PAGE TWO MAROON AND GOLD Friday, November 15, 1963 Maroon And Gold Dedicated to the b«»t int*re*t of Elon Collese ind iu itudenU and (acuity, the Maroon and Gold is published bi-weekly during the college year with the exception of holiday periods in cooperauon with the Journalism program. F;nlfrtd as second clai.-, inauer at the Post Office at Elon College, N. C., under the Act of March 8, 1879. Delivered by mall. J1.50 per college year, 75 cents the •em ester. EDITORIAL BOARD Melvin Shreves - - Editor-in-Chief Sy Hall -- Assi-.tant Editor William Whittenton .. . As^istant Editor Thomas Corbitt Sports Editor DceU Welch Girls Sports H. Reid . ■ Alumni Editor I.u'i.'T N livrd F.II iilu Advisor Jack Lambeth Staff Photographer TECHNICAL STAFF P. .S Thompson .. Linotype Operator Carl Owenv Linotype Operator Ki-nneth Harper Pres-, Operator RF.l'OKTORIAI. STAFF Howard Andrew Don Miller Jo« Berdotfh John .Minns Mac Buwman John Nichols Gordon Cox .. Hugh O’Hara Jumc-i Dailey . Wayne Pruitt Po({gy Dodson Jerry Rowe Hunter Dula .. . . Herbert Siner Shirley Koskett Lamar Smith Milton Grose Jrrry Tillman Cecil Gwaltney Carol Trageser Charles Harris .. . .. Lee Vaughn Marty Hogenson Terry Vining Patrlda McAbee Bobby West George Wooten FRIDAY. NO\ f;MBER 15, 1963 THANKMilVING AHF:AD In M>mc ways it seems hard to realize that Thanksgiving is just ahead, and the chang- ing calend;ir does throw it further into the future th;in was the case just a year ago this time, [or the annual autumn holiday (alls exactly six days later in .November this year than in l'.n;2. Thai changing calendar, with a switch that occurs every six or ^ven years, has a def inite c.'fctt upon Klon students and campus activities One effect w.is upon the Maroon and Gold itself, which is forced to extend Thank.sgivmg greetings furlhi.‘r in advance this year than was the ca.se last fall The Thanksgiving issue rolled from the pres.^ on Friday Ijefore Thanksgiving last year, but this year it is an extra week ahead of the long-looked for vacation per iod. A quick glance at the calendar will show that the holiday Jaunts home will have already been made before another two weeks Is gone. Such being the case, the Maroon and Gold ixtends the heartiest wi.shes to all for a Happy TTiank.sgiving, but it also urges every one to give a thought to the Thanksgiving .season as meaning more than just a holiday and a visit horn*-. It may be well to recall George Washing- on's first presidential proolamalion of Thanksgiving, in which he said. "It is the luty of all nations to acknowledge the pro- .uk-nce of Almighty God. to obey his will, to be grateful for his benefits and humbly to implore his protection and favor ' Both hou.ses of Congress had. by joiiit action, requested Wa.shington to - recommend to the people of the United States a day of public Thanksgiving and prayer, to be ob- ■served by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many and signal favors of Almighty God. especially by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness" And thus he recommended and assigned tw final Thursday in November that year "to be devoted hy the people of these States to the .service of that great and Glorious Be ing who is the heneficient author of ill that good that was. that is and that will be . . . I^d also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the Great Lord and Ruler of Nations and generally, to grant to all mankind such a degrw of temporal prosperity as He alone knows best ’* Certainly, in this modem time, when so r^ny in all parts of the world are denied the blessings of liberty and prosperity, it is well that the people of these United States take time from their busy and often hurried and harried lives to breath a few sincere words of praw and thanksgiving for the life and joys which have been accorded them With swh a thought for the season just a^ad the Maroon and Gold wishes that ^ blessings aowded to both students and faculty may include that blessing of a safe return to the campus when the approaching holiday is ended Wiapa •! Wtedoa ' Money talks aU right, but in these days a dollar doesn’t bay* eoough cents to say muob. . — A pesalmist Is the type d person who prays for rain but won’t buy an um brella. Mott men need two wxaneo In their lives: a secretary to Uke things down and a wife to pick things up. a view from the oak By MELVIN SIIREVF-S Till- 'i.iii Behind The .Mike ■ ,1 ' I N r idio program which i.s air ed O'.