Non-Profit Organliation U. S. POSTAGE PAID Lavirlnburg, N. C. Permit Number 3 THE LANCE Official Publication of the Student Body of St. Andrews Presbyterian College VOL. 8. No. 13. ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE, LAURINBURG, N. C. THURSDAY, FEB. 6, 1969 Hart Succeeds Moore As President Sophomore Charged in $15,000 Robbery of School Equipment Businessman and Educator Takes Office on July 1 BY CHARLES PRATT AND MARGARET OFFTERDINGER Charged with breaking, en tering, and larceny of St. An drews equipnuent, David Lupton McDonald, 19-year-old sopho more from York, S. C., has been released on $7500 bond. The initial bond fee of $15,000 was cut in half at a preliminary hearing in Laurinburg on Janu ary 30. The equipment, valued at ap proximately $15,000, was taken from the science laboratories and offices in the Liberal Arts Building over the week-end of January 25. On Saturday morn ing a secretary discovered her typewriter missing, and a later check of the building revealed the theft of the other equipment. The most valuable item stolen was a Z eiss photo miscroscope valued at $5500. Other items in cluded an electric typewriter, a Thermofax copier, micro scopes, lab carts, and miscel laneous laboratory equipment. A calculator valued at $1500 was also stolen. It is believed that McDonald entered the building through a window or had access to a key. Equipment was taken from four different rooms in the building. Allegedly, McDonald loaded the equipment in a trailer and drove it to a friend’s house out side Charles Town, West Vir ginia McDonald lived in Charles Town before he moved to York. The equipment was found in the basement of the friend’s home. All stolen equipment has been returned to St. Andrews by the Scotland County police depart ment. There appears to be no serious damage to the equip ment. Date of McDonald’s trial has been set for March 17 in Scot land County. The faculty has considered placing tight restrictions on the laboratories as a result (Continued to page 3) Perennial Drought Ends- Scotland County Wet 4'i DAVID MCDONALD The dam burst Saturday. Voters in Scotland County bal loted in heavy support of the ABC Store-package beer mea sure. Unofficial results revealed 2,584 votes cast for the es tablishment of one or more ABC stores in the county and “Off-premises” sale of beer. 1,580 cast negative ballots in the election, giving the victors a solid 1,000 vote margin. The total vote of about 4,164 was the predicted number, ac cording to election officials. The number represents less than half of the county’s re gistered voters. Yet the turnout was considered good for an election of this type. Seven of the nine boxes in the county supported the mea sure. According to members of the Scotland County Citizens for Legal Control, the voting at the Community Building was the most crucial. The vote there was 694 in favor and 323 against. Victory was Inevitable when these figures came in Saturday night. The two precincts voting down the measure were East Laurin burg, where the vote was 150 against, 139 for, and Laurel Hill Depot, where the proposal was downed 195 to 143. Professor William Winn, one of the co-ordinators of the drive commented after hearing the news of the victory, “1 think that this has been a real experience in which we has helped demonstrate that a crea tive tesnion should exist between the college and com munity.” One thing that impres sed Winn was the great mix ture of people working for the passage of the measure. “We had help from persons of all strata. Republicans, Dem ocrats, supporters of Wallace, rich and poor, white, black and Indian. They all came. It was great support.’ The next step toward car rying out the mandate of this vote will be the appointment of an ABC board for the county. It is understood that this is to be done by the board of county commissioners in cooperation' with other county administra tive boards. The ABC board will have wide responsibility, and its duties will include considerable decision making as to establish ment, operation, and mainten-. ance of an ABC store and its' personnel. ABC board members are also vested with some In- investigatory and law enforce ment authority. The vote favoring the llquor- package beer measure means (Continued to Page 4) Newly elected president of St. Andrews Presbyterian College is Dr. Donald J. Hart,professor of management of Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He was elected unanimously at a special meeting of the St. An drews Board of Trustees here Tuesday afternoon. “Dr. Hart brings to his new post a unique record as church man, educator, and administra tor. Undergirded by a success ful completion of our current St. Andrews Forward Cam paign, we are confident of Dr. Hart’s ability to lead the school to new levels of achievement and service. He inherits from Dr. Moore a solid foundation prepared In the demanding years of the school’s first de cade,” said Trustee Chairman Thomas M. Belk of Charlotte, in announcing the Board’s action. Dr. Hart who last fall joined the faculty at VPI, had since 1956 been dean of the College of Business Administration at the University of Florida and lor six