Newspaper Page Text
I'tie Collegiate
, WEEKLV
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, MAY 16, 1968 NUMBER TWENTY
Seniors To Receive Degrees
Final Production Of Season Graduatii
NUMBER TWENTY FIVE
237
Hensley
Final Production Of Season
li.W ~
to Hesley Jr., chaplain, will
.iHifl speaker at the Bacca-
jjjle Service to be held on
,'(*ge's center campus at
'.m Sunday, May 26, The
is being held in conjunc-
j *i(ti tlie college’s 66th Com-
■ateineiif.
jfj in Leavenworth, Kan.,
jjfeared in Miami, Okla., he
s«raduafed from Miami High
as salutatorian of ihis
a He received the A.A, de-
ffroiti Northeastern Oklaho-
; i 4 M, was graduated cum
-ifrom Texas Christian Uni-
jiily with the B.A. degree and
s aivarded the B.D, degree
.Me Divinity School (TCU).
}Me in Fort Worth, Tex., he
;s associated with the Texas
yd of Christian Churches as
jttk of the Christian Youth
;'.«(i-Up Program and interim
■jle Director of Youth Work.
:(served as minister of Hurst
jjislian Church in Fort Worth
■'five years during which time
Ktarch tripled in growth,
tepjain Hensle>' came to At-
itc Christian m the fall of
Jl ivhere he is now serving as
jiislanl professor of religion
as well as chap-
i. . f
1» is currently chairman oi
j College Work Committee of
,, i( North Carolina Council of
.lurches and chairman of the
jnpus Christian Life Commit-
j of the Christian Church
Jiidples of Christ) in North
IK is aministerial elder of
!t First Christian Church in
iilson and preacher for South-
?st Christian Cliurch of Kinston,
Elaine Bailey
Earned Head
Of Marshals
Marshals for Atlantic Christian
Mlege for the 1968-69 academic
,«ar have been announced by
3r. Lewis H. Swindell Jr., dean
" the college.
Graduation
To Be Held
On May 31
Seme 257 seniors are sched
uled to receive degrees in the
arts and sciences at the 66th
Commencement of the college to
be held Friday, May 31.
Commencement speaker will
be Watts Hill Jr., of Durham,
chairman of the State Board of
Higher Education. Delivering the
baccalaureate sermon will be
Daniel J. Hensley Jr., chaplain
of the college. Presiding over
commencement exercises will be
Dr. Arthur D. Wenger, president
of the college.
Baccalaureate
The Baccalaureate service will
be held at 7 p.m. Sunday, May
26, on center campus. Com
mencement will be held in Wil
son Gymnasium.
Those scheduled to receive de
grees are as follows;
Hennie Wallace Adams, Wil
son; James Marion Adams, Wake
Forest; Dennis Warren Alexan
der, Greenville; Ernest Benja
min Alexander Jr., Bethel; John
Harvey .Alford Jr., Wendell; Roy
Jackson Allen Jr., Va. Beach,
Va.; Janet Paul Amerson, Wil
son; Wiley Roadrick Anderson,
Fountain; John Wayne Ausbon,
Greenville; Joseph Martin Baker,
Wilson; James Edward Baikcum,
Wilson; Linda Burgess Baikcum,
Wilson; Harriet Claire Barker,
vVilson.
Joe Allen Barkley, Wilson;
Eleanor Terry Barnes, Elm
Oity; Muriel Hurdle Bateman,
Sdenton; Mildred W. Batts, Mac-
■lesfield; Beverly Annette Baum,
See SENIORS Pagre 3
Chorus To Give
Outdoor Concert
Featuring Pops
At 6;30 p.m. Monday on center
campus, the Atlantic Christian
_ _ _ . College Chorus will give an in-
formal pops concert. The short
T • rirl simple parable about love. It concert, under the direction of
By CONNIE WILLIS delia Lewis as Luisa the , staged on a platform Dr. James Cobb and Ross Al-
The stage and Script of At- Bob Noble as Matt the Boy, scenery except that bert, will feature a variety of
lantic Christian College presents John Mayfield as the Girl s tatn- ^ ^ the numbers with emphasis on tolk
f , the musical hit “The Fantas- er, John Cedarburg as the boy s provided songs, show tunes, and other
Mmecl as chief marshal was ticks” tonieht Mav 16 at 8;15 father, Reggie Smith as t.ie Mut. man. light music.
