THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1975 frn T ^ ^ Lin Thompson The Lance Vanessa Hdldsworth Mick Masel Rowe Campbell Managing Editor Sports Editor Business Manager Nanci Boggs Mark Powell Susan Bainbridge Circulation Manager Advertising Manager Art/Graphics Clay Hamilton Suzanne Hogg Michael Greene Myra McGinnis Dorothy Fillmwe Rufus Poole Kathy Lunsford Terri Clark Staff Tran Brown Kim McRae Tony Ridings C.O. I^pann Lanie Noblitt Cdeste Tillson Lisa Tillson Dr. W.J. Loftus Billy Parker Advisor Letters . . Editorial Come Home, Gerry Ford Gerald Ford should stay at home. Two attempts on his life in as many weeks are reason enough. Besides that, political junketing doesn’t work. The principal rationale for these excursions is that they keep the President in touch with his people, but they don’t. Speeches before carefully selected audiences, mass rallies and airport press conferences are no way to find out what people think or to communicate with them en masse. Television offers a larger and safer forum. Hugh Sidey, Time magazine’s president-watcher, has written that “since the 1960s, presidential politicking has largely been for the enjoyment of the Presidents. They get to use their air planes and helicopters more than ever. Tliey love those machines and the sense of authority they bring. At 37,000 ft. or out in the unruffled spaces of Winner, S.Dak., the world is blissfully manageable. Adultation from masses of people ac tually changes their psyche. President - watchers have seen the cheeks of Johnson and Nixon tone from gray to pink as the strains of “Hail to The Chief” and the cheers of the crowd washed over them. “That kind of campaign is basically a mindless operation - thus an escape from real work.No decisions are required, no memos need be digested, no concentration is necessary. A President can roll effortlessly from place, to place mount! ng the same old baloney. There is sometimes a kind of sensual gratification from handshaking, being pressed by crowds, waving arms and slapping backs.... “...The amount of time and energy required for study and analysis of the array of problems now before the President precludes the old minstrel style of politics.” . It is time to park the jets. People would rather vote for a working President than a traveling one. Surface Appointed to Head CUB Jerry Surface, a 1975 St. An drews alumnus, the 1975-76 director of the College Union. In addition to being residence director of Winston Salem Hall, Surface advises the College Union Board and organizes the moithly calen dar as part of his Union duties. He said his job mainly relies on communicating and working with student suggestions. Surface wants to have more activities in the Cdlege Unirai Building; the bridge and chess dubs are two examples which are already underway. He also said that all posters going on Collie Unirai boards should be initialed by him, to avoid the dutter and disor der that characterized last Dear Editor; I write these words willi the “the deepest concern. Has anybody seen Nancy SuUivan or Phil Bradley? What d Jeff Gross? Has anyone nrticed the mysterious Hood stains on the i»cnic tables by the sden- ce building? Where is the St. Andrews rowboat? And the sailboat? Are the direds of metal and fiberglass that have washed ashore by the spillway the only remnants? Of the college fleet? Why has fishing been so poor lately? It is with a careful reviewing of all the evidence that I come to a condusion. There is a 25-foot great white shark in Lake Ansley C. Moore. Something needs to be done immediately. Let’s not let tragedy strike here, too. What bothers me is-why has the Administration been so hush-Jiush about the whole af fair? Are they trying to keep admissions up instead of saving lives? Meanwhile, DON’T SWIM IN THE LAKE! THE LIFE YOU SAVE COULD BE YOUR OWN! Where is Sam Happy Dog ? Sincerely, Peter Benchley Dear Lin: October, 15 marks the date on which the suite telephones will be removed. As this will constitute a change from the present system I should be most appreciative if you would help publicize the date of the change-over. We are anxious to minimize the con fusion as much as possible. As the President has ex- plained, the new system is more dosely parallel to that in use at other colleges and universities where studens a As the President has ex- plained, the new system is more dosely parallel to that in use at other colleges and universities where students are allowed to have private telephones if so desired. Anyone here wishing to have a private telephone installed should go down to the Southern Bell offices on Cronly Street as soon as possible and make the ap propriate application. They are expecting our students. I would also ask that as studen ts have telephones installed