Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL)

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 240

 

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 240 of the 1967 volume:

- ' 1 f - 1 1 1 .A . A . 5 All Q 5 'Hu A A' i. V fl vs. - s N 's JL NY I , ' ' ,v A , , N- ' 1 - ,- . x , 44 9' f Q2 J, W9 , 4. if LX N v -f , 7 .gn .MJ 1 1-arf ,,,:, .',' 1,5 ZTN55 , ,,..- L- ix LL aj X . -17 H l b.. 'i 5 E ' .. , .4........., om .i n X ' x Y TIT YVE .,,....,,. . .., no dllb 1 I f nw : . I 'sg 1 i , , x, .0- v m , A if if-f iV. 1 ij 8 5 Ml Q5 5.2. Q .4 ff 1 F' af 1- XJ X ,QI f X X I it '5 .MJ1 - - 1. gf f V ' ' 1 L A X Q .... U, U if we 1 .E . -M I 5?5i'f4'455'5.7 R LE S S T 1 g 1 Ji 1' h ? X N ovember, 1966 STAFF AND ADVISORS Editor-in-Chief Pamela Edwards Assistant Editor Ellen Kurpiewski Art Editor , Lewis Alquist Copy Editor David Davidson Feature Editor Sidney Rowe Assistant Feature Editor Suzanne Kelley Literary Editor , Stan Wood Sports Editor . Edward Dempsey General Staff Assistant Celeste Grillo Photographers Norman Summey, David Porter John Homan, Tim Smith, Don Hood Cartoonists Paul Harding, Greg Waite Art Work Ted Nation, Allan Hayes Director of Publications Dr. Harold B. Hayes Dean of University Parallel Programs Cover design bv Sue Kelley and Fsfi Anderson Dr. Homer M. Ledbetter I I I I I I I I I fllikl' I , II If I Ii ON CAMPUS CSe1ected Cartoonsj ....,,,,,, ,.., . ,, , AN INTERVIEW WITH JIM BISHOP Elle Kurpiewski PRESIDENT BLEE . , ,,....,...,, ,,,,. . ,, ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY ,,... ,...,....,,,,.... , THE WORLD OF TOMORROW HERE TODAY Edward Dempsey THE PRESIDENTS RECEPTION ..AAA...,.,.,.,.. ,A,,,A. ....4.,. ,,,, . . RAT WEEK ....R,.,..,, I EA.,,.., ,E..,,... .,.....4.,..,..EE,....,.,, , ,E....,,. , , , RAT'S REPOSE .....,...,.... EA.A ..,.....,.E.,.........A,,4.,,,...,.,...,,...,...,..,,,........,,.,...., . . . THE DIFFICULT BUSINESS OF WRITING GOOD PROSE Stan VVood and David Davidson WARNER, PORTER AND WARNER fLyceum Revxewj ...,.,.......,...,.,,,,..,...., , .,.,,...,.......,....,...,,,... ..,... , I . WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? QMOVIE Revxewj ..,..,, ,, ......., ..,.,..............., .. .. A JOB WELL DONE ,,,, ,, ,. ,..,. ., PICADILLY CPOEMJ . ......, Scott Anderson sg omeu 4 ,-' 1--1.43 -up-gn x. , X, fllff , Z TX ...-v- ' t , I 1 '- , 4 V I X I me 1. M l knew there were a lot of ver- 7 fl, - xi' -. g - N min on campus, but I never knew lj., F XM ' L' ' they rated their own week. 1' .... 3 'f I ' r J l f 1' ff qgsr If you're on the parking lot when it starts I X Ll. N to rain lust remember, women and children ' M '-- first! 2 We will pass the collection plate immediately following this next hymn. ' T183 Q.: , . 1' ' ' v' , - - I-,gh .I I! -.1 V. ,ff 1, I .. QL gi' ' .- A' 'f'f.2fi:a.1-' .zz HIS summer, about a week be- fore classes began, the new freshmen of J.C.B.C. took their first look at the new campus. They found that the sandstorms aren't so fierce and the lakes are really shal- low. Then, woe to them, they be- gan orientation. It was only after three days of speeches that their ordeal was done. Grientation was supposed to show the nature of the college. Well, they came back, anyway. Most of them even made it through the indoor obstacle course at registration. What happened wasn't really that unprintable. But the editors of SILVER SANDS believe these pic- tures give the best view of the action. ' v 41'-:ft - '- riff N, f' . ,.., , g , ui 5? .-- 1' rf xi- .lp , ' I t 1 raft, QL vu' 5 I . . , I, Q if ,,..J7 o Look, why clon' I 41. Q I 3 Q, l F fs' K? S 4,1 f. F: ps, wtf. U. R fw t you iust go over and apologize for spilling his finger paints? Y 'Sl 'F' 53, ' ,,, ' 1 . '- '7' . - A r Y 'Mfg .li K- I gy! . F 21 ,s ...na i. k- +553 Y' A , ., ,, 1- if, l MT F . x , xv. . ,Kc ff Y --f-,4 ,. 1, - -LQIQLI-:X 1, Hey! Those IBM cards sure tear easy, don't they? 'S' Ja- 4 N ,., A .V-51151 s ze Dr. Ledlaetter is modeling a shamrock-green suit with large brass buttons, complimenting his orange shirt and brick-red tie with yel- low flowers. as as ' tg J .re 93.0 fgqjtbl-Q , Y T A V: f 5' J . 09 2 S 1 - Q 1 ' Q1-. lr in +- gf r . No, Mr. Harris, I don't think that Batman would be suitable subiect matter for your paper on Outstanding Personalities of the Twentieth Century. S D fi I -. s V '4 . g N Why should I worry about a parking ' Y I space? Some sophomore iusi rented l me a reserved space for iusf 35.00 a , somesier. rf I I I , 1 ' I P A h s ,,.,-'Sn I x 1 qw- Q' Y I 1 -! ,va 5 . V R N 1 I ' 4 1 z 1.9 , so h 5 Y . D Y, , - I ggi-fg444 E99 ,fl N x 5 ' 'Sv 'x.p, ,. ' -1- 1 Q - , A:.:f'fL'i-5:-.3 my-sf ian-,Hu i',sfbQfE'V Up- Jhfhgh..-,4.A-3.Yj..1Ql.:as,igL?,P ' Q ,, -AQ-Q:-e'6.+'wm ' -1ai'-mm:w1s.s.uf1 Q38 4 There's someihing we can study for biology lab. -K Y Y if T -:A I' 6 Q 4 I' U x 1 f -r 1 scalp Q 9 -f '. Q X ea' 'fu Q lv bmi: s.i No, l'm sorry, all classes in Sand- A 1'-1 4: box 102 have been closed since T A ' early registration. You'll have to f - take Cut and Paste 103 instead. 1 - A l N lj al., +V l r t f ' Q x u, n l Y , 'Q 1, lx .. 'W P, v A x I V' A 'l I. , 1 h af. Q I es, we do have a slight problem K Wt Q-'l luv ith frost-bite in the classrooms ' ' ' .losest to the air-conditioning units. A A Inq AX nav- Wt rf ... Q' -A ,, l J, -:df W. ' X' ,I , QA , , f. l Q , gras. Q- J . l 7177 , 3 What? Another call at the student : S.: nr - - 1 A w center? l've been there for two Q f W, b , , 'Ll 7 M 'Y ' loads already this morning! , ' - 4 ,rr-1 'l . TU L 5 k g Q K ' , H. 1 v vw ---V - W- N s .,.. - -an .l ,VNV A ' . ' l 'l lil 'f 4 l' I'l:1 l x fr. - -if - e , 5 ?. I f ff 1 Not only did he forget to use an electrographic pencil, but I caught him filling in the wrong bubbles. ,- X .. ,X 5 Y Q F N4 A Sign on the dotted line . . . in blood. x V - Q K ' fi, 'sg w A M Q ' ' 4-for 0 0 wx.-.g,. 21 i p , . 5- -'- 25 S Lbs ,, -Qi f-Q A wt Q ,if I don't care what the sophom told you, this is not where get your raffle tickets for the Week Mustang Drawing. Into the Valley of Deat marched the 600 . . . t is rewarding to reach the top, nutwhen you fall short, by a mere vercent or two, and receive a Erade equivalent to work ten per- ent below your goal, competitive pirit is greatly diminished. HE whole point grading stem we labor under presently J.C.B.C. is not a unique fea- .1re at colleges and universities, ut to the majority of Broward udents it represents a new con- pt in grading. This system is ased on a grade scale of zero nrough four as follows: 0-F - 0-59 22' 1-D - 60-69 QL 2-C - 70-79 fi 3-B - 80-89 Si-V 4-A - 90-100 Qi iAs you can readily see, this l ale gives both the students and e faculty great leeway, in so auch as grading is concerned. tome consider this system too nient, others consider it too vere. The nature of their out- ook is many times based on the ffect the scale has had on their .grade point average. Other stu- llents complain that at times the instructors have raised the per- entages in the scale, as some in- ructors feel, and justifiably so, at 90 Si is too low a grade to ate a four point. 1 Functioning under the scale, a tudent may obtain a grade equiv- ilent to a B in a course for work iveraging either 79.5 fb or 89.41 . his wide span for a single grade quite beneficial to the student lust conquering a B by five 'enths of a percent, but a blow 0 the student who averages al- most ten points better and gets 'he same grade for Work of su- Derior quality. Many of the supporters of the whole point system feel that it provides a uniform grade scale for all the courses on campus, but what of the instructor who grades more severely? His stu- dents are not actually on a uni- form scale with the rest of the J.4C.B.C. campus. The whole point system does, however, have some beneficial features. Being a two year campus, Broward students must transfer to complete their educations. This whole point scale does not need to be recomputed at the school to which the student transfers. The grades are accepted as they stand, being readily use- 1l. able by mechanical minds both here and at another campus. The whole point system is both mechanically functional and char- itable. Charitable, in that it af- fords a high grade point average to a border-line student, giving him the same grade as his harder working, often more ambitious, counterpart. Does this charity really help both students? Both the hard working student and hiz more lackadaisical counterpart stand a good chance of receiving the same grade, be it a two, three. or a four. This system could and sometimes does, deter the incen- tive of an ambitious student. Education is a challenge to the individual, an enjoyable romp through the learning process in open competition with our fellow students. Our grading scale, with each whole point representing such a Wide range and quality of work is not conducive to open intellectual competition. It is re- warding to reach the top, but when you fall short, by a mere percent or two, and receive a grade equivalent to work ten per- goal, competitive diminished. cent below your spirit is greatly Many large colleges and uni- versities use the half point grad- ing system, somewhat equivalent to the plus and minus systems in lower educational facilities. This system presents a wide range of grades or so to speak a larger choice of rewards for work ac- complished. Each half point is an extra in- centive to the student. a spark of incentive when, he knows that his hard work will be graded in proportion to that of his fellow students. This system, though less open handed and charitable than our whole point system, would provide Broward students with a sense of satisfaction for a job well done. As each student strives to achieve, he will be rewarded equivalent to the quality of the work he has done. 0 O 1.0 1.0 2.0 1.5 3.0 2.0 4.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 If you intend to labor. under which system would you labor best? 7 iff 1,14 ff 'r gy: ,A,f'..lll if Vx ' T 1 79' SGA meetings are characterized by neither the most gratifying nor the most encouraging atmosphere on campus. Their business is serious and it's taken that way. However, they are plagued by one consistently overbearing problem - how do you help a student body that is completely indifferent to your efforts? y uv W ' 1 1 i 7-'X s sa..- me Pell: ef 'X fx .ff HE Comte Joseph Marie de Maistre, a nine- :eenth century diplomat remarked that, Every :ountry has the government it deserves. Assuming that Mssr. de Maistre was correct, and we have no reason to believe that he was not, it is also safe to assume that the same can be said of a student body on a somewhat smaller scale. l Before we even begin to examine the question of who deserves whom we must first accept the fact :hat too large a number of students have no concept Jf a Student Government whatsoever. As tragic as :his might seem it points up the fact that these :tudents either don't wish to have a voice or they frouldn't care less - the latter hypothesis being the ore likely. Needless to say, this situation presents limitless pportunities to drag out trite axioms like, Of the eople, by the people and for the people, etc. ad finitum. As for those students who have taken notice of 'he SGA most of them have pointed an accusing inger and charged ineptitude. Although this charge s not altogether untrue it is, for the most part, ianfair. If the SGA has been inept in the past, and most certainly has been, it is not because of lack ,mf good intention or lack of effort but rather due to a lack of communication with the student. And iere is where we can finally place the blame with omeone. Communication is a two way street and the BGA has never hesitated to make use of all the acilities at hand to bring the Student Government o the students. It's just that for some unexplainable feason the students have resisted all efforts to be :ommunicated with. With each new fall term comes the hope that this might be the year that the SGA reaches its Jotential and no one ever seems to be too surprised hen the semester ends and everyone says, What GA? And why should they be surprised? The SGA .ponsored the dances that they never attended. The BGA threw the picnic that only a fraction of the itudent body attended. It was the SGA that was responsible for the political forums that tempted grand total of fifteen or sixteen people. And who as it that served as arbitrator when the students requested better food but lacked the courage and he means to do something about it? The Student p overnment Association. l Because no one showed up for the dances, be- ause local, state and national politicians spoke to n empty house and because the food situation is till far from ideal the SGA has been accused of efficacy. But, we know where the real blame be- ngs. The present SGA administration has been active may not be seem to be the correct either Presi- Jean Holder over the summer and although they better than past administrations they finally attacking the problem from angle-the student. When approached, dent Terry LaBelle or Vice-President will state vehemently that they cannot operate effectively or reach their full potential without the assistance and support of the student body. To admit this is already the start of a decisive if minor, victory. If problem is half the half way to go. More than ever to the student and the students forget that. Calendars of special events will be made available to everyone and SGA's Publicity Committee doesn't intend to let anyone rest until they at least know What's going on. As in the past all Student Government Associa- tion meetings will be open to the public but for the first time the veil of aloofness that hung per- petually over the SGA will be lifted. In our American society an individual accused of a crime is entitled to a fair trial before a jury of his peers. To find an entire body guilty of the crime of incompetence Without this trial would be an unspeakable injustice. Therefore you, the stu- dents, must serve as judge and jury to the Student Government Association. But remember if you find them guilty you must also find yourselves guilty for you also stand accused of the same crimes. it is true that recognizing the battle than the SGA has only this year everything is geared the SGA doesn't intend to let , - i V .ff-'- m H 'ii I -1-if 'I J 'LY . ..l..-- E E Fi we A I PULLS --.J is 2 'tp-, jr 'S' WY S f steam, g X ig g . I g ,- , l V NWI . mg, in x MV.. jg? tim.. 9 . t STUDENT GOVERNIVIENTQASSOCIATION JUNIOR COLI.lEGE.OF BROWARD COUNTY i . DAVIE ROAD FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA 33314 November, 1966 The Student Body junior College of Broward County Fort Lauderdale, Florida To Whom It May Concern: Question: Whatever happened to the student body? Apparently it has been swallowed up in the sand dunes or possibly succumbed to a widget attack. However, an interesting fact remains. There appear to be students here. All these warm bodies in the Student Center could not be mirages or figments of one's imagination. But that's all we can be sure of as no one seems to have heard from them. It seems odd to me and to other people who have noticed this problem, that the Student Activities opera- tion on this campus which includes the Silver Sands, the Venetian Crier, the Tri-C radio program, and the Student Government Association, is being run by approximately ten people. Not ten people to each activity, the same ten people are running the entire show! Where does the fault lie? Is it within the organizations themselves? I don't believe so. Rather, I believe the fault lies with the student body in general. I was GREATLY impressed with the freshman class at the orientation program. They seemed to exhibit a tremendous amount of spirit. They all wore their rat caps and seemed to be determined in their attempt at transforming themselves from high school kids to college men and women. What happened in that week between orientation and the beginning of school, I do not know. For some strange reason the rat caps disappeared and the spirit followed close behind. Admittedly, there are a number of freshmen who have planted their chubby little feet on the ground, and decided to make a go of it as students at JCBC. I don't mean the student who simply goes to class and scurries home. leaving behind all that our college Offers him. I am writing of the student who takes advantage of the recreational and cultural activities on campus. But the college can only provide the opportunities. It is up to the student to take advantage of them. Many students consider our little gathering out here in Davie-by-the-cows their thirteenth and fourteenth grades. It can seem so very easily, for no one is forced to attend anything after class. The person who comes to this college looking for his next two years of high school will find it. Not because that's what it is, but simply because his mind is already made up. If he decides he is going to college and is going to benefit not only from the academic program but also from the whole social life, he will find all that, too. He will also be taking another step out of adolescence. Dr. jack D. Taylor, our acting president, has spoken many times on the subject of education. One of his main themes is about the motivation a student has toward study. His ideas can be applied to what I am saying. If a student has the motivation to become involved in college life, he can certainly do it at BJC. If you are interested in writing, there is the little literary endeavor you are reading now, the SILVER SANDS. And the VENETIAN CRIER always appreciates help from writers and photogra- phers. Both of these top publications won more awards last year than any other junior college in the state, including big Miami-Dade. The Student Government Association represents 'Awe the students. If you didn't run for a senate seat. then by all means attend the student government meetings. We put on a helluva show and get quite a bit of work accomplished for the students. Whatever a student chooses is for his Own benefit. College life can enrich a student, but you will only get back what you put into it. It is your own life you are building-or neglecting. I remain. T Sm , erry.LgBel President, ,..- Concerned Student Govern nt Association 10 This is SCHOENBRUN AVID SCHOENBRUN is a ian who knows Charles DeGaulle nd France. These were his topics lay 28th, when he was intro- uced as the first Lyceum of the iimmer. DeGaulle, he stated, is hav- yig a love affair with France. He ees her as a grand lady. He loves ier more than himself and is dis- i pointed in the way she has i own. l France, Schoenbrun added, will become great after De- faullef' Q David Schoenbrun gave the udience an insight into the coun- 'y he obviously loves. He de- 4:ribed DeGaulle offering personal Juches to the picture. He lectured in French history from Kings to he present. He then went on to How would you feel if General Motors' net income for one year exceeded your national budget? Following the main lecture, Schoenbrun sat on the edge of the stage and answered questions. This session was more of Schoen- brun telling the audience what to ask and then answering his own questions with statistics and his- tory lessons. With the present world situation being the topic of the day, naturally most pertained to Viet Nam. It was an interesting evening, the audience becoming irritated and probing for straight answers. David Schoenbrun, egotistical and arrogant as he might have been, knew his subjects well and offered an entertaining and edu- cational performance It's a pity more students did why the General has or- NATO out, specifically his nce of American bigness. not attend. He has a talent for making people think. 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'A, X N Q 2 a ng in am db At th Tomb of the Unknown Rat Praying for salvation as they knew they must Hunger drove him to the machines, There he nt I he bhrokan- Two-hundre lighted freshmen t. For the f ous Court is nythi but i t. B all that happened were tearful scenes. He paid his dime, his only token. N-Pm X W : Y:-NN A .ia m as h gyx y q..,' X, ' x g? . ' - J .zf hll i jm 1 'pry I Hk 229 If Y L f ml. fx, lp .V -J lg T K, ,jx X W J WN x NWA I lk! x X qi ' 1 1 I I 515 I? f f ,dr 'Zig lx UW gf ix xx ZS' 'sx JJ -f -Q13 ml ,f NX- G-Q2 X S 'Z Ziz Q L19-JJ A x x 'X X X .JX ,- f5::Pi'-EJ 5 R f in i f A ff' M, s:x fn. f W N213 ' -gk 'IT ' 9 ' :a::Wma1+ x lk .whINlW xv X X XTX Y xx X5 XS g . E Al?4F??5 Y l,- T!l,- 5 X ligw WS , Q N cg 11 z 1 X X N l '1 X X n, a X vig! Xt M l X 'X X X X I, 'TQ x f f X X X N X xt x I. X 6. AE 5 , N VN ' ,ill bl fx- NX IX V y:v. rv , K , X Y ' Q' 1 'nl BX l 4 X Af yi E O X X --'A x fs Ng? ,X lk I x i A...-E-, 1 T X X E 1 Q,qa:x-z-5,75 . X X . N X X l lk Xfgxi Zfff, E2 -,,...f- il X N H f rain, nor wind will keep us behind No iusl swell guys, 5 aa . ru vm D- O X va : Q. E ru Z an .r: 1- uf -4. 3 .- ln U 'E 'U 12 .wc u 2 UJ -C C 3 0 .- .E -C x. 0 u. Q D ED QT .Z fu s: m fu 3 'E E C. .E .E 3 o. ru va 4 I. l F3 YS , S i rt' Q ...QNX- X ,d 7 wil R , , ' 1 -, ,M - 'QQ . 1 Ns fv v li 1 fffw' tg ' 8 -AY -1- E l X X ' 4-Qi W ' 31- 3 .1 si' ! 5 .f .. 4-'if - Q,-,j.a gg: fx 5 fn Q' ix Q ff' '92 . l,:W l v .4 5 344' SK will I 'T , f A M N , K 4 , X x t X XX CQNJ 'f-2 Q-JNE of the functions of the Lyceum prograin is to introduce students to the lively arts. jack and Sally jenkins. though warm and attractive people, could not he classified this wav. Their show was not up to the usual ex- cellence we have been receiving in the past. ln parts. they were entertaining. There was no douht of their tal- ents. .lack jenkins offered a beau- tiful rendition of Yesterday with the aid of his guitar. Sally len- kins displayed more than once the range and depth of her lovely voice. notahly in an operatic se- lection from La Boheme. She also gave support with her flute in such numbers as Shadow of Your Smile. Unfortunately, this was not the norm. At times, they seemed un- sure, dropped lyrics, or appeared too cute and lovely. They have promise. with voices like theirs they shouldl It is hoped, however, that somehow they will get the idea that the Hammer Song is not a frug number and Mickey Mouse is a bit much for the average college student. 4 Q 4 1 I1 1 l -1 t I 2 V .l F. lSD-lysergic acid diethylamide. A powerful, physically non-addictive drug which produces hallucinations. Nl LSD is not a new drug. It is a new kick. TUDENTS on campuses all over the U. S. are aware of LSD. From llarvard to Berkeley. Alaska to Miami. colleges are feeling its impact. Its kick, Doctors, too, are aware of the drug. Aware of it as a possible help or cure in the treatment of mental patients. Their experiments are an effort to see if the drug can indeed be useful to science and psychiatrists. XYhere did LSD come from? What is its origin? XVhat effect has it really had on those students brutish enough to use it? Has it actually been help- ful to doctors and their patients? This reporter sought answers to these questions, through interviews with students, a television pro- gram and articles appearing in newspapers and magazines. LSD is not a new drug. It is a new kick. The drug itself was developed by Dr. Albert Hofmann in Switzerland about 1938. Hofmann, although con- sidered the founder of LSD, did not really experi- ment with the drug. LSD went fairly unnoticed until about 1960 when Timothy Leary began experi- menting with it while working at the Harvard Center for Research in Personality. Prior to this time there had been little fanfare concerning the drug. It was when Leary was dismissed from Harvard that papers and students began to notice the unusual LSD. Leary, by this time, had become aware of the unusual effects, formed an organization dedicat- ed to make the drug as accessible as possible. While Leary was introducing LSD as a trip worth taking. others were beginning to use it for the purpose of helping mental patients. Doctors of the mind all over the country were administering it to those they felt could be helped. Places soon began to develop where a doctor could take his patient to prepare him. Spring Grove was an example cited in a recent television program. A week before a patient was to be given a dose, he first was given a battery of tests and extensive psychiatric sessions. Fifteen hours before LSD. the patient was given an intelligence exam to see if his thinking would be affected. The program showed two people taking LSD and the audience was able to follow them on their I-1 hour term. To one subject, a rose began to breathe and 18 appear to be alive. When he remembered he was an alcoholic, the rose, to him, turned black and died. To the other, crying was crying for the whole world. She also said she found God and a big hunk of creationf, Both patients involved were cured and now live productive and normal lives. CThe program however, talked to one and asked about the drug.l If I had been ill before and then taken LSD on my own, without my doctors, I would be lost forever, the woman said. XVould you take it again? No, why should I? XVhy? That big question is being asked by upset parents. disturbed educators and concerned people. XVhy take a drug that has sent thousands of young people to hospitals' mental wards all over the United States. XVhy take a drug that can do brain cell damage if used over a period of time? YVhy? Because everyone was taking it. You dont want to be left outf' Kicks Pure kicks. c. Curiosity. I wanted to see what would happen. i'After Marijuana its the next step. Oblivion.,' The first thing users will tell you is that LSD is not habit forming. Physically, they are right. It is not addictive. However, the mind begins to crave for it, to find out what will happen on the next 'itripf' No two people get the same reaction from LSD, is the second rationalization. This is also true, to a certain extent: but there are symptoms that appear when the drug begins to take hold. A University of Boston student aptly explained: 'iFirst everything turned blue, then red, then green. Not a bright green-a nightmare. scary green. A sick-looking color. Color. The welcoming host to the guest on his journey. Another symptom which was explained by stu- dents was the fascination for objects. After the colors, I began to notice things I had never seen before. Like a light-bulb suddenly became very in- teresting and beautiful. You find yourself staring After Marijuana, it's the next step. U at it for long periods of time. After that the rest was a nightmare for mef' continued the Boston student. To some, telephones are silly black boxes, spots on Walls are suddenly large and interesting: grains of sand are in the size of huge boulders. Objects. All objects appear different to the user. Introduction to the drug can happen in a variety of places. The Boston student first used LSD at a party. His dosage came in a sugar cube. Tasteless, odorless and colorless, some were putting LSD in drinks, others ate it in the cube form. Each had in- dividual reactions. One is now in a sanitarium, another still uses LSD quite often. All changed in some way. One boy explained, alt makes you aware of your personality. You see your bad faults and the side that's good. I'll admit - if you have problems before, it can wreck your mind afterf, People have been known to change drastically after experimenting. A parent recently cited an example in a magazine. His son was a fine athlete, good student, clean-cut, popular. Today after taking the drug for kicks, he now lives the life of a nbumf, WVhere does the drug come from and what is being done? The drug is easy enough to get and easy enough to make. Recently a case was headlined in the papers concerning some area students who were making the drug in the school chem lab. The most popular way to acquire LSD how- ever, is on the campus from a pusher who can pick the drug up in Mexico, New York or other large cities. A favorite and quick method is for a group to pack a car, drive to a city, and purchase large quantities for themselves and friends on campus. Compared to many other drugs on the market, LSD is relatively inexpensive. Generally, the cubes cost from 82.50 to 85.00 for 100 micrograms. This is enough to last an eight or ten hour trip.', Trans- portation of it is easy. Some users have been known to soak clothing with a solution of LSD and later, in the safety of an apartment, suck on the clothes. Fortunately, the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health are beginning to put the clamp on LSD. Medical sources are hoping it is not completely outlawed for they feel there should be further experimentation in the laboratories. Medical and legal authorities are asking that it be banned. They feel suicides, murders. and the filling of hospitals mental wards are sufficient rea- son that the drug be examined closely and users picked-up. They have a good point. Recently, a young man found himself in jail, not realizing that while under the influence he had killed his mother- in-law. A child was sent to a hospital in convulsions after taking a cube from the refrigerator left by her uncle. She almost died. A college drop-out committed suicide in a field of lilies of the valley. These are not occasional incidents. They have been happening with frightening frequency. The drug may indeed have its uses in helping psychiatrists find cures for mental patients. But. it is too dangerous, too powerful and has of late been removed from the common market making it a crime to be caught using or possessing the drug. Granted there will be disputes by the users who have dis- covered wonderful thingsu on LSD. Yet, there are too many others who have had their minds destroyed. indeed their lives by this drug for kicksfl Time magazine recently stated 'KNO responsible authority favors use of LSD without close scientific supervision. On the other hand, no responsible authority wants to stop research into the potentially vast possibilities of LSD. One can only hope that students will take a hard look into their new toy and, hopefully. put it aside for a more constructive and mature building of their lives. By Elle Kurpiewski Photos by Norman Summey , 19 4 ,D I. ,1- ' I 1 f . J. .S ' W 'Q . - . 'TAjsxr 'T 0 . f. 'L' f ' 4 Y- - . 2 f ' '. ' ff g -Qniese g:.'.Q '.: graphs . gf nv W . . -1 . 1 W ' rf ' ' X' ,-'S ' A . - f' r- I .-'2 ,. . '4 fy .3115 . , , ,. rl, ' ' 4 .wil y' - few: Jw ,Ai .-Keyes I l v 1 I. Q .Q . I I ' ' 1114 Q 1 an r'3 ab- i ,,,, 1'--s is.-'wifi 17 I er 1 , , MMM! If j -- E ie lil?