BELLES OF ST. MARY’S March 12, 1965 Mai THE BELLES OF ST. MARY’S Published in thirteen issues dur ing the school year, September to June. Monthly for December, Janu ary and April; Semimonthly for Oc tober, November, February, March and May, by the Student body of St. Mary’s Junior College. Entered as 2nd Class matter Dec. 7, 1944, at Post Office, Raleigh, N. C. under Act of March 3, 1870. Subscription $1.00 f)er year. BELLES STAFF Editor-in-Chief Carol Wilson Assistant Editor Willa McKimmon tiews Editor Harriett Jeffress Feature Editor Rosemary Teague Exchange Editor Mary Virginia Hurt Photographer Tappy Massie Head Typist Terry Barnes Circulation Manager Anne Straight NEWS STAFF Jane Perree, Lillian Gray, Susan Gil bert, Nancy .Johnson, Julie McCullum, Lisa Miravalle, Carolyn Price, Molly Richardson, Lisa Rowland, Sallle Scar borough, Ginny Willetts. FEATURE STAFF Elizabeth Clare, Chris Collester, Susan Crabtree, Barbara Eagleson, Rosalie Hanley, Rae Herren, Nancy Hicks, Sally Little, Shirley McCaskill, Lynn Roth- stein, Pat Van I.ear, Audrey Wall, Les ley Wharton. ART STAFF Kris Augustine, Bunny Brown. TYPISTS Gail Boineau, Bee Bost, Georgie Cam- pen, Zan Deas, Martha Hardee, Methel Jacoks, Nancy Johnson, Eva Lister, Julie McCollum, Leah Osgood, Anne Simmons. PROOFREADERS Elizabeth Jones, Chini Smith. CIRCULATION Mary Block, Carol Cantwell, Carolyn Finch, Cassie Henry, Hetti Johnson, Francie Lewis. Julie McCollum. Mary Meleher, Neil Parker, Betsy Rudisill. ADVISOR Mr. John U. Tate. Flicks Of The Future AMBASSADOR March 11th—Dear Brigette. COLONY STATE T omorrow. \HLLAGE Tlie Sun is Out Spring is Here Arise, Good Senior Be of Good Cheer! Letters To The Editor Books In Review: CANDY March 7th-17th*—Mary Poppins star ring Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke. By Mary Virginia Hurt March 7th—How to Murder Your Wife. March 12th’’'—Those Calloways. VARSITY March 7th—Sex and the Single Girl. March 14th—Yesterday, Today, and March 10th—Love Has Many Faces starring Lana Turner. *"dates not definite. There is a sensational new book on the market by Terry Southern and Mason HolFenberg called Candy. Candy Christian is an extremely ac tive and impressionable young girl who had what proves to be a rather unwholesome desire to be “needed.” Living under the strict and uneffec tive rule of her somewhat unaffec- tionate father, Candy seeks to pro vide understanding and sympathy to virtually everyone with whom she comes into contact —from her melic- ious and sex-starved Professor Me- phesto — to the withered telegraph messenger and even to the mysterious Budah, not to mention countless others. Above all, Candy seeks to please. She is very wary of making value judgments or of placing too much emphasis on material things. Candy, greatly influenced by the new concepts introduced by Profes sor Mephesto, gives herself freely wherever she is “needed” for as the professor says, “To give oneself- fully — is not merely duty prescrib ed by an outmoded superstition, it is a beautiful and thrilling privilege.” Candy defends her behavior by men tally reasoning that her gift to man kind is the gratification of the needs of others. The reader follows Candy’s adventures from her small home town to Greenwich Village to a mystic Cracker Colony in Minnesota, where she meets Grindle, and finally to Tibet. The circumstance, having co incidences leading from one physical experience to another, lead to a fan tastic surprise ending that leaves the reader in an uncontrolable state of hysteria. Southern and Hoffenberg have written this little novel as a unique satire on the profuse and pro fane sex books of today. In order to foeus By Sally Little Should college students be permit ted to hear speakers of extremist po litical views? This question is sting ing legislators, students, teachers, and citizens. A negative answer to it de notes superficial concern for the wel fare of America or the image of the institution. The fear of a students being easily swayed by a surging Communist speaker is actually a fear rooted in feelings of inadequacy. Cer tainly this attitude publishes a lack of faith in our chosen form of gov ernment. A confession of this fear and an absurd incongruity in America today is the North Carolina speaker-ban law. The law prohibits Communists from speaking on state campuses re gardless of the subject of the lectures. Students can not even hear lectures on matters as remotely Communistic as nuclear physics. This particular aspect is the supreme folly of the speaker-ban law. But not to be over estimated is the “worth” of prohibit ing Communist speakers discussing Communism itself. “Forty-thirty, our serve!” screamed the excited St. Mary’s girl, bouncing around on the tennis court—at N.C. State?? Tritely said, but truly spoken, for the advanced tennis classes are spending two-hour labs on State courts for lack of facilities on campus. The inconveniences of obtaining transporta tion to State College, the valuable class time wasted, and the thus limited possibilities of recruits for this class are minor in themselves compared to the overall limitations of inadequate courts on campus. Tennis is a typical sport in that one must practice, practice, practice to achieve any degree of pro ficiency. The gym is no place to even bounce a ball without fear of breaking five or six windows. Perhaps many feel that there is not enough interest in tennis. What interest there is is stifled by the lack of convenient, proper courts and practice backboards. Certainly a liberal education must include all aspects of exercise, physical and mental. Granted, that sometimes available funds are not used, because a suitable contract does materialize. Any college is always in need of more and better facilities, but let s not shove this idea in the background of possibilities. It is the feeling of this and other individuals that St. Mary’s is preventing the development of great potentiality in the field of sports for women, especially in an outdoor sport in which women can excel. P. V. L., V. W. C., G. K. Doesn’t it boil down to a question of the basic freedom to learn? The strength of America is the policy or hearing both sides of an issue be fore making a judgment. The stu dent, too, should have the right to make knowledgeable decisions even on political philosophies. Our repre sentative democracy and capitalistic system work only because enough ireople believe in it with open-eyed faith rather than blind committal. A screaming voice for academic freedom has come from Berkeley, California. At this campus of the University of California riots and sit- ins have protested the ruling of the administration forbidding the use ol the campus for money-raising and re cruiting for political activities. The “cause” behind the more than Jt thousand student rioters has explod ed to shocking proportions: univer sity property was seized and all ad ministrative activities were brough to a halt for a week last December. Needless to say, these methods ot protestation are not to be condoned However, the real emphasis — as wi achieve their purpose, the authors --- -- ' -cal have excluded virtually no experience or verbal description. 1 o book however, as one can clearly o serve, is not meanf to be taken y erally. Although it might not be Wise to switch from a steady diet of LmJ Doone and Emma to tackling bearing its satirical purpose in mn^ ’ Candy provides excellent entertaiO ment and unrestrained laughter. 8 eno hall stop ciga bias is tl you this boa: han you leot Wo any on no in 1 ith the speaker-han law—is on education- In the words of a New York Times Magazine article by Sidney Hook- “Students should be encouraged to pursue their educational interests on their own initiative. The educationa process cannot and should not be con fined to the classroom.” The speaker ban law and the Berkeley affair ilm' strate converse attitudes: one is try ing to close the door and the other is trying to open the door of aoa- demic freedom. timi Wh( ing Wal sere Out and Tht Wal Mel som Mo the bad ■tier Mis thei Wer late her tese did] bou and the iti (