considers fraternity committee interim report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi ashedtocompare...

6
4 DAVIDSON HAS FASHION REPRESENTATIVE! (See Page Three' f The News And Editorial Voice Of The Davidson College Stud ent Body FROSH FINISH FABULOUS SEASON (See Page Four) VOL. LIV. DAVIDSON COLLEGE DAVIDSON, N. C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965 NUMBER EIGHTEEN Committee Suggested By WALT DRAKE Davidsonian Staff Writer Several proposals calling for changes in the fraternity system have been submitted to the Student ( ouncil Fra- ternity Evaluation Commit- tee by interested parties and have been receiving the con- sideration of the committee. No rush being held by any fraternity in 1965 and sopho- more rush being initiated in 1966 are basic tenets of one of those proposals. However, eating clubs could be formed which would conform to such regulations as membership re- quiring approval of not more than one-half of the members, I no discrimination as to race and religion, and a 70-mem- ber quota. Also, eating clubs could consider members of oth- er clubs who wished to change membership at the beginning of each semester. Lingle Manor would remain in existence with the addition of boarding facilities and there would thus be offered "an open membership eating club for those not in the majority-mem- bership eating clubs or the fraternities " A college social council would be established to regulate all social activities, and the IFC would be abolished. Kreshman having a 15 average or be'.cr would be a'lowed to keep car< an campus after Thanksgiving. RUBl) week would be held on Friday. Saturday, and Sund i\ or the first week of each sen ter. ALTERNATE PROPOSAL A second proposal being an- alyzed by the committee would eiminaie formal rush week and instituie sophomore rush All freshman would cat in the , college union for one year. No later than Fall. 1966. an eat- ing club would be established with facilities fully comparable to those of fraternities. Each student would be charg- ed a social fee which would be allotted to a campus-wide social committee and the col- lege union. Freshman class activities would be promoted. No discrimination by frater- nities on the basis of race «■ religion would be tolerated. Bach fraternity would be re- quired to sign a non-discrimi- nation agreementeach year and wou'.d be required to submit to the college a written agreement from national fraternities that they wHI not reject a chapter s nominees on the basis of race or religion. Fraternities not conforming to those rules would be abolished. Clubs could be formed with membership by random assign- ment or some system allowing cho'ce on the part of the stu- dent. Membership quotas would be employed. FROSH OUT A third proposalcJtes the pre sent fraternity situation as no Considers Changes "' n accord with the Christian. I j humane, and educational as- pirationi of Davidson Col. Therefore. H would pr "ii.it there be DO formal re- lationship between freshmen and upper C*tSI tfClal organi- zations A social program for the freshman would be planned by the Freshman Council, with ath- letic competition organized a- round dormitories. An admin- istrative staff member would be employed by the college to j . help the freshman adjust to ' college life and pursuits. Clubs would replace the social fraternities and occupy the fraternity houses. The rec- 1 reation. esocial life and intra mural competition would be or- j ganized around the clubs. A | Social Council would plan all campus-wide social events, and all students would contribute to the budget of the Council through a social fee assessed j by the College. Under this plan fraternities: could continue, but member >h.p would be limited to j u n i o r s j and seniors. All Davidson stu- dents would have to be official- ly eligible lor consideration. These ideas are part of some or the proposals offered to; the committee. None of these changes represents the final re- sult of the committee's work, but rather the type o! proposals which are being considered. Some of these proposals are on display in the lobby of tSM College Union. NC Senate Approves ABC Vote North Carolina's Senate took final action Wednes- day on a bill allowing the i town of Mooresville to hold a retail liquor store election. The bill, introduced m the House by Rep. Robert A. Collier Jr. of Iredell County, was amended and passed by that chamber on Friday. It provides that the Moores- ville Board of Commissioners may order a special election on the liquor store proposi- tion, and that an election must be held if 15 per cent of the towns qualified voters petrtion for the referendum. If a special election is call- ed, and the measure passes. : the establishment of a liquor I store would represent a sav- ing of time and effort on the i part of North Mecklenburg resi- dents and provide a source [ of revenue for the town ol Mooresville. I ' As amended, the bJl states that 12.5 per cent of the pro- fits will be used for count) schools, 25 per cent for rec - reation. and 27.3 per cent foi I town schools. Fraternity Committee Plans Interim Report For March 1 Completed Document Expected Shortly p The Fraternity Evaluation Committee will report Monday on their work thus far, according to Will Jack- I son, committee chairman "This report will be brief and preliminary and will only touch on the committee's work. It will probably not contain any solu t i o n s or recommendations," Jackson explained. The complete report of the committee, which has been spending three two hour sessions a week for the past four weeks, probably will be issued a short while later. Bob Young, assrstant director of admissions and a committee member, said. "The commit -ee is fast approaching a voting stage." Young emphasized that the final report would have to be I complete, written docu ment. well implemented to deal with the many parts of the situa tion. Jackson stated that the fraier nity problem at Davidson has been discussed during the last U meetings of the committee and that numerous proposals have been submitted and dis cussed. The committee is now trying to channel the proposals into some feasible recommend.! tions. Rick Von Unwerth. IFC Pres 1 ident and committee member, commented on the social situa ; Lion at Davidson. "The problem is three fold. "First, there is the vaunted rejection of those outside the system; secondly, a social dicho- tomy exists on campus, with so i cial facilities available to some and denied to others by virtue | of the fact that they are outside of the social system: and third ! ly, there is the insidious prob I lem facing boys acceptedby the system who allow it to dictate their attitude towards a David | son education, the student body. i _ —^— - Wind Ensemble Te Play Tuesday t Davidson College's Wind En- i semble. under the direction of Dr. Grier M. Williams, will pre- " sent a program in chapel Tues- . day. r The group will present selec- " lions used on its tour over the i semester break. Included are a " clarinet concerto by Dick Vines e and two selections on the i marimba by David Hoag. Several tunes marches, and a s Spanish selection will also be >- 1 presented. yj Twice postponed, the chape 1 . :" concert was originally schedu- «■ led for Feb. 5 and later for ' Feb. 23. and the goals of the college. "These three. I believe, are inextricably interwoven and are part and parcel of tbe present fraternity situation." The committee's decision in von Umverth's opinion is "whether to direct efforts to- > ward ameliorating the situation I or to eliminating the problem." Membersof <he committee have claimed that the Oavidson| system is a caste system, andI the question arises whether this I situation is healthy or permis- 1 sible. Records indicate that ' t large proportion of the studei who drop out of Davidson are independents or t ho s e outside the s( K ial system. ' T is hard to deny '.hat the campus is divided by formal lines of demarcation irv'.o 'in ■aVaatr 0 RICK VON UNWERTH and 'out' group relationships. | however vague the line may be. " said von Unwerth in speak- ing of the socra! situation. "Most men in fraternities." he continued, "realiie a great deal of good in belonging in a frater- nity group and that the type oT association is beneficial. It, is also apparent that there are a good many disadvantages to those both inside and outside the sytem as well as to the college. The problem then is whether the social system can realixe . its potential for good without fating into an unhealthy oaste- type situation " Von Unwerth stated. "Some . members of «ie committee feel , that with some modifications m , the current s y s t e m a healthy . condition could exist. Others feel that the individual fraternity is l considerably detrimental, and 8 that the very existence of frater- nities and the fraternity system ; is the basis of the problem . without the elimination of the r fraternity system as we know- it now." Phi Beta Kappa Elects Nine To Membership By FRANK FLEMING Davidtonlan Staff Writer North Carolina Gamma Chapter off Phi Beta Kappa at Davidson has elected seven seniors and two juniors to be inducted for the spring term. WILL JACKSON Heads Evaluation Croup Admission OK's 214 Applicants letters of acceptance were sent on Feb. 20 to 214 applicants for admission to the class of 1969. Including early admission ap pi oants. 283 students of the roughly 400 applicants who will eventually be .u-eep'.eil liave re- ceived n<j;iU\r.io-i ol .idmis- s;o:i. ;sp of the de.idl.i:e irV!) 15), the H'i (> ip;i'. "■ ' ed to dale i'imp. ire to 'lie 1 128 received last year by M.trch W. as a i.'> percent inwi Ashed to compare the quality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I) I of Admissions Robert C. Young said. "It is difficult, in fact probably useless, to try to make comparisons between the two groups at this stage in the game." "But it is obvious to us that we're going to have to turn down a very large number of qualified applicants. It kills you to have to turn down such boys, but there simply isnt room for everyone we would like to accept." The following were elected on Feb. 17: Ronnie Ayers, Bob Chumbley, Roger David. Joe FI.iMin.in. Clark Morrell. Gary Nedwed. Russ Trimble. Billy Clark, and Paul Simpson. Election to Phi Beta Kappa represents 1he highest recog- ni'.on of scholarship excellence that an undergraduate can achieve. Membership is limited to students having at least a Bitni ayerag* ami carnal "»> reed net* than eight per cent ,.r |)H Junior Ci.iss nor twelve in.I oni'-tialf |>er cent of the Senior Class. According to Dr. M a Ii o I m Loiter, Chapter secretary, the formal initiation will be held April IS. The name of the guest speaker and oilier detaill will be announced later. Ronnie Ayers, a hi-:ory m.i- ini Itoar.oke. V.i member of sigm.i Chi where rves as boarding house maflacer. Besides ix-mc i Dana : ,r. Avers is past pMel .f Phi Eta Sigma, frcsh- ma:i -rhol.istir fi'atenuy. A member of the Male Chorus. he is also Distinguished Mili- tary Student Bob Chumbl«y I pent h.~ junior year in France ai par' of his major in French A native of Covington, Va.. he belongs to the Eumenean Literary fraternity; and ie Cercle Francais. Also a Dana Scholar. Chumbley has participated in the Wind Ensemble and Vaga- bonds. Rooar David, a pre-med from Winston-Salem. belongs to Scholarship Finalists To Face Interviews Approximately 30 competitive scholarship fin- alists will be on the Davidson campus March 4. 5, The high school seniors will meet with the Facul- ty Scholarship Committee for an informal briefing soon after they arrive on Thursday. On Friday or Saturday each finalist will have one formal interview: a 20-minute session with a seven-man panel of members of the Scholarship Com- mittee, chaired by Dr. W. G. McGavock. During the three days each of the 30 students wUl have dinner with at least four different fra- ternities. Alpha Tau Omega. Phi Eta Sigma, and Omjcron Delta Kappa, national leadership fra- ternity. Having served on both THE DAVIDSON IAN and Quips and Cranks staffs, he was also the editor of the Wildcat Hand- book. He is one of tlie fiw new members who hold Dana Scho- larships. Joe Hateman, I..ikr!,md. Kla.. is 1 mathfin.it res major with a -idc Interest In bridge and A number of Sigma rin BpsUoa, he ptayi m the Wild- cat Hind and Wind EEnavmMe. He holds an honorary Cur 1 M Johnson Scholarship. Clark Morrell, from Hethesda Md.. is major. ng In matin-mat- ;i - The holder of I MCCoMKll Scholarship, he ptatu .1 career in Iniarartcf Be uiember of Sigma Phi Epsilon and ,1 member of H* freshman golf team. Gary Nedwed, \'«v Washing- ton, n' V . an economic! major, is aeereury df the Ppojeci >». r the tenet* u CPBAM). He, be- Sigma Chi. Phi Eta Sigma, and the Spanish Club. president of Hgna Delta |>i, honorary Spanish fraterni- ty, and a member of Scabbard and Blade. He holds both a Dana and Quttman irhalnraMp Rust Trimble, the only married student to be elected this year. is .1 chemistry major from King 1 ; port. Tenn Ho is secre- tary of Gamma lignta Kpsilon. national Obcmtetry fraternity. Ha also belongs to Sigma PW EpMlon and Phi Eta Siam i. in addition to having .1 D.in.i Scholarship. Billy Clark a junior from Charlotte, holds a N Merit Scholarship and Me- Council Scholar-hip for his pre-med study V ri'-preMdent of the Oomun il ve Club awl .1 mi-mber of the Mlldetl CoDDC 1. he belong to K.ipp 1 S i g in a and I'lii Eta Sijm 1 He earned '' u ' awawli for out I ing MS 1 cade mi iUI II cadet Paul Slmp*on, ol Nashville. T.Min . ha~ .1 doable jncj tt Hi psychology ami p:v -nod. Be- sides being IKf Beta The* > P , he. '- "' , ■:" o| M'" ni:y. Sigma ' i ; ' : '' :,. Union B ciwrge " .,ii-Knd dilCU 00 H" w«i oo the Fewhra in ( and won the Freshman Scho- Award ■■ —-'-:■ ■■ . , Lm ' MMMLL CLARK CMUIMUnr i > <9 AYERS HASKMAN TRIMBLE S.MPSON DAViD HEDWED Annual Tournament Fever Strikes Campus By BOB STRAUSER David*oni«n Feature Writer The blue Volkswagen circled the campus in the familiar February drizzle; inside, Dave Powell— his face half hidden by a portable speaker— announced the imminent departure of Davidson's greatest athletic team ever for the Southern Conference Tournament. That was Wednesday afternoon. Little more than a day later the 'Cats held an 86-73 first round win over VMI; West Virginia stood in the wings looking as omi- nous as Coach George King and 6-8 sharp- shooter. Bob Camp could manage by word and act. Even more menacing, VPI had emerged from the first round with an impressive romp over the Richmond Spiders. See Details on Pages 4 fir 5 But Wednesday afternoon, those prelimi- nary questions went unanswered. At the corner of Main and Concord a pep rally of sorts had been planned to convene under the year-old banner announcing Davidson'6 par- ticipation in the tournament. this year nothing to take their thoughts from their first round opponent, VMI, and the pro- ven Keydet squad three times in one year. Fred Hetzel drove down Concord in his grey Chevy, slowed at the corner and turned right to park for a moment. Other cars fol- lowed and remained on Concord. Ken Essex implored a "few words from Fred" and achant of "words, words, words.. " went up from the damp audience. Hetzel re- sponded by crossing the street to take the ever-present portable speaker in hand. Fred allowed that the team wanted this one bad and forwarded the hope of the team to have the title in hand on returning to campus. Dnesell followed Hetzel and noted that he could add little to Fred's remarks. The team departed, somewhat ungloriously. as Essex droned damply, ". . .Give me a D. . .!" Tonight at 7:30 the spectacle begun on Concord continues as the 'Cats face West Virginia again under the familiar lights of the Charlotte Coliseum. Taking nothing not even 23 game winning streaks— for granted, the Mountaineers promise a show and possibly a tragedy for the wary 'Cats. The chilling wind blew through the holes cut in the banner; by the appointed hour, half- a-dozen people stood under Cashion's awn- ing trying unsuccessfully to look nonchalant. Then came Shaw Smith and Sterling Mar- tin, the latter holding an umbrella between the two. Various community personalities came to mingle among the students, whose number gradually reached about 50. Some memories must have gone back a year to a similar send-off in similar weather, to a first-round victory over The Citadel, to the second-round game with VMI that con- cluded with Barry Teague sprawling on the court and the 'Cats on the short end of an 82-81 score. "Everyone spread out and look big," shouted cheerleader Ken Essex who looked wet. President D. Grier Martin, standing among the students smiled silently. A small group of Richardson Scholars stood with ob- jective curiosity on the opposite corner of Main. Comments circulated on the team's re- action to going in a day early. There would be no Thursday morning classes for the 'Cats BARRY TEAGUE DICK SNYDER

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Page 1: Considers Fraternity Committee Interim Report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi Ashedtocompare thequality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I)I ofAdmissions RobertC.Young

4DAVIDSON HAS

FASHION REPRESENTATIVE!(See Page Three' f The News And Editorial Voice Of The Davidson College Stud ent Body

FROSH FINISHFABULOUS SEASON

(See Page Four)

VOL. LIV. DAVIDSON COLLEGE DAVIDSON, N. C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965 NUMBER EIGHTEEN

CommitteeSuggested

By WALT DRAKEDavidsonian Staff Writer

Several proposals callingfor changes in the fraternitysystem have been submittedto the Student ( ouncil Fra-ternity Evaluation Commit-teeby interested parties andhavebeen receivingthe con-sideration of the committee.