-F4310 5 -J I Florida is the only state in the nation with more registered motor vehicles than licensed drivers. This startling fact has jolted john Law into action. HERE comes a day in each of our lives when our oversights catch up with us. Much to my distress, I have just completed such a day. Our state and local law-enforcement agencies have initiated a new program aimed at the apprehension of unli- censed and improperly licensed drivers. As luck would have it, I was one of the culprits. I harbor no animosity towards our law enforce- ment agencies, for they had just cause. Florida is the only state in the nation with more registered motor Vehicles than licensed drivers. This startling fact has jolted John Law into action. At this point you should take heed, stop, and check your license to be sure it's up to date. I arose the fateful morning of my day in jail, quite inapprehensively, for little did I know that the long arm of the law was at that moment prepara- ing to make a pinch. I went complacently through my morning rituals, not realizing that my criminal actions were catching up with me. I was not a member of an organized syndicate of professional law breakers whose mouthpieces tell them to cool it when they have stepped over the line of the law. I was just a lone racketeer who had not realized that the heat was on. In my daily role of Honest John Citizen, I had left my home and had driven leisurely to a prearranged meeting with the editor of this very same magazine. CToday I cannot help but think that, maybe, she fingered me for the trapj Almost to my destination, I came upon a road block. Pulling my car to a halt, I noticed the leer in the officer's eyes. He knew at that moment he had found his suspect, and he would soon add another arrest to his laurels. In complete ignorance, I pleaded guilty to the charge of driving without proper license, and was carted off to the cooler. ff r BY SID ROWE ,.a-S' I -4:7 l ,1-ff N 1 if In complete ignorance, I pleaded guilty to the charge of driving without proper license, and was carted oft to the cooler. 21 if 4 . A i ,J 1 - ill, ll 'I' lil ,ff ffff I f 'L?'f5Z flf'57Zf'flf 'X CN, L P, 2? ada falfza , Qi , Z, , if - -gvif-.-+53 Z g , lf' , X 110' ll - ' -'-rf . 4 f if Wff, f' .UAW i ff 1 1 ',' Q 1 4 Z 7, 'I 'Vl W 5 ,M ...l Z! VZ' X if 'i l Z, ,yj 4 f tlm I i fflyf X ff 5: if My ',, i .JCI il? 'f' 1 4 - QD Y ffffu-Q.Qf , h , ,. , 11' fi ' lfglfn gf f z ff - a I , , eg i elf' r ff l W X ' T, ' , 1-f ,f f ff! XZ 'i ff 'X K X f The jail, or house of detention if you wish, is not exactly the Doral, but, considering the prices, it is plush, At our lovely jail, I realized my mistake. Not remembering the Escabedo case. I had confessed to my misdeed. Everything I said would be held against me. How could I have erred in such a way? Am I not a criminal? Should I not know that the courts would protect me? So I relaxed and enjoyed my stay. The jail, or house of detention if you wish, is not exactly the Doral, but, considering the prices, it is plush. The walls are a lovely shade of pastel gray, each room has a view through a stylishly small window in Danish wrought iron decor. The rooms face a central passageway. Instead of doors, they have the wrought iron repeated across their front wall. It is very quaint and keeps a sense of oppression. The jailer, even without a whip, is still the mas- ter of the jail. No longer a tyrant. he wore the garb of the recreational director of a large condominium high rise. He must, of course, keep the guests Cin- matesj supplied with their necessities: cards. maga- zines, games and other items of interest. Comfort is the word. Everyone is made as comfortable as pos- sible, considering the situation. Now, about the food! We were fed nutritious. palatable ten course meals, including: water, bread, salt, pepper, green vegetable, white vegetable, meat, water, salt, and pepper, The courses tend to repeat themselves, but count them. There are ten. My day ended in freedom. Being quickly indoc- trinated as a criminal in my new surroundings, I soon discovered that jail is only a place you await your bondsman. It is not really a place to stay on a permanent basis. Not wanting to overtax the hospitality of my host, I left sadly. 22 ,.,-,.-v- f S' R 1 Zwpgna 3 We were fed nutritious, palatable, ten course meals. Not Wanting to overtax the hospitality of my host, I left sadly. ff:-. F ki XE ', i t I Ll. --ffl -I 'fri ' ,,,., i li oi' T rlllll X ff W . xx d ll N 1'g if! wi 46 auf., The CDNFORMIST HE words conformity and non-conformity are curious words relating to that curious thing called man. Conformity has probably changed meaning more than any other word, and yet people are always trying to define it and use it as a label. Silver Sands decided to show a few in- stances in which the word has lost its meaning or changed its context. A long time ago, jane and Billy had a thing called respect for their elders. There was no big issue made of it. They simply had respect: for their par- ents, for the law, for the church they would attend once a week. Things began to change and by the time Jane and Bill had children of their own, respect was square and an out of it thing to have. People began to march instead of think, play golf or sleep late on Sundays, break the law if they didn't approve and in general, lose Respect. It wasn't long before the morals of our country began to go down, too. People were just too civil- ized to say 'fNo anymore, even when something inside wished they could. Suddenly, the Beatniks, the Vietniks and all the other niks were dictating what a man should be- lieve in to be 'with it'. Someone began telling you what to wear, how to act, how to speak, saying if everyone did this then you would be an individualist, a Non-Conformist. That seems a bit curious. If everyone is doing the same things in the same ways then who is the real non-conformist? Who's left? Who's left is that fellow who is not in the best clique in school, but who gets an education. Who wears clothes he likes or those that look best on him. Who's left is the kid who has respect for the adults around him. I-Ie's the square. the guy who is out of it. not in with today's time. And he is the only individualist left. He does what he wants or thinks best. and some- times from advice he received from his parents. Parents, you remember them? How long has it been since you kissed your mother or father, in public? Or told someone how proud you were of a member of your family? How long has it been since you and your whole family spent an evening together? Or gone on a date and talked, about all sorts of things. getting to know one another? When did you last help someone who needed it without feeling guilty if a friend found out? When did you stick up for something about your personal self. like religion. when someone attacked it? For some curious reason these things just don't happen much anymore. Neither do many others not mentioned. just think for a minute about some of the things you were embarrassed to do in front of friends. and yet you knew there was nothing really wrong in doing them. We have become embarrassed because the old fashioned standards that our parents grew up with are not in anymore. This is sad be- cause there is really nothing wrong with these values. The point then. is this: if we would all do what we like, old-fashioned or not, then maybe we could begin to rebuild what is in and out. We have nothing to lose but conformity. 23 FOOTBALL LAST SEPTEMBER ED DEMPSEY, SILVER SANDS SPORTS EDITOR, COMPILED THE FOLLOWING POLL, CONSISTING OF TEN OF THE TOP COLLEGIATE FOOTBALL GAMES OF THIS SEASON. THE POLL WAS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY AND STAFF OF THE HPR DIVISION FOR THEIR PREDICTIONS. AS SILVER SANDS I, 1966-67 GOES TO PRINT ALL BUT TWO OF THE GAMES HAVE BEEN PLAYED. HERE ARE THE RE- SULTS OF THE OTHER EIGHT WITH THEIR PREDICTED OUT- COMES. THE WINNER OF THE POLL WILL BE RECOGNIZED IN A FORTHCOMING ISSUE, Syracuse FSU Souihern Cal V5 VS VS UCLA Miami Oregon Sfafe Sept. 14 Sept. 24 Oct. 'I BLUCKER UCLA Miami S. Cal. BRUMLEY UCLA Miami S. Cal. BURKE UCLA Miami S. Cal. GAGLIARDI UCLA Miami S. Cal. GAVIGAN UCLA FSU S. Cal. GIFFORD UCLA Miami S. Cal. LANDERS Syracuse FSU S. Cal, McGEI'lEE UCLA Miami S. Cal. PORTERFIELD UCLA Miami S. Cal. STEPHENS Syracuse Miami S. Cal, WHEAT UCLA Miami S. Cal. S. Cal. 21 UCLA 35 FSU 23 Oregon Syracuse 12 Miami 20 Slate 0 POLL Mega '66 bu t Aubum Alabama Florida Michigan Slate Army ' , vs vs vs vs vs Georgia Tech. Tennessee LSU Notre Dame Navy If Oct. 'l5 Ocf. 15 Oct. 22 Nov. 'I9 Nov. 26 Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Mich. State Navy ia -gl Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Notre Dame Navy Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Mich. State Navy Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Notre Dame Army -K Georgia Tech. Alabama LSU Notre Dame Army Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Notre Dame Navy AGeorgia Tech. Alabama LSU Mich. State Navy I Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Mich. State Army left Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Mich. State Navy ii? Auburn Alabama Florida Notre Dame Navy ' fi l Georgia Tech Alabama LSU Mich. State Navy Y' ' l Georgia j L , Tech. I7 Alabama ll Florida 28 ,litem Auburn 3 Tennessee 10 LSU 7 To Be Played To Be Played BY TOM ENSIGN 26 :.- A 3, 1 is f 15 X 9 J in-so V li.BKlr-4-1.11 NQL yin. My .qi M ' 1 Q V ld M' ff -- 4-'I .,.,I 'lll 5 K l '-'Mmm Review Indicates 1965-66 Season the Best Yet That pleasant aroma which blanketed the many Seahorse sports teams during the 65-66 sea- son was the sweet smell of success. In all sports, Broward not only had the satisfaction of fielding winning squads, but also proved that the college, although still in its formative years, is a major state sports power. First to step into the sports limelight last season was the Sea- horse basketball team. Since Brow- ard is a junior College and cannot field a football squad, basketball has naturally taken over as the major sport. And the Seahorse cagers did not disappoint their many followers. Under the guiding hand of head coach Clint Morris, Broward com- piled a nifty 12-7 record last season. The best in the school's history. At the State Tournament, Brow- ard had the bad luck to draw Chipola, the top basketball power in the Northern end of the State, for the first round. Broward lost, but this was the only real sour note of the whole season. The Seahorses' play earned them a second place finish in the Di- vision Four race. Broward's arch- rival, Miami-Dade junior College, claimed the Division crown. Without a doubt, the highest point of the season came late in the season when Broward handed highly favored Miami-Dade a 98-96 setback. The Falcons wal- loped Broward 122-99 in their first meeting and, apparently, they ex- pected to duplicate that feat . . . Broward had other ideas. That's what made our seasonf, Coach Morris said. We played our best that night . . . I was really proud of them. 4 ,Q Ii A i Morris said it would be difficult 0 name any one man as being esponsible for the teamis huge uccess. Probably the brightest v gtar on the all-star squad was I i ormer Pompano Beach High -chool standout, John Gordon. Gordon was usually high point 'pan for the Seahorses and it was 'ery rare when he scored less than ,ouble figures. But one man does ot make a team and Gordon had -lenty of help. 1 VVorking with the former Pom- fano Beach High School star to give the cage squad its best season Vere such stars as Ken Kulp. ,iryn Jones, Bob Kennedy, Steve Qairns, Bill Mandeville, Bill Fauer- Iach and Steve Hall. lThe taste of success the Sea- lorses savored last season has iven them a big appetite for more f the same. i Armed with a fistful of scholar- ilips, Coach Morris has been touring the county for top-notch ilent to take the place of team hembers who graduated. l 'Tve got some good players oming in, Morris said. uAnd fith the boys who will be return- ig from last year, we should do t least as well and possibly better his season. The echo of bouncing basket- alls had barely faded away when li came time for spring sports to at underway at BJC. lHeading the list of sports was aseball. Coach Leroy Wheat took yer the baseball coaching duties bd he had the reins of a team pat was something less than spec- icular during the 1965 season. He immediately built it into a State Qower. 1 In the Division Four race, Brow- l'd finished a very, very close bcond to Miami-Dade. This feat med the Seahorses a trip to the ate Tournament. lt was the first e in BIC history that a baseball pam received that honor. l Broward made it to the quarter- als before they were bounced t of the State affair. Miami- ade went on to win the State ampionship and later made it all as is 5, Lid 5 xi' 5 A , ...- .- - -4--4-44s.Q4L gf 4-A ---- A -.Q:L4---A--:- ' an -,. -.v---Q V , '. Mr. . H . ' ---0 , -. I . ..,, - . . ev' .1 -....-...... . Y u.: . - - 4-N the way to the National tourna- ment where they lost in the finals. That just goes to show what we were capable of doing, Coach Wheat said. i'We beat Miami- Dade twice during the regular seasonf' Coach XVheat. a former major leaguer himself. gets direct credit for the Seahorses fine baseball season. His knowledge of the game captured the confidence of all his players and the result was that magic word . . . success, Coach Wheat knows how to rec- ognize talent and also knows how to develop talent into champions. The success of the baseball team was not due to any one nor any group of players. It almost seemed as if each man took turns at com- ing up with a clutch hit. or a spec- tacular play to win the ball game. Standouts on the squad were jim Curzynski, Ron Huff, Bruce Kinder, Bob Martin, Alan Morell. Don Newhauser, Dick Orr, Bill Adlemann, Stan Cowherd, Duke Dufresne, Bill Fauerbach. Ken Kulp, Paul Buzzella and jim Cot- tone. If Coach lVheat was happy with last season's results, hels even more pleased with this year's prospects. VVe will certainly have the material here to form a good ball clubf lVheat said. XVe should have a good combination of speed, power and strong pitching. NVE: should do wellf' It was also during the spring season that the girls had a chance to bring glory to Broward . . . and they did it in fine style. The Seahorse girls tennis team. which has never had a losing sea- son, proved they were not only the best junior College team in the State but the best team of any college in Florida. The talented squad, coached by Miss Elaine C-avigan, never learned the meaning of defeat last season. They breezed to a 6-O record, then captured the junior College State Crown easily. Since nobody on the IC circuit could even touch them. they went after bigger game. The Seahorse girls took the 28 Florida State University Invita- tional crown and later went on to claim the State Collegiate womenis title. It was the second straight year Broward won the women's junior College tennis championship. Dur- ing the 1965 season they had only one loss . . . that was to the Uni- versity of Miami. Heading the tennis team was nationally famous Stephanie De- Fina. who is one of the top ranked women amateurs in the country. Following Miss DeFina,s win- ning examples were jane Hancock, Kris Koutras, Christy Johnson and Mary Lou Cmaylo. Miss Gavigan expects another winning season this year. At this time it isn't known for sure if Miss DeFina will be able to return this season because of tournament commitments, but there is a strong chance shell be back in Seahorse uniform along with Miss Koutras and Miss Fuller. In golf. the Seahorses had no in- tention of starting at the bottom and working their way up . . . they started sky high and stayed there. Last season was the first time BJC ever had a golf team and the linksmen wasted no time at all in joining the other Broward sport squads as top State threats. Their S-2 season record cer- tainly proved that Broward Coun- ty has its share of top Collegiate golfers, but the Seahorses were not satisfied with that alone. They went on to take a third in the State junior College Cham- pionships and a surprising fourth in the National Championships in Miami last season. Because of their play in the Na- tional event, Ray Isbell and Hal Hutchison were named to the All- American golf team. Hutchison was named to the second team while Isbell, who tied for second in the event, made the first squad. 1 The teams only losses during the year were both to Miami- Dade. Although this hurt, Brow- ard got some consolation by beat- ing West Pahn Beach twice. West Palm handed Miami-Dade its only two defeats. Although Isbell and Hutchison were the standouts, all members of the squad were fine golfers in their own right. Helping to boost the squad to fame were Mike Hines, Bob Stacy, Bob Goldin, Iim Lyford, Don Schroeder and jerry Rasmussen. Golf Coach Bill Porterfield ex- pects even greater glories for the team this year. We not only have a fine crop of Freshmen coming in, Porter- field said, we also have all but one of our team members coming back this year. The first ICBC boys intercol- legiate tennis team came into ex- istence last year and, although the Seahorse netters didnlt get off to a flying start, they were much better than their 1-5 record would in- dicate. They were shutout only once while losing the other matches by two or three small points. This is not bad at all when you consider the fact that only one of Broward's players had any experience at all. I don't think we did badly con- sidering the newness of our play- ers,', Coach William McGehee said. They played hard and worked hard . . . I couldnit ask for any more than thatf, By the end of the season, the JCBC netters had gained enough experience to give a good showing at the State Tournament. Number five player, Larry Spiller, went all the way to the quarter-finals before being elimi- nated. Also surviving the first round at the talent-laden event was the doubles team of George Herrera and David Claxton. Rounding out last year's squad was Robert Klein, Harry Richard- son and jim .Tucker. WVe should be in pretty good shape this year, McGehee said. Weill have Claxton returning and Iim expecting some good prospects to come in from different high schools throughout the County. ll i i 1 l Americans today treat their bodies like their cars, with 'planned obsolesence' that can and will be replaced. 'l ' 1 l ARE You l FIT TO uve? . by Sta n Wood iF YOU ARE an American between the ages of 'eventeen and twenty-one the chances are better Llhan ten to one that you are not physically fit. f If you are a schoolteacher or administrator and .ot in the physical education department, there is flmost no chance that you are physically fit. Out- ide of the physical education departments, I have W? xx l Kg If ff f . ff '741 i .2 never seen a physically fit schoolteacher or adminis- trator. Of course, I have read how a Dr. Shanksmare runs two miles every day before his morning classes, but I have never met nor seen a Dr. Shanksmare. Year after year universities across the country register fewer and fewer passing scores on their physical fitness tests. Year after year the Armed Forces reject more and more young men for physical unfitness - despite standards which are constantly being revised in a downward direction. Physical fitness tests matching American chil- dren between six and sixteen with European children of the same age revealed that 57.8 percent of the Americans failed on one or more of the tests against only 9.5 percent of the Europeans. Doctors tell us that our life expectancy today is about twenty-five years more than that of our grandfathers. This statistic. however. is very mis- leading. The tremendous reduction in infant mor- tality is largely responsible for today's improved longevity average. After a person passes through infancy he can look forward to only about eight years more of life than his grandfather. despite modern medicine's elimination of nearly all infec- tious diseases that were once great killers. America today faces a physical fitness emergen- cy. We no longer live in a world where vigorous physical activity comprises a significant part of our daily routine. Bulldozers, tractors. power mowers and chain saws are now doing the strenuous work that contributed greatly to the robust health en- joyed by our forebears. 29 ,jx ' fm s 9- ew . 'F g Qi g D so I I X t , 4. fwf--,ff It Q I x! ff .f N I iff W w L ,X fc 5 XF. qcf P ge- It 'fl lu. ij fflu 6 if it 'll f f lier, c y' Modern transportation is responsible for much of the unfitness in our country. Walking is wonder- ful exercise but, Why walk when you can ride? asks a fat America. Hiking, bicycling and rowing are nearly forgotten hobbies. Television's contribution to the nation's unfitness has been the creation of millions of pot-bellied, round shouldered vegetables whose physical endeav- ors are vicariously executed by the likes of Wills, Mays, Horning and Unitas. in ei-35 ,5-gzifr ' fs ' M W' ' . Q CTP r j C' 7 A it ,ji .J V :JI 1 . vi. , S I .- at 1 aw.. fr, ...Q i T if Fl 42635251 C. J' xjiwk f iljgtfiii f if Q7 if Li fila lr: rf fs iff? fi f' . 1' fAQ,, ff U.. f f ,X c .. .91 Illustrated by Lew Alquist 30 We cannot, of course, return to the rigors of frontier life, but we must recognize that times have changed and make adjustments if we would regain the health and vigor that no longer naturally ac crues to us. Americans today treat their bodies like their cars with planned obsolesence that can and will be replaced. Unfortunately, such is not the case. We must take very good care of our bodies if we desire long and healthy lives. By very good care I mean we must eat a well balanced diet CI have never known a person who ate three well bal anced meals daily, so vitamin, mineral and protein supplement are generally desirablej, we must exer cise for at lcast an hour three times weekly for th equivalent thereofjr and we must obtain sufficien rest and relaxation. Obtaining physical fitness is not an overnigh process. Often many months of devotion to the rule of fitness are necessary to overcome years of neglec But the results . . . ah, the wonderful, tangibl results. Physical gains are so much more concret and measurable than the nebulous accruements o the intellect, consequently they give satisfaction i a world where most people 'can't get none.' Im proved appearance, stronger circulatory and respir tory systems, improved posture and better digestio and assimilation are part of the harvest to b gleaned by following the rules of fitness. The ancient Greek prescription of a health mind in a healthy body is the ideal. Preoccupatio with one's body can be worse than physical unfitnes and sixty-eight fone weekj could scarcely be co sidered preoccupation. Youth is the time to cultivate habits of healt Tastes can then be changed and routines develope which will insure and enrich your life. Exercise is a need never outgrown and shoul be an integral and inherent part of your dail activities. Tastes in foods should be turned away from th high-fat, cholesterol-forming varieties and towar the high protein, nutritious, natural foods. The tast for over-processed foods Qwhite bread, white suga canned foods, etc.j and alcohol should be suppresse as much as possible. And youth should not ignore the most ignore warning in America: Caution: cigarette smoking ma be hazardous to your health. In this regard, Ame ica would do well to adopt and adhere to the slog of the Russians, health is duty, disease is sabotage Decide today to be physically fit. Youth is th time for charting one's course in life and physic fitness is a way of life. I I l 4 but, exercising three hours out of every one hundre I I I, . ! 1 1 f - Q, K, Mx ' M W ,A X -x X 11 1 . if N ','kxb '3511 2 ,J WE wma IS 'c' BUILDING? ZW X f 2 El.coME T0 BJC 7 4 E 'Q 'YEL 21-H Lf-fn fXMA,:: K ' N ' ' Q f.Tf2,-alsfwvgff if WJJ X -' ' -ff' 13-if-1'EFg:x - .4.f- 1 dmv ff? ff A:-ff X ' 5 5' y ' -- , 4 X - '1':'-bags: - L fre, .f ' J sf?-iii 1?-Qffff ffl, wfff INTERVIEWS' 'vinyl Author Iim Bishop is a man of style. His manner has it, his writing has it, and it is all his. The books he has written have that definite style of minute by minute aeeounts such as those in Day in the Life of a President or The Day Lincoln lvas Shot. Bishop was horn in New Iersey. His basic formal ecluealion stoppefi at Draices Secretarial College. though he has an honorary degree from St. Bona- phelels College. He is married, has four children ami eight grancfchifffren. Elie Kurpiewsici, Silver Sands assistant editor, recently had the pleasure of having dinner with lim Bishop. Here are portions of that interview: 32 SS: You are currently writing a book on Johnson, in the same theme you wrote the Kennedy book- Day in the Life of a President-How would youd compare the two men as Presidents? IB: johnson has had a much better record than Kennedy had. Do you realize that he has had over 85M of the bills he proposed passed by Congress? I was thinking the other day about it and that is more than any President has been able to do, going back to Washington. Kennedy was barely able to squeeze in any at all. Congress ignored his charm. You see, when a man becomes president there is what is called a honeymoon with Congress-lasting from four to six months. During this time Congress gives the President what he wants. But after the honeymoon is over, Congress goes its own way. Now what happened in the case of Kennedy, was that the Southern Democrats began voting with Republicans and Kennedy was not able to be strong. You know the power of the President has increased. He can control his office and the Supreme Court if he can get two members appointed. The power is very strong. johnson as a President is the hardest working and the most efficient. He probably works harder than anyone. And remember, I am not a fan of his. However, when I was doing the Iohnson book, I learned that as a child he wanted his Moth- er,s approval. He did anything for it from cuttin grass to working as a ditch digger after schooi not because he wanted to but because he sought his motheris approval. Now that Rebecca Johnson is dead, he seeks the United States, approval in her place. He gets very upset when he is criticized. SS: What do you think Iohnson's place in history will be? IB: Well, he hasnit lived long enough to really say what his place will be. He has naive and inno- cent goals-he wants a true peace. He has dominated Congress and he can be crude. He forces his depart- ments to help one another. When he has a meeting, alll departments are there and each must help the ot er. SS: There have been a great many books on Kennedy written. Don't you think some of these, such as written by Maud Shaw, were and are un- necessary? IB: After Kennedy died people wanted to reach out and touch him. The books did this for them. They enabled the people to reach to him. This feel- ing in people is still alive. They want to be close to him. And, remember, as long as the public Wants the books they will continue to be written. SS: Well, you are writing a book on the Day Kennedy Died, and Mrs. Kennedy has asked another writer to do the same. Have you had trouble? JB: No not really. She has written me not to do it, that Mr. William Manchester is doing the book for her. But I have 350 single spaced pages on what every important person was doing between 12:30 and 1:00 p.m. on that day. I have been able to gather enough information of my own. There will .be no competition of books as far as I am concernedf My book will come out after his. In fact, that was ,one of the reasons I did the Iohnson book. SS: Most of the books you have written have been history lessons, The Day in the Life of a President, The Day Christ Died and so on. Is this a style you have developed and how did it come about? IB: Well, I got the idea for the minute-by- minute account thing from my Father. He was a policeman and I used to watch him making up reports at home. With this style a dramatic thing occurs. I am not a dramatist, but people begin to get involved with what is happening. When I took 'I'he Day Lincoln Was Shot to the publisher, he began to read it. As he got to the part where Mrs. Lincoln is putting on her gloves to go to the theater, he began saying, No, Mr. President, donit go to the theater! This is simply something that happens through the use of small details and minute-by- minute accounts. You begin to know the people. Like in a play, you know what will happen, but you keep hoping it won't. You become involved. SS: Following Kennedy's death, his mistakes in office were forgotten and only his best points dis- cussed. However, if you were the historian, how would you classify him? IB: As a charming idealist. He was most charm- ing, perhaps the most charming man I have ever met. His heart sang in poetry for this country. But he was also rough, mean and political. His mistake was wanting to run the country and Congress. He was often double crossed. He was like a man playing follow the leader and when he would look back to make sure everyone was keeping up, he would find he was alone. His first major mistake was shortly after taking office. He arranged a summit meeting in Vienna with Khrushchev. Kennedy expected too much and Khrushchev found he was dealing with a little boy, who wanted to deal honestly and above the table. Russia wouldn't have it, and told him to go home and when he grew up, come back. SS: How difficult has it been to write the Ken- nedy book without Mrs. Kennedy's help? IB: I don't think it's been difficult. I have been able to gather enough information to write it. The Iohnson book will be first, then the Kennedy. SS: Recently, there has been a book published that stated there were too many conflicting thoughts on whether or not Qswald was the assassin-that it was' really a conspiracy instead. What are your feelings about this? IB: I do not think it was a conspiracy. It was solely Oswald. There are people who magnify errors. I have reports from the Dallas police concerning Tibbitis death and the eleven volumes of the Warren Report. I think Oswald, like john Willkes Booth, wanted to be caught. This is the type of people they were. SS: When Kennedy was killed everyone was in an uproar that firearms should be harder to obtain. Nothing was done. Now following the Watts riot, the Speck killings and the Whitman deaths everyone is in an uproar again. When will the law finally be passed? IB: Congress has no intention of passing a law on firearms because it would be unconstitutional. About the only way to curb the problem would be to have the ones who buy them register and then have the police check them. The law however will never be passed. SS: To change the subject, you were one of the first reporters that felt Candice Mossler and Melvin Powers were guilty but would get off? Why? IB: I have never covered a case where there was so much more than just circumstantial evidence. First, there was the reservationist who made Powers, ticket for him from Houston to Miami, very late at night. She remembered him because he gave her a bad check. Instead of signing his name Melvin Pow- ers he signed it Melvin Mossler. He landed in Miami, though both later said he was never there. He went to a bar and the bartender remembered him because he asked for an empty coke bottle, forgot it and came back. It was later found that a coke bottle was used to drug Mossler so that he would not scream while he was being stabbed. Then Candy got a headache and at two in the morning she went to the hospital. Instead of letting a nurse give her a shot to relieve the pain she waited for her doctor to come. And who would stab a man 36 times, wrap a blanket around him and stab him 3 more unless he had a personal thing against him. She's just a very clever woman. SS: Last question. Any advice to aspiring young writers? IB: I can't tell you anything except write. VVIIIB all the time. You know how a child practices the piano, a writer must do the same. By repetition you leam and develop. 