randy Wellford was voted to the Elections Board and earned membership to the Knight ' s soccer team, showing his skills to be both unique and invalu- able. TOP: Rick Skutch LEFT: Randy Wellford. ABOVE: Louis Swanson. I i I 4 WHO ' S WHO 163 m. ■ - ' lyi r ' rt- n Photos by Mike McQuown 164 165 -■(■, -rf - ¥y ;sZJ Tf V a gs«a 3A«i?iMB!ig .tc -«a 167 .(■- .rfgrr -i ifcsio?Tf v 168 d ■ ' ■ ' — -• ■•• liTi • P-- ' i 169 . x-iZuCif- n- s T = i BE mmm § ■JKKJ! , W. iwwf,TrM:HW5Wl WW - .ists: n?y..:. i ' .f,ip- ' fc-; J 1 ■ (■- ■  s:rT - yv ■ U:! V: r- ■ ■ (; , -f 174 Soccer has traditionally become a byword for athletic success. Once again, true to form, the SA Blue Machine put together another fine year. Labeled as a rebuilding year, the 1970 team did very well. SA had an easy op- ener against Pfeifer with a 6-0 win. Lynchburg, a perrenial power- house, was next on Parents ' Week- end, and the early season game ended in a 1-1 tie. Getting back into gear, SA really not playing up to its full potential, put away trouble- some Belmont Abbey by the paltry score of 3-2. The N.C. Wesleyan team was taken easily by the score of 3-1. Pembroke was tough, and SA had a come from behind victory of 3-2. I ■ ' ™ ' - ' SOCCER 175 JM. 1 -fa- 176 SOCCER ■ ' ' la . iM Virginia Wesleyan fell victim easly by a score of 10-2. St. Augustine, hiowever, proved to be too much: for tfie ' Machine , and SA lost tfieir first game by a score of 5-3, on a rain-soaked field. Scrappy David- son held SA to a 1-1 stalemate de- spite the 40 some odd shots SA took at the Davidson goalie. Methodist fell early to SA, by a score of 4-0, and the season ended with an easy 4-1 win over Wilming- ton. In post-season play, the Ma- chine squeaked by Methodist 1-0 in the opening game of the tourna- ment, and then went on to out- hustle Lynchburg and win the Dixie Conference title in an exciting overtime win of 2-1. v;.: 177 . rJ -J -i 5t :zf- zv. 178 SOCCER SA, emotionally drained and er- ror-prone, lost to Campbell in a make-up game to close out the SA season. Captain Craig Hannas. along with sophomores John Rhoderick and Don Cooper made the All- South team, with Hannas again for the third time becoming an Ail- American goalie. Despite losing Hannas, All-South wing Randy Wellford, former All- District Ralph Nesbit, and talented Rick Mason, Coach Kinne, the only coach next year, has a good re- turning squad. Next year, SA should be at its peak of perform- ance. Vj 179 jm -rS 5tSOfTF V. 1 = = 180 ■ ' ' ■= ' - ' Track men have not thrown fear into the hearts of op- ponents, but this year, people will sit up and take notice. With a new and exciting figure in Coach Kinne, the program for track this year is blooming rapidly. At this writing, one track meet has been run and won by the SA sprinters. Outstand- ing performances by Ed Anderson, Henry Freeman, Peter Schmidt, and Ron Hayden turned in a new 440-yard relay race record. In ad- dition to these men. Ken Sprunt, Banning Ingram, Phil Cheney, Randy Brame, Tony James, Dave Dufek, and Mike Walters turned in very respectable performances. As a whole, track is being taken seriously for the first time, and this improvement in attitude should help greatly in the future as well as in the present. With a heavy schedule, the track men, captained by John LaGuardia and Ron Hay- den, have a rough Spring for com- petition, but this is how champions are made. With the proper attitude, the tracksters can put enough to- gether to take away the Dixie Con- ference trophy from Lynchburg. It is Coach Kinne ' s first year as the track coach, and he will have a lot to learn, but with his desire to excel, it would be foolish to ex- pect any less from him than his best effort. This attitude of his has been transferred to the team itself, and this year could be the start of a previously unheard of thing at SA — a track dynasty. m, . irr ' I ' S xii is -H- The first day of October began five long, hard months of basketball for Coach Spencer Boyd and the SA cagers. There were several additions to the basketball team v hich promised to make the 1970-71 season very in- teresting. First, manager Jay Bender got an assistant to help him powder and diaper the nursery full of ball players. Coach Boyd also received help from his new assist- ant, Coach Bobbin Kinne, whose duties were to enforce the training rules and to agree with Coach Boyd. Finally, the team was pro- vided with new means of transpor- tation when the Blue Goose was substituted for the vans, in an at- tempt to prevent the after-game stops on the return from away games. With these innovations, the hoopsters prepared for a tough season. Players by their numbers: Tony Fernandez-52; Gary Gredlein- 34; Craig Haiwas-50; Jimmy Had- dix-10: Ven Jolinson-42: Gary Linn-44; Hudson Rogers-32; Bruce Taylor-30; Ven Johnson- 42. 182 BASKETBALL ffiifgsrrifffiifffirfii ' Bir BASKETBALL 183 . f :- ..r5 ff- V «— The season began with a special Parents ' Night gath- ering as the cagers went up against Lander. Road trips to Methodist and Lynchburg resulted in a win and a loss, respectively and the Knights returned to the home court to face the two teams from the Greensboro colleges before the holidays. A misunderstanding be- tween Coach Boyd and the players resulted in the team blowing a 22- point lead and losing to UNC-G. The next night, however, the Knights revenged their loss as Craig Hannas led the team in con- quering Greensboro College by scoring 36 points and pulling down 33 rebounds, breaking the school record. SA went into Christmas with a 2-3 record and intentions to start the new year with improved play. 184 BASKETBALL m j—- ' The Knights returned from Christmas intent on winning it all. Hannas and Tony Fernandez provided the rebound- ing strength; Ven Johnson and Gary Linn had the outside shots; and speedy Gary Gredlein pro- vided the sticky defense. If Tony and Ven did not feel like jumping. Coach Boyd sent freshman Bruce Taylor to the scene. If the shots would not fall, Hudson Rogers wandered onto the court to score a few buckets. And finally, after Gredlein and Linn got the fast break going, Miles Weaver and Rich Robinson came in to keep the ball rolling. Problems such as player disci- pline and a trip to Greensboro via High Point plagued the Knights as they just could not seem to get it all together. SA finished fourth in the conference with a 6-6 confer- ence record and an overall record of 8-11. BASKETBALL 185 -.a L  s :i?Tf v -K- 186 BASKETBALL The tournament was suddenly upon the SA cagers, who traveled to Rocky Mount to face UNC-G in the first round. Despite an atrocious free-throw percent- age, the Knights avenged their two regular season losses and moved on to face the hornets of Lynchburg in the semi-finals. Poor SA re- bounding and shooting combined with the excellent Lynchburg fast break knocked the Knights out of the finals and into the consolation game against Greensboro College. Too much shuffleboard prior to the game by Greensboro, plus Gary Linn ' s deadly shooting, allowed the Knights to romp over Greensboro and take home the consolation trophy. Hannas, Linn, and Fernandez had led the Knights through the season in the rebounding and scor- ing departments. Hannas and Gredlein were added to the All- Conference team, and Hannas added All-Tournament and All-Dis- trict honors to the list. r  w _ _--— BASKETBALL 187 j f .ni- fs. 3- It is a routine of steam showers, struggling to get the Lord ' s prayer right, losing five pounds in a day, eating lil e a horse after making weight, and lots of hard work — that ' s what wrestling is all about. Coach Griffin ' s underrated matmen climaxed a mediocre 5-5 season by running away with the DIAC championship. This year ' s win made three consecutive titles, and SA retired the trophy. With a small team, the Knights were forced to forfeit weight classes almost every match. De- spite this handicap, the grapplers held their own against conference foes and extremely rough noncon- ference competition. A 28-18 upset win over Lynchburg highlighted the regular season. The victory over Lynchburg was an especially memorable trip for four of the team members were involved in a stick- up. WRESTLING 189 — « . f:r: = - ?itixif-n( r . 1 = = 190 WRESTLING WRESTLING 191 W- a:rf L. ?i CI!