Page 2 MAROON AND gold Dedicated to the best Interests of EIon College and its students and faculty, the Maroon and Gold is pub lished weekly during the college year wirt the excep tion of holiday and examination periods at Elon College, N.C. (Zip Code 27244), publication being in coopera tion with the journalism department. maroon and gold NEW PROFESSOR FRIDAY, APRIL19.1968 EDITORIAL BOARD Co-Editor Co-Editor .Associate Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Paul Bleiberg James Payne Ken Hollingsworth . Russell Schetroma Associate David Johnson Entertainment Eddie Osborne .Sports Bob Williams Sports TT Alumni Luther N. Byrd ....Faculty Advisor REPORTORIAL STAFF ■ Richard Adams, Claes Alexanderson, Nancy Boone, Sam Boroody, Judy Caines, Tom Campion, Sandy Carrington, Stanley Cocke, Larry Collins, Shannon Doolittle, Monty Duncan, Wanda Edwards, Walter Gose, Timothy Green, Keith Handy, William Her bert Eleanor Hill, Holly Hollingsworth, Vickie Hor ner. Linda Jordan, Lloyd Kanipe, Richard Lee, Jim my Lunsford, Kay McCauley, Jim McClure, Don Martin, Lynn Michael, John Michaels, Robert Mona- celli Richard Moon, William Motz, Carl Mulholland, Aleda Pope, Jeannette Robinette, Beth Rountree, Wayne Smart, Sandra Wrenn. Arts Forum Offers Cultural Programs Five days of cultural opi>u.rtunlty will be offer ed to Elon College stu dents and faculty next week as the student-»pjn- sored Liberal Arts Forum presents its third annual series of lectures, en titled “Studies in the Hu manities,” featuring an outstanding series of lec tures, concerts and other programs. The Liberal Arts For um is a group composed principally of Elon un- dergratuates, its princi pal purpose being to fos ter intellectual interest through public lectures. It was formed in 1958 and has been very active since that time. It staged its first annual spring lec ture series in 1966 and followed with the second annual series last spring. The 1968 program will get underway on Monday, April 29th, and will con tinue through Friday, May 3rd, and will feature no less than eleven outstand ing scholars and lectur ers, along with a world- famous musician, in the most outstanding sym posium of the three staged thus far on the Elon campus. The speakers will in clude Or. Kemp Malone, of John Hopkins Univer sity, and Dr. Paul Mur ray Kendall, of Ohio Un iversity, in two opening day programs on Monday, April 29th. They will be followed on Tuesday .April 30th, by Dr. Alfred Gar vin hngstrom. of the Un iversity of North Caro lina at Chapel Hill, and Dr. Osborne B. Hardison, al so of the University of North Carolina. A special feature of the Tuesday program will be the appearance of Igor Kipr.is, world - famous harp-ichordist in concert on Tuesday night, follow ing up the two lectures for that day. Kipnis is to appear under joint spon sorship of the Arts For um and the Lion Lyceum. Elon Faculty Judges For S. C. Contest Prof. Fletcher Moore, academic dean for Elon College, and Prof. Gene Featherstone, of the mu sic department, served as judges for the recent three-day piano contests staged by the South Caro lina division of the Music Educators’ National Con ference. Dean Moore has served as judge for this contest for many years, and Prof. Featherstone joined him the past two years. This year. Prof. James Cly- burne, an Elon graduate, now at Meredith, added still more Elon flavor to the event. The three-day contests were held at Rock Hill, Estill and Columbia in South Carolina. DR. ROBERT W. DELP Delp To Join Elon Faculty For 1968-69 Dr. Robert Worley Delp, whose special field of interest is American history, will join the Elon College faculty as a mem ber of the Department of History and Social Sci ence for the coming 1968- 69 year. Dr. Delp, who is native of North Carolina, is a graduate of Davidson Col lege, later studied at the Lancaster Theological seminary in Pennsylvan ia and received both the Master of Arts and the Doctor of philosophy de grees in history from George Washington Uni versity. He will come to Elon from Atlantic Christian College, where he has been teaching in the his tory department since completing his doctoral work at George Wash ington in 1965. He has written several articleSj the most recent being entitled “Andrew Jackson Davis; Prophet of American Spiritualism.” His current research project is a study of so cial implications of A- merican spiritualism in the Nineteenth Century. He holds membership in a number of professional groups. A Beneath The Oaks BY RUSSELL SCHETROMA Elon’s catalogue proudly proclaims “Stu dents of Elon College gov ern themselves... This is indeed something to be proud of, if it were true; but anyone living here for a semester or so knows better than to ac cept all publicity state ments at first sight. While it is true that we have a Student Govern ment Association, which includes an Honor Court to try offenders against the Honor Code, something is obviously lacking. In the Judicial