33 UR new President, Doctor Myron R, Blee, will bring to our campus a splendid background of education- al experiences and services for his fellow man. Although his efforts have been in many areas, he has certainly evolved himself in and with Floridais educational system. From 1951 to 1954, as the Asso- ciate Director of the Florida Leg- islative Reference Bureau, he was directly responsible for the de- tailed study of the State University System, it was this study that re- sulted to the fine junior college system that has been and is being developed in our growing state. At the same time he organized another study of the rise of educa- tional television for the Florida schools. At the end of this service, Dr. Blee became Associate Director of the Council for the Study of Higher Education in Florida, his five years of service on the staff of the board of control of Florida institutions of higher leaming in- cluded the post of Assistant Di- rector for Program Development and Coordination. One of his great contributions to Florida's educa- tional program has been his fine service as the Director of the Florida Institute for Continuing 34 r PRESIIIE 'I' BL Il University Studies, this he accom- plished from 1961 to 1965. This fine work was followed by his duties at the Florida Atlantic Uni- versity, as the Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, here, he was instrumental in designing and establishing the learning center at the new university. Last April he interrupted his work in Florida to accept an ap- pointment by President Lyndon B. Johnson as the Executive As- sistant Director of the new Office of Emergency Planning in Wash- ington, D. C. Although Dr. Blee has been recruited to a higher duty, his first love has ever been his adopted state of Florida. So, when it became evident that the position of President was open at the Junior College of Broward County, he was contacted, inter- viewed, and subsequently elected to the new position. He will be on our campus as soon as the President of the United States re- leases him from his duties in Washington. Originally from Illinois, Dr. Blee received his B.Ed. from Northern Illinois University, his M.A. and Ed.D. from the Univer- sity of Illinois, and additional work from Florida State University. He has served as an instructor, a high school principal, a superintenden of schools, a dean of students ' Northern Illinois University, an' as an instructor and officer of th United States Navy prior to haf coming to Florida. Our new Pres, ident has written a number special publications education in general and has authored Higher Education F101-ida's Future, this book has a tremendous impact upon education since its publication. Mrs. Blee has her B.Ed. Northern Illinois University, there she met and married President. Mrs. Blee 4 shares her husband's interest the Florida school systems. is the past president of the Congress of Parents and T Dr. and Mrs. Blee have daughter who is at the time enrolled in Agnes lege. Our new President believes a great depth of feeling that person who asks for an ity to gain greater skill edge should be allowed to again and again to attain his within his capacities to do We are indeed fortunate that man of such experiences, edge, and understanding will our President. I iff: ,- ff' s' to I , P gg f 2 'f ' Y G A, jg. T - ' i i xx i ii' ' 09 'i ' :tae .. ' 'RN 4 - ' .,- f ' Jack D. Taylor B.S., M.A., Ed.D. Acting President and Dean of Students N I R ? Walter H. .larecke B.S., M.A., Ed.D. Dean of instruction ADMINISTRATION ' .-.y. N .S. ' ' - e if B.S., A.B., MA., Ed.D. Harvey B. Oates Dean of Administration HGI'l1EI' M. ledhetfel' e.s., M.A., eu.n. Q Dean of University Parallel Programs Th Administrative Dean 0 omas F. Parker B.S.Ed., M.A. Assistant to the President s.. 9-up-QV! Edward F. Koichi B.S., M.Ed. f Technical, Semi-Professional and Occupational Education Dean NFH Lester B. Trussler A.B., M.A. of Admissions and Records ,reg .sr-E 3 1 e I Gordon Chesser B.S., M.S. Director of Registration Q64 Y 'LT' Robert E. Hall B.Arch. Director of Campus Planning 1001- . il. gif Neil S. Crispo B.S., M.S. Director of Student Activities -47' .,.. I Harold B. Hayes B.A.l., M.E., Ph.lJ. in M.C. Director of ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF 1 . 'dirt' 311 Q. ,Q ' anpapnnndo - H a in v .1 I wel' Donald T. Cuddy A.B. Director of Public Relations ..4' -f 5 'L .V - .Q Adolph M. Koch B.A., M.A., Ph.D., L.L.B., l.S.D. Director of L -Q Q :.rT:'5..'ii , 4 Sl -Q 1 A .-.15 ' 1 7 I ' in Grady Dralte Ray M. Gover B.S., B.S. in L.S. Director of Library Services far-. 1 . 1 .-v-1, .x idhkakl 6 I' ., A .77f,3 'fi Donald P. LaRowe B.S., M.B.A. Director of lunior College Personnel B.S., M.A. Director of Admissions ye-,. .Q el B ff. Robert N. Melott B.S., M.A. Director of Data Systems Publications Institutional Research f . . . .ji g 5' N, 7' VA ft ' ' it 5' ' . x , ' ' L 4. sa A g Y Albert Robertson Glen A. Rose Peter Shenosky George H. Voegel A.B. B.S., M.H.P.E. B.S., M.A. B.A., M.Ed. Director of Assistant Director of Director of . Director. of l Foundations and Admissions and Business Affairs Instructional Media Projects Records STUDENT PERSONNEL and SPECIAL SERVICE STAFF in A V it EL ,fu I u fa X .1 ' :rg , -1- 55 Y. Q ' 1 -W -f .. X ' P x 'f 4' A f. to , - Q A I 'K ' George F. McCall, lr. Margaret Porter M. Elizabeth Brashears Phyllis J. Burgoyne Gibson A. Cameron, lr. B.S., M.Fd. B.A., M.Ed. B.S., E.D.M. B.S., M.A. A.S., Ed.M. Coordinator of Coordinator of Counselor Counselor Counselor Placement and Student Aid 'gl ,ay 'wa .... f A A L uise R. Dowerman o A.B., B.S. in L.S. Librarian 36 Reading Services f1'. s nf MV il wi .1 Ronald A. Narel B.A., M.A. Counselor dw QK Elmo Natali B.S., M.A. Reading Specialist V 5 ,i Mary Pardee A.B., B.S. in L.S. Librarian 'D vs . M i 3. T' -'Er I 1 Frank Scalise B.S., M.A., Ed.D. Counselor Llewellyn Shekmar A.B., M.A. Librarian 19' Y. Q Lois D. Shull B.A.. M.A. Librarian Doris L. Sams B.A., M.Ed. Counselor 5 . D Leon Watts B.S., M.A. Counselor 'x .X ' 1 I John F. Lutz B.S., M.A., Ed.lJ. Chairman, Division of Business Administration and Economics lr 'r '77 8' 'wr Timothy W. Donohue B.A., L.L.B., M.B.A. Business es . 5 644 I A Charles B. Howell, Ir. B.S., M.B.A. Business a N. Marshall Nance A.B., LD. Business -Er , , A .sv K' T-T .R -1 3 I 4 Maxine G. Schenks A.B., M.A. Business DIVISION OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION AND ECONOMICS 1 .loan Everhart B.S., M.S. Business NV- i' ' - 1. A-:s1.2e:w 4 1 an i ' 4 if . 'k Eleanor Iddings B.S., M.A. Business Dennis W. Neely A.B., M.Ed. Business .Ja f f Philip L. Trees s.s., M.A. Business 4 'v Us Lawrence Hess B.S., M.S. Accounting P Rs '-1 '- .l'. ., All Paul Kaufman B.S., M.L. Business 'fs YS ,. ...- L S Mary G. Paul B.S., M.S. Business I David wegman B.S., M.B.A. Business ,J 4 4 R lacquelyn Bethel B.A., M.A. Economics ,., as .1 , 'f i 4 kg Joan lvl. Holloway B,A., M.A. Business '. 1 YW 55- Marlene L. Kennedy B.S., M.S. Business N-Q Reyhurn R. Roulstnn B.A.. M.A. Business I . I Marion N. West B.A., M.A. Business foci A Willard S. De Lara D.M., M.M., D.M. Chairman. Division of Fine Arts ,, -v. 1 ' sl Mildred Mullikin BA., M.A. Head, Department of Speech and Drama ZJFFK' L George 1. Cavanagh BA., M.A. Speech 'R i -25- Russell B. Green B.S., M.Ed. Art 5: 3? Donald C. Nichols B.A., M.A. Speech 38 DIVISION OF FINE ARTS af David E, Factor B,S., M.A. Head, Department of Visual Arts ra- ,gr E J sf Thomas H. Cavendish B.A., M.M.Ed., Fh.D. Music lIE!!!!!!i Dale K. Jensen B.M,E., M.M.E. Music fa V564 i- 'rl J-: ll ' 1 ir, . A x A F I i K. .. Lawrence D. Tohe B.S., M.A. Art 455: '!::i l P-0 -12' La Monte Anderson B.S.Ed., M.F.A. Art rg- f. I .Q I' 'Ns l. 4'-ti' J' A sk Elvira Dunlevy A.B., M.S. Speech .A gt, I Lawrence Kassan M.A., B.F.ll. Art ,. 0 tv I U Mary E. Wallace B.S., M.A. Art .a-z. .. I E A Y :. ,Fr-ms.. -.. .Yin Audelia Blankenship B.M., M.M. Music 43 , -a-' ..,,. Y. S, -A T Marjorie B. Esco A.B., M.A. Speech -u ' I7 2 eva. Betty McMilIion A.B., M.A. Music 19 Y , an ' JL. Jimmy 0. Woodle BA., M.M. Music x 'a' 7' ful I Q A 1, ' BEl'I1Bl'd M C . ampbell ILB., M.A. Chairman of the Division of Language and Literature x ,Q n- Constance Borgschulte B.A., M.A. English 1 U 16 Lona Burns A.B., M.A. English -,vac 8: John l. Chestnut A B., M.A. English Hamilton T. Crowell BA M.A. English DIVISION OF 'a 1 ,Fl - ' v Willard R. Kempton A.B., M.A. Head, Department Modern Foreign Languages I 5 , I 'ij I 1- :lf - Donna Rae Branson B.S., MA English 32 .-- vw ludith Ann Butler B.A., M.A. English 'Fi 4? 'ev LL Barbara l. Clark A.B., M.A. English FP 0 -E? - News sg , l Lee G. Dickerson B.S., M.A. English LANGUAGE A -il 5 3 Betty Jean Adkins A.B., M.A. English I , WL 7 Akin CHBTIBS W. BFUEUUI1 B.S., M.S. English urine, g,...,f.. X- '7 A Alfredo A. Caballero B.A., M.A. Spanish -' 43.9- Harry E. Crews BJL, M.F.d. EngHSh N A mg, q xl. 2 Diane M. Disney B.A., M.A. Journalism ND LITERAT E A . , Q f ll' Diane C. Boggs B.A., MAT. Frer-an - I Marina C. Burdick B.A., M.A. Spanish ' -Q. 1 4, ,1 nh Mary lo Carl B.S,. M.A. English 0-K .vig ,fn ' N . is fe 4? 'fx' X Carole A. Cross ILB.. M.A. English Jr '20 S - 'f ' F Lucile H. Glaze B.S., M.A. English 39 Q 1? L an Ned: E. lllll BA., M.A. English ' :lm -4 3 Robert D. 0'Neal M.A.T.S. Spanish MDF' and A - larrell C. Pharr A.B., M.A. English . I f gi Mary Russell 6.A,, M.ll. English 'kk ' . I r-2 11355151 . lei Hausa X svuzefzesii, I i':':::': Merrill P. Sluut B.A., M.A. English 4111 A , ly: -' H -B i -4 1 2 ,f',s Julie Koenig B.l., M.A. English P1 Elsie E. Owen A.B., M.A. Enghsh 7: 4 . , X Donna Rauh A.B., M.A. English 11 -L- wr, If David A. Shaw B.A., M.Ed. English l Qi: 7. Arthur Vanmeeveren B.A., M.A. English F Lp lv lean Magers B.A., M.A. English A -L John Pawlowski BJL. M.A. Spanish E V . Q., ludith M. Rehm B.Ed., M.A. English I 1 ...H V Natalie G. Smith B.S., MJL, Ph.D. German Z in , X. -5 D .lohn C. Weldon A.8., M.A. French Q 'ar in , nf .,, AL i Grace K. Merrill A.B., M.A. English f ia? ' ' QM I , .-W ' 'Ni Frances Pedigo A.B., M.A., Ph.D. English I . L.., .X . Donald C.Tligg B.A., M.Ed. English 5,-.,,fv7. v 'nf X-1. 14 Norman S. Stebner B.S., M.ll. English J' Q., lluy L. Yaler B.A., M.A. English f X Q... 'EF' I Dewey M. Stowers B.A., MJL, Ed.D. Chairman of the Division of Social Science .2 -Q. ,' .JN pgf Wayne E. Barton B.A., M.A. Education O -1 I , -ri '. at ' its Bernadine English B.A., M.A. Psychology Li 4 r fi sa 1 'U' N I E. Lane Jackson B.A., M.A. Psychology U 1 '4 -.Q v i, P fit. Howard Mack B.A., M.A. Political Science DIVISION OF SOCIAL SCIENCE -aff 'T' ,,.ar- Stewart Brown B.ll., M.Ed. Head, Department Political Science Yo 'J V of he . -..-4 , S N. J 2 H I -f C1395 . A r Ralph Clark ll.B., M.A. History Max Harper A.B., M.A. History .fy 1 .dn Rex C. Kidd B.S., M.Ed., Ed.D. Education Charles E. Millspaugh as., ml. History s at I '-,- 'i A lohn M. Bunch 8.A.E., M.Ed. Head, Department of History Rl Mary Patricia Combs B.A., M.A. History ,lg rg, C LL' . ' ., Maureen .l. Hart B.S., M.S. Sociology t9 64. 'R ' 'C ! Louis J. Kilmer B.A., M.A. Sociology xypfzl gr au! - . lr' Curtiss W. Oakes B.S., M.A. Political Science g fan - -..--. i Paul Caulliel B.A.. M.S., Ed.D. Head, Department oi Psychology and Education 4' va -ff V7 1 X . 5 I K , 1' C3thEfll'l9 M. Dlflnell B.A.. M.A. History John P. Hays A.B., M.A. History ia L ma, -.. George W. Laschinski B.S., M.A. Political Science ,- ' 5 J il N. Dale Ratlitf A.B., Th,M. Psychology 41 ,- 5 S . ,L ' 6- ' 'Q iw 1' ., . , , r ,- AL A - Th J. R , I . Harry 1. Schaleman Jr 1,7311 lA.2F 'F' - E?.5'fg'i.1,'l? e s B.3'.'fTi.l. 'an ' B.S., M.A. Hrstory PSYCNOIOEY H'5f0fY Ge02'aP Y Af' 'y ' g- F' A Lv 'lf 7 . - n ,,... V! Edw. J. A. Schindeler Harold J. Theriault luhn D. Wells B.S., M.A. B.S., M.S. A.B..,M.A. Pummar science History Pmlosonhy DIVISION OF HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND RECREATION . yt ng A wh U- ' -' M ' A Q .wi , ' ' r , ,I 4 . '1 .,' ,, -4- 41 -Tf' 1 Y, Rex Brumley B.S., M.A. Charrman of the Duvrsuon of H I ea th, Physrcal Educatnon, BHG R9CI'93tl0I'l ,N Jane Erickson B.S., M.Ed. - ,: Fe- .- ' I .. lx.. - William H. Mcliehee B.S., M.A. 42 'Y Elaine Gavigan B.S., M.A. Head, Department Women's Physical Educatron 1 .3 - f ln Wilbur H. Gilford B.S,P.E., M.Ph. of 'su-7: 1 Qi. ..,- Y xl L Clinfnn E. Mnrr B.S., M.A. William A. Porterfield B.S., M.A. Head, Department of lVlen's Physical Education be ag ,al bf Alma King B.S., M.Ed. l Iudith Ann Blucker a.s., M.A. 'ra 1 4 A r ,se ? L R. L. Landers B.B.A., M.E. 'Vs 1 ' N is Howard G. Stephens B.S., M.A. Thomas H. Burke s.A., M.A. 1' x o P 'S -.1 g -.. I Q: Nancy Macnamara B.S., M.A. I 41- ,gg 'ri-I S 'f x Leroy W. Wheat B.S., M.A. A A Robert C. Cassell B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Chairman, Division of Science and Mathematics I 4 i . 3. . C. - xl ,..-If .loel M. Martin B.S., M.A.E. Planetarium Director ' ' i 5 fm ,K 1 i -,f 'ah lwallace E. Bell B.S.E., M.Eg. ' Mathematics I l i l i i Chinoy a A tuoius D. DeYampert .S., M.S.T. Geology DIVISION OF SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS .je Arthur H. Fuss A.B., A.M. Head, Department of Mathematics 3, 2' . N, ,Q A x Francis Abbott B.S., M.S. Biology R'- xs 'qv ai I il Dan H. Bishop B.S., M.A. Physics 'v -...- we rv. George D. Clement B.S.E., M.Ed. Mathematics ' 4- 5 . I Vx X .xgt . Lorraine Dupuis B.S., M.S. Chemistry 'F W. Holt Harner B.S., M.S. Head, Department of Biology A Ji 33- Q1 in Alvin D. Aurand B.S., M.S. Engineering i L 2 . N' Ben Bockstege, lr. B.S., M.S. Mathematics l 4, ' 4? f' Gl3dWil1 CUl11ES B.S., M.S. Astronomy -P if .1 i -I 1 .V-., David E. Erikson B.A., M.A. Mathematics FA .A-:Y Q! L Richard D, Hill, lr, B.S.. Mio. Head, Department 9 Physical Science .93 K 4 William G. Bailey B.S., M.Ed. Chemistry QQ,- if-71 AIBI1 B. CBDIUI' B.S.Ed., MA. MBtl1El'l'l3lICS c 3 ?'-r 4 :N xfa fy James C. Condon B.A., M.S. Geology .- I I Bernard H. Friile B.S.Ed., M.S. Biology 43 'P K I j' .5 1 Henry P. Graziano B.S., M.Ed. Biology --'G A , xv! Lucille Holmes B.S., M.S. Biology .29 g X fs' s T John W. Medusky B.S., M.S. Mathematics I yi L Q ty! Ellen G. Nelms B.S., M.Ed. Chemistry 44 I -,yi -5 Frank P. Sivik B.S.. M.S. Biology 5'-. 55 . '-'Sl' A V. 0. Guinn B.S., M.S. Chemistry fs S Marilyn Hornquist B.S.. M.A.T. Mathematics Q -ve 6 ,i 1 fx..-v QL Neal T. Morar B.S., M.S., M.S.T. Biology AQ f 1-0 X . Jw Mary L. Perfect B.S., M.S. Mathematics 55 RA Charles S. Vanlrsdall B.S., M.A. Mathematics '21 7, ...aa R-Y Ronald Haire B.S., M.S. Chemistry i - V, 1 Tryphena Howard B.A., M.A. Mathematics 9 Ks -. way Clarice H. Moreth B.S.. M.S. Biology I .X .N 'I 1 Rohert P. Reagan B.S., M.S. Physics . ,N Q --a Lewis A. Warwick A.B., M.A. Mathematics 'f5 xl? Minerva Hulmherg A.B., ll.M. Biology V79 -LJ ,J Annie L. Lang A.B., A.M. Mathematics Xl lx -:- 1. Ralph H. Naleway B.S., M.A. Mathematics -39 'af 'Z' D C. E. Rhodes B.A., M.A. Physics 8 F 1 ' LA John A. Scigliano B.S.Ed. Division Chairman DIVISION OF TECHNICAL, SEMI-PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT OF AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGY Willgam G. Coleman F.A. Chief Flight Instructor William Bowen B.S. Edward Gargan F.A.A. Earl Mengle F.A.A. Roy Mules F.A.A. Russell Sheldon F.A.A. DEPARTMENT OF BUILDING AND CONTRACTING K As George Polk B.S., M.A. Division Chairman .5 . DEPARTMENT OF DATA PROCESSING Q, , 4, 2 -A-ls ' -. . X 'Y 'N eq' 'v' C, Q 4, ., X in TI 4 ey Avi , I I . M. I. Ellis James Brock Fred Scott B.S., M.Ed. B.S., M.S. B.S. Department Chairman DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRONICS -'af ss an 'J . ..4 - v' if V- John Burke Burton Greenstein Gordon Mnndin B.S. B.S.E.E. B.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOTEL-MOTEL ADMINISTRATION r X, lliagurence R. Dieterich 'Department Chairman YVOIIIIE ACk0l.II'Ey B.S. DEPARTMENT OF ORNAMENTAL HORTICULTURE 1 01'- sv P-ef' un Albert A. Will B.L.A., M.S. Department Chairman -,1. Q .,, 9 16 Dudley Palmer B.S.A. DEPARTMENT 1 .- ' Nb: James McGowan B,S., M.A. Department Chairman OF POLICE SCIENCE AND CRIMINOLOCY , 'R I William McCarthy B.B.A. Q 'Q DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL ASSISTING ,z Gladiula G. King MTA B.S.. .S.C.P. Department Chairman .ax xi .Y kk Mildred Poaster 8.5. R DEPARTMENT OF NURSING EDUCATION --R l t . I ', Q1 an 'R l I TF' '3'1f' 1 AQ NRRI IL Adele Miller B.S., M.A. Department Chairman ,-,S -, ,-,f 4 Helen V. Dumas B.S., M.A. 4 . '. G '17 Marv ladwig B.S.N., M.Ed. Anna J. Acuff B.S., M.S. vu f-'11 'Q x Mary C. Dunne B.S.N.E., M.A. - P -, .Q A- X 1 5 r gk Nw' ' N si m., I 525-I AIQZINQE .. 352145 ll'lI13 K. R09 B.S. Rosmond Callery B.S., M.A. A rw gh. ,I .,. ..- 1 , w 'IM Wilthelma Holt B.S. rv .A -A-Kali' if A r w Margrelta Styles B.S., M.N. Department Chairman Con Ieavel 'wr -:- I.: ,f 4 K x 'lawn' hw' li l ' 1 GEMINI lV EXTRA VEHICULAR ACTIVITY-Aslronauf Edward H. Whiie'is shown as he performed his maneuvers oufside the spacerraft during the third revolution of Ohe four-:lay flight. ltlt lllllit i lHlllUlIillilU iliiitltltlll OFFICIAL NASA PHOTOS ARD as you may find this to helicye. the main industry ot Cocoa Beach is not surfing. lf you have accidentally rrrad thc front page of a newspaper as you se,-a1'c-lat-cl lor the driyc-in listings or the comic page any time in the last few years. you have prohalvly gotten the vague impression that there was more to the local surf spot than an occas- sional big wave. 48 Big things are happening on that little triangle of land that shimmers in the heat across the entrance to Port Canaveral. Thousands of people, hundreds of millions of dollars, and the dream of the first cave- man who looked up at the night sky are turning that once primeval sand spit into a port of entry to the stars. Across that narrow channel is the Air Force Mis- mn -' 1 wr-' - - 1 ,VM ww-., V 'Q 'zz 'ir' ' 1 i l sile Test Center at till- rclluluc-LI, Chlpl' Kr-llllr-cly. To the old timers and those who lull und'-r its spa-II. however. it still l't'llIilIIlN MIQII4' fittlttfl Inside the gates ot this Vlllllll-IIIIIIIHII Klllllill' CUIII' plex of Iluilclings. l1llIllC'II pulls. LIAIIIITBS, unll ZIIIIPIIIILIS is Ll Sifllllgl' world. Itis LI world ol giant IIIIXSIIVN lunl microscopitl circuits. ol' I.ox und Clox. luul I'l'IIIlN and IX'-t'Ilil'f', the noi-Ill ol' IIIIIIIDITIIXX llt'I'l' itlflllh, From the- SLlIlflS ol' this lrllltlllll Ill-an-Il Illitll is probing thc' fringvs ol. tht- void that 9l'llilI'LlI4'N llinl from tht- other worlds ol thc- llIlIYl'I'Nl'. Halfway LITUIIIIKI the world. on Iln' slr-ppvs ol Central Russia. other llIl'II Illuv In-r-n rloinu lllw Munr- thing. The-3' wt-rv more Slll.'L'l'NNllII in tllv Irl-uinlling. but now they un- slowly llllling Ilvllilnl ill tllv lllll' that they thrust upon IIS on IJCIUIIVI' AI, 1957. Oli that dzltv. Ihr- Soviet Vnion orlmitml lln- Iilst nlan-nmllv sutcllitv. Sputnik I Instr-rl hiss tluul iIlI't'4' months Iwforo it IllNIIltt'Q,'lAiIlt'fI ill ll Ilull ol tin-. solllv' where over tht- lllc-itic, us it lost sp:-1-tl :intl Ir'II lun-I to the plum-t that had spluxm-cl it. In the short illllt' it l-xistncl. tllr- N!'Yl'lll!'t'lI inc-Il aluminum split-ro UPt'llf.'ll Ll pvlioll ol 4'Xl3IHI'LlIIHII und discovery that will lllftlit' tht- lu-Init-x'r-lin-llts of tht- Columlnuscs and Ilullloas ol' the past SL'4'llI pulv Ivy comparison. But what has alll this to do with you? It Illls a lot to do with you. you, and your ClIIlflI'f?I1. zuld your cliildrerfs children. The effects that the dis- The Gemini VII spacecraft as seen from the Gemini VI spacecraft during their rendezvous mission in space. The two spacecraft are approximately I7 feet apart. tjftX'l'll' ot lllr' XY'-vlvllll Ilf'lIlIHIJIl'l Irlfl nl ll IIILIII will Ill- IIIIIIIIIDIIWI In Illllllll' Ill fl Vlllltllllllll vlll Ill' ll.llr'lollllflfl lv. Sli' fllrlo' IIIIIIIUIIS ol I.l.lvI'Ifl'r. III ZIII flllllf- 1j,ll.l ' hIl't'lllll. plofllnl-, llllfl lllotlllflgfl 'filo-fl nr Ill' lwllllllllllllll Ill 'illilfl .llf lnr'lllll'f Ill frll ll All 'Q lln- nn-lllofl IlN4'1I lo 'gllllfl fill.. lllrlll -'fi 'r lliilll. is IIIIYIIIILI IIIIIIFIIVYIK ol rllllllllrlllw or lll fl llIll'lllIlI IlIflII'wlI'h,IIiIll' IIIIK lllfllll lllll lo gr flow. NhNl1llINIlI'4'lll'IllQl'IllIlI1lil,l1l pl, por -M lrr ll1'lll'4lIliI'lIl llu--prlll lil llXl'l.ll'l r ill 'llllmn' ill! I lIN 'IL Vrvll J' III llllplllllluf flllllllllllrn .llllll I'I.1'slll's llllll lxlll llrll IIIf'Il nl lln- will ol fl lil ol Iln' IIl'1'fl'l' .llI' lln' llI'Il'r'..ll1 llr rllrrlllll -l ll IIIINNIIK'II1lx4'l'lll11'xvI,X4!'XlIll1l'jllfrlyl 'lu rlrl. lI'4'l'f1'-llllelfl IIIIIIN lll,ll iw- l-.ll lol' lil -.lllw ll. lln lllllllltrwslls vw slr-1-p on .ll lllgllll lil Mir. w or llllIHI'ltX1 tI In spur- ll sr-,ill ll SVIVIIIISIY Ir'Il IIS lll.ll 'l, '1' lll'l llllll. l I,l' Illt' xllllitfv' rll IIIVNI' 212 TllIll I 'rlllll llll ll'lll'll I llllil lllut tln' Iixr-s ol gl ln-lulllollw lo rr llll fl lr 4'lII'lL'II1'1l l'Xt'Il lllolw- In cpnrr r'l-slnlrl, Sulvllitt-N now ill ollllt Ill.l'l rtSXlll lIr-- r.l-. ol Iillillll' Lfl'Il1'lALiIIllIlN, 'Illl' SXXIUK .lllll IJIH' HX' lilllfli spy-ill-tln--slay tlrlllt lhllir Il nov Ilwlrg Il' l. fr allow? tln' Soviet Union. us x'.l-ll rr lllf-ll' lin-ill. colllltcl'purts wllic-Il orllit oxr-l' olll' llllloll ls-l llr' tlnl Iwr-pillg of thc- pf-uc-fl lw giving lllslwol 'IIVIII ot Lilly' hostile uttlu-It Ili' wltllr-r' po'-.rl The Augmented Target Docking Adapter is photographed from the Gemini IX spacecraft during one of their three rendezvous in space The ATDA and Gemini IX spacecraft are 6612 feet apart Failure of the docking adapter protective cover to fully separate on the ATDA prevented the docking of the two spacecraft. The ATDA was described by the Gemini IX crew as an angry alligator. ' 'I 5 Yah. T r lv Sli '..N . r' Q ., B I I xx ,' ,, . 4 i 7631 -' Q, . .'..f' ,. 1, 1 A im: fig' ima, A . ' ,J ' -' 1 . ' RVXQL- 1 V k'?'.j-wzX , . -Q Y-6 A, , VtTw'f?i-15 ',1, lvl eff , , .,-.t-,vin . -.4 f s y .4 - 5 ek- R ,Q ,L 'L ':. ' 'Z 1. 'A x.,tQ,., C .- :ff-132-' Q 1 frail -J 'Y 'A T W A 541'-' digg 'fr 15- psf- T' - :WJ , K. if 4 ii A V kin' ,lil 2, t. , 7 . ' '- 5 'i- f T 2-xg, -,F V 1129- K , LK, 1 -tqghr' 5 :P- E-E. l t P' -r,, .4 .mr ,f'1':.'S, . if A-in H. 3. :sxf . 41,1 1 I . We .5 5 II 3: Photograph taken through hatch de- picts Gemini Xl astronauts Charles Conrad, toreground, and Richard Gor- don :is the space pilots make final checks of their spacecraft! on-board systems, Conrad and Gordon began their three day flight when they were launched from Cape Kennedy atop a Titan rocket at 9:42 a.m,, EST, Sep- tember 12, 1966, 97 minutes after their Agena target satellite was or- bited, They rendezvoused and docked with the Agena in record time and performed their first day's assign- ments according to schedule. 50 4.1.47 j. '53 ,l 4 . Q 7 . kQ,, ,A ,, . ,jg Pint 'J' . 'i , J' , , . View of Ethiopia and Somali in northeast Africa showing the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. This picture was taken during the 27th revolution of the Gemini Xl space flight, Altitude is 400 nautical miles. .f Q fgeipmi , X::,,.t Other craft now in orbit give advance warning F hurricanes, tidal waves and icebergs. Photographs ken by TIROS and ESSA satellites have played a ajor part in weather prediction for the last five ears. Communication between nations of the world has een improved by the use of TELSTAH and SYN- OM satellites which relay signals over unheard ot' stances from their positions hundreds of miles iove the earth. The gargantuan task of building the booster ickets that hurl these and other man-made moons to orbit has created millions of jobs from coast i coast. Here, in our own state. this new industry is given us, a second major source of employment 1d revenue. The educational revolution that followed Sputnik caused the creation of the junior college sy stem. he sudden demand for college trained workers for bs in the construction, testing, launching. and 'rvicing of spacecraft brought new value to the Jllege diploma and higher pay to its holder. The complex new age we have entered requires ore and more education for even the lowest ol' sks. The junior colleges help relieve the overcrowd- g of four year institutions and thus enable the ue Gemini XI spacecraft containing Astronauts Charles Conrad and :hard Gordon parachutes safely into the Western Atlantic 700 iles east of Cape Kennedy following their flawless automatic entry. They set a new altitude record when their docked Gemini- gena configuration, using the Iatter's primary propulsion system, so to more than B50 miles. .rs-re-saws..--..,,9a.e.,. -v X som, K , ,Q-. inn-vl ' - as-.--. it! universities to maintain thc high quality ol their education. Thus far we have only skiimnf-rl tht- t-rlgc. ul our surrounding universe. Hut what ol tht- lutmf ' How long until we lcaxc the relatively lamilipo orbits of the earth and begin probing thc vast waclie. of deep space? The two-inanuctl fleinini program is in its last mission. ln early December. the lirst mama-fl mis- sion of Project Apollo will tlumdt-r alolt lrom the Saturn launching area at the northern t'llfl ot tht- Cape. If the Apollo astronauts successfully complete their two week orbit, two .Xnn-ricaus should str-p from the Lunar Excursion Nloduh- onto tht- SIll'ltll'f' of the moon, while another circles it in the flom- niand Xlodule. sometime in 1969. The events at the Cape are going to haw a greater effect on man's history than anything since thc dawn of time. So, the next time you strap the hoard on tht- woodie and pack your baggies and wax. stop long enough to throw a pair of binoculars or a miiiieini in the bag. And when you get to Cocoa. take the time to let the government give you its bus tour. and take a good long look at the Cape. lt wont cost you anything, and youill go away with a far greater understanding and respect. Astronaut James A. Lovell Jr., pilot of the Gemini Vll space flight, is hoisted from the water by a recovery helicopter from the Aircraft Carrier USS Wasp. Astronaut Frank Borman, command pilot, waits in the raft to be hoisted aboard the helicopter. -- -- Q Q.. .. ' . n . - . -' 4 -N -vnu 1 --A. ' -Q, , N -' tr. ' A 1l'u A R' in M N, Agway sb ae. , - -fri N- Se r - 1 ..- ,M ., , v-Tren. '-Lil., ' ' , ,- Lbs- .-1 ff - , 1 Nels M-' s. 1 'J ---.- ' -- rt V ,sf uyxzv : 5 l, N .Q-Haiti 1 . s 'Fi 1 .s1l1'- .....- 'fu--. ' - '-- r ,. - s -t..:.3e Qjfs-s. ,, ,. - wwe 3... ,JM ,r ,rg -,L . . N N Ax, Q V ...- ,,, .. U ,pe . . .'- ., . .1-' T' cf ' ' .ew -fri ' ,f-4 .V-, R .,. .Qt ., ,,. 'k E an i - ' . S . ' A T ' Lt. X' K ,..: . r it t o 2 ,gs- .s - 2. .gi . six k 1 5 1 h - ,' 7 2+ I MS, .ru .,lEli 1 z lx- .LQ 1,1 . f M e. V. aqui! .z 'lv .1 's .'. H JA. .4 H THE STUD Augusf 20th CEPTION 1 V I ? I lj mae,-W1 WE? 3121 mfg x X Y i S -v 41.1. Q, If they survive the hot dogs nm them through drop-adfl. 1 ,. ,' ,Q -f an V X -2 2 1.31 '- UW I .I lux! , f .1 fl I .f ' 'v V I I ' ,f f ' Q A ' . ' X16 -, ,Q gf ' A X X '14, , ,,Lw 4: . Thufs right! fu nsorcdl 54 Q ,mini . I . x-QL fi E v e V to 5 1, o-A , O .3 ff-,f,- ,- ' , 7 Q , is I, 'Ja Y' ff: Q, -'Q X if 'w,,'-ve-'ii wffg: fe , .J .9f :HfV'5' '-' F' N fl I sr x af. Y Tv ' 1 'I J il I. I can so walk on water! cv 'Aa , 5 2 X Q '-it W' nw.. t hairs! A 1? U N ' ,rf ...gm . , I J K. 4 x-- ng' . f A J 4 if f. ' X gm 'S ,. ,Y I., Sure it looks funny, hut it got mc- deferred. W I' XJ., Mm! ' I A if .D N. if you don't give them the :s back, they stop delivering. That's right. thalidomide. 55 41 l sf 0lf7S I I Court Musicians- THE BODY SHOPP Queen Linda Palla f , upaltp W V1 ff?