St Andrews Presbyterian College - Lamp and Shield / Bagpipe Yearbook (Laurinburg, NC)
- Class of 1969
Page 1 of 256
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 256 of the 1969 volume:
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1969 LAMP AND SHIELD ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE LAURINBURG, NORTH CAROLINA VOL.8 RAY RIDDLE - EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ELLEN RICHARDSON - ASSISTANT EDITOR SCOTT McCREA-COPY EDITOR GEORGE SHAFFER - BUSINESS MANAGER SBI € [IXCILLINCI FOR CHRIST £v Ml . Laurinburg Administration Faculty Student Association The S. A. Student 1968 - 1969 First Semester Winter Term Second Semester Organizational Rosters Advertisements Indices Epilog page 2 page 18 page 32 page 56 page 74 page 90 page 106 page 154 page 184 page 217 page 221 page 242 page 248 fr V 3«3 UuRinBURQ: The American southland has long been a land unto itself, a culture dis- tinctly apart in her history and tradi- tion, but at the same time distinctly American in her culture. The South has created a culture that has defied time and space, remaining a land apart from the mainland; it is a land of cow towns and hog towns, of shiny new cities that seem to ask justifi- cation for the shacks along the high- ways. The South is personified by historic seaports and one-light back- water towns, of century old mansions and tenant farmers ' hovels. Here is a tradition of great contrast. The names of the cities bear out the differences . . . Raleigh, Charleston, -Savannah; the names suggest pillared plantation houses, azaleas, dogwoods, magnolias, long sloping lawns an d mint juleps on the veranda. It is the honored tradi- tion, the tangible reminders of the old landed aristocracv that once was the South. Then there are names like McColl, Lumberton. Americus; they suggest the other south, the tradition that is not in the best of taste to call attention to. This is the tradition of the drv flatland existence in the fields that will grow onlv cotton, the patchwork shacks with dirt floors, and the filthv children that play in that dirt. The sign on the highway reads Laur- inburg, All America City, so we pause here a moment or a year, and we meet the All Americans. We drive the broad oak-shaded lanes and absorb the traditionally American small town flavor of it all . . . the children on their bikes, dogs barking after cars, high schoolers with Dad ' s car at the Cone. And as we drive the broad lanes, it is startling to suddenly notice that the houses along the street have become shabbier, the green lawns turned to dirt. Is this the same street? Can these be the same citizens of the same town? One almost feels there should be a sign explaining that each street of All Americans is divided into the first and second teams. But there is no sign, no explanation — this is the way things are in the All Ameri- can city, necessitating no rationale. No reasons are ever offered, nor should they be requested. The houses metamorphize quietly from red brick to rotting boards, the cool asphalt roadwav to dust. The childrens ' fine clothes have become ill fitting rags, the pets a bit less healthy; and one notices that the skins have turned black. S ;- MAKE MORE MONEY WITH McHAIR C I I I U! ! S 2 -- : r -;■- ■B M2NAIR Laurinburg, with the accent on the drawl ... a town of textile men, gen- eral stores and countless banks, home of Norma ' s and Tony Spaghetti, Springs Mills, Johns-Manville, Mor- gan Mills; the names attest to the in- dustry of the town. Cotton dots the fields annually, forcing recognition that in this part of the South cotton is still king. The citizens claim Laur- inburg is a progressive town now; her economy is expanding, and unem- ployment is at a lower level than ever before — the mills are full. This is Laurinburg ' s bid to join the New South, but there are those who claim Laurinburg has no bid to make. In- tegration is often of the token variety, and we doubt that the All American Selection Committee saw Washington Park. Her struggle to become part of the New South is hampered by backward vestiges and incongruities. The city fathers point proudly to Scotland High, vociferously pro- claimed a monument of progress . . . yet the Bond issue that would have provided $1,000,000 more for educa- tion in the county was voted down in October, 1968. The South will move forward, but her rate of progress is often erratic. Head south on Main, out past KFC and fresh as a flower in just one hour, till the cotton fields part to reveal in the distance an array of sand colored buildings rising rather majestically from reclaimed swamp land. Shim- mering in the September heat waves, the modernistic stonehenge bears tes- timony to Presbyterian persever- ance and scholastic endeavor. It was Jeremy Clyde who doubted he was really going to find anything out here ; but he did, and so have we. We ' ve found a college in the midst of an identity quest, that is often felt to be hampered by the lack of a met- ropolitan focus. Laurinburg is a pro- vincial, distinctly southern town, but to deny that town is to deny the wealth that caused the college ' s exis- tence. The arrangement is reciprocal: the town that built us exists in and of itself, but St. Andrews often quali- fies that existence. ST. ANDlEfJ NBMPIHUI AMUR as i Hon mm All too often Laurinburg is noted for its inadequacies, at least in the eyes of the relatively cosmopolitan SA student. The town can be dull and uninspiring — Scotland county is re- ferred to as a cultural vacuum — but then college students are overly wont to criticize these days. Still, the stu- dents ' participation in town affairs is largelv restricted to attending its various churches and patronizing its businesses, and in some cases even that is eliminated; SA has made the mayor of McColl richer than any Laurinburg merchant. Still, econo- mics remain the major link between the town and the college. The frosh discover Main Street, USA. They face their first dilemmas in the choice of City Barber or Angus Mclnnis, Cen- ter or Gibson, but save their favorite dollars for Mr. Rogers. n Still, there are exceptions; the unher- alded Christian Council ' s peace corps, and its tutoring program, that chan- nels a bit of the college climate into the underprivileged ' area of town . . . and vice versa. It is often difficult to discern who leams more; the tutor or the tutee. The construction crew can build a new front porch on a ramshackle East Laurinburg dwell- ing, but it takes more than nails to build self respect and education. But is that our concern? Can ' t we remain an isolated community-, ignoring the poverty outside our sandstone gates? We ' ve obviously shown we can, but also that we don ' t have to. St. An- drews must decide for herself, if she is to be able to define her role in the community. Our gates don ' t need to shut on those in whose midst we live. 5 5 13 Laurinburg is a college town now, perhaps not in the same sense as Cambridge, nor even Chapel Hill; yet for the SA community, Laurinburg must fulfill her role as the other side of a college student ' s education, the social coming of age of the student. Academics is only half the story, and sometimes less than half . . . education involves the growth of the student as a citizen and as a social animal as well as a campus -bound study ma- chine. Laurinburg, then, often be- comes the focus of a student ' s first community interaction, though per- haps even here we are limited; while French students rioted against national policy last spring, three or four SA students marched on City Hall for the cause of race relations. Significant, though, is the sincerity of the students ' involvement rather than the magnitude. - « i g{ - • V • r I k ' ( 15 What we have then is an eclectic gathering of students descending on a town the likes of which most have never seen. Reactions vary, usuall) according to the style of the place from which they came; some laugh, others condemn, a few simply ignore Laurinburg. It is possible to spend four years at St. Andrews and never come into real contact with the cul- ture around us; it is possible, but if that is how we choose to spend our college experience, then we have real- ized onlv half of the total experience. We cannot stay within our walls; to experience St. Andrews without ex- periencing Laurinburg is a cop-out. The culture in which we interact is fundamental to the St. Andrews stu- dent, if he is indeed a student. mm A6ministRAtion= If 1968 was a good year for George Wallace and Dick Nixon, it was Ex- cedrin headache No. 69 for incumbent Presidents. Consider that in 1968, President Johnson wrestled with such problems as Vietnam, racial violence in the cities, gun control, nuclear disarmament and the national budget. Ansley C. Moore that same year had to act on such matters as open dorms in a church related school, drinking on campus, students drawing knives on each other and raising thirty mil- lion dollars to build a science build- ing and new dorms. Perhaps the toughest problem of them all is the fact that with a school as new and innovative as St. Andrews, there are no pat answers. Decisions have to be made with an ear tuned to the present and an eye turned toward the future. 18 ° ' v ■' ' ■' -■■' ■' ' ' A president, anv president, has the ultimately significant and sometimes unfortunate distinction of being the foremost representative of his institu- tion, whether it be a nation or a col- lege. His personality and character carry the image of that institution to the rest of the world, and more often than not judgments are made on the strength of that image. He must con- stantly be on top and ahead of the current school issues and controversies. His is the task of pulling together the various bits and pieces of the total character of the college, and then making decisions and passing judg- ments on the basis of his awareness of the particular ' s relation to the whole. At the same time he must enter- tain visitors, travel extensively and somehow come up with the millions of dollars necessary to keep the college alive. It is inevitable then, that when the machinery breaks down for any one of a thousand reasons, the first cries of anguish are usually directed at the president. Add then to problem solv- ing, money raising and decision mak- ing the task of simply keeping a cool in the constant flak of student criti- cism, and vou understand a bit of what it is to be president of SA. If it often seems shrouded in mystery from our point of view, it is usually because there are implications we never have to realize, and if he seems out of touch with student life it is of- ten because he is the victim of student prejudice or endless administrative duties. There are obviously few re- wards for his efforts, other than wit- nessing the coming of age of the in- stitution to which he has devoted so much energy, especially in his last year as President. It is only regrettable that he has had to give so much time to obtaining the materials needed for the physical plant that he could not maintain the personal contact that is so essential. Dr. Moore ' s retirement is a genuine loss to St. Andrews. mmam Hi Having tasted the delights of four years of C C, a century of basic sci- ence labs and countless other aca- demic mind-blowers, the SA student eventually begins to wonder just who is the guiding hand behind all this agony. Meet Dean Robert F. David- son, Dean of the College, the Big D. He is to be seen everywhere, whether dining with students in the cafeteria, striding across the causewalk with tie flapping in the breeze, or across the desk upon which your D notice rests. The Dean bears the ultimate respon- sibility for the academic concerns of the college and accordingly is vitally interested in the academic progress or lack of same for each student. 20 I 1968 was a year of unprecedented growth for St. Andrews. The students and administration wrestled with problems that seemed to inevitably center around responsibility vs. rules, and for the most part the seekers of freedom prevailed. That they did is in manv cases due to the fact that the Deans of Students also believed that responsible freedom is a far better thing than a set of regulations. It is difficult to realize the constant ten- sion a dean must feel; Roger Decker is the only link the students have with the administration, yet directly an- swerable to the administration for every judgement he makes. When the students desire responsibility, the deans in turn have to bear that re- sponsibility with the administration. Sharing the headaches with Dean Decker is her Grace, Dean Over- holser, and Dr. Doris Hewitt, St. An- drews ' new guidance counselor, who with unending faith and eternal op- timism have been supremely instru- mental in effecting St. Andrews ' shift from in loco parentis adolescence to responsible maturity. ; ' Top: Dean Roger Decker; Left: Dr. Doris Hewitt; Right: Grace Overholser. wmmmMBBSBummMmmsmmmai Mr. Alan Atwell and Miss Mary McNeil. Before any of this four year trip to the Country Club of the South can take hold of you, there is a major stumbling block to be hurdled; it is called the admissions office. It is for the benefit of these gentlemen that vou produced so much sweat for those A ' s and B ' s all through the sunshine days of high school. You sent off your application, sealed with a kiss and a 15 dollar fee, and laid out your very selfhood for judgment. From that moment on, your fate was in their hands. Sitting in council late into the frosty nights of a Laurinburg winter, these people — Alan G. Atwell, Mary W. McNeil, and Charles E. Parrish — had to decide if you were the type of person that would genuinely benefit from the St. Andrews experience, and, in fact, if St. Andrews would benefit from your presence here. Once that decision was made and the notice in the mail, the choice once again rested with you. ■HH Mrs. McKinnon Having hurdled the admissions re- quirements with consumate ease, and found y our wav through the cotton fields to St. Andrews, the intrepid freshman finds one more endurance test blocking his entrance to the ivy- less halls of academia-south; a three hundred yard line wrapped around the LA auditorium on registration day. If you make it into the auditori- um on the same day, you get to regis- ter, and receive a free bottle of smell- ing salts from Ed Gross, SA ' s registrar. Mr. Gross and his able cohorts are utimately responsible for herding all 900 of us into the right classes at the right time on the right day. He is the one who keeps track of every grade we make, and when Mom gets that little pink slip in the mail, guess whose name is on the return address? Mr. Ed Gross and Mrs. Mary Parker Consider for a moment nine hundred students paying approximately twenty five hundred dollars a year, plus countless trustees and benefactors contributing various sums ranging from fifty to five hundred thousand dollars, and it becomes apparent that St. Andrews is big business. Meet then Silas Vaughn and Lindsey Thomas, SA ' s business managers. If you ever wondered just where your parents ' money goes, these gentlemen have the answers. Mr. Vaughn is re- sponsible for everything from a new science building to fountain pens, and with a school that is experiencing the growing pains that St. Andrews feels, the allocation of funds becomes a highly significant matter for the fu- ture as well as the present status of the college. It is especially significant to those who receive some of that cash as financial aid from Mr. Bob Chaiken, SA ' s answer to Rod Laver. It is increasingly apparent that a great many policy decisions are made by the men with the moneybags, and if their grip is less than secure we get spilled along with the coins. Lindsey Thomas, Bob Chaiken, and Sila s Vaughn. 24 HH SKj« M£ iW St. Andrews in the past year or two has been a young girl coming of age, a debutante preparing for her presen- tation to society. The days of infancy and childhood passed swiftly, and now at the ripe old age of seven years, St. Andrews has become a relatively mature and graceful young lady, suitable for her social entrance. She better be ready, because she is about to ask for thirty million dollars, that she might further her growth and cultural advantages. That she is such a beautiful ladv and has developed so well is to the credit of the SA De- velopment Office, which is primarily responsible for SA ' s public image. Someone must convey the spirit and storv of St. Andrews to the world, and the task falls to Mr. Bruce Frye, Mr. Badger Johnson and Mr. Fowler Dugger. Handling news releases, countless visitors, the student publi- cations and anything else that repre- sents St. Andrews to the public is their job; the number of students that applv and benefactors that respond to our needs is their reward. Mr. Fowler Dugger, Top; Mr. Badger Johnson, and Mr. Bruce Frve (photo bv Fabian Bachrach). 25 immmiwmwmMwmaBBm What is there about a library that makes it so hard a place in which to study? Is it the soft hum of the air conditioners, or the thick carpets un- derfoot, or simply the abundant ca- maraderie about the old place? If there is more sleeping and socializing in the library than there is work, it is not due to any shortcomings of the physical plant, aside from our finan- cial restrictions; SA has in Mr. Dick Lietz a scholar as well as librarian, and his knowledge of contemporary literature is a major source of research for anyone who takes the time to seek him out. Ably assisted by his wife and assistants, Mr. Lietz has undertaken the task of transforming DeTamble Library from a sparsely stocked ware- house of bookshelves into a top rate liberal arts library. One of these days the SA student is going to discover what libraries are really for, and maybe then the place will be taken advantage of. Top: Mrs. Bennett; Mr. Lietz and Mrs. Johnson. 26 2L _ The cafeteria, hub of the student cen- ter, the Home of Better Foods, Hul- ka ' s Hash House; the place on campus where the circle of selves of the SA student reaches its widest circumfer- ence; where the food is plentiful and originally named, and if it ' s not al- ways like Mama ' s cooking, remember that Mama never had to cook 1600 meals a day. John Hulka does, and all things considered does a pretty good job. Steak once a week, all the seconds you can hold and grits for- ever and ever. Still, it ' s fun to com- plain, so the food gets rapped; and if Mrs. White didn ' t catch Rock stealing bread so often, we ' d have one less daily laugh at SA. Besides, the food is always a great conversation opener when you ' re dining with that sweetiepie who ' s in your nine o ' clock class. But we ' ve got to sympathize with Marvin, the chef, and his kitchen crew; he cooks the food as well as he knows how, but Hulka keeps dreaming up these crazy names for hamburger, till the students are total- ly psyched out and couldn ' t stomach an alka seltzer. Top: Mr. Hulka; Bottom: Mrs. White and Marvin. t f iimmmxms wMBrnmsmmBm m Top:Mr. Davenport; Bottom: Miss Mai loy. Meet the rightfully reverent Bob Davenport, fighting the forces of evil with an open mind and a quasiliberal attitude, relentlessly challenging the status quo in our little corner of Dix- ieland. Four years now he has been our pastor, and we have seen the evo- lution of mandatory chapel service to an open forum where he and others can stand and say I believe . A man with a notion to make a motion and carry an idea to reality, the Reverend is an undaunted seeker and not a su- perfluous waiter. Deep within the catacombs of his surrealistic monastic cell, our unfrocked friar receives the eight hour protection of Miss Ultra Brite 1968, Ida Malloy. Hers is the job of relaying the minister ' s message to whoever may be listening, but Simon and Garfunkel say it best: the words of the prophet are written on the subway walls . . . but there are no subways in Laurinburg. 28 BfifiS ■As the pastor keeps our spiritual selves in good shape, Mr. Harold Babcock and his maintenance staff keep our SA oasis in good physical shape. These are the guys who pick up the beer cans we throw out the window, and fix the window we broke as the cans passed through it. Mr. Babcock has no office hours; when anything breaks down, he comes. In effect, he has the respon- sibility for keeping a city of one thousand people in good running or- der. His power plant behind the trees generates the energy that allows us to generate some occasional mental energy, and he can be forgiven for an occasional wrong guess about when the cold weather is here to stay. (Air conditioning at 45 degrees is a real freak-out). And since freaking out sometimes takes rowdy forms at SA, we have a campus patrolman to cur- tail the panty raids and keep clear SA ' s own DMZ, the yellow parking zones. Mr. Jackson, SA ' s own mid- night rider, is a one man police force and keeper of the peace, a constant guardian through those long Laurin- burg nights. Top: Mr. Harold Babcock; Bottom: Mr. Jackson. 2? ,.J1UMU1I1IUU]1UJ« ■Bl To talk about the VRA is superfluous. One has only to see the student aides ' dedication, or the kids that are handi- capped themselves, though they are handicapped by name only. SA ' s in- famous wheeled troupe is one of the brightest spots on campus, and a sure cure for those occasional bouts of self-pity. Mr. Bob Urie is the Director of the VRA, and he is assisted by Mrs. Carl Geffert and Mrs. Alice Mc- Kenzie. Together they supervise a program of student aides that has each handicapped student paired with a roommate who lends a hand when needed, but it is often difficult to determine who benefits the most from the other. But, again, to write about handicapped students is de- feating the purpose of the VRA. They are simply a few of the SA student ' s thousand other selves. Top: Mr. Urie; Bottom: Mrs. McKenzie. Top: Evelyn Mohn, R.N.; and Hugh McAm, Jr., M.D.; Bottom: Selah Stephens, R.N. To be ill at St. Andrew ' s is a terrifying experience. Not only does the unlucky one have to get up at the crack of dawn to drag his aching carcass through the morning frost to the in- firmary, but once he gets there he is told that he is indeed sick and won ' t he please go back to the dorm and go to bed? It could be worse; if he has something fairly serious like tu- berculosis or bubonic plague, he is ushered into Cell Block No. 1 and kept in solitary confinement for a week. Visiting hours? Four to five. You ' ve got soccer practice? Well, you ' ll see her in a week. In all fair- ness, it must be noted that our nurses, Mrs. Selah Stevens, Mrs. Alice Mc- Kenzie and Mrs. Evelyn Mohn, do their best with the facilities they have. mmmammm Dr. William Alexander, Philosophy and Religion Bottom: Dr. Donald Barnes and Dr. Karen Barnes Chemistry.  SJS8WS paculty. The thousand other selves of the SA student include about one hundred members of that rare species known as the college professor. Perhaps he is not as rare as he is difficult to un- derstand, especially from the under- graduate point of view. He has in most cases an alarming tendency to become totally involved in academic endeavor and genuine scholasticism, often to the point of devoting entire careers to the pursuit of pure knowl- edge. He seems to revel in scholarly discipline, and actually enjoy spend- ing a lifetime delving into the vast archives of human wisdom. He is of- ten to be found locked away from the world in a textbook-lined cell, passing whole nights lost in an I-Thou rela- tionship with Martin Buber or Wil- liam Faulkner or a mold culture, only to emerge the next morning and dis- course spontaneously for an hour on the state of the union or the relative patriotism of Curtis LeMay. He is possessed of endless opinions and philosophies, and will make them public at the least persuasion. He has inevitably studied under the great and renowned Dr. Bullalot, which simply means there is no way possible to write a passing paper on the thought of Bullalot. He is freer than most men in the American culture, and takes full advantage of that free- dom, whether it be in the form of a beard or a thesis denouncing the academic institution that is paying his salary. He is, finally, doing what he wants to do, rather than holding a job he dislikes in order to do those things he really wants to do. He is ultimately grateful for the opportunity to teach, and here perhaps least understood of all. The difference between a profes- sor and a student can be infinite, but the difference can be erased in a flare of insight that is a professor ' s greatest reward. Top: Mr. Stanley Baran, Jr., Science Edu- cation; Middle: Ethel Bateman, Physical Education; Bottom: Mr. Ronald Bayes, English. «1 I i Tr ' f 33 mm mmvmmmmnwMmiMmBm ■■Top: Dr. Carl Bennett, English; Margaret Bowen, Christian Education; Bottom: Mr. Spencer Boyd, Physical Education; Dr. C. Allen Burns, History. Joyce Bryant, Music Education Dr. Leslie Bullock, Religion — Division Chairman. It is understood, somehow, that the faculty at St. Andrews is of a some- what different fiber from the ordinary. There is an air about the place that is usually noticed bv the students but firmly believed in bv most of the pro- fessors. It has to do with newness and change, with an eagerness to burst the cords of academic tradition and social restrictions. It is referred to officially as academic freedom, but it extends far beyond a mere freedom of opinion and expression. It is more a freedom from convention, and more specifi- cally the convention of the past. Flora Mac is dead and gone, and with her went the type of teaching that ack- nowledged absolute answers and final solutions. St. Andrews will yield to no finalities, either in scholastic matters or the philosophy of their entire en- deavor. Our faculty is committed to the renewing powers of change, and constantly seeks out possibilities to ef- fect that change. It is, however, not a blind compulsion for change for its own sake, but ultimately for the infinity of new forms and directions St. Andrews must pursue. 