No rush being held by anyfraternity in 1965 and sopho-more rush being initiated in1966 are basic tenets of oneof those proposals. However,eating clubs could be formedwhich would conform to suchregulations as membership re-quiring approval of not morethan one-half of the members, Ino discrimination as to raceand religion, and a 70-mem-ber quota. Also, eating clubscould consider membersof oth-er clubs who wished to changemembership at the beginningof each semester.

Lingle Manor would remainin existence with the additionof boarding facilities and therewould thus be offered "an openmembership eating club forthose not in the majority-mem-bership eating clubs or the

fraternities"

A college social council wouldbe established to regulate allsocial activities, and the IFCwould be abolished. Kreshmanhaving a 15 average or be'.cr

would be a'lowed to keep car<an campus after Thanksgiving.RUBl) week would be held onFriday. Saturday, and Sund i\

or the first week of each senter.

ALTERNATE PROPOSAL

A second proposal being an-alyzed by the committee wouldeiminaie formal rush weekand instituie sophomore rush

All freshman would cat in the,college union for one year. Nolater than Fall. 1966. an eat-ing club would be establishedwith facilities fully comparableto those of fraternities.

Each student wouldbe charg-

ed a social fee which would be

allotted to a campus-widesocial committee and the col-lege union. Freshman classactivities would be promoted.

No discrimination by frater-

nities on the basis of race «■religion would be tolerated.Bach fraternity would be re-quired to sign a non-discrimi-nation agreementeach year andwou'.dbe required to submit tothe college a written agreementfrom national fraternities thatthey wHI not reject a chapter snominees on the basis of raceor religion. Fraternities notconforming to those rules wouldbe abolished.

Clubs could be formed withmembership by random assign-

ment or some system allowing

cho'ce on the part of the stu-

dent. Membership quotas wouldbe employed.

FROSH OUT

A third proposalcJtes the pre

sent fraternity situation as no

ConsidersChanges

"'n accord with the Christian. Ij

humane, and educational as-pirationi of Davidson Col.Therefore. H would pr"ii.it there be DO formal re-lationship between freshmenand upper C*tSI tfClal organi-zations

A social program for thefreshman would be planned bythe Freshman Council, with ath-letic competition organized a-round dormitories. An admin-istrative staff member wouldbe employed by the college to j.help the freshman adjust to '

college life and pursuits.

Clubs would replace thesocial fraternities and occupythe fraternity houses. The rec-1reation. esocial life and intramural competition would be or- jganized around the clubs. A|Social Council would plan allcampus-wide social events, andall students would contributeto the budget of the Councilthrough a social fee assessed jby the College.

Under this plan fraternities:could continue, but member>h.p

would be limited to ju n iors jand seniors. All Davidson stu-dents wouldhave to be official-ly eligible lor consideration.

These ideas are part of someor the proposals offered to;the committee. None of thesechanges represents the final re-sult of the committee's work,

but rather the type o! proposalswhich are being considered.Some of these proposals areon display in the lobby of tSMCollege Union.

NC SenateApprovesABC Vote

North Carolina's Senatetook final action Wednes-day on a bill allowing thei town of Mooresville to holda retail liquor store election.

The bill, introduced m theHouse by Rep. Robert A.Collier Jr. of Iredell County,was amended and passed by

that chamber on Friday.It provides that the Moores-

ville Board of Commissionersmay order a special electionon the liquor store proposi-tion, and that an electionmust be held if 15 per centof the towns qualified voterspetrtion for the referendum.If a special election is call-

ed, and the measure passes.: the establishment of a liquorI store would represent a sav-

ing of time and effort on thei part of North Mecklenburg resi-■ dents and provide a source[ of revenue for the town ol■ Mooresville.I'

As amended, the bJl statesthat 12.5 per cent of the pro-fits will be used for count)schools, 25 per cent for rec-reation. and 27.3 per cent foi

I town schools.

Fraternity Committee PlansInterim Report For March 1Completed DocumentExpected Shortly

p

The Fraternity Evaluation Committee will reportMonday on their work thus far, according to Will Jack- Ison, committee chairman

"This report will be brief andpreliminary and will only touchon the committee'swork. It willprobably not contain any solutio n s or recommendations,"Jackson explained.

The complete report of thecommittee, which has beenspending three two hour sessionsa week for the past four weeks,

probably will be issued a shortwhile later.

Bob Young, assrstant directorof admissions and a committeemember, said. "The commit-eeis fast approaching a votingstage." Young emphasized thatthe final report would have tobe Icomplete, written document. well implemented to dealwith the many parts of the situation.

Jackson stated that the fraiernity problem at Davidson hasbeen discussed during the lastU meetings of the committeeand that numerous proposalshave been submitted and discussed. The committee is nowtrying to channel the proposalsinto some feasible recommend.!tions.

Rick Von Unwerth. IFC Pres1ident and committee member,commented on the social situa;Lion at Davidson. "The problemis three fold.

"First, there is the vauntedrejection of those outside thesystem; secondly, a social dicho-tomy exists on campus, with so

icial facilities available to someand denied to others by virtue

|of the fact that they are outsideof the social system: and third

! ly, there is the insidious prob

I lem facing boys acceptedby thesystem who allow it to dictatetheir attitude towards a David

| son education, the student body.i

— _—^—

-—Wind EnsembleTe Play Tuesday

t Davidson College's Wind En-i semble. under the direction of

Dr. Grier M. Williams, will pre-" sent a program in chapel Tues-. day.r The group will present selec-" lions used on its tour over thei semester break. Included are a" clarinet concerto by Dick Vinese and two selections on thei marimba by David Hoag.

Several tunes marches, and as Spanish selection will also be>- 1 presented.yj Twice postponed, the chape1.:" concert was originally schedu-«■ led for Feb. 5 and later for'

Feb. 23.

and the goals of the college."These three. Ibelieve, are

inextricably interwoven and arepart and parcel of tbe presentfraternity situation."

The committee's decision invon Umverth's opinion is"whether to direct efforts to- >ward ameliorating the situation Ior to eliminating the problem."Membersof <he committee

have claimed that the Oavidson|system is a caste system, andIthe question arises whether this Isituation is healthy or permis-1sible. Records indicate that '

t

large proportion of the studeiwho drop out of Davidson areindependents or t ho se outsidethe s(K ial system.

'■ T is hard to deny '.hat the

campus is divided by formallines of demarcation irv'.o 'in

■aVaatr 0

RICK VON UNWERTHand 'out' group relationships.|however vague the line may

be."

said vonUnwerth in speak-ing of the socra! situation.

"Most menin fraternities."hecontinued, "realiie a great dealof good inbelonging ina frater-nity group and that the type

oT association is beneficial. It,is also apparent that there area good many disadvantages tothoseboth inside andoutsidethesytem as wellas to the college.The problem then is whetherthe social system can realixe. its potential for good withoutfating into an unhealthy oaste-type situation

"

Von Unwerth stated. "Some. members of «ie committee feel, that with some modifications m, the current s y s t em a healthy. conditioncould exist. Others feelthat the individual fraternity is

l considerably detrimental, and8 that the very existence of frater-

nities and the fraternity system; is the basis of the problem. without the elimination of ther fraternity system as we know-

it now."

Phi Beta Kappa ElectsNine To Membership

By FRANK FLEMINGDavidtonlan Staff Writer

North Carolina Gamma Chapter off Phi Beta Kappa at Davidson has electedseven seniors and two juniors to be inducted for the spring term.

WILL JACKSONHeads Evaluation Croup

AdmissionOK's 214Applicants

letters of acceptancewere sent on Feb. 20 to 214applicants for admission tothe class of 1969.

Including early admission appi oants. 283 students of theroughly 400 applicants who willeventually be .u-eep'.eil liave re-ceived n<j;iU\r.io-i ol .idmis-s;o:i.

;sp of the de.idl.i:e irV!)

15), the H'i(> ip;i'. "■'

ed to dale i'imp.ire to 'lie 1128received last year by M.trch W.as a i.'> percent inwi

Ashed to compare the qualityof this \,..n afld last year'sapplicants. AsslManl I)Iof Admissions Robert C. Youngsaid. "It is difficult, in factprobably useless, to try to makecomparisons between the twogroups at this stage in thegame."

"But it is obvious to us thatwe're going to have to turndown a very large number ofqualified applicants. It killsyou to have to turn down suchboys, but there simply isntroom for everyone we wouldlike to accept."

The following wereelectedonFeb. 17: Ronnie Ayers, BobChumbley, Roger David. JoeFI.iMin.in. Clark Morrell. Gary

Nedwed. Russ Trimble. BillyClark, and Paul Simpson.

Election to Phi Beta Kappa

represents 1he highest recog-ni'.on of scholarship excellencethat an undergraduate canachieve. Membership is limitedto students having at least aBitni ayerag* ami carnal "»>reed net* than eight per cent,.r |)H Junior Ci.iss nor twelve

in.I oni'-tialf |>er cent of the

Senior Class.

According to Dr. M a Ii o ImLoiter, Chapter secretary, the

formal initiation will be heldApril IS. The name of the guestspeaker and oilier detaill willbe announced later.

Ronnie Ayers, a hi-:ory m.i-

ini Itoar.oke. V.imember of sigm.i Chi where

rves as boarding house

maflacer. Besides ix-mciDana: ,r. Avers is past pMel

.f Phi Eta Sigma, frcsh-ma:i -rhol.istir fi'atenuy. A

member of the Male Chorus.he is also ■ Distinguished Mili-tary Student

Bob Chumbl«y Ipent h.~junior year in France ai par'

of his major inFrench A nativeof Covington, Va.. he belongs

to the Eumenean Literary

fraternity; and ie CercleFrancais. Also a Dana Scholar.Chumbley has participated in

the Wind Ensemble and Vaga-bonds.

Rooar David, a pre-med fromWinston-Salem. belongs to

Scholarship FinalistsTo Face Interviews

Approximately 30 competitive scholarship fin-alists will be on the Davidson campus March 4. 5,

Thehigh school seniors will meet with the Facul-ty Scholarship Committee for an informal briefingsoon after they arrive on Thursday.

On Friday or Saturday each finalist will haveone formal interview: a 20-minute session with aseven-man panelof members of theScholarshipCom-mittee,chaired by Dr.W. G.McGavock.

During the three days each of the 30 studentswUl have dinner with at least four different fra-ternities.

Alpha Tau Omega. Phi EtaSigma, and Omjcron DeltaKappa, national leadership fra-ternity. Having served on bothTHE DAVIDSONIAN and Quipsand Cranks staffs, he was alsothe editor of the Wildcat Hand-book. He is one of tlie fiw newmembers who hold Dana Scho-larships.

Joe Hateman, I..ikr!,md. Kla..is 1 mathfin.itres major witha -idc Interest In bridge and

A number of Sigma rinBpsUoa, he ptayi m the Wild-cat Hind and Wind EEnavmMe.He holds an honorary Cur1 MJohnson Scholarship.

Clark Morrell, from HethesdaMd.. is major.ng In matin-mat-;i

- The holder of IMCCoMKllScholarship, he ptatu .1 careerin Iniarartcf Be i« ■ uiemberof Sigma Phi Epsilon and ,1

member of H* freshmangolf team.

Gary Nedwed, \'«v Washing-ton, n' V . an economic! major,is aeereury df the Ppojeci >».r

the tenet* u CPBAM). He, be-Sigma Chi. Phi Eta

Sigma, and the Spanish Club.president of Hgna Delta

|>i, honorary Spanish fraterni-ty, and a member of Scabbardand Blade. He holds both a

Dana and Quttman irhalnraMpRust Trimble, the only married

student to be elected this year.is .1 chemistry major fromKing1;port. Tenn Ho is secre-tary of Gamma lignta Kpsilon.national Obcmtetry fraternity.Ha also belongs to Sigma PWEpMlon and Phi Eta Siam i. in

addition to having .1 D.in.iScholarship.

Billy Clark a junior fromCharlotte, holds a NMerit Scholarship and Me-Council Scholar-hip for hispre-med study V ri'-preMdentof the Oomun il ve Club awl .1

mi-mber of the Mlldetl CoDDC 1.he belong to K.ipp 1 S ig inaand I'lii Eta Sijm 1 Heearned ''

u' awawli for out Iing MS 1 cade mi iUIV« II cadet

Paul Slmp*on, ol Nashville.T.Min . ha~ .1 doable jncj tt Hipsychology ami p:v -nod. Be-sides being IKf

Beta The* > P , he. '- "',■:" o| M'"

ni:y. Sigma'i ■

; ':''

:,. Union B ■ ciwrge" .,ii-Knd dilCU 00 H"

w«i oo the Fewhra in (

and won the Freshman Scho-Award

■■—-'-:■ ■■ ■ . "»,

Lm

'MMMLL CLARK CMUIMUnr

i > <9

AYERS HASKMAN TRIMBLE

S.MPSON DAViD HEDWED

Annual Tournament Fever StrikesCampusBy BOB STRAUSER

David*oni«n Feature Writer

The blue Volkswagen circled the campusin the familiar February drizzle; inside, DavePowell— his face half hidden by a portablespeaker— announced the imminent departureof Davidson's greatest athletic team ever forthe Southern Conference Tournament. Thatwas Wednesday afternoon.

Little more than a day later the 'Catsheld an 86-73 first round win over VMI; WestVirginia stood in the wings— looking as omi-nous as Coach George King and 6-8 sharp-shooter. Bob Camp could manage by wordand act.

Even more menacing, VPI had emergedfrom the first round with an impressive rompover the Richmond Spiders.

See Details on Pages 4 fir 5

But Wednesday afternoon, those prelimi-nary questions went unanswered. At thecorner of Main and Concord a pep rally ofsorts had been planned to convene under theyear-old banner announcing Davidson'6 par-ticipation in the tournament.

this year— nothing to take their thoughts fromtheir first round opponent, VMI, and the pro-ven Keydet squad three times in one year.

Fred Hetzel drove down Concord in hisgrey Chevy, slowed at the corner and turnedright to park for a moment. Other cars fol-lowed and remained on Concord.