-, Ting Iolmny Poole Repose Septe1 1fz l9e1f' l7t7 1 ,X NNXX ! fQa .44 N t sirgiq 'Nwsv wr-Q f ., ,X - , 'IHII IIIFFIIIIIUI' IIIISI ESS 0F IIIIITI Il IIIIIIII PIIO E IF YOU ASK SOMEONE: 'CAN YOU PLAY THE VIOLIN?' AND HE SAYS: 'I DON'T KNOW, I HAVE NOT TRIED. PERHAPS I CAN.' YOU LAUGH AT HIM. WHEREAS ABOUT WRITING, PEOPLE ALWAYS SAY: 'I DON'T KNOW. I HAVE NOT TRIED,' AS THOUGH ONE HAD ONLY TO TRY AND ONE WOULD BECOME A WRITER. TOLSTOY BY STAN WOOD and DAVID DAVIDSON Dear Sue, H4 H V , ? I. f. . D.d . X h Debbies' birthday was three days ago. My morn was i ow are you m ine int you get t e letter I Sent ya? I'm still going with Anthony. I glovfvie hcispltal' because her blood Count was Way will be eighteen in April. Boy! Time sure does fly. This is what little Robby looks like is he a doll. Fits and starts, multiple climaxes, characters 58 appearing and disappearing - The thoughtless ear- marks of youthful composition. Compare this excerpt, also written by a teenager: You know they say there isn't anything funny about this war, and there isn't. I wouldn't say that it was Hell, because that's been a bit overworked since General Sherman's time, but there have been about eight times when I would have welcomed Hell. just on a chance that it couldn't come up to the phase of war I was experiencing. The difference between these two examples is obvious. The example which more nearly represents what good writing should be was written by the great American novelist and short story writer. Ernest Hemingway, when he was a young man. What did Hemingway have that the first writer so sorely lacked? Let's examine some forces that shaped young Hemingway. Hemingway spent the first eighteen years of his life in Oak Park, Illinois, a respectable, prosperous, Protestant community, next door to Chicago. The citizens of Oak Park prided themselves on being a cloistered village untainted by the corruption of Chicago. Hemingway's father was a prominent, successful physician. Like most Oak Park parents, Doctor Hemingway imposed strict control upon his children. That Ernest also become a doctor was his father's desire. To further this hope, Doctor Hemingway often allowed Ernest to witness the drama of surgery. Hemingway's mother. who professed a love for music, prodded her son to cello lessons for three years. Mrs. Hemingway envisioned a career for Ernest not in medicine but in music. To accomplish this end, she equaled her husbands discipline and scrutiny of their son. What an atmosphere for a sensitive, vital person who heard the beat of a different drummer. At Oak Park High Hemingway had the rare good fortune of having had two competent, conscientious teachers. They nurtured his precocious interest in literature, and composition. By the time Ernest had graduated from high school he had bent the disciplines taught by his parents to his own will and chose writing as his life's work. When Hemingway left Oak Park to take a reporter's job on the Kansas City Star he was re-' lieved to escape the oppressive discipline of his parents and the community, but was immediately confronted by another challenge to his self-determi- nation. Deadlines and form sheets were his new masters. Rules of conduct were replaced by rules of com- position. However, Hemingway by this time was learning to make disciplines work for him. Hr, believed that anyone can write with courage and hard work. While reporting for The Star, Heming- way learned much about control, precision, and economy of words. During this phase of his appren- ticeship Hemingway began to feel the writers ter- rible duty to the reader. You've got to see it, feel it, smell it, hear it, he once declared. Hemingway determined to evoke these sensations with a peculiar- ly superior brand of writing. Hemingway felt that the only way he could write truly about a subject was to experience it. Such a feeling compelled him to enlist in the Italian Army as a Red Cross ambulance driver. After three days at the front, Hemingway left the Rolling Canteen Servicel' and joined the Italians in the trenches. This voluntary action was born in part from a desire for new experience: but, it was also a freeing from the discipline imposed by his officers. Hemingway got his freedom and he also learned one thing he must do to keep it. He learned the self-control required of a man in danger. Hem- ingway had to call upon this self-control hundreds of times in the next forty years. After his return from Italy, Hemingway went into seclusion in Northern Michigan where he charted the course his professional life would follow. He would return to journalism and write fiction in his spare time. As soon as he could sup- port himself on his fiction, he would quit journalism. For the next three years Hemingway worked as reporter and editor and attempted to market his fiction. Rejection after rejection tested his determina- tion. This period of relative failures emphasized the remarkable confidence which Hemingway had in his basic concepts of writing. His style of writing throughout this period remained essentially the sameg improvement came with greater knowledge of his material and the fine points of style. But the greatest improvement was owing to his increased self-understanding. Looking back at this period years later, Hemingway advised young writers. try never to judge people but understand them. Discipline can be imposed by a force outside ourselvesg but if we want something badly enough we will discipline ourselves. Hemingway wanted so much to write good and true prose that discipline was a natural outgrowth of his desire. This obsession to write prose that would last never waned and neither did his self-discipline. This then is the difference between the letter written by Sue's friend which opened this article and the letter written by young Hemingway. Hemingway had self-discipline and control. He had these qualities because he wished to convey truly his feelings. 59 ---...,i. --A ARNER, PORTER, AND WARNER played their audience even better than their guitars. On September twenty-third, in the Stranahan High School Auditorium, a packed house roared With laughter at their jokes and gave their songs a standing ovation. The trio deserved every decibel. ? 23 Tom Porteris twelve-string guitar accompanied' friends through a wide range of styles. Their Went from sentimental and traditional to the hillbillyv jean Laffite Hotelf, More in the folk styles was their easy-going Rome Wasn't in a Dayf' Tom wrote about half of their music. Byron Warner led the trio, but it was his superb comedy that had the audience on the We get some of the biggest bookings. Last we finished the Pacific Ocean. Oh, we recently the worldis second largest leper colony. The being, of course, the University of California at Then he led into the rock,n'roll segment. 'iMy part- Tom Porter, will now step forward and for five he will grow hair. My sister, Florence, will her head back, and twist her hips seductively. I will pass among the audience, selling B After the parody, Tom Porter stepped out the background singing John and Paulie's wistfully Yesterday.v Their best voice was the least heard. Florence arner's emotion-charged soprano was buried except one exquisite selection. The audience refused to let thein go after 'Tll Sing Another Song and I'll Go and Too Many Good- byes. These comparatively new performers had shown that they were already true professionals. Everyone hoped the coming Lyceum events will be comparable to Warner, Porter, and Warner. MOVIE REVIEW By DAVID DAVIDSON 2040 'Q 140144645 af Waegaaaa 204065 HILE love itself is beautiful, the struggle of two people in love to find each other is often painful and ugly. For two hours one watches George and Martha claw at each other. They destroy all the pretences that some like to call civilization. Their battle engulfs and denudes Nick and Honey. Nick. a handsome. athletic, young professor goes down to nothing- Him no can. Him too full of booze. Honey is his respectable young wife who ends the night on the bathroom floor. idly picking a liquor label. Before any two people can love, they must become intimate. But George and Martha have to strip each other's dignity until they stand. dripping with psychic blood. in their naked souls. These four make up the entire cast. All the long conversation. except for a short stop at a lounge. is at the house. Many of the scenes have a certain poetry as when, after George has discovered Nick is a rival, they sit under the towering trees that wood the backyard. He tells of an excursion he had taken, as a young student. to a gin mill. Georges t'confession has an intimate air of personal tragedy. Unwilling to be left out, Nick confides that he had married Honey because of an hysterical pregnancy. Then the two lonely men return to the house. George had easily outwitted his supra-virile op- ponent. But although Nick didn't understand. George had revealed the key to his own life too Y Why he loved the hurtful Martha. Why he refused to rise in his college hierarchy - He had mentioned that one student, with them on the trip, had accidentally killed both parents. George was, of course. that student. Whether or not he really killed them is unclear, and, unfortunately, to George it is unim- portant. When George tells Martha of the suffering she has caused him, she replies, Why not? You 62 married me for it. George's self-punishment for the death of his parents will, however, soon end. But first there must be a total war. Martha leaves him standing in a parking lot to go home with Nick. This makes George prepare the ultimate weapon. At the beginning of the story he had warned her not to speak of the kid . She mentions him, anyway to Honey: Our son is sixteen years old. Hes coming home tomorrow. When Martha comes down to the kitchen, she insults the alcoholically-impotent Nick by calling him house-boy and making him answer the door. As he opens it, George pushes a bunch of snap- dragons in his face. Using a delivery boy tone he cries, Flores por el muerte de su hijo. ' Not under- standing. the victorious Martha joins him in further humiliating Nick. When he walks away to get his wife. Martha tries to embrace George. He stops her: Oh no Martha. We're not going to quit while you have blood in your mouth. We will carry this through to the end. Before Nick and Honey, George de- clares. Our son is dead. I killed him. In an anguished scene. the last illusion dies. The son is a fantasy between the two who never had a child. This game is over. And so are the vicious games they played in order to come together. For Martha, in facing her childlessness, becomes a woman. In this last scene, she is no longer fighting and nagging. She weeps, and George comforts her. Edward Albee's masterpiece will be a rich experi- ence for all who are interested in total life. But it is not for children of any age. Except for the adoles- cents giggling over those words or the uncompre- hending moralist , they would be bored. This drama demands an audience of deep maturity. It is, there- fore, a statement of belief in the American public. 41' Q Q' , U 1 R. E. P. LAUDERDALE, our former Dean 'Q Instruction, was one of the pioneers who founded Yi Junior College of Broward County. He had great 'nfidence in his students and was well-liked in eturn. He once said, As a whole the freshmen are Ep ost cooperative, intelligent, and serious. r F As an outstanding educator, he led the struggle regional accreditation of I.C.B.C. During the 962-1963 school year a self-study was made of the llege. No other Florida junior college conducted g'1 own evaluation. Dr. Lauderdale headed a steering to which was attached six other commit- to determine the strengths and weaknesses of junior college. Both the State Department and Southern Association of Colleges and Schools the report. After a committee from the visited the campus in 1965, regional ac- Cl quickly followed. In tribute, Dr. Taylor said, The real credit goes the chairman of the steering committee, Dr. members of the steering committee, and of the other standing committees whose extending over a period of months made the possiblef, It is sad that our college has lost such a man. An ex-Marine, Dr. Lauderdale took his degree of ' octor of Education at the University of Mississippi. I eluded in Wh0's Who in American Education, he 7' the state vice-president of the American Associa- n of University Professors. Dr. Lauderdale is now orking under a Ford Foundation grant to improve e junior ,colleges in Mississippi. ?'.'1'.Ff+ ' JCB WELL D0 PICADILLY I BY SCOTT ANDERSON . The circus ephervescent All distraction Nothin' tangent to the mind. Flowin'. surgin' sidewalks Worlds coIIidin', Iovers with their hands entwined. But with no one in your arms retrospection dims the charms. And the shadows cIose around you Leavin' nothin' hut a signpost for the Hind. Wand'rin' this frightened forest. ln search of solace, the colors stamped against the sky. stoppin' hut for a moment One sound is echoed the soarin' sparrows mournful cry And if you're taken unaware you'II he frozen by the stare Of men emergin' from the silence, Tired of Iivin', too unhappy to know why See them in the moonlight At midnight's toIIin', see them standin' in the night, VVaitin', anticipatin', the midnight marchers They stand suspended by the light Then scurry through the dark Their minds salvation but a spark And satisfaction never Iastin' Just a taste of what they know they'II never find. IN LONDON NARCOTICS ARE A LEGALIZED. GOVERN- MENT CONTROLLED BUSINESS. IN PICADILLY. KTHE FLEA CIRCUSJ. USUALLY DURING THE EVENING. THE ADDICTS CAN BE SEEN WAITING AROUND FOR THEIR SHARE OR FIX . THIS POEM IS THE AUTHOR'S IMPRESSION OF THE CIRCUS AS IF HE WERE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF NARCOTICS HIMSELF. THIS WAS ORIGINALLY WRITTEN AS A SONG. THE AUTHOR INTENDS TO HAVE IT PUBLISHED AND. POS- SIBLY. RECORDED. 64 FS-' 'UN F, llllllllllll ,,,, V ,!, , . . r C I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I N August 23, l966, Judith Adair Hancock died. She was a : little girl, less than five feet tall who had never weighed more ' I than eighty-five pounds in her life. Red-haired with a freckled : face, Judy was like a tornado that covered more ground in less : time and in a better way than anyone else. She had a sun-shine I I bright personality and an ever-ready smile. Being a friend came I naturally and easily to Judy. : I I When she was born she cried, while all about her smiled. She lived her life so that when she died all about her cried, and : she smiled. The last words she ever wrote were, My body dies but I I my mind lives on. Rightfully so, to the memory of Judith Adair 1 Hancock, the editors and staff proudly dedicate Silver Sands I, : 1966-67. Q I I I I WW! I' I1 'flW1uw n1 mg D 35 , f ...- 1 af? Vzffssg- aft '1- rs' ' ' NQYU , JI, V an .' I - -. 252511131 ' , , Via: ,L Qual? 0-4:3 ig , 9.3 imc -'H ish' 1 af P X' g fl , 'Q ' x sl - J -fi x',f.z , A , - W k.,f , A N -4 . pi I as S 1 ' ' r n 1 A 1 ' 'X 71 a N ' Y . ., L ie.. 6 'I f 5 4 -lg 2 N xi' Qffigjfc N 45 - , af . - L . ,V , --f TTL? if A-A ...f A A Ll L bi I FEBRUARY, 196 Editor-in-Chief Pamela Edwards Assistant Editor , , Ellen Kurpiewski Feature Editor David Davidson Sports Editor l Edward Dempsey Paul Harding ,, , i. ,Norman Summey, David Porter, Judy Mathis Homan Director of Publications , Dr. Harold B. Hayes Dean of University Parallel Programs Dr. Homer M. Ledbetter Illustrator , , , Photographers The Silver Sands is a quarterly magazine published by the students and financed by the student activity fund. X' X fir X l Vt l f 1 lol l l fill .:z,-' 0177 Y. 5,- INTEREST POLL SQUAD .................................A.. ifffffffffffff ..... ffffffff ..... ffffffflff CPoemJ ......... .... Ellen Loughlin CPoemJ .......................................,.. Frank Duntze CLUBS ...........,....4...,....,..............,.................................................... WITH J ACK J ONES ..................,.....,........ ,Ed Dempsey James Higgins TO THE INFINITE ............................,,...............,..,,. OF ORGANIZED RELIGION Ellen Kurpiewski IVIEANS ACTION ...........................,........,..,,...,.......,...,...... DANCE .....,.... ..... OF CHAILLOT CReviewJ Ellen Loughlin THE AMERICAN FOLK BALLET ...,....., ,,......,. DEREK AND RAY ....,.......,.....,...,.,,...........,,..... ,,........ THE LETTERMEN ...........,..,....,,..........,...................,..... ...,.,,... MEET A LETTERMAN Clnterviewl ..,.........,.......,. .......... THE FACULTY CHRISTMAS DANCE ....,.......,.............. A WEEKEND IN BIMINI ,.,.......,.......,..........,.........., .....,......,,........... - THE PROMISCUOUS BOTTLE .,,......,.,,.. G. D. Eisman MARDI GRAS OF MUD ,.,.,,.............................,...............................,.... FASCINATION, FORT LAUDERDALE Lamar Anderson AVIATION ..........,....4...,......,.......,,.............,.....,............, David Davidson SOUTH FLORIDA ENTERTAINMENT James Higgins THE YEAR OF THE PACHYDERM .....,,.. Bill Greene ,qv 3.5 '55- COLLEGI I Q 4. PO THIS POLL IS DEVISED AND CONDUCTED ANNUALLY BY THE SILVER- SANDS. THE PURPOSE FOR SUCH A SURVEY IS TO DETERMINE AS ACCU- RATELY AS PRACTICAL PURPOSES ALLOW THE INTERESTS AND PREFERR- ENCES OF JCBC STUDENTS. THE CATEGORIES CONSIST OF A WIDE RANGE OF VARIOUS SUBJECTS EACH OF PARTICULAR OR GENERAL INTEREST OUT BY THE STUDENTS. THE ANSWERS WERE THEN COMPILED BY OUR STAFF. THE RESULTS CONSISTING OF THE TOP SELECTIONS FROM 'EACH CATEGORY. ARE PRESENTED ON THE FOLLOWING PAGES. NOTE: THE PREFERENCES ARE LISTED IN THE ORDER IN WHICH THEY WERE CHOSEN TO ALMOST EVERYONE., BALLOTS WERE CIRCULATED AND THEN FILILED OUTSTANDING I g MOST NATIONAL P' '5 OUTSTANDING FIGURE 'T gr, . y PERsoNAIITY or I f , THE 20TH CENTURY President Lyndon B. Johnson Senator Robert Kennedy CDD of New York -IQIIU Senator Everett Dirksen CRI of Illinois SI' WIVISIOU Pope John MOST OUTSTANDING INFLUENTIAL WORLD , HISTORICAL FIGURE FIGURE President Lyndon B. Johnson Jegus President Charles de Gaulle Abraham Pope PaUI VI 2 John F -N . J' L . II. A ,. ':L'g7f -., 5 Poli New York Times Wall Street Journal National Observer Playboy Time Life Huntley-Brinkley Walter Cronkite CBS Reports NATIONAL NEWSPAPER NATIONAL MAGAZINE NEWS BROADCAST OR OUTSTANDING DOCUMENTARY NOVEL: FICTION Gone With the Wincl-Margaret Mitchell Farewell to Arms-Ernest Hemingway The Man-Irving Wallace NON-FICTION Rise and Fall ofthe Third Reich-William Shirer Profiles in Courage-John Kennedy Bible . 'X :l.4f'+ x '- x N Q ff NOVELIST Ernest Hemingway John Steinbeck lan Flemming POET Robert Frost Edgar Allen Poe Carl Sandburg Bob Dylan Edward Albee Arthur Miller Tennessee Williams ,, - --5. V 11: .. - Q , -:gif K 4l PLAYWRIGHT if S 3 , ,f r- i ., 3 . sf ARTIST Pablo Picasso Buonarroti Michelangelo Norman Rockwell TV SHOW I SPY Tonight Star Trek POLL COM EDIAN MOTION PICTURE ACTOR MOTION PICTURE ACTRESS PAST MOTION PICTURE 4 2 I X Bill Cosby Jonathan Winters Red Skelton Paul Newman Richard Burton Sean Connery v'.f:,'3f fir - ..--vii A in 4 Elizabeth Taylor Julie Andrews Ursula Andress Gone With the Wind-1939 Ben Hur-1959 Goldfinger-1964 RECENT MOTION PICTURE Dr. Zhivago-1966 Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?-1966 Sound of Music-1965 MALE VOCALIST FEMALE VOCALIST VOCAL GROUP Andy Williams Frank Sinatra Johnny Mathis Barbara Streisand Petula Clark Nancy Sinatra Lettermen Supremes Mamas and Papas POLL Tiiuana Brass Ventures Dave Brubeck Quartet Beach Boys Rolling Stones Peter, Paul, and Mary Al Hirt Herb Alpert Roger Williams Jazz Classical Rock and Roll Good Vibrations Gl ' oria Satisfaction Lady Godiva Get Off Of My Cloud INSTRUMENTAL GROUP VOCAL- INSTRUMENTAL GROUP INSTRUMENTALIST MUSICAL STYLE FAvoRnE soNG QPOPULARI rAvoRitE some uvioom Born Free M ore Moon River Lara's Theme Misty SPECTATOR SPORT Football Auto Racing Basketball PARTICIPATOR SPORT Football Tennis Baseball SPORTS FIGURE Steve Spurrier John Unitas Sandy Koufax POLL AUTOMOBILE PREFERRED LEISURE Jaguar XKE At the Beach Corvette Sting Ray Athletics Camaro Reading We find it interesting to note that President Johnson was not only voted the outstanding national and world figure but was also chosen as the outstand- ing hypocrite and indecision maker of 1966. This could be indicative of one of two thingsg 1. The people who voted were acting as sheep and wrote the Presi- dent's name because it was the first one that came to mind. 2. The voters actually believed what they wrote, in which case the student population is lacking in the intelligence department. We would prefer to believe the former and this belief is supported by the fact that Playboy was chosen as the most popular national magazine and Wall Street Journal placed second as most popular newspaper. If we are to believe that Playboy is the most widely read magazine, land we don't find that too hard to believel, we must also believe that the Wall Street Journal is the second most widely read newspaper. We feel that no further comment is necessary. ED. EDITORIALIZED OPINIONS FOR I966 OUTSTANDING MOST DRASTIC INDECISION BLUNDER MAKER OF THE YEAR President Lyndon B. Johnson U.S. Involvement in the Vietnamese War Secretary of Defense Robert MacNamara Not Bombing Hanoi Vice President Hubert Humphrey Race Riots Medicare OUTSTANDING HYPOCRITE President l.yndon B. Johnson Mayor Robert King High CDD Miami Vice President Hubert Humphrey HONORABLE MENTION George Hamilton 6 eet Th A LOOK AT THE ROSTER OF THIS SEASONS CAGE BRIGADE WI ITH THE end of the 1966 basketball season fast approach- ing, the Seahorses are playing their usual brand of exciting ball, but with one big exception. The size and strength of this yearis team is far below that of past years. The shorter 'Horses have been putting in a good ac- count of themselves, but the toughest part of the season still lies ahead. Without their usual size, the Broward cagers will have to de- pend on ball control and make few mistakes if they are to better their 9-9 overall record to date. The loss of top rebounder, Clar- ence Lewis after midterm grades came out has left a dangerous gap in both offense and defense, and this could be a deciding factor in this half of the campaign. To quote coach Clint Morris, We will have to hope for the best, expect the worst, and hope we can live with something in be- tween. Morris feels that the team can still better the 12-8 record of last year's squad, but that if they are going to, every player will have to put out his utmost effort and possibly a little more. This season must be called a building year at JCBC, with more of an aim toward gathering ex- perience for next yearls squad than anything else. A look at the roster of this seasons cage brigade shows plenty of building material with which to work, as well as a light sprinkling of veteran players. First on the list, by uniform num- ber is number 32, sophomore, Greg Fitzpatrick. Coach Morris describes Greg as one of the team's most dedicated players. The 155 pound six footer plays guard for the Horses and is the best outside shooter on the squad. He is top scorer to date with a 17 pt. average. Greg prac- tices long and hard at his basket- ball, but still allots plenty of time to his studies toward a degree in Physical Education. The work that the Stranahan graduate puts into his courses brought the comment from Morris that he was glad to work with players who were out of danger of ineligibility due to grades. Lots of times , said Mor- ris, you'll spend a hundred hours working with a player, only to lose him from the team when grades come outf, With his passing grade average Greg Fitzpatrick. :32 7 ,fs X Tom Grimm, 1133 Buster Lane, 334 f , i may j X X ,Y Dom Avello, 435 Bob Saffn and his 22.5 point per game aver- age, Fitzpatrick is a valuable as- set to the team. Another Stranahan graduate wears number 33 for the 'Horses Tom Grimm, a 170 pound English major holds the title of the tallest of the Seahorses. At six feet, five inches, Grimm towers a full inch over his nearest teammates, Bob Kennedy and Narcisco Escobar. The speedy freshman has been much improved in recent practice sessions and appears to be in for a lot more action in the second half of the season. Two points mentioned by Morris in his ap- praisal of Grimm were his ability to shoot from the outside and his probable return next season. He has done well in limited play thus far and should develop into a top player with a season of play under his belt. Another rising freshman who showed good potential in the first half of the season is Buster Lane. Lane, a former Bulldog cager from South Broward, has been ham- pered by an injury suffered in high school ball but is still a fine ball player and a dedicated mem- ber of the team. The 6'f3 , 160 pound Lane plans a career in data processing after graduation and works very hard at improving his game. Morris feels that Lane will be a much improved player in time and that his present shooting from the outside and excellent moves make him a fine addition to the squad. Dom Avello fills uniform num- ber 35 on the Seahorse cage squad, and the six foot, 160 pound McArthur graduate is rated by Coach Morris as one of the best junior college guards in the state of Florida. Avello is fast and tough with an amazing talent for re- moving the basketball from the possession of unwary opponents. Morris feels that the freshman education major is one of the sparkplugs of the squad and that he will be seeing a lot more ac- tion in the remainder of this sea- son and all through the next. Avello is a first rate playmaker and a fine scorer with a 16 point per game average thus far. Number -12, Bob Saffran, is the second best rebounder on the squad. The six foot guard weighs in at 145 pounds and scores over the heads of taller opponents with a deadly jump shot. Saffran moves fast and well on the court fits equally well into either the guard or forward position as needed. Morris feels he can depend on the freshman architecture major from South Broward to maintain his cool and deliver in clutch situations, but on a squad which depends on ball control to the extent to which our Seahorses do, his rebounding must count as Saf- fran's most valuable contribution. He to, should hit his peak next season. Many opponents have lost points to the ball banditry of veteran Seahorse cager Bill Man- deville, and many more will be doing so in the second segment of the season. Mandeville, another Stranahan graduate, must be ranked as the best defensive play- er on the squad for his consistent harassment of opposing ball car- riers as they attempt to move down court. The 5'10 general education major is in his sopho- ,ii 1 nr.-A-J Bill Mandeville, 343 more year and is playing his last season as Seahorse number 43. Mandeville ambles down the court until the time looks right and then instantly pours on the speed to snatch the ball away or penetrate the astonished defend- ers. He shoots well from either the outside or right under the net, and plays well under pressure. XVhen Mandeville leaves the squad next season, LeRoy Schwab, number 4-1, looks like the player most likely to succeed him as top defender. Schwab, a 5'll , 150 pound guard from Northeast High, has improved rapidly this season and has shown good speed and ball handling. Schwab, who ma- jors in math at JCBC, has a fine jump shot and makes good moves on the court. He drives well and is an excellent playmaker. He is gaining experience this season and looks to be one of Morris' best prospects for next season's squad. Engineering major, Richard Reeves, wears number 52, for the 'Horses The freshman guard from North Miami stands 6'2 tall and weighs in at 170 pounds. Reeves is another player who can hit from the outside and he has done so on numerous occasions this sea- son. Morris says he will see con- siderable action in the remainder of this season and should develop into a top player for the 67-68 season. Reeves is a dedicated athlete and a good student of the game who has the ability to con- tribute a lot to the squad. As for Bob Kennedy, we might just leave it at that. Bob has been one of the sparkplugs of the squad for the last two years and the V 'Wu XL tg U .i X Q A 1 if 'ms ,-4. b Q ,.',.,f LeRoy Schwab, if-14 sophomore foiwvard will be sorely missed next year. An excellent outside shot and sticky fingers on rebounds make Kennedy one of the biggest threats to opposing squads. The 6'4 forward from Pompano Beach is majoring in Physical Education and wears number 553 for the Seahorses. Bob is the team's top rebounder and makes excellent moves on both offense and defense. liis dedica- tion to the sport and his fine spirit make Kennedy one of the best players ever to represent JCBC. Number 54. Ron Petre. is one of the top freshmen of this year's team. Petre. a 6'2 . 160 pound Business major from North Miami. plays as a forward this season and looks like a prime prospect for the next. Morris describes him as one of the most aggressive play- ers on the squad and a tough defensive player. On offense, Petre strikes with an excellent jump shot and good speed. A spirited competitor. he should see a lot of action this half of the season and all of the next. Castro's take-over in Cuba sent Broward number 55 Seahorse. Narcisco Escobar, .via Miami High. Escobar's family left the island to escape communist domination and he got involved with basket- ball shortly thereafter. He is po- tentially the teamas top rebounder, but missed a few games early this half of the season due to injury. Escobar has good speed and fine iumpshot and the 6'4 center looks like another good prospect for next season. He is an Industrial Arts major and a player to watch in the remaining games. I X 1 xc s. nv, un 'sr lb V - f ' 4 f 4 Richard Reeves. 352 nigh Quo- ' Bob Kennedy. : 53 Narcisco Escobar. 255 R09 PGUE- 254 fu l ll akafhbe By ELLEN LOUGHLIN Someday . . . il will lpe clillervnl Roses will lmlossom lorlll. lrc-es will swny gently ancl roflc in llie larecze- . . ancl no one will frown Alan will ,QralJ llolrl ol tln- lruil ancl plucli it lrom ils lounclalion anal no one will lrown Ancl wllen lu- calls ol il. nncl llu- iuiu- llows lorlll . . . il will soollie lliln . . . uncl no one will lrown Anil wllen lw lfilws tlw lmncl ol luis lovi- aincl liissvs lier Qenlly . . . Slll' will caress liiin . . . ancl no one will llrown And wllcn slw lwnrs lmim a vllilcl willl lossing curls :incl liny grin . . . il will please llim . . . nncl no one will lrown Ancl llley will nmnv lllis cliilcl Hl-oyeH ancl il will luring lorlll many ol ils own lximl . . . ancl no one will frown 10 I Model, KAREN LAWHED PURGATORY by FRANK DUNTZ is there a thing in this worici Xvhich greater pleasure Cioes i At the unsuspecting Than Love is there a thing which wiii to greater heights fuifiii the unprepareci Than Love is there a feeling which can greater sorrow give man If uninitiateci Than Love The gift, it's true is heing ahie to iove, not who Niayhe so But, if iaeing hurt is the gift it's not what man neecis For, despite its momentary iii! The fruits of Love hear hitter seeds. nh by NORMAN SUNIMEY lllfi IOVPS YOU 11 CAMP 12 ILLUSTRATIONS BY PAUL HARDING Venetian QQICIUETS The Venetian Players was or- ganized in the fall of 1960. Each year those students who partici- pate in the performing arts pro- gram of the college are active members in this organization. This year the members worked on the' fall production, The Madwoman of Chaillot. A trip to Florida At- lantic University and guided tour of the new University Theatre, an evening at Coconut Grove to see the Miami Repertory Company perform 1. B. and a trip to Palm Beach Junior College to see the Drama Department's presentation of The Adding Machine proved to be educational and enjoyable experiences for the students. A Halloween cast party served as an enjoyable outlet for the imag- inative creativity of the make-up artists in the club. The officers for 1966-67 are: Director, Jerry Mitchellg Stage- manager, Terry Whitmireg Promp- ter-Business Manager, LeAnn Eich, and Press Agent, Steve Bennett. CIRCLE K Circle K, a men's service club on campus which is sponsored by Kiwanis international, this year pulled off what could prove to be their best and biggest service project since their beginning on Broward's campus. It was called Share The Treats. This project required many, many hours of dedicated work by the men in Circle K. The results were stag- gering and the over-all effects were experienced by, literally, thousands It was a project designed to help the needy and underprivileged people of the community, espe- cially the children. The elemen- tary school children of the area were asked to volunteer their' services by bringing to their re- spective schools, all their unde- sired Halloween candy which they collected while Trick-or-treating. They came through like Batman. Without the help of these young citizens and their parents, this project could never have been. Mayor Burry proclaimed the day and Circle K took over and collected nearly two thousand 120001 pounds of various types of candy, in an all day drive by the club members. There are others to thank, however. Many 1 pounds of candy were donated by responsible adult citizens realiz- ing the potential of such an under- taking and wishing to help also. Richard Polangin, projects chair- man of Circle K, sincerely thanks everyone for their time and effort in helping to make this project a success. The candy was distributed all over the Broward county area and then into Dade with the sur- plus. Four hundred and fifty pounds went to Variety Chil- dren's Hospital, almost two hun- dred and fifty to Jack and jill Nursery, Sun-Dial received about one hundred and fifty pounds, fifty pounds went to the Florida State Welfare Department, over three hundred pounds to Holy Cross Hospital, the South Florida State Mental Hospital received .eil 7' v 0a wi ZX K We Q , over three hundred and fift K pounds, the Broward Count? Q X M Pediatric -Center received nearly ' f one hundred pounds. This candy , 'W was distributed by the men of C S E Circle K also. Full news and radio 0 Ti f ' - E coverage was also received by the 0 men and their project. In closing it should be ex- pressed that Circle K intends to make an annual affair out of this, historic, Share the Treats project. 