Newspapers / The Guilfordian (Greensboro, N.C.) / Nov. 1, 1969, edition 1 / Page 6
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Saturday, November 1, 1969 Appenzeller Discusses Grants By THE GUILFORDIAN Staff In the, following interview witl. GUILFORDIAN staff members, Br. Herb Appenzeller outlines the effects of athletic grants at Guilford on the quality of the team. Dr. Appenzeller explained, "We've gone through the gamut of no scholarships. When I first came to Guilford the top scholar ship was S3OO and it had to be based on need. We received ter rific criticism from a lot of people because they said we were buying athletes. We were helping young men who really were in need. And they had to qualify by need. "We found that we couldn't compete in any of the situations we had been in. The only situation in which we could com pete was back in the early days when everybody was amateur and we >were amateur. Then Guilford had a few winning seasons. We probably had more sea sons with no wins than any team in the country. But the years that we competed, we competed pretty equally with people because nobody then was giving scholar ships. LACK OF SCHOLARSHIPS "Then we went into a period where we took a rugged beating because other schools were giving scholarships and we weren't. Then we went into a period after the war about 1946 when Doc Newton came and they weni inio full subsidation. Then we had some of the best teams that Guilford has ever had. "Then they dropped back out QUAKER FOOTBALL HISTORY Year Record Coach Year Record Coach 1893 2-1 Walter Howland 1928 5-3 Dorman Shcperd 1894 Walter Howland 1929 7-1-1 John Anderson 1895 1-1 No Coach 1930 4-5-1 John Anderson 1896 2-2-1 No Coach 1931 4-6 John Anderson 1897 2-1 Whitaker(UNC) 1932 3-7 John Anderson 1898 0-3 Whitaker 1933 2-7-1 John Anderson 1899 2-1-1 H. C. Petty 1934 2-7 John Anderson 1900 4-2 H. C. Petty 1935 1-7 John Anderson 1901 04 H. C. Petty 1936 2-7 Harry Hodges 1902 4-3-1 H. C. Petty 1937 1-7 "Block" Smith 1903 1-3 H. C. Petty 1938 1-5-2 "Block" Smith 1904 0-4 H. C. Petty 1939 1-7-1 "Block" Smith 1905 1940 0-9 "Block" Smith 1915 1-1 William Moore 1941 0-7 "Block" Smith 1916 2-3 BobDoak 1942 0-6 "Block" Smith 1917 1-4 BobDoak 1945 0-7 Doc Newton 1918 Ol Bob Doak 1946 6-2-1 Doc Newton 1919 1-5-1 Bob Doak 1947 4-5 Doc Newton 1920 1-3-1 Bob Doak 1948 4-6 Doc Newton 1921 1-5-1 BobDoak 1949 4-4-1 Eddie Teague 1922 2-5-1 BobDoak 1950 4-5 Eddie Teague 1923 1-6 Bob Doak 1951 1-7 S. Maynard 1924 1-5 BobDoak 1952 1-7 S. Maynard 1925 0-7-1 Bob Doak 1953 3-5 S. Maynard 1926 2-7 Bob Doak 1954 1-7 S. Maynard 1927 0-7-1 Pat Crawford 1955 07-1 S. Maynard 1956 1-7 H. Appenzeller(WF) I 1957 1-6-1 H. Appenzeller f 1958 3-6 H. Appenzeller 1959 2-7 H. Appenzeller ■Sfe V' 1960 1-8 H. Appenzeller 1961 09 H. Appenzeller \d* ii? 1962 2-7 H. Appenzeller f*! 1 1963 0-10 J. Stewart (UNC) \ 1964 4-5 J.Stewart agmt 1965 8 . 2 j.stewart JL'ig 1%6 5-4-1 J. Stewart JiBHI 1967 6-4 J.Stewart Bob Lord 1968 2-8 Bob Lord (Colo. State) QUAKER FOOTBALL RECORDS INDIVIDUAL MOST YARDS RUSHING: 778, Dan Wheeling, 1967 MOST YARDS PASSING: 1,723, Bill Burchette, 1967 MOST POINTS SCORED: 91, Tommy Grayson, 1965 MOST PASSES CAUGHT: 66, Henry McKay, 1967 MOST YARDS ON PASS RECEPTIONS: 1,111, Henry McKay, 1967 MOST YARD TOTAL OFFENSE: 1,781, Bill Burchette, 1967 BEST PUNTING AVERAGE: 40.7, Jimmy Williams, 1964 MOST YARDS RUSHING: 1,886 in 1967, 10 games MOST YARDS PASSING: 2,057 in 1967, 10 games MOST YARDS TOTAL OFFENSE: 3,94.'} in 1967, 10 games MOST POINTS SCORED: 298 in 1967, 10 games again into very limited scholar ships and we suffered through those periods. "I came in 1956 under a new program because the students had marched to the adminis tration building demanding in an orderly protest that a new and a reasonable program be initiated because we were taking teams with no scholarships and playing schools in our conference that were giving 45 and 50 full scholarships. Although they (the team) made a pretty good show ing, our alumni were unhappy. I came in '56 on a limited basis. "I think the school actually gave us in 1956 $6,000. This was matched by individuals. These were needed scholarships. INCREASED AID "Well, we found out again that we couldn't compete, and so about 5 years ago, a committee of stu dents, faculty and administration reviewed the program. I frankly thought that we were probably going to give up intercollegiate athletics. It looked that way. Instead they came back and said we want to increase our scholar ship aid and stay in the con ference. "Li that time until right now you can see the results. We went to the Nationals three limes in basketball; we went to the Na tionals in baseball. They were the best teams we had. We were then able to compete. "Now, we had agreed that we would look back over the pro gram after about four or five years. At Pinehurst we asked, 'ls this what Guilford College TEAM THE GUILFORDIAN wants?' .Our coaches are doing what they've been empanelled to do. So now we are saying, 'ls this what you want?' You can look now at non-subsidation, limited, need, and at what every body elsp in the conference is doing and decide." Law School Testing Schedule Announced The Law School Admission Test, required by most American law schools, will be administered at 250 centers throughout the na tion on November 8, 1969; Feb ruary 14, 1970; April 11, 1970; and July 25, 1970. Educational Testing Service, which