Ken Essex implored a "few words fromFred" and achant of "words, words, words.."went up from the damp audience. Hetzel re-sponded by crossing the street to take theever-present portable speaker in hand.

Fred allowed that the team wanted thisone bad and forwarded the hope of the teamto have the title in hand on returning tocampus. Dnesell followed Hetzel and notedthat he could add little to Fred's remarks.The team departed, somewhat ungloriously.as Essex droned damply, "...Give me a D...!"

Tonight at 7:30 the spectacle begun onConcord continues as the 'Cats face WestVirginia again under the familiar lights of theCharlotte Coliseum. Takingnothing— not even23 game winning streaks— for granted, theMountaineers promise a show and possiblya tragedy for the wary 'Cats.

The chilling wind blew through the holescut in the banner;by the appointedhour, half-a-dozen people stood under Cashion's awn-ing trying unsuccessfully to look nonchalant.

Then came Shaw Smith and Sterling Mar-tin, the latter holding an umbrella betweenthe two. Various community personalitiescame to mingle among the students, whosenumber gradually reached about 50.

Some memories must have gone back ayear to a similar send-off in similar weather,to a first-round victory over The Citadel,to the second-round game with VMI that con-cluded with Barry Teague sprawling on thecourt and the 'Cats on the short end of an82-81 score.

"Everyone spread out and look big,"shouted cheerleader Ken Essex— who lookedwet. President D. Grier Martin, standingamong the students smiled silently. A smallgroup of Richardson Scholars stood with ob-jective curiosity on the opposite corner ofMain.

Comments circulated on the team's re-action to going in a day early. There wouldbe no Thursday morning classes for the 'CatsBARRY TEAGUE

DICK SNYDER

Page 2: Considers Fraternity Committee Interim Report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi Ashedtocompare thequality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I)I ofAdmissions RobertC.Young

8V2: FELLINI'S LATEST

(Trjr OmititBomanTHE MEWS AND EDITORIAL VOICE OF DAVIDSON COLLEGE STUDENT BODY

Charlfs Dibble Charlie SmithEditor-inChiei Bu$iness Manager

PAGE TWO FRIDAY FEBRUARY 26. 1965

{L'tttrs to 'ht editor do not neceuarilyreflect the views of the editor.)

Out Of FocusTh« Washington Po«t, which

eloquently states its opinion to eachmember of Congress over the break-fast table every morning, operated onthe American Medical Association ina recent editorial entitled "Last Ditch-manship."

The symbol of the capital presspoignantlv" stated that "the AMA hasso consistently been too late with toolittle that it has become hard to lookto that organization for any construc-tive role in designing medical insur-

ance programs.The AMAhas. in turn,

opposed every step that has beentaken to improve access to medicalcare for Americans of awraae andbelow-average incomes It ongina lyoppo>eil Blue Crow and Blue Shield;

it opposed th.< original Kerr-Milis leg-islation it now so bravely endor-e-.it now comet up with an -eldercare'proposal only after it had become un-mistakeably' clear that Congress isready to pass a hospital care pro-gro-

As attacks on the "last ditch-manship" of the AMA, these pointsof the Po«t are valid. However, de-spite the editorial's title, the Po«t'«ultimate object of attack is the AMA's"Eldercare" program, which has beensubmitted as an alternative to the ad-ministration's "Medicare" plan.

The Washington paper contends.. The AMA stuck to last ditchman-ship. and it is goingto be hard to take ■

its latest 'education' campaign and itslatest proposals as anything but fur-ther reflection of the AMA's lack ofinterest in any aspect of health in-surance except to keep the role ofGovernment to a minimum."

Never does the Po*t turn its at-tention to the "Eldercare" plan itself.Rather the newspaper— in a shrewdlyoblique fashion

— discredits the mo-tives of the measure's seponsors. Per-haps the sponsors' motives deservecriticism, but such criticism shouldnever replace judgment of the pro-gram on merit alone.

Thanks,FellowsMeeting the Citadel's tenacious

cadets provided a fitting end to regu-lar-season play for this year's Wild-cats. Close scores; the first half, fol-lowed by second-half surges andhealthy finishes, have been frequentenough to provoke ulcers this year,both within and beyond the scrappyand unpredictable Southern Confer-ence. . ..

No matter where the tourneymaze ends, one fact remains; leavingthe team this year are men who—un-der the keen eye of Coach Lefty Drie-sell—have added a Gauguinish splashto the portrait of Davidson. Davidsonis still a "small, church-related,academically strong liberal-arts col-lege for men." But it is more: David-son is also a nationally ranked basket-ball power.

While adding such a distinction toits catalogue of descriptives. David-son has also quietly acquired anotherlaudable asset. School spirit— howevertrite that phrase may be— has snug-gled up to the somewhat reserved,then warming embrace of the David-son student body. Over the past fouryears, the vague and intangible quali-

ties of "school spirit" have become 1real and readily perceptible traits in >

the student body. The bleachers in (

Johnston Gymnasium are not only 'filled but also exuberant. There now

'exists a facet of Davidson in which

'all students take pride; there now ex-

'ists a facet of Davidson with which all

'students as a student body identify. '

Many should share in the credit ,for the transition. But deserving spe- ,cial attention are this year's seniors

— ,Hetzel . . .Teague. . .Davidson . . . ,Marion. . . Briggs . .Recruited by ,Lefty and closely watched their fresh-man year by a victory-hungry com-munity, the fledgling ( 'ats camethrough their sophomore year withan impressive record that included astunning upset of then second-rankedDuke. The seasons since then haveseen no less success, no less pressureamid ever increasing student pride.

We revel in reflecting on theHoratio Alger-like climb of Davidsonfrom the conference doormat. Andaccompanying our reflective delightis the hope that we have witnessedbut the first fleeting moments of along period of success for Davidsonteams and for Davidson.

Bright SpotsIn considering the question of

where we stand Ihave found thatthere are bright spots, grey spots,and spots that remain predominatelydark. To speak first of the brightspots,Ithink we must all agree thatsome solid progress has been madein strengtheningand improving publiceducation. Perhaps the first thing tonoteon the bright side is a change ofatmosphere; in a great many schoolsthe intellectual development of youngpeople is now accepted as the pri-mary aim of schools and no longerdrags behind citizenship training,home and family living, and the de-velopment of leisure-time activities.

The bright child is more andmore coming to be considered a na-tional asset, although in some circlesbrightness is still considered a sortof affliction, the bright child becom-ing the "exceptional" child, classedwithsuch unfortunates as theemotion-ally distrurbed and mentally back-ward.

Thenew respect for things of themind and for a curriculum to matchis reflected in a number of ways.

Many school people have sought thehelp of subject-matter specialists inthe colleges inan effort to strengthenthe basic subjects, and in recent yearswe have seen the fruitful results ofthis cooperation. This is notably truein the sciences and in mathematics,where committees of specialists, work-ing with schoolpeople, havebeen busyrevising and improving the curricu-lum.

That a segmentof secondaryedu-cation has improved in recent yearsis demonstrated in part by higher col-lege entrance examination scores andby reports from deans of admissionswho tell us that entering classes aresteadily improving. But perhaps aword of caution is in order here; wedo not know whether these higherscores are accompanied by greaterrepresentation among high schoolsaround the country or if the first-ratecolleges continue to draw their high-scoring students from the same rela-tively small group of first-rate highschools.—

The Council for Basic Education

AssociateEditors - Jim Downey Copy Editor Don Davis

rSTvoh SS *"»■ °w "«■»—

*» Ait;enTim Kimrey c« lvin Zon

Managing Editors John Todd Photographers Sam SmithMike Harrington Tom Thel

Asst. Managing Editor John Bailey Erskine SproulNews Editor Rufus Adair Cartoonists Jack LingleFeature Editor Heyward Cartel _ , „ „ .Sports Editor Johnny Clark Rufu» HtllmmTkAssistant Sports Editor BillBriggs L0" HinCirculationManager Malcolm Lane Asst.Business Mgr.

—Irvine Welling

Asst. CirculationManager. John Viser Advertising Mgr. Bob CameronContributors this week: Sam Boyle. Tom Cook, John Allen. Mike Mooty.Steve Brown. Larry Norfleet. Neville Patterson. Paul Marion. Tucker Laxton.Louis Lesesne, Dick Spencer. Huck Berry. Bob Strauser. Steve Couch, RonSnow. Bob Travers. Tun Rothermel. Walt Drake. Mike Bates. Ed Maxwell.BertWhisnant, Roger David. Joe Ford,Frank Fleming. Billy Farr, GreyPash.Danny Boone, Ted Glustnan, Smith McKeithan.

Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office, at Davidson. Nerth Caroline,

under Act ef MarchI.U».

Coming DC Flick Called'A Revolution In Filming*

By SMITH McKEITHANA DavidsonIan Prvelew

O». of the difficulties in "'^.'""y^r.h.^Th.t i°. w<"rtSfconfu"IE=rt%Vhof.^^^

What we often fail to realize <is that the life on the screenwill mean something to us only Iif we accept it as something Iseparate fromour own lives, and Ilook to it as a reflection upon i

our existence rather than a rep- <

etrtion of It. This, of course, as-sumes that the fUm is worth- |while, and that it merits our (concern and time.

God's Little Acre, advertised jas a realistic portrait of the ,changing society in rural Geor-

(gia. was a failure because it of- j1crcd only a superficial view oflife but treated that view as ifit really mattered Goldfinger,on the other hand, won our acceptance because it nevermadea claim to realism, and assumed from the first that we would jsuspend our disbelief for the

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR \CouncilMember Answers

i

Recent Editorial Criticism

course or the film.Vh succeeds, however, where

both of these films do not, in

that it gives us something whichwe can take away from the theafter and can use in relation to

our lives, if not in them.

If Isound selfcontradictoryhere, an explanaUonof the motion picture may help. MarcelloMastroianni plays the part of afilm director who cannot decidewhat his next film will be about,

although the sets have already

been constructed and thehired, and M see him examinemuch or his life, past and prescut. in an attempt to come to

grips with his predicament.Here we have the change in

critical values, for to the direc-tor, working within his film, theart of the film is more re.il

-h.ni

the reality of going down to thecorner pizza house for IMHflhor bedding up with his mistress

In other words, we OH saythat within the film, art equalslife: and the working out ofMastroianni's artistic problem ismore real and of more concernto us than God's Little Acre's"poor treatment of a very realproblem of "GoldflngerV masterful handling of trivia.

We may compare Vh withWordsworth's The Prelude" inits importance and in its method, for it speaks about an artin that art form. If we must laythat it is "about" something, wecan characterize it as a filmabout a film maker trying tomake a film, with the emphasison the trying.

Frederico Fellini. the real director who decided that thislargely autobiographical motion

picture was his eighth and.half, gives us a good point fromwhich to return to our origin,statement, by saying. "InIVi,began with the idea of a maretreating from reality, andwound up with a picture aboua man confronting half a dozeproblems at once."

This is the clue as to why v,

take anything away from thisfilm about filmmaking. In hismovement from retreat to con-frontation. Mastroianni objec-tively reorders his subjectiveartetMkM, and comes toa NiMfrtic MHflMM of Iv.mself n

order to create outside of !i;m-

self By accepting his life.iis dreams, his

pi,' .uvomplis.inients. h;

and his film public and hisartistic MMCtftM, He i- .i!)!>

to make thai life useful.A Mte of warning: don't fio to

8 11I r\|HT:mg tobe given eitherphilosophy or psychotherapyHem than anythingelse.I1/2 isthe projecting of sights andsounds upon a screen, and it

operates on screen, that is. sur-face, level. Many of its effectsare so obvious, so easy to seand hear, that we may lose theirvalue if we intelleotualizethem.

They should linger as senseexbefore becoming stored items inthe registery of our brains. Seeing IVi receptively is an activeparticipation in screen life andit is through this participationin art that we may enrich ouractivity in life, because their respective realities are complementary.

8Vj will be shown at 8:15 onMonday. Wednesday, and Fri<i.iv nights in the MorrisonRoom.

Dear Editor: \

Charles Ramberg'smumblingsfrom the Baggage CompRrtp.irtment have reached a newlevel of UlOUgMleM chatter

'Cleverly and cynically, he punc ]tures the over inflated Davidsonbasketball No one (Hfl question

'his theme Davidson is first andforemost an educational insti-tution, and we should not letoveremphasison basketball sub-vert other higher values. But \his style is bitter-«nd perjiaps 'he has hurt someone, m^ch asthat Wildcat, for wha;e\;-r re.ison. disappointed a child."PERVASIVE IMPLICATION" C

The pervasive implication inhis little diatribe is that some j,

how "our hired hardwood heroes" are not part of "us". t.They are professionaljocks paidto win some games— and nothing more. Surely this is a cold,narrow new to tajte of voungmen who participate in many

varied aspects of Davidson life—and who are accepted as persons, not as mere athletic ma ,chines.

They are iust people !'"■"»" h* .long to fraternities, studv bnn'<-;.

march on the drill field, gettickets from Cop Linker, and

'fly kites in Freedom Park w'ththe rest of it* Peril-"-

' *'Ramberg wouldget off that busand really see what's going onaround him. he would find thatthese athletes have always beenin the ranks of ordinal- (Mr

Ula."PETTY CRITICISMS" I.. . And. n couple of Editor ]

Dibble's crMcixnu <>r the Wtudent Council are ■) best n^ttvat worst unwarranted.

The reason for the change oftime in last week's meeting was \to enable interested members toattend the Prague OrchestraConcert. Although the notice ofthe change was not put in flash-ing neon lights above the uniondoor, it would not have requit-ed great reporter intrepidity to

1 discover the change, of whichample notice was given. And themeeting was still "public"- the

1 Council certainly has nothing tohide, but it does wish clear interpretation of what it does.'

The inference which Dibble1 draws from the outdated Coun"

eil minutes in the I'nton is ;il"

most too ridiculous for rebuttal.'In the first place there existsno Student Body law nor Coun

1 cil rule which states that theCouncil must display its minutes. It is done as a service tointerested students. Admittedly,our unfortunate, overworked Iretary has fallen slightly behind. In the second place. Dibble's ownpublication is eloquenttestimony to what the StudentCouncil has been doing.

It frightens me to contemplatewith what he would have filledthe newspaper space occupiedby such stories as the drinkingrule change and the fraternityevaluation. More of his own ereations?!? Trustees forbid!

David PowellDavidson College

(Editor'* note: At a result ofour "at bait patty at worstunwarranted" crllicitmi, the

sacratary-traasuror has nowposted In the College Unionthe minutes of the Council'slatest meeting. Of course, the

meetings took place Fab. 15instead af Feb. It as stated In

the minutes... IAt for "what the Student ,

Council has been doing," we ,are delighted to learn of the ,Council's great initiative andmotivation in the realm of f"the drinking rule change andthe fraternity evaluation.")

3i(

Webb ;>ear Editor:

'3

Sophomores! Where is your ]■mirage? jSophomore*! Where is your 1

m.icin.iUon?Sophomores! Where is your

■uruisity?Members of the Class of '66

»ave been pioneers in at least:uo respects: Juniors were in[he pilot group fOr the Humanlies program, and Juniors parLicipate in the first DavidsonJunior Year Abroad. Alas! Sofew of you possess tha< adventurous spTil which motivatedthem.

