Newspapers / Montreat College Student Newspaper / Dec. 6, 1968, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Montreat College Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
peRdiTion Of tHymE a flower once full true, now lies on a blue rock. tEmpted by two bumblebees; taken by too much rain. tHe ground sighs to its woe, and heaves to greet the pain- of the seed bearing tree- of the bent daisy-flov7er. nOw all the leaves turn brovm; turn brown, turn brown, turn brown. tUrn to the fate of an early winter. cOme time. gReet the sunbeams that kiss all wonder and leave only a petal of a flower once full true. FILMS by Harvey Davis "Coogans Bluff", starring Clint Eastwood, is another tough guy role for this unshaven stereotype. Eastwood fans will applaud his per formance even though it does not approach his work in such films as "A Fistful of Dollars" and "Hang 'Em High." Coogan, an Arizona deputy sheriff goes to New York and promptly comes in conflict with gangs, police inaction, and other things not known in Arizona. If you are a Clint Eastwood fan you will find the movie very enter taining. If you weren't, it's possible you will be very bored. MUSIC by T. C. Behrens The harpsichord is an interesting instrument in itself, as it changes color, tone, rather than volume. When teamed with a violin ( a Stradivarius, no lessi), the musical result is unique and charming, which pleases any man's ear. The Lucktenberg Duo visited our campus on December 1 to give an extra ordinary concert, using these two instruments with extraordinary musicality. They performed with speed and dexterity that would be difficult to duplicate. Their program consisted of pieces which were composed in the latter part of the seventeenth century. There was one sonatina which was written especially for the Lucktenbergs by a professor at Florida State University. A very interesting and well planned program with excellent musical ability produced a concert that may well prove to be the best of the Sunday at the Inn series this year. GAGERS by Sidney Collins its hot outside half. With 1:37 the hundredth Montreat 105, Montreat-Anderson College won its Dec. 3 tilt with Warren Wilson 105-75*, pushing the Cavaliers' record to 4-1. The Cavaliers opened the game with a tight pressing zone and continued to press the Owls the remainder of the game. At half-time Montreat held a 54-35 bulge. Montreat continued shooting in the second left Sam Milner scored point. Final score V'^as Warren Wilson 79- Roosevelt Robinson led Montreat with 28 points. Frank Slaughter was tops for the losers with 27 points. Coach Halstead was highly pleased with the student body as well as individual players. Coach Halstead commented that, "he appreciated the fine student support at the road games. It really helps the team." Jim Norris and Charlie Dudley were able to play in this game whereas they were unable to play in previous games. They really played a fine all-around game. Phil Zimmerman was cited for "his fine work on the boards and his defensive play." Ben Young was termed "the rock of the team," and Richard Dil lahunt and Bob Hunnicutt were ca "the team's outstanding rebounders." ed Montreat's CavaKiers absorbed the.i r first defeat of the young season, 81-68, at Brevard, Tuesday, Nov. 26. The Cavaliers led by as much as nine points early in the contest. But, when the initial twenty minutes ended, Montreat held a slender two point lead. Brevard opened the second half with a 2-3 zone defense. The Cavaliers failed to break the zone and coupled and suffered from ballhandling lapses. From this point, Brevard stretched their margin to a game high of 18. The Cavaliers fought back and cut the Brevard lead to six points with 3 minutes left to play. Montreat's press forced'Brevard into costly mistakes. However, a Brevard time out stopped the Cavaliers last-ditch effort. Ben Young paced the losing Cavaliers with 22 points. M-A Rallies For 105-92 Win MARS MILL — Montreat-An- derson College, turning on the fast break at the start of the second half, over came a -40-40, halftime deficit, and moved to 105-92, victory over the Mars Hill College Freshmen, here Thursday night. Roosevelt Robinson had 25 points and Ben Young 23 to pace the winners, now 4-1, while Curtis Brooks had 17, Richard Dillahunt 14, and Bob Hunnicutt 12. Dave McCray had 25 and Rod ney Johnson 23 to pace the loser’s attack. They now stand 2-3. Jim Medford 17, and Frankie Hough were other double digit scorers. MONTREAT-ANDERSON (UI5)-Young 23, Robinson 25, Roseman 8, Hunnicutt "2, Dillahunt 14, Brooks 17, Dudlay 6, "lorris, McDade, Zimmerman, Harris. MARS HILL JV (92)-Johnson 23, Med ford 17, McGowan 6, Pfaff 3, McCray 25, Orr 6, Hough 12, Long. Halftime: 46-40, Mars Hill. OPEN 6 A.M. TO 9 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK U. S. 70 EAST OF BLACK MOUNTAIN I WHITE INSURANCE AGENCY 1C GENERAL INSURANCE j Ml S. RICHARDSON BLVD. Phono No. 9-7912 , BLACK MOUNTAIN, N, C. The Qray Sagle Gifts and Crafts 101 Broadway Black Mountain, N. C. FEATURES GIFTS AND CRAFTS ( MANY MADE BY MOUNTAIN CRAFTSMEN ), BOOKS, PEWTER,CHINA GLASSWARE, JEWELRY, CARDS. OPEN YEAR 'ROUND, MONDAY THRU SATURDAY FROM 9:00 - 5:30 »sE EXPERT PHOTOGRAPHIC WORK HEADQUARTERS FOR CHRISTMAS CARDS BLACK MOUNTAIN DRUG ca _ . the T7 store Isa 44',IJUHJil«.|;llilM.'HU'IH> ip Phoni 669*4121 Black Mountain, N.C. COMPLETE PRESCRIPTION SERVICE COSMETICS CARDS CANDIES CARVERS CAKE BOX We specialize in birthday cakes, party goods of all kinds Cakes, Pies, Donuts, and other bakery specialItles 669 6525 Downtown Black Mountain
Montreat College Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 6, 1968, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75