- V 1 = 192 WRESTLING -=-— - J S z Carter McKeithan, Jim Gaskin, Wes Campbell. Marty Mclntyre, Mark Goodnough, Rick Wesley and Larry Williams were the newcomers on the team who aided returnees Buddy Creech, Denny Dodson, Mac Johnson, and Ed Bartlett. Six Knights captured individual crowns in the conference tourna- ment. Gaskin and Big Ed won easily, apparently unhampered by their month ' s vacations in Mexico and Greece, respectively. Other champs were Creech, Dodson, Johnson, and Goodnought. Denny, the apple-turnover Kid, got MVP and subsequently competed in the NAIA National Championships at Boone. The Zoo was not as wild with Compy, Richard, and Ed missing. However, next year ' s animals should be just as ferocious as this year ' s. Only Dodson will graduate, so four in a row may come true. WRESTLING 193 - - li S Efe A V W= This year the cross country team was rebuilding. Its biggest surprise came with the first meet when the team pulled an upset victory over UNC-G and Greensboro College. As the season progressed, victories were not so easy over teams such as Pem- broke, Campbell, and Davidson. The team captain was George Bernhardt, who was also the num- ber one runner. The other runners were freshman Banning Ingram, junior Larry Harding, senior Denny Dodson, and sophomores David Roberts and Bill Robbins. With only these few runners, the Knights were able to get things together for eight wins and only nine losses, which could have been worse. The team was spurred on by the spirit of Coach Blackwell who implanted his spirit in the runners. The Knights finished their season in high esteem, with the addition of Richy Robinson and Phil Cheney, and captured second place in the conference meet and fourth in the district. Bernhardt and Ingram were among the all-conference se- lections. 194 CROSS COUNTRY 1 F - z - - CROSSCOUNTRY 195 m. ..f r i ' itLLW-nflK. 1 = = 196 TENNIS l« I It was one of those years tor the tennis team. Out of the fourteen men who signed up in the Fall, the team had been cut down to six before the first match. During the season, injuries and sickness necessitated adding a reserve to the regular line-up. Nevertheless, the tennis team came through with a winning rec- ord and a strong showing in the conference. Lead by co-captain Cannon- ball Miller, whose philosophy was if the first shot is out, hit the sec- ond harder. Following was Cool Man R. Robinson, who, if he played tennis like he loved, would have been the greatest player in SA history. Third was D. Robinson, senior co-captain, known affec- tionately by his teammates as Hot Lips . Fourth was William Ashe Mitchell who played by one rule when in doubt, call it out. John van den Heuvel, the Flying Dutch- man, and Steve The Pusher Barber rounded out the regulars. The team was coached by that morale-booster. Bob Chaiken whose own personal philosophy was it ' s not how you play the game, but who wins. TENNIS 197 L T IM. h j t cif fV. 198 BASEBALL Ld , Yogi Rackman , Lope , The Cat , Translator , Charlie Hustle , Hollywood , and Pearl of the Peedee . . . These are the names and baseball was the game they played. And they did play some ball with the talented instructing of Coach Griffin. The SA team, finding prospective wealth in six returning seniors, had good possibilities for going all the way to Georgia and back. The opposition ' s batters were scheduled to have a lowering of their batting averages as they faced the small, but capable pitch- ing staff headed by senior captain Steve Litchford, and complemented by Riley Erwin, senior Mark Kleber, and newcomer freshman John Bush. iu -f — s 7 U l r«B. j c«  ... -. T 1 -_ — L n! BASEBALL 199 Backing up the mound were Glenn Hundtermark, with his Brooks Rob- inson approach to third base, short-stop Wayne no ankle Wise, second baseman, Jimmy Haddix, and George Northam at first. Ken Mehrling, bent behind the batters spent the season retrieving pitches. Filling out the team in the field were: Riley Erwin in left field when he was not pitching, Stuart Parrish in center field, and Dave Mills in right. All these, plus some other new players assisted the team in their attempt to become not only the conference champs, but the champs of District 29 as well. 201 IF -rJV. L m. ,c?:--v_ ' v -rif v -«- Albemarle Dormi- tory, having evicted its only suite of all male residents, lost Its only qual- ification to being one of the only two progressive, co-ed dormitories on campus. Loss of the Dorm ' s males though did not turn out to be det- rimental to their competing poten- tiality in sport competition. Banning together, they successfully coor- dinated their varied athletic skills and abilities to form a cohesive unit that won a great deal of intramural events they played in. Their willingness to compete in sports and their ability to win did not seem to drive away potential dates though. Friday and Saturday nights were regularly spent at suite one, King ' s Mountain. Their weekly quest ... a keg of beer. Above: Sherry Spencer. Below: Mrs. Edens. 204 ALBEMARLE L: -_ Abernalhy, Janei R., 74 Dallas Abernathy, Riia L . 73 Charlotle Anderson, Mary C , 72 Winchester, Va. Blanchard. Jane G.. 72 Durham Brand. Mimi H.. 73 Salem, Va. Broome, Mildred E-. 71 Charlotte Cline. Margaret J., 71 Hickory Coleman. Elizabeth M . 71 Richmond, Va, Deek, Vickie A., 73 Bessemer City Donhauser. Jenny L.. 73 Chevy Chase. Md- Duddy. Sara L . 71 Fon MacArthur. Calif. Dunlap, Ann C . 73 Winchester. Va. Hill. Sara B . 73 Hickory Evans, Patricia A . 71 Fairfax, Va, Finnicum. Glenna L.. 72 Miami Springs. Fla. Fuller. Helen L., 71 Whiteville Forrest. Laura R . 73 Gastonia Gribble. Margery J , 71 Clarksburg. W.Va, Harbin, Elizabeth A,. 72 Raleigh Harp. Peggy M,, 73 Durham ALBEMARLE 205 rs ' fc.rT - v ■5 Hastings. Valerie M., 72 Colonial Heights. Va Haygood. Kathleen R , ' 71 Sumter, S C Henderson, Dons A , 72 Green Bank, W, Va. Humphress, Laura K , 73 Chamblee, Ga. Jernigan, Teri D., 73 Raletgh Jones. Pamela A., 73 Winston-Salem Kerr. Mary P . 73 Kinston Kinney, Mildred W,. 71 Charlotte Koch. Kathleen K.. 72 Baton Rouge, La. Lee. Ammie B., 71 St, Petersburg, Fla. Lee, Peachie, 73 Durham Leggett, Ingrid D.. 72 Wjlliamslon Ligon, Margaret A., 72 Fayetteville Logan, Linda L , 73 Fairfax, Va. Mathews, Carolyn W . 71 Tappahannock. Va McKechnie. Joan E., 73 Camp Hill. Pa. McLaughlin. Johnnie M , 73 Red Springs McLawhorn, Janie J., 73 Ayden Miller. Frances A . 73 Lenoir Moore. Valerie L.. 73 Virginia Beach, Va. 206 ALBEMARLE 4 I K««a   : - Oliver, Peggy, 72 Fuquay-Vanna Rirchie, Donna M , 72 Roanoke, Va Rochelle, Anne D , 74 Silver Spring, Md Rodda, Susan K., 73 Andrews Sanlord. Susan A , 73 Leesvilie, S C Scott, Lucy A . 71 Frankfort. Ky. Sheppard. Glennys C-, 71 Charlottesville. Va Sheppard, Vickie J , 72 Lilesville Simpson, Marguerite L,. 73 Fayetleville Slaney. Susan O . 73 Port Washington, NY Smith. ChiChi L . 73 Yanceyville Smith. Yvette, 73 Wmston-Salem Smith, Ruby G , 74 Bladenboro Stimmell. Susan J.. 72 Fairfax. Va Stuart, Bonnie R , 73 Richmond, Va Taylor, Dawn L , 72 Lynchburg. Va. Troyer, Nancy L , 73 Camp Hill, Pa Walker. Jan R., 72 Durham Warren, Martha C . 72 Prospect Hill Winters. Katrina A . 74 Ft. Lauderdale, Fla ' A A ALBEMARLE 207 r ' -_ ' : r ff- V Concord was once known as the convent ... the place where sweet, innocent girls whom few knew and fewer saw re- treated to indulge in studies of STMS and C C scriptures. But Che Guevara and Mao were apparently studied as well, as theories were put into practice and guerilla war- fare broke out between suites 3 and 6. The ensuing battles often spread throughout the dorm as unexpected showers were given to unsuspecting individuals coming up the stairs and to undeserving couples who strayed too close to opened windows. Those who uti- lized the twenty-four hour open suites policy were frequently forced to hang their guests out the window to drip dry. Any doubts remaining as to the applicability of Concord ' s former title were washed away with the dregs of four kegs of beer . . . mak- ing Concord the first all-girls ' dorm to sponsor a beer blast. The event not only proved the Concord wom- en to be able party goers, but able hosts as well. BELOW: Mrs. Sarah H. Peterson, Residence Director. 