Newspaper Page Text
X'he Collegiate
V/EEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, FEBRUARY 27, 1969
NUMBER SEVENTEEN
Inspires Board
Anyone Who Can’t Come
Doesn’t Deserve To Vote
By
LVNNJOHNSON
; who can’t come over
Classroom Building) to
fdeserve to vote,”
,1 *«« «1 “A
11 afta reouested that this
(ear an additional ballot box be
;; inthe Student Center for
the convenience of those sti^ents
hnhave few classes m Hines.
SSted that he believed that
^3 action would increase the
turn-out for the election, which
lias fallen to new lows m recent
* Objections were immediately
,a,ed by Eddie Capel and A
Cooke. Capel said that a
chairman of the elections cona-
mittee, he would have to protest
because his committee was
Imdingithard to get students to
man the polls. Cooke’s objection
was that if balloting were held in
llie Student Center, there could
be no campaigning in the
tailditig, as election rules stated
tot there could be no cam
paigning within 50 feet of the
polls. This objection was
discarded during a five-minute
recess when it was pointed out
that this rule also applied to the
entirely of the Hines Building.
Back in business once more,
Capel introduced an amendment
stating that there would be no
campaigning allowed in the
lobbies of Hines Classroom
< or the Student Center on
days of the election. This
was passed.
Cars on campus, especially for
Hayman Is Elected
By Freshman Class
Miss Deborah Hayman of
Norfolk, Va., was recently
elected senator of the freshman
class. Miss Hayman will fill the
racancy created by the
resignation of B. C. Franklin,
fllher candidates in the election
were, Wilbert Hardy, Richard
Joyner, and James Reaser.
freshmen, also came under fire
from the Executive Board. In a
motion presented by Jim Abbott,
it was suggested that elimination
of cars for freshmen would serve
not only to help alleviate the
parking problem on the campus,
but would also give the freshmen
an entire year to concentrate on
the challenges of college life
without the distraction of a car.
This motion was amended by A1
Cooke to include any student who
does not have a 2.0 average. The
motion was defeated by an 8-5
vote after Dean Bennett pointed
out that while it sounded good, it
would be almost impossible to
enforce (and lamented that the
enforcement would fall on his
office). He also stated that there
were already enough rules in the
book that were unenforceable
without passing more. He
suggested instead that a student
committee be apointed to study
See ANYONE Page 4
STATE STUDENT LEGISLATURE delegates left for Raleigh
Wednesday. The delegates, pictured above with Sarah Mew-
borne, Student Co-ordinator, are (left to right): Byron Wyndham,
Jim Abbott, David Finch, A1 Cooke, Kay Watson, Paul Land,
and Paul Latta. The session will run through March 1.
KAY WATSON
STEVE DOLLAR
Hi-Po Article
erates
Condemation
By LYNN JOHNSON
In action Tuesday night, the
Executive Board of the Student
Government passed a motion that
a letter be written to the student
body and administration of High
Point College apologizing for the
actions of ACC students and fans
at the High Point-ACC game on
Feb. 12.
The statement, presented by
Kay Watson and admittedly co
authored by SGA President
Byron Wyndham, read as
follows:
“Whereas in the past Atlantic
Christian College has always
tried to maintain high standards
of sportsmanship among
students, coaching staff, and
players at all athletic events, and
Whereas such behavior was not
evident the night of February 12,
1969 during the High Point-ACC
basketball game
We, the members of the
Executive Board of the SGA do
hereby resolve that such actions
are a discredit to the school,
student body, and faculty, and
we, as representatives of our
students are shocked and
humiliated that such actions
were prevalent within our college
community.”
Copies of the statement are
also to be sent to the High Point
newspaper.
In discussion of the motion.
See HI-PO Page 2
Officers Slated
By CCA Listed
A slate of officers for the
Campus Christian Association
Cabinet was adopted during a
cabinet meeting Monday. Ac
cording to David Jarman, C.C.A.
president, nominees include:
Robert Thompson, president;
Susan Jaquith, vice president;
Martha Leggett, secretary; and
Betsy Carroll, treasurer.
Qualifications for nomination
are set down in the C.C.A. Con-,^
stitutional bylaws. The president'
must be a rising senior with a
quality point accumulative
average of at least 2.5. The vice
president, a rising junior, must
also have a 2.5 average.