The Junior Year in Francepresents a challenge.

The Junior Year in France offers a new frontier.

The Junior Year in Francetenders a cultural confrontation.

Your predecessors recognizedin the Junior Year in France aunique educational opportunity.In the fresh air of France, somehave again found that stagnantprovincialism about which weDavidsonians complain. Yetthere is something stimulatingin provincialism with a Frenchaccent. Some few French speaking sophomores are taking ad-vantage of this opportunity. Whyaren't there more?

Are you afraid that you arenot capable of adjusting to achange of environment? afraidof losing a year of buzzing?afraidthat you willnot completeyour major?

These are important factors toconsider. But consider also thebenefits of testing your capabilities. Consider the advantages ofworking with Descartes' "grandlivrc du monde." Consider thatover half of the students atMontpellier will graduate fromDavidson with majors in subjerts other than French.

(). Sophomores miserable*!Try to imagine what year ofstudy abroad wouldmean to you.You might be changed. Youmight be revitalized.You mightmake a slight contribution toworld understanding.

Have you ever wonderedhowFrance elects its chief executive? or how nationalization ofvital services affects the con

»sumers? or what differences ;exist between American andKrrm-h education? or why it isthai the French Richardsonscholars do not understand your

'French?

If you have wondered, openyour eyes.Right in front of youis an opportunity to stimulate(not satisfy) your nascent curiosity.

Ihopethat this letter has fallen under the scrutiny of a rareimaginative Sophomore. Mayyou take advantage of one ofDiividson's most valuable op-portunities: The Junior Year inFrmice. Dare!

Johnny WebbDavidson Junior AbroadMontpellier, France

CornelsonDear Editor:

Mr. Kimrey's review of theWorld Student Day of Prayervespers service was a well-doneaffair, aside from its omittingany mention of the organizer ofthe service, Mr. George Kuy-kendall. It was he who plannedand created the program aswell as writing and deliveringthe sermon.It might also be mentioned,

since the note to this effect wasnot in the printed program,thatboth prayers used in the servicewere selected by Mr. Kuyken-dall from a collection of pray-ers by Soren Kierkegaard, andwere not the original work ofany of the service's participants,as many students seem to have—

The printing of these omissionsFromMr.Kimrey's review wouldbe greatly appreciated.

K'. Howard Cornelsen Jr.avidson College.

LETTERS TO THE EDITORTHE DAVIDSONIAN wel-

com** letters from any read-er, eiHier in support of ordiffering from its policies.Letters should bo typewrit-ten, doubled spaced, endshouldnot exceed 250 words.

We altowillreceive longerarticles, but request thatthey be cleared with the edi-tor.

In order to be printed inthe following iuut, lettersshould be receivednot laterthan 4 p. m. Wednesday. Allletters must be signed. Themailing address is Box 211,Davidson, N. C.

Amherst And GreeksA subcommittee of the Amherst. faculty, in a re-

port urging a sweeping reorganization to make thecollege a genuine intellectual community, has rec-ommended that fraternities be replaced by a systemof residential units. Each unit would be large enoughto develop a full range of student activities.

These units, to be known as the Amherst socie-ties,would combine,on a geographical basis,clustersof existing fraternities and dormitories. Each wouldhouse between 90 and 130 upper classmen and wouldhave a proportional number of non-resident fresh-men members, thus ending the present policy ofkeeping freshmen segregated through their firstyear.

In recommending the change, the committeestressed that its emphasis was not on abolishing fra-ternities but on finding a way to give relevance andunity to student education.

"Our main complaint is that students havecometo identify significant intellectual life exclusivelywith the classroom performance as measured bygrades," the report said. "They speak of themselvesas divided between their work and their social life.Many social institutions and extracurricular activi-ties seem to have diminished in standards of excel-lence and achievement of self-expression, and thesevalues are now assigned to the classroom, if any-where. As a result, non-academic, intellectual andcreative pursuits dwindle; the academic ones, in toomany cases, lack enthusiasm and dedication."

In its early thinking, the committee attemptedto devise within the existing system of fraternitiesand dormitories reforms that might break down whatmember described "as therigid separaton of thoughtand pleasure."

It finally concluded that fraternities at Amhersthave become an anachronism, that possibilities fortheir reform have been exhausted, and that theynow stand directly in the way of exciting new possi-bilities for student life.

In recent years all of the campus fraternitieshave attempted to reappraise their functions. Am-herst fraternities were among the first in the nationto eliminate racial and religious discrimination, tominimize the abuses of hazing and rushing, and toestablish the principle that all students should havethe opportunity to join.

In actual practice, only 36 per cent of the stu-dents lived in the fraternity houses last year; 74 percent of the eligible students were active members,and the remaining 26 per cent either resignes theirmembership or never became active.The faculty subcommittee points out that thecollege already holds title to all but one of the ex-isting fraternitydormitories buildings.Byusingthesein conjunction with college dormitories,it will avoidthe expense of constructing new facilities.

The New York TimesFebruary 21, 1965

I I<WVE UFJ \ "to ~^\ 7^*Svu£)nVp»f.Mr 1 / Wrt/CXPTHe " Pis«OiSE HiMself I /HIMSELF BLAgKfJ \ H/MSECF RACK* VhaHAHAHAHA / /

Page 3: Considers Fraternity Committee Interim Report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi Ashedtocompare thequality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I)I ofAdmissions RobertC.Young

Witt Hancock PortraitPresented To College

This arresting bit of infor-mation came to light recentlyby wa) "f .1 chic 1black onpirkl presi release marker "forhnmediate release." Since this; Oil of thing one

Ddi

Tnyior

I

;

" 1 lie

imniscieni labelness, uiurii keeps Hush; 1 cl Milnalh in winning Use a-

ward, Mi Wiseman mtbmitt-ed e\|M lion 0 n "Trair \V( i)r. .md !(Nik^ havenothiii); to do with it.' aklpointed oul She has recentlycompleted the second phaat ■:!ie coni|)e:ition

— a matter in-volving some origin.ii Jllllllialll:ii work.

This pIi a se is MgfMead toshow specific aptitude for jour-

Faw Is AwardedSummer Position

By BOB STRAUSERDavidsonian Feature Writer

".. .He has done so manythings here at Davidson, made

I so many friends and been afriend to so many, it ii assur-ed that Witt will go back <oWest Virginia more fully aman. but the same unobtrusivegentleman he always has bean

The ahem r e m a r k comefrom the 1928 edition of Quipsand Cranks and stands H l'-'\idson's inspressian 0) DanielWitt Hanvock. BnfUal) majorfioin Bluefiold. \V. V.i. cl 1

mA |>ortr.i;t of Wi | HanCOok

ind-. m a convenierri win-

dow of The DAVIDSONIANoffice. From that vantagepoint. i{ looks, alaaeat witiiprideful disdain aCMes editorDibble's desk I: woul<l almost

Men thai an explan.non isrequired for the Intervening 37

Bean after graduation .n 1928.Witt Hancock wen: !<i workfor the Cnaftette of fUthe Ai ociatad Press. A f t e r

1! years m variou APoffices in the United Sii .1n c 0 <■k w 1- ten u> iheLondon bun au

and Iran were .1 few of thetop I ■ U v\.i> for the

Davidson gradu it« nlead ng up to and including theearly days of uv-hi w.ir 11u.ijiicii b u.Jc audience through

pi iking world.

In 19(2 Hancock Found him-iii the K.1-1 Ind 1 on the

island ' .1 1\ 1 reseanking .1

forthcoming book on India \the Japanese over-ran ilie area.

i tiie young reporter and 240■ etheta were evacuated from

1 :he is'and on the Dutch steam-- ship Poelau Bras. 1

A of Du:ch oil e\|>erts'

were on board the il>-fated'

I >p Wanting very much to

capture ilie-o men. the Japm- |

ne-e launched an allout at-'

;.uk on thv iteamship andj,quickly succeeded in linking j

1i;. Alma aoig<

(

, naatty, Hanoock ■ ■ senlanding on <hr ix»'.\ 1 'he

ihip wen: under.'

\::ii the war, the i> cturen! \vi;t Hancoek and other APreporters who <111-<1 i;i the line

■ ">! dut) bung from the »' or AP Ne« Vorli headquar- [When the ntfire Wai

modeled In kits, the pornwere given to the re pec wram " <

In :urn. the Uancock [amithe pot trail to Da\ daon. t

when tiie young man h.id be- "

distinguish) d can 1

Air France Cancels;Chorus To Fly Saturn

Davidson's Male Chorus willfly to Europe June 13 on aSaturn Airways DC-7C insteadof an Air Prance jet as wasoriginally planned last fall.

Alumni director Bill Bon-durant explained that AirFrance had broken Icontractwith the college late in Jan-uary "for reasons of its own."making it too late for him tocharter another jet.

Bondui.m; described Saturnas a "certified US supplementalcarrier" noting that it in.ike-regular trans-Alantic flinr.N

The DC-7C. a propeller-drivenairliner, seats fewer peoplethan the jet. but Bondurant saidsaid that this would make h.sjob of filling it vttn alumniand students somewhat easierthan he had originally expect-ed.

Besides the Male Chorus. 30alumni and student* have a-k-ed for places on the plane jand at least 60 more have ex-

t

pressed an interest in the trip. ]According to Bondurant. ,

chartering a plane enables boththe chorus and other personsto fly to Europe much more ]cheaply than if they flew on .1regular flight. A round-trip (from Charlotte will cost $350.per person.

The Male Churus has man-'

aged to raise about $11,000 <o-'

ward feayiag for the trip.The contract with Sattun bai

made it possible for the family'

of a student to fly to Europe'

even if the student does no.'

go. The previous contract (\.<\'

not perm.1 this."if Daddy won'; send you. 1

you sCnd li.rn. " joke:l ]{o.;- 1

dur.in:. I

... Every Man Dies'

misuse of these "things" lead.Ifeels Buttrick. to regression .1-

long tV vertical line, '.hat is.lead man further from God.

Those who attended the coffee ;hour got an intimate glimpseof Butinck the man. comment-ing on everything from tele-

'vision commercials (-Theypedal their spaghetti \utlievangelistic uncuon.") to Chris' (

ianity ("I'm not a Christian-there's only been one-but 1try.")

He delivered neaaae)** toDavidson boys from tjeir uirlsin his ctaaaaa at jlgaw se»:t.where he is | vis.ting pro-(eMer, and offered tfl <i|K'ii

'inie- of comnnin.cition lor the 'rest of us. "With specie! rateifor chaplains." he oininientulwryly

In spile of the Hpiisking de-(ecu thai BaJtrtak has i"overcome, be and Iii-- audienceboih enjoy themselves tremen- 1

'AGE OF CONFUSION'

Newcombe ExpoundsFine ArtsTo PresentSoprano

Ihe ilub."When asked to elaborate Beard re-

marked. "For me to make any addi-tional comments would seem to imi-tate the uncalled for actions of Mr.Edgar."

YRC President Walter Edgar, onhearing of Beard's decision, explained,if Beard does not attend, his motionfor reconsideration will die

"

Viewing the meeting. Beard said."Hopefully there might be some debate

on the topic ol Speaker-Han, for Ifeelthat the action taken at the last meet-ing was rather hasty and ill-considered.1 hope that a thorough debate will beallowed, although my own motion forreconsideration is to'be withdrawn."

Edgar, hearing of the statement,commented, "Of course there will bediscussion, if discussion is desired,butfor allpractical purposes the club's res-olution opposing the law was passed atthe last meeting."

The election of a new chairman forthe club's nominating committee isamong other business scheduled for themeeting.

By HEYWARD CARTERDavidsonian Feature Editor

"American' CnnfMekm,'' ex-posed and expounded upon byAlan Newcombe. took a heavybea:ing last Tuesday in Cham-

I bers. Neucombc-. known tom m> .is Me "Atlantic Weather

, Man" a 11 d editorial opinionreader of WBTV. and to a few■" Director of Public Affairswith Jefferson Standard Broad-casting Company and authorof the story of his POW expcrcnccs in \VW II. Vacation

:With Pay proved to be fully capable of devastating this andman\ other related topics

Kirs; stating the thithat freedom "nimo- Irun ic-

" ceptance by a majority of the

aas)'flbB.

ALAN NEWCOMBEOn The Basis Of Democracy

population. . . of one «.f twolie explanation- Ih

■Me, "the first one being "theDeclaration of Independence ."all men are created equal...and the second being "Menare no; created; they areanoth-er form of animal life," New-combe proceeded to show whateach explanation leads to.

The latter theory, by doingaway with a creator "makes

communism a v e r y logicalform of existence." i'>r accord-ing to Newcombe. Kveryhuman being chooses an ulti-mate authority. If K is nolthe Creator, it is obviously manhimself." Man then transfers]his authority to the state.

Next Newcombe dazzled his iaudience by informing themthat the idea that Increated has nothing to do withreligion— it is scientific as-sumption" Although God, theFounding Fathers, are all ob-

'Mously beh.nd Mm Constitution.Newcombe lamented the f.u'that now. at a time of theereatesi 0 h ur c h asemhershaji,there are "fewer peaple a^-cr.bing to the idea thai .1 de-mocracy is baaed on <;<>d

Iii dealing with extremieUin the United States, Newoembe

lared that they were in 1

tar) if we are to have .1 "full"ety w h <" r e freedom of

"peech is not a mere <-\y1, but :he> snoutd not >.im-

■elltion Theiropposing op.n.0:1- are, In f.ict.turned into a useful in com-bining their arg uaea -

Into..tynUwsls, In winch oeaapromlic> our real Mrength as a '

on. 1

din moral confusion is an-r problem tackled by New-

combe S'.itnii; that "Mor.illjour menace lies In oonfusingliberty vw-i libertinism," hewent on to jay thai if 1falls below certain moral siand- Isrds, "that society fa.Is apaiBut it is said that human Mture is evil, ami that we cannot change it, therefore «ha:arc we to do to Mop the m. ■

decay of our society?The a nIw e 1. ao

Newcombe is not to try to"change" human nature, for1; is not a fixed thing, there-for it can not be changed, butwe should try to steer it ina worthwhile direction. Thisdirection is the upholding ofthe Golden Rule in its truesense.

This is to "love every hu-man being whether you likehim or not." and to "Do whalyou do to him for his owngood." Thus we can "influence"

Handbook Staff Named

human nature 111 our free. to men a poiir that we

save thai society by moralamelioration

The 1965 Wildcat Handbookwill be much the same as it hasbeen for the past two years, acrording to editor Britt Snider.

There will be a few minor

changes and a number of additions. but the format and theoutward appearance will remain

largely as it has been.The main addition to the

Handbook will be a larger qunntity of editorial comment on theplace of extracurricular BCttvl' Davidson, as well ;i- .1

few words on religious life a1

Davidson and the challenge thatit picents to religious thought

There will also be nemnwintnon the academic atmospherehere including the Book of theVear, theGreat Issues Program.Open Bnd, bull sessions and catlee hours.

