PAGE TWO THE LANCE THE LANCE St. Andrews Presbyterian College Laurinburg, N. C. 28352 . Staff Editor-in-Chief Jim Pope Associate Editor - Sara Lee Associate Editor Charlie Pratt Sports Editor - Mike Keech Layout Manager Tom Harbert Business Manager -— - Chip Wright Assistant Business Manager Claire Haines Advisor Mr. Fowler Dugger Subscription Rates $3.00 per Semester Advertising Rates $ .90 per column inch IBlessings. . .Pope Once again the tubby radical takes pen in hand and creates his action-packed political platform which Is certain to make amends for my earth-shattering column of three weeks ago. I offer to you, the students of St. Andrews, an alternative known as the Regressive Coalition. Our demands are as follows: 1. All dorms will be closed permanently. No longer will members of the opposite sex be allowed In the dorm rooms. 2. The women’s dorms will l>e locked each evening at 9 p.m. This Is to insure against any social relations between males and females and will emphasize the reason people are In college--to learn. 3. All personnel In the Student Affairs Office will l>e dis missed and replaced by retired high school English teachers of the unmarried variety. 4. Chapel will be required each morning at 7 o’clock so that students will be inspired for the rest of the day. 5. No professors will be allowed to live in the dorms. Any retired high school English teachers left over from the Stu dent Affairs Office applications will fill in as residence direc tors. 6. New dorm rules will be Implemented. a. There will be no card-playing allowed. b. There will be no drinking allowed. The Demon Llkker is the major cause of corruption on this campus. c. Study hall/quiet hours will be every day from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. All students must observe these. d. Men and women both will be required to sign in and out with the residence director. No one else will have the power to release students from the dorms. e. Late permission will not be given to anyone for any rea son. 7. The Student Government will have to be revamped. a. The President will merely be a figurehead who ad dresses the freshmen In the Fall and has his picture in the Student Handbook. Candidates for this office will need no plat form; they just have to be popular. b. The Senators will have to be popular, but obviously not popular enough to be President. They will make rules, but they will have no power; the Senate just needs something to do. By accepting this platform, we will regress, right back to where many want us--in high school. **♦ *** *♦* Obviously these demands are ridiculous and are meant only as satire on the way many people see the college student today. I make this .. because in the past much of my writing has been taken seriously, and Lord knows I don’t mean what I say here. What I want to say Is, each and every student here has a com mitment to himself and to St. Andrews and that Is to vote. If you don’t vote keep your mouth shut next year if you don’t like what is happening. BULLFEATHERS by Cline hodson BULLFEATHERS Oo VOU THln/u- ST-eP Letters to the Editor To the Editor of the Lance: The Highland Players an nounced in early fall the dates of their productions. So, the College Union Board was well aware of this scheduling far In advance, but still they have set the New York Rock and Roll Concert Tour The St. Andrews College Choir, under the direction of Thomas Somerville, will begin their annual sprlngtour on Wed nesday, March 18. Theeightday tour will cover three states. The Choir Is composed of thirty-eight students represen ting seven states and a variety of majors in the liberal arts, fine arts, sciences and music. They will tour Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina by chartered bus, singing in such cities as Savannah, Georgia, Charleston and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and Wilming ton, New Bern, and Havelock on the North Carolina coast. Althou^ the choir tours pri marily to present fine choral music to schools and churches, time is always available for sl^t-seelng. Special time will be given this year to tour Char leston during its tricentennial celebration. The St. Andrews College Choir’s program this year fea tures Brahm’s motet “Where fore Hath The Light Been Granted”. Four twentieth cen tury sacred compositions are also to be sung, IncludlngChar- les Ives’ setting of Psalm 67 and a jazz motet by Hein Wemer Zlmmermann. The St. Andrews Chamber Singers will appear on the program singing three Renaissance works, and the Choir will conclude with a group of spirituals, a Scottish song, and a hymn