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Earth
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CHRISTIAN COLLEG
ATLANtrC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, APRIL 22, 1971
WEEKLY
i'.'* 4! ■. ’
ril 18-24
iJegiate
NUMBER TWENTY-TWO
President Nixon has declared April 18-24 as Earth Week. This week is to make the American
: pplemore aware of their environment. This scene depicts serene peace, beauty and tr^Z ml
(hat we, as Americans, must preserve. irdnquijity
Earth Week Activities
10 Population Growth has
:;i conducting an en-
mmental awareness
jram this week in
relation with Earth Week,
■reek’s activities began with
isplay of the geometric
ipssion of population based
I ilie number of births per
iiiite, hour, and day.
jphnts and Butterflies, the
ilroversial pamphlet printed
the University of North
ina, along with ecology
lierswere sold on Tuesday.
iterature dealing with the
' itl of phosphate content in
< srgents to the water
resourses of the world was on
hand Wednesday. Materials
describing the number of
species of animals which have
become extinct since the turn of
the century was also distributed.
Today’s program included a
debate between Dr. Paulsell of
the Department of Religion and
Mr. Larry Whitlock from
Psycology concerning the pros
and cons of abordion. Students
also served on the panels. The
last rites for Mother Earth were
to be held late this afternoon.
The activities revolving
around Earth Week close
tomorrow with the planting of
trees in Wilson.
Announcement
All persons interested in
working on a SGA Com
mittee for the year 1971-72
should submit their names,
addresses, phone numbers
and desired committee to
the SGA President or Vice
President by April 30. The
committee seats are as
follows: Student Life,
Entertainment, Concert
and Lecture, Campus
Awareness, Convocation
Coordinating, Student
Center, Library,
Curriculum, and Elec
tions.
Ecology Speaker
410
It. William E. Thomas,
ictor of clinical psychology
1 the North Carolina Depart-
I Jl o! Mental Health, will be
' liking on campus, Tuesday,
ril 27, at 11 a.m. in Howard
mel His visit is being
inored by the Convocation
ftdinating Council which has
Dr. Thomas to ii\itiate
second in a series of
•ams dealing in the area of
gy. Dr. Thomas’s topic of
tussionwill be “Ecology and
iiman Resources.” His
station will be followed by
iortunities for students,
jteistration, and faculty to
Jiquestions and participate in
fti discussion revolving
k’*d ecology.
p. Thomas, a resident of
plwgh, received his B.S.
pe form Hillsdale College,
P'sdale, Mich., in 1947; his
k degree from the U niverslty
I Minnesota, Minneapolis,
® , in 1949; and his Ph. D.
PMichigan State University,
Lansing, Mich., in 1955.
Thomas served as an
®*™ctor in the Department of
Kiology and Anthropology at
™igan State University, from
F;53. During 1955-56, he was
clinical psychologist at
"‘alo State Hospital, Buffalo,
H* Noted among his work
PWence, Dr. Thomas served
pnief research psychologist at
;»‘«mbus Children’s
1 Schiatric Hospital, Columbus,
lonlp
Ohio, from 1960-61. The
psychologist has also par
ticipated as a consultant of the
State Mental Health Authority
for community mental health
services, under the North
Carolina State Board of Health,
Raleigh.
Dr. Thomas is presently
psychology consultant for the
North Carolina Department of
Mental Health. He is responsible
for development of psychology
programs in institutions and
local programs. He holds
membership in many
organizations in the area of
psychology and public health
including; American
Psychological Association;
American Public Health
Association; North Carolina
Public Health Association, of
which he currently is chairman
of the Committee on Ethics
Legislation, and Professional
Practices.
Dr. Thomas has published
numerous articles in magazines
and journals, noted among
these: “A controlled clinical
study of the efficacy of
iproniazid in the treatment of
depression,” published in
Journal of General Psychiatry,
1959; “Services to children by
North Carolina community
menta] health centers,” which
appeared in Mental Notes, N.C.
State Board of Health, 1962; and
as a contributor of “Mind over
Matter,” Tenn. Department of
Mental Health, 1963.
Coffeehouse
The Southern Folk Cultural
Revival Project, Inc., under the
sponsorship of the Campus
Christian Association will
present The Southern Folk
Festival at ACC on Thursday,
April 22.
Musicians featured in this
group will bring with them their
voices and poetry, their guitar
strums and autoharp picks, and
a deep sense of the South that
they know and love.