208 CONCORD Bfiaffi £Ksa Alexander, Merriam, ' 74 San Francisco. Calif. Allred, Rachel N . ' 71 Goldsboro Buck. Glenda S., ' 74 Cheslerfield, Va. Berry. Pauline D,, ' 71 Holliston, Me. Bickett. Julia E.. ' 72 Spencer Bryne, Joanna L.. ' 74 Sarasota, Fla, Crawley, Deborah G . ' 71 Upper Montclair, N J Cook, Judy B . ' 74 Scotlsblutt, Nebr. Carter, Pamela F , 74 Winston-Salem Carroll. Rebecca M , ' 73 Bladenboro Carr, Pafncia A , ' 73 Mt. Olrve Daniel, Mary G , ' 73 Charlotte Davidson. Janice R , ' 74 Bluefield. W. Va. Denham. Suzanne, ' 72 Middlesboro, Ky. D ' Adamo, Theresa U., ' 74 Brantord, Conn, Dougherty, Jane G , ' 71 Boone I ] ? CONCORD 209 1. I J !S Ci±Lnf- 210 CONCORD Edwards, Judith G , 71 Shelbyville, Ky, Foil, Nancy J , ' 73 Mt. Pleasant Grant, Heather J.. ' 71 Mountainside, N.J. Greeson, Joyce, ' 73 Thomasville. N C Grubbs. Cynthia L., ' 74 Greenville, S C. Grumbles, Mary D., 72 Danville, Va. Helms, Martha J.. 74 Winston-Salem Heyw ard. Emma E-, 73 Charlotte Highsmjth, Ann C-, 74 Fayetteville Holt.Cherryl C, 72 Raeford Isenhour, Shirley E., 71 Havelock Isley. Sarah C , 72 Boone Innes. Diane L-. 74 Southern Pines Johnston, Claire K., 74 Penn Hills, Pa, Jolly, Patricia A., ' 74 Richmond. Va. Keller. Frances L,, 74 Chapel Hill Lavoie, Mane A.. 74 Hamlet MacLeod, Mary M., 72 Virginia Beach, Va. Martin, Janice M,. 72 Winston-Salem McCue, Susan A.. 73 Richlands, Va BUH - McQueen, Linda Red Springs L , 72 McLean. Sheila ■72 Laurmburg McNeil. Pam A Millers CreeK ■74 Medders, Martha E-. 73 Onley, Va. Mernll, Mary A.. Atlanta. Ga. 73 Morns. Sally A.. Winston-Salem 74 Moses, Janet S-. Appomattox, Va 71 Neale. Beverly L. Charleston. W. V; ■74 Neil. SaraE., ' 71 Huntersvilie Nesbit, Katrina R., 74 Atlanta. Ga. Noland. Jean R., 72 Athens. Ga Parker, Jennifer C , ' 71 Warwaw. Ky. Richards. Susan A , 73 Wallace Riddle, Teresa J , ' 73 Sanford Roberts, Paula s , ' 74 Durham Rohrmann, Nancy M , ' 71 Scarsdale. N Y Ross. Margaret M , ' 71 Lillington Seago, Caroline E , ' 73 Summerville, SO. Sharpe. Dennis W., ' 74 Smith, Connie, ' 73 Clearwater, Fla. CONCORD 211 ..m. .=r3??f: =L s _rrf- v Smith. Doris W,, 71 Fayetteville Stevenson, Angela B , ' 74 Atlanta. Ga, Snyder. Pamela S , ' 73 Winston-Salem Taylor. Frieda K , 73 Bladenboro Thomas, Angelyn K., ' 71 Elizabethtown Tuck, Selma T., 72 Ansonville  v r r -i .1 (p p £ S,S ' win ' ' il i«HK - ' Weems. Marian B., ' 73 Waynesboro, Va Westnck. Debra L , ' 72 Wmston-Salem Whjtmyre, Leslie A , ' 74 Lima, Ohio Williams. Nancy K . 71 Bon Air, Va. Valenline, Beth, 71 Richmond. Va VanZandl, Maury L , ' 74 Louisville, Ky. 212 CONCORD asm ABOVE: Miss Carolyn Snyder, Residence Director. For some reason, the fact that Granville is neatly sit- uated nearest the pine forest and the underbrush, the women of Granville are often said to be ex- traordinary. Word has it that during the daylight hours. Granville is often quiet with the studies of its inhabitants. Then, these night people slowly awaken with the set- ting of the sun. Seven signs appear on the seven suite doors: ■24 hour open suite ... by invitation only, Then the darkened courtyard is pierced with strange sounds from the inner sanctums of the rooms. When the inside of the dorm grows empty, it is usually because the courtyard has filled with beer blasts and movies. Granville is one of the more in- teresting of the women ' s residence halls, and its uniqueness extends to its Residence Director, Miss Carolyn Snyder. The women may change from year to year, but the alluring atmosphere of Granville will never fail to interest the cam- pus society. GRANVILLE 213 Dryden, Mary E , 71 Arlington, Va. Duncan, Jo A . 73 Wadesboro Edens, Julie A., 71 Fayettevjile Edmonds, Sally B . 71 Maxwell AFB. Ala Ellison, Dianne, 72 Greensboro Flowers. Bettye J., 73 Wadesboro Funk, Nancy A . Bluedeld, Va Gardner, Deanng K., 73 Ashevilie Baldwin, Lam K., 72 West Point, Va. Smith, Mary E , 73 Wag ram Blake. Barbara J,, 73 Lutherville, Md. Bond, Barbara W , 72 St. Petersburg. Fla, Bowie, Marie L.. 74 Chevy Chase, Md, Bowie, Mane M Anderson, SC- Boykm. Belte L., 73 Arlington, Va. Carlson. Sara L., 71 Falls Church, Va Chambers, Grace E., 74 Raeford Daniels, Ethel A., 73 Raleigh Davis. Kitty P.. 74 Louisville, Ky. Dove, Jacquelyn D , 73 Kinston 214 GRANVILLE Gibson, Mithcenl. 71 Asheboro Gordon. Janice E 71 West End Gunter, Elizabeth A.. 71 Durham Hartley. Beth, 71 Hudson Kibler. Laura K-. 72 Front Royal. Va. Koser. Vicki L,, 74 Chevy Chase, Md. Leslie. Mary L,. 71 Avondale. Ga. Liverman, Dianne M., Elizabeth Cjty Lohn. Pleasant M , 72 Man, W. Va. MacDougall, Jeanne M.. 72 Hilton Head. S.C. Mebane, Nancy F , 72 Plandome, N.Y. Mobley. Darlene A , 73 Atlanta, Ga Morgan, Claire S., 71 Arlington, Va. Mornson, Margie, 73 Maxton GRANVILLE 215 -T- fT I Morton. Frances E.. ' 74 Hazard, Ky Parks, Loretta R.. 73 Cedartown, Ga. Pilkington, MeNssa A., St Petersburg, Fla, Pledger, Margaret F., 74 Atlanta, Ga. Pledger, Patncta A., ' 72 Atlanta, Ga- Polk, Barbara A,, ' 73 Peachland Quick, Dianne, ' 73 Maxton Reed. Ruth E.. ' 74 High Point St. John, Leslie A., 72 Glenmont. N.Y. Sanders, Patncra L,. 74 Greensboro Smith, Carohne W . 73 Wilmington Smith, Tricia, 73 Mechanicsville. Va. Steward, Laura A., 73 Wadesboro Tomlinson. Jane A,, 72 Annandale, Va. Underdown, Eleanor B., 71 Lenoir Waggett, Evangeline J , 73 Wilmington Webbere. Sandra L . Arlington. Va Wilfong. Jane K., 71 Athens, Ga 216 GRANVILLE Kings Mountain Dorm is unique. Past the stage of indulging in the childish diver- sions of water fights and shaving cream battles, Kings Mounta in re- lieves its frustrations and aggrava- tions by Roman candle duels. Suites, teamed up on their respective sides, trade fire crackers, earning for Kings Mountain the NASA title for North Carolina. A flaming social life is not a rarity for Kings Mountain either. Parties with two horror flicks, beer and hot dogs break the monotony of an otherwise typical weekend. If ever there was a dorm that displayed its spirit and lack of in- hibitions, it is Kings Mountain. LEFT: Dr. Dick Prust, Kings Mountain Dorm Daddy. KINGS MOUNTAIN 21 7 a , 2 Albertson, Jeff S , 74 Tryon Atkinson, Sidney W.. ' 73 Richmond, Va. Baker, Edgar R., ' 73 Raleigh Bartlett, Edwin C, 73 Greenville Burress, Daniel O , ' 73 Salem, Va. Cottingham, M. Colin, Jr.. ' 72 Greenville, S.C- Damron. Mac. ' 72 Lebanon, Va. Davis, Charles A., ' 74 Winston Salem Davis, Roger P , ' 72 Hickory Eckmar. Stephen J.. ' 74 Charlottesville. Va Einbinder, Stephen C, ' 74 Camp Springs, Md. Elkins, Thomas J., ' 72 Philadelphia, Pa. Harding, Laurence L,, 72 Richmond, Va Gcodnough. Mark L , ' 74 Winston-Salem Hunderlmark, Glenn S., 71 Ballimore, Md. Ingram. Banning V., ' 74 Wasfiingion. DC. Isaac. Michael A H., ' 74 Holtman, N.C. Johnson. Wilham M., ' 73 Launnburg Joseph, Samuel J . 74 Charlottesville, Va. Judge. Richard J-, ' 74 Trenton, N,J, Kip. Thomas B,, 71 Columbus, Ohio Kline, John D.. 72 Arlington. Va. Malhieson. Greg R , 72 Silver Spring, Md McCallum. Stephen S., 73 Monroe McKeithan, Carter, 73 Red Springs McQuOwn, H Michael. 72 Baltimore, Md. Miller. James T_, 74 Mt. Airy. N.C- Morrison, Thad. 74 Atlanta. Ga KING ' S MOUNTAIN 219 I Reagan, James S., Jr.. ' 73 High Point Robinson. Dame! D.. ' 71 Charlotte Rothrock. James B.. ' 71 Jartinsville. Va, Savage, James M Vienna, W Va. Sellars. David R.. ' 74 Greensboro Smith, Hugh F., ' 74 Nashville, Tenn Smith. James S,, ' 73 New Bern Southwell, E. Lee, ' 72 Savannah, Ga. Mecklenburg was filled with strange, sensuous vibra- tions of a different type this year as freaks, hippies, and radicals rapidly took over territory previously held by the jocks. Throughout the dorm, doors locked and walls bulged, threatening to give way under the pressure of stereos turned to full volume with acid-rock music. The parties, closed doors with strange smells permeating the halls, Neal ' s bubblegum music — often heard in the main lounge since the tube was broken most of the year — Phil ' s parties which were always worth attending, night after night, and Ken ' s chip putt course in the hall; all gave constant reminder to the rest of the campus that the beasts in the zoo ware sauntering through another year. LEFT: Dr. Neat Bushoven, Residence Director. Mecktenburg MECKLENBURG 221 r-T- ' ,ai ; fT Allen. Robert D . 74 Decatur, Ga. Beale, David S., 73 Greenville. SC- Bender, James V.. 73 Pollocksville Bennett, Walter L.. 74 Birmingham, Ala. Breckenridge, R Scott, 72 Atlanta. Ga. Brjdges. Saunders M,, 71 Florence, S C Brown. W, Steven, 73 Atlanta, Ga. Bryan. John, 72 Lumberton Bryant. Milford H. (Bob). Jr., 73 Charlottesville. Va. Butfington, J. Andy, 73 Woodstock, Ga. Bunn, David E , 72 Greensboro Campbell. Glenn E.. 74 Germanlown, Md. Chappell. Calhoun. 