years prior held the same post at the University of Idaho. The newly-elected president will take office July 1, suc ceeding Dr. Ansley C. Moore who has served as president since 1960 following action by the Presbyterian Synod of North Carolina to establish a new co educational liberal arts college in Laurinburg. Dr. Moore In 1967 had announced his plans to retire pending the selection of his successor. A ruling elder for 16 years In Presbyterian churches In Idaho and Florida, Dr. Hart was a commissioner to the General Assembly of the Pres byterian Church, U.S., at Mon- treat In 1965. He has been ac tive in presbytery affairs in Florida, a frequent lay speaker, and leader in the church’s cam pus ministry. A native of Milwaukee and graduate of Lake Forest Col- Tege, Presbyterian liberal arts college In Illinois, Dr. Hart DONALD J. HART is the new president of St. Andrews Presby terian College, elected Tuesday by the Board of Trustees. Now professor of management at VPI, he formerly was dean of the College of Business Administration at the University of Florida. received his Ph.D. at the Uni versity of Wisconsin following four years’ service as a Navy lieutenant In the European thea ter of WWIl. He was an as sociate professor at Carroll College in Wisconsin for three years before becoming a dean in 1950 at the University of Idaho. During his 12 years as dean at the University of Florida he was named In 1967 presi dent of the American Associa tion of Collegiate Schools of Business, the national accredi ting agency for business schools. He Is a former national officer and executive committee member of Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary business so ciety. A former director of several business firms, he also has been a director of chambers of com merce in Idaho and Florida and has lectured extensively in exe cutive development seminars. Dr. Hart is the author of nu merous articles for business and professional journals and Is the author of a text, “Busi ness in a Dynamic Society.” For four years Dr. Hart was a trustee of Florida Presby terian College and was an ad visor in the planning lor Florida Atlantic University. He twice headed the campus planning and development committee at the University of Florida. His civic service embraced public schools. Boy Scouts, mental health, bl-raclal work, city fi nance, and community or chestra. (Continued to page 2) ... Students Drop In On Loop London During January Theatres, Becket and Buskers MANNED WITH HIS MOVIE CAMERA, Denny Ogden films the guard at Windsor Castle, one of the many residences of Queen Elizabeth. Counter-inauguration Marchers For Peace had a parade. Unlike the parade BY PETE COOK More than ten thousand people gathered near the Washington Monument early Sunday after noon, January 19, to highlight three days of activities with a massive peace march. The march went from the White House to the Capitol Building in the middle of Pen nsylvania .^venue. More than thirty five of the students pre sent were from St. Andrews. Many middle-sized, middle class citizens of Washington and tourists from all over the nation sat in the bleachers lin ing Pennsylvania Avenue. Many of the spectators jeered and shouted obscenities atthepara- ders who were led by veterans of the present war in Vietnam. The parade was only a seg ment of the activities, however. The three day “Counter Inau guration” event which was sponsored by the National Mo bilization Committee also in cluded workshops on Saturday morning, noon, and night, and a “Counter-Inaugural Ball” on Sunday night, the evening before the inauguration of Richard Nixon as President of the United States. At the ball, anti-Nixon sen timents became obvious as a pig was inaugurated in his place. The pig, an obvious carry over from Chicago’s summer “police riot’ , was not the main focus of the counter-inaugu ration, however. Also Inaugu rated were the principles of peace, for which the three days of acitlvities were planned. On Monday, January 20, Ri chard Milhous Nixon became the nation’s leader, and he also the day before, however, the streets were lined with police and the National Guard. The Army, Navy, Air Force, Ma- (itontinued to page 2) ini Courses At St. Andrews BY JIM POPE The St. Andrews Student Association has authorized four extracurricular courses that are being offered for the first time on our campus. These courses are purely for the in terest of the student body and no credit is given for them. Dr. Charles Joyner Is in structing a course entitled, “The Black Experience in A- (Continued to Page 4) BY JOE JUNOD Several students were walk ing through Canterbury Ca thedral and happened to fix their eyes on an engraved stone monument set into an ancient wall. “Thomas Becket-Arch- bishop of Canterbury 1161-1170 Died on this spot in 1170”. A shrine to his memory was erected and became the focus of Chaucer’s famous Tales. The shrine Is gone, destroyed by Henry VIII, but the overpower ing sense of history grabs each individual and devours him. This consummingfeelingofhls- tory radiated from every cubicle of England. Thirty four members of the St. Andrews community spent three weeks in London and the