Jne Barnes Bailey of Kenly, ^Howard Cha ^
w
^^The Fantasticks^' Begins
Three Day Run Tonight
— T.,.,;. Luisa the Girl, simple parable about love
--:n kq staged on a platfo
Uhe college. the musical hit futhw^Reggie Smith as t.'ie Mute ^„ute property man. gj^ioSstT'featured will be Jin>
Named as chief marshal was ” tonight May 16 at • ■ Vdwards as Mortimer and - . u on Wooten, John Cederoer^^,
Mne Barnes Bailey of Kenly^ p.m.’in Howard Chapel on ca - r the "’ill I'rpve PQj,j5 Greene,
taior class marshals named . ,. • cugkespearan actor. ^ extremely entertaining Thos-^ Accompanists for tae perform
we Thomas Albert of Wilson The A.C.C. production is p'nllwoin® the “overture”. Bill rnusically and actm„^ ^ Vickie Newsome,
iid Beth Best of Dunn. Sopho- rected by Paul Croucti, head^^^^^ for tne will not ® jones, Dan
*rf» ('law -MjpvA Dramatics progtam, f , hv sinking “Try to R , ,^\\\ have ^ P- i rharlotta White, and Ron >
‘tie SJiLlT- SS.5' S”Ve» ‘ Bass win be P-a,.-.
Saturday mgnts, ,j, Albert,
at 8:15 in the chapel.
Eugene McCarthy Wins
Recent College Pnraai y
A,T.. <:tndents polled favored reduc
■e class marshlas named were
in Piland Anders of Havelock
W Linda Darnell Jones of Ro-
wke Rapids. Freshman class
Mrshals are William Richard
&on of Wilson, Joyce Ann
See ELAINE Page
See ELAINE Page 4 — —
Students Extol Religion
Professors In Project
stage manaL-eu
blood an and Fran Johnson. ^ -mber'' He loes a^n Excellent
Tho f J* ^ snd will truly begin.s the
Pi r!n M Cordelia Lewis is
a! 0 t..e Narrator, Cor- fresh and alive, almost starry-
eyed as she sings “More More,"
which leads into an ardent duet
between Cordelia and Bob Noble,
in which the boy is efficient but
still somehow naive. The two
fathers selection, “Never Say
No”, is quite amusing to the
audience, as well as the numer
ous characters of the Mortimer
actor.
ous characters
15 of the students participating and Old Shakespearan actor
™ Editor were Education majors and eight Parable
« Course - Teacher Evalua- w-ere Religion majors out of 75 ^'n y
iav last Thurs- juniors and seniors,
teacher was sent a Students were also given a
■ffladp ^ stating the evaluation chance to mention majors they
studentc*' participating would like to see addecl to the
fu curriculum. These majors in-
liDw m! “forms the teacher eluded psychology, socio ogy,
in the stndents ranked him Home Economics, Journalism,
ratprf how they and Recreation. Several courses
fourth r fewer than one seemed to be favored, as being
“rtn rtese were Sec
-..J- uiiu ii>jyv , , u£ favored, as
rated him. If fewer than one . Among these e ^ ,
1 fourth of the students who dropped,
paluated a teacher checked a ondary r.wiliza
-'•^u ct Lcacner cnecKea c- - ,
Me or a two on a given state- L i v i n
^6nt it
Education, Healthful
Living, Western Civilization,
Handcrafts, and Folk and Ball-
it was not given
^^6 ‘nor.^ 4. naiiU^l aiLo,
PhiIosnnh”^^u^ Religion ,room.
i’fofessors i most Many students expressed an in-
K... . p acing in the top terest in seeing courses such as
- Riis.sian, Canoe
d' the most Many students as
„ Placing in the top terest ^^eem^ Canoe
five with four. Social Science Library Safety, P V
Md Education and Psychology ing f'J^viAraov added to the
came in second with two each, sical
ft is interesting to note that riculum.
M. ^ -—
Minnesota Senator Eugene Me- students polled favored reduction
Id uia Carthy won the recent national of U. S. military efforts in Viet-
Parable collegiate primary. Choice 68. nam and 17 per cent favored
This play, written by Tom McCarthy polled 285,988 of the immediate withdrawal, while 21
Jones and Harvey Schmidt, is a 1,072,830 votes, with Senator per cent voted for an “all-out
— "] Robert Kennedy of New Yor U. S. military effort.” Twenty-
running second receiving 213,832 nine per cent voted for a sus-
votes. Over 44 per cent of the pension of bombing, 28 per cent
participants in this primary will for cessation, while 15 per cent
be eligible to vote in the No- voted to intensify the bombing,
vember Election, Four per cent of those voting
Nixon favored nuclear weapons use.
The southeast favored Nixon Education
with Kennedy close behind, Ken- Education and job training
nedy ran almost as powerfully were favored for top - priority
in the Deep South, a region in federal urban spending with
which favored an “all out” U,S, 40 per cent and 39 per cent
military effort in dealing with respectively,
the Vietnam War, or at least Mc-
an intensification of bombing. Carthy’s supporters preferred
Vice President Humphrey was ^ reduction in
^ significant write - in activity or immediate
candidate garnering 18,53o votes. , r tt o t
Forty - five per cent of the withdrawal of U. S. forces.
As the final copy of this
week’s edition of the paper
rolls off the press, The Col
legiate halts publication for
the 1967-68 school term. Pub
lication will resume in Sep
tember.
Students who wish back
copies of this year’s CoIIegiates
are urged to visit the office
and ramble through the paper's
stockpile closet. Pictures used
I in the paper during the year
pnay also be claimed at the
Collegiate office next week.