35 MMW I mm ■MB If our faculty has a common identity, then, it also has dozens of individual personalities, each expressing its own peculiar version of the SA philosophy. The faculty is yet another bit of the swirling SA kaleidoscope, and their unique bits of form and color are of- ten influential in what form and color the students will take. The choice of a course involves so much more than one text book over another; it implies an exposure to the entire thought processes of a particular professor on whatever subject one is studying, and thus can be a totally different course than it would be with a different pro- fessor. As we bring ourselves to St. Andrews, the faculty bring themselves to their work, which is ultimately us, the students. Each of us then inherits the vibrations of several separate minds, all tuned to a new kind of freedom and creativity but transmit- ting on individual frequencies. It is ultimately for the student to draw conclusions and formulate answers, if answers are what he is looking for, but a man with too many answers is becoming an object of suspicion. 36 Opposite page: Emily Cameron, Education; Dr. James Carver, English; Mr. Phillip Clarke, Piano. This page: Mr. John Dahl, Art; Bottom: Dr. Ronald Crossley, Re- ligion; Dr. Julian Crovvell, Math. 37 mmmMMM M wmmmmmmm Mr. Carl Geffert, German; Dr. John Daughtrey, Education and Psychology; Dr. Malcolm Doubles, Religion. Mr. Charles Cidnev, Romance Languages; Mr. Gerald Griffin, Physical Education. Dr. William Goodman, French.  What role then does a professor play? More often than not, a professor is a catalyst, serving to crystallize, if not stimulate thought in the normally lethargic SA student. Consider Ron- ald Baves, poet-in-residence: Aside from writing, I think the main thing I can do to be of value is provide a forum for student poets whenever possible — act as midwife to the birth- ing of some writing in prose and poetrv — be an inanimate blackboard or strawman when those things are necessarv for testing writing and writing students desiring same. The professor is a shaper of alreadv pre- sent materials, a creator who creates in hopes of inspiring others to create, a sculptor of organic clay. Some are deeply concerned about their clay: John Hill ' s underlying philosophy of his role at SA is to attempt to stimu- late lazv students to use their minds: until SA realizes that this is its only raison d ' etre, it will continue to be nothing. 39 mm The professor at SA is often times a link between the historical past and the relevant present, responsible for illuminating the relationships of his- tory to contemporary issues. C. Allen Burris: The political historian rec- ognizes that the politics of the present is rooted not only in the past itself, but is also dependent, in part, upon what a society contrives its past to be. Part of the task of the professors, then, is to instigate an open minded concern for political and historical roots. Perhaps the real concern is an attempt to put the past in a proper light, and imply if not state diat the modern student ' s present is not that far removed from his professor ' s past. A professor deals with perspective; his task is to constantly shift and maneuver his subject matter and sometimes his students so that every viewpoint can be seen, that each dif- ferent perspective will be considered. This is especially true at St. Andrews; students are urged to see the overall view, the entire kaleidoscope, the in- finity of patterns. Dr. Harry Harvin, History and Politics — Division Chairman; Mr. Rufus Hackney Jr., Physical Education — Director; Dr. David Hawk. Sociology. 40 Mr. John Hill, Politics; Mr. Thomas Humphrey, Economics; Dr. Douglas Hiv Christian Thought. iiji iiiiiimiiiiIiii i ii rrnrnnnrniiTwi There are pragmatic professors, and there are idealistic professors, the former concerned with the subject itself, and the latter with much more than a course of study. Professor T. M. Humphrey states honestly that he teaches simply because he loves the subject and it enhances his own level of satisfaction to teach it. It is also his hope to convince his students that the subject is fascinating. What better method than to be fascinated himself? Another professor is a bit more ideal- istic about her task; Miss Margaret Bowen, Associate Professor of Chris- tian Education; feels that there is such a great need in the church for trained workers . . . that in helping prepare even a few ... I am having a part in something very important . . . and that St. Andrews is making a valuable contribution to the church. It would seem that the SA professor believes in his work and be- lieves in himself. Mrs. Elaine Johnson, French and Spanish; Dr. Charles Johnson, Jr., English; Mrs. Betty Johnson, Sociology. Dr. Charles Joyner, History; Mr. Buchanan Looney, His- tory; Mr. Thomas Lott, Spanish. 43 Mr. Spencer Ludlow, Jr., Philosophy; Mr. Arthur McDonald, Speech and Theater; Mr David Mcllhiney, Anthropology. Occasionally one encounters a teacher who is primarily concerned with the student himself. This is when teaching becomes a person to person experi- ence, an intimate yet open interplay of minds and experiences; the falling into place of two distinct color pat- terns to form a new larger and usually more colorful design. Miss Radiana Pazmor, Professor of Voice: The singing voice is a gift to be used for the development of the individual as a person, and for the service of his fellow men. It demands of the student a thirst, first, for the attainment of complete mastery of the instrument, and second, for the command of the means of expressing as fully as possi- ble the ideas of the poet and the composer. As a teacher, it is my ob- ject to help the student to attain these goals, and to foster in him a deep understanding of and reverence for the music of the great composers. Perfection is my unattainable but remitting quest. 45 Mr. Dady Mehta, Piano; Dr. George Melton, History; Dr. G. Tyler Miller, Jr., Chemistry. 9 Dr. Catherine Neylans, French; Dr. George O ' Connor, Jr., Biology; Mr. W. D. Narra- more, Jr., Speech and Theater. As it is the natural variety of person- ality among the faculty that provides for the randomness in the experiences the student is likelv to have, so does that same variety make for occasional discrepancies in such minor matters as grades and assignments. It is common knowledge that a D from Ludlow is worth at least a B from any one else, with the possible exception of Dr. Fulcher, SA ' s first faculty 1 hip- pie. The various members of the fac- ulty 7 naturally view grading from sev- eral different vantage points. Some go bv the book, some bv the attendance book, a few by actual value and a couple by the mood of the moment. It is commonly realized that grades are the most irrelevant feature of col- lege work, but unfortunately no one seems to have come up with a better indicator of academic progress. It is widely hoped in the best of student circles that someone will indeed de- vise a more genuine method; consider that in these days of Hershey ' s draft extravaganza that a careless or irre- sponsible professor may send a bor- derline student to Vietnam with one too many of th ose Fs that were meant to make him start studying for my class. Mr. Jim Ollis, Physical Education; Dr. Robert Pedigo, Biology — Division Chairman; Right: Radiana Pazmor, Voice. ■4! 48 :foV ' Jt 4yv Mr. Richard Prust, Philosophy. Dr. Helen Rogers, Music Theory — Division Chairman. Dr. William Rolland, Science. Perhaps the variety of faculty per- sonalities is most clearly illuminated in non-classroom relations. There are those who are never seen by the stu- dents outside of the classroom, and others who are part of campus life so much that the classroom is just an- other place to meet. Neither is better than the other; it is simply another facet of the interplay lie-between student and professor that is deter- mined by the individuality of the professor. A professor can be a father or pal, or he can keep a professional distance to maintain his academic superiority. In extreme cases he can even take the form of the wild North American Dorm Daddy; this takes a rare type of man, for the physical hazards are great. But theirs is the pinnacle of the interplay of personal- ities that is the SA experience. Dave Mcllhinev and Dick Prust have achieved in two short years a student faculty relationship that was unimag- ined at SA a few years ago. Their fortitude is great, and their contribu- tion to St. Andrews largely unreal- ized; let this be a minor tribute. wp For a faculty to remain alive and rel- evant, it must not only interrelate with the students but with itself. To this end, St. Andrews utilizes the team teaching concept in such basic core courses as the ever popular C C, and the equallv beloved Basic Science. Six minds fighting with and thinking through the same problems from six differing viewpoints born of six different backgrounds is more conducive to open minds and well- thought through conclusions than one man putting the stamp of authority on a certain aspect of study. At SA, several opinions are presented to the students in hopes that the students will do their own thinking and remain open to all avenues of thought. It is essential then that the professors be able to argue intelligently among themselves in favor of their own par- ticular viewpoint, that no one answer will gain prominence by process of elimination. The variation is the stimulus, but if there is no logical co- herence among the variation then the whole point of team teaching is lost and the student loses. 50 mmmaam Kasm I I ) Far Left: Mr. Sidney Siegal, Art; Top: Mr. David Singleton, Math; Mr. Cornelius Swart, Education; Bottom: Dr. Alvin H. Smith, Psychology — Division Chairman; Mr. Rosario Urso, Mathematics. 51 There is still another inter-relation- ship within which the SA faculty finds itself; that of the professors and the school itself. St. Andrews has drawn her faculty from schools such as Duke because she has something unique to offer. It all comes back to the open- ness of St. Andrews, the willingness and desire to remain free of binding tradition, and in fact to create a tra- dition of constant dialogue and aca- demic freedom. St. Andrews main- tains communication with her profes- sors in order to keep open the poten- tial for innovation, and it is this con- stant play of ideas and opinion, trials and failure that will eventually make St. Andrews great. She is in no hurry to formulate standards of conduct, and the faculty is in no way ready to bind themselves to academic abso- lutes. The school and the teachers together are plotting their mutual di- rection for the future. Top: Mr. Gentry Wade, Business and Economies; Jo Ann Williams, Physical Education: Bottom: Mr. George B. Wells, Psychology and Placement Director; Dr. W. D. White Beligion and English — Division Chairman; and Mr. John E. Williams, Organ. 52 MMM BHl 53 Right: Mr. William Winn, Religion; Bottom: Dr. Jerry Williamson, English Mr. Franklin West, Music and St. Andrews School of Music Director; Mr, Paul Young, Biology; and Dr. David Wetmore, Chemistry. ,.■■. w w In the end, though, it is a bit too vague to speak of academic freedom and student faculty inter-relationships . . . what does it all mean specifically for a professor at St. Andrews? One infamous department head has put it just about perfectly when he speaks of a faculty building a liberal college that will find its own distinctive voice in its commitment to freeing indi- vidual men to more fully human lives. It seems to all be actualized in the creation of a community of learning, thought and feeling in which men are freed to be more fully men. It is a commitment to the liberal tradition, both philosophically and practically, that manifests itself in an infinite quest to push back horizons, to deny finalities, and to retain a dedication to inspiring students to think for themselves and to become their own men and women, not products of an All American degree mill. It is a concern for each class of graduates as people rather than a new stack of IBM cards. 55 • I Top: David Betts, Student Association President; Left: Mike Ferrell Vice President; Danny Beerman. 56 —————— Student Qovecnment Association: Student Governments, historically, are patent frauds. All students know it, and administrations count on the fact. Traditionally, student leaders were the most conservative voices on campus. They were nice, B+ stu- dents who knew their place and kept their fellow students in line. These so called governments were content to play games and be the general lackey for the Dean of Students. But, by using the term student govern- ment , one appears to be talking about some type of organization which is responsible for the direction and supervision of student affairs, with sole authority over those things which only affect students. Thus to be true to the real meaning of the democratic government, student leaders must be instigators of change who respond to the requests which come from the student body. The Student Association at SA has climbed out of the sand box. It is not satisfied with only meaningless and unimportant work. At other cam- puses, student leaders are worried about being overthrown by campus leaders. At SA, student and campus leaders are the same. Change is not a dirty word — but an important and vital part of the campus tradition. mmm Jane Johns, Secretary; Bob Brewbaker. Lawmaker and policy examiner for students and workers through committees, the Senate derives its members through the dorms. Some- times slow to action, the Senate and Robert ' s Rules go hand in hand. Dealing with problems ranging from food complaints to course offerings, the Senate is a strange combination of personal means and community problems. A working legislature. Senators experience the frustration and victories of parliamentary proce- dure. Criticized frequently, the Sen- ate has become a tvpe of scapegoat for campus problems. Yet somehow, the members have time to respond to these needs. Thev are not always successful, but even when success is not achieved, they have raised the is- sue. And if the issue is raised high enough for all to see, it is only a mat- ter of time until some action must be taken bv college pol icy makers. So, here we see the Senate, working to increase each student ' s area of deci- sion making as thev grow academic- ally and socially. Vj| Wf  Hi  ,— if .: r y S « I George Sherrill, President. II ■■■■■■■I ■■■■■■■I ■■■■■■■I «■■■! ■■■I ■■i ■■i Concerned students, together out of a common tradition of Christian faith, directed by conscience and respond- ing to needs, the Christian Council works in both the campus and com- munity. Concerned about action, not talk, this Christian group does not see limits of involvement. Its work varies, vet never ceases. Chapel is only a part and the kev word in all things is rel- evant. All work begins from this point of view and is seen from this perspec- tive. All men must one dav face the world that he lives in and ask some verv difficult questions about himself and his life. The Council offers stu- dents the opportunity of seeing how one might face these questions and still be able to relate to other men in some meaningful way. The Council is no longer those people, but is a part of us. You don ' t agree? Write a dialogue. 61 62 Wa OBBEBUBBn a Ladies and gentlemen, the Student Center Board of St. Andrews is proud to present Little Anthony and the Imperials! Consider that a few short years ago the best they could have done was ladies and gentlemen, the Student Center Board is proud to present Dannv and his flaming Beer Men, and the distance the SCB has come becomes apparent. Under the enlightened monarchy of Ted Mc- Cormack, the SCB regularly signs nationally prominent artists on the concert tour, rather than simply whoever they can afford. This is large- ly due to the fact that their budget has increased from about $2,000 a year (which will get you one Barbara Lewis show and two dances ) to ap- proximately $8,000 (which is more like Glenn Yarborough, Ian and Syl- via, the Platters, Chad and Jeremy, the Showmen and several dances in one year. ) Perhaps the real reason for the new social outlook at SA is the new SCB philosophy that figures if they provide top rate entertainment. However, entertainment is not the only function of the Board. They are, as their name implies, the keepers of the castle, the caretakers of the hub of the SA world, that architectural wonder, the Student Center. The SCB maintains that homey atmosphere about the place and provides a color TV and FM radio to counteract the constant roar of the jukebox next door. To further enhance that home away from home image, the Board throws an occasional ice cream party, complete with serving maids and lit- tle wooden spoons. And if ice cream is not your bag, how about a pizza party, with Giovanni Hulka throwing the dough? The Student Center is a world in itself, a gingerbread house by the lake, and the psychedelic cen- ter of the SA social kaleidoscope. The jolly SCB invites you to take a trip in Dove ' s pleasure palace! 63 Coordinating and administrating the various branches of the St. Andrews Judiciary Board is the Judicial Committee, under the charge of At- torney General Bob Brewbaker, and entrusted with the files and records of every case that has ever come be- fore the board. Theirs also is the task of initiating and carrying out investi- gations of each case, and theoretically at least of seeing that sentences are carried out. .tt Mttre Bre,. aura EM Ray Riddle, Senior Representative Susan Klopman, Junior Representative Carolyn Caldwell, Chairman, Senior Representative. There are times when the SA student forgets his obligations to the SA community, and his dav in court finds him on the wrong end of the decision. This is the reason for the existence of the Student Faculty Appelate Board, the final court of appeals in the school judiciary system. Any case, from the residence court on up, may take its decision to the Appelate Board for a final hearing. Composed of student representatives, a faculty representative and a member of the administration, the Board is the offi- cial interpreter of the constitution and represents an avenue of appeal for the student on trial. Though the president of the college has final authority to change any decision made by the courts, he has yet to reverse a student made court decision. Top: Pete Klopman, Chairman; Rick Walker; Bottom: Don White. The Judiciary Board of St. Andrews represents student concern with meeting the shortsightedness of fellow students, and an attempt to deal with his violations constructively and fair- ly. Frustration is perhaps the key word in connection with those who dedicate their efforts to seeing that the SA student is judged by his equals on their common standards of justice. Though the Board stands officially for the right of the student to a swift and just trial by the duly elected court of his peers, the implications extend much deeper. When one con- siders the problems of a student at- tempting to pass judgment on a suitemate or even a roommate, the fundamental dilemma of student courts becomes clear; for judgment to be valid, student participation is es- sential. But the question remains of the actual validity of a judgment that can so easily be prejudiced by that same student fraternity that is basic to the court system. WMMWfc ,— In a futile effort to keep the circle in front of the student center from becoming the Indy 500, the Traffic Court has made a practice of handing out (at random) tickets for illegal parking. Though the logic seems sound, we must wonder why tickets in the All American Citv are only ten cents and at SA are one buck. Hell of a way to raise $30,000,000. 67 4 68 Ko ra Acknowledging that a pantv raid is of a different nature than an Honor Code offense, the Judiciary Board has utilized a Men ' s and Women ' s Resi- dence Court to deal with specifically social issues. Maintaining the philos- ophy of judgment of students by fel- low students, the courts are composed of elected representatives, as are all branches of the SA judiciary system. Dorm uprisings are dealt with swiftly and efficiently by these protectors of the common good, and the old meth- od of the dorm council sentencing the offender to ninety davs has been largely forgotten as a remnant of the dark ages of dorm mothers. SA ' s en- lightened attitude toward her judicial processes are due in large part to the Trojan efforts of Bob Brewbaker, who se belief in the system has changed its image from that of a hanging court to an efficient and fair court of justice. 69 (Top: Margaret Offterdinger; Bottom: Sandra Gaddis) Student power has come of age. Mov- ing from food problems and late hours, students are now concerning themselves with issues of national importance. Vietnam and Black Power are no longer questions which are only open for discussion in Wash- ington. Students are on the move! The 1968 political scene testifies to this and Berkeley and Columbia are the casualities of the type-of-mind-set that ignores — in fact denies — this realitv. The National Student Association (NSA ) is in the forefront of change. Reacting to the needs and climate of the time, NSA is not afraid to take a stand. Looking back at the South, one sees an organization called the Southern University Student Gov- ernment Association (SUSGA) — a hundred lillv-white colleges con- cerned about structure , i.e., the game of student government. St. An- drews joined NSA this year and is moving out of SUSGA. With Mar- garet Offterdinger and Sandra Gad- dis being our respective representa- tives, St. Andrews is joining those schools which are more concerned about issues than images. 70 IKH Members of the Senate, such as Hunter Allen (opposite) met with other schools in North Carolina to discuss issues on a state level in mock legislature. Open to much criticism, a group of students travel to Raleigh each year to practice parliamentary procedure — all expenses paid. Yet, if nothing else, other students from North Carolina schools see St. An- drews stand out in a leadership role. And after h earing about other schools in North Carolina, senators return with new faith in St. Andrews by the water and new vigor for improvement in our own system. A The Student Life Committee is the one college organization which is made up of administration, faculty, and students. Dealing with problems which concern the entire campus community, the SLC acts as a sound- ing board for all. Headed by Dean Decker, the Student Life Committee works to present the best possible solutions for these problems. The Committee also reviews all club charters annually and evaluates their contribution to SA. Not a policy maker, but nevertheless an important advisor, the SLC reacts to the call of responsible change. 72 maamm A handful of students who have ex- celled in their academic endeavors are recognized in this honorary way. No brain trusts here. St. Andrews Presb -terian College produces no little libraries. Rather, the goal at SA is to develop students into think- ing and creative individuals who are armed with the tools which are nec- essary to actualize their potential. The members of the St. Andrews Honor Society (the Sophomore Honor Societv is onlv the first step ) are stu- dents who have developed these tools more fullv than their peers and for this thev are honored. 73 4 inns y the S. A. Student lie came of age one warm autumn in ' 61, descended from the proud lineage of Flora Macdonald and her Scottish Presbyterian forebears, and generally conceded to have an, aus- picious future. His inheritance was a college, somewhat removed from his native ground, but all the more sig- nificant for new life and new achievements. They called it St. An- drews, and declared him a Knight; and if he was a bit apprehensive he never showed it. He found life in the new colony a bit rustic at first, what with logs floating in the lake and cows behind the dorms; but if it in- stilled in him a pioneering spirit, all the better. The newness of the place, the situation and the people promised our Knight new ideas, opened minds and widening horizons. - 75 That ancestral knight is now long gone, and we stand in his place. We are several; we have traveled from each coastline, from the far north and from the deep south to reach this common meeting ground of cultural exchange. We have brought with us the inevitable native attitudes that project such a convenient first image, and we carry the baggage of home- grown ideals that must soon stand the test of collegiate coolness. Occasion- ally someone brings a preformed cool, but mostly we have brought our- selves, and there is the true strength and potential of St. Andrews. It ' s a kaleidoscope of personalities; the realization, difficult for some, that the universe does not after all revolve around Charlotte, or New York, that a southern drawl has as much dignitv as a Boston brogue. The SA student must be open to his thousand other selves in order to understand and know himself. •rs j M 76 HBHHi . — , - ' X , % ■■■3EL A ■' E V ' I C C7 Even as he meets his other selves, the SA student finds it difficult to find himself, for the college life is one marked and characterized bv constant change. The first freshman apprehen- sions and occasional misgivings soon give way to a relieved familiaritv with the place, and he finds it is actually possible to reach a state of true hap- piness in the life span of a freshman. Some would onlv call it a limbo, however; a suspended state between the giddv jov of new-found freedom, and the vet-to-come perils of sop- homore C C. Freshmen live in a state of blissful ignorance, and are envied bv the rest of the college eommunitv. Theirs is a carefree exis- tence, but it eventuallv becomes the basis of the familiar phenomenon called sophomore slump. It is also the state of mind that precedes sop- homore brashness, an equallv familiar phenomenon. Having mastered the intricacies of Math 101 and freshman PE. the two vear man deems himself the elite of the intellectuals and as- sumes the role of the enlightener of the human race. He becomes a cru- sader for student power and the dig- nity of man, and bellies up to James ' bar with all the aplomb of a senior. His hair becomes his dominant facial feature, and in the space of a vear an innocent vearling becomes an authentic guru. 79 1 There is a numbness that follows the sophomore year, extending through the summer till one glides smoothly into the calm and relative repose of the long awaited junior year. Having scaled man ' s uttermost heights of knowledge in C C 202, the junior is a complete man. He has earned his right to linger over coffee, chat on the front steps of the student center, or even take a night off to visit the local tavern down the road. He smiles be- nignly at the ignorance of the under- classmen, and does his own studying at his leisure. He calls his professors by their first names, and will dis- course for half an hour on the local campus controversy. But there re- mains a weariness about the junior animal; his steps have slowed, and he scores fewer goals for the soccer team than he did his sophomore year. Looking closely one might even dis- cern a grey hair or two around his temples, and in the small hours of the morning he will tell yo u with a sigh and a deep drag on his Winston that things just aren ' t like they used to be. 80 Tr 82 mm wmasm S£A B tin- time one reaches his senior year, he is already looking back: the future is too Frightening anyway. He cruises through the last few hours of his major requirements with the air of one who lias long ago forsaken the glorious quest for knowledge that marked his younger days. GRE ' s have come and gone, as have the Navy re- cruiters ... he has reached the au- tumn of his years, and he wishes more and more that it were spring. It is from this semi-detached perspective that the SA student is most clearly brought into a wistful focus, and his image is a forever shirting kaleido- scope of passion and apathy, each qualified by places, persons or events. As in the Byzantium of William But- ler Yeats, the images come flooding back; it seems impossible to distin- guish the single self from the com- plexity of the many selves. The thou- sands of flashback fragments span the lifetime of at least four and usually more distinct personalities, but if the complexity is overwhelming, perhaps it is an honest chronicle of an equally overwhelming experience. 