VOL. XLIX
NO. 10
LONGWOOD COLLEGE, FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1973
Residence Board Considers Housing Issues
Nixon Resign?
By KATHY MILLER Residence Board received a number of proposals at last week's meeting, particularly concerning the shakey self-regulatory hours. A count has been taken of how many students use the self-regulatory hours because there have been a few complaints concerning them. Some say there are too many rules to follow and the girls on duty are unsure of what their exact duties are. It is difficult to explain to new students and it results in too much confusion. Signing-Out One suggestion concerned the siping out procedure. It was proposed that a student would be required to sign out only if she were planning to spend the night out of her dormitory. As it stands now it is difficult to enforce the
A year to the week after President Nixon's landslide re-election victory, Sen. Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts became the first Republican senator publicly to urge President Nixon to resign. Brooke said he had "reluctantly" come to the conclusion that the President should resign "in the interests of this nation" as Republicans and Democrats sought to assess the impact of a sharp decline in public support for Nixon, as measured by the Gallup poll, and the increasing calls for his resignation in the Bannin Cancels controversy over the Watergate scandal. Student Govt. Day; While Nixon remained secludTo Be Held Later ed in his retreat at Key Biscayne, a spokesman in Miami By BARBERA RADFORD reiteratted that the President Student Government Day was to had ' absolutely no intention of be held yesterday, November 6. resigning." It would have involved the presidents of the major organiza Gubernatorial Race tions, members of the major boards, and administrative memVirginia's two gubernatorial bers and faculty department candidates sought voter support- chairmen. Members of the student goving Clintwood, but they maintained their record of never appear- ernment were to be placed in the ing jointly on any platform during offices of the administration, or department chairmen for the day. the bitter campaign. Republican nominee Mills E. The first purpose of the day, acGodwin, Jr., said at a Clintwood cording to Bobbsie Bannin, High School rally that Virginia Chairman of Legislative Board, has set a fast pace for itself would have been to remind stuand the South in the past decade dents of Election Day. The secand that he is better qualified ond purpose was to give students to see the state continue its posi- some insight into the duties of the administration. tion of leadership. Independent candidate Henry The students would have acted Howell, speaking at a Dickenson mainly as observers in the ofCounty Democratic dinner at fices, as the administrators and Long's Fork Elementary School, chairmen conducted their usual said, "The people of Virginia are business for the day. going to send a message to the The day had to be cancelled, politicians" when they elect however. Bobbsie was contacted, Howell Tuesday. and she explained. "First of all, it was cancelled out of respect for Colonel Abrams, who reIsrael and Egypt cently passed away," she said. Israel and Egypt warned sim"Secondly we would be keeping ultaneously Sunday that fighting people from going to his funeral, could erupt again over the Egyp- which would be inconsiderate, tian demand that Israeli forces we would be leaving student in pull back to the Oct. 22 cease empty offices, which would defeat the purpose of having student iireT lines. he warnings came as the Tel government day," she continued. The idea has not been forsaken, Aviv command said Israeli and though. Plans are being made Egyptian soldiers exchanged small arms fire for about an to annually hold Student Governhour near Ismailia in the central ment Day early in the second sector of the Suez Canal and semester. This year would benear Port Taufiq at southern gin the regular schedule by holding the cancelled day very early end. next semester. Bobbsie said, "It Israeli defense minister Moshe Dayan said Egypt is concentra- would probably be held very early ting its forces and can "definite- In second semester, after the ly" be expected to renew fighting seniors have left. It's more apbecause of dissatisfaction with propriate to its purposes, and the student government as a whole the Oct. 24 truce lines. "We have to realize the war is would get more out of it. She not yet over," Dayan declared continued, "We'll have our freshin an interview on the Israeli men representatives by then, too." state radio.
