v-n-Proflt Organization V. S. POSTAGE PAID ' j#orinl>»u«> N. PMinit Niunbfti- S THE LANCE Ot'tlCIAL PUBLICATION OF THE STUDENl' liuDY OF ST. ANDREWS VOL. 8. No. 8. ►’RESBYTERIAN COLLEGE ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTEKIAN COLLEGE. LAURINBURG, N. C. THURSDAY, OCT. 31, 1968 County Committee Pushes Liquor Bid The Scotland County Citizens’ Committee for Legal Control voted unanimously on Monday to prepare and pass a petition that will give the voters of Scotland County the right to decide If they want the sale of liquor and beer In their county brought to a vote. The petition Includes the Introduction of ABC stores and the sale of beer into the county. The right of on premises consumption of beer ms discussed and unanimously llsmlssed as an unwise addition :o the petition since members of the committee had received many negative opinions about this possible aim of the peti tion, The sale of wine was also discussed and dismissed. J. C. Tyson, chairman, em phasized that this petition will serve as the means whereby the members of the county can de cide whether they want to bring the legal sale of alcoholic beverages to a vote. State law requires that the petitions con tain signatures of 25% of the number of people who cast bal lots 1 n the last gubernatorial election. The Committee plans to pass the petitions through out the coming weekend and on Election Day, November 5, at all the polling boxes in the county. When the petitions are turned in the County Com missioners Office, they be come public property of the county. Otherwise, they will not be published. As for the legal sale of liquor and beer in North Carolina, the law states that a person must be eighteen to purchase beer, twenty-one to purchase liquor. Those who voted to pass the petition as such were, William Winn, Jerry Peele, J. C. Tyson, Buddy McCarter, Joe Junod, Jerry Riggins, Bill Riggins, J. R. Blackwell and S. W. Blackwelder. SPEAKING AT CAMP MONRQE Tuesday morning as part of “Time Out", Bill Wilson discussed the college radical’s views toward college. (Staff Photo by McCrea) Students, Faculty Speak On St. Andrews MARGARET OFFTERDINGEP •‘St. Andrews is oeginning to find its identity ... As a liberal arts college it seeks to provide both breadth and depth by balancing a strong major pro gram with a unique four-year integrated general education program emphasizing concepts and open-ended scholarly re- Siegal To Exhibit Works, Lecture In Venezula On Exchange Program Mr. Sidney Siegal, Assistant Professor of Art at St. Andrews, has been invited by the U. S, State Department to lecture and exhibit his paintings at El Centro Venezolano-Amerlcano In Caracas, Venezuela. Mr. Siegal’s invitation Is jointly sponsored by the governments of Venezuela and the United States as part of a continuous Intercultural exchange pro- sram. Thirty-five of Mr. Siegal’s oils and watercolors, spanning the period 1956-1966, will be ex hibited at El Centro from Nov ember 17 through December 2, 1968. In addition to attending the opening of this exhibition, Mr. Siegal will deliver two ad dresses at El Centro during the period of his stay in Caracas. The first lecture is entitled "Play and Paradox: A Com mentary on Contemporary Art.” In this lecture he will expli cate his concepts of playfulness as an essential condition for creativity manifested in many of his idioms of contemporary art. This will be connected witji his idea of paradox, or "the visual surprise resulting from the discrepancy between our be liefs and our experiences,” which he regards as being cen tral to many modern works of art. His second address, “Ad vice to Young Painters,” will be presented in the form of a “hap pening”. In addition to the one-man ex hibitions in Caracas, two draw ings by Siegal are included In the 4th Annual Piedmont Graphics Exhibition at the Mint Museum, Charlotte, N. C. October 27 through November 24. During the period of their stay In Venezuela, November 17- December 1, the Slegals plan ARTIST SIEGAL to visit Angel Falls which is lo cated 450 miles southeast of Caracas at the headwaters of the Rio Churun, a tributary of the Orinoco River. It is a topical rainforest area, “being everything a jungle should be,’* to quite Mr. Siegal who is a devotee of the world’s jungles, having voyaged through the jungles of the Philippines, and rainforest areas in the Cari bbean. The cataracts comprising Angel Falls are named In honor 5f Jimmy Angel, an American pilot who crashed near the falls in 1937 while searching for gold and were subsequently