74 Orange Park, Fla. Cocke. Thomas P , Jr. 71 Lutherville, Md. Coleman, F. Alan, 73 Wmslon-Salem Cooper. Donald G., 73 Atlanta, Ga. DelTosto. Henry P., 71 North Arlmgton, N.J. DeVane, Benjamm C, 73 Elizabethtown Dodson. E. Denison (Denny), 71 Charleston, W.Va. Dutek. David F., 72 Newport News. Va. Egleston, Charles L., 72 Columbia, S.C Eller. R, Michael, 73 Waynesboro, Va. Fawley, Dorman, 72 Falls Church. Va. Ferry. A. Eugene, 74 Atlanta, Ga. 222 MECKLENBURG Gehres. Hewitt C. 73 Mt. Vernon. Ohio Getty. George C. 73 Silver Springs. Md. Gravely. Marshall G-. ' 73 Myrtle Beach, SC. Hale. C. Srodenck. 73 Bluefield, W.Va. Holder, Robert Ray. ' 73 Winston-Salem Hov ell. John R.. 71 Dover. Del. Hunter. C. Vincent. Jr. 72 Atlanta, Ga. Jessup, James L.. Jr.. ' 73 Charionesviiie. Va. Johnson. Venable. Jr., ' 72 Petersburg. Va. Johnson. Walter. 72 Petersburg. Va. Kleber. Mark D,. 71 Parns Island. S-C- LaGuardia, John M.. Washington. D.C. LandJs. David H . ' 72 Camp Hill, Pa. Lawing. James R,. Jr.. ' 74 Greensboro Lawson. Jack N,, ' 74 Winslo -Salem Long. Matt Ransom, ill. 74 Winston-Salem Lutz. James D.. Jr., 72 Hendersonville Massengill, Steve E.. 72 Durham Mehrling. Charles K,. 72 Silver Spring. Md. Mizell, A. Daniel. ' 74 Tarboro MECKLENBURG 223 - ' - - ' Bobbins. William W., Lenoir Scales. Philip N.. Martinsville, Va. Shackelford. Lyne M,. Orange, Va. Sinden. Watson R., 74 St. Petersburg, Fla. Smith, W Paddock, 74 Durham Sohmer. R. Marcus, 74 Winston-Salem Speth.C Theodore, II. 73 Marion. S C. Thompson, Walter D., Jr. Julian Wagner, Davrd E , 71 Baltimore. Md. Ward, Jeffrey S., 74 Stratford. Wayne, Pa. Warren, Thomas Paul, 74 Atlanta. Ga. Watson, M. Hunter, 73 Petersburg, Va. Wilhoyte, Don E., 71 Louisville, Ky. Wilkinson, V Shepard, 73 Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Williams, Dixon C, 74 Clemmons Williamson. John P., 73 Towson, Md. ' ikdk Wilson, Christopher C. 72 Baltimore, Md- Wilson, L Garrard, ' 71 York, S,C. Wise, K.Wayne, 71 Florence, SC 224 MECKLENBURG The intellectual atmosphere of Orange Dormitory gives inspiration to the campus. Nightly — and daily, too — pas- sers-by can gaze into the main lounge of Orange to see the boob tube squad greedily pursuing its academic enrichment. Weekend screams that periodi- cally rise above the one story, open court-yard dorm quicken the steps of those same passers-by who won- der if some pagan ritual is in prog- ress or whether a combination beer, wine, and purple passion party — highlighted by water and shaving cream fights — is going on. A cas- ual glance eastward from Meek in the wee hours of the morning oc- casionally reveals a security officer scaling the sun screen to salvage the after-effects of the night before. As strange as Orange may seem from the outside looking in, though, it appears to have a quality in unity that no other dorm on campus can match ... or really tries to. LEFT: Miss Elizabeth Dove. Orange Resi- dence Director. ORANGE 225 d il Benz, Cathryn A . ' 71 Rockville. Md Bradley, Mary M., ' 73 Nashville, Tenn. Brown. Emma G , ' 74 Bristol. Va. Buffington, Robert, ' 72 East Hartford, Conn, Bunn. Alan L,, ' 74 Greensboro Carson. Shirley, ' 71 Roanoke, Va. Calloway, R. Gail, ' 71 Highlands Davis, John E., Fairfax. Va. Davis, June L.. ' 73 LaGrange. Georgia Dickson, David G., ' 71 Winchester, Va. Donaldson. Charlotte D., ' 71 Kennett Square, Pa. Downey. Dianne, ' 71 APO. New York Downey. Leslie J., ' 74 McLean. Va. Edge. Thomas A , ' 72 Richmond. Va Erfnler, Michael P., ' 74 Temple. Pa. Gottenkieny, Charles H.. Jr. Falls Church, Va Baney. Robert M., ' 73 Daleville, Ala. Baughman, Gretchen A , ' 74 Chapel Hill Beale. Norman V , ' 74 Greenville, S C 226 ORANGE Hayden, Ronald L,, ' 73 Winston-Salem Hayden, Wrlburn, 71 Winslon-Salem Heaton, Carolyn E-. ' 73 Andrews Hermann. Cecelia M.. ' 73 Mechanicsburg. Pa. Hobbs. Wayne D., ' 71 Winston-Salem Hope. Anne G-, 71 Laurinburg Hope. Jean B . 71 Laurinburg Humphrey, Carolyn F.. 73 Williamsburg, Va. Keen, Susan H , 71 Wayne. Pa. Kinney, Joseph C, ' 73 Clio, SO Kurtz. Susanne M.. 74 Rahway. N.J Lauber. Annette M-. ' 73 Seaford. Del. Leavitt. Roberta J.. 71 Landover Hills. Md. Love, Deborah A., 73 Charlotte Lyman. Steven J . 72 Beihesda, Md. Macy. Janet. ' 73 Greenwood. SC ORANGE 227 McRainey, Pamela G , ' 72 Fayetteville Mills. David G.. 72 Galveston, Texas Moore. Jacquelyn. 72 Louisville. Ky. Moore, Tracy T., 71 Charlotte Munday, Mary Lynn. 71 Roanoke, Va. Parr. Francis M,. 73 Savannah, Ga. Penninger, William V., J, Charlotte Polley, Anne E , 73 Alexandria, Va. Robinson, John L . 74 Raleigh Roper, John A . 71 Wagram Schurke, Robert H.. 71 Jacksonville, Fia Shannon, Ellen M , 72 Charlotte Simpson, Milburn W , Jr., 74 Monroe Simmons, Craig R , 71 Ware. Mass. Singletary, George H , 73 Bladenboro Smith, Edward T , 73 Raleigh 228 ORANGE Smith. Sally L . ' 73 Deep Run Stahlberger. Charles A-, ' 7 Bndgeton. N,J. Thompson, Charles P.. 71 Charlone Squires. Ahce T,, ' 71 Petersburg, Va. «Al Treece. David A . 71 Albemarle Turbyfill, Ardis R.. 74 Maiden ORANGE 229 1 l — 7- E« BOTTOM: rector. Gladys Harvey, Resider}ce Di- Wilmington Dormi- tory began the year in steep com- petition with itself in an attempt to gain Concord ' s lost title, The Convent. But Wilmington ' s women are a thinking bunch who had the dawning realization that there was little fun to be had on the course they were heading. Taking to the halls, streamers made of toilet paper were hung from ceiling and Playboy pictures, affectionately symbolizing suite mates, were taped to the lounge windows. Down- stairs, Mrs. Harvey awoke one morn with a bitter cold causing her to turn off the air conditioner that some sadist from above had turned on from the stairwell the night before. And at four in the morning she, with the rest of the campus, was lulled awake by the melodious voices arising from most of the eight balconies, as the suites now changed the type of competi- tion with each other to see how loud they could become. 230 WILMINGTON Adams, Maryanne W.. 74 Newport News, Va Andrews, Josephine S.. ' 73 Durham Andrews, Susan E,, 74 Albuquerque, N,M. Bateman. Cynthia L., 73 Palm Beach, Fla, Bakaerl. Susan R,, 74 Wilmington Blackburn, Sallie J , 74 Norwalk, Conn. Burns. Katharine Y., 74 San ford Chelette. Dairlyn J.. 73 Ooraville, Ga. Cheney, Johanna L.. 72 Fayettevjile Cooper, Deborah, 74 Chestertown. Md. Coyle. Nancy H.. 73 Charleston, W, Va. Crane. Carolyn L.. 74 Geneva, Switzerland Daniels. Stevre O , 74 Birmingham, Ala, Darby, Mary A.. 74 Lakeland, Fla. Dean, Tom D.. Apharetta, Ga. Dennison, Carolyn L., 73 Gamesvilte. Fla. Durham. Delle R . 73 Winston-Salem Everett, Sue C , 74 Huntington, W.Va. WILMINGTON 231 ! — W7i -— Forbes. Mary A,, Hopkinsville. Ky Fox, Dory, 74 Easton. Pa. Gibson. Debra M , Charleston. W.Va. Grant, Mary D.. ' 71 Charlotte Graham, Nancy O.. ' 72 Max Meadows, Va. Haigler, Becky. Raleigh Harris, Sus an F Raleigh ' 74 Hayes. Susan C Sanford ■74 Heaven, Carol L, Charlotte ■73 Hotvedt. Suzanne Annandale, Va G , ■73 Howerton. Dianne G . Greensboro ■73 Huckins. Dianne C. ' 72 McLean. Va. Huffman. Betty L Shelbyville. Tenn ■71 Hutcheson. Mary Va. Beach, Va. M.. 73 Jacobs, Janet C. Columbia. S C. ' 74 232 WILMINGTON Lee. Sarah P.. 71 Lynchburg. Va. Mackenzie. Ann S . 71 New Providence. N.J. Jones. Nancy L . 74 Lancaster, S.C Jones, Wanda K . 72 Florence, S C Johnson. Debra L . 74 Atlanta Kennedy, Karen E.. 73 Chamblee, Ga. Kennedy. Loma A.. 73 Newport News, Va. King, Eirzabeth M,, 74 Kingsport, Tenn. Knowles, Margaret B , 74 Raleigh Lancashire, Merry C. ' 74 Winter Haven. Fla. Men. Pavla. 74 Charlotte Moser. Joyce G-. 74 Myrtle Beach, S.C. O ' Neal. Daphne M . 73 Beihaven Patterson. Wanda D , 74 Red Springs Rader. Mafy S.. 74 Mooresvilie Reichard, Wilma J.. 74 Charlotte WILMINGTON 233 Rohrmann, Rita D., Scarsdale. NY, Russ, Wanda, ' 73 Baadenboro Seawell, Karen A.. 73 Carthage Smith, Karen M , Hickory Spencer. Sharry D., 73 Wadesboro Stadler, Helen E., 74 High Point Stone, Barbara J., Savannah, Ga. Surles, Susan L., Fayetteville Swanson, Karen H., Durham Tebo, Mary-Virginia, 73 Ealontown. N.J, Thomas, Elaine. 