83 It is a peculiar phenomenon of that overwhelming complexity that a large portion of it comes through as a care- free giddiness, a holiday mood that is never interrupted by such distrac- tions as studies, grades, or exams. There is an infectious air about the place that seems to so easily lift one above the tedium of everyday that one wonders if SA is not really the coun- try club of the South. A clear cool day in the fall finds the tennis courts full, the lake dotted with sailboats and the woods a latter day Cythera. Everyone claims his own special rea- son to be lighthearted, and the de- grees differ; but we think it is a good sign that St. Andrews makes room for laughter. The SA student, then, is a clown in a room late at night, playing to an audience of suitemates; or one ol a table at lunch exploding into hysterical laughter at the latest dirty joke, or simply himself standing on the steps at sunset and laughing easily at nothing in particular and every- thing in general. Laughter comes eas- ily at SA by the lake. 84 1 ♦ ♦ • ™ • w j KM «f 85 1 As imperceptibly as the leaves change, laughter Fades away and takes its music to someone else. If you hadn ' t stopped to think just why it was you felt so good, there seems e en less reason now for the clouds to come tumbling in again . . . but they do, and once again it rains on your head. Little things . . . an unexpected D from that trusted professor, a broken date, a missed foul shot, any of a thousand aspects of life at SA that peqDetuate the flux, that turn the ka- leidoscope, that are the SA student. Life was good, and now it is dismal. Simple to feel, but impossible to un- derstand, as is most of the life at SA; it is a circus of feeling, defying reason and challenging the soul. A girl skip- ping down the benches of the cause- walk on a spring morning feels but doesn ' t need to understand ... as that same girl feels the silent screams of love and cant yet understand that the kaleidoscope must turn . . . 87 Yet if we identify his feelings and his moods, and laugh at his happiness and share his sadness, and mark his journey through the months and years at St. Andrews, have we really come to know the SA student? Sooner or later we come to some kind of under- standing and realization of just what it is we have been doing here for four years; one, it seems, comes to know the self. But have we made any pro- gress at all in knowing any of those thousand other selves with whom we have shared the tumbling color and imagery of our kaleidoscope? Do we know the fellow with bags under his eyes who we see occasionally late at night hunched over his test tubes in a fluorescentlv lit lab, or that quiet girl who has invariably occupied the same desk in the same corner of the library for as long as we can remem- ber? Do we know the performers in front of the student center on those warm spring evenings, or the shv one in the suite from whom we swipe cookies? Do we even know the one with whom we have shared a room for these four years, or is a cinder- block room all we have shared? If we have not, then all the archives of knowledge accumulated in C C and all the various major courses of study are of significantly less importance. The studies are only part of the ka- leidoscope; it is the people that ulti- mately are St. Andrews, and if we come away without our speck of color and form having meshed or clashed with the others to create some kind of visible pattern, we have missed the point of the liberal education. If so, perhaps it is only because we have not really come to understand our own selves in the context of the St. Andrews experience; but more often than not the pattern is there, and our lives are unavoidably and forever af- ter shaped and colored by the pattern that SA has imprinted on our minds. A i 1968 1969. It has been quite a year for the S student, perhaps one of the most sig- nificant in his history. 68-69, more than am other time, has been a year of ferment, a backdrop for change both radical and slight, and perhaps ultimately has signalled the coming of age of a college. The image has changed; awareness has thankfully accompanied physical and financial growth, and though there have been times when it was close, the adminis- tration and students have so far man- aged not to outstrip the other in the maturing process. The SA student of 68-69 is a different person than the SA student of 61-62. He is a product of a different culture, and looks at the world from a different perspective. He was not content with obsolete policies that were formulated with a small southern super conservative church school in mind; the student has grown and has demanded that his school grow with him. 4 Perhaps the greatest potential for growth in 68-69 came in the form of St. Andrew ' s long-awaited new pres- ident. The news came one week be- fore the inaguration of another presi- dent, one R. M. Nixon, and while carloads of SA students headed north to demonstrate their discontent with the nation ' s choice at the counter-in- auguration, St. Andrews welcomed Dr. Donald Hart as their new presi- dent. Dr. Hart represented many things to St. Andrews, but the mood in the air was things new, change, re- form. The outlook was definitely opti- mism last January, as the veteran freedom fighters on campus permitted themselves to hope that this was the man who would accurately read the pulse of the campus, and realize that a pulse is movement, and that movement means life. 93 i 94 The vear of growth took a different chronological framework than anv before it, as St. Andrews inaugurated the beloved 4-1-4 calendar. The initial jov at the prospect of no more long boring Christmas vacation at home when everyone else is back at school soon gave wav to dread of a solid month of independent study or worse, a month of one course and one pro- fessor. Still, there was a wav out . . . excursions to London, Jamaica, New York, and even Washington were the answer for over a hundred serious students, and for those who couldn ' t afford London and couldn ' t see Lud- low for a month there was the ever popular Glass Blowing 101. There was anguish in some quarters as the conversion from semester hours to straight courses nailed a few souls, and snickers as the dude with the 5.0 average found himself carrying a 3.5 on the new scale. We trust all critics will be silenced when exams end midway through the merry month of May. 95 Still another potential avenue of growth was presented to the St. An- drews community in 68-69, but whether it was taken remains to be seen at this date. Three vears ago St. Andrews became an integrated col- lege, but this was the year we had to define our terms. Fourteen black students at St. Andrews was appar- ently a sufficient gesture for the ma- jority, until the minority of fourteen made it known that they still consid- ered St. Andrews ' attitude toward black students insufficient and inher- ently racist. Their anger at SA s lack of maturity became violence at first, but eventually gave way to open ended dialogue and later stalemate. Those optimists who expected the confrontation to produce a sentimen- tal solution to the black and white thing were disappointed, but there were those who at least were gratified that SA was part of the world after all. There remains room to grow. n Outward is also one of the directions in which St. Andrews has been mov- ing, and this year saw the foundations laid for the long awaited science building. If the college is to move and grow in academic matters, it must have the physical capacity to contain and complement that growth, and early in the year the concrete went up as the lake went down. Designed to incorporate the ultimate in facili- ties, the massive hall of wonders be- hind the LA represents SA ' s major bid to offer the complete liberal educa- tion, from choir to thermodynamics. Rather than simply another branch of the traditional liberal art education, however, SA ' s clan of scientists should now be able to realize its potential as one of the best small college de- partments in the south — in its own right. Completed at a cost of 2.4 mil- lion dollars, the new building will of- fer well over a million dollars worth of instrumentation alone, including such everyday appliances as photo- spectometers and electron micro- scopes, and this area ' s only radiation lab. A 400 seat lecture auditorium will enhance the palace, and give C C more room to breathe in the LA auditorium. Completion is expected by the beginning of next year, and someone ought to be splitting his first atom by Christmas. - I 98 - SA ' s coming of age often took the appearance of several separate skir- mishes with the administration or the trustees; three major fronts were the carefully procrastinated drinking bill, women ' s dormitory hours, and dorm regulations in general. As the trustees and administration continued to sit on the drinking bill, the dean ' s office was forced to adopt a vague position of non-enforcement-ex cept-on-occasion, and since no one knew when that occasion would be, each suite had its own bootlegger (to keep the spirits up. ) Meanwhile, on the ladies side of campus, unlimited hours were dan- gled in front of the upperclassmen who did nothing about it till the men got disgusted and made them do something about it. January found the coeds still clinging to the security of their curfew, but change came with th e new semester, and the senior women discovered a whole new world after dark. Dorm life in general was in critical stages of reformation, as open dorm hours were extended and people stopped worrying about the morality involved. Paneling and bur- lap had to go as interior decoration, but it didn ' t stop those little goodies in the ceilings from falling . . . 101 H Conservatism IS R SYMPTOM OF STERILITY ■T ca .uMfru fi The SA student was becoming con- cerned about larger issues as well; it showed up during the national elec- tions and its aftermath, and it was evi- dent everytime a military recruiter appeared on campus. An under- ground newspaper, entitled Anything Left, made a brief but pointed ap- pearance, and the concern was obvi- ous as black and white students spoke their minds in open dialogue throughout the year. Petty campus is- sues, such as the great food demon- stration, looked rather silly in com- parison to the carloads of students who migrated north in January for the counter-inauguration. Draft counsel- ing was available for those hung up on war, and the senior class sent off a considerable number of applications to seminaries. Those who were look- ing for the rah-fraternitv type of col- lege experience found that it no longer existed, because college is now part of real life, as it has rarely been before. The SA student found he must begin to identify himself as a part of the society of man if he is to make anything of the college experience relevant at all. ■i l ggaa jj 102 Humphrey • ■- ' ■' ■■■■.. WMHHHMMMM 103 1 It was perhaps with all this in mind that the school embarked on a self- study in 1968, to discern how relevant St. Andrews really is, and hopefully to find an identity. Working from a thoughtful and detailed statement of purpose, a large committee of faculty, administration and students began to ask themselves and each other just what is the shape of St. Andrews, and in what direction is it going. Will the school be able to realize its potential, or will the students be left behind in the great dollar race? Will the school be a showpiece for southern presbv- terianism, or a significant and realistic forum for ideas and knowledge, aware of the world and relevant to its con- vulsions? Will the SA student be hidden away in a conservative cloister for a four year diet of dogma, or will he listen and be listened to in an open and free dialogue with society for a classroom? These are the questions of a college that is growing up in today ' s world. 105 fipst Semestep Despite appearances, there was a guiding hand behind the festivities of orientation, and it was called oddly enough the Orientation Committee. Masterminded this year by Rick Walker and Sandra Gaddis, the pri- mary aim was to do away with the traditional freshman mickey mouse activities and instead simply give the newcomers the basic information diev would need to exist at SA, and then of course to give them the lowdown on the faculty, who to avoid, who to butter up, etc. Everything not cov- ered by the upperclassmen was made 106 indisputably clear in the freshman bible, that bottomless fount of wis- dom, the Student Handbook. Since the middle of 1967 the handbook had been taking shape in the devious minds of David Flucke, Sara Aber- nethy and company, the ' 68 Hand- book Committee. Theirs was the task of rewording for the eighth time in eight years the hallowed rules and regulations of St. Andrews, and they did an exceptional job. The beginning of the school vear has always been a time of mixed emo- tions, from grade school days when you turn pale at the very mention of school, to the eager anticipation of once again immersing yourself in your studies that is so characteristic of col- lege people. At any rate, there is no going back, and all one can do is damn the torpedoes and plunge full speed ahead. So when Fall came in 1968, three hundred eager freshmen descended on S.A. four days ahead of everyone else — in order to have am- ple time to be lost before the upper- classmen would be around to laugh. In hopes of eliminating as much of the confusion as possible the frosh and a select group of mentors plaved a groovy game called orientation, where the upperclassmen pretended they knew everything about S.A. that the frosh think they need to know, and thus a false sense of security set- tles comfortably on the newcomers, and they prepare for the S.A. experi- ence. 107 ma As the leaves begin to turn at SA, and those clear cool davs of Fall set in. afternoon classes become more and more uninviting, and for those restless souls the Men ' s Recreation Associa- tion offers the gentlemen ' s answer to academics, intramural football, Caro- lina-style. Kings Mountain was the powerhouse this year, going unde- feated till the last game of the season, and featuring the most unique flanker in the league in Jim Wheels Roth- rock. For those whose interests are towards the more sedate sports, the MRA offered volleyball, which was won bv big Meek, and the ever popu- lar ping-pong, and in this event Meek again swept to victory. For the masochists. there was cross-coun- try, and Harry Kralv won it for the sec- ond straight year for the Mountain. When winter set in the name of the game was basketball, and it was a close battle all the way, with Meek pulling away at Christmas time. 3 ass i — 7 f  109 When teams win as much as SA did this year, and games become a bit monotonous and one sided, it ' s always a good thing to have some kind of diversion on hand for the fans. At SA they are called cheerleaders, and they have brightened up more games with their pulchritudinous prancing than Hannas ever did. Laurinburg ' s answer to the Rockettes, the girls put in long hours of practice all year that they might spur their men on to greater victories, and when games were close who can deny that the prospect of the pretty young things running for you with open arms was greater inspira- tion than a coach ' s pep talk? Mama Todd and her brood of chicks were a loyal band of gypsies this year, fol- lowing the teams around the state and doing their thing for all the blue ma- chines. no Ill If it was not a great year for the cross country team, it was a season unlike any other in S.A. history. What other team was pampered by two blonde managers, much less accompanied on all the road trips? Try explaining that to the man at the Holiday Inn . . . Papa Ollis and his gvpsv band ran six regular season meets, winning a cou- ple, losing three and taking a second in the final four way meet with Campbell, Greensboro and Metho- dist. Overall records were misleading however, because this was a season of heart rather than statistics. Few people were aware that the runners were up each morning at dawn to run around the misty lake, in addition to their ten or fifteen miles in the after- noon. And the managers weren ' t sleeping either; Sharon Webber and Nancv Nicholson, affectionately known as Dusty and Stretch, were up with the boys each morning, dispens- ing orange juice and smiles and pro- viding the moral support that it must take to run five miles before class. Still, in the end it was a matter of individual guts, and this team had it to spare. The Knights opened the season against UNCC and lost a close one, with Higgins, Walker and Durant taking the third, fourth, and fifth spots. Pembroke was next, but this one was not as close as the pow- erful Braves ran off with the first six positions to clinch the meet. By now, though, the team was beginning to run well, and the times were coming down. In a five way meet, the Knights outran everyone except Pembroke for their first conference win, and fol- lowed with a win over Campbell while trailing Davidson. Higgins again paced the team with a 31:30, Durant and Walker were under 32:30 and Todd Davis, Bev Davies and Will Henderson came in around 33 and 35 minutes. A week later Campbell edged the Knights bv five points, and the NAIA second place finish fol- lowed. It all came down to the state meet which was gobbled up by East Carolina, with the SA harriers making a respectable showing among small colleges. 113 Deep within the bowels of the student center can be found a tiny dark office inhabited by half a dozen grimy gnomes with newsprint stained hands and great dark bags under their eyes. This is the home of the SA weekly rag, the Lance, and editor Dity Joe Junod and staff are the harried in- habitants. From this birth place is spawned the weekly issue of campus trivia, indignant editorials and sym- pathetic sports coverage. Wavering dangerously between the poles of radical, independent and occasionally yellow journalism and timid con- tentment as administration lackeys, D.J. and friends made unquestionable progress from past years, but often fell short of the potential created by this year of spontaneous dialogue and conflicting, sometimes hostile opin- ions on everything from national elections to Back Power. Still, The Lance has been the best paper in the school ' s history, if not the town ' s. 114 115 ■- 116 -: 1 With eight minutes gone in the first quarter of the Erskine game. Randy Wellfbrd slapped in the Knights ' first goal of what was to he the greatest vear of soccer SA had ever seen. The 11-0 massacre of Erskine was a clear indication of things to come; it was the first of seven season shutouts by Hannas and Co., and hinted rather broadly at the new scoring potential of the front line. With All-South Albers spearheading the attack and ' 67 All American Hannas guarding the gates, SA swept to a 13-3-1 season and an eventual seventh place finish in the NAIA national plavoffs at Quincy, Illinois. It was the seniors vear — seven starters were playing their last season of soccer for SA, and the experience showed. The four sen- ior fullbacks became a tightlv syn- chronized unit that held their oppo- nents to onlv 13 goals in 17 games, and their unmatched efficiency in the backfield often made it a boring vear for goalies. Colbv, Brewbaker, Thompson and Svnder became SA ' s answer to the Four Horsemen, but of course thev didn ' t do it alone. With co-captains Pritchard and his rowdy gang of halfbacks manning center field, the front line saw the ball more often than usual. Clark, Sewell, and Johnson were the mainstays, and more than once were the unsung heroes of the squad. In the end how- ever, it is the front line that does the scoring and thus wins the games, at least for the statisticians. Albers was the pointmaker, getting 18 for the season, with Nesbit surprising even- one as he contributed 11 goals to the cause. Moise, Daniels, Freeman and Well- ford all displaved talent bevond their years, and will be the voungest vet- erans in the league next season. 1968 was indeed the golden era of socccer at SA; from Erskine the Knights went on to defeat Wesleyan 6-1 on the field where thev had won the conference title last year, then met defeat at Chapel Hill on two fluke goals by the Tarheels. Thev bounced back with a 3-0 shutout over Pfeiffer, and followed it up two davs later with a tight 3-2 victory over a strong Pembroke team, coming from behind to preserve their winning record. However, a listless game against Wilmington vielded a one to one tie, and by mid-October the Knights stood 4-1-1. Then came 117 the rains, and two of the wettest, muddiest soccer orgies in SA history. The Knights proved to be true mud players, and slopped their way to a 3-1 win over the Presbyterian brothers from Davidson, and followed with a 5-0 wipe out of the Baptist College of Charleston, as the Golden Cater- pillar won a name and a place in the hearts of sports fans everywhere, scoring three goals in a row to lead the team to their sixth win in eight games. A week ' s rest proved benefi- cial, as the squad picked up a couple of easy wins over Methodist and Guilford, by scores of 3-0 and 5-0, ex- tending their shutout record to five. They added one more against the red meanies from Lynchburg, but not be- fore accepting a bitter 2-1, double overtime loss, from the Camels of Campbell College. Still, the win over Lynchburg more than made up for their second loss of the season, as the Captains Prit- chard and Albers each contributed a goal in the 2-0 victory. The Blue Ma- chine wrapped up the regular season with a final 2-0 shutout over East Carolina, and looked to the task of defending their DIAC crown. Going to Lynchburg seeded first, the zoo squad boomed Methodist in the semifinal game, but succumbed to the cold and the pleasures of Lynchburg, losing the elusive trophy by the sad score of 4-0. So the Knights turned to more important matters and pre- 1 - pared to do battle for the NAIA area championship and a ticket to Quincy. In a reenactment of last year ' s plavoff at Pfeiffer, the Knights again faced Belmont Abbey in the final game — and the captains who had led the team thus far won the game for them, each bagging a goal to pull out a 2-1 victor)-, and bedlam broke loose at Pfeiffer for one glorious hour. Thanksgiving meant Quincv, then, and the Machine found itself deep in the heart of Illinois a week and a half later, with the temperature near freezing and no hot water at the Lincoln Douglas. The mightv Quincv Hawks were the first obstacle, and SA faced the toughest opponents in its historv — onlv to be defeated soundly by a 6-1 score on a frosty night in Quincy stadium. The Hawks showed eleven good reasons why they were national champions, and all SA could do was offer Yank a penalty kick to avert a shutout. Still, SA showed its guts and never flinched or stopped fighting, and the game was not as onesided as the score suggested. Thanksgiving dawned with sleet and snow, and the onlv games for the day were on the tube. Came Friday, and SA faced Westmont of California, a team sporting a 32-goal forward and a win over UCLA. The Knights were shutout 4-0 on a cold, muddy field, and all that was left was a chance not to come in last. At 7:30 A.M. the next morning, temperature 26°, the veiy Blue Machine steamed out on- to the frost covered field and beat Rockhurst of Indiana, the second seeded team in the tournament, by a score of 3-1. Albers hit twice, Nesbit bagged one and the 1968 soccer team of SA turned their frozen feet toward a warm Holiday Inn, proud of the Cinderella year that left them the number seven team in the nation. A final laurel was awarded the team near Christmas as Albers, Hannas, and Doug Colby made the All- South, Albers for the third time; 2nd Hannas, All American for the second. 