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NUMBER TWENTY
CHRISTIAN COLLEGE
Cayton Sets SGA
Goals For Next Year
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
A number of student govern
ment leaders were named in
recent elections held on the
campus of Atlantic Christian
College during the month of
April to serve during the 1972-73
academic year.
Named president of the ACC
Student Government
Association was Robert Cayton,
son of Mrs. R.B. Cayton of
Aurora. Named vice president
was Sir Walter Scott Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. Sir Walter Scott of
Maysville. Andy Gay, son of Mr.
and Mrs. A.W. Gay of Zebulon,
was named treasurer, while
Mary Sue Richardson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Richardson of
Anadale, Va., was named
secretary.
New Campus Christian
Association officers named were
Steve Sprinkle, son of Mr. and
Mrs. T.G. Sprinkle of Dobson,
was named president. Nancy
Brinson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Rufus Brinson of New
Bern, was named vice president
Named secretary was Sarah
By JIM ABBOTT
Former North Carolina Gov.
Terry Sanford officially opened
his campaign for the
Democratic presidential
nomination recently in
Washington, D. C.
The Duke University president
said the party is short on
leadership and the country is
tired of so-called establishment
Washington-based politicians.
“I have as good an opportunity
as anyone now in the running,”
Bowles:
Make It Tough
On Pusher
WINSTON-SALEM —
Democratic candidate for
Governor Hargrove “Skipper”
Bowles said here Wednesday
that the professional drug
pusher should be treated as a
serious criminal.
In an address to the student
body of Wake Forest University,
Bowles said of the professional
pusher, “He’s not a user because
he doen’t want to get hooked;
he s the man with underworld
connections, the wholesaler.
He s involved in drugs only to
make money. He’s the one that I
toink our efforts should be
directed toward. He’s the one
who should be jailed or driven
from the state by laws that make
it simply too hot for him to be
comfortable. He’s the target in
any drug abuse legislation that I
Would recommend.”
Kittrell, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Kittrell of Morehead
City. Marcy Reid was named
treasurer. She is daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James Reid of Mat
thews.
Tim Corbett was elected as
editor of the campus newspaper
“The Collegiate.” He is son of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Corbett of
Walstonburg. Mike Hickman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Hickman, Virginia Beach, Va.,
was named business manager of
the publication.
Elected editor of the college
yearbook, “The Pine Knot,” was
Ray Griffin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A.R. Griffin of Fayetteville. Ann
Pinson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. T.E. Pinson of Norfolk,
Va., was named associate
editor.
Elected Head Cheerleaders
were Sally Beth Jones, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jones of
Elizabeth City, and Gecky
Garrett, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Garrett of Hopewell,
Va.
the 54-year-old Sanford told
newsmen. He said the
Democratic race is wide open.
Sanford expects to find an
early base of national support
among the young and throughout
the South. Then, he said, his new
approach to government should
catch on across a broader
constituency now tired of the
politics and unkept promises of
others.
While in Washington, Sanford
received mild support from
Mike Mansfield, the Senate
majority leader, who said
Sanford or Florida Gov. Reuben
Askew could be a compromise
candidate if none of the other
contenders sew up the
nomination.
Mansfield was quoted as
saying Sanford would provide “a
Robert Cayton will soon be
installed as president of the
student government association
for the 1972-73 school year at
Atlantic Christian College. He
will assume his duties with a
first hand knowledge of the
workings of our student
government gained from his
year as vice president. In an
interview with the Collegiate.
Cayton recently discussed his
plans for next year and his ideas
about the role he should play in
the SGA.
When asked whether or not he
felt he could represent the
majority of students. Cayton
replied- "Yes sir I believe I
can." He added that he intends
to rely heavily on the SGA
Executive Board for counsel and
advice because “it is a broader
representation of the student
body than the president is."
On the question of whether or
not as president, he will take
steps to revive efforts to get a
drinking bill approved by the
Trustees, Cayton commented:
"If the student body shows in
terest in such a bill again, a
committee should be appointed
by the SGA to work on it. That
committee I would think would
want to find out student, ad
ministration and parental
reaction to such a bill."
When asked a similar question
about women’s visitation in
men's dorms, Cayton gave a
similar answer saying that he
felt if interest was expressed,
that a committee could best deal
with it.
On the question of whether or
Howard Lee
Calls For
Tax Reform
RICH SQUARE, N.C. -
Howard Lee, Mayor of Chapel
Hill, and candidate for Congress
from the Second District, today
said that tax reform must
become an economic reality for
the working men and women of
America and not just a political
rally cry for politicians.
