Newspapers / St. Andrews University Student … / Oct. 30, 1975, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE LANCE, OCTOBER 30,1975 iiiiiiytiiiiiiiiiHHiiiiiiininiiiiiinniiinnmm 4 H SA Review To Have Benefit R. Buckminster Fuller...Guy Owen...Bob Packwood...Sam J. Ervin, Jr....Paul Green...Ron Bayes...Yukio Mishima....Ch arlene Whisnant...Hueh Scott-.Carolyn Kizer..Charles W. Joyner...Ann Deagon...Mark Hatfield...Re ynolds Price...Ovid W. Pier ce. Some are known in ternationally, some nationally, others largely in the southeast; but the unique characteristic that makes them all part of a new and vital literary family is that each has contributed to ST. ANDREWS REVIEW, a twice-yearly magazine of the arts and humanities published at St. Andrews College, Laurinburg, NotUi Carolina. Achieving with the first issue in the fall of 1970 a place in the ranks of important literary magazines in this country, the REIVIEW is now suffering from economic woes shared by many worthy publications printed on the campuses of small in dependent ccflleges. From its inception the magazine has received more material than could possibly be handled in one issue. Ten have been published and the manuscrip ts continue to arrive. Feeling a responsibility to provide a forum for new writers as well as those who are established, and expressing a strong sen timent to continue publishing a magazine which has received widespread acclaim in literary circles and some ten or more competitive cash awards, the editors have tur ned to the community within which St. Andrews thrives for help with current fundings. Under the direction of managing editor Malcolm C. Doubles, Dean of Students and Associate Professor of Religion at St. Andrews, and executive editor Ronald H. Bayes, Writer-in-Residence at the institution, a citizens gron) chaired by Miss Mary Jane McCoy, Laurinburg educator, has made arrangements for a ST. AN DREWS REVIEW Benefit to be held at 8 pjn. on Friday, November 6, in Avinger Auditorium on the College campus. Arrangements for the benefit on the magazine’s hone campus are being made by a citizens committee working with the editors. Chaired Miss Mary Jane McCoy, the committee’s other members were Mrs. R^inald McVicker, Mrs. Clarence Styron, Mrs. Jonelle Gier, and Mrs. Herbert Horn. Tickets priced at $6 for individuals and $10 for two perswis will be on sale at various locations in Laurinburg and mail through the Office of Student Personnel Services, St. Andrews College, Laurin burg, NC. The benefit program will feature poetry readii^s and music by students from the Collie’s music department. The readers participating will be Carolyn Kizer," former Director of the Literary Program for the National En dowment for the Arts and author of “Midnight Way My Cry;” Judith Johnson Sher- win, currently Chairperson for the National Academy of Poets and winner of the Yale Younger Poet’s Prize for her book “Uranium;” Daphne Athas, whose novel “Entering Ephesus” placed on “Time’s” top-ten novels of 1973 list and whose article “Gods, God desses and Women Writers” appears as the lead in the issue of ST. ANDREWS REVIEW now in press; and E. Waverly Land, St. An drews alumnus and author of “Painful Entry.” Interest in the REVIEW does not stop at the doorstep of St. Andrews. Financial sup port for the magazine will be sought at four other benefits which will be held in New York aty at St. Marks Chur ch in Manhattan (Judith Johnson Sherwin-Coordinato- r); in Washington, D.C. (Carolyn Kizer-Coordinator); in Charlotte, NC (Charlene Whisnant-Coordinator); and m Chapel Hill, NC (Daphne Athas-Coordinator). As an indication of her siq)- port, Marion Cannon, who recently spent several days as poet-in-residence on the St. Andrews Campus as naH the college’s Common Ex perience Program, made an initial contribution of $250 to the Laurinburg benrfit. Mrs. Cannon, whose first volume of poetry, “Another light,” was published when she was 69 years old, has also been published in “Esquire” and "Southern Poetry Review.” 