-;r Burlington's radio station WBBB is '''? c MU m.'in's efforts and dcterm- > v !i ':i i say one man. I can’t truthfully a.iv that just one person was responsible for the -airin)! of this very successful program. ’’h ' idea started three years ago when Tr.iee-Pr and Lynn Ryals attended a NSSr;A Conference and learned that several college' h;ifl succes.sful radio programs in their home arca.s. Thev f’.im'’ back to Klon with big ideas. Th" CommnnKv Helations Committee spon sored th;'m to speak before the Burlington Rotary (lub. R>als told them about their hotx?s for a radio program to inform the pe'i;)!'’ nrnurd Elon of their little college. •\l Ih' (if the Rotary program, "E isy" ,Ion''s of V'HHR told them that air time was • -.V (■ ' ;■ ■ ; vl.i;..;, N;mir;i!lv this boosted th" sjiirifs of in ,■ t ie'.’ n; nd' i sophnmores, but the enthus- j.i'm Ilf 'he Student S"nate was poor and they were unible to obtain financial support to begin the program. I-ast year, things liegan to pick up again under the pushing and pulling of a new sopho more class president, Fred Stephen.son. One )( Two I’rojects Stephenson was working on two major pro jects last year for the Community Relations Committee The first, a project to get identi fication cards for the students, gave way to the radio program by a stroke of luck. Thu Senate thoucht that it could not finance both programs, so the committc-e began working on the program that would be less compli cated. The I D. project proved to be the more complicattKl. so wholehearted work be gan on the radio idea. On December 12 of last year, the Commun ity Relations Committee presented to the Sen ate a bill to provide $450 for the purchase of a tape recorder and other equipment to get the radio programs started. It took the Sen ate over a month to approve the bill, but it was finally passed in January. Working alongside Stephenson on the pro ject was a .senior who made the dream a reality. When help was asked, Paul Robin son worked tooth and nail to get what was needed at the best possible price. He con tacted electronics specialists at Western Electric for advice and then wrote to numer- (His electrical supply houses looking for the right equipment for the job. .\nd at the .same time, he was bumming, borrowing, and almost stealing equipment to get the .show ?oing without the Senate’s finances. He did get several programs on the air before the Senate acted, and it was the succe.ss of these shows that probably swung the Senate. A New Year Starts While other students were getting settled for another year withip the academic walls of Elon College, Paul Robinson was inter viewing people, editing tapes, trying to con vince the higher-ups that he needed a record ing studio, and for more important, inform ing the people of this area about the little colleffe down the road. And he is doing a good job of it too. When 'Indents .shop in Burlington they hear people nnisi"" th» show. 'TK ■ Is Elon College" has been on Ine ■ every wpck .since the beginning of the semester In short while it will be known as the "Elon Forum” and Paul hopes that like other college radio shows, it will be aired throughout the state on other radio stations. ^ oil might think that this is another dream, hut look at what happened to the previous dream. I II even bet (hat Dean Moore agrees to let the Radio team have the old recording recording room in the rear of Whitley in a few weeks. Sp-rifica(ions For A Man Sometime during Work) War II while in Italy, a lieutenant in the Army sat down and wrote out for a younger cousin in the Navy what he thought were the specifications for a man. It went like this: "To respect my country, my work, and myself. To be honest and fair with my fel low men as I expect them to be with me. To be a loyal citizen of the United States. To speak of it with praise and act always as a trustworthy custodian of its good name. To be a man whose name carries prestige with it wherever it goes. To base my expectations of a reward on a solid foundation of service rendered. To be willing to pay the price of success of honest effort. To look upon my wort as an oppor- tiini«y to be sej^ with jo/ aHfl *o be made the raost of^ no as a painral drudgery to be reJuctai^ly endured. TV) remember that success lies within my ownself and in my own brain, my own ambi tion and my own courage and determination. To expect difficuhies and force my way through them. To turn hard experience into capital for futare struggles. (CoBttnBed Oa Par* Ftnr) KLON HOMECOAISXC AT FOOIBALL GA3IE Bonnie V*cEvoy. of Burlington, who ruled as Homeco -’ ;ig Queen ov,'r Elon s gala Homecoming festivities the first weekend in November, ii pictured center ab iiimial Elcn-Western Carolina football game. With her acr.l of th;; Elon Student Government, who crowned the royal escort for the queen. diii’ing coron;!tion ceremonies at half-time of the lir.’ lot; is Wally Sawyer, of Portsmouth, Va., pres- i.iieen: and on the right is Lynn Ryals, of Durham, Elon Lists Four All /JJierkaii Stars As this 1963 football campaign nears its end and as the time ap proaches when the so-called ex perts will be naming their All- .