119 The first month of school ends each year with a super picnic called Par- ents Day, and whether it is a trick to get the parents to give money or a time of fun and fellowship for the whole family it is usually a roaring success. This year hundreds of parents descended on the campus to see jun- ior and give him two bucks for the haircut he got the day before. For those so inclined there are opportuni- ties to meet professors, dorm mothers, and to see just what kind of people mommy ' s darling has been running around with at college. Some of the lucky ones have the pleasure of visit- ing Rodger ' s, but they are a distinct minority. There are speeches all day, and of course the ever popular Dean ' s Cup race on Lake Stumpy. Box lunches are the order for the day, but no one seems to mind too much, since the parents don ' t realize it ' s a treat. In the end the truly lucky ones are those whose parents couldn ' t come, but as long as Dad leaves a couple of twenties to tide Junior over till the next check comes, or even better leaves the Grand Prix for him to drive home Thanksgiving, the day has been well worth the haircut, the cleaned-up room and the pals you asked to please not let on they are your friends. 120 ■a 1 121 mt The Circle K Club took it upon themselves this year to steal Marv Battle Higgins from the rest of the campus and make her their own spe- cial Sweetheart. In addition to this dastardly deed, the Circle K, which is the old college try at that mainstay of America, the Kiwanis Club, pub- lished a weekly newsletter of campus happenings, excluding the orgies, ushered at the Concert Lecture events, and in general made them- selves useful in whatever way the campus needed. In an attempt to far- ther the ideal of service, the club members participated in District and International conventions in Phila- delphia and Charleston, though it was rumored it was the club members who needed service after their jour- ney to the big cities. The addition of Mr. Rick Wells as an advisor with Mr. Babcock brought a prompt fund-rais- ing attempt in order to buy a sailboat for the lake, but when the lake went down, so did the sales. Ever onward in the never ending quest for service, and who gets to date Mary B. to- night? 122 1 Occasionallv a student at SA is so in spired bv one of his favorite professor: that he is certain his life can onlv b fulfilled by following in his footsteps For this noble breed of student, there is the SNCEA, which is pronounced Student North Carolina Education Association. Led this year by Carol Batten, the SNCEA is, in her words, a pre-professional association for col- lege and university students which presides opportunities for those pre- paring to teach to develop an under- standing of the teaching profession. Advised bv Dr. Daughtrev the club sponsors manv projects such as a job interview workshop, a substitute te aching program for senior education majors, a joint program with the Favetteville State Teachers College, and a co-operative program with several FT A groups. 123 SA ' s junior men in grey flannel suits are wearing double breasted blazers and tassels these days, but the big business outlook is still there. The American Marketing Association is SA ' s answer to Madison Avenue, and this band of dedicated capitalists meets once or twice monthly to fa- miliarize themselves with the kind of world they will face when the com- forting walls of SA have been left be- hind, and the tycoons of the future go out in search of their fortune. Jamie Gregory is President and fish- ion trend setter, but the most impor- tant man is the social chairman, and there are about two dozen. There have been few parties this yea r to match the ten-keg extra vaganza the AMA threw last Fall, unless it was some of the unofficial parties various members threw. For this significant service, then, the club deserves a groggy round of applause from the campus. In all fairness, we must admit that the AMA members will most likely be the more affluent alumni of this affluent institution, but then they ' ll need it to keep themselves in kegs. . . 124 If one is a business major, and a member of either the AMA or the dormant Economics Association, he finds himself a distinguished member of that capitalistic elite, that aristoc- racy of student princes, Phi Beta Lambda. It is defined in the hand- book as a club with the purpose of creating interest in and an under- standing of business occupations, and to develop competent and aggressive business leadership; in other words, a prep course in cut-throat tactics, pennypinching and taping tickers. Or so it seems to the uninitiated, the lib- eral arts majors. With the inimitable leadership of Miss Leta Mclntyre as an inspiration, the future business ty- coons of the nation begin to learn the endless ins and outs of the business world, that they might survive when SA casts them out into the cold cruel pavement of Wall Street. 12S The Letterman ' s Club of St. Andrews is saddled with a dilemma that arises from the particular nature of the school it represents. A club of this sort can be either a fraternity of elites, a select group of athletes who glory in each other ' s laurels — or a service club, in the manner of Circle K. It is, unfortunately, neither. Wavering between the two it can not seem to find an identity or sometimes even a purpose. SA simply is not a fraternity school — who wants to be a member of Gamma Delta Hackney? Nor is the club a service club, except for the endless stream of cokes and popcorn at ball games and a mildly successful sale of poison antidote kits to the un- suspecting parents on Parent ' s Day. Still, for those lettermen who seek a common meeting ground with the rest of the athletes on campus, the club provides a traditional honor in return for the sweat and pain it took, whether in competition or initiation, to earn the big white SA. If the sailboats come, can spring be far behind? Not at SA, where the first day in December with the slightest resemblance to warm weather saw Rick Wells ' sloop rig slicing a white wake across the muddy waters of the SA lagoon. With Mr. Wells ad- vising (and tving the knots? ) the Sailing Club made its debut at St. Andrews this year, and on fall and spring days there was a small fleet of sails on the lake, full of sunburned pseudo- vachtsmen and real sailors, the one group ducking the boom and the other occasionally booming the ducks. The sailors were there to teach the others the tricks of the trade, and to keep a steadv hand on the rud- der while the inevitable mis- takes were made. Knots had to be learned, and tied over and over, as well as what every line and everv inch of sail does at any particular time. h ' S --- mmm 127 Late studiers at the LA Building oc- casionally report small groups of mad scientists huddled over bubbling, steaming breakers and glowing test tubes, cackling with glee and antici- pation at the weird smells and occa- sional shapes that emanate from their brews. Jim Holler and crew make up the American Chemical Society, and their stated purpose is the fostering of a professional spirit among SA ' s chemistry majors. Papers and reports by various majors are presented, as well as guest speakers and visiting scientists. Affiliation with national branches is an essential aspect of the club, and the group has been known to pack up and head for San Francis- co for a convention at the drop of a test tube. Dr. Barnes is the chief mad chemist, and offers his considerable knowledge in an advisory capacity. 128 Sociology, Anthropology, Human Re- lations, and Psychology majors seek- ing new directions, and finding old club procedures dull and too much like academics formed the core of the Behavioral Sciences Club this year. Significant for a club whose concern is people and how they interrelate was the racial question that was brought into such sharp focus this year on the SA campus. Tangible evi- dence of the club ' s efforts were the attempt to persuade the administra- tion to hire at least one Negro faculty member within these majors, to hold a weekend Racial Happening in which to analyze the college com- munity ' s real stand on the issue, and the initiation of means for the publi- cation of significant reports of any student in any of these fields, a move that could be echoed in every de- partment on campus. Official and expert guidance is given the club in the persons of Dr. Smith and Prof. Dave Mclllheny. 129 130 . Being the ladies that thev are, the Women ' s Recreation Association took to a somewhat gentler round of sports last fall than football and wrestling, and plaved a dainty round of volley- ball. However, the contests took on a rather unfeminine flavor as a group of stars from Concord dominated the league and spiked their way to the dorm championship. Another dorm title for the vear seemed likely as Jean Knowland, also from Concord surged into the lead in the womanly sport of ping pong, though the other dorms vowed to even the score in the spring round of basketball and Softball. 131 Whenever SA has a big name enter- tainer on campus, it seems that WSAP devotes the two weeks before and af- ter the concert to his records . . . and this October, all anybody heard for four weeks was the sound of Mr. Josh White Jr. Performing before a packed gymnasium, Josh White established an immediate rapport with the typi- cally responsive SA audience, and the next two hours were a musical blend of old, show tunes and just Josh White tunes. Handling the audience and his guitar with equal ease, Josh White was easily the most popular person on campus for a couple of hours. Several weeks later the perfect complement to Josh White ' s tradi- tional folk music was presented by the Paul Winter Contemporary Consort. Winter has been around a long time, but this group is the zenith of a crea- tive career. Discarding and leaving far behind all and any conventional musical schemes, Winter and friends 132 Across the t op: Sander Vanocur, Rabbi Rubenstien, and Josh White Jr., Across the bottom: Herman kahn, and The Roc-coco lompany- put out some of the most unique music ever heard at SA, and left no doubt that his basically jazz hut un- restricted compositions were the sound of an entirely new concept in music. Again, though, the perfect foil for the Consort ' s space age flights into fancy; the Roccoco Company, out of Baltimore, playing straight Bach with harpsichord, cello and violin accom- paniment. The tone of the evening was eighteenth century European, as the Roccoco Company took SA on a trip to listen to the sounds of the granddaddies of it all. All was not musical on the fall agenda, however. Herman Kahn, the world-reknowned futurist, and, we suspect, the reason for C C 400 this year, brought his insights and wisdom to SA for a three dav round of analysis and prediction. The director of the Hudson Institute, the government ' s own think tank, Kahn brought his considerable fore- sight to bear in the areas of Vietnam and the year 2000. The year 1968 was well scrutinized in November as news commentator Sander Vanocur ana- lyzed the election year and responded to student queries for an interesting couple of hours, before winging off into the night via Piedmont scare- lines. — : ■V HI rff ma H l l T t ?s jwH - - With visions of New Year ' s bubbles still dancing in their heads, the SA basketball squad got down to the business at hand and swung into a season that left them eleven points short of their second consecutive con- ference championship, and second onlv to a Methodist team thev even- tually beat in the tournament. It was a good season; with team membership fluctuating from sixteen men to nine at one point, the Knights rolled to a 12 and 6 overall record. Co-captain Pete Garner was the team scoring leader as well as the conference lead- er, and was named captain of the All- Conference team at the end of the season in light of his 27.5 average. Along with Gamer, the driving forces of the ' 69 team were the versatile Craig Hannas, the pleasantlv surpris- ing Gary Linn, and the rolv-polv Ken McGinnis. For various reasons, the talents of these three were not real- ized till the second half of the season, but as soon as thev joined forces the team won ten of their last twelve games. It was not unusual for Coach Bovd to plav a unique brand of pla- toon basketball, often replacing all five men on the court with the five still left on the bench. Though this 135 move invariably drew gasps from the fans and sometimes the players, he must have known something we didn ' t; McGinn is, Gredlein and big Tony Fernandez would come romp- ing on to the floor for Turner, Fitch and Garner, and the entire style of plav would abruptly change. Then, if their particular brand of play was not quite suited for the tone of the game, in would come team A again, and so it went. They never lost, the Good Earth kept exclaiming all through January, and it seemed thev never did. So it came to tournament time, and the Knights were ranked second, though we knew in our hearts thev were the best. An easy win over Charleston in the first game set up what everyone thought was the game of the year, SA and Methodist in the semi-finals. With Hannas going ani- mal on the boards and Gary Linn throwing in 26 points the Knights took Methodist by nine points and it seemed the title was in the bag. Sat- urday night came, and Greensboro College ' s crackerbox gym was packed for the massacre of UNC-Charlotte. However, the lads from Charlotte came out hitting and before the game was over Larry Gray was in the hos- pital with a concussion and Garner was writhing on the floor with his knees ripped. The final score was 79- 68 and SA had to settle for second place, but it was a season to remem- ber. As a final tribute, Hannas and Garner were named to the All-Tour- nament team. -y - 136 It usually comes as a surprise to new students at SA that there is at least one big weekend on campus, and if it can ' t match a Duke homecoming, it at least affords one a pretty good reason for staying here one weekend out of the semester. Fall Fling has come a long way since the early days of SA, and this year a new dimension was added that had been previous ly only vain hopes; the drinking was le- gal, albeit off-campus. That first Sat- urday night mind-bender at the Bam was what SA had been needing for years, a place to blow off as much steam as anybody could generate without destroying the entire campus, and it was the perfect complement to the previous night ' s concert with An- thony and the Imperials and dance with the Showmen. Anthony and friends got everyone high, and near the end of the Showmen ' s perform- ance there were many who needed landing lights . . . and of course there were those who never touched ground for three days. Never since the days of Knarf and Pistolas has SA seen a wrestling team to match the 68-69 version. Each match was a performance rather than an event, and though the outcome was occasionally along the lines of an Elizabethan tragedy, the grapplers provided more than their share of comedy while fighting their way to avenge the loss of the 67-68 conference championship. Consider that the lit- tlest guy on the team had the worst luck; Bahnson, with his dramatic match winning pins in the waning moments of a crucial match after just returning from a holiday jaunt to New York; or Jan and Dean toying with their opponents like cats with a mouse, or even Dodson ' s Snoopv helment; that was funny. But Teal . . . what is there to say? Undefeated, ever-smiling and not a pound over 167. To Coaches OIlis and Johnson we can only say congratulations on a great season. 1 3 141 Despite the overwhelming support of the SA student body Eugene Mc- Carthy had lost the nomination to Hubert Humphrey, and cousin George dropped a bomb on his chances when he picked LeMav, so November rolled around with the campus fairlv evenly split between Nixon and Humphrey. Signs of the times were everywhere; bumper stickers proclaimed Nixon ' s the One, or countered with the HHH brand; buses took students to political rallies all over the state, and graffiti mur- mured some of the truer sentiments of the whole affair; the anti-Wallace segment scribble I laid down in front of George ' s car and lived , or Drop LeMav on Hanoi, (but none could match the indignant post election epithet, Nixon cheated . So the long awaited night arrived, and SA settled down for a long vigil in front of the boob tube, armed with popcorn, pepsi and Pat Paulsen buttons. Each dorm had its own faithful in the main lounge, with a command center set up in the student center to watch the most uncolorful candidates since Ike in living color. Weary hands chalked up the returns as thev came in, and faint cheers could be heard now and then as somebody ' s home state went solid Nixon. As the hour became later and later, a few decided to call it a night, but as the race began to look like another Nixon-Kennedv dead heat, blearv eves were propped up with toothpicks and the loyal ones curled up for the rest of what looked like a several hour siege. Dawn came and with it a horde of rumors from those who had not stayed up and caught onlv snatches of information as thev hurried to class. Some had Humphrey far ahead in the popular vote, and other dreamers predicted a Wallace write-in avalanche any moment. But as early morning classes were getting out the news was wait- ing that Nixon was indeed the one. Reactions, predictably, were mixed. Some rejoiced, others wept, a few booked passage to Australia, and more than one began to look for Ted Kennedy in 72. For those whose man had won, there was the satisfaction that thev had picked a winner, and for the Humphrey people onlv a glum wondering what was ahead. The Wallace group went south to regroup for next time, and life returned to normal at SA . . . A ll except clandes- tine meetings to organize the protest march at the inauguration. -_. ;.;.;.;. V .;.;.;.;.;.; .... ., ; ,;.;,; .;.;.;.;.; 143 Hill — 144 h£ With big Frank Ligon carrying the best average in the Dixie conference this winter, the SA keglers (refers to bowling, not beer) captured their third league championship in three years last February, the only SA var- sity squad to win three in a row. Dizzy Doc McLean continued his winning ways in the 68-69 campaign to tally a 33-7 overall record; the Knight ' s coach found a pleasant sur- prise this season in the person of ' Twitch Williamson, and also in the improved bowling of Kim Vohs. The starting five bounced the wood at a 176 clip this year as Ligon ' s new style paced the team to a tremendous sea- son and the title. With the tourna- ment looming in March the keglers found themselves defending doubles and team champions, and odds-on favorites to take the whole thing for their third tourney crown in four years. T ' was the season to be jolly, and cele- bration took the form of the annual Christmas formal. Returned thankful- ly to the lounge upstairs, the beauti- fully decorated hall was the perfect setting for a most successful affair. Music by Don Ramsey and Orchestra provided the background for a kalei- doscopic swirl of long gowns and tuxedoes, and SA danced late into the night. Since it was Christmas no one really minded too much shelling out twenty dollars for a tux and corsage, and digging out those once-a-year shoes, or even wearing socks. Even with a monster cold front moving in an hour before the evening and a few bare arms freezing, it was generally agreed it was all worth while if just to see half the SA faculty doing the bunnyhop for five sublime moments. 146 147 Though there are no hills to speak of, SA is often alive with the sound of music, ranging from ON AIR to Bach and Beethoven, and from the wind ensemble to the two choirs of Mr. Roger Lamb. With half a hundred voices to work with, the wealth is di- vided into a touring choir, which travels throughout the South in the Spring, and a chapel choir, heard by seven people and Bob Davenport each Thursday in chapel. The music performed is varied tremendously and depends in part on which choir is singing it, but usually the typical SA choir performance will include a complete spectrum of sound from traditional folk to high church music, all done as expertly as any choir in the South could do it. The usual schedule finds the choir giving a Christmas oratorio, a month long concert tour and a final homecoming performance in the Spring. The sounds of St. Andrews were never sweeter. 149 im K 1 i. Ii i Vl ' ■A 1 - 1 p. • ' ■' ' ?9 A ' : ' -. - « ' 1. ' — I — 1- Say bands on the SA campus and the question comes back, acid or grit? Mr. Franklin West has a group that is neither, and probably capable of both kinds of music. The SA en- semble is a small group of talented instrumentalists, who worked the en- tire first semester to present the score for the presentation of the Messiah at Christmas. Throughout the year the group has worked on several small ensemble pieces for their own en- joyment, but hopefully this spring will see the production of Stravinsky ' s LUistoire du Soldat, a piece written for percussion, small orchestra, danc- ers and a narrator. 1S1 152 No group on campus trips out more beautifully and more often than the Highland Players, who present an- nually such fantasia as High Spirits, Arms and the Man, Look Back in Anger, and more. Their medium is drama, and their standard is excel- lence. Under the guiding hands of Dub Narramore and Arthur McDon- ald, SA ' s band of gypsy players turns out productions worthy of any school in the country, if not Broadway. The secret of success, we hear, is a spreading of the wealth — the thes- pians have in their ranks future scene designers, makeup artists, lighting engineers, costume designers and even a few actors. The amalgam must gel easily; the spontaneity and pol- ished ease of each performance is a tribute to the hours and weeks of mental and physical exertion that are culminated to live or die in one brief appearance to the world. So far there have been no early deaths. AlBenuple hall For romance through the sun screens, fires in the courtyard and alligators in the bathtubs, Albemarle was truly the place for fun in the sun in 68-69. Cocktail pa rties at the Tradewinds and a real live housemother who actually watched TV with the girls rather than in her cubbyhole set the mood, till peace and quiet became boring and the ladies declared war on Kings Mountain. Then it was Rice Crispies in the mountain men ' s socks. For all their frivolity, the Albemarle crew also became the most industri- ous women on campus. Beds made for 15 cents was the word each Monday night in KM, and what other dorm could match the offer of unlimited bed service? o £) ? ' 69 CjpAdUAteS Sara Abernethy Charlotte B.A. — Christian Education Sandra Kaye Berg Fayetteville B.M. — Piano Ann Bottoms Montgomery, Ala. B.A. — Psychology Dianne Helen Buckle Richmond, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Donna Elizabeth Cleeland Philadelphia, Pa. B.A. — Spanish Suzanne Currie Richmond, Va. B.A. — Psychology Amanda Williams Davis Concord B.A. — Elementary Education Bonnie Lynn Foster Chestertown, Md. B.A. —Art Linda Lee Fox Alexandria, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Barbara Jean Harris Arlington, Va. B.A. — Psychology Catherine Dillon Homeier Richmond, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Cwen Horton Durham B.A. — Elementary Education Margaret Cameron Lewis Mt. Airy B.A. — Elementary Education Elizabeth Linville Lexington B.A. — English Cynthia Lou Marshall Lynchburg, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Brenda Maureen O ' Berry Dudley B.A. — Human Relations Margaret Meade Offterdinger Lynchburg, Va B.A. — English Betty P. Rose Richmond, Va. B.A. — Human Relations Jessie Prentiss Self Augusta, Ga. B.A. — French Education Martha Lee Simpson Arlington, Va. B.A, — History 154 Judy Ann Slauson Miami. Fla. B.A. — Psychology Susan Elizabeth Sloop Mooresville B.M — Music Education Susan Eflie Stockton Dobs on B.A- — English Education Sally Syphrit Aiken. S.C. B.A. — Drama and Math Ruth Darlington West Durham B.A. — Secretarial Administration Mary E. Willis Columbia. S.C. B.A. — Elementary Education I AW bcAWoo.vv.1!! Unteoctissmen Mary - Carolynn Anderson, ' 72 Winchester, Va. Karen Ruth Bender, ' 72 Arlington, Va. Jane C. Blanch ard, ' 72 Durham Mildred E. Broome, 71 Charlotte Margaret J. Qine, ' 71 Hickory Mary Jane Corning, 72 New Bern Suzanne Gail Craddock, ' 72 Win ston - Sale m Nina Dianne Dougherty, ' 71 Arlington, Va. 155 H HP nmmmn!wm Daguerrelyn J. Dugger, ' 70 PineblufF Dorothy Lynne Durden, 70 Chamblee, Ga. Pamela Meador Elliot, ' 72 Greensboro Claire Bright Emerson, ' 72 Laurinburg Patricia Ann Evans, ' 71 Fairfax, Va. Glenn a Lynn Finnicum, ' 72 Miami Springs, Fla. Lynn Carole Fulk, ' 70 Alexandria, Va. Alice Faye Graham, ' 72 Tabor City Margaret Lois Harmon, ' 71 Indian Trail Judith Elaine Harris, ' 70 Stuart, Fla. Kathleen Ruth Haygood, ' 71 Shaw A.F.B..S.C. Linda Daryl Helmer, ' 71 Rockville, Md. Linda Kaye Hill, ' 71 Greenville Brenda Ann Kinlaw, ' 70 Fayetteville Mildred Kinney, ' 71 Charlotte Laura Lee Koblegard, ' 71 Ft. Pierce, Fla. Kathleen Karla Koch, ' 72 Baton Rouge, La. Johnnie M. McLaughlin, ' 72 Red Springs Susan Mackey, ' 71 Bumsville Clara jean Major, ' 71 Atlanta, Ga. Carolyn W. Mathews, ' 71 Tappahannock, Va. Charlotte Me cum, ' 70 Winston -Salem Mary Addie Mewbom, ' 70 AJbertson Kim Meyer, ' 72 Richmond, Va. 156 Brenda Kaye Midgette, ' 70 Rocky Mount Adair Oden, ' 71 Kichmond, Va. Susan Virginia Rjoe, ' 72 Abingdon, Va. Lucy Anne Scott, ' 71 Frankfort, Ky. Glennys Catherine Sheppard, ' 71 Charlottesville, Va. Vickie jean Sheppard, ' 72 Lilesville Mary Catherine Stawasz, ' 70 Shreveport, La. Susan Jane Stimmell, ' 72 Fairfax. Va. Mary Elizabeth Strickland, ' 72 Albertville, Ala. Catherine Love Stringfellow, ' 71 Culpeper. ' a. Adele Shepherd Tate, ' 72 Memphis, Tenn. Dawn Taylor, ' 72 Lynchburg, Va. 157 3SBW CodcorC) llAll Now girls, these young men living in our guest room this semester are entitled to their privacy, and certainly don ' t want to see you traipsing around the lounge in your nighties at four in the morning . . . and so it went in the halls of Concord this year, as freshmen and seniors mixed to win SA ' s Convent of the Year Award. They also won the distinction of hav- ing open dorms fewer times than any other dorm in one year. The only time, in fact, that men were seen up- stairs was when an unwitting Fort Bragg GI knocked on Bollin ' s door . . . Understandably, the social hieh- light of the year was the night the young pretties piled couches and chairs in front of the Housemother ' s door. Yippee. 