'SS3553EESEEESESESEESEEEQQES SET DElTA PSI OMEGA Delta Psi Omega, the national dramatic honorary fraternity on campus received its charter from' the national Chapter on january 10, 1963. There were eleven char- ter members. The organization initiated five new pledges on No- vember 20th bringing the total number of members to 65. Mem- bership in Delta Psi Omega is earned by excellence in the dra- matic arts and is a life member- ship. Officers for 1966-67 are Cast Director, Jerry Mitchell, Stagemanager, Terry Whitmireg Business Manager, Sharon Buck- ley. 13 THE PIT gf' N.J 0645 GD P i Delta hi L'Auhergisl:e L'Aubergiste, the campus Hotel and Motel Administration club, was given an Award of Distinction for its booth at the annual Pan Am Exposition. The Pan Am Exposition is a trade show, educational forum, and culinary arts display held in Miami Beach in conjunction with the Florida Restaurant Association. L'Aubergiste, which means Innkeeper in French, competed with all Florida junior colleges, senior college, and trade schools for the 'Award'. The club serves the hospitality industry leaders by helping the hotel and restaurant association at their meetings, conventions and trade shows. L'Aubergiste will let students become acquainted with industry leaders and their problems during educational forums they intend to sponsor on the campus. The club should keep the college aware of new trends in the industry and keep the curriculum and course content current with needs of the industry, said Mr. Ray Dieterick, faculty advisor for L'Aubergiste. It will become a bridge between alumni and college, he con- tinued, and will help place graduates in the industry. Membership in L'Aubergiste is open to all students of the junior College interested in the industry of hospitality and the field of Hotel- Motel Administration. Officers of the club are: Alan Malcolm, president, Allan Diebert, vice-president, Joe Udell, treasurer, and Donald Schroder, secretary. Psi Delta Chi, a unique honor- ary service society dedicated to furthering the Public Relations image of the Junior College of Broward County, was born of the spirit of cooperation rather than competition in May of 1966. The Greek letters, Psi Delta Chi, stand for the Greek words, psyche Qmindj, dais Qtorchj, and hire fhandjx These words in turn signify the organizations motto ABILITY, LEADERSHIP, and COMPASSION. Since the society was founded by its present president, Judy Mathis Homan, the members have maintained an impressive record of firsts on campus. It was the first organization to aid the Coun- ciling Staff in filming an orienta- tion program for incoming Fresh- men. The 45 minute narrated color slide program was partially written, filmed, taped and narrated by members of the club. Each fall the film will be up-dated and shown to the entering students. One of the more unusual fea- tures of club policy is a practice of mutual cooperation with other campus organizations. Upon re- quest from any fellow campus in- stitution, Psi Delta Chi serves as advisor, co-sponsor, or willing ser- vant in their campus endeavors. In this capacity the club has ushered JCBC Alumni meetings, Art Lyce- ums, Planetarium shows, Rat's Re- pose, a President-Faculty-Student Reception, and Graduation Exer- cises. It has furnished student workers for the Student Activities projects, salesmen for P'an Ku Magazine, a co-sponsor for bake sales with S.N.E.A., and instigated similar programs, ad infinitum. In November the organization hosted a record-breaking Journal- ism Seminar of over 400 visiting high school students. The program was sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi SALES ond MARKETING CLUB Z The Sales and Marketing Club began their plans for the year last September. On September 21, The Club was addressed by Dr. Buckner. of Florida Atlantic University. Dr. Buckner extended an invitation to them to visit the business depart- ment at the university. The club accepted and did so during Octo- ber. Also during October. Sales and Marketing members attended the Florida Retailers Convention which was held at the Pier 66 Hotel. To top off the club's October activities three businessmen, mem- bers of the Sales and Marketing Executives of Fort Lauderdale. addressed the members concern- ing their individual businesses. During the week of November 6-12, the SMC recognized Nation- al DECA Week, which was pro- moted by local publicity. New elections were held in N - December. ii O and Theta Sigma Phi, both Professional Societies. Workshops were conducted in Photography, T.V., Radio, Public Relations, Ad- vertising, Freelance and Magazine Writing, Journalism, and many other categories with noted repre- sentatives in each field. Each year the members select the most outstanding representa- tives in college Public Relations from the faculty and staff for conferral of honorary membership in Psi Delta Chi. Last year's cer- tificates went to Dr. jack Taylor, Dean of Students, for his out- standing success as acting presi- dent and for his beneficial image of the college projected in the community. A second award was given Dr. E. P. Lauderdale, former Dean of Instruction, for his P.R. image to the student body and aid in forming an Alumni Assol ciation. The honorary member- ships for this year are a closely guarded club secret and will be disclosed Award's Night. 'gd -l or 1 y Slop. 9 Op- !0ok. L0O7i, l me See H-,e X dance, Q ' l he pretty I i qwcxviigz - l 4 sy- 15 VETERAN'S CLUB --rr One of the newest clubs on campus, The Veteranls Club, is the only club of this type in ex- istence in Florida. Because of the great influx of servicemen return- ing to school under the G.I. Bill, the need for a club for Veterans was evident. The purpose of this club is to provide a homogeneous atmos- phere for the incoming veterans, Lin,-I provide leadership in student ac- , tivities and create harmony with the community and the school. One project the Veteran's Club 6 was sponsoring is The Veterans ts if Day Ceremony , and the accept- K 21' ance of donations for the sale of B5 X Poppiesi'. The purpose of this A X- program is to commemorate the I ' x war dead, and the proceeds from 'P Q 5 , f the poppies go to aid the Disabled y i War Veterans. 1 7 'Xi 4 S Z 4 N N. I .,, l 1 i Phi Beta Lambda is a national fraternity in the special interest area of business administration and business education, with several hundred local chapters throughout the country. Our JC- BC chapter, known as the Iota Kappa chapter within the na- tional framework, was launched during the 1964-65 school year, and replaced the business club . Phi Beta Lambda is sponsored nationally by the National Busi- ness Education Association, an or- ganization of business teachers and professors. At most four-year institutions, the membership con- sists of business-education majors, preparing for a career in the teaching of business subjects at the high school level. A new chap- ter is currently being formed at Florida Atlantic University, and it will draw its members from that area of interest. Here at JCBC and at most jun- ior colleges that have chapters, the area of interest and activity is broader, generally cutting across the entire business curricu- 16 lum, with membership open to all varieties of business majors. In the view of faculty adviser Reyburn Roulston, it is sort of a union of business majors, through which they can develop a program of activities that serve their individual self-interests, and which also make a significant contribution to the total college program. After a very successful pro- gram last year, capped by win- ning local Interest Club of the Year honors, this year's President Rick Chappell and his fellow-of- ficers are carrying forward a pro- gram aimed at building total membership to strengthen the on- going character of the organiza- tion, as well as provide a well- rounded schedule of business and social events. Other new officers for this year, in addition to President Chappell, are: Bill Lane, Vice- President, Ginny Carruthers, Se- cretary, Stan Woods, Treasurer, and Walter Turner, Reporter. PHI BETA LAMBDA PIYEIN' IUNS llll-llill I-! lllll IIIIIIQUI llllll lllKUllllF!YAUl llllll IVIIIIIIUI. .Annu nun r',llll Illlllllll null: llll ul , Ill llllll n n 5 lll lllllll ll Q Ill nun I II llllll L I ' lllll llll Ill Ili J-as, PHI TI-IETA KAPPA The PHI THETA KAPPA their scholastic potential to the Fraternity is the national junior utmost, are fulfilling the purpose College Honorary Scholastic So- for which an educational center is ciety, founded in 1918. constructed. The Junior College of Broward There are PHI THETA KAP- x County Chapter is designated as PA chapters in 39 states of the f' p Mu Mu. Union. 1 ' Membership in PHI THETA Last fan PHI THETA KAPPA C,- KAPPA is 0P9n to any S'fUd?f1t sponsored the October 22nd who has a cumulative Grade Point Hallowelen Dance at pioneer City El'-HJ Average Of at least 3-0 and who in conjunction with Student Gov- fffffffffff C carries not less than fifteen 1151 ernment Association' f-X credit hours per semester. These However their main project is criteria limit membership to the 3 tutoring gervice which is avail- ggrliifr ggugggcent 00737 of the able free to any student who is ' ' d'ff' l ' 1 The Plffpose Of PHI THETA Z2S0ufLfZmi lxiiiiingn 5.522 - KAPPA ls to promote Scholar' effort to better his academic posi- ship, to develop character and to tion. cultivate fellowship among the Off. f th h 1 students of both sexes of the 1966 gifs ,Of e SC OO year 1.4- junior colleges of the United ' are- A-J 4 States of America. PHI THETA President Gary Van Doren KAPPA represents the intellectu- Vice-president Amalie Riley J al element of the junior collegeg Secretary Judith Weber those students who, in utilizing Treasurer Annamaria Flambouris Student NEA is the profession- al organization for college and university students preparing to teach. SNEA lists as its main ob- S N E A jectives: The development of an understanding of the teaching pro- fession and to give its members practical experience in working Z together on the problems of the ,Q Profession and of society. The U , officers are: Dan Couch, President C 2 and SFEA Executiveg Vice Presi- I I f 2 dent, Nancy Westbrookg Secre- Mill 5 tary, Gary Van Doreng Treasurer, 4 N Tim Smith, and Historian, Har- w riett Brooke. Mr. Wayne E. Bar- I' ' l ton is faculty adviser. SNEA will 5 begin a Tutorial Program for stu- I dents in the County as well as K establishing a Speaker's Bureau -1-1 5 j' to visit local FTA Chapters. i SNEA is currently publishing a xxx ' Chapter Newsletter. In March, f delegates will travel to Jackson- ville to the State Convention. 17 -1 -n X75 le Wham Tw' QQ ll The 103 sky-blue uniforms that speckle our campus are worn by members of SNAF - the Student Nurses' Association of Florida. During the week many members of SNAF spend their time patterning small children who can't move their arms or legs due to brain damage. Other members spend part of- their Saturdays stuffing envelopes for the March of Dimes. The function of SNAF, which is represented by 100 per cent of the nursing students, is to lj provide pre-professional organization on a district level to nursing students and to encourage participation in meetings and activities, 23- prepare for membership and participation on all levels on the American Nurses' Association, the professional membership organization for nurses, 3D stimulate an interest in and understanding of the programs of the National League of Nursing and the constituents, 45 aid in the development and growth of the individual stu- dent by fostering good citizenship, Sj encourage the nursing student to promote high educational and professional standards, provide the opportunity for exchanging ideas and broadening the memberls hori- zons individually and as a member of a group, 61 participate as an active constituent of the Student Nurses' Association of Florida. SNAF has certainly proved itself active at the Junior College. Highlights for 1966 were the plan- ning of a pinning ceremony for graduating nursing students, a capping ceremony for the new freshmen, and a trip to the annual convention. The organization closed the old year with a Christmas party for the indigent children of migrant workers and welcomed the new year with a resolu- tion of continued service to nursing and to the com- munity. C MEAN KU CLXLTEM Coffee Houses, Poetry readings, Inspirational parties and the interaction of literary members of the junior College of Broward County have been the primary interest of the Pan Ku Club. This organization functions as a media of com- munication for the members of the Junior College of Broward County who are interested in the literary arts. Its name is derived from the Oriental God of Creation, P'AN KU. The P'an Ku Club works in close harmony with the P'an Ku magazine, but maintains its individual- ity as does its members. Founded in the fall of 1966 by its first president, James Higgins, P'an Ku Club has become one of the most recognized and active organizations on campus. P'an Ku's membership has risen to thirty enthusiastic members, who have strived to establish a tradition of creative literary persons from the college. President James Higgins, Treasurer David Rossi, Ellen Loughlin and Sheila Holmes represented the Junior College of Broward County at the Poetry Festival in Tampa. Other officers of the club, Vice- President and Photographer David Porter and Secre- tary Chris Cross attended various other conventions. Mrs. Betty Owens is sponsor for the club. 18 ' . , u PAN D Q . Q . .,,.V 1, 5 THlMK. M,,,A ff ,, , ,f P 4 Adria? 2 1 -ee ' 'P can-Y'-. 'tv-' '. SJO ES meet lack Iones is to meet a gentleman with In his chosen field he is considered to be one best. He joins the ranks with Robert Goulet or William. When discussing good music, his comes' into the conversation. Recently, in an at the Diplomat Hotel, where he was ap- Iaclz fones answered the following questions: 1 1. I. SS: As the son of a personality, did you find this to be a liability to you when you embarked on your career? lj: Yes, there was some resistance because I was the son of Allan jones. He had made a name for himself and there was some resistance when I en- tered into the business. SS: VVhat are your feelings on the so called Hol- lywood Dynastiesf' such as Nancy Sinatra or Frank Sinatra Jr. or Cary Lewis, coming into the business? Do you feel they have talent or are they merely living on a name? H: Nancy is young. I think she has talent. I grew up with her, we went to high school together. She is improving a great deal, I think. Sheis doing all right. She seems to be developing as an actress. Nancy is an attractive person and impressive. I don't know how she would do on a night club stage, but she seems to be reaching the public. SS: What is your opinion on the mod-music or long-haired music, if you will? II: Some of it is interesting and good fun, I don't think any of it was meant to be an artistic achieve- ment. It's just for fun. On the other hand, a lot of it represents a sickness. A lot of it represents an atti- tude that is sick. It's an attitude of boredom, like what can We do next. How far out can we go now. I think people today are becoming jaded. Even the young are becoming jaded. SS: What do you consider to be the hardest part of your Work? H: The pressure involved and the grind of travel- ing. g SS: How much traveling do you do? H: Well, I guess I average about 40 weeks a year on the road. SS: Do you feel the personalities entering the political scene to be an opening door for others? 19 urn 'na' '. 'ls .r '..--v.,.,.,- -'. :ru tx-,ie:73..,?I N . ,, E -45 4.1, , .X . . , Beagan and George Murphy entering the political ring? ' ' , II: First of all, I've heard this open door' thing before and it is silly. There is no open door , 'just because they entered into it. I donit feel someone should be barred for entering one career just because he has come in from some other. Experience and qualifications are the important thing, not what he did before in another work. A politician won't care. You know, a politician is an actor, maybe even more than those already in Hollywood. What I don't agree with is some actor at 40 saying he now wants to be President. That is ridiculous. As far as Reagan and Murphy are concerned, Weill just have to wait and see. Maybe they do have the qualifications. Maybe they can do the job. SS: Have you ever played college audiences? What do you think about the current college genera- tion? II: College students are wonderful audiences. They vary in different parts of the country. I've played Berkeley and they weren't the kind that gets publicity. They were hardworking, young people who weren't wasting their time protesting everything that comes along. The protesters are in the minority there and it's too bad they are the ones who have gotten all the publicity. The current college generation is more hipper than before and more aware of what is going on in the world. They are more interested than in the past, I think. They are afraid of the future or maybe more confused about the future. I guess Viet Nam has triggered this. A young man doesnit know if one day he'l1 get his degree and the next be fighting a war. SS: You've played all over the country and you've been in this area in the past. Do you feel Miami and the south Florida area has come into it's own, in show business, in competition with such places as New York, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas? II: Yeah, I think so. It's a good entertainment spot. It's definitely in the top 4. It's a top resort area, people like to come down and blow the lid off a little, so performers must be around to entertain. 20 . r.. .-,X 1. - ' '- ',-Lg :J-' iyfl . What are your opinions on SS:-. singers. are pnlyia petition today there..-is,'.', who have becomes. singers? Whoielse? Ht Well,-unlilte' stay on. There' are few and roll. Most are Usually, if 'people that the song may They're playing our' just donit remember. remember. VVhich is encouraging last, I don't know there .areilessl Crosby, Tony Martin, Buddy was on his way to becoming about the same amount today. I others who have lasted, 'can Martin. Today there is john Andy Williams. I itfs the -same. SS: VVhat is your favorite. types of II: All types of music. Even rockand done some country and western, too. new coming out, I'm Indestructive, is a funlrock type. I've written the lyrics recently' to Love. I don't know whether 'you can 'use care, but anyway . . . Bob Florence wrotegthe SS: What are some of your future II: I'm going to be in Valley of the Dolls! hellava roll Tony Polara is the part. I-Ie. mind. Not on pills, either. It just deterioraftes end, heis in an asylum, does not even, know his It's just gone, completely. I met her, Suzann, the author. She's really a gal' f ' Q. J , .V SS: Finally, can you offer -any advice and where aspiring young singers can-gii help their careers? p A ' II: just find as much work as you' working. Work until youfre you can do best. Work1 become more relaxed, deyeliipayoiijg work! x.fh ' 7.1 X-X.f'x,f fgjffx' Nzdp xg!! gf dw ? if P f N X WW 'mx L 2'- A RJ U 15 PQPPW' 7' 0 f' , 0 o rw H L,l X 0' X A J J' 'f .S ti x f g f iv E c' ' g My .Q S s I V I f 1 E M, 1 ff 1 - M xf , NP y A f 6 mlm 1 if CI- I EDS L lun QHLLYE TERM MU miiffffw Lx JJ., Q? of , O X know he's a creep, but pledge EAN I distributor for I him a this area. ' nyway. His old man's the Busch 6753 fl, U 411635 VRSQ L ZA A if Gv:gg:'v5'E ,t i FVNQ r?msuvc,- XXX:-igv ff X Qi' sa i can we SH . lf things going out iron r 1-si ll 'J' . N .9 - 1 'Sh-my ' Doris house ' urorfss 'four E VIIEIT '13 x 1 if 'X 5 S 5 5. . A VJ: -if 9' is H X .o-.-.- -f- - '5- , A , . -Ani -if f .f l .. , V W- - lg: iw, , ,A .k i - -fa.-tiara Q ,z ' . NY, - -, 4, -rw. g.,z,' y. ,Q ' :.x e1' 'ai--' ff?-' .315 ft ,ft r 'eng' gf: .ji E,5e'- Qing' . -9 . ' ll.: ,. l4,i,:5 ' 1 I affix: .nga .:' fgtff-'L. fi , Y ff ' V ir! 1. i,:l'?',2tQ -wg . l.,I ' ..gr:, qw., X K , '10 y ut, -r- f JNL: :', ' ' 6 - .151 at l . X , 'f,:-uf- 321:11 ' :tr 'ifffifr-it ? 95fT'Qi- E ,Ly 'Q -Ifllri 4 'lsfffyg-rf.-.. . -- -,gas 124 13. . X . -C yr-,,1 'rf'- high '.' A -T' git? -fqgfyga Q'-gy ,,:'1.4,.a G.. 7'-. -ry ', - 2 .mm-.-ei---'-. '25 aaa-, A -1 ,9- Pgz-fQq515-- 1 . any .-.3 ' . -Q'i-fjrik stiff- ' 1' .f'gi.' R, 3? ' .- Qvrf- ffl i:f '2 'N --v, ff :--s.n,.f-.M X S '24.5'l2:?43f1t .' ' -h57'r?'w: ?'E :fv2pf's3l- 'Li' . gggs. '. t f ag., Ju.- f.f. 1. .Ja--.1r. ..li . g.31f:,i-F' -, , ' . Lawrence Tobe's Stale Number Eight -as-ani.. .... HE Faculty Art Exhibit opened November 6th in the gallery of the Fine Arts Building. The addition of 3 new artists, Lawrence Kassan, Russell B. Green, and LaMonte Anderson, to the faculty of the Art Department enhanced and broadened the scope of this annual affair. Because of the addition of these art- ists to the already superior art depart- ment, this year's faculty exhibit was greatly improved over former ones. David Pactor's entries were outstand- ing in the exhibit of forty-nine pieces. His works consisted of four pastels, an etching, a water color and one combina- tion tempera and graphite. Mr. Pactor's etching Unwanted F arms had been worked to a composi- tion of forms, lines, texture, color and positive-negative areas which left, on the whole, little to be desired. Primarily, this work consisted of a dominant textured abstract form of a light area crossed by lines to carry the viewers' eyes across the surface of the total picture. Around this central form were textured brown forms on black which were similar to previous drawings by the artist. This may have accounted for the subtitle Seaflower and Medusav. HXVOITIBIIU, a pastel by Pactor, would probably have been much more interest- ing and effective if it had been done in oils, although outstanding in its pres- ent medium. The fat, grotesque lady in an op art swim suit would frighten a bulldozer away if not crush it. The over-all appearance suggests a three hundred pound woman in a concrete brick. Basically, this picture is com- posed of oval shapes developed with a descriptive line and three bright colors, hot and cold, which create a buzzing, optical effect. Pactor's main object in several of his works is the creation of form by balanc- ing color tones rather than varied color tones or line so that a black and white photograph of his work, for instance, would have shown no form. This is partially represented in The Bathersn. LaMonte Anderson utilized a fascinat- ing technique derived from nature itself, but unfortunately cannot be used in a tropical climate. Many of his water- colors are painted outdoors in freezing temperatures or inside and then frozen after it is painted. When the paintings thaw, freeze marks are created on the surface of the composition. This device is effective for a snow scene. It is well applied in Cold Dusk . Light grays and white are contrasted with dark brown and black areas and highlighted with a very cold blue to create a pleasant coldness about the subject. The Three Graces also a water- color, is one of the outstanding paint- ings in the show and depicts three old ladies standing in front of an old house on what looks like a gloomy Sunday morning. This statement about old ladies might be called surrealistic car- tooning, which may, or may not, be appreciated by the viewer. The medium of watercolor is exceptionally well used and creates a good surface quality. ll Green's uposterior Landscape Number Four 1' Q fifhfic. .f Russell Green's large painting named Posterior Landscape Number Four utilizes the paint in an unusual, textured 'way that is, in this case, effective. The color variations are limited in a wa that the p'icture appears to be much more colorful than it actually is. This enables the viewer to look at the forms and elements of the picture either sepa- rately or as an art work on the whole without ever growing tired of its ap- pearance. This painting by Green is an abstracted variation of several others he entered in the exhibit and has also been working on. The form represented is the lower front portion of a female body lying on the left side with one leg bent down and the other straight out. Mr. Creen's philosophy that every man must carry his own umbrellan, which translated means that each indi- vidual must set up his own defenses to ward off the chaos of the universe, is well expressed in Loneliness',. This oil is very simple in appearance but ob- viously complex in composition and meaning. Basically it is a dark form sitting on a bench holding an umbrella. The figure appears to be isolated from a bright, hot background. Its communi- cation to the viewer is especially effec- tive. Although this painting is one of the three smallest in the exhibit it makes up for its size with its striking colors and overall attitudes. Lawrence Tobe works on the effect that is created by the plain flat surface coupled with the chaotic area. Partic- ularly, effective is Stele Number Eighth and njuxtapositionn. In Stele Number Eight the conflict set up by the plain, flat surfaces and parallel horizontal lines on the right side has a squeezing effect on the chaotic area. The conflict is strengthened by the hot color of the chaotic areas made by picture writing and the cold color of the plain flat surfaces. Many of these surfaces seem to run under the hot chaos in the center and are carried out throughout the forms in the center creating depth. On the same wall with Stele Num- ber Eightn was juxtaposition , It is similar but much more complex in de- sign and color combination. This paint- ing uses much hotter colors combined more intricately with the cold colors. Many areas lend a transparent quality which creates underlying surface and in reverse surface is created over the trans- parent ones by a very solid, hot color. These oil paintings by Tobe may re- mind the viewer of a treasure hunt that will reward the searcher with fantastic experiences. Tobe's art de- serves a considerable study rather than a passing glance. Lawrence Kassan is an art photogra- pher and shows a photographic approach in his paintings. His photographs in this exhibit were well composed as photo- graphs go but some students felt they were out of place in a show of this type. Although the photographs did provide a completeness to the exhibit, 1 V I 9 ' , f ' . - - Q E.49 ' I mf -v 1 ' ff. .. 5 .1 A 3 '7- lt . .. - Q tx V I , -is . f ' Wax ' . , f s f - A u 'X x . .sxsi If , Y if l-'A .' - 1- 'A ' -1 ,.ar..,-Q fl I in 1 ., ., , f D I. I x U -.1-'nv ' . I ' Y AL. 75, I . ,ny X V Af f ' ' :nf ' I . A ' F ,' f --v - 4 T -1-r2T i:'5' ' al' -. .-- r - so gr X e'-si, f- ,fi lgssss - fp ' ' .- .1 . .+'.:,5.x., - fl Sgt ? i 2' may fast -' vigil te if-g 9.0, .wat -A KK, Y M fi i I 1 4 i xi -' i . . Q A Tas X. K -- . Q-il , 6 vflifw? Ui? Q., A l 1 Vg' Q- A -A ' what -- they stress too greatly the subject of a human form such as one might find in fashion magazines. A more artistic ap- proach may have been in order. Kassan also had on exhibit two of his tempera paintings done with an air brush. Viking is so realistic that it is doubtful many people recognize the subject of the tempera painting which is a cutaway of the Viking rocket show- ing its blast furnace. It is in a composi- tion of delicate line creating form with a strong black and white positiye-nega- tive background. Another tempera painting by Kassan is The Northern Cross . According to the artist this picture is accurate to the star. It shows the various constellations and magnitudes of the stars. The color scheme is in various shades of black with white stars. The trees in the fore- ground are particularly effective. Mary XVallace, the only woman repre- sented in the exhibit, is primarily con- cerned with wet and dry mediums com- bined with wet and dry surfaces. This creates an underwater appearance in . 5 1 - .-.- .-.Y ., 4-. f' . A- 'A -9. :G . ,. . Q- F i Jw ji 1 'T Z N .h ,-J-,A ,- .- g rn: ' .. 1 . I t . s . -2.1 u.' uv ' .. i -ARF . '14- I 5 .. -, - i . .+c. 1. ,, A rf: - ,,-y':-1.4. '.-' 4517! -v ,sr f 1-ff . :Z E.-. r 5, . at -9- ',,.av l nearly all her paintings and drawings and is well used. A tempera and ink painting. Num- ber One, untitled. uses line delicately and sensitively. Number Three. untitled. was by far her best attempt to compete with other artists on the faculty. The color in this one is darker and brighter than any of her other paintings. A fiery red. along with a cold, intense blue com- bines in a striking way. The line ele- ment is good, but her pictures were overpowered by the other works. Part of what her paintings lacked could have been in her inadequate presenta- tion of them. The junior College of Broward County can, indeed. be proud of iS Fine Arts Department and the faculty members which comprise its staff. The faculty art exhibit was a superb dis- play in as far as the art work itself is concemed. The show closed on December lTth but it will certainlly be remembered as one of the most successfully attended events in the history of the school. 