\merican. All-State, All-Confer ence and All-Everything teams, it may be interesting to recall some of the Elon gridiron greats of years gone by, those Fighting Christians who won recognition on the All-Teams of the past. Four of Elon's grid stars have been accorded rank as All-Ameri cans from the ranks of the small er colleges by winning berths on various Little All-American picks. They are Arnold Melvin and Sai Gero. a pair of gigantic tackles. Tony Carcaterra. a great end; and George Wooten, speedy quarter back. Melvin was placed on the Little .411-American squad of the As.soc- iated press in 1949, while Sal Gero was thus honored by the Associat ed Press in both 1950 and 1951. Carcaterra won his Little All- American rank on the Williamson .selection in 19.58, and George Wooten was chosen on the NAIA Little All-American squaad of 1961. Another of "Elon’s greatest stars would almost certainly have won : Little All-American honors if there had been separate selections for 'the smaller colleges in his day, for Jim "Jack Rabbit” Abbitt was given honorable mention on an 11 'man All-American team which was I named from all of the colleges and ! universities in America in 1937 Abbitt later went on to play oro ball in the National loop. Eight of the Elon stars were named on recognized All-State lections, according to best av’ " able records, and it is poss'''’? that others may have been so ho- ored and the records not found The ElOn All-Staters include Hap Perry at halfback in 1922, Peie Williams at fullback in 1929 and 1921, Jim Abbitt at halfback n 1935 and 1937, Joe Golombek at fullback in 1938, Sal Gero at t kle in 1950 and 1951, Ho.Tier Hob- good at center in 1954, Bob Stauf- fenberg at fullback in 1957 and Tony Carcaterra at end in 1957 and 1958. Arnold Melvin never made All-State, but he was named All-Southern in 1948. Fifty-five Elon gridders ha e been chosen to the All-Conference teams, some of them being thus I'onored for three seasons, in squads chosen from the Little S’ North State or Carollnas Coiifei- ence. This is according to recoid. (Continued on Page Fom For many years we have been told that Communism will grad ually cease to exist, as our econ omy and democratic government will rise to stamp it out. How ever, for the past fifteen years ihe United States has seemingly ueen slipping slowly down hill. Are we losing the Cold War? Since World War II the Com munists have gained thousands of miles of new territory. The Com munists have turned millions of people against our way of govern ment, and they have converted once free people into Commnnists sympathizers. Are we Americans .selling out our country? Were our representatives sent to Washing ton to do nothing but make con cession after concession to the Russians? Less than one hundred miles off the coast of Florida lies the Com munist stronghold of the Western Hemisphere. Five million Cubans were betrayed by the country they had always looked up to. The Cub an people suffered unmercifully, homes were confiscated, propertj was stolen, and everything of value waas pillaged. The Cubans wail ed, the world waited, but we did nothing. This was the greatest of all Communist acquisitions since their movement began, and it showed several things. Firstly, it showed that the United States has a poor and ineffective iatelligence system. Castro was a known Communist sympathizer for many years, yet he received the United States sup port during the Cuban Revolution. Secondly, it proved that Ameri- Syde Lines By SY HALL cans no longer thought freedom was worth fighting for. We were content to just sit back and offe: idle threats to the Russians as they conquered a once proud ro public. Thirdly, it showed the weakness es and the fallacies of our foreign defense pacts. How much do the NATO and SEATO treaties mean to other countries in the world when we cannot defend an island that lies a mere 90 miles off our coast? Fourthly, the fact that the Unit ed States did not enforce the Monroe Doctrine has rendered it useless for all future purposes. Recently our government ha > entered into an era of so-called ■co-existence” with the Russians. Friendship and good will waj shown by both sides. We no long er mentioned Cuba to the Rus sians for fear that they might take it the wrong way and destroy th;s friendship which they have so grac iously given us. So it is that we’ll keep our eyes off Cuba and try to forget that ambarrassing situation if the Rus sians will be so kind as to let ap in South Viet Nam. In this way. our present administration will be able to return to the Whi»« Hou.