to peace ar ranged by Professor Somer ville. The Choir will sing three con certs in the Laurinburg area at the conclusion of the tour. They will appear in the Teaching Au ditorium on the St. Andrews campus at 8:00 p.m. on Wednes day, April 1, at the Village Chapel In Pinehurst at4:00p.m. on Sunday, April 5, and at the First Baptist Church in Laurin burg at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, April 5. Recital The School of Music at St. Andrews Presbyterian College will present Judy Dianne White in her senior organ recital at the FirstBaptlstChurchofLau- rinburg on Friday, March 13, at 8:00 p.m. Miss White, who is complet ing requirements for the Bache lor of Music degree with a ma jor in church music, organ em phasis, is a native of Concord, North Carolina. She is a stu dent of John Williams, associate professor of organ in the School of Music. Her activities at St. Andrews have included meml bership in the St. Andrews Col lege Choir and the St. Andrews Honor Societv fVIiss White’s program wiU include ‘‘Grand Jeu’’ by du Mage, “Elevation Tierce en Taille” by Couperin, “Les Cloches” by Le Begue, “Noel en Trio et en Dialogue” by d'Aquin, J. S. Bach’s “Prelude and Fugue in A minor” and Mo zart’s “Fantasy in F minor,” “No. 2, K. 608”. The recital is open to the public free of charge. A recep tion for Miss White will beheld at the Plantation house immedl- iately following the recital. Ensemble concert for this Sa turday night. It is rather un fair to the student body to have two main events planned for the same week-end. Many of the students work ing with the Highland Players’ current production of “The Three Sisters” would like to attend the concert, but are now unable to do so. The concert is a special event and with the many open week-ends here, it would have been wiser to have scheduled this group for an open time. Sincerely, Dennis Richards, President The Highland Players To the Editor of the Lance: Many people around the coun try have observed in the past five months a change in at titude, on the part of college students, toward the United State’s policy in Vietnam. Some polls report that over seventy percent of the present college population agrees in principle with President Nixon’s policy. Yet what exactly is the adminis tration’s policy? Why does the Vice-President reserve his bitterest tirades for men like Senator Fullbrlght and other opponents of the Vietnam war? If the Nixon Administration were really moving towards an end to the war, there would be no need to attack its opponents so ferociously. When Mr. Ag- new offers to swap “the whole damn zoo” of dissident youth for one platoon of the splendid young men he saw in Vietnam, the best explanation is that the Administration does not in fact contemplate ending the war, but rather trying to make it poli tically tolerable. When the meaning of this becomes under stood on the campus and the draft calls go all the way to “good old safe” three hundred and sixty five, I don’t know whether Mr. Nixon’s “policy” will continue to be seen as that of a “peace maker.” David E. Betts Class of 1969 THURSDAY, MARCH 12 Programs For Student Rule /T BY CHARLES PRATT Student government this year I is moving more into the dir.; I tlon of attempts-realisti'j idealistic or whatever-to ob 1 tain an equal voice for studenki with faculty and adminisijj I tlon. The issues that candidates! are dealing with are no loi to restricted provincial per I sonal rights alone; they with moral issues and free'} doms of the individual both Ij I side and outside the St. An-i drews community. The; proaches vary somewhat, bntj the attempts at communication! are real, and show promise for! getting results. One approach is through t use of consolidated pohtlcall parties. This is an important! advent for student organiza-| tions because of its inherent! strength in numbers and per-! suasion. Through a unified front! there is a hope that communi cation will come with faculty I and administration throughuai-I fled student backing. Another equally importaal| approach to student govern-! ment is to form a united stu-! dent-faculty. It depends on the I workability and rapport be-1 tween student leaders and stu-1 dents, and between student 1„ ders and faculty and admlnis-l tratlon. The underlying assumptions] for each of these approaches Is I that students have the right I and the ability to operate In] conjunction with the heads of| (Continued to Page 3) Louis Swanson for President of t!ie Student Association Paid Political Advertisement! ■V ■V ■ BEADS ; Pocket”' IBooKS (> SLIPS I C A-R O L> S £ I— e> a f\ if2-o i_ I S V .