74 Mt. Gilead Venable, Deborah D , 73 Charleston. W. Va. Wampler, Rebecca C. 74 Sturats Draft, Va. Wtllcox. Constance J,, 74 Westfield, N.J, Wilson, Lucy D,, ' 71 Karachi. Pakistan 234 WILMINGTON Winston Salem Hall, constructed on some of the higher ground around, rises above the other dorms. But from there on its strictly down hill, as its structure merely holds eight separate suites together. In tact, there was for a time the possibility that suite 8, the motorcycle suite, might secede from the dormitory. The most hardened trouble-matcers on cam- pus are pacified and easily con- trolled when threatened with exile to Winston Salem. In spite of their disunity, the men of Winston Salem were terrors on the field. In football they ranked third, in paddle ball and ping-pong they were first, and it ' s been pro- jected they ' ll make NUMBER ONE in soccer. It appears any hopes of the suites in W-S pulling together will have to come from sports or from the dorm ' s new Residence Direc- tor, John Haluska. ABOVE: Mr. John Haluska, Residence Director WINSTON SALEM 23S Allgood, Michael P.. 73 Atlanta. Ga. Arnold, Ames T,. 72 Arlington, Va. Baker, Frederick L , Jr., 73 Falls Church, Va. Barrick, James W., 74 Raleigh Barton, Craig B,. Chapel Hill Bernhardt. George L., 72 Lenoir Bowden, Lavis C , ' 73 Mt, Gilead Bowie. David R., 73 Landrum, S.C. Boyd, Steven R , 73 Charlotte Burgwyn, Charles B., 71 Murfreesboro Burrell, Lonnie J., 73 Winnsboro. S.C. Bush. John E.. 74 Augusta, Ga Campbell, Wesley L., 74 Titusville, Fla- Christian, Thomas J. J., 74 Jacksonville, Fla. Decker. Henry W , 73 Richmond, Va. Denham, Steven C , 74 Middlesboro. Ky. deSherbinin. Michael E.. 72 Bryn Mawr, Pa. Erwin. Riley W,. 73 St- Petersburg. Fla. Fisher. Don F , 73 Charlotte Fox. Richard L., 71 Clinton, Md. 236 WINSTON SALEM Fry. John D , 72 Richmond, Va. Garrison. James B., Jr., 71 Albemarle Griffin. John N,, 74 Ballimore. Md, w Hall, Henry L.. 71 Bladenboro Hartke. Keith L . 73 Falls Church. Va. Harward. James T . 72 Durham fl l i !% Hayes, Christopher Daniel San ford 73 v Heery. Marvin P., Ill, 73 Savannah Hrnes, David M . 74 Wilmington Hitt. William M , 71 Hamlet James. William Anthony, 73 Myrtle Beach, S C. Jones, Hosea, 71 Warner Robbins, Ga. Jones, Hugh Mclnnis, 71 Petersubrg, Va Lawson. John D . 71 Richmond. Va. Lowery. Michael S., 74 Camden, S.C. Martin, Homer D . Jr., 74 Raleigh McGuinn, Rex A , 73 Anniston. Ala. Morgan. Richard R , 72 N Miami, Fla, WINSTON SALEM 237 Muslard. WjIMam N,. ' 71 Manchester, Conn. Perrin. James R . ' 71 Potomac, Md Ralph, Richard F.. J Miami, Fla. Rankin, R, Blair. ' 71 High Point Roane, Thomas H., ' 71 Bushnell, Fla. Robinson, Richey, ' 72 Charlotte Saunders, William H., ' 73 Atlanta. Ga Skipper, Larry B.. . ' 72 Bladenboro Smith. John M.. ' 73 Clayton. Ga Street. Frank L., ' 73 Charlotte Valier, David P . ' 74 West Palm Beach, Fla. Vanulk. F. Jay. ' 73 Port Washington. N.Y Vosburgh, Stowell, W . ' 73 Tryon. N.C. Walker. B Martin, 71 West Point. Va. Warren. William Tdman, ' 73 Birmingham. Ala, Weaver. Miles F., ' 73 Darlington, S.C Williams. Larry B., ' 73 Bedford. Mass. Snipes. William E , ' 74 Roxoro 4% Atk 238 WINSTON SALEM Left: Jim Snyder Right: Doug Colby Off-campus residents who are neither married norliving with relativesareastrange group of people. As with all the other off-campus residents, they partal e of the academic fruits and contribute to the extra-curricular activities, offered on the St. An- drews campus. Many of them can be seen in the cafeteria during any given meal, and a smaller number can be seen rummaging through volumes of books in the library and still others even venture near or into the dormitories. It is then with a great deal of confusion and mys- tery that the riddle of why anyone would willingly give up residing on the S.A. campus in favor of peace, quiet, serenity, and relatively cheap- er expenses is pondered upon. Delp, William A,. Jr.. ' 71 Mullens, W, Va. Dickson William J , 72 Launnburg Arnngton Donald B , ' 74 Rowland Bowyer, Mane Adele. ' 72 Launnburg Came Harry E,. 71 Memphis, Tenn. Crosswell McDuffieK,. 72 Winston-Salem 239 Diggs, Stephen S , ' 73 Rockingham Dixon. Joseph E.. Jr.. ' 71 Columbia. S C Gamble. Robert D . ' 72 Laurmburg Griffiths. Dann E., 7 Bethesda. Md. Groff, TheeC. 72 Owings Mills, Md- Guy, David E , ' 71 Maxton Hannas. Craig W., 71 Laurmburg Howard, Romaine, ' 72 Tarboro Killian. Ray A.. ' 71 Charlotte Martin, Prescott L . ' 71 Tarboro Mason, Richard L.. 71 Philadelphia. Pa. Maynard, Hubbard D., 71 Laurinburg Ramsey, Dyer W , Gibson Ratliff. James N., 71 Newport News, Va. Rem, Craig W., 71 Arnold, Md. Richmond, Jack B , ' 72 Huntington. W. Va. Saut. Jeffrey D., 71 Ricfimond. Va Sewell. Hampton H., 71 Va. Beach. Va, Skutch. Ira F., ' 71 Old Greenwich, Conn. Stuart, David D., 71 Bluetield, W Va. Tisdale, Samuel T.. Jr., ' 71 GreenJield, Mass. W ellford. Randy T . 71 Memphis, Tenn Wesley, Stephen D , 71 Winston-Salem 240 DAY STUDENTS fca ' lSQ IS Q 15 Bl e 51  s 5« :- - - p i ii n,s Q.SI n, fi,s( n s n, ' a.j 5, I S £1 rS jn IS.S« Q 0fi ,£« Ri IkSQk! 1! k! Sk2 Ci 19 k? f ri il fa S« P5 £! Pi £« £1 .£! rigQg ' QgQgSltSBlgggglg I -r im r-z- Jl 243 f 7 Wv. 244 Before the green and air is gone Before ttie sun is just a brigtit spot out in tfie night time 245 i ' — ? —  t ad a V ;i . X A , mif.,:jm _ twi rh — .■« T- ' A- I  l .v ' 247 : 23 248 249 L. :a££;2 ■ ' The staff and the business manager, espec- ially, extend a sincere thanks to these busi- nesses who supported the 1971 Lamp Shield. McNAIR INVESTMENT CO. REAL ESTATE BARRON MILLS The Place To Go For The Brands You Know Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina fr(9m f he BILL ADAMS ESSO SERVICE Church and Main Laurinburg, North Carolina ATUS TIRES TUNE-UP COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE 276-2556 253 ■▼ Compliments of WACHOVIA BANK TRUST, N.A. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System To be or not to be Is not a question 254 SfHit ?, Studios i ' 14 EAST HARGETT STREET RALEIGH, N. C.  J 255 pm .iiiPB, - - - :--- WATER TREATMENT PRODUCTS |MOOUt A N D S ER V I CES SI NCE 1 91 5 THE MOGUL CORPORATION 120tS GRAHAM STREET- CHARLOTTE, NC 28203 Forrest D. Loy Route 2 gibsonville. n, c. 27249 919-449-6398 % (HAk t littp RIZK ' S For the Lassies For the Lads LANZ GANT GAY GIBSON CORBIN JOHN MEYER CRICKETEER HANG TEN FLORSHEIM GOOD LUCK TO THE CLASS OF 71 CITY AUTOS, INC. Laurinburg, N. C. Your Friendly Ford Dealer FORD - MERCURY PINTO 24 Hour Wrecker Service 276-2337 SAGA COMMUNITY DRUGS, INC Free Parking and Delivery Students Welcome Open— Mon. - Sat. 9:00-9:00 Sun. 2:00-7:00 1011 South Main Street (One block below Hardee ' s) Laurinburg, N. C. Phone 276-6061 THE HOLIDAY INN of Laurinburg 401 - 15 By-Pass 276-6555 ( ' 1 . BOBBY BUTTS, INC. BUICK, PONTIAC, CADILLAC GMC TRUCKS 1201 South Main Street Laurinburg, N. C. Phone 276-1471 SCOTLAND DRUG COMPANY, INC. Max Factor Distributors Laurinburg, N. C. BOB ' S JEWEL SHOP, INC. College Ploza Shopping Center College Plaza 213 Main St. 276-7318 276-1781 Laurinburg, N. C. Home of Keepsake Diamonds We ' re Tuned In. With the now generation. In today ' s fast-changing textile marketplace, you have to be with it. At Springs, we make colorful, splashy prints for the discotheque and coffee house set. Psychedelic towels and sheets for the avant-garde. Bedspreads, blankets, carpets and kitchen cottons for the heartland of America. Want to be where the action really is? For information about a career in jet-age textiles, write Manager of Recruiting, Springs Mills, Fort Mill, S. C. 29715, An equal opportunity employer. Springs Mills, Inc. Headquarters: Fort Mill, S. C. S MANN DRUG STORE College Plaza Shopping Center LAURINBURG, N. C. THE DRUG CHAIN WITH EVERYTHING - COMPLETE COSMETIC DEPARTMENT Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 9:30, Sunday 1 :00 to 7:00 Phone 276-7305 HERMAN ' S TIRE COMPANY, INC. 1518 South Main Street Laurinburg, N. C. Telephone 276-2324 Stereos, Televisions, Tape Players for Car Home, and Tape Cartridges For T. V. Service call 276-2340 Hi, Suzll (Don ' t let it bug you. Jack.) 2«0 McLAURIN-McARTHUR CHEVROLET COMPANY SALES AND SERVICE 1609 South Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina M ffM ii s MOfi BEST PRODUCTS COMPANY — In Richmond, Virginia — 4909-13 West Marshall St. - 359-5021 5400 Midlothian Turnpike - 233-9891 — In Lynchburg, Virginia — 2215 Langhorne Road - 345-5993 — In Arlington, Virginia — 4024 S. 28th Street - 931-4100 Om. Allen Ginsburg, Chicago, 1968 iJucJleil Jlppliance and S Co. Soles and Service Quality We Guarantee, Service We Give. Coll 523-5521 108 E. Gibson Ave. McColl, S. C. 29570 Call 276-1808 120 Cronly St. Laurinburg, N. C. 28352 CENTER GIBSON Movies ore your Best Entertainment K? ut s . 