"Embers" to
Open Fling
With Friday Dance
The Lance
Hootennany Sat.
Afternoon at
S.C. 2:00 P.M.
St. Andrews Presbyterian College
Laurinburg, N. C., Thursday, Nov. 2,1967
Vol. No. 9.
Fall Fling Weekend to Culminate With
Saturday’s Chad and Jeremy Concert
Chad and Jeremy will be big attractions for Fall Fling weekend.
Hungarian Artist Exhibits
The paintings and mosaics
of Christine Balogh, Visiting
Lecturer in the Art Depart
ment at St. Andrews, will be
on exhibit In the Vardell Build
ing until November 22. The
public is cordially invited to
the opening on November 4 at
8;00 p.m.
Christine Balogh was born
in Hungary and received her
first training in art from her
mother, a well-known Hun
garian painter. Her father was
Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court in Hungary before the
second World War, at a time
when Hungary enjoyed a certain
independence.
He was a pioneer in Land Re
form legislation at a time when
the nobility and church owned
most of the land. As a child,
her household was a center
of Intense Intellectual and ar
tistic activity, and she was
stimulated by the atmosphere of
her home.
Her academic training in the
field of art began at an early
age; she graduated from the
School of Graphic Art at the
age of 18. She then began train
ing in the Academy of Fine
Art in Budapest and graduat
ed in 1950, having majored in
oil painting.
During the war years, ac
tivities centered around the
finding of food for their large
family of brothers and sisters.
She and her mother went to
the mountains to work for far
mers, and after some months
would be able to accumulate
a hundred pounds of flour and
corn, and would pull It back to
Budapest on a wooden wagon in
two or three weeks time, de
pending on the condition of the
roads,
At the end of the war, the
communists came to power, and
all intellectuals and profes
sional people were assigned
factory work or imprisoned.
She was given the job of de
signing central heating and air-
conditioning for large build
ings.
She was still employed in this
fashion at the time of the Jun-
garian Revolution in 1956. She
and some of her brothers and
sisters fled to Austria.
From refugee camps, they
managed to get permission to
emigrate to various countries:
>,^1 orife in Germany, one in Aus-
tralia and one in Brazil. She
t ^ was admitted to the Vienna
Academy of Fine Art, and was
supported by Rockefeller Foun-
^ dation Grants.
! She studied fresco and mo-
siac there, and graduated in
1961. Another two-year Ricke-
feller Grant followed to study
Film and Television at the
Vienna Academy Seminar.
During these years and those
that followed, Christine Balogh
took part in numerous exhibits,
and received commissions by
the City of Vienna for numerous
public buildings.
Although most of her mosaic
works are permanent fixtures of
various churches and buildings,
a small number of panels are
enroute from her studio in
Vienna for this exhibit. Should
they be delayed enroute, they
will be represented by repro
ductions.
“Chad and Jeremy are the
sort of musicians that one could
bring home and not have any
trouble with mother, or father,
or Sadie, or Mary, and that’s
good, isn't it?”
As well as being very special,
outspoken, elegant and marvel
ously amusing, Chad and
Jeremy are contemporary
musicians. Chad and Jeremy
aren’t at all true-blue. They
are really quite nonconfor
mists -- they have terribly
strong views on equality and
social services to all classes,
colors, etc. They get very angry
about injustice.
Chad has green eyes and light
tan hair, long but not over his
eyes. He washes it every so
often so adults won't think it’s
dirty.
Jermy is a little slimmer
than Chad. They are both six
feet tall. He has flowing mousey
brown hair and light blue eyes.
Chad and Jeremy are unbe
lievably amusing in a fresh,
open, light sort of way. They
both have natural leanings to
wards humor and they both went
to drama school, spending three
years learning all about the
theater.
In a publisher’s office Chad
wrote the very first hit he ana
Jeremy ever had. It was called
‘ Yester-day’s Gone". It had an
enormous success all over the
world.
Marriage Counselor to Discuss
Sex Education on Sunday
This weekend offers a variety
of happenings ranging from the
Fall Fling dance, concert and
hootenany to an interesting and
different approach to the ap
propriate subject of sex, which
recently has been openly raised
by numerous students.
On Sunday, November 5 there
will be the chance for all to
discuss and question their be
liefs on the subject of sex,
dating, and marriage—pre
valent and important to all St,
Andrews mature adults. The
discussion will be led by a
professional marriage counse
lor, William F. Eastman, Ed,
D., Assistant Professor of Mar
riage Counseling of the Uni
versity of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill.
Dr. Eastman will speak on
"Sex In Context” at various
meetings. At 4:00-5:00 In the
dining alcove Dr. Eastman will
speak to the suite leaders, dorm
presidents, and Resident direc
tors.
An open meeting for all St,
Andrews students in mass will
be held from 8:00-10:00 in the
main lounge of the student cen
ter.
Dr. Eastman is a popular
speaker who deals with the
question of premarital and
marital sex problems in an
honost and forthright way, ac
cording to Dean Grace Over-
holser. He has spoken before
fraternities and dorm groups
and just recently appeared on a
panel at a mental health meet
ing in Greenville, South Caro
lina.