A short new .sec: 1011 on IheSen* member> of Ihe faculty willcover wh.r they have done, theirqualifications, and their degrees

Another section. Snideiwill include all statistics on the

DavMaon'l International Re-lations Club (IRC) will spon-sor an on-campus session of

.Great Decisions. . .1965. an an-nual program on eight differentforeign policy topics prepared

1 by the Foreign Policy Associ-ation.

The program will run for a-bout light NVafcf, with at leastone meeting per week. Amongthe topics to be dlactuaad are.'"Re<! China-Menace or Paper

iTiger?", and "Vietnam— Is Vic-| tory Possible?"

Jim Brindell. IRC President,said the program is designed"to make the individual more■ware of the IsSttM involvediii various critical areas of U.S.foregn |>ol.cy." He added thattin- rtlafmrinn formal attowadparticipants to express iheirown ideas on the subjec

Bnnt|.;i laid that 1") per-onshad expressed an in:erthe program, bat be w.i< an*~ure ,i> to the final numberof participations. "A 1m ■1 1i?roup of eight would be easilyworkable," he sa:d. If .1 gtmmany persons become i,:■;l he Mfanittad thai be mighth.ne tO f<inn several grOUDI

K.ic'i participant i^ providedwith .1 F.u" Sheet Kit contain-ing back-ground noaterial 'orem h bop lo I).1 discussed, tn.idd.tion. the k.' will contain.1 balM on wired the 1 1

m.iy expreu hii opinionthe direction I'.S foreign :should take in eaeh icasat presented

The h.illot may be KCM to.1 1 ongressman or tenatoc toniaki'an individual's Viewoofaltknown

The Idea, 1 think.scntially very good." com-mented Brindell. noting thatthis i-, tlie first Mine thai thisprogram ha1 been tried on the■impi 'We'll i-v the kits

ami Me where we can go fromthere," he contimi

The 1 ■

■ : adu>i,- the

D natei

Decker Kaw. a junior partioipaling In the Washington Se""

neater program, won tins weakin internship for study in fedrial government this summer in 1

WashingtonThe internship, awarded by

ihe North Carolina Chapter ofthe National Center for Kduc.i;ion in Politics, involves workitiR for II weeks as an aide toa congressman or senator. Theawatd includes a stipend to cover expen

Pan MM choM-n from morethan TS applicant! Tor the eightplace-, offered The applicantsfor the internship wen1 limitedto juniors or seniors wlm areresidents of North Carolina Hisis the first awardof this nature■11 he ui\en '11 ,1 D.ividson sttident.

The North Carolina Chapterilso makes available similar in

ternships lor stud> in state goveminent al RaJeign. Two other Davidson students. NormanJunker and Pal Hubbanl. wereawarded scholarships py t li<>viuii' organisation \a attend .1one week seminar on the statelegislature.

At present V.\\\. along withSteve Graham, is studying inWashington. I) C. at the Amerlean Unlwraity on the Winnington Semester program. This pro 1gram ts a cooperativeeffort between ;he Anieriian ('Diversity.ind aeveral other Inatitutfona ineluding Davidson. 1

At Davidson Faw is a mem |ber of Pi Kappa Phi. ill. M.1I1Chorus, .ind I1.1 beenImemberur the Davidson Civil Rights 1Committee, lie h.i^ panic pin church activities as preol t in- Mctli. ■ 'it Fellowthip and as .1 Sttnda) School 1

a . ipi

new Freshman Class: the num '.bar ol elaai presidents, scholarship winners, letters won, and 1

other- similar lists of informa 1

ion This profile will be much i

the same as the one put out by Ithe Admissions Office eaehyear

The Wtt Handbook will ■fata'

come out in two editions one'

without room numbers and onewith room numbers. "It take- .1

'little mote money." Snider st-atad, '

'bin it is more than wor'h'

it."Pictures ur the student body |

officers and ullageofficials willhe action rather 'han pond held ,shols i»f the past Another pro

" d 1 hinge will be thr 1.

placement of the cartoons whichiate the sections by photo

graftalThe Staff beside- Snider will :

be Bill Mcfiuire, busiaeaa man■gar with Paul Marion. Wayne 'tfangum, Thorn Blair.John Callender. (Jary DeVanc. Johnnj.1. ■ 1. Richard Little, and JohnSartonniis as section editors.

YRC Squelches CoupFromStateConvention

New Hall CounselorSelections Due Soon

Hall counselors for the year 1965-66 will be an-nounced early next month, reports Dean of Stu-dents Richard C. Burts, Jr.

Counselors are chosen from rising seniors whohave served this year as hall counselors, and froma group of well-qualified rising Juniors and seniorswho have been asked by the Dean of Students toconsider the job.

Interested students should contact the Dean ofStudents office.

Dean Burts commented that "Hall counselorshave an opportunity for leadership and responsibil-ity." Pay for the year is one-half room rent.

On April a training period will be held for thenew counselors. A preview of the role of hall coun-selor will be given and discussed by the Dean ofStudents, Supervisor of Dormitories, College Chap-lain, Counseling Office, and Freshman Advisor.

Davidson's Young Republicans, inthe midst of a breech caused by inci-dents at the recent State Convention,anticipate a more reserved atmosphereal their March 3 meeting.

Joe Beard, a member of the club'sconservative1 element, said this week:"I plan to stay in my room during themeeting. In oiher words,Ido not planto attend."

In way of an explanation for his ac-tion. Beard said. "A certain conflict be-tween the president and me. begun atthe convention, would make my pret-ence at the meeting detrimental to thebest interests of the dub."

Beard explained the origin of the'conflict" by stating that, "Mr. Edgar,two weeks before the convention, hadagreed to support my candidacy for dis-trict liason officer. At the conventionhe decided that he did not wish tosupport the same.

"After he had spoken to Hal Clark,who had also previously assured me ofhis support,-Hal and he informed meofHal's candidacy.Iconsider Mr. Edgar'saction to be detrimental to the unity of

Evelyn McGarrity, mezzosoprano. be will presented in con-cert at 8:15 p.m. March a. inHodson Hall.

Miss McGarrity is a graduateof the Curtis Institute of Musicand has served on the faculty<>r Wesleyan College in M.icon.Ga.. and the Opera Workshopat Indiana University. At pre-sent she is on the faculty ofLouisiana State University.

A winner of the 1937 YoungArtisi Auditions of the Nation-al Federation nf Anisic Clubs.she has loured the United StatMwith (Han-Carlo Menu U' "TheConsul" .ind in !:.ily. OB .1 Kul-

Schotarth i>. she made ahi j> h 1y u li:

-1S

Suzuk; n "H ul.inn- Butterfly."\li~~ McGarrtt) na» made im-

portan: Mid appearance- withleading orchestras and choralgmV, Including the CollChoral.- under the d.rc.-tion ofKobei■; Shaw.

Km her Davidson programM McCarrity Drill sing agroup of Beethoven tonga, artlOSgl by Richard Strauss.F.iure and Debu>sy, and Mlasjtions by Vinceiv I'cr-.ichettiand Dehus. The featured oper-atic aria willbe "Voi tofrom Haacagni* CavellerlaRusticana Anna Bultman. pro-minent Charlotte pianist willIserve as accompanist.

Other events on the Fine1 estiva] include the mo\ie.

"A Nous. V\ laberte." onNrarch 9-10: a joint recital byGrier Williams, trumpet. a?id

Wilmer Welsh, harpsichord.March 12: Ralph Kneeream.New York organist, on March19; a Chamber Orchestra con-cert. March 21: and the Rus-sian film, "Alexander Nevsky.

on March 23-24. plus art ex-hibits by W Dabney Stuart.Douglas Houchens, Lyder Fred-erickson. and Pierre Jacquemon.

THE DAVIDSONIAN PAGE THRSBFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965

Mrs. Bill WisemanOn Magazine Board

By BOB STRAUSERDavidsonian Feature Writer

"Davidson College will be represented this year onMademoiselle's College Board by Claire Metcalfe Tay-lor, '66."

nalistic work and is climaxedby the awarding in May of20 Guest Editorship- In mak-ing these .uvards. Mademoiselleoffer- .1 :r p lo Kinopi. jour-nalistic experience, and an op-portunit) for .1 position on the

.iff.

■ : ■ last

1 1

. |»

IRC PlansUS PolicyDiscussion

(Sl.ill I*h. i-. 1 In Sin iln

CLAIRE TAYLOR WISEMANDavidson's Mademoiselle

'MEANS BECOME ENDS'

Buttrick Raps Things'By TED GLUSMAN

Davidsonlin Feature Writer

Once again Davidson has en-joyed a visit from possibly themost distinguished of its re-gular visitors. Dr. GeorgeButtrick.

We* m

DR. GEORGE BUTTRICK'No Horizontal Progress . . .

gular ie 0Northwestern Universit) inE ton. Hi.. 1- no strangerto Davidson itu lact.'■:!

-Iolid visit of

this .ic,idein:c \ firM

occurring during FreshmanOrientation.

Buttrick spoke first at Ves-pers Sunday night, (hen inchapel Monday morning. Histopic Monday, whichpretty wellsummarized the topic of hisvisit, was "What's the Matterwith Things?" He made threemain points, two in chapel andVespers, and one at the regularcoffee hour after chapel.

... In A World In Which.. .vaa that thing*, or

gate" 1.1. he termed them),are a means, no) an end. The

second was that things are <relative, and can be used forgood or evil. The third point |

was that you should never treatthings as things!

Buttrick sums up his philo- 1sophy on gadgets in a single 1

phrase, which forms the basis 1for his whole theological sys- Itern. "There can be noprogress Ialong the horizontal line." he Isays, "in a world in which |.■very man. including the lastmi. in. dies." (

ftggtaas along the "horizon- ,1! Use" ech- j

_>. Man'

giflw dM I

doushy. He is a master of theimpressive pause, but canparry a question with .1 quickwit on occasion.

In response to one partic-ular}' ticklish question, he turn-ed to chaplainWill Terry, whosereceding hairline is a favoritelocalattraction, andasked, "Dothey try to trip you up likeths? Is that why you're losingyour hair?"

Buttrick ended forin.il d.-n with .1 story Hrittlre

tivc of his philo-o;>n "■

growing anportaace <>f "tnWlier, he movpd to 1

n il e ii .1 N01 th Cl

tile kind of »|HMkei l>"ilidii.ii have more ol

ip some-d.i> ' U h here, he will be,welcome.

Snider prated Us staff, laying,"I just gave them their assignments Id work mi. <nul they'vedQM them. If they conic up withany good ideas, and they have,the) II be used

The only problem encounteredso far this year has been thatnl eaOOgfl money. Last year'shandbook ran In the red, andtins yens edition nay need tohave more funds from the ool

Snider concluded by laying,■ l don't anticipate any pmt>

ii the Buys keep gettingIn 'In- material, we'llhave a realfine Handbook."

Page 4: Considers Fraternity Committee Interim Report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi Ashedtocompare thequality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I)I ofAdmissions RobertC.Young

By JOHN ALLENDavidtonian Sports Writer

Davidson's fabulous freshman basketball squad finished asuccessful seasonSatur-day with a 116-69 win over the frosh cadets from the Citadel. Tom Youngsdale led allscorers with a 28-point mark as the Kittens, believed by some to be possibly the bestfreshman squad in Davidson basketball history, finished the season with a 14-3 won-lost record.

Coach Terry lioll.imi.RUW c.i^i- mentor, feels :!ie se.i

son h.i^ be.'ii very MKcessfuand thai the ye.iriinji* h.ive de-velopMl tremendously.

"1 Mi d:-.ippointed with our

DC Sailors Meet;Snipe Is Selected

ieaaes. of course."

he says. -'We-hniild have bea'.en Dukeat 1.once and should never have lostto L'N'C. but I am very pleasedwith the season as a whole."

The Kittens racked upimpressive figures in their'tion this season,outscoring theiropponents by an average of 15points with an 86.47 average 1scoring output The starting fiveall totaled double figure season

;scoring averages.■Wee Tom" Youngdale. 6-10

j pivorman. led the Wildkittens in! rebounding and scoring with a

'1 season total of 312 points for

'1 an 18.35 average. Bobby Lane

'had 271 points and a 16pointaverage.Scott Sinnock had a 259total with a 15point average and

'playmaker Cecil Clifton scored189 points for an 11point aver jage.

Rod Knowles missed threegames but still managed a 257point total and an 18.4 average.

George Leight led the reserves |in scoring with 95 points. Pinky |

iHatcher had a season total of |59 and Tommy Clayton had 38 ,points and a 77r; field-goal ai

curacy. 'Notes Holland. 'The boys have

come along well and are allready to play varsity ball. Alleight should definitely be on the !squad naxl year, and three.maybe four. Of them will start."

Tom Youngdale and Rod j:Knowles. the frosh big men.will be oiled on to fill the P"

'sitions of graduating Don Davidson and All American Fred 'Hetzel. |touch assiunment

Sinnock and Lane, two terrific ,I

scorer*, lad Clifton. ;i top notchball handler, will be fightingwith the rttamlng uppeiBMO for thi> butiH to

be v.n.iti'd b\ Mien b.ut>Teague and Charlie \Ii.eipht. Hatcher, .md Claytonwill add reserve ltf<QgUl ti) the

"f.im and like the first five will

be counted on heavily.

"These freshman could wellbe the nucleus of next year'svarsity," reports Holland. "Wewill really be depending on themnext year,but they have workedhard and progressed rapidly andwe think they can do the job "

Turkeys HoldDC Wildcat Shoot

■y TOM COOKDavldsonlan Sport* WriterWhile the Southern and

Atlantic Coast Conferencespersist in determining theirNCAA representatives bythe post-season tournamentmethod, the other 13 majorconferences are enteringtheir final week of regularseason action with nineteams almost certain ofplaying in one of the fourregional tournaments whichprecede the National Cham-pionship at Portland, Ore-gon.

Ten at large berths are avail-able for the nation's best unaffiliated teams: however, onlyin the East is the NCAA certain of an overabundance ofqualified teams.

EASTERN REGIONALThe regional tournament of

interest to ihis area is theBatten) Regional, which ineludes a tripleheader in Philadelplna's Palestra March 8 andthe finals and semi-finalsat Collag! Park. Maryland. March12 and 13.

The Eastern format will fea-ture the Ivy League representstive against an at-large team,unranked Penn State, theMiddle Atlantic Conferencechampion versus the YankeeConference champ, and theSouthern Conference's tournaiment champion againist fourth-'ranked Providence, whichsports. a 19-1 record and lists St. Joeamong its victims.

The Ivy Penn. St. winnerwill play the AtlanticCoast Conference tournament championMarch 12 and the winners of theother two Philadelphia gameswill meet the same night at Col-lege Park.

St. Joseph's, thenation's thirdranked quintet, finished its con-ference schedule tonight againstLaSalle and has a lock on theMiddle Atlantic Championship.Likewise. Connecticut sits wellBtove the rest of the YankeeConference with a 20 2 record,including a loss to ACC doormatVirginia.

The Ivy League race will bedecided tomorrow night asPrinceton (16 5) meets Cornell(19.0 at Princeton. Princeton,last year's champ, must winand then beat Pennsylvania nextweek to appear in Philadelphia.Princeton is favored over theBig Red because of veteran super star Bill Bradley and thehome court advantage in theTigers crackerbox-size gymnasium.