1. Compliments of WliitebrookFarms ! BILL EVANS CO., INC. COMPLETE OFFICE OUTFITTERS LETTERPRESS — OFFSET PRINTERS Phone CR 6-0519 126 East Church Street Laurinburg, North Carolina Laurinburg, N. C. One HOUR WBTinime THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING 262 We are proud to have been the contractor on these two fine buildings. H. R. JOHNSON CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. IVIonroe, N. C. , 1. WESTWOOD TEXACO SERVICE U, S. 74 West T Dial 276-1414 ;x4c esD James Stanton, Owner S H GREEN STAMPS ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT COMPANY LAURINBURG, N. C. 401 By-Pass — King St. RICHMOND, VA. 9-13 West Main St. RALEIGH, N. C. 2926HillsboroSt. AUGUSTA, GA. 1441 Greene St. JOHNSON BROTHERS REALTY AND CONSTRUCTION CO. P. 0. Box 1528 Laurinburg, N. C. K. N. (Bill) JOHNSON Phone OR 6-3710 FRED HALL Phone OR 6-3775 Ooo, eee, ooo, ah, ah, Ting, tang. Walla-walla bing bang. Ooo, eee, ooo, ah, ah, Ting, Tang, Walla, walla, Bing bang. W. D. Octor compliments of MAINTENANCE SUPPLY CO., INC. p. 0. Box 498 Huntersville, N. C. It ' s the real thing, Coke Compliments of HAMLET COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO HAMLET, N. C. ■ ssxm. m '  ?5 LEGION DRUG STORE, INC. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded Corner of Main and Cronly 276-0833 ACKERMAN FURNITURE MUSIC CO. 214 James Street Laurinburg, North Carolina Your Furniture and Music Needs 276-3531 WADE S. DUNBAR AGENCY, INC. Phone 276-3621 Insurance Plus Service Since 1914 454 Atkinson Street Laurinburg, N. C. SOUTHERN NATIONAL Member F.D.I.C. . . . The Bank that thinks young, even though it ' s been in business since 1897. Thanks! THE PARTY SHOPPE TTC, («so) GASOLINE, OIL AND BATTER I ES CARL STEVENS ESSO SERVICE North Main Street FIELDS ESSO SERVICE 401-A North Main Street WEST CHURCH STREET ESSO 237 W. Church Street ESSO HEATING OIL SERVICE OIL CO, INC. 275-1673 HANEY ' S TIRE RECAPPING SERVICE, INC. 1663 South Main Street Laurinburg, N. C. 28352 Phone: 275-2636 COMPLETE W HEEL ALIGNMENT Windshields Stocked and Installed Recapping: One-day Service — Orbitread Method BMrf T --aB 1 BEST WISHES TO OUR MANY CUSTOMERS FIRST UNION NATIONAL BANK OF NORTH CAROLINA Post Office Box 986 Laurinburg, North Carolina 28352 ' yfa ' d PARGAS p. O. Box 25 Phone 844-5423 219 W. Wilmington St. Maxton, N. C. NAME BRAND COOKING AND HEATING APPLIANCES, INCLUDING CENTRAL HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING We Service What We Sell 268 1 11 I II fcrf I Mifiiifcfc.jaiaw it wu. FURNITURE Carpets for Your Room CARPETS APPLI ANCES DIAL 276-6600 106 MAIN STREET LAURINBURG. N, C. What is the purpose of reality? ■- ' -««= « FIRESTONE HOME AND AUTO SUPPLIES Phone 276-2924 Laurinburg, N. C. Phone 844-5883 Maxton, N. C. BLESS OUR E JFETE fi DQF n ITORy 4 fe-!r:[ja„La • ' j ' - ' li. ' ' |ilWi 269 ' ' - - ' ■ ' m. ' sm ' ■ ■ ' Activities Albemarle-204 Baseball-190. 191 Basketball-182-187 Cabinet-118 Cheerleaders-119 Choir-116, 117 Civttan Club-121 Concord Hall-208-212 Cross Country-ISO, 181 Day Studenls-239-240 Elections Baard-124 Entertainers-122.123 Farrago-126 Golf-194-195 Granville Hall-213-216 GunClub-125 Handbook Commitlee-127 Honor Society-130 Highland Players-128. 129 Judicial Board-133 Judicial Comfnitlee-132 Kings Mountain Hall-217-220 Lance-135 Mecklenburg Hall-221-224 Men ' s Recreation Associalion-136 Men ' s Residence Court-137 Orange Hall-225-229 Orientation Committee-138 Parent ' s Day-140. 141 Ratso-144 Riding Club-142 Sa.ling Club-143 Senale-145 Soccer-174-179 St. Andrews Christian Council-156. 157 Student Center Board-146 Student Faculty Appellate Board-153 Student Lite Commitlee-149 Student North Carolina Educational Association-148 Track-192. 193 Tennis-196, 197 Who ' s Who-158-163 Wilmington Hall-230-234 Winston-Salem Hall-235-238 Women ' s Recreation Association-150 Women ' s Residence Court-151 Wrestling-1S8, 189 WSAP-152 Faculty Staff Aiken, Lillian P Alexander. William M. Allsbrook, Margo Applegate, Arthur L. Babcock, Harold C, Barnes, Donald G, Barnes. Karen K- Bayes, Ronald H Becker, Jeanne Bennett, Carl D. Bennett, Margaret W. Blackwell, Floyd E. Blair, Aaron E. Bowen, Margaret W. Boyd, Linda H. Boyd, Spencer S. Bridgeman. Linda S. Brockmann, Monlque H. Bullock, Leslie Bushoven, Cornelius, III Business Of(ice-182 Campbell, John H.-87 Carlile, Robert E Chaiken. Robert L.-182 Clausz, John C Cobbs, Howard C. Coburn, Loufse S. Coffman, Rooney L. Craig, John W.-83 Crayton. Bennie Crossley, Ronald C. Daughlrey, John P. Davenport, Robert F -73 Davidson, Robert F -68, 69 Davis. Julian M.-182 Davis, Kathleen H. Davis. Leora P. Dean of the College-68 Decker, Rodger W.-70 Development Otfice-87 Dickens. Mildred H Doubles, Malcom C. Dove, Elizabeth M. Dubs, Chris L. Dugger, Fowler, Jr. -87 Dunbar, Roberta P Eastman, Robert F Edens, Eleane O. Emerson. Sara M. Ferrell. Michael R. Fouke. George L. Frye, J. Bruce-87 Fulcher, John R. Gay. Lacy M,-81 Geffert, Carl W Gillis, Fern A. Gourley, Everett E. Gnffin, R. Gerald Gross. Jeffrey T. Gurol. Metin N Hackney. Rufus R , Jr Haluska. John E Mannas, Christine Hart, Donald J. -66, 67 Harvey, Gladys Harvin, Harry L. Hasty, Nettie L. Hendrix, Wade H. HiK, Douglas W Hix, Patricia D Holmes. Elizabeth Holmes, J D J, Hood, Barbara P. Hope. A Guy Horn, Hebert A Hunt, Alice M. Infirmary Jackson. James H. Jacobs, James A Johnson. Betty S Johnson, Charles E Johnson, F Badger-87 Joines, Vann S , Jr. Jones, Josie A Joyner, Charles W, Keylon, Lucylle C. Kinne, Bobbin K Kraly, Harry L Lane. Billie A. Lee, Nancy M. Ltetz. Richard J. Liles, Elaine 8. Lott. Thomas W. Ludlow, Carol Ludlow, Luther S. Malloy, Ida M. Marks. Stuarl A, Matthews. Ann H. Maynor, Mildred G. McDonald, Arthur M. Mclntyre, Leta W McKenzie. Adce L McKinnon, Virginia M McLean, David A McNair, David McNeill, Mary W. Mamtenance-80 Melton, George E. Miller, George T. Morgan. Wilham H. Morrow, Lance J Morrow, Margo D. Murray. Joseph B. Myers, Derek S Neylans, Catherine E, Nye, Robert N Ollis, James B Overholser, Grace M Parker. Mary L Parnell. Betly S. Parrish, Charles E -87 Paslor-73 Patterson, Mildred C. Patton. Betly J, Peacock, Jewel W. Peacock, Nancy N Pedigo, Robert A. Perkins, Rebecca J Peterson, Sarah H. Pope, Linda T. Powell, Steven F. President of the College-66 Prusl, Richard C. Rayburn, Jean L. Raynor, Mary Reville, Jacques C -81 Rogers, Helen Holland, William W. SAGA- Samuels. James H. Simmons, Lalavae M. Singleton, David S. Singleton, Jacqueline H. Smith. Alvin H, Smith, Mark L. Snider, Carolyn Somerville, Thomas C. Sonierville, Virginia P, Spencer, Rebecca F. Stephens, James F Stephens, Selah A Styron, Clarence E Swart, Cornelius M. Tapp, Margaret Q 1 empleton, Grace W. Terry, Cora T. Thomas, Alfred E. Thomas, Flonene M. Thompson, Rosalie H Urie, Elsie D. Urie, Robert M Varnes, Arthur W Vocational Rehabilitation Association Wade. Gentry W Wade, Peggy M Wallace, Mary K Weimer, George W. Welmore. David E, White, W D Williams, Jo Ann Williams. John E, 274 students Abell. Christopher M. Abell, Mary M. Abernathy, Janet Renee-205 Abernathy, Rita Lane-205 Adams, Anita J Adams, Anita B Adams, Maryanne W -231 Addington, ins E. Albertson, Jeffrey S -218 Alexander, ( erriam-209 Allen, Robert D.-222 Allgood, Michael P. 236 Allred, David F. Allred. Rachel N.-209 Alston, Douglas S Anderson, Edward A Anderson, Mary C--205 Andrews, Susan E -231 Andrews, Josephine S.-231 Annas, Robert B. Arnett, Elaine R. Arnold, Ames T.-236 Arnnglon. Donald B.-239 Asher. William C. Ashmore, Hall B Atkinson, Frank V., Jr Atkinson. Sidney E -218 Ausband, Leigh T Baker. Arch C Baker, Frederick L., Jr. -236 Baker, Edgar R -218 Baker, Nancy Irene Baldwin. Lani K.-214 Baney. Robert M -226 Barber, Steve Barclay, John W. Barclay, Walter D Barlow. Ted S Barr, Pierce Barrick, James W.-236 Bartlett, Edwin C.-218 Barton, Craig B -236 Bateman, Cynthia L -231 Baucom, Jean K. Baughman. Gretchen Ann-226 Beale, Norman V -226 Beale, David S -222 Beale, Richard H. Beall, Edward C. Bearse, Ellie Beedle, Helen E Bekaert, Susan R -231 Bender. James V -222 Bennett, Walter L.-222 Benz, Cathryn A -226 Berger, Lawrence E. Bernhardt. George L.. Jr. -236 Berry, Pauline D.-209 Biba. John F. Bickett, Julia E -209 Bishop. Josephine H. Blackburn, Sallie J. -231 Blackmon, Mary Ellen Blake, Barbara J -214 Blanchard. Jane G.-205 Blue, Ruthie O. Blumenstein, Robert P Boardman. Stephen Bond. Barbara W -214 Bonsac, Shelby W. Bowden. Clilford Bowden, Lavis C -236 Bowerson, David G. Bowie, David R.-236 Bowie, Mane L.-214 Bowie, Mane M.-214 Bowyer. Marie A. -239 Boyd, James H. Boyd. Steven R -236 Boykin, Belte Lynn-214 Bradley, Mary M -226 Braly, Matthew C Brame, Randal A. Brand, Mimi M -205 Breckenridge, Scoti R.