Tuesday, September 26,1979 THE CLARION Page 2 EDITORIALS Mrs. Grace Munro We Give Thanks Chalk one up for Mrs. Grace Munro, Brevard College business teacher. Mrs. Munro was recently included in the 11th edition of Community Leaders of America, a book citing people who are active in community life'. Community Leader’s of America recognizes those who serve in government, public welfare, medicine, education, sports, the arts, the sciences, church, leisure, conservation and community life. Mrs. Munro certainly fits several of those requirements. She has been a business teacher at Brevard College for 23 years. Before coming to B.C. she taught high school classes as well as adult education classes. Here are B.C. she serves as secretary to the College faculty. She also serves as chairman of the College Institutional Development Committee as well as being a member of the Tenure, Academic Standards, and Career Planning committees. Her duties also include being college campus chairman of the annual Heart Fund and secretary of the Transylvania County Home Health Advisory Committee. She is active in the Brevard-Davidson River Presbyterian Church, and is an elder and a member of the Christian Education Committee. She also extends her secretarial duties to include the Asheville Presbytery Women of the Church and the Christian Education Committee. As if all of those duties are not enough, Mrs. Munro is also a former president of the both Delta Kappa Gamma, a teachers’ association, and the American Association of University Women. She is also a member of Delta Phi Epsilon, a business organization. This is not the first time that Mrs. Munro as been recognized for her con tributions to others; she is also listed in World Who’s Who of Women in Education and International Who’s Who in Community Service. Mrs. Munro makes it her duty to serve her community and the college campus to the best of her ability. We should all be thankful that she has so much ability. THE CLARION Published during the college session by students of Brevard College. The opinions expressed in this periodical are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those of the college. Editor-in-Chief Debi Crane Busmess Manager/Sports Editor Bobby Hayes Donna Hooper, Reggie Kellev Photographers Preston Birchner Reporters Donna Molford, Scott Singletary Debbie Willenborg, Marion Blackwelder Greg Bare, Ronnie Chapman, Ray Duckworth Nancy Ennis, Bobby Henson, Jenny Holladay Donna Hooper, Charles Huckabee Mike McFarland, Tim Merritt Jana Miller, Alan Odum, Chris Pustorino ^ . Yvonne Roop, Anthony Tinsley ■^^visor K011 ChsmiGB b^x^56'^*^*^^ welcomes reader contributions. Please place contributions m ‘Pause’ Provides Spiritual Uplift by Jenny Holladay A multitude meets with Lord Jesus Christ every Monday night at 9 p.m. in the Methodist Church to be fed — by the Word. “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there I am in the midst of them (Matthew 18:20). Amongst “joyful noises” in song, testimony, and prayer, spirits glow with the love of God! “Pause,” an interdenominational coffee house for all students offers Christian fellowship as well as an in spiring “pause” from tedious studies. Talented guitarists and excited voices fill the room with choruses of ‘ ‘Hallelujah” and harmonious cheers of “Jesus is alive.” “Pause” serves as a spiritual uplift from hectic routined days and lives. New friends are found in new faces each week and a new understanding of trust is brought to life by the group. After the period of an hour to an hour and a half the sharing time ends with individual prayers spoken within a circle of joined hands. Then the hugging begins. With radiant smiles students welcome and remind one another, “I love you.” The sharing group is not directly linked with the ac tivities of the school, therefore there is no sponsor. Neither is it an organized club of any type and so has no elected officers or organizers, or members! It is an open house of open hearts for believers and seekers alike. There are none professing perfection, but spirits en- tertwine in the “family” atmosphere and participants “grow together.” For interested students, “pause” offers a chance to strengthen one’s spiritual life through fellowship and inspiration. Yearbook Cancellation 9 Only A Rumor by Marion Blackwelder Have you heard the rumor about the yearbook being cancelled? Freshman were to have their pictures made on Monday and Tuesday September 3rd and 4th, and Sophomores were to have theirs made on Wednesday and Thursday September 5th and 6th. As of September 6th, onlv 250 of the faculty and students had showed up. For this reason, the Dean threatened to cancel the yearbook. After he sent out memos, many more people went down Friday and had theirs made. As of now, our yearbook is scheduled to be printed and we are hoping to have the best yearbook ever. Has sail Resiiaand Little Big Man One of our features stories in this issue is about Hassan Regimand, the “little big man” of B.C. soccer. Hassan is a good illustration of the fact that height is counted in more than just physical inches. Any person who does honor to his every act can be tall- In tne same way, any person can be short. The person who does not live up to his best is short no matter how many inches the yardstick states. Hassan provides a valuable lesson in goodness which we all can follow.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view