dis covered by him during his re turn journey back to civiliza tion. Angel Falls are the highest waterfalls in the world, plunging down 3,212 feet from the fact of Devil Mountain, or Auyan- Tepul, in local Indian dialect. Until several years ago only a 'few dozen Americans and Europeans had ever seen Angel Falls. An air service now links this remote spot, replete with a new camping area, with the out side world. Formerly unknown native Indian tribesmen of this region, who only a few years ago had never seen a Caucasian, are now In mutual contact. Mr, Siegal points out that some of ihese Indian groups are head- aunters, and while some have renounced this pursuit, others may be encouraged to continue this curious activity as a result of the Increased commercial demand for shruken heads on the American market. Mr. Siegal hopes that only his work will find its way to commercial markets. search. In this way it hopes that its graduates can be liberated from narrowness and prejudice of view, liberated to participate in life as free and knowledgeabfe human beings, and liberated to be radically open to an emerg ing and challenging future”. So emphasized Dr. Tyler Miller speaking on “What Is the purpose of St. Andrews as a Liberal Arts College” at Time- Out-‘68, the student govern ment retreat held on October 29 at Camp Monroe. First, emphasizing St. Andrews as a liberal arts col lege, Dr. Miller singled out the Christianity and Culture core program and the new science programs. He also said that, at St. Andrews, “an education is not liberal unless it recog nizes the great pi»bllc issues of the day”. Dr. Miller felt that “the habits if learning to serve one for a lifetime must in the final analysis Involve self-dis cipline and Inner motivation”. St. Andrews as a community is seen as a totally Involved in a “shared search for what Is good, what Is true and what is beautiful”. He also noted that dormitory life should con tribute to this totality and not just be a “hotel business”. Dr. Miller noted the problem of “en loco parentis” at St. Andrews, ‘St. Andrews recognizes that ;he design of undergraduate life can no longer enclose and pro tect students as It did in the past”. As a small college. Dr. Miller felt that St. Andrews should fix the maximum size at 1200 stu dents—an “economically feasi ble operating size” and one that allows “an atmosphere of open and free inquiry”. In spite of Its smallness, St. Andrews can “continue in Its efforts to make the world its campus”. Dr. Miller also sees St, Andrews as a free Christian college. In such a role, St. Andrews “does not tell our stu dents or faculty what to believe or that they must-, believe, in “Ither God or Jesus Christ. We do expect them, however, to examine critically their basic beliefs about the meaning and value of life In an atiemyi to arrive at a position of their own that has been and is continually examined and critically af firmed.” Such St. Andrews graduates should contiue in this sense of open and free inquiry in order to be constructive and concerned critics of the Church. As a Presbyterian College, St. Andrews should continue to recruit members of the Synod of North Carolina, who is the founder and owner of the col lege. However, students should also be recruited from the en tire Atlantic Seaboard in order to become a nationally recog nized model of what it means to be a quality Christian col lege. Dr. Miller also feels that, as a bold and ongoing experi ment In Christian higher ed ucation, St. Andrews “is a con tinuing experiment in trying to find out what a free Christian liberal arts college is and should be”. Summing his concept of the atmosphere at St. Andrews into three phrases. Dr. Miller feels that the college is “in tellectually exciting; bold, emergent, innovative; and in dividual centered”. Reaction to Dr. Miller’s talk involved where St. Andrews should go from here. Dan Beerman felt that student government, hung-up on only being here for four years, has essentially neglected looking at the future picture of St. Andrews. The student leaders are too much Involved in “sand box politics”. Bill Wilson sees St. Andrews as a “ghetto” which needs to more community (Laurinburg) Involvement—a creation of ten sion within the community. He suggested that students be given course credit for work In the Laurinburg community. Commenting on the part of racism in the college com munity, Todd Davis presented a narrative, emphasizing the white students’ lack of empathy. He felt that a new outlook was needed by the entire college.