-222 Breda, Dana M. Bridges. Saunders M.-222 Bngg, Jeffery M. Briggs. Edwin G, Briggs, Frederick W. Brinson, Jennifer S. Britt, Roger E., Jr, Broome, Mildred E -205 Brown. George E Brown, Julia C Brown, Elisha W Brown, Emma G 226 Brown, June J Brown. Walter S -222 Bryan, John-222 Bryant, Milford H., Jr. -222 Bryne, Joanna L -209 Buchanan. Thomas W. Buck. Glenda Sue-209 Buckland, William W Buffington, James A , Jr -222 Bullard, John A Bunn. Alan L -226 Bunn. David E.-222 Burdett. Allen M Burgwyn, Charles 8,-226 Burns, Katherine Y.-231 Burrell, Lonnie J. -236 Burress, Daniel O -218 Bush, John E.-236 Butler. Loren L Byars, Oraleze De Lavane Byrne. William L . Jr Cam. Faye W Caines, Donna J Caldwell, Charles F. Calloway. Rita G -226 Came, Harry E.-239 Campbell, Glenn E.-222 Campbell, Wesley L., Jr -236 Campbell, Barbara T Carlson, Sara L.-214 Caron, Pamela J Carr, Gloria J Carr, Patricia A -209 Carroll, Becky-209 Carson, Dale Cratg Carson, Shirley M -226 Carter. Pamela F -209 Chaiken, Barbara H Chambers, Grace E,-214 Chappell. Clarence C.-222 Cheletle, Dairlyn Jo-231 Cheney, Emily R Cheney. Johanna Lee-231 Cheney, Philip M Chesney, Paul A , Jr. Chiphe, Eva H. Christian. Thomas J. -236 Clegg, Francis L, Clendenin. William Cline, Margaret Jane-205 Cocke, Thomas P. -222 Coddington, Jeffrey L Codell, Carol S Coleman. Elizabeth M -205 Coleman, Francis A -222 Compton, Catherine S Connelly, Lynne Conway, Barbara L. Cook, Steven W Cook, Judy B,-209 Cooper, Deborah-231 Cooper, Donald G -222 Copelan, Patricia I. Copeland. Sarah E Collingham, Marchant-218 Covington, William R Coyle. Richard Jay Craig, Mary E. Crane, Carolyn L -231 Crawley, Deborah G.-209 Creech, Mansfield H, Croswell. McDuffie K.-239 Crow, Mary Virginia Crudup, Bate T Culwell, Kenneth G DAdamo, Theresa U.-209 Damron, Mac -218 Daniel. John W Daniel, Mary G.-209 Daniels, Ethel A -214 Daniels, Stevie 0.-231 Darby, Mary Anne-231 Davidson, Janice R -209 Davis. Kitty P -214 Davis, Charles-218 Davis, Emmett T Davis, Ian M. Davis. Joanne P. Davis, John E.-226 Davis, June L -226 Davis, Roger P. -218 Davis. Todd Steven-239 Dean. Tom D -231 Deck, Vickie A. -205 Decker, Henry W -236 Decker, Virginia B. Delp. William A., Jr. -239 DelTosto, Henry P. -222 Denham. Steven C -236 Denham. Suzanne-209 Dennison. Carolyn L,-231 Depkin, Katherine D. Derr, George C. DeSherbinin, Michael-236 DeVane, Benjamin G -222 Dickson, David G.-226 Dickson. William J. -229 Diggs, Stephen S,240 Dillon, Marcus L., Ill Dixon, Joseph E., Jr. -240 Dodson, Denny E -222 Dolge, David B. Donaldson. Charlotte D -226 Donhauser, Jennifer L -205 Dougherty, Jane G -209 Douglas. Earl J. Douglass, James E. Dove, Jacqueline D -214 Downey, Leslie J. -226 Downey, Dianne-236 Dryden, Mary Ellen-214 Duddy, Sara L.-205 Dufek, David F -222 Duncan, Jo Ann-214 Dunlap, Ann C -205 Durham, Delle R.-231 Duty, Mary C Eckman, Stephen J. -218 Edens. Julie Anne-226 Edge, Thomas A. -226 Edgerlon. Arnold B. Edmonds. Sally B -214 Edwards, Judith G.-210 Edwards. Maurice N Egleslon, Charles-222 Embinder, Stephen C -218 Eipper, John C. Eldndge. John Elkins, Thomas J. -218 Eller, Richard M.-222 Ellison, Dianne-214 Ermler, Michael P. -226 Erwm. Riley W -236 Eutsler, Stuart K. Evans, Hervey Evans, Robert W. Evans, Patricia A -205 Everett, Sue C.-231 Ewart, Laurie W Exum, Josiah C -218 Fawley. Dorman, W.-222 Fernandez, Antonio A. Ferry, Alan E -222 Ficken, Peter K. Finger, Paul E. Finnicum. Glenna L.-205 Fisher, Don F,-236 Fisher, Graham Robins-218 Fisher, Thomas M. Fletcher, Michael T. Flinchum, Nathan Flowers, Bettye Jo-214 Foil, Nancy J -210 Folsom, Charles W, Forbes, Marianne-232 Forrest, Laura R.-205 Forrest, William G. Fori, George M Fox, Doralynn-232 Fox. Patti C. Fox, Richard L , Jr -236 Freeman, Henry B. French. Charles T Fry, John D., Jr. -237 Fuller. Helen L.-205 Funk. Nancy A. -214 Futral, William J Gaddy. Samuel M Gamble, Robert D , Jr. -240 Gardner, Katherine D -214 Garrison, James Banks-237 Gaskin, James Mc. Gaud. Henry T. Gehres, Bma J Gehres. Hewitt C.-223 Gerstner, Jack S. Getty. George Charles-223 Gibbs, David S. Gibson. Debra M -232 Gibson, Millicent-215 Gilberlson, Knstina Gillian, James R. Gilreath, Ronald J. Giroux, Christopher C Givens, John H -218 Goedert. Lucy Lee Goodnough, Mark L -219 Gorandon, Debbie C Gordon, Janice E.-215 Gordy, Walter T Gollenkieny, Charles H , Jr. -226 Grady, Martha E, Graham, John T. Graham, Nancy 0-232 Grant, Heather J -210 Grant. Mary D,-232 Gravely, Marshall G -223 Gray, Judith A. Grebner, Denise Grebner, Franz J Gredlein, Gary E. Green, Elizabeth Greene. Edwina C. Greene, Phillip A. Greeson, Joyce-210 Gregory. Eric W, Greuling, William M, Gribble, Jane-205 Gnffin, John N.-237 Griffiths. Dann E,-240 Groff, T. Compton-240 Grubbs, Cynlhia L. Grumbles, Mary Dayle-210 Gulbrandsen, Susan B Gunter, Elizabeth A -215 Guy, David-240 Gwinn, Jane W Haase, Robert W III Haddix, James E.-218 Haggard, William D.-218 Haigler, Becky-232 Haines, William C. Hale. Charles B . Jr,-223 Hall, Anthony B.-218 Hall. Edna Jo Hall, Henry L.-237 Halyburton, Teresa Hamilton. Diane Hane, Elizabeth A Hannas, Craig W -240 Harbin, Elisabeth A. -205 Hardee. Jasper R Hardesty, Charles D. Harding. Laurence L.-219 Harllee, Mildred J Harp. Peggy M -205 Harris, Julian T Harris. Susan F.-232 Hartke, Keith L.-237 Hartley, Ruth E.-215 Hartlove, Waller E. Harward, James T -237 Hastings. Valerie M -206 Hasychak, Michael L. Hayden. Ronald L -227 Hayden, Wilburn, Jr. -227 Hayes. Susan C -232 Hayes. Christopher D -237 Haygood, Kathleen R.-206 Heaton, Carolyn E.-227 Heaven. Carol L.232 Heery. Marvin P . 111-237 Helms, Martha Jane-210 Henderson, Dons A -206 Herder, Robert R , Jr Hermann, Cecelia M -227 Heyward. Emma E -210 Highsmilh. Ann C -210 Hill. Mary M Hill, Sara B -205 Hines. David M.-237 Hinshelwood, Mary K. Hitt. William-237 Hobbs. Wayne D.-227 Holder, Anne W Holder. Robert R.-223 Holmes, Merry C. Holt, Cherryl C.-210 Hope, Anne G -227 Hope. Jean B -227 Horner, Milton A Hotvedt. Suzanne G.-232 Howard. Michael D Howard, George Howard, Romaine. Jr. -240 Howell, John R.-223 j 275 = Howerton. Diane-232 Huckms, Dianne-232 Huff, Harry A. Huff, Julie M. Huffman. Betty L.-232 Humphress, Laura K -206 Humphrey. Carolyn F.-227 Hundertmark, Glenn S.-219 Hunter. Charles V , Jr -223 Hunting, Susan Hutcheson, Mary M 232 Ingram. Banning V -219 Innes. Diane L.-210 issac. Michaei-219 Isenhour, Shirley E.-210 Isley, Sarah C -210 Jackson. Edith J. Jackson. Sallie M Jacobs, Janet C.-232 Jacobs, Robert R., Jr. James. William A. -237 Jamison. Paul G. Jernigan, Ten D--206 Jerome. Walter G., Ill Jessup, James L -223 Johns, Wdliam S. Johnson, Debra L.-233 Johnson, Venable, Jr. -223 Johnson. Walter K.-223 Johnson, William Mc--219 Johnston, Claire K.-210 Jolly. Patricia A -210 Jones. Ebbert E Jones, Frank H.-237 Jones, Hugh M.-237 Jones, IVIargaret W Jones, Sarah H. Jones. Thomas D. Jones, Wanda K.-233 Jones, Nancy L,-233 Jones, Pamela A, -206 Joseph, Samuel J., 111-219 Judge, Richard J. -219 Kascher, Sue B. Kaulfman, Jennifer L Kearney Kathenne f . Keen, Susan H. Keller, Frances L -210 Kelly. David C. Kennedy. Karen E--233 Kennedy, Lorna A, -233 Kerr, Mary P -206 Kibler, Laura K -215 Killian, Ray A., Jr. -240 King, Elizabeth M.-233 Kinney, Joseph C -227 Kinney, Mildred W -206 Kip. Thomas B.-219 Kleber, Mark D -227 Klein, James L Kline. John D.-219 Knight. Luther T. Knowles, Margaret B -233 Koch. Kathleen K.-206 Kohrman. Rila A Komar. Janice E. Koser. Vicki L -215 Kraly, Mary L Kurtz, Susanne M,-227 Kutack, Mardi A. Laguardia. John M.-223 Lament, Catherine A. Lancashire. Merry C.-233 Lancaster, Emily R. Landis, David H.-233 Lane, Douglas R. Lanier. Stanley L, Lathem, Louie P., Ill Lauber, Annette-227 Lavoie, Marie A -210 Lawing. James Roy, Jr,-233 Lawson, Jack N -233 Lawson. James C. Jr. Lawson, John D -237 Lea, Louisa S. Leach, Rona-233 Leavitt, Roberta J -227 Lee, Ammie B.-206 Lee, Jenny (Peachie)-206 Lee, Nancy M Lee, Sara P -233 Leggetl, Ingnd D.-206 Leiand, Timothy F Leslie, Mary L.-215 Ligon, Margaret A. -206 Lilly. Robert H Linn. Gary W Lisenby. Dennis R. Litchford, Stephen D Liverman. Dianne M.-215 Logan, Linda L.-206 Lohn, Pleasant M -215 Long. MatI R , 111-223 Long, Joseph J , III Love, Deborah A. -227 Lowenhaiipl, Erie S. Lowery. Michael S.-237 Lundy, Karen L Luper, Raymond E., Jr. Lutz. James D , Jr,-223 Lyman, Steven-227 Mabon. Robert H. MacCue, Conrad MacDougall, Jeanne Marie-215 MacKenzie, Ann S.