>t in 1964 on the platform of peace and prosperity. W'e are now in the process of negotiating the sale of wheat to Russia. Reports from behind the Iron Curtain sUted that the Rus sians are in the midst of a terrible ^mine. The people are discontent ed; many farmers and peasants are causing smaU uprisings throughout the Soviet Union. This is absolute proof that the Com munist system does not work. Here is a great advantage for demo cracy, and we are not in position to give it up, but all we are do ing is to strengthen the Commun ist movement by supplying wheat to our enemy. America is currently in the midst of a terrible war. There are no bul lets being fired, no bombs are be ing dropped, but land is being con quered, and people are losing their freedom. The way in which the Communists work can be ex plained in one word—'Infiltra tion.” The University of Havana has been turned into an espionage school. It is turning out hundreds of well-trained Communist agents that are being sent to South and Central America. How would you feel if you read one morning that South and Cei tral America had been taken o' by the Communists? When it hap pens, it will happen just that fast, as one quick and perfectly *»i'. timed overthrow of all South a'"' Central American governments What can we as Americans 1o about it? For one thing, we shou’d s'f'p making concessions to tr>e Crmmunists. We should stop -3»- cifying itie Russians. We should recognize them as the enemy of the United States and treat them as such. We caannot get rid of a verr"' with food and protection. It muit b® destroyed before it overniiis the countryside. Communism >s a vermin, and as such it must tie gotten rid of and destroyed. i what about ihis? By BILL WHITTENTON When a columnist waits until just at dead line time and then conies down with an at tack of disabling influenza, it becomes nec essary for a pinch-hitter to step into the scene. In many ca.ses, that pinch-hitter finds the use of a pair of sharp scissors and clip pings of interesting items the easiest way to full the void. Some truly interesting items appeared in a rocent issue of The Appalachian, the cam pus news sheet on Appalachian's mountain- encircled campus. The items appeared in what might be described as blank verse, for certainly it included considerable blank space. One series of thoughts were entitled “On Man.” They follow in exactly the form thev appeared— The rose knows the touch of clod the feel of sod the breath of God. The rose is clod and sod and God and man. * * * * The same Mountaineer poet also offered a number of lines, which were entitled “Briefly.” .Again, those lines are presented just as they appeared— THE TOUCHED, TIME AND CIRCUMSTANCE. SAVAGELY THE EMBRACED, I.ONGING AND LIFE. P.\SSI0NATELY THEY STRUGGLED, 1'ARKNES.S AND LIFHT QUIETLY THEY PARTED, MAN AND ETERNITY. DARKNESS . . . SILENCE . . . PAIN . . . STRUGGLE . . . BIRTH PAIN . . . SILENCE . . . DARKNESS . . . MAN! • * • * • And again, that same poet, still speaking briefly, offered thoughts of sea and sand and moonlight and man’s place upon the stage thus created. Those thoughts are presented below— FROTH UPON THE SEA SHADOWS UPON THE SAND RIPPLES UPON THE POND FROZEN BREATH BY MOON LIGHT AS FROTH MARKS THE SEA AS SHADOW MARKS THE SAND AS VANISHING RIPPLES LEAVE THEIR TRACE AND FROZEN BREATH HER ETCHINGS UPON THE NIGHT. SO MAN STANDS UPON HIS PEDESTAL OF TIME AND WRITES HIS NAME UPON THE WIND AND DIES AND ETERNITY LAUGHS. ♦ ♦ » « » Still another of the mountain poets mused upon the subject of “A Leaf,” and certainly such thoughts are proper in this season of fallen leaves. That final selection is offered here— a leaf falls before its division from the tree is felt a feeling changes before *■- its presence " ia the . heart is known a gay sense of security is pierced by a pure golden ache for home