1 158 ' 69 QRAdUAteS Carol Ann Batten Fuquay-Varina B.A. — Elementary Education Ginny Boyce Mayesville, S.C. B.M. — Church Music Carolyn Caldwell Lynchburg, Va. B.A. — History Education Katherine Ann Carpenter McLean, Va. B.A. — Secretarial Administration Mary Elizabeth Carson Raleigh B.A. — English Joan Lee Clark Raleigh B.A. — Elementary Education Rachel Rice Dixon Abingdon, Va. B A. — French Sally M. George Salisbury, Md. B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology Elizabeth Gail Hoffman Newport News, Va. B.A. — Christian Education Claudia Jean Hughes New Bern B.A. — Secretarial Administration Mary Linda Key High Point B.A. — Drama Sharon Dianne Lambert Altavista, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Emelda Williams Lawing Mt. Holly B.A. — Business Education Margaret Bailey McConnell Southern Pines B.A. — History and Political Science Mary Lynne McKenzie Washington, D.C. B.A. — Elementary Education Nelanie Shepard Nye Wilmington B.A. — English Nancy Lee Richardson Fayerteville B.A. — English Ruth Anne Saville Richmond, Va. B.A. — English Ma rtha Joan Stafford Garland B.A. — Elementary Education Sandra Lou Strickland Rie gel wood B.A. — Elementary Education OK Rebecca Ellen Suddreth Lenoir B.A. — Elementary Education Marian Jane Talley Roanoke Rapids B.A, — English Phoebe Anne Tucker Lovingston, Va. B.A. — English Anne Ward Winter Park, Fla. B.A. — Psychology- Elizabeth Anne Ward Richmond, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Todd White Lenoir B.A. — Chemistry Carol Williamson Lynchburg, Va. B.A. —Psychology UnOeRcLAssmen Judy Carol Abemethy, ' 72 Charlotte Delia Ann Becton, ' 71 Wake Forest Sarah Chamberlayne Bell, ' 70 Dublin, Va. Jane Easterly Bibee, ' 70 Hickory Judy Bickett, ' 72 Spencer Joan Margaret Bollin, 7I Rock Hill, S.C. Barbara Bryant, ' 70 Dedham, Mass. Marga Carol Bunch, 70 Newport News, Va. Gloria Jean Carr, ' 71 Mt. Olive Nancv Elizabeth Clifton, ' 70 Milford, Del. Susan Elizabeth Cotton, . Winston-Salem Deborah Gafl Crawley, ' 7 1 Upper Montclair, N.J. Nancy E. Crumpler, ' 70 Norfolk, Va. Suzanne Denham, 72 Middlesboro, Ky, Jane Grace Dougherty, ' 72 Boone Elizabeth Bentley Elliot, ' 71 Richmond, Va. 1S9 Elizabeth Vance Fogartie, ' 72 Charlotte Martha Graham Goodman, ' 70 Lexington, Va. Heather Jane, Grant, ' 71 Mountainside, N.J. Carolyn Elizabeth Greer, ' 72 Greensboro Audrey Susan Grogan, ' 70 Charlotte Mary Dayle Grumbles, ' 71 Danville, Va. Elisabeth Elmore Hane, ' 7 Columbia, S.C. Sharon Lynn Hayes, ' 72 Moravian Falls Graye Ann Heider, ' 70 Miami Springs, Fla. Cherryl Cecelia Holt, ' 72 Raeford Susan Hunting, ' 72 Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. Cathy Isley, ' 72 Boone Toni Katherine James, ' 72 Winston-Salem Agnes Nicholes Jenkins, ' 72 Charleston, S.C. Margaret Jones, 72 Framingham, Mass. Kat Kibler, ' 72 Front Royal, Va. Cynthia Carol Kirby, 72 Arlington, Va. In grid Diana Leggett, 72 Williamston Margaret Anne Ligon, ' 72 Fayetteville Mary Marget MacLeod, ' 72 Virginia Beach, Va. Linda Lee McQueen, ' 72 Red Springs Joan E. Magnusen, ' 71 Washington, D.C. Florence Crary Marshall, ' 72 Durham Janice Marie Martin, ' 72 Winston-Salem Mollie V. Matthies, 70 Summit, N.J. Janet Susan Moses, ' 71 Appomattox, Va. Sara Elizabeth Neil, 71 Huntersville Donna Leona Neserke, ' 71 Towson, Md. Jean Rogers Noland, ' 72 Athens, Ga. Peggy Lee Oliver, 72 Fuquay-Varina 160 Mary Randolph Prince, ' 70 Petersburg, Va. Barb) Ann Reiner, 72 St. Louis, Mo. Ruth FJItn Richardson, 70 Ocala, Fla. Patricia Ann Rufiln, ' 70 Johnson City, Tenn. Anne Lowell Ryland. 71 Warsaw, Va. Chris I. Ryon, 71 Lynchburg, Va. Frank Randy Sanger, ' 70 Falls Church, V a . Doris Wendell Smith, ' 71 Fayette vi lie Frances Snyder, ' 72 Charlotte Sarah Catherine Speer, ' 72 Abingdon, Va. Cynthia Sweet, ' 72 Abingdon, Va. Mary Jo Trice, ' 70 Richmond, Va. Selma Theresa Tuck, 72 Anson ville Dorothy Elizabeth Valentine, 71 Richmond, Va. Cathy Amelia Wallace, 71 Atlanta, Ca. Judith Ann Waple, ' 72 Culpeper, Va. Catherine Ware, ' 72 Jacksonville, Fla. Laura Lee Weigie, 72 Greensboro Nancy Karen Williams, ' 71 161 QRAnviLLe hill Granville won the distinction this year of being the first of the women ' s dorms to realize that what the men ' s dorms had been doing all last year was the only logical step toward em- ancipation from the ' in loco parentis ' creed, and their replacement of a dorm mother with two students and a hip alumnus has made Granville the freest and probably one of the more responsible dorms on campus. Res- ponding with glee to their new lease on life, the grannies became the party dorm on campus, holding an autumn affair with the rest of SA, and co- sponsoring the blast of the year at the Barn. Granville has obviously become a dorm of considerable spirit (s ). 69 QRAOUAteS Alice Terry Dryden Durham B.A. — Mathematics Deborah Kay Harper Raleigh B.A. — Chemistry and Biology Sarah Betts Hunter Aiken, S.C. B.A. —English Joyce Carol Lowdermilk Raleigh B.A. — Elementary ' Education Sarah Martha MacLeod Virginia Beach, Va. B.A. — Economics Susan Jane McCallister Chapel Hill B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology Martha Ann Magill Morristown, Tenn. B.A. — Religion Margaret Louise Parrish Laurinburg B.A. — Elementary Education Christine Sutterer Hampton, Va. B.A. — Elementary Education Gloria Jean Templeton Hickory B.A. — English Mrna Lee Tracy Indian Trail B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology Janice Ophelia Wells Charlotte B.A. — Elementary Education 162 UruVBclASsmt-n Nancy Rebecca Armstrong, ' 70 Greensboro Leigh Trent Ausband, ' 72 Winston-Salem Nellie Jo Babcock, ' 72 Laurinburg Lani Kay Baldwin, ' 72 West Point, V a . Edna Ruth Bell, ' 70 PfafTtown Pauline Dyer Berry, ' 71 Holliston, Mass. Barbara W. Bond, 72 St. Petersburg, Fla. Barbara B. Brooke, ' 72 Atlanta, Ca. Ann E. Burriss, ' 70 Anderson, S.C. Linda E. Cherney, ' 72 Green Bay, Wise. Marilyn J. Cook, ' 70 Sherman, Texas Martha R. Courtney, ' 70 Cresent Beach, S.C. Laurie A. Dow, ' 70 Jacksonville, Fla. Mary Ellen Dryden, ' 71 Durham Nancy E. Ducker, ' 72 Charlotte Julie A. Edens, ' 72 Fayetteville Joyce E. Fryar, ' 71 Tarboro Dixie W. Fulton, ' 70 Columbia, Tenn. Dolly K. Galloway, ' 71 Maitland. Fla. Donna R. Gardner, ' 71 Havelock Millicent Gibson. ' 71 Asheboro Teresa A. Halyburton. ' 71 Shelby Elizabeth A. Harbin, ' 72 Raleigh Ruth E. Hartley, ' 71 Hudson Valerie M. Hastings, 72 Colonial Heights, Va. 163 4fcfc Doris A. Henderson, ' 72 Green Bank, W. Va. Susan J. Howe, 70 McAdenville Margaret B. Hudson, ' 70 Durham Edith J. Jackson, ' 72 Qjakarda, Indonesia Rita A. Kohrman, ' 72 Fayette vi lie 4fe ir Mary L. Leslie, ' 71 Avondale Estates, Ga. Kathryn L. McCain, 72 Decatur, Ga. Cathey J. McDonald, 70 Rockingham Carolyn S. McNutt, ' 70 Charleston, W. Va. Kim A. Matthews, 70 Danville, Va, Nancy F. Mebane, ' 72 Plandome, N.Y. Elizabeth S. Meyer, ' 72 Richmond, Va. Julie K. Morris, ' 71 Concord Nancy J. Munro, ' 70 Hialeah, Fla. Nancy G. Nicholson, ' 72 Arlington, Va. Pat A. Pledger, ' 72 Atlanta, Ga. Kathy R. Pooley, ' 70 Rome, Ga. Susan L. Prescott, ' 71 Florence, S.C. Pamela J. Robinson, ' 70 Lynchburg, Va. Jean M. Rose, ' 70 Miami, Fla. Leslie A. St. John, ' 72 Rye, N.Y. June E. Stockbridge, ' 70 Kingsport, Tenn. Beth M. Tingley, ' 72 Greensboro Barbara A. Tomlinson, ' 72 Azores, Portugal Eleanor B. Underdown, ' 71 Lenoir Fran H. Vardeman, 72 Atlanta, Ga. Sandra L. Webbere, ' 72 Arlington, Va. Sharon K. Weber, ' 70 Arlington, Va. Susan Whitford, ' 72 Durham Nancy K. Young, ' 72 Roanoke, Va. 164 kmqs mountain h.ui This was the vear of a new image for Kings Mountain; anyone who referred to KM as the Pansv Palace ran the risk of angering varsity athletes, Maggie and Tiger Woman. The Green Bay Packers of the intramural football world, the Mountain also en- joyed a year of tennis ball wars, plas- ter lovers in the lounge, pop tops in the courtyard and faculty in the suites. The irreverent Richard Prust is their daddy, and more often than not could be found fighting the forces of evil across the lake and defending the freedom of the castle. Righteous Richard and his band of merry men have been instrumental in breaking away from the old SA image of house- mothered, demerit-ridden cloisters posing as men ' s dorms. C 5 QRAOUAU s James F. Amhurn, Jr. Etkin B.A. — Economics Collier Whittemore Baird, III Short Hills. N.J B.A. — Economics Daniel R. Beerman West Palm Beach. Fla. B.A. — Politics Robert Sidney Brewbaker Bedford. V a . B.A. — Psychology George Leslie Ducker Charlotte B.A. — Human Relations James P. Euverard Richmond, Va. B.A. — Economics Charles Boyd Fondow Burlington B.A. — Biology Richard W. Fowler Grand Rapids. Mich. B.A. — Economics Benny Eugene Gurley Charlotte B.A. — Human Relations 165 mBBBBBBBM wmmmmm Thomas A. Hackney, Jr. Lake City, Fla. B.A. — Psychology Harry Edgar Hagan Irvington, N.Y. B.A. — Chemistry William Stone Jones, Jr. Bluetield, W. Va. B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology Joseph V. Junod Pelham Manor, N.Y. B.A. —English J. W. Scott McCrea Millbrae, Calif. B.A. —English David Lane Mills White Plains, N.Y. B.A. — History Albert S. Moss Drakes Branch, Va. B.A. — Business Administration John Price Chevy Chase, Md. B.A. — English Raymond Erwin Riddle Charleston Heights, S.C. B.A. — Psychology- John Edward Royal], Jr. Mt. Pleasant, S.C. B.A. — English George Vernon Shaffer Woodstock, Va. B.A. — Psychology Tim Brook Tate Boca Raton, Fla. B.A. — Business Administration Otto Theodore Wendel Lanchorne, Penn. B.A. — Biology James Houston Wheeler Lynchburg, Va. B.A. — Religion and Philosophy William Donald White Richmond, Va. B.A. — History UndeRclassmen John Carle Anderson, ' 70 Marion Station, Md. Richard Irving Beach, ' 70 Gainesville, Va. Leon McCuen Bennett, ' 72 Rock Hill, S.C. David J. C. Berry, ' 70 Raleigh Charles Edward Brown, Jr., ' 70 Red Springs Donald Ray Campbell, ' 70 Chatham, Va. Charles B. Cummins, ' 70 Blackstone, Va. William A. Delp, Jr., ' 71 Mullens, W. Va. Joseph Edward Dixon, ' 71 Columbia, S.C. 166 ft Jeffery Vemon Erickson, ' 72 St. Petersburg, Fla. John Everett, ' 70 Huntington, W ,i Michael Ray Ferret], 70 Fay ette ville Samuel M. Caddy, ' 72 Charles City, Va. Cordon Bruce Carrison, ' 71 Richmond, Va. Thomas W. Gilbert, ' 71 Manchester, N.H. Louie Aubrey Goodson, III, ' 72 Danville, Va. Thee Compton Groff, 72 Owings Mills, Md. Glenn Steven Hundertmark, ' 71 Baltimore, Md. Thomas B. Kip, ' 71 Chapel Hill Peter Klopman, ' 70 Ho-Ho-Kys. N.J. Harry Lee kraly, ' 70 Wilmington Edward C. McKeown, ' 72 Arlington, Va. Roderick Bruce Moore, ' 70 Wichita. Kan. Robert Lee Nichols, Jr., 70 Vicksburg, Miss. John Stuart Parrish, ' 71 Laurinburg David Reno Porter, ' 70 Ricbmond_ Va. Edgar Adwell Porter, ' 71 Colombia, Tenn. Charles Chase Pratt, ' 71 Durham Robert Blair Rankin, ' 71 High Point Dan Robinson, ' 71 Charlotte Hampton H. Sewell, ' 71 Virginia Beach, Va. E. Lee Southwell, ' 72 Hamlet Louis Earl Swanson, ' 71 Durham Hall Williams Thompson, ' Birmingham, Ala. Ottie Lee Treadway, ' 72 Oak Hill, W. Va. John S. Turner, ' 70 Virginia Beach, Va. Frank Richard Walker, Jr., ' 70 Charlotte Stephen Douglas Wesley, 71 Wjnston-Salem Robert Henry Wheless, ' 72 Lake City, Fla. 167 msmaasm %mss in L mecklenBuRq hall w QRAOuites Larry Duncan Hammond Roanoke, Va. B.M. — Church Music There is a hedonistic air about Big Meek, and it is understandable; con- sider that it ' s only a matter of time till the whole thing begins to crumble and crack and slide right back into the lake from which it rose one dark night, and one sees that the men from Meek are truly a lost lot. Every cam- pus needs a zoo dorm, and Meek has had the title for as long as anyone can remember. No outsider has ever gone in and come out alive, and it ' s rumored that they do have a house mother, though they only let her out for meals. A cacophony of psychedelia pours from the windows on Saturday nights, including the shrieks of young girls being sacrificed in pagan rites — truly a haunted palace of many wonders is Big Meek. Russell Edwin Lester Danville, Va. B.A. — Psychology UnCtGRdissmen Edward Arthur Anderson, 72 Pittsburg, Penn. John Lewis Bryan II, ' 72 Lumberton David Bunn, ' 72 Greensboro Allen Mitchell Burdett ID, ' 72 Falls Church, Va. Robert Chapman, ' 70 Lutherville, Md. Mac Crosswell, ' 71 Winston-Salem John Davis, ' 71 Fairfax, Va. Roger P. Davis, ' 72 Hickory Henry Paul DelTosto, 71 North Arlington, N.J. Denny Dodson, ' 71 Charleston, W. Va. Thomas Armitage Edge, ' 72 Richmond, Va. Dorman Walton Fawley III, ' 72 Falls Church, Va. Bfll Forrest, 72 Gastonia David Stuart Cibbs, ' 72 Philadelphia, Penn. Tom Harbert. ' 70 Alexandria. Va. Laurence Harding, ' 72 Richmond, Va, Russell Hash, 72 Roseland, Va. William Grover Henderson, ' 72 Concord, Va, Winston Hensley, ' 70 Elkton. Va. Ray Edgar Higgins, ' 71 Memphis, Tenn. William Hitt, ' 70 Hamlet Jed Nelson Howell, ' 70 Bon Air, Va. Franklin Johnson, ' 71 Washington Thomas Patrick Kelly, ' 72 Gaiden City, N.Y. David Richard Krug, TO Pittsburg, Penn. 169 Dean Reed Leake, ' 70 Charleston, W. Va. Robert Lilly, ' 71 Falls Church, Va. Gary Wayne Linn, 72 Fayette ville John Fredrick McAllister, ' 70 Chapel Hill Kenneth Michael McGinnis, ' 70 Pinellas Park, Fla. Prescott Lenneau Martin, ' 71 Tarboro Stephen Edwin Masse n gill, ' 72 Durham Gene Downing Miller II, ' 70 Clinton Handy Gail Moore, ' 72 Courtland, Va. Ralph Nesbit II, 71 Richmond, Va. Philip T. Nickle, ' 71 Arlington, Va. Robert Nason Nye, ' 70 Milton, Mass. Francis Campbell Peery, ' 72 Tazewell, Va. William Van Penninger, Jr., ' 71 Charlotte Jim Pope, ' 72 Winston -Salem Herbert G. Prizer, 70 Petersburg, Va. M 1A Douglas Dallas Raynor, ' 71 Richmond, Va. James F. Siemen, ' 71 Wilmington, Del. David Ash ton Sinclair, ' 72 Hickory James Walter Stands, ' 72 Columbia, S.C. Siiiuiu.il Lee Sutton, ' 72 Durham David Edward Wagner, ' 71 Baltimore, Md. E. George Weeks, ' 70 Tarboro Christopher C, Wilson, 71 Baltimore, Md. Lewis Garrard Wilson, Jr., ' 71 York, S.C. William C. Wright, Jr., TO Charlotte 170 ORAnqe hall It ' s time that the rumors about Orange were stilled once and for all; there are no coed rooms, except on weekends, and the wooden barriers were not torn down bv a frenzied mob of drunken females; the men pitched in too. Orange has the dis- tinction of being the onlv dorm on campus in which the main lounge is reallv a lounge; where else on campus can a couple live together for the whole year? The unsinkable Mrs. Dove is Orange ' s pixie-in-residence, and she makes no attempt to be a mother — just a friend, and there she excels. Lib Dove has been one of the brightest spots on the SA campus for years, and her presence in Orange makes it a brighter place all around. kilh C ) CiOAC UAtt S Jan R. Barllc-tt Arlington, Va. B.A. — Religion and Philosophy David E. Betts Atlanta, Ca. B.A. — English C. Peter Caldwell Danville, Ky. B.A. — Economics John Richard Erisman Alexandria, Va. B.A. — Economics Alex Mills Fitzner Sylvania, Ga. B.A. — Economics David Roger Flucke Chicago. 111. B.A. — History Janet Elizabeth Hoff Denville, NJ. B.A. — Elementary Education Charles William Hock Augusta, Ga. B.A. — Economics James S. Holler Williamsburg, Va. B.S. — Chemistry J. Tern ' Javwork Milford, Del. B.A. — English Theodore B. Kingsbury Franklin, Va. B.S. — Chemistry Majorie Ann Kings ley Kings Point, NY. B.A. — Religion and Philosophy 171 Susan Marie McCaJl Salisbury B.A. — Human Relations Robert Condit Muir III Allentown, Penn. B.A. — Psychology Linda Jean Peel Hungtington, W. Va. B.A. —English Kenneth W. Pritehard Williamsburg, Va. B.A. — Mathematics and Chemistry Lesley Ann Quast Bloomfield, Conn. B.A. — Psychology George T. Sherrill Franklin B.A. — Religion and Philosophy Nancy Thornton Stuart Falls Church, Va. B.A. — Religion William Norman Thornton Charlottesville, Va. B.A. — Biology- Mary F. Todd Nichols, S.C. B.A. — Psychology James Rhodes Wright, Jr. Raleigh, N.C. B.S. — Biology Undepclissmen Dorothy Elizabeth Best, ' 70 Greensboro Mary Eleanor Blomquist Richmond, Va. Judy Marie Brown, ' 71 Eden Robert Burlington, ' 72 East Hartford, Conn. 72 ' 70 Rita Gail Callow Highlands Shirley Marie Carson, ' 72 Raleigh Salli M. Chapin, ' 70 Hanover, NJ. Thomas Asa Collins, Jr., 71 Rocky Mount David Carson Dickson, ' 71 Winchester, Va. Charlotte D. Donaldson, 71 Kennett Sq., Pa. Sandra Lynn Gaddis, ' 70 Lynchburg, Va. Carol Elizabeth Gay, ' 70 Winston-Salem te •4 A 85f W ' V Qaire Gertrude Haines, ' 70 Rockingham Marianna Hardison, ' 70 New Bern Wilburn Hayden, ' 71 Winston -Salem Wayne Douglas Hobbs, ' 71 Winston-Salem Jane Powers Johns, ' 70 Front Royal, va. Susan Henri Johnson, ' 71 Laurinburg Lyl Billings MacLean, ' 70 Lumberton S. Lynn McClaughry, 71 Bluemont, Va. Michael H. McCord, ' 70 Fairfax, ' a. Pam McRainey, ' 72 Fayetteville David Gordon Mills, ' 72 Galveston, Texas Eric George Mohn. ' 70 Rockville, Md. Jacquelyn Moore, ' 72 Louisville, Ky, Betty Louise Moose, ' 70 Tavlosville Mary Camilla Neal, ' 70 Marion Edward Tray wick Newton III, ' 71 Durham John William Ogietree, 71 Darien, Conn. Barbara Spencer Olson, ' 71 Richmond, Va. Nancy E. Paden, ' 70 Hendersonville Karen Frances Rjggs, ' 70 Fayetteville John A. Roper, ' 71 Red Springs Robert Holland Schurke, 71 Jacksonville, Fla. Ellen Marshall Shannon, ' 71 Charlotte Alice Tappey Squires, 71 Petersburg, Va. Lawre Swan Sbringfellow, ' 72 Culpepper, Va. Carolyn L. Sutton, ' 70 Selina, Ala. Wendy Oliver Tinga, 71 Wilmington Charles Parker Thompson, Charlotte David Alan Treece, ' 71 Albemarle Jim W. Youngdale, ' 70 Portchester, N.V. 173 Wilmincton h. li For the third year in a row, Wilming- ton captured the distinction of having more couples per night hovering around the doors, and huggy-bear was the name of the game. Rapidly becoming known as Fort Bragg ' s USO club, Southern Branch, Wilmington retained vestiges of the old days while experimenting with new procedures for signout and less reluctance to grant late permission. For the most part, as in most of the dorms on cam- pus, the changes being made were constructive and joyously received; still, Wilmington has a notorious re- putation that it found hard to shake. Sheets hanging out of a cheerleader ' s window at 11:00 PM one night brought Mr. Jackson to prevent the elopement, till someone remembered the hours had been changed to mid- night . . . progress, but oh so slowly m s Elana Rene Carrie Savannah, Ga. B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology Ellen George Clarke Montgomery, Ala. B.A. — Religion and Philosophy Phyllis E. Dieth New Orleans, La. B.A. — Drama Ginny Dwyer Satellite Beach, Fla. B.A. — English Carol Elaine Fetter Jacksonville, Fla. B.A. — Drama Neta Faye Hart Winston-Salem B.A. — Elementary Education Susan Hawkins West Palm Beach, Fla. B.A. — Spanish Mary Battle Higgins Shelbyville, Tenn. B.A. — Elementary Education Genia Margaret McNeill Ft. Clayton, Panama B.A. — Psychology Jeannette Elliott MaeKethan Fayetteville B.A. — Social Studies Elizabeth Sansom Mason Salisbury, Md. B.A. — Religion and Philosophy Nannie Ould Pettyjohn Lynchburg, Va. B.A. — Secretarial Administration 174 Susan lane Rogers Orlando, Fla B.A. — Human Relation Linda Katherine Susong Middlesboro, K . B.A. — English Susann B. Wade Richmond, Ind. B.A. — Art Mary Katherine Wilder Asheville B.A. — Hist ory Nancy Wooten Covington, Tenn. B.A. — French unteoclAssmen Anita Bemice Adams, ' 72 Asheville Elizabeth Bartlett, ' 70 Stanford, Conn. Jane Fair Bennett, 7 1 Clio. S.C. Ashley Dulin Blevins, ' 71 Asheville Elizabeth R Blose, ' 70 Harrisonburg, V ' a. Mary Margaret Bolton, ' 70 Franklin Beth Ann Bryant, 70 Oradell, N.J. Susannah B. Cashion, ' 70 Wilkes bo ro Gail Riddle Chowning, 72 Louisville, Ky. Sylvia Kaye Comer, ' 71 Ellerbe Dianne Elaine Davis, ' 70 Arlington, Va. Linda Lee Dings, ' 71 Charlotte Dianne Downey, ' 71 Arlington, Va. Dianne Ellison, ' 72 Greensboro Kate Wilder Farmer, ' 70 Granite Falls Anne J. Fletcher, ' 70 Hampton, Va. Anne Elizabeth GabbarcL ' 70 Stanford, Ky. Nancy Oewel Graham, ' 72 Max Meadows, Va. Mary Diane Grant, ' 71 Charlotte Susan B arwick Gulbrandsen, ' 72 Chestertown, Md. Edna Jo Hall, ' 72 Durham Nancy Dorsch Hammond, Tappahannock, Va. Terry Blue Hatch, ' 71 Raleigh Patty Hickey, ' 71 Weave rvi lie Patricia Bell Highfill. 70 Raleigh 175 Tommy Carol Holmes, ' 70 Fayetteville Leslie McCorkle Houston, ' 71 Hickory Dianne Carol Huckins, ' 72 McLean, Va. Betty Lynn Huffman, ' 71 Shelbyville, Tenn. Mary Maxwell Hutches on, ' 72 Virginia Beach, Va. Suzy A. Hyde, ' 70 Franklin Shirley Esther Isenhour, ' 71 Havelock Sallie Jackson, ' 72 Salisbury, Md. Wanda Kay Jones, ' 72 Florence, S.C. Mary Ann Karetas, ' 72 Myrtle Beach, S.C. Penny Ann Keller, ' 72 High ts town, N.J. Mary Lou Kruthoffer, ' 70 Huntington, V. Va. Cail Elaine Kvingedal, ' 70 Newport, Vt. Hollace Ann Laws, 70 Durham Roberta Joyce Leavitt, ' 71 Landover Hills, Md. Sara P. Lee, ' 71 Lynchburg, Va. Ann Sharon MacKenzie, ' 71 Severn a Park. Md. Jane D. McDaniel, 70 Wyncote, Penn. Marilynn Hensley McNiel, ' 70 Bridgeport, W. Va. Annabelle Matthews, 72 Gastonia Pamela Ann Menius, ' 72 Winston-Salem Mary Alice Moffett, ' 70 Raleigh Natalie Moffett, ' 72 Raleigh Susan Lynne Mowrey, ' 70 St. David ' s, Penn. Anne B. Parsons, ' 70 Erie. Penn. Qaudia Leigh Perry, ' 72 Lynchburg, Va. Connie S. Phillips, ' 70 Norfolk, Va. Betsy E. Pope, ' 70 Atlanta, Ca. Joan Marilyn PureeU, ' 70 Arlington, Va. Donna Marie Ritchie, ' 72 Roanoke, Va. 176 Vera Ann Rivers, ' 72 Charlottesville. Va. Susan McKee Simpson, ' 70 Annandale, Y ' a. Martha Lee Sprunt, ' 72 Raleigh Sarah Archie Watson, ' 70 Rowland Elizabeth Carol West, ' 72 Charlotte 177 _ Winston SMem t h U On the farthest edge of the campus stands Winston-Salem, looming like a medieval castle over the plains of St. Andrews. The domain of Lord Mcllheny, ex-soccer star and archae- ologist, W-S boasts more students stuffed down the trash chute than any other dorm, and is the home of the infamous Suite 7, the plague of the Dean ' s office, and the scourge of the campus. Daring David, who has been known to sweep campus coeds off their feet with a single sultry glance is perhaps even more of a freedom fighter than Prust; he is one to carry the battle to the enemy, and his zeal has been behind much of the con- structive change that SA ' s dynamic- duo has accomplished in their two years at St. Andrews. ' ) QRA iutes James F. Bouk Falls Church, Va. B.A. — Business Administration Robert L. Cheek High Point B.A. — Biology Malcolm Gray Clark Elizabethtown B.A. — Religion Greg H. Gibson Madison, N.J. B.A. — Economics Bradford Stuart Harris, Jr. Henderson B.A. — Business Administration James Thomas Harris Stuart, Fla. B.A. — English Keith Brian Kiger Rural Hall B.A. — Economics Ralph E. Koontz Greensboro B.A. — Math John Frank Ligon Fayetteville B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology George Edward Ted McCormack, Jr. Birmingham, Ala. B.A. —History Albert G. Peery, Jr. Tazewell, Va. B. A. — Politics Frank Pfenning, III Irvington, N.J. B.A. — Sociology and Anthropology David M. Seale Portsmouth, Va. B.A. — Business James Leslie Shaw Richmond, Va. B.A. — History and Political Science 178 Alfred Hubert Thumspon Charlotte B.A. — Histoo Brian Earie Thompson Yarmouth, N.S., Canada B.A. — Sociolog and Ajlthropolog) George Archibald Watson III Durham B.A. — Chemistry Charles W. White, III Charlotte B.M —Church Musk UnCHTOcL s rntn Ames Thomas Arnold, ' 72 Arlington, Va. Craig B. Barton, ' 71 Chapel HU1 George L. Bernhardt, ' 72 Lenoir Frank K. Bos worth. III. ' 72 Moorestown, N.J. Charles Buxton Burgwyn, ' 7! Murfreesboro Paul Chesney, Jr., ' 72 Charleston, W.Va, Marchant Colin Cottingham, Jr., ' 72 Durham Dixon Crumpler, ' 72 Henderson a. Mac Damron, ' 72 Lebanon, Va. Bev Davies, 71 L nchburg, Va. Mike Eric deSherbinin, Bryn Mawr, Penn. Arnold B. Edgerton, Jr., Golds boro Ben J. Evans, 0 Abbeville. S.C. William Kemper Fitch, 111, ' 72 West End Richard L. Fox, ' 71 Clinton, Md. James Banks Garrison, Jr., Albemarle 179 - Stephen Gibbs, ' 70 Philadelphia, Perm. Lawrence Milton Gray, Elizabeth City PhUlip Greene, ' 72 Elizabethtuwn Henry HaU, 71 Bladenboro Md± James Harward, ' 72 Durham Christopher Heppe, Wayne Pa. Michael HiU, ' 70 Ft. Mill, S.C. Paul Howie, ' 70 Richmond, Va. Walter Gray Jerome, 71 Arlington, Va. William Johns, ' 72 Front Royal, Va. Hosea Jones, ' 71 Macon, Ga. Hugh Mclnnis Jones, ' 71 Petersburg, Va. Waveriy Land, ' 71 Hampton, Va. James Collins Lawson, Jr., ' 72 Winsto n -Sa le m James Dwight Lutz, ' 72 Henderson vi lie Marshall McClung, ' 72 Salem, Va. William Henry Marlow, ' 72 Vestal, N.Y. Edward Lee Minnich, ' 70 Clinton McFaddin Moise, ' 72 Sumter, S.C. Richard Morgan, ' 72 North Miami, Fla. «M itifcK Pete Mori and, ' 72 Cristobal, Canal Zone James Perrin, Jr., ' 72 Potomac, Md. Scott Powers, ' 71 APO, N.Y. Craig Weston Rein, ' 71 Arnold, Md. 180 Thomas Hansford Roam-, ' Bushnell, Fla. Norman Sholar, Jr., ' 70 Moo ' esville Craig Kichmond Simmons, Wan?, Mass. James Isaac Stephens, ' 72 Fuquay-Varina Donald Stroud, Charlotte Richard Tilghman, ' 