The Southern Conference tournament this weekend willbe followed next weekend by the Atlantic Coast Conference tourna-ment at Raleigh. Duke, seededfirst, faces sternchallenges fromNorth Carolina. North CarolinaState, and Maryland.

MIDEAST REGIONALIn the Mideast Regional, Mi

ami (Ohio) of MidAmericanConference meets an at largeteam while Eastern Kentuckyof the Ohio Valley Conferencemeets another independent teamfrom the South or Midwest— Independents in this tourney areDayton and De Paul, both unranked.

The winners of these twogames will advance to the Uni-

versity or Kentucky campus atLexington to meet the Big Ten

and Southeastern Conferencechampions, respectively. Firtt-ranked Michigan beat seventhranked Minnesota 9178 lastTuesday, but the Wolverinesstill must meet Minnesota nextSaturday and thirteenth rankedIllinois tomorrow night beforeclaiming the title.

Southeastern leader Vanderbilt must still meet fourth-placeAlabama twice while secondplace Tennessee faces four sec-ond division opponents duringthe next eight days.

MIDWEST REGIONALIn the MidwestRegional, three

at large teams and the Southmat's probable champ TexasTech will battle to earn trips toManhattan, Kansas to meet BigKiglu titlist Oklahoma Stateand tenth ranked Wichita State,which continues to win despitethe Januarv graduation of DaveStaIIworth and the academicinedibility of Nate Bowman.If Wichita can keep rolling

on its momentum, it is favoredto top Oklahoma State whichsports only a so-so record thisyear. Houston. Oklahoma State,and Colorado State, all un-ranked, are the at large teams.

FAR WEST REGIONALIn the Far West Regionals.

second-r a n k e d UCLA andeleventh-ranked San Franciscowill be waiting at Provo, Utah,to meet the winners of an at-large game featuring two inde-pendents and the Western Ath-letic Conference champion ver-sus a third independent. Tenthranked on one wire service, New-Mexico must face BrighamYoung March 6 in a matchwhich will probably determinethe conference champion.

Seattle, the leading independtot in the Pacific West, wasrocked by a betting scandalinvolving several of its startersand whether the Chieftains willreturn to the NCAA this year isundecided. Portland is amonpthe other teams being consideredfor the at large berths.

REGULAR SEASONRESULTS

Make Forest 95 88

it. Joseph's (4-77

Furman 113-12

Jacksonville U. 91-70

VMI 91-69

Dhio State 17-44U. of Virginia 86-74

U. of Alabama 79 62

J. of Ohio 11-43(William A Mary 77-57J. of Richmond 97-47■SM York U. 12-73The Citadel 1IM1

J. of West Va. 14-77Presbyterian 130-47

East Carolina 12 48Wake Forest 78 71

,t/MI 14-71iSeorge Washington 11943U. of West Va. 10380Furman 55-50Richmond U 13-73Wofford 117-72The Citadel 42-50

In Charlotte,Davidsonians meet

At the Famous Open Kitchen for "...PIZZA

the famous OPEN KITCHEN131 8 W. Morehea* Charlotte,N.C.

Observes a husky lineman, "Itseems like a lot of work andtrouble now, but I'm sure wewill be glad we're in shapewhenpractice starts on April 6."

Moasts another, "It takes ahi tie sacrifice to havea winningteam, and we will have a win-ning team."

Davidson's riMenien journeyed\> Blaokaburg Saturday anddropped a 144!) 1.160 decision to\TI\ nationally- ranked Gobb-lers.

Malcolm X. Cook, the top■corer for VPI, led all shootersWith a score of 293 out of 300;In int. all of the VPI team hadim "ies higher than our top score. '■

Sgt. Eaves commendedVPI as"a fine team, who just had topick our meet to break theirschool record."

Other scores for VPI wereJohn Osmers with 292 and RickMoore with 291. Lee Young shota 288 and Ralph Fite had a 285.

Jim Kopp led the Davidson jmarksmen with a 281. He was jfollowedby Jim Clark and Waiter Eastes with 275 and 270. respei lively. Will Norman andMm Bailey both had 267's. |

Sgt. Eaves reported that hevva^ pleased with our shooting,but it is hard to compete against |schools which have requiredpractice."

provement.TrainerTomCouch'sprogram emphasizes 440-yardsprints.

Smith is confident that in TomStevens. Ken Blair, and DickTomey, he lias "a group of as

It Who are in top conditionthemselves and who are all conditionmn advocates. Heavy de: land w ii be mate on the boyi

prbtfl .md ne\: f.ill. an<i

ITiportaiK that m have ,i

H iff which encourage! conng "

"I'm o\ erjo]ed to a ■>■ th* a:l>-elds filled with athletes

t\ afternoon. One of■'i ■ great advantage* ai David

" fields.ire n«ar the dorms and therefore ■ ' i> available."

and very flexible. "It is com-pletely voluntary and dependsprimarily on the attitude of theboys, which has been excellent."he adds.

Because of the entirely newoutlook in Davidson football.Smith Wr mus: vjK'iidmost of the time in the twentydays of ipring prac toe on ihetechnical peri .mil. therefore,nui-t :"tie time atibte on conditioning."

The weight programvised by a trainer tand will be an ■ year roundb.c-is ,i' I).:- Idem. N

players ;irc welCOHH'.cip.ttr and have atria i

to dp sii

In the running program, theplayers are liming themsih ">

for measuienien) ti th ■'' w

The newly formed Davidson!Sailing Club met last Tuesday tomap plans for the Spring andde jcided to buy severalSnipe boats. |

Bob Orr. spokesman of the 51 !member club, noted. "We voted 'in favor of the larger, faster!Snipe instead of the less-expen-sive Penguin. We feel that fourto eight boats will be neededto accomodate all of our mem-bers and the Colleges Springphysical education plans."

A proposal is being sent toPresident Grier Martin in anaitempt to obtain the moneyneeded to purchase these boats.Orr commented. "PresidentMartin's decision will probablybe basedon the student interestmi the availability of fundsto spend on the boats."

The club has already linedupseveral regattas and has beenatamp to represent Davidson at;iregatta inSt. Petersburg.Florida. April 4 6.

All MM not smooth sailing.however. One irate clubmembersnarled as he left the meeting."I'm really mad about thisthing. Ifeel if one member of:the club is against havingSnipes, his integrity should berespected Ihad a definite ballfor the Sntpe and it still got by.This thing isn't over yet."

By PAUL MARIONDavidsonian Sports Writer

Coach Homer Smith'sfootballers have begun pre-paring for spring practicefor next year's season witha newly-devised program ofrunning ana weight lifting.The objective of "Homer'sNew l^ook" is "to get theplayersin the habit of b ingin good physical shape allyear round

"

"Successful football: thia type of coodil

Staee yi.ii can't practice foot-ball m '.In' ofl MBMO Ican basketball iir nolC, the onlything that can be done ' pin shape."

Tin- newphasizes that it is only a <-ug-

Rested program, very general

Bank Recruits Dole;Coach Closets Cleats

Former Head Football Coach Bill Dole has ac-cepted a position with the First National Bank of Ca-tawba County.

Dole moves to Hickory in about a month andbegins work shortly thereafter. He will be concernedwith the personnel, public relations and advertisingside of the business.

"I'll be traveling around Catawba County tothe different branch banks and will do some workwith newspapers and radio," Dole reports.

Asked whether he might become connected inan unofficial way with football at Lenoir-Rhyne Col-lege Dole speculated, "Thebank will close at 3 p.m.and my job will end about 3:30. which would makeit possible to help with football at L-R."

R. Walker Geitner. president of the bank, saidhe was pleased to have "such an outstanding andwell-known man join the bank staff."

Dole received his BS degree from West Univer-sity and his Masters from New York University.While coaching at Davidson, Dole served as presi-dent of the Southern Conference Football CoachesAssociation and was on the executive committee ofthe North Carolina High School Athletic Association.

Open 'til 1a.m.Monday— Friday

The HubFinest Steaks Served Anywh*r#

SWAIN'S CHARCOALSTEAK HOUSE

1800 West Morehead StreetCHARLOTTE, N. C.

Phone ED2-2414

Rendezvous in Charlotte atLa Roma Ristoranti

BEST PIZZA WEST of ITALYSpaghetti — Lasagne

— Parmigiana—

Salads— CHOICE STEAKS—

La RomaRistorantiCharlotte, N. C.

Phone 376-2576 1540 Wort Blvd. at Remount Rd.

LAKESIDE INN "*(Under New Management)

"We are eager to serve the students of Davidson Collegeeither individually or in semi-private or private parties."

Highway 115 South:Turn Right just baler* Fox Drivt-in TheaterOpen Tuesday through Saturday from 5 p. m. on...T* roionJtentVdiarlotto 37>-2701-3*4-3711

Rush Wilson Ltd. takes thisopportunity tocongratulate the Wildcat BasketballTeam on a great season and to wish themthe best of luck in the Southern Confer-ence Tournament.

Rush Wilson, Ltd.Greenville, S. C. Davidson, N. C.

PAGE FOUR THE DAVIDSONIAN

Once Past SC Tourney, 'CatsFace Long, Slow PathTo Top

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965

Regular Season StatisticsG FGA FGM Pel. FT* FTM Pel. RB Av«. Avg.

Fred Hetzel 24 425 249 SI.6 165 131 79.4 1S1 M4 2*2Dick Snyder 24 370 202 M.« 100 II 11.0 210 I.I 20.2Don Davidson 21 2S3 124 49.01 109 S2 47.7 112 S.3 14.3

C. Marcon 24 243 114 U.9 57 40 70.2 IN 4.5 11.2Barry TaagiM 24 147 »1 41.5 101 77 74.2 M 3.9 1.3Paul Brigg* 23 47 40 59.7 45 34 7S.t M 2.9 4.9Ronnie Stone 22 55 24 47.3 19 13 M.4 U 1.4 2.9Phil Squier II 26 I 30.1 14 11 0S.7 II .55 1.5$Dick Byrd IS 13 4 44.2 11 « 72.7 4 .24 1.SCam Harknesi14 12 2 U.7 4 3 $0.0 4 .42 .5*Barry St. Clair IS 11 I M.I 14 11 71.4 12 SO 110Team Rebounds

'* S.4Own Team

Total* 24 14J2 M0 51 5 441 442 72.1 1141 47.5 19 3

Total* M ISM tS1 41.4 574 194 41.4 927 M.4 70.4

Fabulous Frosh FinishSeason With14-3Mark

HKy(ItjC $&wr sr I«. v^^ ■*"

(Photo by Thcl)HOPPING HETZ'

Fred Frolics Under Boards as VMI's Gupton Gapes

HOMER'S NEW LOOK'

■ THE FUN BE6MS AT

HATTIE'S"just up the road—

B Ian 1*1 A>it . .* xi~ \ 11111.1 " ni' MiW %-" tiiin """^■f^Pr !^^111I11i^J alaW < iAix

I IQryTyaj

I 1 V

(Photo By Thel)

'HOMER'S NEW LOOK' ON PAPERRunning And Weight Lifting Equals Weight Losing

Bruisers7 Bod Building Begun

Page 5: Considers Fraternity Committee Interim Report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi Ashedtocompare thequality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I)I ofAdmissions RobertC.Young

By SAM BOYTEDavidtonian Sports Writer

Davidson drove VirginiaMilitary Institute from theSouthern Conference Tour-nament 86-73 last night inthe first round at the Char-lotte Coliseum, as All-Ameri-can Fred Hetzel led nation-ally sixth-ranked Davidson'sscoring with 31 points aswell asgrabbed a game-high14 rebounds.

Dick Snyder w.i-. close behindwith J« points He ilso had thelaugh job of guarding VMI'irepresentativeon the All Conference squad and top scorer i IK *i

per game). Charlie Schinaus Snyder held him la ItPO Ills.

Throughout tiie game Davidton was successful in moving" , b.ill under the basket to

make ■!»■' resuktai In

i field goal percentageSnyder provided a const.m!

le threat with Ins long ■>'■

< in ,rc jumper B.irrv Tague,who scored two points for theafternoon, kept his reputation ,i.the "brains or the Davidsonbasketball team" by his skillfulriom guidance of the 'Cats

Don Davidson scored nil of1 points m the first h.iH

as he sat out part of the second

half with four fouls. He spentmost of hrs game time tryingto figure out how to handle hisdefensive assignment John Prosser.

"I'rosser playeda really greatgame for them." commentedDavidson coach I-ef!y Pr"We put three different men onhim but we couldn't find anythine to stop him."

Second high scorer for V.MIwith 18 p<) nt u.i

- Robfa I'mter. who replaced Jet Krus.vttski (averaging ItJ points

,mie) when !he tram ciptaill left the came with an iniiired knee with leas Hian oneminute elapsed

■ r's foul f' r Kruszewskl wa the firel point "f

.■lie. but lle.tzrl gave theWildcats g ii lead seconds lateras he tappetl m a missed shot

Successive barifft* i>:- Marconand Hit/el gave Davidson .i "'■ Ilead vmi tied the game at <i itmi a basket bj Porter and went■head l» '■' OB Ifree throw bySchms

KetSeJ headed UK Ke\deKwith a free throw that made thescore 10 10. Don Davidson h t

a short jumper and left his defender *out in the cold on oneof his patented twisting lay ups"ii set the mark at M 10

Although Butler tied the MMat 18 18 for the Keydets. |),i\id

sun never again lost the leadSnyder sparked ■ Hi 5 rally thatpu: the Cats ahead by :<■» O. At

A free throw by Hetzel withabout eight minutes remaining

gave Davidson its largest spreadat 67 51.

Throughout the game VMIwasmost successful when it slowedthe pace and waitedfor an open.shot. This tactic resulted insome defensive changes for Da-vidson.

"We did switch into a zoneseveral times when they wereMolding the ball." said Driesell."It seemed to be more effectivethan man to man."

Ton:gh: Davidson I i< WetlVirginia, who set am1 1 id goal percentage record of

I net cent in defi irgttWashington H4 in in th<preceding the D n * m VMIgam

"We're going to "uament." rawed *fe "

coach George KingDriesell admired. "West Vir

ginia mas l>(1 tnc' touch" " taeaiin the tournament. They 'theWildcats] realise thai the) «regoing to have to play .igood ballgame to beat \V. lia."

■ Were going to be 'HereWe're looking forward to thegame."

Other tournament action saw\ I'l crush Richmond 103 fi:) andsixth seeded William and Mary

;edged out thirdrated Ciladcl(18-60. in the opening round-\s

■ only upset.Davidson entered the totttna

ment with n perfect U0 confer: ence record after defeating ai stalling Citadel team f.2 50 lasti Saturday night.! the half the score wai 39 31-

&( S^» aff m

By JOHNNY CLARKOavidsenian Sports Writer

TOURNEY NOTES . ..The Wildcats rolling on... West Virginia building its

shaky hopes....George Washington giving 100^ effort100'; of the time . .. .VPIcrushing pathetic Richmond.William and Mary upsetting Citadel... Last year's final-ists being eliminated in the first round. ...