1 Already during its brief life (fall 1970 through summer 1975), the REVIEW has made literary history. The first issue, now a collector’s item, printed a never-before published work by Ezra Pound, thus becoming in strumental in the current “Pound Revival,” a high point in U.S. literary circles. Issue number two carried first printing of a substantial portion of Buckminster Fuller’s “A Metaphysical Mosiac”. Work by four U.S. Senators has appeared, in cluding a portion of Soiator Sam Ervin’s Speech to John Erlichman during the Senate Select Committee’s Watergate Hearings; and Ovid Pierce, well known Nor th Carolina author, diose this journal to publish his speedi to the North Carolina writers’ Conference in 1974. Betty Leighton of the Win- ston-Salem Journal states in her current review of the latest issue (compared with magazines published at the University of North Carolina and at Mars Hill College) “Although half its usual size this time, ST. ANDREWS REVIEW is (rf high quality and is the best balanced of the three. Despite the size, you’ll get the most for your money with this one. There ar essays (Ezra Pound’s “Oh. structivity,” Ovid Pierce’s “Currents and Place”....an(i 18 pages of the best poetry being published at this time." It is evident that a vital am important forum, well- balanced among creative writing, essays, studies, and graphics exists in the ST. AN DREWS REVIEW. Althougli Southern emjiiasis continues, the Dublication has reached | into all corners of the country and touched literary drcle abroad. The editors - first Ronald H. Bayes; thei Charles W. Joyner, and I presently Malcolm C. Doub - have every reason to courage friends of the I REVIEW to insure its con-1 tinued publication and suc cess. THE RED LION Welcomes Back The Students Of St. Andrews Now Open In The College Union NC Bicentennial ContestAnnounced A program for student initiated Bicentennial Projec ts has been announced by the Youth Involvement Office of the N.C. Department of Ad ministration. In 1967 the North Carolina Bicentennial (NCB) was created by the State b^istet-ure te^lan-wd dovclop programs for the celebration of the American Revolution in the State. Within the themes of Heritage, Horizons and Festivals, the NCB en courages the active in volvement of young people in the carrying out of bicen tennial goals. “Student Projects for the Bbi centennial Celebration” offers post-secondary education students the op portunity to create their own projects within the framewOTk of the Festivals theme. This theme involves an expanded effort to make North Carolinians more aware of the traditions, the culture, the hospitality and the character of the State and ALL THE LATEST MAGAZINES WILL’S NEWS STAND 109 McKAY ST. DOWNTOWN its people through the arts, education, travel, exhibits, fairs, crafts and festivals. This program is sponsored by the North Carolina Bicent- nnial, the National Bicen tennial Internship Office Project Criteria Student Bicentennial Projects should: "Be imaginative and feasible; -Meet a public need; -Be related to sane aspect of Nffl-th Carolina’s cultural heritage; -Be related to the Festivals activities of the NCB; -Have local community support; and -Be sanctioned as learning. Projects can also demon strate they will encourage secondary student populations to contribute to public needs and their own learning. Post-secondary students at senior colleges and univer sities in the state are eligible to apply. The NCIO staff is available to provide technical assistance i it is needed. They can be reached at (919) 82^966. November 14, 1975 is the deadline for all appliiations and notice of accejrtance will be made by December 8, 1975. The earliest possible project initiation date is January 1, 1976. All projects must be completed by May 31. 1976. At least 15 students will be supported. Applicants will contract with the NCIO, mutually agreeing on . objectives, beginning and en ding dates, reimbursement schedules and time period. An individual student receive no more than $1,®® for a total project grant, an no team of students ^ receive more than $2, ■ When the agreement is signed, 50% of the fun^ w be released. Payment for balance will be negot with at least 10% of the project grant held bad up® the successful comple^'® the project. JERRY’S Delicatessen & Country Store A Wide Assortment of Practically Everything Highway 4Q1 South
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Oct. 30, 1975, edition 1
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