*.v' X •
Jackie Wright
Performers featured on the
program will be: Brenda Jones,
a contemporary Black singer;
Jackie Wright, a modern-day
mountain man and white blues
singer; Bessie Jones, the leader
of the Georgia Sea Island
Singers from St. Simon’s Island,
Ga.; and Alice and Hazel, one of
Challenge 71
Probes Ecology
Six ACC students represented
the college recently at the
Challenge ’71 Symposium at
Wake Forest University. The
Challenge topic, “The Challenge
of Survival: Not Man Apart,”
focused on environmental issues
with special concern over where
society is heading for the future.
Andy King, Winn Clayton, Diane
Hicjman, Bill Bousman, James
E. Jones, and Joyce Copeland
composed the local delegation.
Keynoting the four-day event
was consumer-advocate, Ralph
Nader. Nader challenged the
Challenge audience to consider
support for a North Carolina
program to provide funds for a
student-public interest
organization to handle student
concerns. Such a program, he
informed the group, is in the
pioneer stage in Oregon and
Minnesota. The establishment of
a citizen interest lobby would
have tremendous effect on
congressional action was em
phasized in his address, “as long
as these millions of Americans
sit watching the soap operas,
chatting on the phone, bowling
or watching the Dallas Cowboys
and the New Orleans Saints in a
kind of a drunken stupor, as long
as that continues and those
valuable resources of citizen
time and energy are fiddled
away, then no matter how much
the economy grows...there shall
be little improvement...We’re
down to the grass-roots, citizen-
power,” The recent defeat of the
SST by the powerful citizens
lobby was cited as an example of
public opinion and its effect on
the legislator.
Other major addresses of the
Challenge ’71 program included
a plea for personal commitment
in the clean earth campaign by
Kentucky ex-legislator, Harry
Caudill; and the expression of a
need for a reinstatement of
diversity in human life by
changing the goal of progress to
quahty rather than quantity by
Rene Dubos. Panel discussions
groups included such dignitaries
as Mr, Roy Sowers, Chairman of
Coming
Attractions
“The Sand Pebbles,” starring
Steve McQueen and Candice
Bergen, will be shown Sunday
night at 7:30 p.m. in Hardy
Alumni Hall. Students with
I.D.’s will be admitted free.
Future attractions in the
Student Center Committee
series will include “Barefoot in
the Park” and “For the Love of
Ivy.” Check campus bulletin
boards for details,
the few accomplished female
blue-grass driving grass and
oletimes country groups today,
Earl Gilmore will be featured
in the program. He is a hard
driving gospel and blues singer
from the mountains of southwest
Virginia. Anne Romaine, a
North Carolina country ballad
singer will perform and serve as
emcee.
the State Department of Con
servation and Development;
Attorney General Robert
Morgan’s Ocean Law Con
sultant, Thomas Caine; and
Tenth District Congressman,
James T. Broyhill.
The major theme recurrent in
the Challenge ’71 was the need
for individual involvement and
concern over environmental
problems. The idea of a
Challenge program was a result
of a 1%4 bull session at WFU.
The Wake Forest students saw a
need for agreater involvement
with the problems that face
mankind. Challenge is now held
every other year at the Winston-
Salem school.
Eighty-three schools in the
Eastern United States were
invited to attend this year’s
program. The participation of
these schools was light, but the
program accomplished its goal
of instilling in its participants a
compassion and understanding
needed, in facing up to solving
problems.
New Officers
Are Chosen
Alpha Chi National Honor
Society recently elected new
officers for the 1971-72 academic
year. Elected were: Jeannette
Norfolk, president; Rosalind
Matthews, vice president;
Wanda Daughtry, secretary;
and Dennis Adams, treasurer.
Martha Leggett was elected
regional representative. Ad
visers for one-year terms are
Dr. Mary Stough and Dr.
William Paulsell. Mr. Ronald
Wachs will continue as adviser
for the society.
Speaker
To Come
Maynard Mack, Sterling
Professor of English at Yale
University and President, in
1970, of the Modern Language
Association of America, will
speak twice on campus on
Thursday April 29. He will speak
on Romantic Love in
Shakespeare at 11:00 in the
Choral Room of the Music
Building, and at three, in the
same room, he will hold an in
formal discussion and question-
and-answer period.
One of the most distinguished
scholars in America, Professor
Mack is being sponsored by the
Association of Eastern North
Carolina Colleges. He will speak
on other days at Meredith
College and at East Carolina
University.
Professor Mack has published
widely both on Shakespeare and
on Alexander Pope and the
eighteenth century. Students
know him particularly as the
author of “The World of
Hamlet,” King Lear in Our
Time, and The Garden and the
City.