23 Eli flllll Hllillf lNflNlIlf AVE you ever seen a building that is a bobbed- off pyramid in shape? Or ceiling to ceiling carpets? Or four way stereo, controlled by electric console switches? Yes, it is our campus' Buehler Planetaritun, in honor of Emil Buehler. This aeronautic pioneer who brought the stars a little closerl' donated the S150,000 funds necessary for its construction. The planetarium and its chambers were specially designed by Armand Spitz, the 'Henry Ford, of Planetariums. Along with joel M. Martin, JCBC astronomy instructor, Mr. Spitz had been working since 1952 on the dream of this planetarium. He invented a planetarium that, in his opinion, cannot be duplicated in uniqueness or versatility. The physical aspects of the planetarium make it a college first, along with the fact that it is the first to be used in astronomical instruction as a credited course. fThe unique feature of the planetarium is that it was designed for teaching. All the instruction takes place in the planetarium itself.j The large chamber features a super Spitz A-3-P, which is the fourth revised model, consisting of a prime sky and 2,000 stars fa first for Spitz planetariumsj, in a forty-foot dome. There are only eighteen larger planetariums in the United States- only two such structures in Florida. The main chamber seats 100 persons in collapsible desks, with 4,400 square feet of floor space. The smaller chamber provides a twenty-foot pro- jection ceiling and a Nova III projector, which is a much smaller machine and a more limited one than the A-3-P. 24 Mr. joel M. Martin, a noted consultant, was chosen to research techniques of planetarium con- struction. After intensive study and numerous con- sultations with noted astronomers, he completed a comprehensive plan for Buehler Planetarium. Mr. Martin stated: It takes three hundred hours to prepare one program consisting of special dome effects, picture slides, stars, precision, patterns and new machine processesf' Something never before attempted by Spitz is a specially designed pedestal which supports the en- tire device, plus some 30 extra accessories - all controlled through the operatoris console. Through this unique pedestal, stale air is drained out to admit fresh air into the air conditioner via an underground tunnel large enough for a man to crawl through. Such a vent at once clears, from the room, the heat produced by the powerful lights of the projector. fThe A-I3-P Spitz has two projectors, placed in a rear booth to avoid noise and light leakage, and are console operatedj The ceiling is made of rings suspended on wires. the entirety weighing about 5X2 tons. Definitely a first, the carpeting extends from the ceiling, across the floor and up the other wall to the ceiling. There is perfect acoustical purity, absolutely no reflections to hamper the view from any angle, and because of the charcoal shades, maintenance is about nil. The value of the KSuper Spitz is enormous. Mr. Martin points out that with this projector we can create and project the earth as it was ages ago, or as it might look in the future, or picture how it f l l l 4 l 1. -T-.. ,,,.,- gs . Artisfs sketch showing the interior of the new Buehler Planetarium. might appear from the center of Mars if you could see through the rock and dirt to the surface. Any new object discovered in the future - such as a neutron star or invisible galaxy - can be shown in its proper place and will move with the stars. This facility provides extra slip-ring contacts enab- ling the placing of lights on the rotating part of the planetarium. Six individual switch-controlled projectors provide for mythological figures. De- signed to blend with the stars. the images when shone upon the sky help us to picture the mythical identities attributed to such constellations as Orion. Taurus, and Cygnus. These can be changed for other figures, produced in the college art department. Programs are now scheduled for Monday, Tues- day, and Wednesday nights. The program runs about an hour long, consisting of the program itself and a question and answer period afterwards. Mr. Martin says, It's easy to get into the planetarium but hard to get out without asking questionsf' Astronomy is taught during three terms. Astron- omy 101 is the study of the Solar System. Mr. Glad- Win Comes, a new member of the faculty, teaches the course. Astronomy 102, taught by Mr. Martin. is the study of Stars and Galaxies. The third course taught in the planctarium is offered only during Term Sb and only to teachers. The course is EDU 260 which discusses the uses of planetariums. Besides being consultant and director of the planetarium. teacher at the college. and consultant for other planetariums. Mr. joel Martin has written an article about Space Science and the planetarium. to be published in the American Educational Profes- sions Iournal in the near future. Mr. Martin can be heard over the radio Monday through Friday at 12:02 on XVGMA. 1320 on the dial, giving short resumes about how the sky is on that day. Future programs to bc seen in the planetarium will be programs such as: Exploring Gur Galaxy. a guided tour of the Milky XVayg Our Place In Space. a trip beyond our galaxyg and YVhen Time Began. ideas from Big Bang. Programs are open to the public on the three nights previously mentioned and tickets may be obtained at the desk at the planetarium. Tickets are free. 25 v FY wifi . X15- is 1 be--f Q 7. ,l M-I - lx! 'I .LL l - 4i in Foil? ': 'L 'x X - ugyl IXIX5 xxx -n I ' a Q I., 3 Y . .,, , -ummm- The Plight of ORGANIZED RELIGIO OLLECE and religion. This topic has been widely discussed in magazines, television, and radio. Is Cod dead? And is He dead in the minds of college students? Or is organized religion dead? Has it been killed by new morals, new thinking and new freedoms? Recently, Americais college students have said that they believe in God, but they don't go to church to worship Him. Students have added that they feel they can worship God in their own way, that organized religion has failed to do its job in teaching. What do the students of the junior College of Broward County feel about this? XVhat do the min- isters think about it: the lack of wanting to belong to an organized religion. A list of questions were posed dealing with: 1. Do you believe in God? 2. Do you go to church? 3. Why or why not? 4. Do you think organized religion is losing ground? 5. Has organized religion done its job? VVhy or why not? Students came up with a variety of answers to these questions. Many of those interviewed stated a belief in Cod, although there were a few who professed to be atheists and agnostics. by Ellen Ku rpiewski Ken Bell. said. 'KI believe in Cod. but I think the lack of organization comes from our morals being more liberal. Religion may be necessary. but it's slacking off. I dont go to church because I'm simply not that interestedf, Some students said they dont go to church as a rebellion against their parents and former teachers who pushed it down my throat. YVhat was the reason for this? As stated. the students seemed to agree in a belief in Cod. but they did not believe in going to church. One student. Sharon Crosby, said she didnt go bc- cause church yvas too social. She continued that. I don't think its bad if you dont go. There are too many hypocrites in church noyv. It's like. iif I go to church. then I'm good and I can do anything I want the other sis daysf I think you can worship Cod just as much at home. The word 'hypocrite' came into the conversa- tions often. Hoyvever, there were students at Brow- ard yvho do believe in Cod and do go to church. Rick Strauss felt that. too many believe in their faith, or say they do. but yvon't back it. Others added HI go to church because it is the yvay I can worship Cod. The students interviewed gave reasons xvhy they felt some of the religions are failing and yvhy the organization of religion is losing poyver. 27 Gloria Lemos felt, The Church lost its power because it no longer has the control over state it had throughout history. XVhen it lost this power it also began to lose its organization with the people. One interesting theory was that man today is too intelligent to just accept the truths the churches want him to. Doreen NIcColdrick elaborated, Religion is too dogmatic, it's killing itself. The ministers of today simply expect too much and man is too intelligent today to accept it. Emma Ammons added, the church is disorgan- ized because people think what they do is right, not what the pastor says. There is a lack of unity in people todayf' Two students also added they felt the ministers today only care about money. Barbara johnson said, Pastors aren't interested in people. They are only interested in money. Changing morals has also got a lot to do with the lack of organization in religion. This then was the students side. One side be- lieves in Cod but is tired of accepting things they don't understand. Itis a side that is tired of having religion pushed at them. A side that feels the parents are the reason they donit care. The other side also believes in Cod, but they go to church to show it and cannot understand the hypocrites who don't. VVhat is the side of the ministers? Do they have any solutions or do they feel there is no problem? Father Danaher, a teacher at Saint Thomas Aquinas High School, made it clear that, Catholi- cism is an organized religion by Christ. There can be no deadness. The people may not practice, but they can not deny the truths and remain a Catholic. On the question involving morals, Father Dana- her added, usually when a Catholic rebels, if they have an education, then it is because of s-e-x. Reverend Charles Fix, pastor of the Plantation Community Church, felt that the question had been overblown by the press. I think it's been played up. When I went to college we had those who did not believe in Cod and didnit go to church. I think it's an indication of the searching mind of college stu- dents. They want to know and understand, so they ask. Perhaps religion with college students HAS been blown out of proportion. As Reverend Fix added, Let's face it, we have more students today than ever before. It makes a differencef, Rabbi joseph H. Narot, senior rabbi at Temple Israel of Greater Miami, said in a recent article in the Miami Herald, From the remotest antiquity of our own time, men have expressed faith in C-od. The concept of God has varied through the ages and across the world, and faith has differed accord- ing to the conceptf, Rabbi Narot added, If we cannot know God, we can know godliness, godliness that is translated into the goodness of one human being for another. There is a sacred source of life and a holy purpose to ig the sacredness and the holiness we call brother- hoo There will no doubt always be those who feel there is no Cod, who do not go to church, who can not accept an organized religion. To choose for him- self is a privilege belonging to the individual. But one student, jim Higgins, summed up the feelings of the ministers by saying, I donit think religion will ever become extinct. Religion is an essential thing to man. It would be unnatural not to accept Cod or a Cod-figuref, GMI is 3 1 am not dead! 'lb X l 1 T 1 I x Q . J L ' 'K KG- I The Great abate 28 MEANS 7466 14cz'6a6z'6ea '66 I SJ 14121 A iw, 5 'fi in 2 ,U if :f Q 411 9 , Q getay, . , . fffgiigww ,. . T, 5' ,':',., -M - - V ', r , -YG' 3-,gy J-Q f 1.l rf'.9c1i.-if'-Q-ifAd'Y il LL 7-uw wwrce an 4,11-.m,0wm Maxaman to pm- Aman ,aww if fffi' 9 'g'VV2f, , : 1, ' -fs r ir are N I t 2 0 , Q , T T H A f c , r .i ! A . If , I i , 1 XC I ,f r , lg X-' NN , ,f , 1-, I I QQ 3 A A Q ' Lge, L41 Yu- 'X L' im ' X., 2 , Jr l irkizif . Q e f V X f '!? 1 1 2 5- Cyncwlwomcm of ehccillot-' REVIEW BY ELLEN LOUGHLIN f HMEN ARE changing back into beasts. A man doesn't take your hand nowadays, admon- ishes Countess Aurelia, he gives you his paw. This is one of the many observations made in the recent play, the Madwoman of Chaillot. just one example of educational theatre performed at the college, the play was written by Jean Giraudourt. It takes place in Paris around the early 18006. But the time and place is unimportant, really, hi - cause Paris symbolizes the world and the time could be past, present and future. The curtain opened on a Paris scene, in tlzz town of Chaillot. A prospector, played by Davy! Sims, believes that large lakes of precious oil lie beneath the city. He convinces me greedy Pres A dent, played by Terry Whitmire, to sponsor he plan to drill for the oil and destroy Paris. Q ! ,N 1 L i I Xaffl i 'FTW -ll XII I . ,.. cwlwomcm of ehccilloi-' REVIEW BY ELLEN LOUGHLIN NMEN ARE changing back into beasts. A man doesn't take your hand nowadays, admon- ishes Countess Aurelia, he gives you his paw. This is one of the many observations made in the recent play, the Madwoman of Chaillot. just one example of educational theatre performed at the college, the play was written by Jean Giraudoux. It takes place in Paris around the early 1800's. But the time and place is unimportant, really, be- cause Paris symbolizes the world and the time could be past, present and future. The curtain opened on a Paris scene, in the town of Chaillot. A prospector, played by David Sims, believes that large lakes of precious oil lie beneath the city. He convinces the greedy Presi- dent, played by Terry Whitmire, to sponsor his plan to drill for the oil and destroy Paris. ,..NA.-xx Y N -. ll 5 1 X 1 i -'l 1 Phyllis Hogan played Countess Aurelia, who discovers this diabolical plan. But, she lives in a dream world and believes that if she forgets about this horrible problem, it will go away. It takes the Ragpicker, played by Ricque LeParmen- tier, to bring the 'Countess back to reality. With the help of the vagabonds and the Countess's three mad friends, played by Mary Ann Uhlar, Susan Frome, and LeAnn Eich, the Countess destroys the men and their wickedness. Beauty and goodness are once more restored to Paris. At times comic, sympathetic, overbearing, wor- ried, and sweet, Phyllis Hogan did a good job in her portrayal of the Countess. David Sims gets a good rating for his interpretation of the repulsive, scheming, prospector. Talented Ricque LeParmentier was superb. His home is the stage. Mary Ann Uhlar, who played the spoiled Constance, added spark to the play. Her voice is a melody. The play carries a meaningful message. In one scene, Countess Aurelia shouts, How can you bear to live in a world where a man is not his own master? Are you all cowards? The Ragpicker talks of the change in people . . . how they've become strangers . . . turned into materialistic money pimps Playwright Giraudoux is trying to wake us up. Many people are blind to what happens around them. It's not that they can't see. it's just that they don't make the effort, they don't care. Giraudoux believes this is a grievious fault of mankind. He also believes that materialism runs rampant over the world. People don't care what you are. they care who you are and what you can do for them. Money is their God. Playgoers who paid close attention to the lines. were seen squirming noticeably in their seats. Though funny at ltimes, the play wasn't really one to enjoy. It was a play to learn from. x xx 1 35 '59 A M n 4 'a HALLOWEEN 0 HE annual Halloween Dance commenced Octo- ber 22, as students found themselves on a train ride to the Old lVest. The festivities were held at Pioneer City, where costumers enjoyed the run of the town. Even a hayride was in the offering! The ice cream parlor, horse stables, printing shop, and other stores, were all at the students' disposal. The Dance was held in the Saloon and music was supplied by the Noblemen. Costumes went from the I'iCl.lCl1lO'L1S to the sublime. Little girls and boys were bountiful. There was even a Moses. Perhaps the best, or at least the couple that received the most comment, consisted of the girl who came as a sailor and her date, who came as a French hussey. They Gly cj' even followed it through on the dance floor as she, meaning the boy sailor, led he, meaning girl hussey, around. The Halloween Dance was a success as students left muttering, 'ithis was the best place to have itli' MAE 'af ,QE ?J fhiw 65634 ka ' A look into the Past- loneer Days with the AMERICAN FDLK BALLET ONE OF the most interesting of the Lyceums presented was the American Folk Ballet. The troup performed Winter at Deep Creek and were unusual in addi- tion to being good. They are not ballet dancers in the true sense of the Word. Their dancing more resembles that of a Russian dance. They leaped, jumped and screamed on stage. But there was also a beauty about them as they Worked. They told the story of wagon trains moving across American soil in the hope of reaching the west. The program opened with Shenandoah and throughout fea- tured traclitional songs such as Ole joe Clark, Wayward Wind, On Top of Old Smokey and The Skater's VValtz, which featured sparkles falling on the stage as the dancers imitated skaters. It was an interesting evening and in its own way made one feel proud. They are all exception- al dancers and the three singers of the group enhanced the feeling of watching the prairie days come alive. Twin pianos present EVENING CDF E ICYME T 'Hifi Ray, fill' ,xllglifr .XIlll'l'i4i1Il pianixlx ximxxeri tin-ir w-f- saliiilj iivinrr' .in 1-nliiuxia-lir allfiivmf-, 'iii'-x in-gan, apnrnprialf-iy, xxilin Miixxn iliiif-rf-nl Xvuririfl. 'iiiien film nrufwffif-ri xxiliu piers-x ranging irfnn f'i,,,l, slirixsn lo ii-lin ilniixi' In Ufn-'l-n- Nif?l'X PNN. lin-y riiri Illfjal ui liniir lnnr-x in lIN'fH1'yN - ggixing lin' auriivnvi- lin' in-xl part oi 1-mir Nf'ilA1iIflll. iiif- NIVCIIVX ni I5l'UilfiXX.If.' SIIUXX XFHIQ' was llllf,iUl1iJt1'tiiX' lin' iuwl. Hiif-iiu IDfJH8H, Hxxyilfl Cimlll I rl-UTI! Vi-UU. miiin- Niairinnaiu-r '4', Hijeriniifi. anri again Uijoiix '. luppf-fi lin- per- idOl'l1lill11l'. Pll'iii9il D4-rr-ix ami .Xll'll'T- inan Ray Plllllililkilfli fin-ir if'ilIH'N ll'ill1NillialI1iil nalure xxilin am,liier une-ciiey ui songs from imtin tin-ir f0lIllifif'S. Tin- rim-piy lnoxing Hcireermsiei-x'es-i cunlraxhwi uilil lin- iigiiivr Umfnixx' ilaixvu. Hijrnxn- lown , ami rain- fin! to line BHIIQZIIHQH. Having quifkiy ximwn tin- aurii- emw lin-ir sixiii as pianisli, liiey tnuix lime out for a iillie miowning. Tiime tunes everyone piayeci E19 a filiiciz HHearl ami Souii' ami Chop- sticiasn, i5l'0lIQilt niintim in time aucii- ence, and siaoweci time pianixtii f-xlra aiqiiily as nom:-ciians. Derek ami Rayis aiuiiily to ilan- ciie requests was amazing. Easily playing every ffxflllfit linal time per- milteni, tin-x' incimim-ci time sentimen- tal nniislyw. EiJiJ Ticieu. ami 'Simon River . H.5xrrix'acien'i Roma . Ufgraziiii. Hcanaciian Sum.-tu, ami hxever on Sunciay fmnpuseci 'iniusic ,-Xroumi lin- Xvoricin. iileir iasl lneciiey. Tiney Limf-ni wilil uciirnia Every Niuuniainn. Dereic ami Ray were of time same higix quality that iias macie this tennis I-YCt'lIITl one of the best, Tiley weii nieserveci the standing ovation given them iby time stucienls of our college. 39 THE LETTERMEN Sacceaa pewandbfded . 2 .ff .,! 'D ,I 1 ' A y f L 1 , - 1 1. in f,l fg c xr 'N ITHOUT a doubt, the most popular Lyceum program of the semester was the last one, the Lettermen. The War Memorial Auditorium was filled to capacity November 19, as the Wilson Brown Trio opened with In Crowd and Taste of Honey. This was the backup group, and they were excel- lent. However, the audience had come to see the Lettermen and they were not let down. The trio sang, clowned on stage, invited the audience to clap along and, in general, put on the best show of the year. Standout numbers would be impossible to pick, but Tony singing Yesterday, Bob singing Kansas City fwith audience participationj or Jim singing What Kind of Fool Am I, showed they could do just as well on their own. Tony has a soft, gentle voice that lends itself well to romantic tunes, Bob has an excellent ability with rhythm songs and Jim has the best range. There were two standing ovations for the Letter- men. The first was after a West Side Story medley. The second was at the end of the concert following the request portion, in which they sang When I Fall in Love, Smile, Blue World, Unchained Melody, Graduation Day, Cherish, and Youill Never Walk Alone. The Lettermen were great professional enter- tainers. It is hoped future Lyceums can do as well. ff 4 6 dl ,J X-.R SK X tl J 15. I? 16 'HJ l HAT IS IT like to travel all over the United States and be paid for it? It's a great life, says Jim Pike of the Lettermen. The Lettermen are a singing trio consisting of Tony Butala, Bob Engemann, and Jim. They range in age from 26 to 31 and have been popular for about five or six years, now. Jim is 30 years old. He was raised in Idaho and attended Brigham Young University, majoring in Geology. I went into the study of Geology be- cause I always had wanted to dig old mines and see if I could make my 'fortune' from it. It was through that study that I found out about this stock I now own. It is used in rocket fuel and some of it is now being found in Idaho. The range of jim Pike's voice makes it easy for him to sing soprano andfor solos reminiscent of Andy Williams or Bob Goulet, as one student put it after a concert. Pike's idol is Williams. If asked why, with a voice like his, didn't he go on his own and leave the trio, Pike will usually say, The competition would be too rough with someone like Andy Williams still recording. I'll stick with the group. Still, he does solos in the Lettermen's con- certs. Rock and Roll is a topic he generally does not like to talk about. Some of it is ok, like some of the Beatles tunes, but then there are a few that are just dirty. You know, the double meaning ones. Sam the Sham and the Pharohs should be the kings of those, after Little Red Riding Hood. There is so much good music being written. You don't have to sing the junk. Jim Pike becomes excited when he speaks of the trio and the albums they have done. He feels the new Christmas album is the best they have ever done. It's fantastic. I know it sounds like I am bragging, and I don't mean to, but it really is. We have some new songs on it that no one else has 42 EET LETTERMAN ,-in mmm, ma jim Wee By ELLEN KURPIEWSKI recorded and a great orchestra, it's the best one we have. He sometimes tends to say that about all the recent LP's. Those first ones were not very good. You can tell. just play a new one and then one of those older records. What is it like to travel? I love it. Although we don't see as much of cities as people think we do. But we have a bus that has everything on it we could want. It's equipped with a stereo and speakers and we each have a closet and drawers so we don't have to press clothes all the time. I know flying would be faster. But after a while, that got to be very expensive and we got tired of it. Not only that, but most colleges are in small towns, so we would have to rent a car to get to the school. With this bus, we just drive right up. I guess the only thing bad about traveling is eating in restaurants. After a while, everything tastes like cardboardf' Home for jim Angeles. There he has his new car, and a two bed- of the total year, however, he months there. The rest is spent appearing in night clubs where Pike and the Lettermen is Los room house. Out spends only three on the road and we are paid about 56,000 a week. Booking for colleges is done according to bids and the size of the college. If we have a large college, we contract for that and then contract for the small ones surrounding it. Pike is eligible, has hazel eyes, dark hair, and loves all kinds of food. I guess I'm easy enough to get along with, he said with a grin. He is basic- ally an extrovert who loves to laugh. A Mormon, he neither drinks or smokes. jim Pike considers being a Lettermen, with the autographs, money and traveling, to simply be a job. Everyone has a talent. I can't draw a picture, write a story, be a doctor. But I can sing, so that is my job. The Faculty Christma Formal ECEMBER 17th arrived and Circle K started off the whirl of holiday festivities with the Christmas Formal. A crowd of more than six hundred people gathered at the Golden Gate Hotel expecting not only a big name dance band but a show with name celebrities. The campus had been saturated with posters and newspaper articles announcing such, and unfortu- nately the students were disappointed. For the three thousand dollars that Circle K managed to spend they gathered ten union musicians together to act as a dance band plus two singing and musical groups. These big name bands were the Interludes, an outdated comedy and musical group who were rated at best as pretty good, and the Fraternity, a local group who often perform at Circle K functions. It seems to many that for 352,000 Circle K could have managed to stage a dance a little more suitable to students tastes. If not the Byrds Qas had been petitioned by the stu- dentsj then some group a little less popular with the Faculty than the Interludes. After all, the dance was paid for by the Student Government Association and thus should have been student oriented. Far be it from anyone to suggest that the faculty should not take full advantage of and completely enjoy the functions provided by the school, but maybe Circle K should be reminded that they were sponsoring a student dance. In the future it is suggested that money appropriated for Students Activities be spent with the student in mind. Circle K would do well to remember that the students on campus are not unintelligent bores. They enjoy good music and entertain- ment and generally tend to prefer dances which offer the same. Miss Linda Pallotto, sponsored by Circle K, was crowned queen to reign over the festivities. 43 WI A WEEKEND IN BIMINI! by Gary McCray, Dan Turbeville, Ron J. Fonda as told to Judy Mathis Homan . l ' C .P ' N- ff .T GARY, Dan, and Ron, all students at the Iunior College of Broward County, have one interest in common - the ocean and all its fascinating flora and fauna. These young men are not writers but are adventurers. It is common knowledge adventurers, leading exceedingly exciting lives worthy of print, never seem to swagger around to placing pen on paper. Therefore, they require a scribe and biographer. Cary, Dan, and Ronis adventures, deemed essential to Silver Sands are all about just that - silver sands, crystal seas and a marine biol0gist's paradise, Bimini . . . CARY: Saturday moming, returning Sunday afternoon. While Our weekend in Bimini actually began as something quite different from what it became. More chan es took place between its conception and compietion than anyone could imagine possible. At first the plan involved chartering a boat for one full weekend, leavin early Saturday morning, return- ing late Sunday nigit after two full days of diving, co lecting and researching. The weekend was de- cided on, a boat chartered and the majority of Mrs. Moreth's Marine Biology class signed to go. DISASTER! During the week the ship chartered sheared a shaft Cor some related mechanical disasterj, most of the students found they couldn't go, and talk circulated of calling the trip off. RESCUE! Mrs. Moreth hastily drew up plans for an al- temate attempt, Bimini on the Machey cruise ship 44 in Bimini we would lodge at the Sunshine Inn, visit the Lerner Marine Laboratory, and rent a boat for diving. You might think this alternate plan sufficiently simple to carry out. Wrong again. Conditions arrived to 1'9l'ldCI' our plan uunrecognizablev in the end. DAN: 8:50 a.m. Miami and arrival at the Mackey Docks. At last. It felt good to crawl out from beneath an avalanche of gear, climb from the car, stretch my legs. Cary followed suit saying, Well, we better get this stuff unloaded. XVe both cast a sleepish eye at the mountain of scuba and skindiving equipment rising from the back seat. I knew what he was thinking, No, we didnit forget anything. YVe brought it allf' Then began the laborious task of transferring all the equipment from the car to the deck of our ship, the Carib Queen. Aqua lungs, tropical fish collecting gear, wet suits, buckets, luggage, etc. took up a lot of space. Luckily no one seemed to mind. At 9:40 the Carib Queen put out to sea. At 9:50 Cary remarked, Just know I forgot something. We set anchor in Bimini at 2:00, and low tide. waiting for a salvage tug to pick us up. At 2:10 Gary re- membered what he forgot, his suitcase. XfVe decided it really didnt matter. All the suitcase contained was his clothes with various and sundry small necessities. After all Gary still had his diving gear and slurp gun. Once again on land, North Bimini, we realized we beached the wrong island. Our reservations read Sunshine Inn, South Bimini. So it was all aboard a tiny ancient boat. Loaded to capacity we cast off for our other island. RON: Good thing Gary forgot his suitcase or we might have sunk! Our taxi awaited, a tired Volkswagen bus with driver. At one dollar a head, eight of us squeezed our gear and ourselves into the rusty deteriorated car. It was a rough ride, a rough road, surrounded by mangrove swamps on both sides. Meeting one oncoming car tthe only other tired automobile on the islandl, both vehicles pulled off the road, par- tially into the swamp to pass. Our ride terminated at the Inn, the extreme southwest tip of the island. Gear stowed in our rooms, we set out to explore the beach. By 3:00 in the afternoon we had separated into two groups, one diving after tropicals, the other scaling the rocky shores. DAN: I, being a little bit.more conservative about sharks and barracudas, watched Gary to see if he were appetizing. Finding Gary wasn't attractive to the local denizens, I waded into the water. GARY: I am a cautious diver and I don't like to dive alone, but somehow I always seem to be the first one in. Staying near shore I encountered some of the most spectacular collecting grounds I have ever seen in the Bahamas or the Keys. After about an hour, Dan joined me and we ventured further out. I think the reason he waited so long was to make certain no man-eating sharks or such habited our beach. With me the bait! I found several species of deep water tropical fish in great variety in this extremely shallow water, 25 feet, brilliant diamond-studded dark blue marine Iewelfish, whose brilliance is reflected in its scien- tific name tMicrospathadon Chrysyrusj, rock beau- ties, a striking orange and black fish with bright blue eyes, Queen Angelfish and comical Reef Puffers. The only danger sighted was one ferocious looking, but timid, barracuda. DAN: The overabundance of marine life was an amaz- ing sight. As I gasped at this beauty, a myriad of air bubbles rose popping to the surface. Another avid skindiver, Wayne Pomeroy, soon joined us. Wayne seemed eager to try out a new gig. Right on target, first shot. WVayne landed a wal- oping four-inch Trigger-fish. It didn't matter he had been