71 Annapolis, Md. Bruce Ronald Tingle, ' 70 Newport News, Va. John Vinson, 72 Petersburg, Va. Baker Martin Walker, ' 71 West Point. Va. Samuel Ashton Watkins, III, ' 72 Kingston Randy Wellford, ' 71 Memphis, Tenn. X y Students Other than that brave band of com- muters, there are those who would just as soon pass up the pleasures of dorm life (house mothers, falling ceil- ing vents, suitemates . . . ) and spend their college days in the urban splendor of Laurinburg. Whether the move represents a deliberate choice of an apartment over a dormitory cinder block cell, or the fact that SA as yet has no housing for married students, approximately five percent of the student body resides off campus, and thus escapes the still remaining vestiges of the in loco parentis tradition that permeated St. Andrews for so long. And where else can the campus bound majority go for parties and weekends? ▲ C i 63 OoAiHiAtes N. B. Yank Albers Wagram B.A. —English Harry Hunter Allen, Jr. Spart anburg, S.C. B.A. — Economics Douglas James Colby Huntington, N.Y. B.A. —History Jeannie Casque Raeford B.A. — Elementary Education Constance Lane Harris Washington B.A. — Art Noel Sandy Harris Tampa, Fla. B.A. — Human Relations Thomas Newton Ingram, Jr. Charlotte B.A. — Psychology Thomas J. James, Jr. Greenville, S.C. B.A. — Economics Robert Leland McNie) Hamer, S.C. B.A. — Economics Joseph Bok Mitchell Elizabethtown, Ky. B.A. — Drama Robert William Owens, Jr. Bennettsville, S.C. B.A. — Human Relations Michael Graham Quinn East Northport, N.Y. B.A. — English Charma Lorraine Pickett Burlington B.A. — Psychology Thomas Bayne Randall Shelby B.A. — Economics Robert J. Rich Bel haven B.A. — Economics William Edwin Rinker Greensboro B.A. — Business Administration James Hoglen Snyder Bethesda, Md. B.A. — Business Administration Charles M. Speegle, Jr. Fayetteville B.A. — Economics Mary Paul Stokes Laurinburg B.A. — Elementary Education Kay McLaurin Tallon Dillon, S.C. B.A. — Elementary Education 182 Virginia Baker Taylor Laurinburg B.A — Sociology and Anthropotog ' Talbott Milton Taylor. Jr. Laurinburg B.A. — His ton, Thomas Anderson Teal Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. — English Bruce Daniel Tighe Millbum, NJ. B.A — Economics James Whitten Tisdale Grotan, N.Y. B.A. — Business Administration David L. Trosper Waynesboro, Va. B.A. — English ) i± J. Wes Ward Laurinburg B.A. — Economics William I. Wilson Leola, Penn. B.A. — Enghsh David Leslie Wolfe Winston -Salem B.A. — Chemistry Carol White Wood Maitland. Fla. B.A. — English Thomas Kendrick Wood Da r tona Beach, Fla. B.A. — Histon Uncled assmen Marie Adele Bowyer, 72 Laurinburg Pamela Baren, ' 71 Laurinburg James Dyle Johnson, ' 71 Mayport, Fla. Paula H. Lfles, 70 Bennettsvflle, S.C. Robert M. Middleton, ' 70 Charlotte Carol J. White, 71 Havre, Mont. Kfci Second Semestec 184 In the never ending battle for the total annihilation of the in loco par- entis anachronism, the Inter-Dorm Council, led by the fearless Dan Beerman, has carried the banner of freedom this year. Women ' s hours were a main concern, and with some enlightened thinking on both sides of the lake, coeds were at last given the credit for knowing when to come in out of the snow. Another IDC brain- storm was open forums with the fac- ulty in the dorms themselves, and K- M kept Ludlow locked in suite 3 for hours one night discussing the nature of the universe and the campus. The open forum concept proved attractive, and was the inspiration for an open Black Forum, in which SA ' s black men and women spoke freely in dia- logue with whites on the essential questions of black and white co-exis- tence on the campus. SP E Ff P A I r 1 tjA WML % 1 - F v ' • % 9 r f£m In an effort to demonstrate that people kill people, not guns, SA ' s gun club has joined forces to provide safety courses, inter-club competition and safe storage for that old musket you ' ve been keeping under your bed for an emergency. President Mike McCord and crew have established guidelines for possession of firearms on campus, including having passed NRA qualifications and registration with the club. The group can easily be recognized by the Garrison ' s Guerillas camouflage suits that are so much in evidence each time hunting season opens, and the dead doves being plucked under your dorm win- dow each evening when the hunters return home from the hills. The Gun Club hopes eventually to compete in inter-collegiate competition, though target and skeet ranges are still in the planning stages. Think of it, though — the cheerleaders prancing and veil- ing for a bullseye, halftime enter- tainment by the Laurinburg militia, and even a pre-match pep rally with everyone standing around firing shot- guns into the air, polishing muzzles and practicing quick draws; instead of a conference tournament they could have a shootout on Main street at high noon. m dfcM H-s Of ... I r After copping the basketball title in February, mighty Meek moved into the lead in the intramural dorm competition, and looked ahead to the warm weather and those lazy after- noons of softball to further enhance their prestige in the athletic world. After the frenzied and often freezing football contests of the fall, and the sweaty and often bloody basketball tilts, softball has usually been a re- laxed picnic-type finale to the year ' s competition. Still, the overall cham- pionship is still up for grabs at this stage, and behind the fraternal beer and sandwiches atmosphere the stakes are still the thrill of victory or the agony of defeat. And if all those par- takers of the national pastime still haven ' t decided who is indeed num- ber one on this side of campus the MRA has provided an open track meet for all the dorms, just so one dorm doesn ' t start grabbing the gold too soon.  ■; ' With the athletic young ladies from Concord leading the female race for intramural honors, the WRA opened its spring schedule with, appropriate- ly enough, a swim meet. However, being ladies they can be excused for confusing their seasons; shortly there- after they swung into the basketball season as everyone else was frolicking in the grass. With the girls varsity team officiating and coaching, the race proved only slightly less exciting than the men ' s and quite a bit gentler. Bowling was also on the agenda for those lasses who were more striking than their friends, and finally they got around to softball though the men made them play over in the corner of the field with all the drainage holes and beer cans. There was, finally, tennis, and the end to the most strenuous year of activity the SA women had ever seen. JI. JI. J1. JI. JL JL JL JI ■0Q0Q0ISI0I 0Q0Q0Q0I 390Q0 ' Q05i 0909090011 B0B0a0Q0B0IS0IG0Q0l 090909081090909091 0IB0B0Q0l 0l 0a0B0l 90B0B0C0B0li0Q0S0l! v ' ' V L ' ' J J J L. ' J l? ' j t ' ' J 1. ' j k '  J , I ■r? - - BU Best dpessed Co-eO: miss dianne BuckLe 189 lettepnun ' s CLub Sweetheapt: miss nancy hammpnO 190 CiRde k SweetheaRt: miss iTURy B. hiQQins 191 j Bt hJ jt i ■•Jn i  % Vfll fc i-_  v Jk , ' • kk ' 4 • -,- r5 , , . S '  ' I • •  «n ■- L lu • -S - •• ' ■-;j:r ' i ,■' ' ■™ --• J _ ja teS ' m :- . v. , : .. :,: jj ¥ ■■i- «gafe. v- fc - SA being a school for young southern gentlemen, and only thirty miles from the Pinehurst resorts, golf is under- standably a natural thing to a dozen or so ambitious Arnold Palmers each spring. With practice rounds starting in the cold winds of February, and matches in the sometimes colder winds of March, the team still man- ages to bring home wins at an appre- ciable clip. Coached and harassed by golfing great Jerome McGee, the Prince of the 19th Hole, SA ' s varsity squad should be spearheaded this year by David Seale and Craig Han- nas, with the talented threesome of Amburn, Jones and Samson for sup- port. With McGee ' s expert pointers on the finer aspects of the game the lads should be firing sub-70 rounds in every match, and with his physical fitness training they should be belting 300 yard drives on every hole . . . and as soon as he learns to count the guys can start keeping score. 192 H 194 WSAP, home of the good guvs and the super saps, the voice of St. An- drews and channel 64 on vour dial all in one. What more could anvone ask in the middle of a long scholarlv night than the cheerful companion- ship of C.T. or Uncle Mills? President Fitzner and his band of announcers, technicians and businessmen have brought WSAP from an Orange-based feeble voice in the evening to a first rate if limited radio station, easilv comparable to anvthing the area has to offer if not better. .Armed this vear with hundreds of dollars worth of new transmitters, consoles, turntables and even records, WSAP presents the op- portunity for anv campus egocentric to have his golden voice heard all over the campus at almost anv hour of the day. The good guvs are so thorough, in fact, that it often seems impossible to escape the voice of St. Andrews; it follows vou to breakfast, dinner, the John and we assume the classrooms will be next. Still, WSAP must rate; consider that during the great ice storm of ' 69 the onlv gener- ator on campus was running not stoves, not heaters, but you guessed it; good old super sap. If track seems lacking in prag- matism, what can be said of bright young men running around inside a caged enclosure batting a fuzzv little ball over a net? Spring invariably means tennis, too, and this year ' s crop of lunatics will be desperately trying to emulate the feats of that SA star of yesteryear, Bob Chaiken, now pos- ing as coach. What this year ' s squad may be lacking in outright experience should be made up for in a lack of general ability. Pity Mr. Chaiken; all those long cold windy afternoons on the courts, dodging foul pops from the ball field and rackets hurled in de- spair, attempting to infuse six semi- coordinated hopefuls into potential Rod Lavers. With captain Harry Kraly playing the number one spot and the suave pair of Hardesty and Moore at two and three, and a horde of left-footed wonders bunched be- tween four and six, the SA country club set should possibly break even, maybe even win a few more than thev lose, and who knows? If they reallv get good, Chaiken may give them strings for their rackets . . . 196 197 UM Leatherwood and Lisa, Christopher Parkening, a nd the New York Rock and Roll Ensemble; a spectrum of sound and emphases as wide as anyone could ask for, to suit the tastes of a wide and varied student body. Even in the entertainment it seeks, the SA family continues to move in kaleido- scopic patterns from classical to modern rock to everything in be- tween; as Tom Leatherwood de- scribes his music, a 1984 version of the Everly Brothers by way of Ser- geant Pepper. He might just be cap- turing the style of St. Andrews, 1969. Christopher Parkening Leatherwood and Lisa New York Rock and Roll Ensemble ms 200 That Spring brings out the animal in- stincts in the typical student is an ac- cepted fact, and the various forms in which a person ' s animalitv is mani- fested are usually accepted or at least tolerated as a basic facet of that per- son ' s individuality. Thus, one can smile at the annual carnage on the lakeshore during those warm, sleepv days, and enjoy the fun of tennis and baseball and golf . . . but track???? Running in endless circles with no companion except pain and burning lungs, or trying to toss a 16 pound hunk of lead, or putting yourself into orbit with a fiberglass pole; man, vou have to be strange. Strange or not, however, SA ' s track team is a strange- ly dedicated band, who should enjov a good season though thev are pla- gued with the usual lack of man- power. Previous conference javelin champion John Price, and veteran distance runner Jim Bouck are the old men of the team, and should demon- strate to the younger members of the team that even when one is a senior and a scholar, he can still be crazy enough to run track during the spring of the year. 201 . ■jiPm . ? -r-LifcJ 202 What would spring at SA be, finally, without baseball? The only better wav to spend an April afternoon than watching a ball game would be watching a ball game with a six-pack, but since SA has its hangups one has to settle for the national pasrtime as performed by Gerry Griffin ' s bunch of ballplayers. Bv the time the weather is warm enough to sit in the bleachers for two hours, with or without six- pack, the team has been practicing and running off all winter ' s six-packs for over a mo nth. By the time March is creeping out like a lamb and the sunbathers have been chased off the tops of the dugouts the ball club is putting their talents learned in little league to use with a long schedule of games and of course, more practice. This year ' s squad will be a young one, but veterans like Kemp Gregory, the ace of the mound, and infielders Jimmy Timmons and Memphis Sny- der should provide all the inspiration needed for a good season. The Knights should be a better fielding club than a hitting one, but with a little good weather and a little less harassment from the tennis courts. Coach Griffin should find himself with a squad only slightly less tal- ented than the Mets. 203 mam 204 J mr a B ST ' Thus it was that come mid-season, the Knights had put together an impressive 9-6 record, occasionally looking like the Mets but more often resembling the National League All- Stars. Hundertmark, Xortham and Everett rounded out a tight defensive infield, and Gregorv was joined on the mound bv Rich and Kleber for some excellent pitching performances. Hitting was the key factor, predictably, and when the bats boomed the victories came easily; some days, though, the opposing pitchers threw aspirins, and it is difficult to win when your pitcher is the top batter on the team, as was the case at mid-April. Still, the ' 69 team was a winning one, and could be excused for losing 13-0 to Wilmington, and being caught with a bus full of tall Buds somewhere between Laurinburg and Rocky Mount. After spending Easter on a Marine base, can you really blame them for amthing? 205 As the Highland players have their fantasies upon which to ride out of reality and the gun club their rifles to let out their inner frustrations, there had to be a club for those pro- lific souls who let it all out in prose and poetry, and it is called appropri- ately enough, Quill and Scroll. Com- posed of the staffs of the three student publications, the Lance, Cairn and Lamp and Shield, and headed by President Junod and Vice-President Riddle, the Quill and Scroll is a clan of frustrated Salingers and Heming- ways posing as a literary society. A typical meeting finds Her Grace Mrs. Overholser presiding, and a dozen or so literary types throwing satiric- barbs at one another in hopes that someone will hear the creation of an immortal bit of verse and a star will be bom. Of course no one hears any- thing but his own words and conse- quently no one impresses anyone else. 206 Cairn-from the Gaelic, a conical heap of stones used as a monument or landmark. From the SA poet ' s mind, a landmark of creativity or just plain literary honesty. Published once a year under the guiding hands of Nancy Williamson, the Caim is the SA student ' s chance to put his thoughts and ability before the cam- pus and the community for reaction, contemplation or disregard. The Cairn is for the sole use of the SA community, and depends therefore on the profundity and the prolificacy of the SA student. The Cairn, finallv. is probablv the most genuine of the re- flections cast from the ever-spinning kaleidoscope that is St. Andrews. 207 — mamm mm Who ' s Who= Who ' s what was the real question for the nineteen St. Andrews seniors honored in the annua] selection of Who ' s Who — Among Students in American Colleges and Universities. Based on scholastic achievement and extracurricular involvement, the awards this year were made by nom- ination by the student body and final selection by the Student Life Commit- tee. Jan Bartlett, a religion major from Arlington, Va. was this year ' s presi- dent of the Letterman ' s Club and has been captain of the wrestling team for the past two years. He has twice been conference champion and MVP in the conference tournament. Jan hopes to attend seminary. Dan Beerman is a politics major from West Palm Beach, Florida. He is pres- ident of Kings Mountain dorm and president of the Inter-Dorm council. He has also been president of his sophomore and junior classes. Dan will attend Princeton Seminary. David Betts, SA student body presi- dent is from Atlanta, Ga. and an English major. David was treasurer of the Student Association, and plans to attend law school or seminary after graduation. Gloria Bell graduated last summer with a BA in English and is now in graduate school at Chapel Hill. A former member of the student senate, she is the daughter of former SA ad- ministrative head Stan Bell, now re- siding in Des Moines, Iowa. Bob Brcwbaker is a psych major from Bedford, Va. and this year ' s Attorney General of the Student Judicial Sys- tem. As well as being instrumental in revising the entire judicial system. Brew has played varsity tennis and soccer and was named to the All- Conference soccer team this year. He will attend Princeton Seminary. Ellen Clarke hails from Montgomery, Alabama and is majoring in philoso- phy and religion. Head of the Peace Corps program, Ellen has also been a senator for two years. Peter Cook is a native of Tampa, Flor- ida and sometimes resident of the Laurinburg hippie tribe. A philoso- phy and religion major, Pete has been Jan Bartlett Danny Beennan Gloria Bell Bob Brewbaker David Betts Ellen Clark 209 m mjmaaummmd probably the most influential voice at SA in the past years in effecting and encouraging social reformation and occasional revolution. Mills Fitzncr has long been a guiding hand behind the maintenance, cre- ativity and growth of WSAP, and serves as president of the Radio Club this year. Mills is an economics major from Sylvania, Georgia. Joseph P. Junod is this year ' s Lance editor and has been on the staff for four years, serving as sports editor his sophomore and junior vears. Joseph is an English major from Pelham Manor, New York. Joyce Lowdermilk, from Raleigh, is president of Granville dorm this year and has been class secretary of her freshman, sophomore and junior class. Joyce is an elementary education major. Ted McCormack, is a historv major from Birmingham, Alabama. Ted was treasurer of the SCB for two years and plans to enter graduate school at Pete Cook Mills Fitzner Joe Junod Duke Scott McCrea, currently from San Francisco, is copy editor of the Lamp and Shield and sports editor of the Lance. An occasional English major, Scott will attend Princeton Seminary • Joe Mitchell a Drama major, hails from Elizabethville, Kentucky. Presi- dent of the Highland Players for the past two years, Joe is now married and resides in Laurinburg. Margaret Offtcrdinger is an English major from Lynchburg, Va. She has been secretary of the Student Associ- ation for two years, and plans to teach after graduation. Pete Peery, a Political Science major from Tazewell, Va. is president of Winston-Salem dorm, and has been a member of the student senate. One of the outstanding scholars on campus, Pete plans to enter graduate school. Ray Riddle, a Psychology major from Charleston Heights, South Carolina, Joyce Lowdermilk Top to Bottom: Ted McCormack, Scott McCrea, and Joe Mitchell. 211 wmmmmamm is editor of this year ' s Lamp and Shield and president of both the Circle K Club and Behavioral Science Club. Ray plans to do graduate work in experimental psychology- George Slierrill is a native of Frank- lin, North Carolina and a Philosophy and Religion major. President of the Student Christian Council, George plans to enter seminary. Linda Snsong is associate editor of the Lance this year as she was last year, Margaret Offterdinger Pete Peery Ray Riddle 212 and is an English major. She is presi- dent of Wilmington dorm and a member of the Women ' s residence court. A resident of Middlesboro, Kentucky, Linda wants to teach be- fore obtaining her Master ' s degree. Carol Williamson, a Psychology major, has been a member of the Student Judiciary Board for two years. Carol is from Lynchburg, Ya. and hopes to enter the Peace Corps after gradua- tion. Across the top: George Sherrill and Linda Sirsong; Bottom: Carol Williamson. 213 B HUHH  V — ' 67 - 68 most VaLuABle puyecs Craig Hannas, Soccer and Basketball 214 Harry Kialy: Cross Country and Tennis 215 In the early morning of May 25 the Class of 1969 marches across the SA causewalk. They march not across countryside, not with gauze masks, not with little red books of gospel to quote from and to wave in crowds. Led by administrators and teachers, there is a studied solemnity in their pace as they are self-consciously elated and relieved garbed in aca- demic black cloth and mortarboard and tassel. There are no fearful crowds looking on, only proud parents, relatives, and fiancees. Squirming uncomfortably in the heat, but happv, these chosen few watch the slow procession as each SA graduate marches forward symbol- izing his or her achievement. The draft or marriage or grad school or just a plain old fashion drunk races through each mind platform-bound. The address still floats on the warm, early-summer air and perhaps two or three of Ansley ' s words are remem- bered long after the SA campus is forgotten in the chaos and confusion of living. Here and now, only this is real. 216 Qovecnment: CABINET MEN ' S RESIDENCE COURT: Ellen Clark President; David Betts Chairman: Herb Prizer Vice-President: Mike Fen-ell Vice- Chairman. 1st Alternate: INTER-DORMITORY COUNCIL: Secretary: Jane Johns Ted Wctidcl lYesident: Dan Beerman Traesurar: Todd Davis Vice-Chairman, 2nd. Alternate: Vice-President: Pete Peerj Advisors: JefT MeKeshnie Secret ar : Joyce Luwdemiilk Mr. John Hill Secretary: Butch Stahlberger Treasurer: Anne W;inl Mr. Spencer Ludlow Dan Beerman Advisor: Dean Overholser Demi Decker Dean Leake Dean Leake Dan Decuman Pete Peery Linda Susong Ted McCormack Jim Wright Jtllfa Wilson George Sherrill Advisors: Jim Wright Bob Brewbaker Mr. Gerald Griffin Barbara Bryant Mr. Charles Johnson TRAFFIC COURT: Chairman: Ron Tingle SENATE WOMEN ' S RESIDENCE COURT: Rick Ralph President: Mike Ferrell Chairman: Linda Peel Gail Hoffman President Pro-Tern: Hunter Allen Vice-Chairman, 1st. Alternate; Jed Howell Secretary : Henri Johnson Becky Suddreth Bryan Thompson Parliamentarian: Pete Cook Vice-Chairman, 2nd. Alternate: Advisors: Amy Davis STUDENT LIFE COMMITTEE: Mr. John 11,11 Secretary : Janet Dalton Chairman: Dean Decker Mr. Spencer Ludlow Joyce Lowdermilk Vice-Chairman: Dean Overholser Albermarle Hall Linda Susong Dr. Daughtrey Anne Bottoms Anne Ward Dr. Doubles Nina Dougherty Julia Wilson Mr. Dugger Lmda Hill Advisors: Mr. Mcllhiney Concord Hall: Mr. David Mcllhiney Dr. Williamson Carol Dugger Dr. Doris Hewitt David Betts Grave Ann Heider Dean Overholser Joe Junod Man, Prince Dan Beerman Granville Hall: S.U.S.C.A. CO-ORDINATOR: Jane Johns Linda Leslie Margaret Offterdinger Todd Davis Julia Morris Dianne Ellison Jean Templeton N.S.A. CO-ORDINATOR: Kings Mountain Hall: Sandra Gaddis GRADUATION COMMITTEE: Harry Kraly Chairman: Margaret Offterdinger Eddie Porter ELECTIONS BOARD: Ken Pritchard John Royal) Chairman: Carol Williamson John Royall Mecklenburg Hall: Don White Linda Peel Mac Crosswell Nancy Richardson John Turner John McAllister Carolyn Caldwell Dixie Fulton Cline Hodson Ray Riddle Orange Hail: Al Thompson HONOR SOCIETY: Glendy Garrison Betts Hunter Chairman: Nancy Richardson Henri Johnson George Ducker Advisor: Mr. Looney Terry Jaywork Sarah Abernethy Wilmington Hall: STATE STUDENT LEGISLATURE: Lydia Johnson Mary Lou Kruthoffer Hunter Allen Bob Brewbaker Elliot MacKethan Cline Hodson Pete Peery Hollace Laws Valerie Hastings Jean Casque Winston-Salem Hall: Sally Edmonds Jean Templeton Banks Garrison Mac Crosswell Susan Cotton Chris Heppe Ray Killian Marianna Hardison Ron Tingle Dianne McLean Joint Representatives: ORIENTATION COMMITTEE: Glendy Higgins Meek. 6c Wilmington: Diane Davis Co-Ch airmen: Jane Johns Concord 6: Winston: Henry Hall Sandra Gaddis Sandra Gaddis Day Student Representatives: Rick Walker Man Lou Key Hunter Alien Ray Riddle Mike Ferrell Pete Cook Cathy Wallace Martha Goodman Robert Owens Kattie Wainscott Dianne Davis Dave McDonald Pat Snipes JUDICIAL COMMITTEE: Attorney General: Bob Brewbaker HANDBOOK COMMITTEE: MEN ' S RECREATION ASSOCIATION: Secretary: Pam Elliott Chairman: David Flucke President: Bill Jones John Everett Secretary: Sara Abemethy Advisors: Benny Gurley Jean Can- Coach Griffin Ken Pritchard Sara Lee Jim Johnson Steve Wesley Barbara Olson Dorm Managers: Cathy McKinnon Ron Watkins Ken McCinnis Betts Hunter Dean Overholser Herb Prizer Sandy Gaddis Stuart Parrish Mary B. Higgins STUDENT CENTER BOARD: Walter High Advisor: Dean Decker President: Ted McCormack John Ogletree Vice-President: Al Moss Dave Dixon STUDENT-FACULTY APPELATE BOARD: Secretary: Donna Gardner Jim Timmons Chairman: Carolyn Caldwell Treasurer: Tom Edge Craig Rein Secretary: Advisors: Rick Ralph Susan Cotton Dean Overholser Ray Riddle Mrs. Dove WOMEN ' S RECREATIONAL ASSOCIATION: Advisors: Rick Skutch President: Barb Bryant Dr. Car! Geffert Lucy Scott Vice-President: Gail Calloway Dean Davidson Hollace Laws Secretary: Janet Moses STUDENT JUDICIARY BOARD: Mary B. Higgins Advisors; Chairman: Pete Klopman David Wagner Miss Williams Vice -Chairman, 1st. Alternate: Miss Bateman Carol Williamson STUDENT CHRISTIAN COUNCIL: Managers: Vice-Chairman, 2nd. Alternate: President; George Sherrill Windy Tinga Don White Vice-President: Mary Stone Pam McRainy Secretary: N ' ancv Richardson Secretary: Beth Bryant Mandy Duddy Rick Walker Treasurer: John Roper Vickie Vendrell Craig Barton Advisor: Mr. Davenport Sally Jackson Charles Pratt Marianna Hardison Nicki Jenkins Advisors: David Flucke Sally MacLeod Dr. David Wetmore Marilyn Cook Bettv Blose Dr. David McLean Tom Wood Mary L. Walker Mr. Richard Prust Bev Da vies Dianne Ellison 217 