In a speech to a group of
supporters. Mayor Lee stated:
“In 1971, one steel company had
an income of over 150 million
dollars, but paid no corporate
taxes."
“Last year, 1,338 Americans
who made over $50,000 paid no
personal income taxes.”
“Our tax system is
progressive in name only.” “We
must change.” Lee said, “a tax
system that sometimes lets
not he has set or is going to set
any goals for his administration
Cayton replied: "Yes. I have set
some goals and they include:
initiating student action to raise
funds for a new library which is
badly needed I also feel that the
SGA should work with the
Women s Interdormitory
association and the Pan Hellenic
council to seek changes in some
of the girls regulations." He
went on to add that he felt
sororities should be given the
prerogative of having off
campus housing as fraternities
now do. Cayton also felt that
there is a dire need for better
relations between ACC students
and the city of Wilson and bet
ween the Christian Church
(Disciples of Christ) and
Atlantic Christian College.
The Ewha Womans University
Glee Club of Seoul, Korea, will
be presented in concert on the
campus on the campus of
Atlantic Christian College on
Sunday and Monday, April 16-17,
in Howard Chapel. The Sunday
concert will begin at 7 p.m.,
while the Monday concert will
begin at 11 a.m. The concert is
sponsored by the college’s
Concert and Lecture Committee.
The public is invited. There will
be no admission charge.
In addition to its many concert
appearances in Korea, the glee
club has tolired in Thailand ,
Taiwan and Japan. Its reper
toire includes a number of
sacred classics, both mediaeval
and modern. The group also
Nick Rally
There will be a Nick
Galifianakis rally, Thursday
night April 13 at the Wilson
Recreation Center from 7 to 9
p.m. Free refreshments and
entertainment will be
provided and all students
interested in Galifianakis’
senatorial race are urged to
attend.
Galifianakis is facing a
tough fight to unseat aged .\.
C. senator B. Everett Jordan
in the Democratic primary
.May 6.
On the question of whether or
not he felt the fact that he is a
religion major was an important
issue in his recent election.
Cayton said: "The fact that 1 am
a conservative religion major
mattered to some students, but
to the student body as a whole. 1
don't think it really mattered "
Cayton disclosed that his
student coordinator for next
year will be .Margie Thorpe, a
rising senior and an elementary
education major. Heading up
next years delegation to the
■North Carolina Student
Legislature Cayton said, will be
Robbie Steen.
In closing Cayton said that he
hoped very much that "our
negative points can become
positive points and that those
can become steps forward"
performs a selection of Korean
folk songs, some to the ac
companiment of the “kayagum,
a harp-like instrument.”
Conductor of the glee club is
Kyus(x)n Lee. who was born in
Korea in 1929 and received both
her bachelor’s and master's
degrees in music from Ewha.
She has also had two years of
graduate study at the University
of Kansas. She has been a full
time member of the Ewha music
faculty since 1958. Currently she
is serving as head of the voice
department and director of
academic administration in the
sch(X)l’s College of Music.
The Ewha Womans University
Glee Club will be in the United
States to participate in the Third
International University Choral
Festival sponsored by the
Lincoln Center for the Per
forming arts. More than 600
young singers from 16 countries
and five continents will come to
the United States on April 6. to
participate in the event to be
held at Lincoln Center.
Ewha Womans University was
founded in 1886 by Mrs. Mary
Scranton. an American
missionary, and has played a
leading role ever since in
making higher education
available to Korean women.
Today, with an enrollment of
more than 8,000 students from
many countires, it is the largest
women’s university in the world.
See SANFORD Page 4
See HOWARD LEE Page 4
Second district Congressman L.H. Fountain, facing " ‘““f '‘^t Sor
re-election this year from Chapel Hill mayor Howard Lee. made his
[S vtrto ACC in several years last Thursday. Fountam a 20-year
congressional veteran, did not make any speeches, but chatted w
students in the lobby of Hines Hall.
Cayton And Scott
To Head 72-73 SGA
Sanford Begins
Bid For Presidency
rn
Hargrove "Skipper” Bowles brought his campaign for the democratic
gubernatorial nomination to .Atlantic Christian last Friday. In an
impromptu visit to the campus. Bowles visited Hines Mall and the
Hamlin Student Center meeting and talking with students. He stressed
the main points of his campaign to the students and faculty he met. He
said as (iovernor he will oppose any new or increased taxes of any
kind, that he would fight for a LI.>nTKD no-fault automobile insurance
plan and that he would continue his efforts to get the drunken drivers
off \.C. highways. Before leaving .\CC Bowles said that he was really
"impressed with the beauty of the campus and the friendliness of the
students and faculty he met.”
Korean Glee Club
To Perform Here