surrounding area studying the English theatre. Within that time, every possible theatrical form was experienced. From the Royal Shakespear Com pany’s production of “Julius Caesar” to the folk-rock musi cal “Hair.” Almost withoutex- ceptlon, the plays overflowed with the aroma of English his tory. To see the National Thea tre perform Breckt’s “Edward 11” from the second row was stimulating if not shocking. Edward, KingofEngland, greets his male whore, GavestoniWitha passionate, homosexual kiss, and follows by spitting on his Queen’s face for thirty seconds. One of the mystifying nights at the theatre was at the Co vent Garden Opera House. We were at the theatre for a per formance of Verdi’s Rlgoletto, a nineteenth century opera. Never have I seen such au dience enthusiasm. After the final act. the members of the cast received fourteen cur tain calls. Sir Alec Guinness’ perfor mance as the unknown guest in T. S. Eliot’s “The Cocktail Party” was brilliant and saved the poet’s play from slipping to second rate melodrama. Outside the theatre world, London was like many big cities, dirty, a melting pot for all races and oftentimes ex pensive. Twelve pounds doesn’t go very far In certain areas of the Soho. The architect that designed our place of residence must have been a diabolical fiend. Little h^at, a scarcity of hot water, and ninety steps to your room it you were so lucky to be stuck on the sixth floor. Not that this was enough, maids who would dismantle rather than clean and dogs that would use the breakfast floor as a sand box. Touring the restaurants was an eye opener. The Soho is famous for meals from all over the world. A goodtime night would be Simpson’s on the Strand for dinner, the Aldywch Theatre for a performance of Edward Albee’s “A Delicate Balance” and then to The Bag or Sous Sol for some dancing and drinking. Plccidilly Circus Is the Times Square of London and the neighboring Leicester Square runs a close second. This area is the tourist trap of the world. Men with cameras snap your picture and then convince you that mother would love some shots of you In the greatest spot in the world. Only a pound ($2.40) for two pictures. Even In Plccidilly one can find a reasonably priced meal. Fortes Is a restaurant that has as much atmosphere as the LA building but a treble cheese burger and two warm pepsls (all drinks in England are warm) for nine shillings, served by a waitress that reminds one of Apple Annie in the movie “Poc- ketfull of Miracles.” Something that seems to be peculiar to London are thebus- kers, the street singers that emerge to perform while people are queueing up to get into the cinema. They sing for their supper and “enjoy the guts out of life” according to “Paris” Nat Schaeffer, a long time street singer. “Paris” totes his 12 string Martin wherever he goes or sleeps and when he plays It the half crowns fly for the upturned tamborine that his female com panion carries. I ran into him one night on Leicester Square. A thick, dropping mustache dresses his face which slightly resembles a dried up riverbed. His long, stringy hair partially hid a gold earing. Coming from the country of hippies, 1 realized that this singer was as genuine as the big guy in the sky makes ’em. “Pot? Yea, hashish too. Been on it for thirty years. Does something for my playing and singing that I could never do without it. Makes me really enter and become part of what ever I attempt on the guitar.” Cecil Court, just off Tra falgar Square, Is a tiny street that is catacombed with anti quarian bookshops. One small shop had more dust than anti ques and his prices were so high he belonged In the high class shopping districts of Lon don. For those Interested in antiquaries, this ancient street has got more than one could ask for. If you think of London fashions then you probably wonder about Carnaby Street and the not-so-well-known Kings Road. Carnaby is all anyone ever made It out to be. The latest fashiojis for both sexes are there In quality and quantity. Kings Road caters more to the female. The most exciting place tor clothes In London is Carnaby Caverns, Just off the world re nowned street. You enter the shop and are swamped by a red haired man with a full flaming red beard who, without question, is the greatest salesman In the world. 1 had spent 10 guineas ($25) before two minutes had passed in the store. Colin Wild dresses all the name bands In England. Slug ging down a bottle of milk for (Continued to page 3) A CLASS OF TWENTY-FOUR STUDENTS, the majority being from St. Andrews, studied in Jamaica during the month of January. L^d by Dr. Jerry Williamson, their objective was the study of Jamaican society through its emerging art and literature. The first days were spent In Ocho Rios, where a bauxite mine, a sugar plantation, an agricultural research station, a native village, Dunn’s River Falls, and the beaches were visited. After a week, the group moved to Kingston where lectures were presented by many prominent Jamaicans in their fields of art, literature, dance, and drama. The class returned to Florida Presbyterian College and each member completed a paper concerning some chosen aspect of the Jamaican culture.