See OFFICERS Page 4
191 Students Acliieve Spot
On 1968 Fall Dean’s List
firpsses are the
fAPEU INDUSTRY HITS BIG not to be left
latest fad in the fashion industry and ACC femimne
'’e'lind. The generation gap merges as -jajjie in the Book-
ffptesentatives model the new styles now
store.
One hundred and ninety-one
students earned places on the
Dean’S'' List for academic
achievement during the 1968 fall
semester, according to Dr. Lewis
H..^windell Jr., dean of the
colffege.
TjKmake the Dean’s List
students must achieve at least a
3.20 grade -average for the
semester while carrying a
minimum load of 12 semester
hours.
Students named were: Bobby
Gleen Abrams, Dennis M.
Adams, Thomas Russel Albert,
John P. Anders, Brenda Ed-
mundson Ange, Betty Kay An-
tone, Kitty Kent Arnold,
Catherine Jane Arrington, Clara
Arm Askew, Cynthia Kay Askew,
Judith Gayle Avery, Angela
Cooper Aycock, Phyllis Bryan
Bagwell, Elaine Barnes Bailey,
Paula Gabriel Baker, Wiley
Thomas Ballance, Joyce Ola
Banks, Patricia Ann Banks,
Dennis Allan Barker and Linda
Kay Basnight.
Also, Phoebe Womble Bass,
Linda Horne Benton, Lynda
Keith Benton, Mildred Elizabeth
Best, Barbara Joanne Black,
George Cecil Boswell, Rodney
Blake Bouldin, Glenda Dale
Brantley, Beverly Parker Briley,
Julian Becton Broughton Jr., Jo
Anne Bunch, Virginia S. Byrd,
Benjamin Earl Casey, Linda
Faye Casey, John M. Claud,
Shirley D. Cockrell, Priscilla
Jinnette Comer and Albert
Roland Cooke.
Also, Joyce Ann Copeland,
Charlotte Caroline Coppage,
Robert M. Covington, Frances
Elizabeth Cowper, Clifton Boykin
Crawford, James Wilkinson
Curtis Jr., Cheryl Marie Dew,
Irene Mae Dail, Ruth Smith
Daniel, Clara Grantham
Daughtridge, Douglas Scholer
Davis, Dennis Ray Deans,
Marilyn Joy Dixon, William
Richard Dixon, Kay Cooper
Dunn, De Wayne Eakes, Cheryl
Marie Dew, and Hazel Earlene
Dail.
Also, Ruth Johns Eason, Nancy
Broussard Edmundson, Carolyn
Hollowell Edwards, Judith Ann
Edwards, Julia Glover Edwards,
Sandra Dale Edwards, Marilyn
Bryant Elliott, Linda Kay Far
mer, Nina Elizabeth Folmsbee,
Linda Gibson Fowler, Sam Mayo
Fowler, Charlie William
Freeman, Norma Johnson
Fulcher, Cheryl Lynn Gay, Linda
Frances Gladson, Johnnie Calvin
Godwin, Larry Gene Grant,
Nancy Jane Gray, Doris Gray
Greene, Linda Diane Griffin and
Janet Winstead Harper.
See STUDENTS Page 2
Carr away Is Named
All-Conference Man
By BILLY DIXON
Ed Carraway, a senior guard
on Atlantic Christian College’s
basketball team, has been chosen
for the second straight year as a
member of the All-Carolinas
Conference Basketball Team,
conference officials announced
Monday.
The five-foot-11 Carraway, who
played most of the season with an
injured knee, joins the eleven-
man team headed by unanimous
choice Gene Littles of High Point
College.
Clyde StalJsmith, a senior
front-line man for the Bulldogs,
was named as one of eight
honorable mention picks.
Carraway, in spite of missing
nine games this season, rolled up
a 19.9 scoring average and holds
the ACC career record with an
over-all average of 18.8 points a
game. Carraway also holds the
school record for most free
throws in a single game with 18
and for most career free throws
with 478.
Dubbed the “Rat” by his
teammates, Carraway led the
Bulldogs in free throw per
centage this season, hitting on 113
of 143 attempts for 79 per cent. He
also hit 133 of 261 field goal at
tempts for 51 per cent and totaled
379 points for the year.
Carraway, who has great speed
and tremendous moves under the
basket, was an All-NAIA District
26 performer last season and was
voted ACC’s Most Outstanding
athlete Award for 1968,
The 28-year-old Stallsmith set
four all-time ACC records this
season: for most points in one
season (596), for most field goals
in one season (238), for most free
throws in one season (120), and
for most career points (1,749).