they let us in Student Per sonnel Services know their numbers that we may com municate th^ to the various offices on campus. Finally I wish to thank you for whatever you can do to assist in making this tran sition as smooth as possible. You might wish to point out that this new system relieves students from any depen dency on the hours during which the switch-board operates, as folks will have thdr own telephones. Fur thermore, this makes possible direct dialing of long distance calls, something which will produce a 30% saving per call for our students. Thanking you for your at tention, I am. Sincerely yours, Malcolm C. Doubles Dean of Students To the Editor: Your comments on the Saltire were justified in one respect. Mistakes in names such as substitution d Car’ twright for Crawford is pretty blatant and lacking in good taste. But the reasons for error far outweigh the com. {daints a persrai could make. It seems that unlike previous years, the Student Association government failed to appoint a Saltire craimiittee in the spring. As a mattffl- of fact, it was not until near graduation that a three- man committee was ap pointed to work on it that summer. Of those three only one got any information on what exactly was supposed to be done. This information consisted of a five minute talk with (Elx-Saltire chairman) Susan Hamill, who kept saying, “It’s real simple.” That committee began working during the first sum mer sessirai when nobody was hhre to ask about who was wiiat. The committee never really even met. About three days after the printer had begun to get angry the whole kaboodle was abandoned in frrait of Student Personnel. Dean Doubles then, doing the liest he possibly could (having no assistance) saved the Saltire from being non existent this year. So in our (pinion it is better to have a few errors and a Saltire than no Saltire at all. Sincerely, The Salitre Committee Steve (i)hasson Clay Hamilton Ridiard Hudson On The Other Hand: Lin Thompson year’s boards. One of Surface’s current projects is restoring Farrago as a sodal center. He and Dave Niblock are wra-king together in an rffort to et Farrago open at least three weeks a month. Surface is also looking into organizing parties better so they won’t be the usual “beer bust muck.” “What I need most is suggestirais,” Surface said. “I would like to plan more ac tivities in the collie union but I need ideas from people who are willing to par ticipate.” Past President of Winston Salem, Surface was a literature major and plans to enter graduate school next year. This repra’ter has received a number of remarks about last week’s column on typographical errors in The Saltire, Most have been either verbal congratulations (“Nice Column, Jim!”) or comments on the number of typos in the artide itself. Typos are a weekly IM-oblem with which we cope with varying degrees of suc cess. Try as we do to catdi them, they still manage to slip by-usually in em barrassing places-sudi as in last week’s column, or in a letter to the editor last spring on typos. In it the word “errra-”, of all things, was spelled incorrectly. One of the informal fallacies of reasoning taught by Dick Prust in his Intro to Logic class is the cir cumstantial argument, in which a person’s argiunent is discredited because of some activity or involvement one might expect to cdor his judgment. Fra- example: a textile manufacturer’s argument for hi^er taniffs on imported cloth bdng rejected by his listeners on the groun ds that he would naturally favor high tariffs, "me exam ple used by dever Dick rai a recent test drew on in teresting line from my editorial on tdephone service two weeks ago and my efforts to secure a Ugger budget for - THE LANCE The test problen: “‘Inconvenience or no, though, mraiey has to be saved somewhere and the student body would be well advised to accept the fact...’” “Pretty dubious reasoning, coming from THE LANCE editor whose budget was “in creased” this year!” Your point, Dick. Word has it St. Andrews’ circulation librarian, Mrs. June Chay, is getting ready to q>en a store in the Brooks Shoppng Center in town. She’d be dealinng in wines, cheeses, and sudi things. No word on wtaat the place will be called, though. Suggestions: CJiay’s Cheese; or , taking a French approadi, Chez Oiay; or, more informally, Chay’s Lounge. No charge for those, Mrs. C.-use them as you like. Finally, “The Lance” hereby casts its endorsement in the ring for the re appointment of Bob Haley to the Student Assodation Food Committee. The re appointment, which as the support of such diverse groups as Citizens for Bob, Atty. Gen. Bill Wilmot, and Students for Eating (see photograph) comes up for Cabinet Consideration this week. RETLRN SPONSORED BY 1 I A I | \/ HALhi STUDENTS EATING FOOD COMMITTEE