Jeremy, while Chad was pub
lishing and writing, went to work
as an actor. He was in ‘ ‘Ham
let”, “The Miser”, and “A
Man for All Seasons”. In 1964
they gave up what they were
doing and started to sing folk
songs In coffee houses.
Their first record was a hit
and because It did so well in
Amercia, they came over here
to do a lot of TV shows. They
appealed to an audience of all
sorts of ages, because they sur
vived the death of the teenage
rock shows.
Both Chad and Jeremy have
got very quick minds--hardly
anything escapes them. Each
of them acknowledges that he
is a demanding artist and a
severe taskmaster. They say
this is justified because their
careers must be safeguarded.
The Chad and Jeremy Con
cert is Saturday night at 8;30
in the gym.
The Embers, North Caro
lina's leading band from Raleigh
will be here Friday night at
8:00 in the cafeteria. This band
can play anything from soul to
psychodelic. The cost is a dollar
per student.
Mosiac by Christme caioB-'
Grove to Groove
Juicy steaks, lively enter
tainment, and a live band are
features of the bigger and better
"l Orange Grove planned by
Orange Dorm for Saturday, No
vember 11.
This year’s event will be
held at the Brandin’ Iron at
Bennettsville at 7:30 p.m. Cost
; per couple for the event is
$6.50,
The “Rhythm System” will
provide music for dancing. The
menu includes ten-ounce
steaks, baked potato, salad,
beverage and dessert.
Tickets are being sold to
Orange residents through
Sunday and will then go on sale
to the entire campus com
munity, Dr. and Mrs. W D.
White and Mr. and Mrs. Daven
port will be guest chaperones
for the event.
Michael Harrington to Convey
Democratic Revolution of Future
Michael Harrington, chair
man of the board of the League
for Industrial Democracy will
speak in the Laa at 8:00 on
November 7. Harrington’s topic
will be "The Democratic Revo
lution in the Next Twenty
Years."
Mr. Harrington was born in
St. Louis in 1928, graduated
from Holy Cross College in
1947, attended Yale Law School
for one year and received his
Masters Degree at the Univer
sity of Chicago in 1949.
Mr. Harrington is best known
for two books; “The Other
America’ (1962) and “The Ac
cidental Century” (1965). “The
Other America” has been
widely credited with playing a
role in sparking the anti-pover
ty campaign of recent years.
In his prize-winning book, “A
Thousand Days’', Arthur M,
Schlesinger, Jr., wrote that,
“I believe that “The Other
America” helped crystallize
his (President Kennedy’s) de
termination in 1963 to accom
pany the tax cut by a poverty
program.” Kennedy’s action
culminated in President John
son’s declaration of the war on
poverty In 1964,
'D, W. Brogan, the English
scholar, reviewed “The Ac
cidental Century” and said,
“Mr. Harrington is one of the
most effective polemical
writers the United States has
known for a generation,”
‘ ‘The Other America” has been
translated into ten different lan
guages, including Japanese and
Russian, and has been published
in a braile edition.
In 1951 and '52, Mr, Harring
ton was the associate editor of
the “Catholic Worker* .In 1953,
he was organizational secre
tary of the Workers Defense
League. He served as assis
tant to John Cogley in the Fund
for the Republic's Investigation
of blacklisting in the entertain
ment industry during 1954 and
’55, and has been associated
with the Fund, in one way or
another, ever since. As part of
the Fund’s Trade Union pro
ject, Mr, Harrington was co
editor, with Paul Jacons, of
“Labor in a Free Society”
and author of “The Retail
Clerks” (1963).
In 1964, Mr. Harrington ser
ved as a consultant to Sargent
Shrlver in the war on poverty
and was active in the Citizens’
Crusade Against Poverty as a
founding member. Heisamem-
MICHAEL HARRINGTON
ber of the Board and special
consultant to the A. Philip Ran
dolph Institute and has been
active in the civil rights move
ment for over a decade.
Mr. Harrington received the
Hillman Foundation and George
Polk Awards in 1963, the Wash
ington Newspaper Guild Award
in 1964 and was granted the
honorary degree of Doctor of
Humane Letters by Bard Col
lege in 1966.
New Equipment Aids
Scientific Research
Scientific research here at
St. Andrews got a shot in the arm
recently with the addition of an
advanced model Perkln-Elmer
Infra-red Spectrophotometer.
The gifts made it possible for
the St. Andrews research pro
gram to leap ahead some two
years, spokesman for the col
lege chemistry department
pointed out.
‘ ‘ This spectrophoto meter
will enable us to move into
the highest levels of organic
research,” Dr. Delta Gier,
Chairman of the Science Di
vision said, “and will be of
great value particularly to ad
vanced research students and
our staff.”
Dr. Barnes (Donald) will use
the instrument for molecular
structure and kinetics studies
in his physical chemistry
courses while Mrs. Barnes will
use it in instrumentation in her
analytical sections of organic
chemistry.
Graduates of the College of
Wooster in Wooster, Ohio, the
Barnes both received Ph,D’s.
at Florida State University.