administers the test, ad vises candidates to make sep arate application to each law school of their choice and to as certain from each whether it re quires the Law School Admission Test. Since many law schools Easy Riders' Trip A Little Bumpy (CPS)--One who finds peace pondering the hum of a stereo, the emptiness of a pointless in terruption or the living, breath ing, phantasmagoric quality of trees and flowers while on drugs, will identify with the film "Easy Rider." The marijuana and acid scenes are among the most honest to be depicted in a commercially-dis tributed motion picture. There are the familiar disoriented, ab surd conversations, fickle mood changes from paranoia to trust and back again, dreamy smiles, searching eyes, and interludes of quiet meditation. The camera work apporxi mates the vision of one who is stony, focusing in a peacock frill of blurry colors upon a solitary object--a white blossom, the glowing wall of a cliff, the carv ed figure of Jesus on a cross, etc.--then shifting suddenly to another object, another scene. At one instant, the two main characters, Peter Fonda and Leunis Hopper, are bedding down foi the night in a dark hollow of trees, crickets chirping in the backgiound; at the next, a blaze of white sunlight blinds the aud ience and the two are zooming on their motorcycles across the Golden Gate Bridge to the pound ing beat of Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild." MUSIC EXCELLENT The music is excellent, with major groups such as the Byrds and the Jimi Hendrix Experience providing the accompaniment throughout. "Easy Rider" is more, though, than a mere glorification of the "big vroom and the narcotic high" as a reviewer for the Christian Science Monitor wrote. It has a message. If the unforgettable vividness of the sights and sounds pro duces in one a "high" or general feeling of euphoria, the plot causes a hard crash, for it first offers exposure to all thai is good about being free only to leave one's psyche bruised and battered by the roadside at the end because, man, though it's your life, you can't really do what you want. Fonda, who wears a jacket and helmet bearing designs of the American flag and is known as Captain America, and Hopper, Guilford student Pat McSwaim models a striped lounging suit at the Dashiki Fashion Show last Wednesday in the Union Lounge. select their freshman classes in the spring precedingentrance. candidates for admission are ad vised to take either the Novem ber or the February test. The morning session of the test measures the ability to think logically. The afternoon session includes measures of writing who resembles a freaky Davy Crockett, are kind of like hip Ulysses' pursuing an odyssey of discovery in modern-day United States after making a financial killing from smuggling drugs. RIDE THROUGHOUT COUNTRY They ride by red rock can yons, open fields and scores of back country hamlets, smoke grass with a hitchhiker in a cave, pass the joint at a mid west commune, frollick nude in a mountain pond with commune chicks--in short, partake with out remorse of the good life unfettered by jobs, homes, per manent relationships, etc. All the while, there are mount ing signs that the travelers are out on a dangerous limb defy ing fate. Innkeepers won't give them shelter, they are arrest ed for innocently clowning on their cycles in a town parade, stares are hostile and the voices they hear are viciously abusive and accented with hate. The U. S. is being tested, see. It is a Pepperland where two longhair honchos on doodaded-up bikes can remain alive and well and find true happiness, or are there too many Blue Meanies? F00d... Friends... ...Fun fVm better^^^ Coke m\ Page 5 ability and general background. A bulletin of information and registration should be obtained from the dean of the University school of law and mailed with the requisite fee to the Educational Testing Service at least three weeks before the desired test administration date. How they married - without minister He stood with her in an ex pecting silence. His hand then reached for hers, and they said in turn, "... I take thee . . ." No organ pealed forth, no minister s|>oke. But, in tlie regathered quiet, one who had come to witness rose, and spoke of fidelity and responsibility and the love that gives life. And though a traditional cere mony seemed to lie missing, the two became one in God's presence, which alone makes any marriage sacred. The bride was lovely... even in a simple gown. The wedding required no cere monials, no formal blessing. For to Quakers a ritual or person who intercedes be tween man and his God is unnecessary. No one day of the week is holier than any other. And all acts are equally sacred because we live always in the presence of God. Do you find that the essen tials of your religious life seem to be obscured? Could an ap proach without dogma or for mula be a sensible one for you? If so, we have some free and quite readable leaflets which we'll gladly send. 1 Friends General Conference | I 1520 Race St.. Dept. No. 000 | I Philadelphia, Pa. 19102 j Please send □ tree literature I j [2 location of nearest Friends | I Meeting House I understand j I no one will call I I I I j : | ! TRIENDS GENE j | CONFERENCE ] I I FRIENDSHIP MEETING Moon Room At 11 Each Sundav
The Guilfordian (Greensboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1969, edition 1
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