sign-out rules without a lot of paperwork and checking up. It is felt that a flip of the sign-out card is vague and doesn't really tell where a student is. Residence Board reminded students that if late permission is desired for an individual, a student should request it directly from her head resident. Late permission for a group should be requested from Dean Heintz. Any late permission a student receives is considered her curfew, and if it is impossible for her to get in by that time, she should call her head resident and notify her. E X A M I N A 1
ION
Open House A suggestion was made that open house be extended to Sunday night. Some objected because many girls would be arriving back on campus on Sunday. No decision on this matter was reached. There was further talk, however, of extending Sunday curfew to 2:00 a.m. to allow those traveling back to school from a great distance more time to return. A decision was made by Residence Board that anyone caught tampering with a fire extinguisher would be asked to appear before the Board. Many extinguishSCHEDULE
Examination Day and Date
Morning 9:00-12:00
Wednesday December 12
Al I Enqlish 100 sections
ers have been broken and the cost of fixing them is $4.00 each time repairs are needed. The Board said there may be no penalty, except to make the student pay the cost of repairs. The Board is also currently working on evaluation forms of Hall presidents and Residence Hall Presidents. They have requested an evaluation form from Dean Heintz. Residence Board meetings are open to all interested students. Debbie Waldron, Chairman of the Board, noted that all suggestions concerning the Board are welcome.
First Semester, 1^73-74 Session Afternoon 2:00-5:00
E ven i nq 7:00-10:00
Thursday December I 3
8:00 Monday
4:50 Tuesday
»lI:00 Monday
Friday December 14
10:00 Monday
4:00 Monday
* 9:25 Tuesday
Saturday December 15
2:00 Tuesday
3:00 Monday
Monday December 17
9:25 Tuesday
8:00 Tuesday
* I:00 Monday
Tuesday December 18
2:00 Monday
3:25 Tuesday
•9:00 Monday
Wednesday December 19
10:50 Tuesday
I:00 Monday
•8:00 Monday
Thursday December 20
I I :00 Monday
•10:00 Monday
Friday December 21
9:00 Monday
* 10:40 Tuesday
■ 8:00 Tuesday
Examinations are scheduled in accordance with the first day of each week 1hat a class meets. For example, all classes moetina at I I:00 a.m. on MWF, M-F, MTuF, or any combination beginning with Monday at I I:00 a.m., will have the final examination at 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, December 20. In the event a class meets at an irrenular hour, e.a., 12:45 Monday, the class will be examined at the time set aside for the regularly scheduled classes meetinq durina thai period, in this case with the classes meeting at 1:00 on Monday, fxaminations for evening classes will be scheduled on the evening of the reqular class meetlnq durinq the examination period. Examination periods preceded by an asterisk, *, are alternate times which may be used in addiTion to, but not instead of, the reoularly scheduled period, because it is not feasible to schedule an alternate hour for every scheduled class period, seme periods do not have alternate times listed. Instructors may permit students to take examinations at the alternate r.oriods listed. Instructors are free to schedule individual examinations at other times, if they wish, provided that such individual scheduling does not interfere with the Dreroqatives of other instructors, rememberinq that an examination must be available to students at the renularly scheduled hour. MANY CLASSES DO NOT LEN0 THEMSELVES TO DUAL EXAMINATIONS. THEREFORE, ACCEPTANCE OF THIS PROGRAM IS THE SOLE PREROGATIVE OF THE INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTOR.
Poet Coleman Banks To Read Here On Tuesday, November 13, the Institute of Southern Culture will present a reading by one of America's most exciting young poets, Coleman Barks. The program will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Bedford Auditorium; the public is invited. Coleman Barks has published in a large number of literary magazines and anthologies. Harper and Row brought out his first book, THE JUICE, in 1972. Mr. Barks has B.A. and Ph. D. degrees from the University of North Carolina and an M. A. from
the University of California at Berkeley. He has taught at the universities of North Carolina and Southern California and is teaching now at the University of Georgia. THE JUICE contains a sequence of poems called "Body Poems" that have brought Barks national recognition. The "Body Poems" constitute "a meditation on the parts of the body and the way they contain bits of landscape, animals, memories losses, jokes, the seeds of our death, and someone else's birth."
According to Barks, * Bodily response to images is what I'm after. The minnow inside the wrist, the dice in the ankles, the limbs in the limbs." The reading is the Institute's first program of the year. The appearance of Coleman Barks is especially appropriate since a healthy selection of his poems will be included in the anthology of young Southern poets currently in preparation, which the Institute wiU publish next year.