aiming at a large snapper. GARY: YVe returned to the hotel at dusk. I cleaned up as best I could, considering rny clothes ahoard ship. Then dinner at the Inn, ridiculously exp'-nsiw-. con- sidering we had seafood. couch cutlet. RON: After dinner we began to realize the isolated condition of the island. The motel power generator failed, and lights went off for more than an hour. VVe calmly proceeded to the dock with flashlights and nets for more collecting. No success. DAN: At midnight lion decided to take a solitary swim in the hotel pool, the only pool I ever saw rising and falling with the tides. Dont know if lion ever took his swim, for as Ron poised to dive in a loud crash was heard. It was the hotel manager, savagely beating his wife. Our hero, Bon gathered his courage and lit into the melee, and subdued the irate husband until help arrived. RON: I had to do it. Again one realizes the primitive and isolated position of the island. It took two hours for the doctor and the authorities to come. A boat dis- patched them to and fro. Then to bed, setting our alarms for six. Tomor- row was our last day and not to be wasted. GARY: The next day, we all got up early. stowed away a whopping breakfast and hit the surf. After renting an air-pump for any fish I might catch I trotted down to the beach. I was the first to make it but today the entire group followed in rapid sequence. XYe struck out along some small islands directly adjacent to the motel. The diving was more spectacular than the day before. DAN: I collected rapidly, mainly from the phylum Mollusca. including green conchs, chitons. and a gastropod called bleeding toothf, Then I sighted Gary to my right and decided to swim over. Then I saw it . . . a five foot barracuda! It happened. Ex- ecuting a sharp turn I grazed my arm on a razor piece of fire coral. By that time the cuda was only ten feet away, but headed straight for Cary? A steady saffron oozed from my arm. I gestured wildly to attract Caiys attention. He was armed only with his sluip gun. GARY: All at once I saw it. The underwater world was suddenly a very insecure place. He was headed straight for me. Please dear Cod. Hes tuming. SAFEI DAN: They are lucky to be alive. The return trip consisted primarily of rehashing our experiences on the reef, with occasional em- bellishments on our encounters with the denizens of the deepf' that weren't really quite as large as- they sounded. In conclusion, we would like to add, although the trip was never intended to turn out as it did, about the only thing that could have improved it would be to stay for a full week, in spite of a five foot cuda. Photograph by COM PHOTO 45 tive mlecwoil ball le VER since Adam noticed that Eve was some- thing more than just another fig tree, men have been trying to top women in the battle of the sexes. Men's fashions, hairstyles, mannerisms, and speech have all been molded by the attraction they might have for the opposite sex. Today, for instance, it is not only important who or what a man is but also 46 By G. D. Eisman what he smells like. There is a great variety and quantity of men's colognes, after shaves, and deodor- ants that offer different attractions and fragrances but all seek the same end, amorous adventures. Some conservative colognes such as Canoe and English Leather make no promises to the customer. They are advertised honestly as men's colognes, nothing more, nothing less. These are the Sweden and Switzerland of men's toiletries. Even with a vicious war waging around them they have some- how remained neutral. jade East is exhilarating elegance. Dunhill is liquid virility. Desirable? Yes. But they don't seem to be the lance that is going to slay the dragon that guards the castle of feminine conquest. That Man is a fragrance for the single-minded man which is a step out of the trench and towards the enemy lines if it means that the man is singlely-minded towards the conquest of his objective, however, this may backfire if the enemy reads single-mind- ed as being uneligible. Of course, if Mrs. Paul Newman likes it, it can't be too bad. Old Spice Lime and York Town make things happen. Although it is never stated what will happen, it is assumed that they are not referring to starting revolutionary wars. Lorle Lodorante, which must be French for Sexy Deodorant, also says that it starts things happening, and for the convenience of the lazy or non-perceptive reader, supply two telling photographs: the first is of a man and woman innocently enough smiling at one anotherg the second is of the same couple, only now the woman is bare shouldered and not-so-innocently embracing the man. The meek mannered man need no longer seek satisfaction in a dark closet armed with only a flashlight and three months back issues of Playboy Magazine. Now with his bottle of Kent of London he may approach women without fear because even though it can't talk, women get the message. And even if a man is too timid to approach within smelling distance of a woman, he may retreat to his bottle of Arden for Men which satisfies everyone from sportsman to diplomat, thus eliminating his need or psuedo-need for a woman. Of course, there are always those who seek a more carnal result from their bottled masculinity. And as legend would have it, one day a Russian countess threw herself at an unsuspecting leather- maker because he smelled so good. Such was the birth of Russian Leather which seems tailor-made for those men who find themselves constantly in contact with Russian countesses. From here, one need only hop over to France to secure Dante which is for men who know how to handle women, there- fore, if a man uses Dante he handles women. After- wards he may wish to take a brisk swim across the English Channel to play dirty with It's Cricket. Black Watch fthe name is Scotchj gives the secure feeling that the age old art of plying women fmen use it straightj is no longer confined to oral consumption fwomen find it intoxicatingj. Moon- shine even promises to be quicker'n likker. While Pinaud's YU will make all mornings-after-the-night- before bright and happy because she'll still love YU in the morning. Seven Seas is the cologne for men that call themselves Ishmael and often find themselves being drawn toward the sea in search of loosely clad sea nymphs and mermaids. Celluloid eating conserva- tives who have just finished sitting through five and dream of days of yester- year when barmaids were big on bosoms and short their dream materialized in a reels of Tom jones on morals may find bottle of Pub which brings back the lusty life. Old Spice contends that so many single men use close to their product because women love being the bold, masculine aroma of it. If this be true, the women might very well start buying the bottle and eliminating the men. Some men still feel that some of their attraction should come from themselves rather than just from a bottle and do not wish their love partner wondering whether it was him or his Piping Rock. These are the all-male men who do not want to exhibit perfumy odors coming from their bodies. Signoricci solves this paradox by still remaining a successful scent but being incon- testably male. Royalty White Hunter brings in the men who visualize themselves as another Heming- way stalking wild bull elephants and women Cnot necessarily in that orderj. And for the all out male who refuses to even kiss his mother, there is Cen- taur - half man . . . half beast . . . all male. The cologne bottle has become a modern day phallic symbol that is exibited in most every medi- cine cabinet in this country. And just as Lyme, By George! says that it is dedicated to the knowing, by Genesis! I think that they're all dedicated to the knowing. 47 MARDI GRAS of MUD SEA OF mud looms ahead of the drivers, perched high to the front of their swamp bug- gies. The starting flag is raised. The crowd tenses, inhaling the acrid fumes of naptha, jet fuel and alcohol. The noise level reaches the breaking point as the drivers rev their engines . . . the flag is d0Wn. THEYRE OFF! This is the climax of the three-day celebration of the Eighteenth Annual Swamp Buggy Days, the dirtiest race in the world, beginning 16 years ago in Naples, Florida, when Glades hunters got together to test their buggies before invading the swamp. Mud flies as the buggies hit the soupy swamp, topping 45 miles per hour when leaving the 20 yard sand runway. The cheering crowd stands as one, cameras poised as the first twin hemi-head buggy hits the first slush hole at the end of the sand strip. A hail of mud and water engulfs the machine, en- gine, rider, and all. All the buggies are mounted on huge tractor or airplane tires. Three buggies, including the twin hemi-head, cross the 15 yard hole, a fourth bogs down, sinking in the mire. Running scared, the twin hemi-head driver guns Grasshopper , his buggy, with a twin Corvette-powered buggy in hot pursuit. Suddenly Grasshopper leaps into the air, rear wheels spinning without traction, while the front wheels roll on, clawing at the mud. At last Grass- hopper levels out without loss of speed. Gaining, the twin-corvette buggy is even with Grasshopper. A third buggy, jack Hatcher Specialv, is closing in. Grasshopper bounces up again, executing a sec- ond wheelie . Fighting to gain control, the driver loses, and shoots straight for the bank bordering the grand stand, at sixty miles per hour. '-.., The crowd screams, but the driver keeps his head, cutting power. slamming down just short of the stands. A front wheel rips off, throwing the driver into the fencing. The Grasshopper is dead bug the iiudience applauds for the driver stands an signa ed O.K. NVHATS THIS? The Grasshopper is not deadf Reversing off the bank and taking off on three wheels, using his one front wheel as a rudder. Grass- hopper rides again. Zigzagging down the course. bouncing off banks. Grasshopper tries to catch Half Fast. the twin- Corvette powered buggy which is 200 yards ahead on the one mile figure-eight track. ,lack Hatcher Special runs up on the bank and rolls. The huge wheels claw madly at the air. Again the auidence applauds a driver as he signals his health. but its uits for the j.H. Special. q Now the race is between Half Fast. in the lead fmnning twin -127 fuel injectorsl. and trailing but gainin , Grasshopper. lingering the last stretch. the two buggies are neck and neck with the three-wheeler doing a series of wheelstands. A ten foot deep mud trench stretches in front. It is the point of no return. Both buggies gain speed in a shallower trench and top 60 miles per hour. They enter together. all but emptying the sink hole oyer the grandstand. Half Fast bogs down to a stop. then bolts free of the sludge, a mad dog off leash. 49 ji Grasshopper takes the lead and planes across the last obstacle. The rear wheels sink into the grime, losing speed but forging onward. The last lap stretches ahead with only 400 yards to go. DISASTER! It's Grasshopper on two wheels. Grasshopper loses control again, hitting a bank, veering over and bouncing off Half Fastg then back to the bank again and running off the track. Grasshopper clips a thick pine. The buggy grinds to a halt, teetering on the bank minus both front wheels and ready to topple' over into the water. The driver fights to regain footing, frantically backing it off the bank. But for Grasshopper it's a futile race now. Grass- hopper continues to the fanatic cheers of the audi- ence. 50 Half Fast crossed the finished line, taking the checkered flag . . . But the fun is not over. Ten minutes elapse. The winner and runner-up accept congratulations from the mayor of Naples, attired in a dinner jacket. Suddenly the mayor breaks into a sprint across the field, followed by the two muddy winners in rapid sequence. They bring him down, throwing him head first into the big mud hole, in full view of the ten thousand roaring spectators. Still the fun is not over. The Swamp Buggy Queen, chosen for her charm, grace, beauty, and the originality of her gown is given a kiss by the grimy Buggy King, who takes her for a sloppy ride ffancy hairdo and gown flapping in the breezej. After one fast lap, he stops in the middle of the mud track and tosses her into the muddy soup! To the now sopping Queen, this is the end. cwcincctio FORT LAUDERDALE Howard Tiger and I were playin' by the church when a small party of trail injuns happened along. I guess they'd had enough of those new tangled Christian ideas, cause they up and started a iight, right on the spot . . . using clubs and lists. Luck was with us though, cause they were finally out- numbered and snuck back into the woods. Arizona, 1835? No, Broward County, 1935! But stranger yet . . . Ft. Lauderdale's history begins as far back as 1793, for it was then a Spanish ship discovered the Charles Lewis family settled on the New River with a farm and fruit trees already bearing fruit. The following year the Spanish granted Mrs. Lewis the section of land. Mr. Lewis was probably dead by this time for the grant was made out to his wife, Frankee. In 1817, Count Odet Phillipi came from Charles- ton, South Carolina with his family and slaves, settling on the New River, East of the Lewis home- stead. Count Phillipi, a schoolmate of Napoleon, By Lamar Anderson had been chief surgeon of the French Navy. Phillipi was captured at Trafalgar and sent to the Bahamas as a prisoner of war. After two years, he was freed. The Count went first to Charleston, then on to New River, where he grew tobacco and refined salt from the sea water. Next to the New River area came William Cooley with his family, tenanting the Lewis land after Frankee left to join her children in Cape Florida in 1824. Mr. Cooley built a plantation and starch mill and ran a trading post for the Indians at Tarpon Bend, located on New River. Then tragedy struck. On January 6, 1836, Mary Rigby, her son, and two daughters, living upstream on the opposite bank of the New River heard shots, war cries, and screams of the Cooley brood. Mary and family fled through the woods to Cape Florida. William Cooley was in the Keys obtaining sup- plies when the infamous attack occurred. On the way home he heard the news of his family's mas- Tarpon Bend, site of the Cooley Massacre in 1836. Sl sacre. Stopping only to mourn briefly he hastened to Fort Jupiter, notifying the army of the Indian uprising. A contingent of troops, commanded by Major William Lauderdale and reinforced by a naval ship captured 47 Indians in the area, now called Davie, March 2, 1836. Recovered in the capture were the pitiful scalps of the Cooleys along with some dry goods from the trading post. Adding yet more tragedy to the saga is the story told by one branch of historians . . . the Cooleys were wamed of the impending attack by a member of the attacking war party with whom they had been friends! The informer, a young Indian lad, was caught by the raiders and was punished by cutting his ears off. Giving veracity to the tale, Crop-Earred Charlie was a familiar sight in the streets of Ft. Lauderdale up until 1922 when he died at the age of 100. With the Cooley Massacre came the Second Seminole War. In 1837 Major William Lauderdale led a con- tingent of Tennessee Mounted Militia here to con- struct a fort. Lauderdale and his men built the first fort near the forks of New River, just one-eighth of a mile East of the Cooley homesite. Accompanying Lauderdale was the young Lt. Anderson, later to become the Major surrendering Fort Sumter. The fort consisted of a two story log building 30 feet square, surrounded by a stockade 60 by 50 feet of palmetto logs set 116 feet in the ground. This was the site of the famous Battle of Fort Lauderdale, August 27, 1837 .... A Seminole war party floated silently in their war canoes into Middle River, and made their way to New River, a short distance from the fort. Leav- ing their canoes, they crept steathily toward the stockade, hoping to surprise the sentry and mas- sacre the garrison. Luckily one Indian slipped, uttered a cry, and was heard by an alert sentry. The sentry's shots awakened the soldiers and the Indians were routed back. For days attacks were repeated but the Seminoles were finally turned back. After the battle several expeditions into the Glades were made, but the fort was finally aban- doned May 7, 1838. In 1839 a new contingent of artillery returned to find the fort burned to the ground. A new fort was raised close to what is now Bahia Mar. This fort is considered the real Fort Lauderdale, since it was occupied for a period of over three years, 1839 to 1842. Fort Lauderdale was a rectangle of palmetto logs with a block house at three of the four corners. The fort boasted three guns placed at the most strategic points of attack. S2 The Second Seminole War ended in 1842 and the fort was abandoned to be occupied only briefly during uprisings in 1856-1857. By 1850 settlers straggled back to Bay Biscayne. Local history is a blank during the period, with one possible exception. A story is told of Isaiah Hall, a Georgian, who piloted gunboats early in the Civil War. Pro-Southern settlers found out about the Union gun-runs and decided to deport Hall's wife and children to a northern Florida internment camp, but the brave family heard of the plans and fled their home by a small sailboat to be picked up by the infamous Hall. Trekking to New River, they remained for the duration of the war, and then moved on to the Keys. The first known settler after the Civil War was John J. fPigj Brown, who raised hogs on the New River in the 1870's. Pig left the area in 1876 after being elected to the state legislature. In 1876 the Federal Government built five houses of refuge on the east coast of Florida, one at Fort Lauderdale. This was for the aid of ship- wreck victims and served as rest stops for travelers along the lonely unpopulated coast. They later grew into the Coast Guard stations. Washington Jenkins was the first keeper of Fort Lauderdale's house of refuge. Fort Lauderdale was not always known by that name. In 1887 the late W. H. Scott of Melbourne, a cabin boy at the time, arrived here on the trading schooner, Cornelia. Scott said Lauderdale was once known as Funk Landing, funk CSeminolej for stink, referring to the smell of rotting alligator hides drying in the sun. Still another tale recalls a man named Munck who had a shark fertilizer plant at the inlet in 1890. Scott may have confused Munck with funk. In 1888 Captain Dennis O'Neill was sent to take over the Refuge Houses. The barefoot mailmen were Captain O,Neill's only contact with reality and the outside world. The mailmen received their nickname from their habit of walking their route along the coast, barefoot in the sand. And then Fort Lauderdale began to grow . . . In 1893, a young man of 27 from Ohio, Frank Stranahan, arrived to this area. His first job was running the half-way station and ferry over New River for the Hypoluxo Lemon stage line. Strana- han, an enterprising young man, soon built a small store with one room cabins for overnight guests. There were wood floors and canvas tops for the few travelers coming through Fort Lauderdale on the stage line. Stranahan's store was built on the present site of the Pioneer House on the New River, where Mrs. Stranahan still lives. In 1894 Hugh Taylor Birch and John McGre- gan Adams ran aground on Fort Lauderdale beach in their yacht. Birch and Adams were millionaires and naturalists. The area appealed to them, en- couraging them to buy a long strip of beach front. The Las Olas Inn, first beach hotel on Las Olas Boulevard and Atlantic, was built by Adams. Birch later donated the land at the corner of Sunrise and Atlantic Boulevard known as Hugh Taylor Birch State Park. In 1895 the Florida East Coast Intracoastal Canal was improved for boat traffic. The boats took over the mail contract from the stage line. Then along came the railroad . . . Philomen N. Bryan and his son, Tom, to survey for Flagler's Florida East Coast railroad. It was Mr. Bryan who named Lake Mabel, later to be known as Port Everglades. Mabel was a member of their family. Bryan soon brought his entire family down to settle here in 1902. Bryan built the first hotel, the New River Inn, in 1905. On February 22, 1896, the first passenger train arrived arrived in Fort Lauderdale. With it came Miss Ivy J. Cromartie, and the King family. King had pre- ceded his family earlier in 1895, building a fine home. In April of 1896, the Florida East Coast rail- road was completed to Miami. Fort Lauderdale and Miami celebrated together, perhaps for the last time. By 1899 a school was needed. Ed King traveled to the Dade County Superintendent of Schools. Z. T. Merritt. Merritt told King if he could find nine children for the school, the school board would provide a teacher and materials for building and maintaining a school. King not only found the nine students, but erected the building. Ivy Cromartie was the first teacher and was affectionately known to her students as Miss Ivy . Miss Ivy, still in her teens, had graduated from the Lemon City High School and had been tutored for the State Teacher's Examination. She received S48 a month, of which she gave S15 to the King family, her inlaws, with whom she boarded. In the summer of 1900, Miss Cromartie and This site, once inhabited only by beach-mongers, is now occupied by a rondominium. 1 n nik in 1, wha!-M g... ..+ A. - - -0- .N-x . ' - 42' , 3. f In - - V Cx 'Ai ie f -- ' I ' V 'gif -1 ' ' N A ' 2 . 5'.i'.A,.. N, u'g ., -- Q , -S :ef-P .. .-'ix . 'l -7 ' g 1 - ' ' 'Y , Lis-, 10' - 53 Frank Stranahan were married in Lemon City. Dur- ing their courtship Frank would carry mail to his sweetheart's home, and on dates, of course, would take Ivy hunting and fishing. Frank and Ivy played an important part in the development of Fort Lauderdale and Broward Coun- ty. Mrs. Stranahan is still loved and respected by the Seminoles for her kindness to them, and is still represented on their council. When the Stranahans were married in 1900, the population of Fort Lauderdale was approximate- ly 52, but by 1911, when the city was incorporated, the population was a striving 175. Citizens engaged in fishing, hunting, and agriculture. The tourist boom had not arrived. Among the few tourists who visited Fort Lau- derdale was President Grover Cleveland. He and his companions, golfing enthusiasts, would practice shots in open spaces in the thick piney woods. Indians would hunt among the pine straw and pine cones for balls, and were paid dimes and quarters for each recovered . . . good money in that by-gone era. The settlers of Fort Lauderdale were not lacking in social life. Once a year the school had a family picnic at the beach. Entire families would attend the box supper and dance, held on the second floor of the trading post. The first class to graduate from the Lauderdale school in June, 1915, had only three male graduates. In 1902, the first marriage took place in Fort Lauderdale between Eva Bryan and Frank Oliver. Members of the Oliver family still reside in the area. In 1903, the first rock road was built between Miami and Fort Lauderdale, replacing the old sand trail. Stranahan was paymaster for the builders, and every week made the trip to Miami by bicycle to pay the workmen. Part of this rock road is now Federal Highway. Influential in the development of Fort Lauder- dale was the Womenls Club. While the men were busy clearing land and earning a living, women assumed the role of improving the community. One of their first tasks was promoting millage for edu- cation. Next, they turned their efforts to transportation. The Board of Trade Qforerunner of the Chamber of Commerceb fought unsucessfully to secure the right of way for Andrews Avenue for five years. In a single summer season the women attained the right of way. In 1911, the Women's Club asked the city fathers to levy a one-fourth millage tax to establish park. The tax was levied and the funds a city started to accumulate . . . but not for a park. 54 In 1918 George Henry, a lumberman from New England, stopped in Lauderdale, but bound for Miami. He was scouting South Florida, investments on his mind. It was then the need for a commercial hotel for Fort Lauderdale was suggested by local newsmen and real estate hawks. Henry agreed the possibilities were promising, but he wanted the city to back the proposed ven- ture with S2,500. Unfortunately there just wasn't 52,500 in the entire city. But therels always a Way . . . While downtown shopping, Mrs. Stranahan bumped into John Sherwin, editor of the local paper. Greetings exchanged, Sherwin announced, That man Qreferring to Henryj is leaving town tomorrow. Can't the Women's Club do anything about raising the money? They could and did. That night at the city council meeting, Strana- han, who was a member, offered to give the city a block of land for a park - if the council would vote the funds accumulating for the park to Mr. Henry. Stranhan's offer was accepted, the money given to Mr. Henry, and the Broward Hotel built. But the Women's Club was not content with past successes. When the Homestead Exemption Law was proposed to the Florida Legislature by Representative Dwight Rogers of Broward County, the bill was passed, again thanks to the insistence of the Women's Club. Mr. Rogers went on to be- come a congressman, succeeded upon his death by his son, Paul. In 1915 Broward County was born, created from bits of South Palm Beach and North Dade counties. It was named after Florida's governor, Napoleon Bonaparte Broward, but thatls another story. A town council was formed appointing Frank Bryan, city clerk, Adolphus Goodbread, marshall, and J. L. Billingsley, attorney. In 1917 a long wooden causeway was built to the beach. This was known as Las Olas' Boulevard. Before one had to travel by boat most of the way. By the end of World War I, the population of Fort Lauderdale was over 2,800. To Ft. Lauder- dalels joy, people were tired of hard times, caused by the war. Thanks to Henry Fordls flivver -Cost S400-they traveled to Florida-the boom was on! Real estate was gold, prices soared higher and higher still, but like a house of cards, sure to fall. Land development projects began to crop up. Plantation, Wilton Manors, and Oakland Park were given birth by the Everglades Draining Project. Before they were exactly that-Everglades. But all good things must end . . . In 1926 the land boom failed and the tired cliche came true, people lost their shirts. In 1926 one of the worst hurricanes ever to hit, swept over Fort Lauderdale, effecting almost total destruction to the new developments. Then came the death blow, the depression of '29. Still the tough town and county strived . . . Between 1920 and 1930 they more than doubled their population. While the rest of the world suffered the depth of the depression, Ft. Lauderdale, already drastically deflated, was lean, hard, and hungry, and again on its way back. A new population explosion began in the late 1930's. Time erased all traces of boom and bust as Second World War froze the nation status quo ante. Lt. Alexander Sandy Nininger, Jr. was the first soldier from Ft. Lauderdale to rffceive the Meflal of Honor for heroic action at Bataan. Then the war was over. and the city and uiuritg' grew beyond recognition between 1946 :infl 1960. In 1954 college students from all over the na- tion migrated to Ft. Lauderdale during their spring vacation. At Easter time the population of the nity more than doubled. In 1960 a movie. 'tWhere the Boys Are , won national acclaim anrl along with it. Ft. Lauderdale. Broward County has quaclruplecl its population in the past decade. An immense migration, since World War II, is of people come to stay, They profit from the climate, rather than speculation, Ft. Lauderdale and Broward's future can he nothing but sunny. .FUQ 55 AVI A TI Q - A Career of Passion By David Davidson 55, .A It 4 .-4 9 U a jlbiir-, -A-wg,-M -- , ,,- ' 'V' A191 ' , 5 ...,-- V , . - x' ., ' ' ',.,- , 'V Y ,- --' , X - ,.. ,,.A Q' E A f -M-S-1-: Q. sf V - -L ' ' ' Q 1' ' - ny:z5Q .im -S-.RM ,Q ,Q .,- A - W- 'A' X, MW- vp . A vg . ' . 'ral-5 ,Q , r .Hx K':j1j:,1,x ,-635271,-raixu. s, M A- f1i1':7f-f.x'Y5.H -, 3' -Ex-: ' l, v A-f---an ..fA ...N , -. . f V e. '-'5-If-eV:- E, 'I ' . f'iJi 3 4'-H1 'Wifi ff 5 ? :f' S':'f? f'- i -Ie !'? A H . lags-1 F' , , A .'f:1X-mp? again. '-v:'Q-A'-f'w 'm15'.rf:,vP+1'-':w ' f?1i,q.ra' ' - ,ff '1 , :if-4-If Q. .::'f925 f?'Pf 14531-'4?gQE?'r'fPf-, -1'fiff'1 . 1 -vbw 'Q'- ' n.-Ft,-gn f-:-1GV.-y - 4-J-fy-5 ,.-: - - --,,,,,...-. i:?-av-1552.-Q., X,. in V -I .21 T I l 1 0 .lv N E ,..,.H V- bw, ?'f Emil Buehler donated all the airplanes for the Career Pilot program. Here he chats with SILVER SANDS writer, David Davidson, about aviation. Buehler began flying in 1917. A long career in aeronautical engineering lies behind his new- est design shown in foreground. W HEN a test pilot was asked, What would you do if your wife asked you to quit flying? he replied, l would tell her to go to hell. Such is the absolute passion that so many have for aviation. The professional, to whom flying is a way of life, moves through a world more exciting than the wildest paperback ever conceived. The pilot commands his destiny more completely, yet is at the mercy of more possibilities, than any other person. He knows the sky as intimately as a trout its lake. Nowhere is there greater safety, or danger. Radar, weather forecasts, instruments, and navigation' aids extend his senses hundreds of miles. And the final decision, in every flying problem, is made solely by the pilot. The Career Pilot program at J.C.B.C. is preparing students for this demanding profession. The student pilot receives approximately ten hours of actual flight training, with an instructor. Then he steps out, and says, Take it around the field once. ln a perfectly controlled panic the fledgling adiusts the trim tab for for the lost weight, takes off, circles the airport, makes his first solo landing. lf he believes that he is now a pilot, he soon learns differently. Intensive courses in meteorology, aerodynamics, navigation, and other as- pects of aviation will make him aware of the complex nature of the airman's world. More than one hundred hours of flying instruction, cross country and instru- ment simulated flights, complete his training. .vsfiz asm, 19- , . ,J-' ' . - Ciriedgcgl l mlQll553R I5 X Student begins pre-flight check of airplane. Of the numerous safety precautions in flying, this is probably the most important. The pilot makes a visual check of every part. This is to detect any mishap that might have occurred while plane was on the ground. Even an insect in the pilot tube, if unnoticed or unremoved, can cause an accident. s. 1 9 A Z , 'sc 5 I - X F A X . , Instructor Edward Gargen waits as student-pilot Marko Milobar acliusts throttle of Cherokee 140. The Cherokee is the perfect aircraft for pilot training at J.C.B.C. Its fast rate-of-climb and top speed of 140 M.P.H. prepare students for later high performance commercial airliners. 