-233 MacLeod, Mary M -210 Macy, Janet-227 Magnusen, Joan E. Maley, Suzanne Mallard, Gary P. Mallison, Frederick M. Martin, Homer D., Jr. -237 Martirr, Janice, Mr. -210 Martin, Prescott L., Jr -240 Mason, Elsie-215 Mason, Rickard L,-240 Massengill, Stephen E -223 Mathews. Carolyn W.-206 Mathieson, Gregory R -219 May, Haywood G Maynard, Hubbard D.-240 McAlister. Robert V.. Jr. McAlister, Steven M. McAnulty, Patrick L. McCallum, Stephen S,-219 McCollum. Julie A. -227 McCrary, Robert A., Jr. McCue, Susan A. -210 McGuinn, Rex A. -237 Mclntyre, Martin L., Jr McKechnie. Joan E.-206 McKeithan, Carler-219 McLaughlin, Johnnie M,-206 McLawhorn, Janie Jolly-206 McLean, Sheila-211 McMichaet, Gary L. McNeil, Pamela A. -211 McNeill, Cherianna-227 McQueen, Linda L.-211 McQuown, H, Michael-219 McRainey, Pamela G. -228 Mebane, Nancy F.-215 Medders. Martha E.-211 Megee, Ann H, Megee, Jane A. Mehrling. Charles K.-223 Men, Paula-233 Merritt, Mary A. -211 Meyer, Elizabeth S, Miller, James T -219 Miller, Frances A -206 Miller, Thomas D. Mills, David G.-228 Mitchell, William C. Mitchell, Ray N. Mizetl, Alonzo D., 111-223 Mobley, Darlene A. -215 Monteith, Nancy J. Moore, Karen J. Moore, Jacquelyn-228 Moore, Karen E Moore, Tracy T.-228 Moore, Valerie L.-206 Morgan, Claire-215 Morgan. Richard R.-237 Morris, Sally A -211 Morrison, Thad. 111-219 Morrison, Margie-215 Morton. Frances E.-216 Moser. Joyce G.-233 Moses. Janet S.-211 Mowen. John H . Jr. Moyers, Suzanne D. Munday, Mary L -228 Mustard, William N -238 Myers, Susat J. Nance, Paula M. Neale, Beverly L -211 Neil, Sara E -211 Neill, Jeffrey T Nesbit, Kalrina R.-211 Nesbit, Ralph, Jr, m Neumann. Christopher E.-223 Nickle, Phihp T Nolan, Lavonne Noland. Jean R -211 Northam, George 1.-223 Novak, Neil C O ' Neal, Daphne-233 Oliver, Peggy L,-207 Orttenburger, Marsh C. Owen, Susan D- Page. Janice C. Papp. Allen N. Parker, Jennifer C -211 Parks, Loretta R -216 Parr. Francis M -228 Parrish, John S Parsons. Glenda M. Patterson. Wanda D -233 Perry. Francis C Penninger. William V.. Jr. -228 Perkins, Mark L. Pernn. James R , Jr. -238 Pilkington. F Ivy Pilkington. Melissa A -216 Pledger. Margaret F.-216 Pledger. Patricia A -216 Point, Stephen H. Polk, Barbara A -216 Pollock, Michael A. Pollock, Sarah E.-219 Polston. Kenneth W. Pope. Harold J , Jr. Porter. Edgar Adwell Powers, Scott E. Pratt, Charles C,-219 Quick, Priscilla Diane-216 Rader, Mary S -233 Ralph, David A. Ralph, Richard F -238 Ramsey, Dyer W., 11-240 Randolph. Henry G., Jr- Rankin, Robert B -238 Ralliff, James N -240 Raynor, Douglas D Reagan. James S -220 Reech, Philip D. Reed, Ruth E.-216 Reichard, Wilma J.-233 Rem, Craig W -240 Reynolds. Michael L. Rhoderick, John C. Richards. Susan A. -211 Richmond, Jack B--240 Riddle. Teresa J--211 Ritchie. Donna M.-207 Ritler, Timothy W Roane, Thomas H.-238 Robbing, William W.-244 Roberts. Paula S.-211 Roberts, David E. Robinson, John L.-228 Robinson, Daniel D.-220 Robinson, Jill A. Robinson, Richard A. -238 Rochelle. Ann D.-207 Rodda. Susan K -207 Rogers, Elinor R. Rogers, Game S. Rogers, Hudson C. Rohrmann, Nancy-211 Rohrmann, Rita D.-234 Roper, John A. -223 Rose, Thomas P. Rosenstem, Jack Ross, Margaret M.-211 Rothrock. James A -220 Rountree. Roger R Rowell, Roland Russ. Wanda D. (Tootsie)-234 Sanders, Patricia L.-216 Sanford, Susan A. -207 Saunders, William H.. Jr. -238 i 276 INDEX Saul, Jeffrey -240 Savage, James M -220 Scales, Philip N -224 Schmidt, Peter H Schurke, Robert H -228 Scoti, Lucy A -207 Scrogins, Raymond L Seago, Caroline E -211 Seawell, Karen A -234 Seigler, Deborah E Seilars. David-220 Serini, John D Seine. C H Kevin Sewell, Hampton H,-240 SchackeUofd. Lyne M , Jr. -220 Shannon, Ellen M,-228 Sharpe. Dennis W -211 Sheppard. Glennys C -207 Sheppard. Vickie J -207 Silman, James I II Srmmons, Craig R,-228 Simpson, Milburn W -228 Simpson, Marguerite L -207 Sinden. Watson R -224 Singletary, George H -228 Skipper, Larry B -238 Skutch, Ira F.-240 Slaney. Susan O.-207 Slaughter. Patricia C. Sloan. James R Smith, E Yvette-207 Smith, David H Smith, Karen M,-234 Smith. Princess April J. Smith, Wirt P. -224 Smith, Caroline W -216 Smith, Christopher C. Smith, Dons W -212 Smith. Edward T -228 Smith, Ellen C.-211 Smith, Hugh F -220 Smith, James S.-220 Smith, John f fl,-238 Smith. ChiChi L.-207 Smith, Mary Ellen-214 Smith, Tncia P. -216 Smith. Ruby F -207 Smith, Sally L -229 Snipes, William E.-238 Snyder, Pamela 3-212 Sohmer, Robert M.-224 Southwell, E Lee-220 Speer, Sarah C Spencer, D. Sharry-234 Sperling, Thomas W--238 Speth. Charles T,-224 Sprunt, Kenneth M-. Jr. -238 Squires, Alice T -229 St. John, Leslie A. -216 Stahlberger, Charles-229 Slalder. Helen E.-234 Stawski, Robert M. Stephens, James I. Stevenson, Angela B -212 Steward, Laura J, -216 Stewart, Kenneth C , Jr. -220 Stimmell, Susan J, -207 Stone, Barbara J. -234 Stossel, Jeanne M Street, Frank L.-238 Strickland, Mary E, Stroud, Donald E. Stuart. Bruce G. Stuart, Bonnie Rae-207 Stuart, David DuPuy-240 Sturgill, Paul J. Surles. Susan L -234 Sutton, Samuel L, Swanson, Karen H.-234 Swanson. Louis E , Jr. -220 Sykes, Alvis W Tavlor, Bruce A.. Jr. Taylor, Freida K -212 Taylor, Dawn L -207 Tebo. Mary V,-234 Thomas, Angelyn K -212 Thomas. Elame-234 Thompson, Charles P. -229 Thompson, Walter D.. Jr. -223 Thrift. Donald W. Ttsdaie, Lotti E, Tisdale. Samuel T.. Jr--240 Tomlmson, Jane A. -216 Trabue, Nelson T.. Jr. Treece, David A. -229 Trotter, Thomas W. Troyer, Nancy L -207 Tuck, Selma T.-212 Turbyfill, Ardis R -229 Underdown, Eleanor B.-216 Upchurch. Sarah B. Upjohn, G. Van Vaden. Frank R Vakos. Robert H Valentine, Beth E,-212 Valier. David P -238 ' ■ ' ■■ r f ;r Van Den Heuvel. John Van Ulk, Jay-238 Vangorder. Cathie S -209 Van Zandt, Maury Lee-212 Vardeman, Frances H. Venabie. Deborah D.-234 Vendrell. Virginia M -207 Vernooy, Jeffrey A. Voltz, Vicki J. Von Unwerth, R. G Vonbuelow, Robert L Vosburgh, Toby W.-238 Waggett, EvangelmeJ -216 Wagner, David E -224 Waldo, Alfred O., Ill Walker, B. Marlm-238 Walker, Jan R.-207 Walker. Mary L Walters, Carter A. -220 Walters, Michael L,-220 Wampler. Rebecca C.-234 Waple, Judith A. Ward, Jeffrey S.-224 Ward, John W., Ill Ware, John T.-220 Warren. Thomas P -224 Warren. Martha C,-207 Warren, Wayne A. Warren, William T , 111-238 Waters, Marsha L. Watkins, Kenneth C.-220 Watkins, Samuel A., Ill Watson, Meredith H.-224 Weaver, Miles F.-238 Webbere, Sandra L -216 Weber. John H., Jr. Weems. Marian B.-212 Welch. Richard E. Wellford, Randy T.-240 Wesley, Stephen D.-240 West, Elizabeth C. Westrick, Debra L -212 Wetmore, Ruth Y. Welsel. Christobel R White. Katherine L White, Sidney 0,-220 White, William M Whitesides, William A. Whitford, M Susan Whitmyre. Leslie A. -212 Wilfong, Jane K.-216 Wilhoyte, Don E.-224 Wilkerson, William R. Wilkinson, Vincent Shepard-224 Willcox, Constance J. -234 Williams. Dixon C -224 Williams, George O, Williams, Frances R.-229 Williams. Larry B.-238 Williams. Nancy K--212 Williams, Robert J.. II Williamson, John P--224 Wilson, Steven W.-220 Wilson, Susan L -234 Wilson. William J., Ill ♦- 1 p Wilson. Christopher C -224 Wilson, Jennifer Wilson, Lewis G.. Jr. -224 Wilson, Lucy D.-234 Winter. Katrina-207 Wise, Kenneth W.-224 Womble, Joan M. Wright, Paul M. Wright, Walter L Young, Tracy R.-229 Young, Robert A. Zurbrugg. Franz Patrons Ackerman Furniture Adams Esso Barron frills Belk ' s Best Products Co Bill Evans Co. Bobby Butts, Inc. Bob ' s Jewel Shop. Inc. Center Gibson Theatres City Autos, Inc. Community Drugs Dossenbach ' s Electrical Equipment Co. Firestone Home Auto Supplies First Union National Bank Hamlet Coca-Coala Bottling Co. Haneys Tire Recapping Service Herman ' s Tire Co,. Inc. Holiday Inn H R Johnson Construction Co., Inc- Johnson Brothers Construction Co. Legion Drugs Maintenance Supply Mann Drugs Martinizing McLaurin-McArthur Chevrolet McNair ' s Department Store McNair Investment Co. McNeil ' s Appliance TV Co. Pargas Party Shop Pepsi Cola Bollling Co. Roses Rizks ' AGA ssie Lassie )tland Drug Co. vice Oil ith Studio . uthern National Bank Spring Mills, Inc. The Mogul Corporation Wachovia Bank Trust Wade S. Dunbar Westwood Texaco Whitebrook Farms I K 4 INDEX 277 ■m.wr d . ■ 5-7 . j3«e hMe slft - se 3 r- i i mm f? ' ' . - iwm sz . L. 282 283 db : . K ( N ' A 285 ;jw- ' --i?r I . r 287 -r-x 288 UJJJ I , — A. ' tV- M -A- ' l v . Zyy -jj


Suggestions in the St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) collection:

St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974


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