The Coliseum crowds. ... the boistrous VPI fans.... the well-stacked West Virginia cheerleaders. . . .the kids getting autographs from their heroes. . . JoeKruzewski choking back tears as VMI falls behind andthe trainer tells him that he can't help . . . coachesthrowing out optimism. .. the excitement in the air ofthe big games that finally count.

The; losers getting their consolation prizes, butnot feeling very consoled. . . the futility of the lookson the players who finally realize that they are aboutto lose and the season is over. .. .the excitement of thewinners, which for most will turn to disappointment by-Saturday night.

Few sports events provide the interest and excite-ment of championship tourneys. They're great fun.

But,as Charlotte Newssports editor Ronald Greensaid yesterday, "It's still a poor way to choose a champ-ion." » * " *

Said West Virginia coach George King yesterdayafter topping GW, "We will beat Davidson and we willwin the tournament."

He will be eating those words by the time thispaper is out. , .

Davidson should edge by West Virginia tonight.VPI will top William and Mary decisively, and then the'Cats will crush the Gobblers in the finals.

Bob King, Tech's 6-11 beanpole sophomore, wasgreat against Richmond, but he's not strong enough tomatch the 'Cats' big men. Hetzel will eat him up.

Richmond's 24.2° - field goal shootingin the secondhalf of their game against VPI was the most pitiful I'veever seen a college team shoot. A good p.e. team couldhave beaten them last night.

Joe Kruiewski is one hell of a ball player. Heaveraged 18.6 points a game this season and always gave100'-. He was the spirit of the VMI team.

Our win was decisive enough to prove that wewould have won anyway. But Iwish he hadn't been hurtso that we could have had the satisfaction of beatingthem at full strength.

Some system of seeding in the NCAA Regionalsshould be worked out. Something is wrong somewherewhen teams ranked third, fourth, fifth, and sixth in

the nation end up in one bracket, whereas Duke facesvirtually no competition in the other bracket.

Davidson must whip fourth-rankedProvidence andthird-ranked St. Joe in order to just get to the Easternfinals Duke, or whoever the ACC champ is, has tobeat the winner of the game between Penn State andthe Ivy League champion in order to get there.

Three Southern Conference schools fielded soccerteams last fall, and Davidson's win over Furman was theonly contest between league teams, thus making David-son's booters the unofficial conference champions.

So just for the record:Southern Conference .Soccer StandingsDavidson 10 1.000West Virginia 0 0 .000Furman 0 1 .000

Actually, soccer coach Harry Fogleman, is tryingto arrange a round-robin tournament with these teamsand East Carolina, if the Pirates field a team next year,in order to determine an official championship.

Tom Wli to and Allen Tonin- ■

POddb

. ,i pairCompxon and Joe Jellu- led UwKappa Sigs with 14 and Hi

Ed Arml " ;<i had 15 and RickReid L2 tor the BAB'S. DaveJohnson and Jim Fuller ledthe fndys with M and 13 pointseach,

In oiler games, the 1'lii Gainscaptured sole possessionof thirdplace by edg.ng the Sigma Nils.W .17 behind the clutch shootingof Jim Mytler who had I] potnti.Bill R.i: n.:lW had 21 for thelosers

Tom White's 21 points led the

past the l'i K.iivHowever, the l'ik.i- lost .. dotsone to i: " K \ Reftn

■nd (Jrey WinI . 'd wkh 14 led the KA attack

The KA'j toil to the Indep 'ml

eats b> .i score a) vh mi. JimPotter and David Jennings had18 pont . net) for the btdys,

Geoff Hirkh.-ad With L"l and

Pal Hiibh.wd with II sparkedLhe ATO's to ,i7> 2'J rout of theSI'K \ The S(gma ("ins crushedthe Betas 71 M. Baail Hicks had22 points and Joel Williamson1*1 lur the Machis.

There are ■"till some gameilei: Id be pl.ived ami the IMACwill inii't Monday night to reschedule the inauhes They willalso decide on what to do about

the crucial Phi Delt Sigma Nu.u.ime which mi ended tttoi Mi

IMAC STANDINGS

Kappa Sigs 12 0

Phi Oelts 7-1Phi Gams 5 2Sigma Oils 8 3

Independents 7 3ATO's S3

Pikai HSigma Nu 1-5<A'» 37

Pi Kapps 2-7

SAE> 2-7B*l.is 18SPE's 0-1

overtimes with the scon- tied It71 all.

STOKES REWRITES RECORDS

Fishmen Win 1Drop 2

The powerful Kappa Sigscontinued their dominationof the MAC basketballgames this wcefe to fttoteout thoir third ttraighlundefeated Beaton with aperfect 12-0 record. Famousfor their slow starts andstrong finishes, they downedthe Pikas 68-34. the SAE'S56-45. and the Independents65-47.

Raymond Garrison and BuddyDubose. by far the finest jjuardcombination in the league, led

the sweep with lightning fast

breaks and dead eye jump slum:

inR The front line, averaging|feet A inches and composed of

Tommy Reams. Pete Oil. andBill Crane, scored consistently

and garnered most of :he re

bounds.Other valuable big men this

season for the talent laden Sigs

were Tucker Laxton and Stu

Burness. who Lefty drafted into

uniform for the conference tournament.

Hetzel Is A-A Again;Snyder Makes AII-SC

By NEVILLE PATTERSONDavldsonian Sports Writer

Davidson's 6 8 center KredHetzel was named to two of tlu

Hbvll%.Mf

3hkk I

ALL AMERICANFred Heliel

most important of the nation sAllAmerica* teams and was

joined by junior Dick Snyder onthe All Southern Conferenceteam during the past week.

The coaches of the NationalBasketball Association (NBA)announced their six man (because of ■ tie) All-America teamlate last week.

On the basis of two votes forfir-:, one vote for second, thenine coaches of the NBA gaveBill Bradley of Princeton a

unanamous choice with 18 votes.Michigan's CazzieRussell polled17 votes and Hetzel was thirdwith 15. Miami's hot handedRick Barry got 14 and GailGoodrich of UCLA and DaveStallworth of Wichita had 13each

The UnitedPress Internationalteam, also witha six man squad,came oat Wednesday. UtahState's late Wayne Estes waschosen as the first posthumousA A selection as 310 basketballexperts across the country werepolled as to their choice of thenation's top five players.

Russell was named on 95 percent of the ballots. Bradleymade 92 percent, and Barry86 percent. Goodrich got 74percent and Hetzel and Esteshad 64 per cent.

Dick Snyder was given honorable mention in the UPI selection. as a result of polling threevotes or better.

"I'm really thrilled, saidII.zel. upon lieannj; of the I'l'I ■

suits. "Making All America liasalways been my dream. Itswonderful -to have it bciumr i

reality Icertainly couldn't liavedone it without the help of thecoaches and the other playersI just hope Ican live up to itin the Tournament."

The Southern Conference announced their All-Conferenceteam Monday night, as Hetzelwas named to the team for thethird straight year, and wasalso named as the team's cap-tain. Snyder gaveHetzela fairlyclose race as he took runawayhonors for second place.In a poll of practically every

body in the four S C states whohas anything to do with basketball. Hetzel amassed a total of385 votes. Snyder received 366votes. Charlie Schmaus of VMIgot 286. Mickey McDade of VPIgot 261 and Tom Tenwick ofRichmondhad 24S.

Wildcats Don Davidson andBarry Teague were both pickedto the second team All-South-ern. Davidson polled 172 votesand Teague got 121.

MatmenTopBulldogs,Fall To Cow College

By STEVE BROWN with VMI last Saturday. Coach son did not win the event, theDavldsonian Sport* Writer Dwighl Shoe had special words time does not go down as a

Davidson's swimming of pra.se for tarita'. 400

U'ilHr-iK pnili-il thpir reBU- .Viird medley relay team: Our ,,." „.wnacais enutci ineir 'cgu » ""^■P d1(j verv woj] jn our W)n

lar season this week With medley team. COntpHSSd ef Jim ,,v,.r Host,okt." Tuesday"

cona Victory over RoanOke Col- Downey m the backstroke. P,H1,.(|shoe "We won tha! meetlege and losses Jo confer- Lloyd Davidson on the brea-t bv ., ,M, inarRi|)

,w|s

ence foes VMI and VPI.The stroke. Jin stokes „,, the but ,„.,.,.,„, ,)1(,;1S(.(J wjth ,mi

team finished the slate with terfly. and John Helm an the S|,,k(,s . 178 hutterflv timea 6-6 record, as compared free style, swam a 4:03.0. more whicn set,new , recordto last year's 4-6-1 finish. than 6 seconds better than the Roanokc College „

mQrc thflnSpeaking of the home meet BflheoJ record, but since David- 8 seconds."

By MIKE MOOTYD.ividsoni.in Sports Writer

Davidson s matmenbroke even in last week's action,winning an 18-12 decision over Georgia last Saturdayand bowing to N. C. State 13-17 in Raleigh Wednesdayevening.

Bi !l m ii ng f r <> mmatch « ;h the Citadel lawweek, Mir 'Cat's Jumyied to in

rearly lead over' Georgia, andhung on :n '

!!" heavier weight -:<i t.ikc the rn.itili JiK- BilffniK-ton icared nS> :lure) pin In -i\

wins m tiii- 12.1 dni.sion. ;<i ro-m.i.n uadeCeated Cor the waaonhi the im BOBBd ckus, MikeBisard drew f.r-t blood withi Mkedown In the first pi-rodand held his lead to gain ■ 7-4decision over the Bulldog's JoeQodtewski.

In the 117 pound class lapho-man Martin Miller broke .i 2 1deadlock by pinning his oppon-ent with 1:17 remaining in thee\en: The Rulldag.s put 'henln-1 points on ihe board a< BillKuehlc dec skated Jesse Suns4-2 in the U7 division. Thematch score then stood l.'t -I in

favor of the Wildcats.Davidson lost decisions in the

next two weight divisions. TheBulldog's Robert Kery defeatedDuff Armfield in the 157 eventby a score of 8-1, while TerryO'Hair wa.< downed by WhitWheeler 13 2 in the 167 pounddivision.

Eric Nichols was declaredwinner in the 177 class by for-

nd the five p ilni wardbrought the ui.i :,> m-s

lining,hi :hc ,u\i\> we

. Howard ton .■ close '>■-■in. !to the BuUdof M Davis.

Tiii i i i s e iiWednesda) evening,however .i^■!u\ :uok on the grapplera fromti.C State, in tahlon,Joe Buff ing ton and MikeBisard got tlio match off to a>:i><>.i (tart. Buffing'.o:: scoringhi- -econd pin of the week inthe IS pound class, and Bisard

up h;s appeaanl to gaina 9-0 decision The t.de '.'.lenchanged a< Manin M Her Mite, lead to drop the 137event to the Wolfp.u-k's TomPaga 7-3.

Jr-M- Sims and Duff Arm-field both lost close decisionsin their events. Sims by ascore of 0-3. and Armfield byI0-J talley Knc Nichols thenpinned his man to give theCats a 13-9 advantage. TheWolfpatk captured the matchin the last two events, how-ever, as Mike Broaby pinnedTerry O'Hair and Bobby Howardlost a 7-0 decision to FredWyland to give State a 17-13\ictory.

Wednesday the tankmen tookM Vl'l in ;in away meet whictlthe Wildcat! lost by ,i taJlj ol70 u Commented Shoe, TheVP1 team was outstanding in" in- butterfly and the raedle) rel.n events; they swam the -looyard medley relay in 4:002. miexcellent time

"

The WUdoOU have only onemore outing tins nnmon. theSouthern Conference Touni.iment. to be held at Williamsburg next weekend.March 4. .">.and 6.

Sinii' predict";. "VMIwill prob■My be the conference champn>n they have been in A of thelast 6 years, and I don't Meany reason why they won't winagain this year. They haw .ireally strong group. I wouldplace VP1 a<; second, and Davidson .is anywhere from thirdto sixth.

"Davidson's swimmers shouldmakea good showing at the conference meet.Ibelieve that JimStokes has a good chance forthe most outstanding swimmertrophy Randy Hughes. John,Alexander. John Helm, andButch Falligant. who. by theway. is probably one of the topthree divers in the conference,should also do well."

Face Streaking W. Va.In Tonight's Semifinals

Davidson Clobbers Keydets 86-73PAGE FIVETHE DAV1DS0N1ANFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965

afaVr"* V^9 HIhTm9j bL*ct1put j^^y«?fjBJiiH.r5»^i{j

■sW* - Vcat^

% .a t^1 " Jk.

'.Photo By The!)

SNIDER ON DEFENSE~ -

Schmaus Eats His Lay-Up

>-" ■» l*f W aW^^^eaea^► "-:** ' ~" 1I1I"JI' - r z- imi w

*■ gv- sr* ** W

■bMLL. " "2 '~ -M - "

■w* *"■ '- *% %r

JIM GREY CONGRATULATES JIM STOKESNew Butterfly Record Holder i

LBr j'n'^ gm m

ear- -'^^^^ "^■TaFi""?^

(PhOtO B> Thfl)

TEAGUE DRIVES ON KEYDETS"Little General" Guides 'Cats' Rout of Soldiers

Sigs Sweep Last 3,Finish With12-0 Mark

Page 6: Considers Fraternity Committee Interim Report 1...as a i.'> percent inwi Ashedtocompare thequality of this \,..n afld last year's applicants. AsslManl I)I ofAdmissions RobertC.Young

PAGE SIX

POETICAL MEMORYTHE DAVIDSONIAN

Deadlines MadeFor Nominations

By MIKE MAYDavidtonian Staff WriterA real live Yankee turned

up in chapel Thursday. Dr.Lesley Frost, daughter ofRobert Frost, is from NewHampshire,and by the timeshe was through speakingevery one of her somewhatbreathless listeners couldnave guesseo as mucn.

Once the predominancySouthern t-a^ of the assembled

iemen had be-come accustomed to MtalFrost's clipped tout- s. theyfound themse.vos confrontedwith an engaging personalityHer Maaaiga thai life shouldbe lived to tnc fullest and thatthis goal may be approachedby artistic participate:one which she felt strongly.

"Fall in love w:th as manyk.nds of living as possible."This was really the burden ofMiss Frost's remarks. By norown statement, she had found

Y TheaterExploresMan Today

the idea with several incidentsfrom her own life.

'Happenstance.' according to

the speaker, "is something thathas to happen because of ourwishful thinking." Wishfulthink nj? w..l f.nally meet op-;portunity. and when it doesopportunity may be seized.

To illustrate her po:nts. MaliFrost recited a number offpoems by her father and others.Opinion varied as to the quality ;of her reading, but studentswere unanimous in their amaze-ment at her prodigious memory. [

So now Davidson College is [included in the worldin whichMiss Frost is renowned. Someof her audience felt that herpresentation did not do justiceto some of her material. None-theless, the number of her lis-teners who were a sleep wassmaller than usual, and thosewho remained awake were re-warded with one of the year'smore interesting chapelpro-grams.

