PAGE 2
MAROON AND GOLD
FRIDAY, MARCH 28. 1969
MAROON and gold
Dedicated to the best Interests of Elon College and
its students and faculty, the Maroon and Gold is pub
lished weekly during the college year with the excep
tion of holiday and examination periods at Elon College,
N.C. (Zip Code 27244), publication being in coopera-
lion with the Journalism department.
REPORTORIAL STAFF
Paul Amundsen, Randy Bishop, Donnie Bowers,
Rebecca Burgess, Chester Burgess, Steve Caddell,
Bruce Cohen, Dean Coleman, Don Goldberg, Joe
Goldberg, Tom Hardee, Cheryl Hart, Dale Harrison,
William Hartley, Jim Hodges, Betty Isleley, Bobby
King, George Koplk, Bick Long, Noble Marshall,
Danny Moore, Rick O’Neill, Ned Poole, Kenneth
Shaw, Jerry Schumm, Mike Spillane, Ben Stever-
son. Max Sullivan, Archie Taylor, Vernon Taylor,
Jim Waller, Bill Walker, Jay Waugh, Frank Web
ster, Johnny Weeks, Jerry Woodlief.
Choir Sings Lenten
ProgramOn Sunday
(Continued from page 1)
ton; Carol Truitt, Raleigh;
Joan Watson, Kenly; and
Joan Wilson, Wilmington,
Del.
ALTOS; Margie Antal,
Carversville, Pa.; Glen
da Baird, Spruce Pine;
Susan Brown, Faith; Me
lissa Coats, Alexandria,
Va.; Laurel Denzer,
Brenchville, N.J.; Susan
Ellis, North Miami, Fla.;
Sue Hamilton, Lorain,
Ohio; Kathy Harper,San-
ford; Kathy Howell, Ar
nold, Md.; Iris Hyde,Wil
mington, Del.;
Janet Lynch, Suffolk,
Va.; Joan Riggan, Macon;
Jean Rhodes, Burlington;
Cindy Simmons, Burling
ton, Maryann Swartout,
Newton, N. J. ;AnneVun-
Cannon, Asheboro; Sallie
Ward, Liberty; Gaye
Weatherly, Camden, N.
J.; Janet Winstead, Elon
College; Gwendolyn Wood,
Longhurst; and Myrna
Wright, Salisbury, Md.
TENORS: Keith Cole,
Graham; Jack Gotten, Fu-
quay-Varina; Floyd Hin-
shaw. Snow Camp; John
Park, Larchmont, N.Y.;
Vic Bola, Portsmouth,
Va,; William Shaver,
Charlotte; Greg Smith,
Pittsboro; David Surrett,
Greensboro; and Chris
Walsh, Richmond, Va.
BASSES: Mac Aber
nathy, Burlington; James
Brown, Angola, N. Y.;
George Cannon, Newport
News, Va.; David Corey,
Portsmouth, Va.; Ronald
Dameron, Burlington;
Philip Davis, Stoneville;
James Fogle, Charleston,
S.C.; Wayne Hayes,Bur
lington;
Marvin Morgan, Zebu-
lon; David Newsom, Win-
ston-Salem; Harold O’-
Briant, Durham; Bud
Parrish, Greensboro;
Don Perkins, Fayetteville;
York Poole, Chesapeake,
Va.; T. J. Ross, Roanoke,
Va.; Randy Smart, Nor
folk, Va.; Archie Taylor,
Durham; and Pete Tuck
er, Newport News. Va.
“Early to bed, early to rise,
enables you to save enough to
do otherwise.”
Westafer At
Music Meet
Prof. Walter Westafer,
member of the Elon Col
lege music faculty, rep
resented the college and
the music department at
Che annual national con
vention of the Music
Teachers National Asso
ciation, which was held
last week in Cincinnati.
Professor Westafer,
who is a past president
of the Southern Division
of the Music Teachers
National Association,has
also been serving for
some years as a member
of its national executive
board and also as a mem
ber of the nominating
committee. He was re
elected to both groups
during the recent 1969
convention.
The Music Teachers
National Association is
the oldest professional
music organization in the
United States.
LECTURER
Dr. E. Adamson Hoe-
bel, pictured above, was
a guest speaker on the
Elon campus last week,
appearing as the last of
the series of Visiting
Scholars lecturers for
tliis 1968-69 college
year. The Visiting Schol
ars series is sponsored
by the Piedmont Univer
sity Center, a group that
includes more than twen
ty colleges and universi
ties in central North Car
olina. Dr. Hoebel, chair
man of the department of
anthropology at the Uni
versity of Minnesota,
spoke on the topic, “From
The Stone Age To Sur-
banlzation.”
THEY WOJSTOP HONORS FOR ELON IN MIAMI CONTEST
The Elon College delegation won top honors in a large field in the Invitational
Model United Nations assembly, which was held at the University of Miami in
Miami, Fla,, from Wednesday, March 12th, through Sunday, March 16th. The
Elon delegation, pictured left to right above, was composed of Noel Allen, of
Burlington; president of the Elon Student Government Association; Christopher
Walsh, of Richmond, Va.; and Russ Schetroma, of Natalie, Pa,, the treasurer
of the Student Government Association; the trio who made up the Elon delegation
to the assembly at Miami. The three Elon representatives, who voiced the needs
of Pakistan in the model UN assembly, are shown with the silver trophy which
they brought back to Elon with them.
Filing Period Is NowUnderway
For Annual Campus Elections
The annual campus
election in which the stu
dents of Elon College will
choose their Student Gov
ernment Association
leaders for the coming
1969-70 year will not be
held until after the an
nual spring holidays, but
the filing of candidates
for the principal campus
and class officers got un
derway last Monday,
March 24th,
The candidates for the
offices of president, vice-
president and treasurer
of the Student Govern
ment Association were
requested to begin filing
on Monday, and they may
continue to file until next
Wednesday, April 2nd.
Although there had been
rumors as to candidates
for the various posts,
there was nothing defi
nite known as to prospects
at this writing.
Also filing at the same
time as the candidates for
the three executive offi
cers of the Student Gov
ernment Association
were the candidates for
the various officers of
the rising sophomore,
junior and senior class
es. Each class has a pres
ident, vice-president and
secretary-treasurer.
(Continued on page 4)
FAVORITE ROOMING PLACE 0/ FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
This generation of Elon College students, accustomed as they are to the modern
dormitories that furnish them with a place to live, with some of the dormi-
present day even featuring air conditioning, will find it hard to believe
that me somewhat delapidated structure pictured above was one of the favorite
rooming places for Elon’s men students as late as fifteen years ago. However,
such is a fact, for the picture is of the historic and much-loved old Club House,
which stood at the southeast corner of the presen: gymnasium parking lot and
almost ^rectly across from the main north gate of the campus. The old building
contained about ten rooms, and many Elon alumni of today look back with great
pleasure to the years they spent in those rooms. The Club House may not have had
air conditioning, but its rooms were quite definitely airy on cold wintry nights,
uespite the delapidatlon and discomforts, however, there was frequently a waiting
list of students seeking Club House lodging.