doRms= ALBEMARLE Social Chairman: Terry Dryden Social Chairman Herb Prizer WILMINGTON President: Julia Wilson Residence Director. Martha James Residence Director: Mrs. Hasty President: Linda Susong Social Chairman Nancy Abb tot Dorm Managers: Bob Nye Social Chairman: Phyllis Dieth Residence Director: Mrs Edens Betts Hunter John Davis Residence Director: Mrs. Harvey Suzanne Currie Margaret Parrish Denny Dodson Anne Parsons Brenda O ' Berry Margaret Welch Tony Fernandez Anne Fletcher Jane Cline Cathy McDonald Bob Lilly Sue Hawkins Cam Lewis Pam Robinson David Sinclair Susie Mowry Barbara Harris Myrna Tracy Sandy Ta Image Sarah Lee Sara Abemathy Dixie Fulton Elana Carrie Margaret Ofterdi iger Terry Dry dan Nancy Munro ORANGE Mary B. Higgins Nancy Hammond CONCORD President: Jimmj W right President: Anne Ward KINCS MOUNTAIN Social Chairman Leslie Quast WINSTON- SAL EM Social Chairman Mary - Key President: Dan Beerman Residence Director: Mrs. Dove President: Pete Peery Residence Director: Mrs. Peterson Residence Director: Dick Prust Dorm Managers: Social Chairman: Fred Faulkner Jane Talley Charles Fondow Gail Calloway Residence Director: Dave Mcllhiney Ginny Boyce Ted Wendel David Flucke Fred Teichen Barbara Bryant John Price Nancy Stuart Ralph Koontz Cathy Wallace Jim Amburn Janet Hoff Chris Heppe Claudia Hughes John Royall Linda Peel Keith Kiger Elizabeth Ward Jim Rothrock Camilla Neal S teve Gibbs Molly McConnell John Everett Mills Fitzner Terry Jaywork Charlie Burgwyn Brian Thompson GRANVILLE MECKLENBURG Steve Litchford Grey Clark President: Joyce jowdermilk President: Deane Leake meOU: ARTS: CAIRN: Linda Susong Jody Dixon Editor: Nancy Williams David Wagner Tom Edge John Price Sports Editor: Scott McCrea Dianne Downey Jean Can- Business Manager: Jim Bouck John Brvan Lynn Cansler Advisor: Mr. Fowler Dugger Bill Gaston Cathy Wallace Carol Dugger Buddy Bennett Craig Smith Neta Hart Greg Gibson Elizabeth Hane Cline Hodson Janey Guinn John Turner Jim Pope Wilburn Hayden Kemp Gregory Margaret Olfrerdinger Duane God man John Lawson Charlie Pratt Winston Hensley Jane Tally Terry Jaywork Doris Henderson Hal Crowe Kemp Gregory Cline Hodson Anne Ryland Mike Keech Jim Holler Harry Huff LAMP AND SHIELD: QUILL AND SCROLL: Terry Jaywork Editor-in-Chief: Ray Riddle President: Joe Junod Jay Jerome Business Manager: George Shaffer Vice-President: Ray Riddle May Kingsley Assistant Editor: Ellen Richardson Secretary: Nancy Williams Don Lawton Copy Editor: Scott McCrea Advisors: John McAlister Photographers : Dean Overholser Sharon McKensie Pete Cook Mr. Fowler Dugger Ed Marsh Sandy Harris George Shaffer Allan Mason Scott McCrea Ellen Richardson H. D. Maynard Advisor: Mr. Fowler Dugger Scott McCrea Dianne McLean Becky Armstrong Pete Co ok Al Moss Suzanne Denham Sandy Harris Stuart Parrish Charlotte Donaldson Linda Susong Dwight Oxford Laurie Dow David Wagner Van Penninger Millie Gibson Jim Bouck Blair Rankin Sandra Caddis Craig Rein Graye Ann WSAP: Mike Reynolds Will Henderson President: Mills Fitzner Dennis Richards Sue Hunting Vice-President: Ron Tingle Jack Richmond Mary Hutcheson Secretary: Dottie Best John Roper Sallie Jackson Treasurer: Scotty Scott Bob Schurke Nickie Jenkins Program Director: David Berry Craig Simmons Pete Klopman Business Manager: Bob Nye Craig Smith Dianna Leggett Advisor: Mr. Nammore Kent Snyder Margaret Murray Pierce Barr Lee Southwell Leslie Quast Richard Beach Charlie Thompson Bill Rinker Frank Bosworth Bruce Tighe George Weeks Scott Beckinridge Ted Wendell Chip Wright Steven Boyes Steve Wesley Hal Crowe Gardy Wilson LANCE: David Bunn Chip Wright Editor: Joe Junod Gordon Dixon Tony Wyatt Associate Editors : Joe Ed Denny HIGHLAND PLAYERS: President: Joe Mitchell Secretary: Julia Wilson Treasurer: Sally Syphrit Advisors: Mr. McDonald Mr. Naramore Jeff Alheim Gayle Baldwin Sarah Bell° Jean Carr Sally Carlson Kaye Comer Gail Craddock Mac Damron Phyllis Dieth ° Carol Fetter Harry Hagan Patty Hicky Mary B. Higgins Jed Howell Betts Hunter Lydia Johnson Mary Key Kathy Kock Jack Ligget Joe Mitchell Susie Mowery Kathy Pooley Dennis Richards Pat Ruffin George Shaffer Craig Smith Cynthia Sweet Sally Syphrit Cissy Underdown Sharon Weber Ron Wilkerson Julia Wilson Nancy Young Honor Members TOURING CHOIR: President: George Ducker Secretary: Lydia Johnson 218 SpORtS: CROSS COUNTRY: Captain: Rick Walker Managers: Nancy Nicholson Dustv Wibbre Coach: Mr. Jim Ollis Bev Davies Todd Davis Buzz Durant Wil Henderson Ray Higgins Dave Rothwell SOCCER: Captains: Yank Albers Ken Prit chard Manager: Benny Gurley Coaches : Mr. Rufus Hackney Mr. Jerome McCee Bob Brewbaker Phil Blundel) Gray Q ark Historian: Susie Stockton Tour Manager: George Shaffer Director: Mr. Roger Lamb Gayle Baldwin Lane Baldwin Delia Bectan Ginny Boyce Gail Calloway Bill Compher Mary Jane Coming Mac Dameron Diane Davis Pam Elliott Bill Evans Crawford Fitch Lynn Futk Dixie Fulton Larry Hammond Susan Howe Bill Johns John Lawson Margaret Ligon Bill Rinker Anne Ryland Jessie Self George Sherrill Susan Sloop Charles Stahlberger Ceilia Stegail Mary Louise Walker Wes Ward Al Wendler Chuck White Judy White CHAPEL CHOIR: Director: Mr. Roger Lamb Neil Babcock B. B. Brooke Millie Broome Beth Bryant Jean Carr Rachel Dixon Carol Durand Kate Farmer Doug Colby John Daniels Earl Douglas David Dufek Henry Freeman Craig Hannas Terry Jay work Walter Johnson David Mills Mac Moise Ralph Ncsbit David Rothwell Hamp Sewell Jim Synder Bert St. John Paul Szumelda Al Thompson Bob Vakos Randy Wellford Jim Womeldorf BASKETBALL: Captains: Pete Garner John Turner Statisticians: Debbie Harper Janice Gordon Coach: Mr. Spencer Boyd Joe Denney Tony Fernandez Kemper Fitch Larry Gray Gary Gredlein Craig Hannas Gary Linn Steve Litchford Ken McCinnis Steve Massengill Brent Rhue WRESTLING: Captains: Jan Bartlett Dean Leake Coach: Mr. Jim Ollis Henry DelTosto — 123 lbs. John Rovall — 130 lbs. Ann Bletcher Dayle Grumbles Marianna Hard i son Patty Hickey Susan Howe Berts Hunter Shirley Isenhour Margaret Jones Kathy Kock Karen Lundy Susan Mackey Sally MacLeod Jane Matthews Natalie Moffett Betsy Pope Olivia Ratcliff Olivia Stegail Carolyn Sutton Judy Waple ST. ANDREWS ORCHESTRA: Director; Dean West Joyce Bryant Carol Byron Robert Cheek Karen Clarke Susan Cockrum Bill Delp Dennise Denefield Ann Evans Glenna Finnicum Elizabeth Fogartie Dayle Grumbles Sharon Hayes Lloyd Hinson Susan Howe Katherine McKinnon Traywick Newton Campbell Perry Blair Rankin Selma Tuck Elizabeth Ward Doris West Ronald Wilkerson Paul Young Dean l.eake — 137 lbs. Rick Morgan— 1 IS lbs, Jan Bartlett — 152 lbs. Danny Dodson — IGOm-. Torn Teal— 167 lbs. Al Thompson — 177 Lbs, Ken Pntchard — 177 lbs. Hunter Bahnson — Heavyweight BOWLING: Coaches: Mr. DHvid McLean Mr. Blackwell Manager: Barbara Olscn Sandy Berg Laurie Dow George Ducker Jeff Erickson Joe Junod Frank Ligon Margaret Ligon Sandy Strickland Kim Vohs Larry Williamson Randy Wolfe GOLF: Coach: Mr. Jerome McGee Jim Amburn Bate Crudup Banks Garrison Craig Hannas Jim Harwood Vandy Innis Chris Johnson Mac Jones Ed Marsh Herb Prizer Bob Sampson David Seale Buzzy Vincent TENNIS: Captain: Harry Kraly Coach: Mr. Bob Chaiken George Bernhardt Frank Bos worth Bert Cushmen Fred Faulkner Chuck Hardesty Wirt Hatcher Frank Ligon Scott McCrea Rod Moore Danny Robinson Ted Wendel TRACK: Coach: Mr. Spencer Boyd Ed Andrews Jim Bouck Henry Freeman Paul Jamison Gene Miller Gale Moore Phil Nickle John Ogletree John Price Jack Richmond Jim Stevens Kim Vohs BASEBALL: Manager: Lewis Swanson Coach: Mr. Gerald Griffin Doug Adams John Everett Gary Gredlein Kemp Gregory Glenn Hundertmark Sig Johnson Mark Kleber Steve Litchford David Mills Irvin Northam Bob Rich Jim Snyder Al Thompson Bruce Tighe Jimmy Timmons Wayne Wise 219 CLUBS: AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY President: James Holler Vice-President: Ted Wendel Secretary: Kim Matthews Treasurer: David Wolfe Advisor: Dr. Donald Barnes John Anderson John Ball Dwight Clav Bill Delp Gordon Dixon Harry Hagan Casey Jonas Jeff McKechnie Ham Montreuil Phil Nickie Leland O ' Brian Kenneth Pritchard George Watson J. Todd White Randel C. Wolfe AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION President: Sig Johnsen Secretary: Darlene West Treasurer: Al Moss Advisor; Mr. Wade Edward A. Anderson Collie Baird Buddy Bennett George Bernhardt Jim Bouck Charlie Brown Dave Bunn Allen Burdett Charles Burgwyn Bill Carper Bate Crudup Michael E. DeSherbinin Dave Dickson Ralph Edwards Rick Erisman Randy Fagnani Fred Faulkner Mills Fitzner Dick Fowler Nancy Funk Butch Gaddy Pete Gamer Rick Gasque Bill Gaston John Geer Steve Gibbs Tern. Glakas Jamie Gregory Compv Groff David Guy Frank Hall Craig Hannas Lawrence Harding Stuart Harris Winston Hensley Chris Heppe Walter High Tom James Paul Jamison Chris Johnson Mac Jones David Krug Tom Kip David Landis Emelda Lawing Hayne Liles Sharon MacKenzie Tom May Bob McNeil Linda McQueen Nick Mitchell Eric Mohn Mac Moise Pete Morland Traywick Newton Nancy Nicholson Bob Nye Denny Ogden Stuart Parrish Barbi Reiner Rick Reynolds Brent Rhue Jack Richmond Bill Rinker David Rothwell Mark Salmon Norman Sholar David Sinclair Christopher Smrth Charlie Speegle Betty Strickland Tim Tate Tim Taylor Fred Teichen Bruce Tighe Jim Tisdale Wm. Scott Todd Roger Vaden Bobby Vakos George Weeks Chris Wilson Rusty Wolfe Chip Wright Wayne Zoofay BEHAVORIAL SCIENCES CLUB President: Ray Riddle Vice-President: Leslie Quasi Secretary; Brenda O ' Berry Advisors: Dr. Smith Mr. Mcllhiney Jane Bibee Jenny Boyce Debbie Edward Glenna Finnicum Molly Hill Jane Monteith Margaret Murray George Shaffer Jane Talley CHEERLEADERS Captain: Todd White Co-Captain: Sally Chapin Joan Bollin Mary Boltin Sally Edmunds Nancy Hammond Valerie Hastings Roberta Leavitt Anne Parsons Muffy Sprunt Janice Wells GUN CLUB President: Mike McCord Vice-President: Richard Beach Secretary: Ellen Loving Treasurer: Rick Erisman Advisor: Dr. Wetmore John Anderson Scott Breckenridge Bill Carper Dwight Clay Pete Cook Charlotte Donaldson Mills Fitzner Bruce Garrison Louie Goodson Connie Harris Wayne Hobbs Tom James Tom Kip Ted McCormack Jane McDaniel Alan Mason Jock Muir Dwight Oxford Ron Pierce Doug Siceloff Mr. David Singleton Wendy Tinga Bruce Travis George Weeks David Wolfe Jeff Saut Norman Sholar Peyton Morton Wilburn Hayden CIRCLE K CLUB President: Ray Riddle Vice-President: Al Thompson Secretary; Jim Youngdale Treasurer: Bob Schurke Sweetheart; Mary B. Higgins Advisor: Kiwanis International David Berry Bill Delp Gordon Dixon George Ducker Buzz Durant Benny Gurley Ray Higgins Bill Marlow Ralph Nesbit Dwight Oxford Douglas Raynor Charlie Thompson LETTERMEN ' S CLUB President: Jan Bartlett Vice-President: Ken Pritchard Secretary-Treasurer: Harry Kraly Advisors; Bob Chaiken Jerome McGee Rufus Hackney Doug Adams Yank Albers Hunter Bahnson Pierce Barr David Betts Phil Blundell Jim Bouck Bob Brewbaker Leroy Broach Jim Brooks Doyle Calloway Doug Colby Denny Dodson John Everett Tony Femandex Steve Cibbs Gary Gredlein Kemp Gregory Benny Gurley Craig Hannas Chuck Hardesty Rudy Howell Glenn Hundertmark Joe Junod Ray Killian Dean Leake Frank Ligon Steve Litchford Ted McCormick Ken McGinnis Bob McNeil ° Gene Miller Rod Moore Ralph Nesbit Irv Northan John Price Dave Pritchard Puck Reynolds Brent Rhue Bob Rich ° John Royal 1 Dave Seale Hamp Sewell Jim Shaw Jim Snyder Lewis Swanson Tim Tate Tom Teal Al Thompson Tom Thorn ' Bruce Tighe Jim Timmons Ron Tingle John Turner Mark Walker Bob Welch • Randy Wellford Wayne Wise Randy Wolfe Inactive STUDENT NORTH CAROLINA EDUCATION ASSOCIATION President: Carol Batten Vice-President: Carolyn C aldwell Secretary: Rachel Dixon Treasurer: Joan L. Clark Advisor: Dr. Daughtery Susan Sloop Diane Buckle Vickie Sheppard Gwen Horton Mary Willis Cathy Homeier Cam Lewis Anita Adams Dorothy Best Betsy Carson Donna Cleeland Susie Stockton Cynthia Marshall Cathi McDonald Dixie Fulton Janice Gordon Deborah Harper Beth Hartley Nancy Clifton Susan Grog an Carol Bragunier William Kimzey Marilyn Hensley Janet Hoff Jane McDaniel Betty Moose Nancy Munro Linda Peel Joan Stafford Sandra Strickland Elizabeth Ward Rebecca Suddreth Linda Fox Nancy Hammond Linda Smith Sarah Watson Kate Farmer Mary Moffett Betsy Pope Nancy Wooten Jane Talley Don Campbell Amy Davis Margaret Parrish Cindy Leach Nancy Crumpler 220 COMMUNITY DRUGS, INC. Closest to the St. Andrews Campus Students Welcome Open — Mon. - Sat. 9:00 - 9:00 Sun. 2:00 -7:00 1101 South Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina Phone 276-6061 ACweRtisements things go Coke (m Hamlet Coca-Cola Bottling Company - BOTTLERS OF - f kat SPRITE - TAB - FRESCA - FANTA • la. u. pal era. HERMAN ' S TIRE COMPANY, INC. 1518 South Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina Phone 276-2324 We Specialize in TV — Radio Repair Front End Alignment Headquarters for Goodyear G.E. Products Service S. fl. Duncan Company, Inc. Telephone 376-8481 1001 North Church Street P. O. Box 2044 Charlotte, N. C. 28201 221 She What??? When the sailboat sunk??? COMPLIMENTS of WHITEBROOK FARMS Wilmington, N. C 222 ■■........ i ' j • ' -. ' ■. . ' ■' v.v : -■-.:■■. ■•;■■, ' ; ' ■;■..:. ! ■■•■' - , ■We ' re ■j ' . ' V ' - ' ' -. ' . ' - ' •■■r 9 5 Tuned In. With the now generation. In • j ' B « today ' s fast-changing textile ' ' ■' ' SB Bt marketplace, you have to be with it. k J - ■Ijfc fls H - • X ftki At Springs, we make colorful, Km ■■' 41 splashy prints for the discotheque BflBI Bp f r R M ]I and coffee house set. Psychedelic lllif - '  « Bw 1 Pky towels and sheets for the MEP Sr ' t ' ' - i j K mF ' f fir KJ . l T avant-garde. Bedspreads, blankets, A TW i tic ' '  jI 3l ' 49 £ 41 carpets and kitchen cottons for the Sffi fi iB i heartland of America. B J Bfell Want to be where the action really [ ■KHHb ' v is? For information about a career in jet-age textiles, write Manager of Recruiting, Springs I0:MS:: HT j Mills, Fort Mill, S. C. 29715. i K Eyip An equal opportunity employer. f li i Springs Mills, Inc. KJ-W ?— ' ' Headquarters: Fort Mill. S. C. S§ l  8l i ill m 223 ..,;:.: ..,:■- ' u m$mmmm If you ' re planning to build a new home, ig ss k are you sure it will have all the value, , comfort x and convenience i - for modern living? It will if it ' s a Gold Medallion Home. CAROLINA POWER LIGHT COMPANY An inxvstor -owned, taxp+jinf public utility company Compliments of SCOTLAND CONCRETE COMPANY, INC. TRANSIT MIX CONCRETE Telephone 276-1774 P. 0. Box 1718 Laurinburg, N. C. 28352 WATER TREATMENT PRODUCTS AND SERVICES SINCE 1915 THE MOGUL CORPORATION 1201S GRAHAMSTREETCHARLOTTE.N C 28203 Forrest D. Loy ROUTE 2 GIBSONVILLE, N. C. 27249 919-449-6399 The All Americans!! FRITOS CORN CHIPS LAY ' S POTATO CHIPS CHEETOS CHEESE PUFFS By FRITO-LAY, INC. Maintenance Supply Company, Inc. P. O. Box 498 Huntersville, N. C. 28078 BEST WSHES to the ST. ANDREWS CLASS OF 1969 BICKETT DISTRIBUTING COMPANY PORTION CONTROL MEATS AND SEAFOOD Florence, South Carolina BEST PRODUCTS COMPANY P. 0. Box 6994 Richmond, Virginia 23230 TIP TOP BREAD AND CAKES Baked the Old Fashioned Way 225 BOBHHBH HBI Hfl FLITE FUEL TROP-ARTIC PHIL HEAT NO. 1 AND NO. 2 HEATING OILS Snead ' s 66 Service Westside 66 Service Richmond Mill 66 Service All Welcome St. Andrews Students and Faculty MORGAN OIL CORPORATION Phone 276-1666 Nights 276-7652 TOUIT HOST FROM COAST TO COAST THE HOLIDAY INN of Laurinburg 401-15 By-Pass 276-6555 Eat your hearts out, boys! 226 Complete Vending Consultants NANCE Vending Service Incorporated Lees Mill Road Laurinburg, North Carolina Telephone 276-0594 Mr. John G. Martin Heindeer droppings, hmnmmmmm, not bad. Compliments of S D Coffee, Inc. Concord, N. C. FOOD SERVICE EQUIPMENT SUPPLIES Restaurants — Schools — Clubs Institutions — Complete Engineering and Layout Department Thompson Little, Inc. 933 Robeson Extension Fayetteville, N. C. 484-1128 Mrs. Thrower ' s Flower Shop F.T.D. 744 West Church Street Laurinburg, N. C. Distinctive Flowers for Discriminating People McLAURIN-McARTHUR CHEVROLET COMPANY Sales and Service 1609 South Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina J OLDSMOBILE 227 a «Vr£? £ 7 v. . v M- . mk A v% 1 Wtt 1 i ,jpf m ' Jltfa ' 1 tWKV B T1 wild flower PARGAS P. 0. Box 25 Phone 844-5423 Maxton, N. C. 28364 Name Brand Cooking and Heating Appliances, Including Central Heating and Air Conditioning We Service What We Sell jjHB ' IP 1 Br 3 fmi, - •. SSJrii ' 1 ' ' ' ■mk ■Ob- v- •  - — — =•!...■y ijh H. J. Munnerlyn, Inc. Lumber — Building Materials Ready-Mix Concrete — General Contracting 301 S. Parsonage St. Bennettsville, S. C. 29512 P. 0. Drawer 543 Phone (AC 803) 479-3881 Boggs Company, Inc. Laundry and Janitorial Supplies and Equipment Atlanta, Ga. — 404—627-1391 Greenville, S. C. — 803—233-3916 Charlotte, N. C. — 704—392—3226 CITY AUTOS, INC. Laurinburg, N. C. Your Friendly Ford Dealer FORD Mustang - Falcon - Galaxie - Thunderbird 229 ■JMUUMllUamiJiMM i§§ mm One HOUR ' ' , ' ?.(! DRV OB si ■■the most s ? ' P ■■■■■■■■■i 230 I dreamed 1 went to a cookout in my Maidenform bra . Where Your Home Comes First Peacock Furniture Company Roper Street Laurinburg, N. C. Phone 276-3564 FIRESTONE HOME AND AUTO SUPPLIES Phone 276-2924 f Phone 844-5883 Laurinburg, N. C.oikSC+Maxton, N. C. Southern National W Member F.D.I.C. . . . The Bank that thinks young, even though it ' s been in business since 1897. BOB ' S JEWEL SHOP, INC. Main Street 213 Main Street Maxton Laurinburg 844-3423 276-1781 David ' s Floral Gift Shop St. Andrews Home of Flower Power With the Artistic Touch that Adds So Much Coast to Coast Wire Service Prompt Delivery David Caulk Owner Phone 276-6544 Top Bottom, Inc. Nationally Advertised Brands Fantastic Discount Prices Shirts PANTS Sportswear 120 Cronley Street Laurinburg, N. C. HONEY-CONE DRIVE-IN Laurinburg, N. C. Your Variety Drive-In Phone 276-2467 Where were you when the lights came on? 232 EXPANDING ' %, ST. ANDREWS fe (Bldt Potldt For the Best in Italian Flavor Served in An Old World Tradition PIZZA — SPAGHETTI — RAVIOLI CHOICE STEAKS 233 :, ■: ' .■; ■-V 3 ' i , I : ■' •:-. ■■: ■■■.. ... ■. : ... :.-. ' . ... « HANEY ' S TIRE AND RECAPPING SERVICE South Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina JOHNSON BROTHERS REALTY AND CONSTRUCTION CO. P. O. BOX 1528 LAURINBURG, N. C. k. n. (bill) johnson Fred hall Phone CR 6-3710 PHONE CR 6-3775 First Union National Bank OF NORTH CAROLINA • POST OFFICE BOX 986 LAURINBURG, NORTH CAROLINA 28352 McNAIR AUTOMOTIVE CO. INC. Since 1908 LAURINBURG, NORTH CAROLINA  -? Bfcf ' M 8NMXL i TRUCKS !UICK PONTIAC CMC TRUCKS PHONE 276-1471 SCOTTISH LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS Johns Road Laurinburg, N. C. Phone 276-3155 He won ' t eat it either, huh? ' ' BILL EVANS CO., INC. Complete Office Outfitters Letterpress — Offset Printers Phone CR 6-0519 126 East Church Street Laurinburg, North Carolina Brooks Shopping Center Super Market Barbe Restaurant ' Shop 1402 South Main Street Laurinburg, N. C. The Big Store with the Little Prices 235 BARRON MILLS The Place To Go For The Brands You Know Main Street Laurinburg, North Carolina CONGRATULATIONS TO ST. ANDREWS COLLEGE FOR THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF EDUCATION Compliments of STRICKLAND ' S PORTION PAK 2016 Sapona Road Fayetteville, N. C. Phone 483-6788 QUALITY MEATS AND SEAFOODS 236 THE COLLEGE SHOP RIZKS For the Lassies For the Lads Villager Gant Joha Meyer Cox Moore Gay Gibson Corbin Lanz Cricketeer John Romain Florshiem Misty Harbor Harbor Master Weejuns Weejuns SCOTLAND DRUG COMPANY, INC. Max Factor Distributors Laurinburg, N. C. Is the grass really greener? 237 Rastom ' s Store Quality Merchandise for the Entire Family Laurinburg, N. C. College Students Are Welcome WADE S. DUNBAR AGENCY, INC. Phone 276-3621 Insurance Plus Service Since 1914 454 Atkinson Street Laurinburg, N. C. Fashion Fabrics, Inc. Custom Draperies — Dress Fabrics Butterick Patterns — Simplicity Patterns 117 S. Main St. Laurinburg, N. C. Phone 276-7926 Amber House Restaurant The Finest in Foods 112 Aberdeen Road Laurinburg, N. C. 28352 M. L POLSTON, Owner . now where the hell did Moss go? 238 Stntfk Sludloi 14 East Hargett Street Raleigh, North Carolina 239 i memoRiAms i ' 67- ' 68 We are grateful for the memory of Wendy Crapsey. We recall her good humor, her persistent hope, her quiet courage, her quick mind and nimble tongue, her wispy smile, the breadth and depth of her interests, her ability to perceive and willingness to identify phoniness, her penetrating honesty, and her personal integrity. For the ways in which these qualities in- formed, judged, stretched, and quali- fied our personal and community life, we are grateful. The death of Bob Quantz came in the fullness of his life and within days of his commencement. He was going to graduate. He was going to work. His absence disturbed us. He was not loud or rude . . . And yet his was a strong presence. He was not afraid to voice his hon- est convictions when an honest voice was called for. He was not a person to be intimi- dated or bullied. He was a man. 240 ' 68 - ' 69 We are each reminded in a unique way of the pleasures we had by sim- ply knowing Joyce Elizabeth Fryar— — of the frustrations we knew at times in being her friends —of the intellectual challenges she provided bv her questions — of the patience which she demon- strated from hour to hour, day to day —of our sense of limitation and in- adequacy in the presence of over- whelming tragedy. 241 Indices ACTIVITIES Albemarle Hall — 154, 157 American Chemical Society — 128 American Marketing Association — 124 Baseball — 202, 203, 204, 205 Basketball — 134, 135. 136, 137 Behavorial Sciences Club — 129 Bowling — 144, 145 Cabinet —56, 57 Cairn — 207 Cheerleaders — 110, 111 Choirs— 148, 149 Christmas Dance — 146, 147 Club Rosters— 217,218,219, 220 Concord Hall — 158, 159, 160, 161 Cross Country — 112, 113 Day Students — 182, 183 Drama — 152, 153 Fall Fling— 138, 139 Golf— 192, 193 Graduation — 216 Granville Hall — 162, 163, 164 Gun Club— 185 Handbook Committee — 106 Inter-Dormitory Council — 184 Intramurals Men — Fall, 108, 109 Spring, 186 Women — Fall, 130, 131 Spring, 157 Judicial Board — 66 Judicial Committee — 64 Kings Mountain Hall — 165, 166, 167 Lamp and Shield — 246, 247 Lanoe— 114, 115 Lecturers and Entertainers Fall — 132, 133 Spring— 198, 199 Lettermen ' s Club — 126 Mecklenburg Hall — 168, 169, 170 Men ' s Recreational Association — 108 Men ' s Residence Court — 69 Most Valuable Players —214, 215 National Elections — 142, 143 National Student Association — 70 Orange Hall — 171, 172, 173 Orientation — 106, 107 Orientation Committee — 107 Parent ' s Day — 120, 121 Phi Beta Lambda — 125 Quill Scroll — 206 Radio Club — 194, 195 Sailing Club— 127 Senate — 58, 59 Soccer— 116, 117, 118, 119 Southern Universities Student Government Associa- tion — 70 State Student Legislature — 71 Student Affairs Office —21 Student Center Board — 60. 6 1 Student Christian Council — 62, 63 Student-Faculty Appellate Board — 65 Student Life Committee — 72 Student North Carolina Educational Association — 123 Tennis— 196, 217 Track— 200, 201 Traffic Court — 67 Who ' s Who Among Students —208, 209, 210, 211, 212 213 Wilmington Hall — 174, 175, 176, 177 Winston-Salem Hall — 178, 179, 180, 181 Women ' s Recreational Association — 130 Women ' s Residence Court — 69 Wrestling — 140, 141 WSAP— 194, 195 ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY Admission ' s Office — 22 Alexander, William M. — 32 Armstrong, Gloria Atwell, Alan G, — 22 Babcock, Harold C. — 29 Baran, Stanley, Jr. — 33 Barnes, Donald G. — 32 Bames, Gladys H. Barnes, Karen K. — 32 Bateman, Ethel O. — 33 Bayes, Ronald H. — 33 Bennett, Carl D. — 34 Bennett, Mrs. Margaret —26 Bowen, Margaret W. — 34 Boyd, Spencer S. — 34 Brantley, Mrs. Louise Bryant, Joyce M. — 35 Bullock, Leslie P. —35 Burris, Allen C. —34 242 Business Office —24 Cain, Mrs. Nora B. Cameron, Mrs. Emily B. — 3( Carver, James E. — 36 Campbell, Janie Chaiken, Robert L. — 24 Clarke, Phillip C. — 36 Coffman, Rooney L. Covington, Howard E. Covington. Mrs. Eileen Crossley, Ronald C. — 37 Crowell, Julian —37 Dahl, John —37 Daughtrey , John P. —38 Davenport, Robert F. —28 David, .Mrs. Gladys M. Davidson, Robert F. —20 Davis, Kathleen G. Davis, Leora Dean of the College — 30 Decker, Rodger W. — 21 Development Office — 25 Dickens, Mrs. Mildred Dove, Mrs. Elizabeth — 62 Doubles, Malcolm C. — 38 Dugger, Fowler — 25 Dunbar, Miss Roberta Edens, Mrs. Elaine Emerson, Mrs. Sara Engineer — 29 Fairley, Mrs. Pat Food Services — 27 Frye, J. Bruce — 25 Geffert, Carl W. — 38 Geffert, Mrs. Margaret Gidney, Charles W. — 39 Gillis, Mrs. Fern A. Goodman, William A. — 39 Griffin, Gerald — 39 Griffin, Jessie C. Gross, Edward B. — 23 Grovenstein, Mrs. Ruth Hackney. Rufus R., Jr. —40 Harvey, Mrs. Gladys Harvin, Harry L. , Jr. — 40 Hasty, Mrs. Dan Hawk, David B. —40 Hewitt, Clifford Hewitt, Doris —21 Hill, John E. — 41 Hix, Douglas W. — 41 Hix, Mrs. Pat Holmes, Betty A. Hord, Mrs. Janet Anybody here have a joint? Hulka, John— 27 Humphrey, Thomas M. — 41 Hunt, Mrs. Alice Hurley, Mrs. Margaret Infirmary — 31 Jackson, J. H., Jr. —29 James, Miss Martha Johnson, Badger — 25 Johnson, Mrs. — 26 Johnson, Betty S. — 42 Johnson, Charles E., Jr. — 42 Johnson, Mrs. Elaine H. — 42 Johns, Patricia M. Johns, Ronnie Jones, Mrs. Josie Joyner, Charles W. —43 Lamb, Roger B. Lee, Mrs. Nancy Library — 26 Lietz, Mrs. Lois M. Lietz, Richard J. —26 Looney, T. Buchanan — 43 Lott, Thomas W. — 43 Lovin, Miss Patricia Dianne Ludlow, Mr. Spencer — 44 McArn, Hugh — 31 McDonald, Arthur — 44 McGee, W. Jerome — 45 McIIhiney, David B. — 44 Mclntyre, Miss Leta W. — 45 McKenzie, Mrs. Alice — 30 McKinnon, Mrs. Virginia — 22 McLean, David A. — 45 McNeil, Miss Mary Wells —22 Malloy, Miss Ida— 28 Matthews, Mrs. Ann Maynor, Mrs. Mildred Mehta, Mr. Dady — 46 Melton, George E. — 46 Miller, G. Tyler, Jr. — 46 Mohn, Mrs. Evelyn — 31 Moore, Ansley C. — 18, 19 Narramore, W. C. — 47 New, Rowland ]. C. Neylans, Catherine — 47 O ' Connor, George M., Jr. — 47 O ' Connor, Mrs. Marv Olhs. James B. — 48 Overholser, Mrs. Grace — 21 Parker, Mrs. Mary L. —23 Parrish, Charles Pastor — 28 Patrolman— 29 Patterson, Miss Mildred Patton, Mrs. Bettv Patton, Elvert R. Pazmor, Radiana — 48 Peacock, Mrs. Jewel Pedigo, R. A. — 48 Perkins, Miss Rebecca Peterson, Mrs. Sara Powell, Steven F. President of the College —18,19 Prust, Richard — 49 Registrar ' s Office —23 Rogers, Miss Helen — 49 Rolland, William M. —49 Siegal, Sidney — 50 Singleton, David G. — 50 Singleton, Mrs. Jacqueline H. Smith. Alvin H. —51 Spencer, Mrs. Rebecca F. Stephens, Mrs. Selah —31 Stokes, Donald T. Stone, Miss Betty J. Student Affairs Office — 21 Swart, Cornelius — 51 Tapp, Mrs. Peggy Terry, Mrs. Cora T. Tesmer, Mrs. Shirley Thomas, Mrs. Florine Thomas, M. Lindsey — 24 Thompson, Mrs. Rosalie Tyner. Mrs. Georgia C. Urie. Mrs. Elsie Urie, Robert M. — 30 Urso, Rosano — 51 Vocational Rehabilitation Association — 30 Vaughn, Silas M. — 24 Wade, Mr. Gentry —52 Wade, Peggy Wallace, Miss Marv Kay Wells, George R. — 52 West, Franklin J. Wetmore, David E. White, Mrs. Josephine M. — 27 White, W. D. — 53 White, Mrs. Nancy J. Williams, Jo Ann — 53 Williams, John E. — 53 Abbitt, Nancy J. Abell, Mary M. Abernethy, Judy C. Abernethy, Sara A. — 154 Adams, Anita B. — 175 Adams, Douglas W. Ainslte, David G. Albers. Helen Albers, Norman B. Allen, Harry H.. Jr. — 182 Alheim, Jefrbry D. Ambum, James F., Jr. — 165 Anderson, Edward A. — 168 Anderson, John Carle — 166 Anderson, Luke N., Jr. Anderson, Mary C. — 155 Armington, Charles R, Jr. Armstrong, N. Rebecca — 163 Arnold, Ames T. — 179 Ashburn, Carolyn B. Ausband, Leigh T. — 163 Babcock, Nellie Jo — 163 Bahnson, Agnew H. Bagshaw, James R. Bailey, Nancv S. Baird, Collier W. — 165 Baldwin, Gayle R. Baldwin, Lani K. — 163 Baran, Pam — 183 Barclay. John W. Barham, Jack T. Barlow, Ted S. Barr, Harold P. Barry, Barbara A. Barry, John E. Bartiett. Elizabeth — 175 Bartlett. Jan R. — 171 Barton, Craig B. — 179 Barton, David M. Batten, Carol Ann — 158 Beach, Richard I. — 166 Beale, Richard H. Becton, Delia A. — 159 Beerman. Daniel R. — 165 Belknap, Kathryn E. Bell, Edna R. — 163 Bell, Sarah C. — 159 Bender, Karen R. — 155 Bennett, Jane F. — 175 Bennett, Leon M. — 166 Berg, Sandra K. — 154 Bernhardt, George L. — 179 Bern, David J. C. — 166 Berry, Pauline D. — 163 Best, Dorothy E. — 172 Betts, David E. — 171 Bibee, Jane E. — 159 Bickett, Julia E. — 159 Bisset, Donald H. Blanchard, Jane G. — 155 Blevins, Ashley D. — 175 Blomquist, Mary E. — 172 Blose, Elizabeth R. — 175 Blundell, Phillip J. Boll, John A. Bollin, Joan M. — 159 Bolton, Mary M.