Program Is PlannedTo View Censorship

After Vespers Open HouseThe following professors will hold open houso for

students after vespers this Sunday night:Applewhite Cole Lindsrv Van EgmondBeck Frey McGill White H. E.Bondurant Holland Mebane WinklerBryan Johnson. N. Parker WruckCampbell Lester Rogerson

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965

$100 DUE MARCH 15

Miss Frost In LoveELECTIONS

MONDAY, MARCH 8Chapel address by Will Jackson, explaining electionprocedure, schedule and rules.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10Deadline for filing for office. (Candidate files forstudent body office. Honor Court, Freshman Ad-visor. Student Council and cheerleader )

THURSDAY,MARCH 11Chapel: Passing out of election cards9 p.m.: Deadline for turning in stencils of platforms.

FRIDAY,MARCH 12Platforms returned to candidates by 6 p.m.

MONDAY, MARCH 15Chapel: Speeches by candidates for Student BodyPresidentVoting for: Vice-Presidents of Student Body

Secretary-Treasurer of Student BodyHonor Court MembersEditor of Quips and CranksEditor of Scripts 'n Pranks

7:30 p.m.: Open forum for Presidential Candidates ?.TUESDAY,MARCH 16

Voting for: President of Student BodyEditor of THE DAVIDSONIANVice-Presidents of Student Body (run-off) ISecretary-Treasurer (runoff)Honor Court Members (runoff)WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17

Voting for: CheerleadersPresident of College Union

Runoffs, if necessaryTHURSDAY,MARCH It

Chapel: Presidential Candidates of YMCA speeches'

Voting for: YMCA officersFreshman Advisor

Runoffs, if necessary'FRIDAY,MARCH 19

Voting for: Runoffs, if necessaryMONDAY, MARCH 22

Voting for: Student Council representatives.TUESDAY,MARCH 23

Voting for: Runoffs, if necessary.

Stave Bunch, president ofthe Collage Union, has an-nounced thai applications arenow being accepted for nomi-nation for 1M5-M Union preii-dtnl. Applications In writingand including the applicant'squalification! should be fum-ed In to Bunch or to the Un-ion desk before March ft.

Also, Ken Essex, headcheer-leader, it accepting nomina-tions for cheerleaders for nextyear. The deadline for nomi-nations it also March 10Student Council released an

alections schedule this weaklor next month's balloting, tn

a chapel address March I,Council President Will Jack-son will explain the conciseschedule adopted for this year.

Scott Narrowly LosesRace For State Position

The College Union Censorship Committee will pre-sent the first in its series of programs designed to intro-duce the problem of censorship facing the Americanpublic. The committee has scheduled the program forTuesday at 8:15 in the Morrison Room of the Union.

Bill Williams, associate editor pervasionof pornography in theof the Gaitonla GaMtta, will United States

"

show the film »-rv,r,IOn For heads CQmPr.fl>. and will lead discussion wh|ch wM formed {0.„.

after the presentation vestigate thc prMe|U djWilliams, anadvocateof strict lemma of censorship. Martin

enforcement of North Carolina's pointed out that "We do notanti obscenity laws, is a mem- want anyone toget the idea thatber of the Committee onDecent we are going down to thc HubLiterature and Movies. Parvar- to clean house."»ion Far Profit is a "30minute. graphic presentation of the He commented that. "Since

|;h a controversial issue11 students will be faced

their respective com-i. we are merely tryingaint the student bodydifferent viewpoints of

:■. This program will beup by the coming of

odman through the YM»s on sex."According to the ichedule. I Goodman, a writer by occu-

pation, who had some of histnt rooms can make arrange hil n on sexual morcsme* with Mrs. Nicholls be- scnted jn Kebruarv. issuc ofMM, March 1 and March U ptayhoy wiI1 nl\ he viovvm M,,rch 16. ns.ng seniors w.sh consor.ship.nK s.nglc rooms or threeman Thp issup brought {oM(tM m9 draw for available j,jght on,hp Davidson campu< „..rooms-

'■ Mr^. Ethel Nash List workOther students will draw num [ she emphatically opposed cen

Mn tn detcrmino the Drder in sorship ;ind even went «n f.ir H.vhich they may reserve rooms, to say that "some degree of por-ts lias been done m the past. !nography i< good for us."

MEET YOUR FRIENDSAT THE

GONDOLA RESTAURANTW. INDEPENDENCE AT WILKINSON BLVD.

CHARLOTTEWHILE ENJOYING

THEBESTIN

PIZZA and SPAGHETTI

The Theatre of Concern, sponsored by the Davidson YMCA.will present "What's the BigIdea in Hodson Hall at 8 p.m.Wednesday.

"What's the Big Idea." de-scribed as "a potpourri fortwo," consists of a seriesof fourshort plays from the theatre'srepertoire and concerns modernman. his frustrations and hisfalse gods.

The first of the four plays."The Well Spoken Acrobat," isby Norman Dirtz and termed"a comic examination of the'frustrations of human communication." The MMMfld |)!ay. "OldYntfr'i ci.i\ pot.

'also by Diet/..

is a simple allegory of atonenii-nt as ■ jjood potter oKMttM arebellious pol wfeicti he later forgives.

■torium." adapted fromia play by Par Iindictment of nan's bru;ahty toman in the movingpersonal tes ',timony of .lesiis am) Judas. !"How Do I Qai There From'Here?" is a concluding fusillade jaime<l at the clay feet and bigmouths of the gods men maketo live by.

The Theatre of Concern is atouring company of two. formed!In 1962 by Dietz and his wife

'Saadra. Since the inceptionIor the theatre they have .stagedImore than a dozen different \

most of them contemporary, some controversial, andmany comic.

With less than a dozen NewYork actors who have traveledwith them from time to time.the Dietzes have performed inchurches, colleges, and universities from North Dakota toTennessee and arenow en routeto the West Coast.

The work of the Dietzes hastaken them to theatre workshopsin Pittsburgh and Chicago andto taping sessions for TV seriesin Philadelphia and St. Louis.Together the Dietzes have produced an expensive spectaclewith a cast of over 100 playersrailed "The Town Went Boom."They have also toured alonefor over a year with a twocharacter program called"How're Things And So Forth?"

During their travels, and attheir New York home, thhearse. Norman writes, developing much of the material forthe theater itself, and Sandracostumes the show.

Tuition Deposits Due;Room Sign-Ups Begin

Tuition deposits of $100 on next signed.'year's tuition must be paid nolater than March 15, M. W. MeGill, college bursar, announced

; this week.

lloGolexplained thai invoicesfor the $100 advance ck'posk vullbe mailed next week

Upon payment of the depositdentl may make rioni n

v.itinns for next year. This willbe earned out as it h.is m the

"C to Mrs. PeterKills, supervisor of dormi

totter An information sheet runeerning the procedure will bem.tilod with the \nv0&» I

According to Mrs. Nicholls.students should start now ar

'ranging for their roommates.Students wishing to room withRichardsonScholars may put ina request now.

Cards entitling studen'.x to:room reservations will be issued

'on payment of the tuition deposit. Both roommates must havepaid before a room will be as

According to the schedule, students wishing to keep their prescut rooms can make arrange-incuts with Mrs. Nicholls be-twaan March 1 and March 15.

On March lfi. rising seniors wishinn single rooms or three mansuite- may draw for availablerooms.

Other students will draw nuinbcrs tn determine' the nrder inwhich they may reserve rooms,;is lias been done m the past.

Terry To ExploreBible Scholarship

Chaplain Will Terry willpreach at vespers Sunday evening

"What I'm going to preachaboiv Idon't want to "give itaititle." Terry explained, but thesermon will concern the difficulties biblical scholarship causesfor biblical faith. It is a prob-lem—which I think is a realproblem for Davidsonstudents."

Most students come to David- ;son viewing the Bible as theau-thority for their faith. Whenthey encounter inconsistenciesand "errors" of a sort, revealedby Biblical scholarship in theirBible courses, "the ground oftheir faith is knocked out from >under them." he explained."It realy amounts to 'What

do we mean when we say theBible is the word of God."Terry concluded.

Sunday evening's service ispart of a new plan to give thechaplain more opportunity topreach at vespers. Many feelthat he is better qualified tospeak about the problems ofDavidson students than otherswould be since he lives on cam-

'pus. ;

SPRING, 1965

Eight From AmherstTo Initiate Exchange

By RON SNOWDavidsonian Staff Writer

Eighth Amherst College students will be guestsof the college from March 21-27 in the initiation ofan exchange program between Davidson and Am-herst.This is the fourth year that Amherst has work-ed this exchange with various Southern colleges

The delegates will stay in the dorms, eat at thefraternity houses and the College Union on a rota-tional basis, and attend classes and seminars as theychoose. It is expected that Davidson will offer a host-type arrangement in which one or a few studentswould be responsible for one of the exchanges dur-ing his stay here.

There is no formal meeting or panel scheduledwith the students;but Tommy Heffner,program co-ordinator,said that there might be an Open End dis-cussion with them one night of that week.

When asked if there would be any Negroes inthe group, Heffner replied, "Amherst is integrated,and the letter said the delegation would be repre-sentative."

The program is expense-free, the host schoolproviding room and board. The students pay theirown transportation to and from the exchange schoolThe students from Amherst are coming during thesecond week of their spring vacation.

Heffner said that 24 Davidson students havethus far expressed an interest in going to Amherstd iring their spring vacation which begins March 27.Anvone interested in the program should contactHeffner or any member of Student Council,and fromthe list,eight personswillbe selected within thenextweek. Transportation to the Massachusetts collegewill be provided by Davidson College.

Heffner also asked that anyone interested inkeeping one of the students in his room or servingas a host, should contact him soon.

Tom Scott, a Davidson junior, was narrowly defeated in his bid for vice-presi-dent of the State Student Legislature of .North Carolina at the organizations conven-tion at the old State House in Raleigh last weekend.

This marked the first time inrecent year* that a D;r

studen: has run for a state offlee at the convention. The winner in the final election heldSaturday afternoon was CharlesDaye. a student at North Carolina College.

Election of officers climaxedtwo days of legislative actionand campaigning. Scott's namehad been placed in nominationby Davidson delegate ChuckMatthews, who also deliveredthe nominating speech.The sec'Hiding speech was given byBeth Garraway.president of thestudent body and delegate tothe convention from Queens Col

Politics is not a new game forScott, a transfer student to Davidson from East Carolina College. While at East CarolinaScott was class president fortwo yt'iirs and active in numerous campus activities. He hasattended the State Student Leg

islature for the past three years.Representing D.i\ :dsonCollege

at the meeting along with Scottand Matthews were Joe Beard.Mark Brown. Ted Pulliam andJohn Hutcheson. The delegatesarrived in Raleigh and attendedthe opening banquet for all delegates on Thursday night. Ap-proximately 30 North Carolinacolleges and universities sentdelegations to the convention.

MOCK SESSIONSDuring the next two daysdele

gates attended mock sessions ofthe House and the SenaW andacted on several imaginary'bills.Each school had two Senators.while House representativeswere allotted in proportion tostudent body enrollment.

Davidson had three membersin the House: Brown. Beard,

and Matthews Scott and Hutcheson served as Senators, withPulKam serving as an alternate.

The Congress met five timesduring the session, three times

on Friday ;md twice on Saturd;iy. Some of tin- bill> which '

p.i^ttl both hou<«"> .UTf ;i billsubmitted by Elon College re-quiring four years of physicaleducation in public high schoolsin North Carolina, and a resolution submittedby UNC to estab jlish a state lottery, with proceeds to be used for improving!education in North Carolina.

Davidson's delegates voted in '

favor of these bills, with the ex ;

ception of Beard, who votedp

against the physical education;bill.

NOT ENOUGH TIMEThe Davidson contingent had \

hoped to present a bill calling'for the repeal of the "Speaker'Ran Law." but there was not!sufficient time at the legislative

ons for them to do so.In the election of officers Sat

;ird.r. each representative had'

one vote. Jane Levine fromDuke University was electedpresident, becoming the firstgirl ever to hold the office.

Davidson cast the deciding:vote in this close election bysupporting Miss Lpvine. Scott 1

hat there was a gooddeal iif bloc voting by the variouschoots in this and in the other t

elections.POLITICS!

Scott explained that there w.is

quite a bit of "politicking" done*: the convention, and that allthe delegates were involved inlobbying, campaigning, and de-bating John Hutchison's drbating in the Senate merited par

: pniac from Scott.A combo party held on Thurs

r)r. night, and various i i"neet.ngs. and campaigning keptmost delegates up all night talking with and meeting other delegates.

Scott commented tonguein- jcheek that several of the femaledelegates saw a distinct likenessbetween John Hutcheson and ac'or Robert Mitchum, affording jthe Davidson contingent a biglaugh.

Sco't expressed his hope thatChuck Matthews, who "did anoutstanding job on his secondingspeech and debating as a mem-ber of the House." will run forin office in the State StudentLegislature next year.

QUITE HAPPYAlthough disappointed that he

was defeated. Scott was quiteihappy with the entire programand commented that he hopesDavidson will continue to showan interest in state college poli-tics.

Scdtt concluded that "the Da-vidson delegates did a real fineJob in all the areas which theyentered at the meeting," and!that they all "regarded the ex-perience as quite valuable."

The group returned to David-son from the convention on Sun-day, after spending Saturdaynight at UNC in Chapel Hill.

sophomores...Here's what me Hew 2-year

Army ROTC program means to youA new Reserve Officer Training Corpsprogram permits selectedcollegesophomores to be commissioned as Army Second Lieuten-ants in two years.Youcan do this by:1. Completingaspecial6-week summer campbetween yoursoph-

omore and junior years.

2. Completing the 2-year Advanced Courseat any schoolofferingthe ROTC program.

What are the benefits of Army ROTC training?" Management training for success incivilian or military life." $40 permonthpaywhileattending the Advanced Course,plusuniforms;payand paid travel for summer camps." Eligibility for free flight instruction at selected schools lead-ing to a privatepilot's license." A commissionasan Armyofficer, withall of itsaccompanyingbenefits, including higher income, greateropportunityfor ad-vancementand officer status." The personal satisfaction that conies from knowing you'retrained to assume leadership responsibilities.

These benefits willputyoua stopahead of othercollege graduatesand willpayoff for the restof your life. Youowe itto yourself toinvestigate these new opportunities.

For compl.U information, ■"" th« Profoaor of Military Science «t yourschool, or tend the coupon below.

! U.S.ARMY ROTC JlkP*tt Ottlc* Boi1M0 WaMbury. N*. Y*rt 11M1Gantttnwn: PIum»«nd m« informationon th« 2-year Army VI^BmIB^BrROTC program Iundcrttand that th«r« nno obligation. 17

Mm—

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**

§DR. LESLEY FROSTA Real Livt Yankee

Chat life was really opened upthrough art. especially poetry.

Poetry, of course, is peculiar-ly the heritage of Miss Frost's,and she had a lot to .say aboutit. She was convinced that theknowledge of poetry leads toadventure, and she illustrated

WINS Tommy Heffncr, vice-president of the Senior Classand a native of Newton, is oneof eight North Carolina collegestudents to re eie v e ReynoldsScholarships tor study at theBowman Gray School of Medi-cine. Sponsored by the Z. SmithReynolds Foundation, the scho-larship will provide each recip-

ient with $14,000 during his looryears of medical school.