Branch of our government the lack appears to lie in the Why Is It? By JAMES PAYNE Why is it that the United States is not winning in Viet Nam? Is it because the Johnson Administra tion is afaid of the nu clear strength of Rus- sia? In September of 1966 Secretary of State Dean Rusk testified before the Senate Preparedness In vestigating Subcommittee and stated that “accele ration of the war in Viet Nam could move into an area of conflict that would knock out 300,000 people in the first hour.” He further stated that “the effort has been to take the action necessary to sustain the peace and to prevent a course of ag gression from being laun ched and to prevent the United States from be coming involved in an all out general war.” When Rusk spoke about “knocking out 300,000 in the first hour” in a “gen eral war”, it seems he was referring to a nu clear exchange between the Soviet Union and the United States. When speaking of preventing “a course of aggression from being launched,” is he not probably referring to an attack on the United States by the Soviet Union (It is very obvious that the United States will not at tack the Soviet Union first)? On August 25, 1967. Ro bert McNamara in a pre pared statement to the Senate stated that “an ex- cellarated air campaign against North Viet Nam would involve risks to our personnel and to our na tion that I am unable to recommend.” What risks? From who? There is no way that North Viet Nam can hit the United States nor is there any way that Red China (at the present) can hit the United States. Only the U.S.S.R. has at the present the capability of hitting this country. In the last five or six years, because of ever- increasing spending for the war in Viet Nam, the nuclear strength of the Unied States has been re duced. High ranking mili tary authorities have stated that in 1967, the So viet Union caught up with and began surp.issing the nuclear strength of this country. Does this all mean that the present administra tion will not destroy most of the strategic targets that have not been bomb ed, and will not put areal effective blockade on the port of Haiphong, because they are afraid of pro voking a Soviet nuclear attack against the United States? The United States has lost its nuclear su periority which it had six years ago and also lacks an anti-missle defense. Is Johnson just plain a- fraid of Russia? fact that we not only have an Honor Code, but also a Campus Code, and sep arate regulations govern ing dormitory life. Infrac tions of eachof these var ious codes are tried by separate courts. The decision as to which court gets which case is often a difficult one to make. Decisions of the student- faculty courts are subject to review by the Administration, and in reality there is no clear line marking the boundary between the authority of student courts and ad- ministrtive action. Some dormitory rule infrac tions are handled by the interdormitory council and some by direct ad ministrative action. Traf fic violations are handled by the administration. The handbook each stu dent receives at ths be ginning of each year con tains a vastarray of rules and regulations. Many of these regulations are completely outdated. Ad ministrative officials realize this and do not enforce these outdated rules. This is certainly kind and considerate, but not very wise. Whenever a group de cides to enforce only cer tain of its rules and to overlook others, a gen eral laxity is bound to invade the entire legal system. The outdated laws should not be mere ly overlooked — they should be removed from the code! We are coming to the time when a new admin istration will take office in the S.G.A. The new of ficers are willing to work as hard as they can to make Elon a better school and a much more pleasant place at which to live and study. But the stu dent body itself cannot rest content to leave all decisions and actions to the officers of the S.G.A. Each student must be willing to act as a mem ber of the S.G.A. andbring to the attention of the elected officials those a- reas in which work must be done. The S.G.A. can only be as powerful and as effective as its mem bers want it to be. Now is the time for decisive action— action which will determine whether Elon students will indeed gov ern themselves or whe ther they are satisfied with the status quo. From the frequent com plaints over present con ditions heard around campus it seems incon ceivable that the status quo is satisfactory to the student body as a whole, yet few students seem willing to take the re sponsibility for change upon themselves. The changes necessary to overcome the weak spots in Elon’s student governmental set up out lined above can only come about when the student body as a whole rises and unites within the • G.A, to demand them.Any* thing less than total sup port of every S.G.A. member can result m nothing more than a con tinuance of the present near impotenfp of Elo’’ ® “ studenti'.'^^^^vcrnmcnt.