— 175 Bond, Barbara W. — 163 Bosworth, Frank K., Ill — 179 Bottoms, Elizabeth A. — 154 Bouck, James F. — 178 Bowles. William T. Bowyer, Franklin C. Bowyer, Marie Adele — 183 Boyce, jenny C. — 158 Boyce, Mary V. Boyes, Stephen R. Bradley, Douglas S. Bragunier, Carol E. Breckenridge, Scott R. Brewbalter, Robert S. — 165 Brinker. John H. Britton, Catherine A. Broach, Leroy F. Bromberger, Elizabeth R. Brooke, Barbara — 163 Brooks. James A. Broome, Mildred E. — 155 Brown, Charles E.. Jr. — 166 Brown, Judy Marie — 172 Bryan, John Lewis, II — 168 Bryant. Barbara A. — 159 Bryant. Beth A. — 175 Buckle, Dianne Helen — 154 Burlington, Robert — 172 Bunch, Marga C. — 159 Bunn, David Elmo — 168 Burdette, Christie C. Burgwyn, Charles B. — 179 Burriss, Ann Etta — 163 Byrne, William L. Byron, Carol S. Caldwell, Carolyn — 158 Caldwell, Peter G. — 171 Calloway, Doyle L. S. Calloway, Rita C. — 172 Campbell, Donald R. — 166 Cansler, Barbara L. Carlson, Sara L. Carpenter, (Catherine A. — 158 OH!! My GOD!!! Carper, William G.. Jr. Carr, Gloria J. — 159 Carrie, Elana R. — 174 Carson, Marv E. — 158 Carson, Shirley M. — 172 Chasion, Susannah B. — 175 Chapin, Salli M. — 172 Chapman, Robert B. — 168 Cheek, Robert L. — 178 Chemey, Linda E. — 163 Chesney, Paul A. — 179 Chiphe, Leppaine Chowning, Gail R. — 175 Clagett. Barbara H. Clark, Joan L. — 158 Clark, Malcolm G. — 178 Dark, Wilbam C. Clarke, Ellen C. — 174 Clay, Dwight A. Cleeland, Donna E. — 154 Clifton. Nancy E. — 159 dine, Margaret J. — 155 Cockrum, Cathy L. Colby, Douglas J. Cole, Charles H. Coleman, Elizabeth M. Collins, Thomas A., Jr. — 172 Comer, Sylvia K. — 175 Compher. William N. Cook. B. J. Cook, Marilyn J. — 163 Cook, Peter J. Copper, Margaret E. Coming, Mary J. — 155 Cottingham, Marchant C. — 179 Cotton, Susan E. — 159 Coupland, John R. Courtney. Martha R. — 163 Coyle, Richard Craddock, Suzanne G. — 155 Crawley, Deborah G. — 159 Crosby, Paul David Cross well. Mack — 168 Crowe, Harold E. Crowell, Roberta F. Crudup, Bate T. Crumpler, Nancy E. — 159 Crumpler, Thurman D. — 179 Cummins, Charles B. — 166 Currie, Suzanne R. — 154 Cushman, Robert G., Jr. Dalton, Janet R. Damron, Conley M. — 179 Daniel, Natalie T. Davies, Arthur B. — 179 Davis, Amanda W. — 154 Davis, Dianne E. — 175 Davis, Ian M. Davis, John E. — 168 Davis, Marion L. Davis, Martha B. Davis, Roger P. — 168 Davis, Todd Steven Dawson, John E. Deberry, James L. Delp. William A., Jr. — 166 DelTosto, Henry P. — 168 Denham, Suzanne — 159 Denney, Joseph E. Desherbinin, Michael E. — 179 Dickson, David G. — 172 Dickson, William J. Dieth, Phyllis E. — 174 Dings, Linda L. — 175 Dixon, Gordon A. Dixon, Joseph E. — 166 Dixon, Rachel Rice — 158 Dodson, Denny — 168 Dolge, David B. Donaldson, Charlotte D. Doubles, Jacqueline M. Dougherty, Jane G. — 159 Dougherty, Nina D. — 155 Douglass, Earl J. Douglass, James Colby — 182 Douglass, James E. Dow, Lauren A. — 163 Downey, Dianne — 175 Dryden, Alice T. — 162 Dryden, Mary E. — 163 DuBose, Shirley P. Ducker, George L. — 165 Ducker, Nancy E. — 163 Duddv, Sara L. Dufek, David F. Dugger, Daquerrelyn J. — 156 Dugger, Vivian C. Duncan, Danette L. Durand, Carol E. Durant, Edward W. Durden, Dorothy L. — 156 Dwyer, Ginny A. — 174 Dyal, Peter Edens, Julie A. — 163 Edge, Thomas A. — 168 Edgerton, Arnold B. — 179 Edmonds, Sally B. Edwards, Deborah A. Erhinghaus, Michael E. Edwards, Ralph L., Jr. Elliott, Elizabeth B. — 159 Elliott, Pamala M. Ellison, Dianne — 175 Emerson, Claire B. — 156 Engle, Susan L. Ennis, Vandy A. Erickson, Jefrery V. — 167 Erisman, J. Richard — 171 Euverard, James P. — 165 Evans, Anne B. Evans, Benjamin J. — 179 Evans, Patricia A. — 156 Everett, John L. — 167 Fagnani, Raymond R. Farmer, Kate W. — 175 Faulkner, Fred, III Fawley, Dorman W. — 168 Fernandez, Antonio A. Ferrell, Michael R. — 167 Fetter, Carol E. — 174 Ficken, Peter K. Finnicum, Glenna L. — 156 Fitch, Crawford E. Fitch, William K. — 179 Firzner, Alex M. — 171 Fletcher, Ann J. — 175 Flinchum, Cy Flucke, David R. — 171 Fogartie, Elizabeth V. — 160 Folk, Connie Fondow, Charles B. — 165 Forrest, William G. — 168 Foster, Bonnie L. — 154 Fowler, Richard W. — 165 Fox, Linda L. — 154 Fox, Patti C. Fox, Richard L. — 179 Freeman, Henry B. Fryar, Joyce E. — 163 Fulk, LynnC. — 156 Fuller, Helen L. Fulton, Dixie W. — 163 Funk, Nancy A. Gabbard, Anne E. — 175 Gaddis, Sandra L. — 172 Caddy, Samuel M. — 167 Galloway, Dollins K. — 163 Gardner, Donna R. — 163 Gamer, Carlton R. Garrison, Gordon B. — 167 Garrison, James B. — 179 Gasque, Dorothy Jean — 182 Gasque, Richard F. Gaston, William R. Gay, Carol E. — 172 Geer, John M., Jr. George, Sara M. — 158 Gibbs, Dave S. — 168 Gibbs, Stephen V. — 180 Gibson, Gregory H. — 178 Gibson, Millicent — 163 Gilbert. Thomas W. — 167 Glakas, Thomas T. Gleason, Carolyn B. Godman, Duane C. Goodman, Martha G. — 160 Goodson, Louie A., Ill — 167 Gordon, Janice E. Graham, Alice F. — 156 Graham, Nancy O. — 175 Grant, Heather J. — 160 Grant, Mary D. — 175 Gray, John E. Gray, Lawrence M. — 180 Gredlein, Gary E. Greene, Phillip A. — 180 Greer, Carolyn E. — 160 Gregory, Andrew J. Gregory, Kemp D. Gribble, Margery J. GrofT, T. Compton — 167 Grogan, Audrey S. — 160 Grumbles, Mary D. — 160 Gulbrandsen, Susan B. — 175 Gunter, Elizabeth A. Gurley, Benny E. — 165 Guy, David E. Gwinn, Janie W. Hackney, Thomas A. — 166 Hagan, Harry E. — 166 Haines, Clairia G. — 173 Hall, Edna Jo— 175 HaU, Frank P. Hall, Henry Lee— 180 Halyburton, Theresa A. — 163 Hammond, Larry D. — 168 Hammond, Nancy D. — 175 Hane. Elizabeth E. — 160 Hannas, Graig W-. Harbert, Thomas C. — 169 Harbin, Elizabeth A- — 163 Hardesty, Chuck Harding, Laurence L. — 169 Hardison, Marianna D. — 173 Harlin, Raymond J. Harmon, Margaret L. — 156 243 Anyone mention booze? Harper, Deborah K. — 162 Harris, Barbara J. — 154 Hams, Bradford S. — 178 Harris, Constance L. — 182 Harris, James T. — 178 Harris, Judith E. — 156 Harris, Noel M. — 182 Harrison, Francis Hart, Neta F. — 174 Hartley, Ruth E. — 163 Harvey, Craig J. Harward, James T. — 180 Hash, Russell W. — 169 Hastings, Valerie M. — 163 Hatch, Terry B. — 175 Hawkins, Susan M. — 174 Hayden, Wilbum — 173 Hayman, Rebecca Jane Hayes, Sharon L. — 160 Haygood. Kathleen R. — 156 Haynes, Robert T.. Ill Head, Charles W. Heaton, Martha E. Heider, Graye Ann — 160 Helmer, Linda D. — 156 Henderson, Doris A. — 164 Henderson. William G. — 169 Hensley, Winston K. — 169 Heppe, Chris W. — 180 Hickey, Patricia J. — 175 Higgins, Mary Battle — 174 Higgins, Ray Edgar — 169 High, Walter B. Highfill, Patricia B. — 175 Hill, Linda K. — 156 Hill. Mary M. HiU, Michael C. — 180 Hitt, William M. — 169 Hobbs, Wayne D. Hock, Charles W. Hodson, Cline M. Hoff, Janet E. — 171 Hoffman, Gail — 158 Hoke, Charles W. — 171 Holler, James S. — 171 Holmes, Tommy C. — 176 Holt, Cherryl C. — 160 Homeier, Catherine D. — 154 Horton, Gwendolyn S. — 154 Houston, Leslie M. — 176 Howe, Martha A. Howe, Martha A. Howe, Susan J. — 164 Howell, Jed N. — 169 Howell, John R. Howie. Paul W. — 180 Huckins, Carol D. — 176 Hudson, Margaret B. — 164 Huff, Harry A. Huffman, Betty L. — 176 Hughes, Claudia J. — 158 Hundertmark, Glenn S. — 167 Hunter, Sarah B. — 162 Hunting, Susan — 160 Hutcheson. Mary M. — 176 Hutchison, David T. Hyde, Suzy A. — 176 Ingram, Thomas N. — 182 Isenhour, Shirley E. — 176 Isley, Sarah C. — 160 Jackson, E. Janelle — 164 Jackson, Sarah M. — 176 James, Thomas J. — 182 James, Tone K. — 160 Jamison, Paul G. Jaywork, J. Terry — 171 Jenkins, Agnes N. — 160 Jerome, Walter G. — 180 Johns, Jane P. — 173 Johns, WilliamS. — 180 Johnsen, Sigurd D. Johnson, Bonni B. Johnson, Franklin D. — 169 Johnson, James D. — 183 Johnson, Lydia F. Johnson, Susan H. — 173 Johnson, Walter K. Jonas, Karl C. Jones, Ebbert E. Jones, Frank H. — 180 Jones, Hugh M. — 180 Jones, Margaret W. — 160 Jones, Wanda K. — 176 Jones, William S. — 166 Junod, Joseph V. — 166 Karetas, Mary A. — 176 Keech, Michael R. Keen, Susan H. Keller, Penny A. — 176 Kellv, Thomas P. — 169 Key, Mary L. — 158 Kibler, Laura K. — 160 Kiger, Kieth B. — 178 KiUian, Ray A. Kimzey, William R. Kingsbury, Theodore B. — 171 Kingsley, Marjorie A. — 171 Kinlaw, Brenda A. — 156 Kinney, Mildred W. — 156 Kip, Thomas B. — 167 Kirby, Cynthia C. — 160 Kleber, Mark D. Klein, James L. Klopman, Peter H. — 167 Koblegard, Laura L. — 156 Koch, Kathleen K. — 156 Kohrman, Rita A. — 164 Koontz, Ralph E. — 178 Kralv, Harry L. Krug, David R. — 169 Kruthoffer, Mary L. — 176 Kvingedal, Cail E. — 176 Lambert, Sharon D. — 158 Land, Edmund W. — 180 Landis, David H. Lawing, Emelda W. — 158 Laws, Hollace A. — 176 Lawson, Jim C. — 180 Lawson, John D. Lawton, Donald C. Leach, Cynthia S. Leake, Dean B. — 170 Leary, Stasia M. Leavitt, Roberta J. — 176 Lee, Michael E. Lee, Sarah P. — 176 Leggett, Ingrid D. — 160 Leslie, Mary L. — 164 Lester, Russell E. — 168 Lewis, Margaret C. — 154 Liggett, John S-, Jr. Ligon, John F. — 178 Ligon, Margaret A. — 160 Liles, Paula H. — 170 Lilly, Robert H. — 170 Linn, Gary W. — 170 Linville, Elizabeth — 154 Litchford, Stephen D. Littlepage, Charles K. Loving, Mary E. Lowdermilk, Joyce C. — 162 Lundy, Karen L. Lutz, James D. — 180 Mackenzie, Ann Sharon — 176 Mackenzie, Virginia Sue Mackethan, Jeannette E. — 174 MacLean, Douglas M. MacLean, Lyl B. — 174 MacLeod, Lynda D. MacLeod, Mary M. — 160 MacLeod, Sarah M. — 162 McAllister, John F. — 170 McCain, Kathryn L. — 164 McCall, Susan Marie — 172 McCallister, Susan J. — 162 McClaughry, Shelva L. — 173 McClung, Marshall S. — 180 McConneU, Margaret B. — 158 McCord, Michael H. — 173 McCormack, George E. — 178 McCrea, William S. — 166 McDaniel, Jane D. — 176 McDonald, Cathey J. — 164 McDonald, David L. McGinnis, Kenneth M. — 170 Mclver, Lamar W. McKechnic, Jeff R. McKenzie, Mary L. — 158 McKeown, Edward C. — 167 McKinnin, Catherine L. McLaughlin, Johnnie M. — 156 McLean, Marcia D. McNeill, Genia M. — 174 McNeil, Marilyn H. — 176 McNiel, Robert L. — 182 McNutt. Carolyn S. — 164 McQueen, Linda L. — 160 McQuinn, Georgiana M. McRainey. Pamela G. — 173 Mackey, Susan C. — 156 Magill, Martha A. — 162 Magnusen, Joan E. — 160 Major, Clarajean J. — 156 Marble, Sara L. Marlow, William H. — 180 Marsh, Edward D. Marshall, Cynthia L. — 154 Marshall, David B., Jr. Marshall, Florence C. — 160 Martin. Janice M. — 160 Martin, Prescott L. — 170 Mason, Alan C. Mason, Elizabeth S. — 174 Mason, Richard L. Massengill, Steve — 170 Mathews, Carolyn W. — 156 Mathews, Jane F. Matthews, Ann H. Matthews, Annabelle — 176 Matthews, Kimberly A. — 164 Matthies, Mollie V. — 160 Mattingly, David L. May, Thomas P. Maynard, Hubbard D. Mebane, Nancy F. — 164 Mecum, Charlotte R. — 156 Menius, Pamela A. — 176 Mewbom, Mary A- — 156 Meyer, Anne K. — 156 Meyer, Elizabeth S. — 164 Middleton, Robert M. — 183 Megee, Ann H. Midgette, Brenda K. — 157 Miller, Barbara J. Miller, Gene D. — 170 Mills, David L. — 166 Minckler, Susan J. Minnich, Edward L. — 180 Mitchell, Charles N. Mitchell, Joe B. — 182 Moffett, Mary A. — 176 Moffett, Natalie P. — 176 Mohn, EricG. — 173 Moise, McFaddin — 180 Monroe, Carl E. Monroe, Linda A. Montreuil, Hamilton Monteith, Nancey J. Moore, Handy G. — 170 Moore, Jacquelyn — 173 Moore, Roderick B. — 167 Moore, Tracy T. Moose, Betty L. — 173 Morgan, Claire S. Morgan, Richard R. — 180 Morland, Peter D. — 180 Morris, Bettie S. Morris, James S. Morris, Julie K. — 164 Morton, William P. Moses, Janet S. — 160 Moss, Albert S. — 166 Mowrey, Susan L. — 176 Muir, Robert C. — 172 Munro, Nancy J. — 164 Murray, Margaret R. Neal, Mary C. — 173 Nek, Sara E. — 160 Nesbit, Ralph — 170 Neserke, Donna L. — 160 Newton, Edward T. — 173 Nicholson, Nancy G. — 164 Nichols, Robert — 167 Nickle, Philip T. — 170 Noel, Katherine K. Noland, Jean R. — 160 Northam, George I. Nye, Melanie S. — 158 Nye. Robert N. — 170 OBerry, Brenda M. — 154 O ' Brian, Leland R. Oden, Evelyn A. — 157 Offterdinger, Margaret M. — 154 Ogden, John Herbert, Jr. Ogletree, John W. — 173 Olert, Frederick H. Oliver, Peggy L. — 160 Olson, Barbara S. — 173 Orttenburger, Marsh C. Owens, Robert W.. Jr. — 182 244 Oxford. Dwight H. Pace, Linda A. Paden. Nancy E. — 173 Parrish. John S. — 167 Parrish, Margaret L. — 162 Parsons, Anne B. — 176 Patterson, Martha C. Peel, Linda J. — 172 Peery, Albert G. — 178 Peery, Claudia L. — 176 Peers ' , Francis C. — 170 Penniger, William V. — 170 Pending, Mark L. Perrin, James R., Jr. — 180 Pettyjohn, Nannie O. — 174 Pfennig, Frank, III — 178 Phillips, Constance S. — 176 Pierce, Ronald C. Pledger. Patricia A. — 164 Poolev. Kathv R. — 164 Pope, Betsy E. — 176 Pope, Harol J.Jr. — 170 Porter, David R. — 167 Porter, Edgar A. — 167 Powers. Scott E. — 180 Pratt. Charles C. — 167 Prescott, Susan L. — 164 Price, John D. — 166 Prichard. David T. Prince. Man R. — 161 Pritchard, Kenneth W. — 172 Prizer. Herbert G. — 170 Purcell, Joan M. — 176 Ouast. Lesley- A. — 172 Ouinn, Michael G. Ralph, Richard F. Randall, Thomas B. Randolph, Henry- G. Rankin, Robert B. — 167 Ratdiff, Olivia Ratliff. James N. Ravnor, Douglas — 170 Redd, Charles T. Rein, Craig W. — 180 Reiner, Barbara A. — 161 Reynolds. Michael L. Reynolds. Paul B., Jr. Rhue. Eddie Brent Rice, Susan V. — 157 Rich, Robert J. Richards, Dennis B. Richardson. Nancy L. — 158 Richardson, Ruth E. — 161 Richmond, Jack B. Riddle, Raymond E. — 166 Riggs, Karen F. — 173 Rinker, William E. — 182 Ritchie, Donna M. — 176 Rivers, Vera A. — 177 Roane, Thomas H. — 181 Robinson, Daniel D. — 167 Robinson, Laurence Robinson, Pamela J. — 164 Rogers, Susan J. — 175 Rohrman, Marie N. Rolland, William W.. II Roper. John A. — 173 Roper, John N., Ill Roper, Sarah M. Rose, Bettv Peebles — 154 Rose, Jean M. — 164 Rosenstein. Jack J. Rothrock. James A. Roth well, David M., Jr. Roy all, John E., Jr. — 166 Ruffin, Patricia A. — 161 Ryan, Christie, I. — 161 Ryland, Anne L. — 161 St. John. Cuthbert A. St. John, Leslie A. — 164 Salmon, Mark E. Samson, Robert K. Sanger, Frank R. — 161 Saunders, Linda L. Saunt, Jeffrey D. Saville. Ruth A. — 158 Schurke, Robert H. — 173 Scott, Dorothy E. Scott, Lucy A. — 157 Scale. David M. — 178 Self, Jessie P. — 154 Sewell, Hampton, H. — 167 Shaffer. George V. — 166 Shannon, Ellen M. — 173 Shaw. James C. — 178 Shepherd, James W. Sheppard, Glennys C. — 157 Sheppard, Vickie J. — 157 Shemll. George T. — 172 Sholar, Norman P. — 181 Siceloff, John D. Simmons, Craig R. — 181 Simpson. Martha L. — 154 Simpson, Susan M. — 177 Sinclair, David A. — 170 Sinclair, John D. Singleton, Thomas M. Skutch, Rick Slaughter, Patricia C. Stawson, Judy A. — 155 Sloop. Susan E. — 155 Smith, Carroll P. Smith, Christopher C. Smith. Craig L. Smith, Doris W. — 161 Smith. James R., Jr. Smith, Linda J. Smith, Stuart R. Snipes, Patricia A. Snyder. Frances G. — 161 Snyder, James H. — 182 Snyder, Kent A. Southwell,- Wilmer L. — 167 Soeegle. Charles M. — 182 Speer. Sarah C. — 161 Sprunt, Martha L. — 177 Squires, Alice T. — 173 Stafford. Beth G. Stafford. Martha J. — 158 Stahlberger, Charles A. Stands. James W. — 170 Stawasz, Mary C. — 157 Starwalt, Gary W. Stegall, Ceilia D. Stephens, James I. — 180 Stewart, Diane B. Stimmel, Susan J. — 157 Stockbridge, June E. — 164 Stockton, Susan E. — 155 Stokes. Mary P. — 182 Stone, Mary H. Strickland, Mary ' E. — 157 Strickland. Sandra L. — 158 Stringfellow. Catherine L. — 157 Stringfellow. Lawre S. — 173 Stroud, Donald E. — 181 Stuart, David D. Stuart, Nancy T. — 172 Stubbs, James M. Suddreth, Rebecca E. — 159 Susong. Linda K. — 175 Sutterer, Christine D. — 162 Sutton, Carolyn L. — 173 Sutton, Samuel L. — 170 Swan, Gregory ' G. Swanson. Louis E. — 167 Sweet, Cynthia R. — 161 Syphrit. Sally J. — 155 Szumelda, Paul S. Tallev, Marian J. — 159 Tallon, Kay M. — 182 TaJmage, John S. Tate, Adele S. — 157 Tate. Timothy B. — 166 Taylor, Dawk L. — 157 Taylor, Talbott M.. Jr. — 183 Taylor, Virginia B. — 183 Teal, Thomas A. — 183 Teichen, Richard L. Templeton, Gloria J. — 162 Thomas, Barbara J. — 157 Thomas, Margaret V. Thompson. Alfred R. — 179 Thompson, Brian E. — 179 Thompson, Charles P. — 173 Thompson, Hall W. — 167 Thorn, W. Thompson Thornton, William N. — 172 Thrower, Susan V. Tighe, Bruce D. — 183 Tughman. Richard P. — 181 Timmons, Jimmy P. Tinga, Wendy O. — 173 Tingle, Bruce R. — 181 Tingley. Beth M. — 164 Tisdale, James W. — 183 Todd. Mary F. — 172 Todd, William S., Jr. Tomlinson, Barbara A. — 164 Tracy. Myrna L. — 162 Travis, Jane G. Travis. Jeffrey F. Treece. David A. — 173 Treadway. Ottie L. — 167 Trosper, David L. — 183 Trice, Mary Jo — 161 Trussell, Millard M. Tuck. SelmaT. — 161 Tucker, Phoebe A. C. — 159 Turner, Blair P. Turner, John S. — 167 Unchurch, Lawson R. Underdown, Elanor B. — 164 Vaden, Frank R Vakos, Robert H. Valentine. Dorothy E. Vandergrift, Jacob J. VanGorder, Catherine S. — 157 VanPelt, William W.. Jr. Vardeman, Frances H. — 164 Vendrell, Virginia M. — 157 Vinson, John H. — 181 Vohs, Kim L. Wade. Susan B. — 175 Wagner, David E. — 170 Wainscott, Marv K. Walker, Baker M. — 181 Walker. Beverly, J. Walker. Frank R.. Jr. — 167 Walker. Jan R. Walker. Mark B. Walker, Mary L. Walker, Susan B Wallace, Cathy A. — 161 Walters, Alice C. Wallman, Joan Waple, Judith A. — 161 Ward, Anne — 159 Ward. Elizabeth A. — 159 Ward. John W. — 183 Ware, Catherine — 161 Warshanv, Diane M. Watkins. ' Samuel A.. HI — 181 Watson, George A. — 179 Watson, Sarah A. — 177 Webbere. Sandra L. — 164 Weber. Sharon K. — 164 Eber. Sharon K. — 164 Weeks, George E. — 170 Weigle. Laura L. — 161 Welch, Margaret B. Welch, Robert D. Wellford. Randy T. — 171 Wells, Janice O. — 162 Wendel, Otto T. — 166 Wendler. Albert P. Wesley. Stephen D. — 167 West, Elizabeth C. — 177 West. Waddv West, Ruth D. — 155 Wheeler, James H. — 166 Wheless, Robert H.. Jr. — 167 White, Carol J. — 183 White. Charles W. — 179 White. Josphine T. — 159 White, William D. — 166 Whitford, Mary S. — 164 Wilder. Mary K. — 175 Wilfong, Jane K. Wilkerson. William R. Wilson, William T. — 173 Williams, Manetta P. — 157 Williams, Nancy K. — 161 Williamson, Carol — 159 Williamson, Larry H. Willis, Mary E. — 155 Wilson, Christopher C. — 170 Wilson, Julia F. — 157 Wilson, Lewis G. — 170 Wilson, Lucy D. Wise, Kenneth W. Wolfe, Barbara B. Wolfe, David L. — 183 Wolfe, Randall C. Wolfe. Russell Womeldorf, H. James Wood. Carol L. White — 183 Wooten. Nancy — 175 Wright, James R., Jr. — 172 Wright. Walter L. Wright, William C„ Jr. — 170 Wyatt, Anthony E. Yeardley, Mary C. Young. Nancy K. — 164 Youngdale. James W — 173 Zahn, Delnres H. Zahn, Robert A. Zoffay, John W PATRONS: Amber House— 238 Barron Mills. Inc. — 236 Be Ik ' s— 233 Best Products Co. — 225 Bickett Distributing Co. —225 Bill Evans Co.. Inc. —235 Bob ' s Jewel Shop. Inc. —232 Boggs and Co.. Inc. — 22 l J Brook ' s Shopping Center — 235 Carolina Power and Light Co. —224 City Autos, Inc. —229 Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Hamlet — 22 I Community Drugs, Inc. — 221 David ' s Floral and Gift Shop — 232 Fashion Fabrics, Inc. — 238 Firestone Home and Auto Supplies — 231 First Union National Bank — 234 Frito-Lay, Inc. — 225 Gibson and Center Theaters — 234 H. J. Munnerlyn, Inc. — 229 Haney ' s Tire and Recapping Service — 234 Herman ' s Tire Company, Inc. — 221 Holiday Inn of Laurinburg — 226 Honey-cone Drive- In — 232 Johnson Bros. Realty and Construction Co. — 234 McLaurin-McArthur Chevrolet Co. — 227 McNair Automotive Co., Inc. — 234 McNair ' s Department Store — 222 Maintenance Supply Co., Inc. — 225 Mogul Corporation — 224 Morgan Oil Corporation — 226 Nance Vending Sen-ice, Inc. — 227 One Hour Martinizing — 230 Pargas, Inc. —228 Peacock Furniture Co. — 231 Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. of Lumberton — 228 Rastom ' s Store — 238 Rizk Department Store — 237 Rose ' s— 229 S D Coffee, Inc. — 227 S. H. Duncan and Co., Inc. —221 Scotland Concrete Co., Inc. — 224 Scotland Drug Co. — 237 Scottish Laundry and Cleaners — 234 Smith ' s Studios — 239 Southern National Bank of North Carolina —231 Springs Mills, Inc. — 223 Strickland ' s Portion Pak — 236 Thompson and Little. Inc. — 227 Thrower ' s Flower Shop — 227 Top and Bottom — 232 Wade S. Dunbar Agency. Inc. — 238 Ward Foods, Inc. — 225 Whitebrook Farms, Inc. — 222 Ye Olde Worlde — 233 . stay in the bushes, Ellie May. 245 Top: Ray Riddle-, Editor-in-Chief; Pete Cook, photographer; Scott McCree, Copy Editor. Bottom: Ellen Richardson, Assistant Editor; George Shaffer, Business Manager. 244 March 4, 1969 Dear St. Andrews, One vear ago this month there was a conception, a union of reflective thought and concrete matter; the Lamp and Shield you hold is the off- spring. The kaleidoscope is now suspended in time, the light and colors are hard bits of glass immobile in vour hand. This is the final pattern. The hands, vour hands, that turned the kaleido- scope everv minute of even ' day now turn onlv the pages of this frozen col- lage. As the year has ground to a close, so have the swirling patterns of life and light come to rest; our hope then is that we have caught the best pattern, the most genuine reflection. To that end we have lived under- ground for a vear; hundreds of cokes and a thousand packs of Winstons have best measured the time, but though we had to spend time, it was not our intention to stop it. Our ultimate concern is that this book should itself be a kaleidoscope, an infinite swirl of its own patterns, that, while marked by arbitrary limits as our year was, will continue to live within itself. If the book moves in its solidity, then we have captured you and vour year, because frankly, you moved us. love, Rav, Ellen, and Scott Geore 247 epiLoq-. Stretching its heritage back to 1858, St. Andrews is a bejeweled sugar cube with 111 glistening, sparkling, per- haps a little chipped, diamonds. Eight are new and well-earned as are the institution ' s bejeweled promises like keep the faith, or take a trip — in the knight room, the Scottish Cove Club, the Amber House or your own pad. S.A. in ' 68- ' 69 was a college fumbling for the sugar cube of life. The ' 68- ' 69 students, as usual, were caught hanging around together on the steps of the student center, but a long way from army chemical war- fare days and slit trenches. They were also hanging separately in classes cut all semester. They could be caught alone in a dorm on date night. The campus was a world of GTOs, Mustangs, convertibles, camp, and Clayton Powell. Sock it to ' em, baby. Do like the man said. This was a campus on the go: forwards, back- wards, in circles, sometimes to the fu- ture. The in thing to do was to debate the ANYTHING LEFT articles. Some even fought with their dates. Many fought to make Scotland County wet. Go wet! Stay dry! Go in a GTO so that you get there first. Where? Who knows, but everything is clear. SA — the college on the move — spluttering, spurting a little. Everything is super- clear. A little reluctant to catch up with curfews, liquor, tenure, Berkeley, and pot, SA was on the brink of ex- ploding in March. With only a shallow pop now and then, SA experienced her sharpest growing pain.- But, I need a good college. I need to learn what I don ' t know. Some- thing is lacking in me, and God knows I can ' t know everything. Though, sometimes, I think I do. So teach me! Learn me! Isn ' t this the year of involvement? Everyone ' s involved — in county liquor referendums, involved in racial disputes and understanding, involved with student government and student power. Don ' t let me go out into the cold cruel world of involvement. Not now! Not ever! What ever happened to the Saturday night baths? It was a very good year. ■111? ■H mmmm. EEHpp ! iS iH MP IS ESSa 3i2£gai pjHIBL. taHBT jjEgN g H SB j- ■was Hi ' - ' hHS H TSHHI Warn; mm WsSsmsi ■H HHI m HH VBUEbBbb . - S J AV 5 SSa jw ffiiv« SS } IESBfti t S9Kd«Sia
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