57 After training flight, Student-pilot David Gauger wheels plane back into place. An hour closer to his Private Pilot license, he has been practicing aerial maneuvers such as S-turns and stalls. sf It ix-7 Q I Y f 5 ' X fx , Q . 1 f. 'SQ N vi . f .asf H , -V V I.. Instructor and student go over previous training flight. ln time, flying will become a set of re- flexes, but now the student goes through the long process of realizing and eliminating mis- takes. His instructor went through much the same experiences, and understands the student's problems. Unlike other iunior college pilot training, the in- structors at J.C.B.C. conduct both classroom and flight instruction. Their vast experience is staggering. Colonel William Bowen, ret., does the day and night classroom lectures. Glen Coleman, the chief flight in- structor, flew a B-24 Liberator in the Pacific during World War ll. Edward Gargan, who is also a Federal Aviation Agency Examiner, has flown more than 20,- OOO hours! Mr. Coleman said, I have attempted to bring in the best men I could, in order to offer a quality program. But the cost of the program to the student is a great obstacle. The tuition is 352,280 for commercial pilot training. Even veterans can find it insurmount- able. The G.I. Bill only pays for pilot training that leads to a Bachelor of Science Degree - ruling out two year programs. Mr. John Scigliano, Chairman of the Division of Technical Education, said, This is the result of fraudulent schools in the early post-war period. I have evidence that aid to veterans will in- clude our type of program before the next Fall term. Non-veterans find financial aid difficult to Obtain. Every student who has walked from the library to the student center knows the name, Buehler. The same man, Emil Buehler, who made possible our planetarium also donated the airplanes to our avia-' tion program. Mr. Buehler, with almost four decades of aviation behind him, is now designing an execu- tive-type airplane with a cabin pressurized to 30,- OOO'. Unlike many companies, which use a large team of engineers, Mr. Buehler is doing most of the design- ing himself. As we sat by his conference table, with its large onyx panther, he related his philosophy on dona- tions. He doesn't like to contribute to organized charities as he feels that too many of their funds go into salaries etc, Mr. Buehler also looks down on willing money to charities to use after death. He likes to see his contributions in action, in areas that he believes are important. An engaging man, Mr. Bueh- ler shows that the private individual still plays a great role in modern mass society. The airplanes he donated are Piper Cherokee 14O's a sweet, single-engined, two-place cabin mono- plane. It takes off in only 725 feet, yet has a top speed of 140 M.P.H. Able to climb 820 feet per minute, it reaches an altitude of l7,000'. With a range of 600 miles, the Cherokee can use radio navigation aids. The program now consists of six planes and ap- proximately 70 students, With the great demand for good pilots, the program will expand. Edward Kotchi, Dean of Technical Education, said, Mr. Buehler plans to give the college more planes. The college is also considering courses in air traffic control and stew- ardess training. fx t 4 C, KWL Q SQ L I 1' wr -fit. 12s f 9' J fl' E ttl , 3'-W' . . . VVho needs money to hare a good time! It cant be paid for anyway. t0'+ QD + imagination - -f FU XCITEMENT is in great abundance in the Fort Lauder- dale area for those of you who are endowed with an imagination and creative ability to discover the natural resources of this great wonderland of fun. If you happen to be broke, don't worry. YVho needs money to have a good time? It canit be paid for anyway. From the start of a day waste no time that can be devoted to the out-of-doors. Wake up early with a cheerie attitude, look out- side and smile. Wander down to the Atlantic shore. The sand is a world of entertainment. Try to forget your age for a whileg build a sand castle or dig a hole and bury yourself. Then wait for the tide to get you! Take a walk through Port Ever- gladesg look at the shipsg watch them dock and cast off. Nearly every weekend some war vessel will be in port, holding open- house for the public with guided tours through the ships. There are many woods in the area quite a few right near the campus that canit be beat for a picnic or just a hike. If you should be unable to find any By james Higgins ILLUSTRATED BY PAUL IIARDIXC woods, South Florida affords beautiful parks such as Hugh Taylor Birch State Park and Greynolds Park. At either park you can paddle your own canoe or paddle boat on a delightful fresh water lagoon surrounded by a wild and romantic atmosphere. The canoes and boats are rented at the park for a very reasonable fee. lust dont forget a picnic basket. Climb trees, walk, talk or capsize your canoe. If you are one to enjoy sailing, there are several places where a sailboat can be rented. One is in Miami near Dinner Key auditor- ium. Closer to the school is one on Fort Lauderdale beach near Birch State Park. At both the Atlantic ocean is your play- ground. Crandon Park Zoo is among the finest zoos in the nation. All types of animal life from the stork to buffalo can be observed there. YVho knows, you might even find the missing link in your family tree. . . . dinner at a swanlcy place isnyt too practical for the average student. Besides the zoo. Crandon Park has a large amusement park. Xllio can think of anything more en- joyable than a ride on a merry go-round? Vvhile at Nliami stop at Bax Front park and feed the pigeons The Florida attractions arent stamped tourists only. They will treat you and your date to fi l W x Q! - . k II, 'j a yt Cf 2 Q. 5 qu 9' 3 c.. 59 1 'N J, 5 Q1 X 5... ij. movies are your jJl'l'f0l'0llCl'. fry ng one in cz foreign language. a wonderful surprise. just try onel Many of them. like Pioneer City and Ocean XYorld, are not only entertaining. but educational. Lets go fishing. just relax wherever fish can be found. Imagine resting on the bank of a lake with your favorite date on one arm and a fishing pole in the other. XValk out on the pier and catch the main course for the beach party you planned for that night. Bc aware of how lucky you are to have an ocean. No one can vouch for this more than a surfer. When you hear his cry usurfs up, grab a hoard and whether you can surf or not. at least try. You may have a ball. Along the same lines is the sport of water skiing. And Ft. Lauderdale with its endless wa- terways, is the original water skiers paradise. Anyone of the coffee houses, such as the Caslight in Coconut Crovc and the Flick in Coral Cables, provides top quality folk entertainment. The collegiate at- mosphere created is enjoyed by beatniks and college students alike. Double with someone who has a car besides yourself. Find out what time a plane leaves from Miami to Ft. Lauderdale. Leave one car at the Ft. Lauderdale 60 ANYO airport before picking up your dates. Co to the Miami Interna- tional Airport with dates, being sure to keep everything secret, tell them its just to watch the people walk around. Suggest that everyone walk down a specific concourse at the specific time. Surprisel as you and your dates climb aboard a magnificent Mack- ey DC-6 and take off into the blue, bound for Ft. Lauderdale. All for S250 per person. The airport in Miami really is interest- ing. You can have fun just watch- ing the big jets land and take off. XVithout any trouble. you should be able to find a pilot to show you his ship and to explain it. Another sport popular among all sets is horseback riding, al- though it is expensive. The feel of an animal as large and strong as a horse whisking you along at a fast gallop or moseying at a peaceful trot can be equaled by few sports. As the sun slips below the hori- zon to make room for the night, your attention turns to other types of entertainment. Start with dinner. Any one of the many inexpen- sive dinner restaurants in the area are most sufficient. Most of these offer a full course steak dinner for under SZ. Cafeteria atmosphere is not conducive for an enjoyable date and dinner at a swanky place isnit too practical for the average JCBC student. For an unusual dinner date, hop aboard a train to Palm Beach or anywhere and have dinner in the diner. Then ride the next train back. Before getting on. make sure the train is connected to a diner. Miami Beach offers a wonder- land of nighttime sights and pro- vides a world of things to do. Don a coat and tie to make a grand tour of Hotel Row. XValk through several of the hotels and observe the people, they are quite interesting you know. The Fountainbleau is a must for your tour, with its vast and impressive convention halls. Here a thou- sand things can come true with- out spending a dime. You can kiss in a large room lined with mirrors or dance to an imaginary orchestra of your choice at the ze should ever' he ulife lo say lhal in this greol slnle of Florida lhey eanll find any enlcrloinmenl . . . ball youve always dreamed of.' Present, in your honor, are world dignitaries, personalities and stars. Here for you and your date it is true until the eerie echo of silence brings you back and you notice yourself all alone in a room large enough for a fox hunt. Then you can climb to the roof and prepare for an exquisite view of the Magic City at night. 1 After a slow window-gazing, F walk along Lincoln Road Mall.. Stop in one of the many restau--i rants of foreign cuisine, from 1 jewish to Spanish, Italian to Ori- ental, for a snack. How about watching a wrest- T ling match in the smoke filledi Miami Beach Convention hall orl War Memorial in Ft. Lauderdale? l Both have first rate matches. - And, of course, most worthl your while are the various cul- tural affairs. art exhibits and! stage productions. You will notice that movies: have not been mentioned. Al-l though showing in great abun-1 dance they rarely lend themselves I for a successful date. Seldom doj they avail themselves intellectu-4 ally and are rarely worth then price paid for the tickets. It is i wise to check the reviews before l investing. However, if movies are i your preference, try seeing onei in a foreign language. P.S. No one should ever be' able to say that in this great state of Florida they canlt find any entertainment or be able to com- plain about the drinking age be- - ing too high. Use your imagina- tion and don't hesitate to try any idea you might come up with. Something new is almost always i ,P - Al? fun. f ff X X X l l I it lg! W I ' -xi' I U I lipid Pl l -fps -Aimee mam -fag? , de Zena a e Pach derm appealing to the backlash vote, Kirk borrowed Marylandis George Mahoney's fDemocratic candi- date for governorj slogan of Your home is your castle-protect it! High never took a definite stand, but it was well known that he openly courted the Negro vote. Kirk labeled High an 'ultra-1ibera1,' which is not the kind of reputation a candidate wants in Florida. Looking at High's primary victory in May, it becomes apparent how he lost in November. He used a combination of the big Dade and Negro block votes to slip into the runoff. Here, Scott Kelly and his supporters rallied to his side to defeat Burns. After the primary, the Kelly people felt they had done their job and left High with only little more than his initial support. With Scott Kelly remaing on High's team, another split opened between Don Petit, High's campaign manager, and Kelly. Petit told High to concentrate on the large population areas: Kelly insisted that the rural areas of North Florida Were most important. Three things resulted from this clash: Petit left the organization, High lost the elec- tion, and Kelly went into political oblivion. High needed at least a 150,000 vote margin out of Dade county, but received only 50,000. This was more than offset by Kirk's upstate win. High car- ried only nine other counties, and these were by small margins. 61 I , 1 -'-, 1 'O 4. A 1 J. Herbert Burke speaks with students on campus prior to the November elections. He defeated his opponent, joe Varon, for the congressional seat by almost 30,000 Votes. The victory of Kirk ushers in a new shape in Florida politics. No longer will the Democratic pri- mary be the determinant as to who will be the next governor. No longer will the Republican primary go unnoticed. Obviously, the chances of future Republican candidates rests squarely on the shoulders of Claude Kirk. Should he fail, it could be a long time before another Republican governor is elected in Florida. Kirk's victory was only part of large Republican gains across the country. Pollsters had predicted moderate gains, but this was not to be the case. It is hard to evaluate the Republican resurgence as figures alone do not express the meaning of it all. The question in the minds of many Americans after 1964 was not if the Republicans could win again, but rather if they would survive. Richard Nixon, in only a slight overstatement, said, This year is the year that the Republican party either goes up-or out . The Republicans did more than come back from the brink. They made massive gains overshadowing those lost in 1964. But more important, they re- established themselves in the minds of Americans as an effective political power. In the House of Representatives, the Republi- cans surged from a 295-140 deficit to a workable minority of 248-187, a net gain of 47. This margin re-establishes the Republican-Southern Democrat coalition and spells certain doom to LBJ's 'Great Society'. The gain was well over the off-year aver- explains why Johnson wants to mid-term balloting. the Republicans picked up three ages and perhaps do away with the In the Senate, seats but more important, it gave them some bright new faces. Hatfield of Oregon, Percy of Illinois, and 62 Brooke of Massachusetts fthe first Negro elected by popular vote to the U.S. Senatej will all be heard from in the future. Without question, the largest gains were made in the governorships. Before the election, the Demo- crats controlled 33 statehouses to only 17 for the Republicans. The voting saw the Republicans taking ten states away from the Democrats while losing only two. This gain of eight fperhaps nine if Georgia is ever straightened outj gives the Repub- licans 25 governorships compared to 24 for the Democrats and a firm political base to launch the party's presidential drives of 1968 and 1972. The big winner has to be California's Ronald Reagan who defeated Governor Pat Brown by al- most a million votes. In Michigan, George Romney won his expected landslide, but of greater signifi- cance, he displayed powerful coat tails by pulling Senator Griffen and many others to victory with him. Finally, in New York, Nelson Rockefeller came from what appeared to be certain defeat a few months earlier to re-election for a third term. These Republican governorships give the party control of seven of the nine most populous states, making the future look bright indeed. No longer does the Republican party throw up its hands in utter despair at the prospects of 1968. Rather, it looks to the future with high hopes. The Republi- cans will go to their convention in '68 looking for a winner and with the firm belief that they CAN win. One can only speculate as to the future, but one thing is certain: the Republicans are a vigorous party again as a result of 1966, an election that will have to go down as the year of the pachyderm. The conquest of space is worth the risk of life. Virgil I. Grissom A T 6:31 p.m., on the night of January 27, 1967, three astronauts left this Earth for the last time. Virgil l. Gus Grissom, Edward 1-l. White Il, and Roger B. Chaffee ioined the honor roll of those who have laid down their lives to pay the terrible price of progress. These men were unique in many ways, they were part of that breed which seeks always to go a little higher and a little faster, men who could perform superbly on their own while being fiercely proud of their membership on a team, and who were never afraid to take the first steps where man had never walked before. These were men who few of us ever had the privilege of meeting, but whose tragic deaths came as a deep and personal loss to us all. They died pursuing a dream which has been shared by all mankind since the dim and distant past, the dream of flight. The urge to reach for the stars, and to burst free from the planet of our birth was the goal for which they gave their lives. But as cruel and senseless as their deaths now seem, they have not died in vain. Others of their breed will take up the awesome task which they lay aside. Other men will bury their sorrow and rededi- cate themselves to the goal of their fallen comrades. This is as it should be, and this is how they, them- selves, would have wished it to be. As Grissom once said for them all: If we die, we want people to accept it. We are in a risky busi- ness, and we hope that if anything happens to us it will not delay the program. The conquest of space is worth the risk of life. And so it is, that to these brave pioneers, Virgil l. Grissom, Edward H. White ll, and Roger B. Chaffee, and to their dream, that the editors and staff humbly dedicate Silver Sands ll, 1966-67. A Z J Vg 71 -9-, , hm is 3.-, I ' A as rl! VM,-0' ffaqxai ggish x,4 I ' ' Q' X 1' Q 1? lf W f , gflv Y I J ' 3,5 .',S, X k -f WWE' 3 'EJ G gg. X N K . ,ws X L, vb -1 66 V50 ,ffr Ji A 2 ,Q- ,sb. 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T Y at ted Rhodes expl 8 holds hodes R uct of Odessa Junior 'College in Texas, prod A be loca -e L- 9 5 0 J: 4.. .E HC, 4-4 L- O 1- 'C C 5 .id u ba 'ng will vell Cox It of Texas. Univers ty the ..- from th Ma Master degree in Arts and UNH Junior the of president former Rushing, J o e Dr. hat I here t WSIS ClOf. work as an instru O ie t O I1 L he hat t ked IIS and him et TTI College Q1 -1 ..- ..- '- .1 .- C L- 3 .- Z 5 'L ,- ..- .... ., L .- 2.3 VI CA 0 'C O .C 5 L, '- .- 3 V1 ,S 11 ,m L-4 CU GJ P. V7 ..- F' ..- DD ,- .- 2 Folio ICS. Phys '- ..- .d D- ..: .: C :.c c: E 5- c 3 VZ ..- Sli GJ 1 o .c D4 S2 -'I C CJ 5- S- :J U CL f- .- ,- .I L4 C 'LJ .- Cu 'J '- .- .- 4-I '- - O U O 6-4 Su CL 'la ..- E U L- O 'E I3 '1 oi C . .- C . ,- - .-J '- s.' '- A -a .- SL C E I C ,.. ..- Z' - '- -. A Q ,- ...- C 11 - 3 -. u '- ...- lu f CI U 4-J C C s.. :L 19 .:: I ..- .'- 1 1 Z ,.. I-' Q '54 5 1, L- 3 1 '- '- FS v-1 rx. 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D- .E d faced ha ey th superior to any far Dade against HHCC l'I'l st perfor his be .E 'U GJ C2 L.. tu years. points. 14 with orth N in aI't8I'S St three SSW end n's SO The sea spot action Buster Lane saw continuous cagers. Seahorse M G! GJ E 'ri wb-l UZ GS .-1 GJ .CI 4-' L.. O '-A-4 C! O ..- 4-I U CU C t . V Ll I'1 Bobby Kennedy, Greg Fitzpatrick and Bm in every contest, and hit the rim for 14' points Mandeville will graduate this year, after two agalhst the Lauderdale Lakers f0f his best successful years on the BJC cage squad. All effort Of the season- three w re important factors in Morris' plans, .Lel'0Y Sehwabi had his best flight against and, as the head mentor puts it, they will Efllseh JC lh Whleh he saw the het f0l' 13 be hard to replace , points, while Ron Petre's supreme performance Bur one thing that makes the Outlook for came in .the form of 16 points against Lauder- next year's team a little brighter, despite the dale Kmgllts' , . loss of these three men, is the fact that eight .Rlcli Reeves best mgllt was also .the members of this year's squad will be returning. Klllghts game' Where he lllt for 14 polms' With one year of action under their belts, Whlle Nal-Clsqo. Escobal' rebounded ll-Om.8ll these boys will provide the nucleus for next early Seagoll llllllly to score l8 polllts agams year's team, that could prove to be the answer lllcllan Rlvel JC' . . to Morris, prohiemsi i Of the thiiieei retirmig cageirs, all of wcliiom Dom Avello' an ex'MCAlthu 'le' will head lixioixstrickrnhad uiiusioeciouspegaciihreasansssvdoulilg the list of talented cagers next season, and he figures with his best effort a whopping 33 brings with him some impressive credentials. points against the U of Miami freshmen Bobby In his first season as a Seahorse, the spunky Kennedys high Score came against Dade South guard led all Scores Wltll ll l7'3 average' on where the lanky sophomore hit for 22 while 163 fleld goals and 88 fl-ee throws ln 24 games' Bill Mandeville scored 22 against the Ilauder- His fine overall play and continuous hustle dale Knights Kennedy red the -Horses in re earned him a starter's position on .this year's hounds wirh'143 for the Season- team, and should prove to ,be a decisive factor Fitzpatrick was Chosen the .Most Valuable to the Success of next years Squad' Player' on the squad and presented x ith a I But Qne man doesnyt make me team- Avelle handsome trophy at the season's end. The 5'l1' Wlll he Jelhed hy seVeh Of his '65357 team' guard was chosen for his fine all around play males- Bob Safffah- Bllslel' Lane, Tom Gflmmv and his desire and hustle. He also finished the rn ':: N go mb L. 50 O Q2 Q.. V75 ai 'Sm on '-'U ci QL- '- cu? ag cs 3... no E? 31.5 'C .E:-3-4 223 Wm Ln S Sf' Q f.:-2 5:0 e wg 3 .Eg cva:,j', safe c: Sm L: mm cn 'ow ' if S an Ui Zio w by W Wai UL. C'- Ufwr, .2 .cf-lg :J is 3 ca 2-3 'A HG in 32.5 ...Cz 15:25 o3c:.':. D4 92 Eng ease 2222 Emi-H5 OO m51:: S1254 mg, .JZKA more successful one next year. to for oked are being lo 'O C S L: G O Pi :n ...- .C Q-3 cr: U :A L.. O .C Q02 ,A -ll A.,-E FA LF f 'I 2-3.17 '13 U10 .... V... 'TZ FT :m A A-L A LO AFS :I il? 'f-0 AA V. f-1 A. N-in-4 ning 2.22 A ....-7 .,, 'J 751 f-+A C ...A J. CA 'A'!.,--' '-'A E: 51 'I :TE 0.1. Cf-'w -ft Z F ... I I ff Ll 'J 3 PN A C F A 'E C ,... A. u: rv : P- I A :A 7: f- A ,....... 'Kf f F5 N A- C ff .H-' - ...A A 'Z Z..-A 2' ff ... A Q A.. L1 -1 A F: ETL 415 C :J A... .... 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Ranked in the fifth erence P ay tlrougc H76 mtl C es' fel' gave 3 S01 e' position, Betty is a reliably steady player and with a featgd Marymount O ege In out O Con erence P ay' little experience under her belt should be even better Thelr only losses came to two non-conference teams, next ear one to the University of Florida and one to the Unlver- A y ' n ' I I sity of South Florida. Both of these are four-year In the with P051t10U 13 Sandl' Saundefsml- One Of colleges. the better dioubles playersn on the squad, Sandy is Chris Koutras, a cute, short-haired blonde is leading Classlfled as 3 g00d PlaY9f bl' her Coach and team' the team as the top seeded player. She carries adequate malw- CI'edeHtl3.lS tO llOld tl'llS SpOt HS She iS 21150 I'3.HkCd In the other positigus are Renee Bayuk in the f0Uffh in the State Ollf Uf all the Women tennis PIHYQTS seventh-seeded position, Caroline King in eighth Bar- here- bara Wood ranked ninth and Celeste Grillo in the Toni Barone a freshman, holds down the second tenth and final position, spot as the second-seeded player. At the moment she A I .l f . I h isn't ranked state-wide because she hasnit competed in I . mcg? .hey CSD erelice Wllfls' he matters ave any recent tournaments. 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Not a religious hook, but a theological, and P9111-cg: It ig scntimcntal bccausc convicts art' socicty owes inc morc of a debt than I owc it yct it is disguised because I didnt lnvan this vi-ry sf-ntimcntal pcoplc. just as womcn,h01ISO- . . . and . . . oh, isn't it terriblc . . You to bc a thesis. an cssav. wivcs, gft thc blamc for bt-ing gossips. lint, know , . . It is rcally phony. I can't think of a i 'A-4' f-nd :TZ ... -.1 V:- r-:- 'Q :.- L 9 .a CCS gf- A.-. .. Ili-. 9 Sa.. vi 1.- Q-.I oi ,-CI -. is 'v-1 .- :CL gi ..- cr: F-fm' FJ Zu- -C i: g AC C': L.. I-.. 1... -, cf:- -.- 'L -Q: ..- CLC F-5 F 'Hat 51 FF TZ S3 2 :az '-n .-.., iw- '71 fc .i 'CL m- ...- .- -..,.. 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'- ' K .,x xi' . 1 A-if H 'Ns N -s '., 'al Q' :ps ,.-1 I.-if ,. .-11 .Qi-7' f H J- .W- iff. if-, l-,Y f 'S ly f ' Q Q M521 rr 1 I- - r I- - rl f 1 f 1 , f f 1 rf . . . ETE SEECER captured the hearts of an like to be a newspaper reporter, like yourself, better than any method I've tried, is to have estimated 3,000 people of all ages and races but was totally unsuccessful finding a job. One my wife behind me, running the translated who attended his concert at the Miami Beach day a friend came to me, and told me he could words around a screen as I sing. I've found Convention Hall, Sunday, Ianuary 22. get me a job singing to young children. Then that in some countries I have to el' inate I ' , . . g V one thing led to another, and here I am. humorous songs altogether. I'll sing a funny I1 SPN' Qt lllclwts 'wld bU1llb.t1m'ut5 film' verse and no one gets it. They just sit there tending Petes cominunistie affhatlons, the folk mud Stare' I gums ips because different Cultures singer performed hrilhantly. Ile sang to enter- SS: hat kind of audiences do you like most? luwe different fvpes of humor- tain the audience as if they were friends in the , . , , , A ' privacy of his living room. IIe joked of wine, PS: I mfg to Sfllg t0 fmyofle who hkfls t0,h5,teH women, and song, told stories in the off-the-cuff ff' mf' Smgg Amcfm' Russumj Egylmfmxsyllani SS: Are you often pieketed. as you were to- fashion, and made social and political comments Spflnlsh' frflnch, and EDghSh', AH of them' night? on the predieznnents of today's world. 559319 fllil-IQ1l1f71f5f'llf'f1l 1i11lil1f7jI7:1Eig5E 2?fl1li'VFl:Z PS I didlft know dun wwe mv pitkktq hen 1 -e e se. u ues: 'X ' 1 2 ' X X 1 , N H '. One of the strongest protest songs Pete sang, goung people, the iollege students. They're the Once in a while, but not too often. I find the was introduced in this manner: lf you don't fmgg that will Show ug the way, people who do the picketing very often dont like this song, you don't haue to like it. 'Muddy even know what or why they are picketing. VValer' was in protr st of the war in Viet Nam They have a right to he there. and its all right. and the arhninistration's policies regarding our SS: In foreign Countries' where you perform, they don't do any harm.m One time l walked presence there, do you find' .I lqngufmc h.u.l.icl.'P through a line ol aliout Q0 of them, and they . . . L 1 t' l ' didn't even know who l nas. I ollonlng thnx encore s and a standing ova D, A tion, I'ete went lo his dressing room lo change. IS: Ol WIS' 1' Willy Slmnf: Ono' 8 ll S known Q L A -.1 .- Q ,- ,.. ... ,. .4 O - -4 C Y -un v .- ,- v If f A -4 1 an-1 m a a f r C -.J ,- ..f ,... V A A ..1 :ft E fu ... 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U hich CW W9I'9 6V81'yOIle if and driverg uld be a safe W0 USGS C3 ohol alc accidents, SGS Call peed S ts, den uld VO result L s carsj the ngerou st as da CO 9 ffl Sa T10 be ould W STC h hen t fe, careful driver t S3 3 acci- SSS C311 f intelligence O ck la accidents, and ould W ho idual w .3 'U .E Lv E cu V2 cv -Cl P' 4-i C: cv I.-4 aa '-OH f .I'. 'U an .D TL: 4-5 U7 ents, Why in accid HO there are If ts. STI accid cept De- GX ents s accid S6 rything cau V9 dents. E GJ U2 CU GJ .- OJ L-4 4-4 .-4 C14 .D -GJ CYS GJ an .52 .E rn U1 CD L- O- E D O 3 FU. .2 'U CD D CU .CI rx. rn L' cu .D safety OI' column llapsible steering CO 8 de- gfl ve, however, that desi I'0 P facts The 4-4 ..- O L- 4- button, open the door, or crawl out a conven- is SITOI' that human agrees Government countless of CQLISS the ficiencies have been agent. DCE SL1!'8 in S hi call and window, ent i automobile acci- f O Se portant cau im st ITIO the fatal accidents. me a new car. That monologue is more Send have defic encies ..- echanical l'1'1 hough dents, Alt f- p0 im he statistics, t and he facts Despite t pleasant than last rites. an, accidents, m l ta yfa an TH for le 'Q m C'- O O- rn CD L- C GJ GJ .D C1 CU CJ ..- L- an E 4 'U CI cu l-I ru U Z 5-4 -C U YU. I-4 o LT- 2 U K5 C cu E 4- C G! 4-4 O 4-4 'U CU -C IA CU .Ci 4-F CI '14 4-4 7 0.4 'O OJ 4-4 ..- .E CU O 4-4 .ti O L- 4-4 Q5 Q Ih cu .Q ln. f: .9 cn. CU Vi o E o .:: .- CD .-4 43 Tv -- 4-4 'J .D NJ 51 4-4 -C ,ED E CU GJ -C 4-4 L C F-1 G4 9 o S5 4-T C CU .CZ U 'U C CYS L- GJ -CI 44 CU DB O 4-4 W band D0 FS t0 Mo eak com- s res. W de ment's ETH h gov t YW mpl CO ..- ...- ien- SC CII r se. Wh pe ausen LLC rect indi he t been ough cause, as th hout wit persecution nt ITIG OHIO- Hut nd se legislation, strong laws, a IT1 l'O P ..- noted that is it applied, principles are t fic .-4 and injury do not constitute unnecessary death SOIH9 that insure ts GD a greem Pany COYI1 bile I'I'13I'lS hu f O rt pa he t 0I'1 avior eh b rrational i ry good cause. V9 El TS' O U made. s been ha gress I'O death p L.- O GJ V7 D G3 U 4-4 U 112 L- 'E GJ .c 4-V 4-3 :1 .Q m. 4- C QJ CU an GJ Ln I5 G3 U L1 o S-1 5-4 cu C :Ls E 3 .-C 4-3 cu -C: Q-4 VJ ..- CJ V: Ci Q L4- :LJ .-4 O r- .- . - E UZ F: c O 4-4 GJ Q n cars have certain safety C3 Ameri 967 All 1 packaging per I'O mp of sult F9 he st TY ..- ..- and inju fe- sentatives FC' The auto rep accidents. CHLISGS ' SRV? lx SED, will definite s which, IF U F9 aiu fe upants. CC O f O ould rivers w d f the i at h t nt pcatedly comme Cornell Aero- 1960 A ny lives? 18 U OW lives. H is ash FCI' C8 f a O ictim V ed unrestrain he T roblems at P vc their rc-ful, lea C21 OYC ITI be only L . .- .,- O .- L- ..- 'J .- L- .- -4 Calif udy in ies st aborator L nautical hboarrl, das Q4 .CI 4-4 O -0-' .E .2 U7 O 4-4 CJ GJ L- H-1 Z4 GJ 4-4 absolu 5. ad condition YO thc to cording C.. -4 L- drive 14 4- C O -E '14 .- .- L- tlic injury s would reduce lt be Ht S9 ted C3 lly T98 he if and windshield. heel, W eering st 50,000 r nk ng to someone else, cl eavc thc- 'C C C25 an V r: c an ..- O : 'T ..- . k. ,S L4 O ..- .. L- 9. O ..- .- G ..- 'S le- 1. .S .- Ui Ol :- .Q s: Q4 41 9 -f: C14 Q. .cz C LT. 6-4 :a o ui 'o ro o CU .c 4-4 W4-1 o GJ DE CU 4-f E 5 -:J U3 U7 Q4 .-If CU 4-4 L-4 CJ -1: 4-3 UU L-4 UT L: 3 .E CL : 5 E O 3- ..- O E' c B L- O Ps C11 u .- .- 9 OJ .- .- .4 .- .- 'I f ...- ,- .- 2 r .-1 -4 L- 14 .- ..- .- C. .- L.. 1 L.: '14 .- 4-4 L.. -LI '14 -. 4-4 4-4 ...- CU I .- .- C 4- C V1 ..- .- ..- 4-4 r-1 L- ..- 4- - 4-4 Cl. 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Suggestions in the Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) collection:

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Broward Community College - Silver Sands Yearbook (Fort Lauderdale, FL) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970


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