'Bulldog Club Members (Continued From Page 15.) Anatomy Of An Alumnus Mr, Robert McKinney—Individual Membership Mr. Marion L. McMillan, Jr.—PHD Mr. C.C. McMurry, Jr.-PHD Mr. Fay McSwain, Jr. Mrs. Fay McSwain-PHD Mr. Jerry W. McSwain- PHD Carl L. Miller & Sons, Inc.—SAB Fred G. Mills-PHD Mr. Duane Mitchell-PHD Mrs. Maryann Moffitt—Individual Membership Mr. Dan W. Moore, Jr.-PHD Morgan & Company, Inc.—PHD Morrison Construction Company—PHD Mr. Aaron B. Moss—Individual Membership The Movie House Corporation—Family Members! C. P. Nanney-PHD Mr, John Neill-PHD Mr. Paul Nipper, 111—Individual Membership Mr. Keith M. Norris—Family Membership One Hour Martinizing Co., Forest City—PHD One Hour Martinizing Cleaners, Shelby—PHD Mr. James i.. Padgett—Individual Membership Mr. E Raymond Parker—PHD Mr. Ed M. Patterson—Individual Membership Mr. C.M. Peeler, Jr.—Individual Membership Mr. Dewey H. Phillips-PHD Piedmont Pharmacy—Individual Membership Porter Brothers, Ind.—SAB Vol. XIII No. 1 Published bimointhly —Sept., Nov., Jan., March, May—at Boiling Springs, N.C. 28017. Second class postage paid at Boiling Springs, N.C. Bill Baucom Executive Secretary Alumni Association Debbie B. Putnam Editor Gardner-Webb College Alumni Association Julius Pinkston, ’51 President James Williamson ’52 V. Pres. Ms. Sue Mlllen, ’59 Secretary Mr. Lear T. Powell—Individual Membership Dr. Dan Proctor—Family Membership Mr. T.S. Putnam-PHD Mrs. Bobby G. Pyron, Sr.—Family Membership Mr. Johnny H. Ramsey—PHD Rhoden Enterprises inc.—Individual Membership Mr. Joe Robbtns—PHD Mr. Dennis C. Roberts—Individual Membership Mr. Howard Rollins— Individual Membership Roundup Store—PHD Mr. Tommy Royster—PHD Mr. R.J. Rucker-PHD Dr. Larry Sale—PHD Mr. Thomas E. Saunders— Individual Membership Mr. Jerry Scruggs—Individual Membership Mr. James A. Seagraves—PHD Seal With Company—SAB Shelby Concrete Products, Inc.—PHD Shelby Farm & Garden Store—Individual Membership Shelby Glidden Paint Center-PHD Shelby Supply Co.—SAB Shorts Boat & Motor Service— PHD Clyde A. Short Co., Inc.—Individual Membership Mr. Heyward Shuford—PHD Spangler & Sons, Inc—PHD Mr. A. Donafd Spangler—PHD Mr. Dale Spangler—PHD Miss Dorothy Spangler—PHD Ralph Spangler—PHD Ralph Spangler-PHD Mr. Pau.' Stacy—Individual Membership Miss Charline Stamey—PHD Mr. Harold C. Stowe—PHD Mr. T.C. Strickland, Jr.—Individual Membership Mr. J.L. Suttle, Jr.-SAB Mr. Linton.Suttle—PHD Mr. Robert Sweezy—PHD Mrs. Sarah D. Tallent—PHD Mr. Paul G. Taylor-PHD Tedder Motor Co., Inc.—PHD Jesse W. Thackerson—Individual Membership Mr. Charles Thissen—PHD Tillmans, Inc.—Individual Membership Mr. Clarence R. Tolleson, Sr.—PHD C. Thoms Antiques—PHD Mrs. Shirley Toney—Individual Membership Tri City Concrete Co., Inc — Individual Membership Bill Turner Chevrolet, Inc.—RID Mis. Felton Walker—Individual Membership Mrs. Frances G. Walker—Individual Membership Mr. Jerry R. Walker Mr. Walter C. Walker-PHD Mr. Glenn Wall-PHD Phil Wallace—Pro Nothing Mr. Thomas E. Walters Mrs. Thomas E Walters—SAB Mr. Wayne L. Ware—Individual Membership Mr. Eugene Washburn—Individual Membership Dr. Gene Washburn—SAB Mr. Thomas W. Wease—Individual Membership Mr. Bill Weaver-SAB Mrs. Marie W. Weaver—Individual Membership Mr. Fred D. West-PHD Mr. Dean Whisnant—Individual Membership Mr. David P. White—Individual Membership Mr. Jim Wiles-PHD Williams Oil Company-PHD Mr. Billy Williams-PHD Dr. Craven Williams—PHD Mr. James Williams-PHD Mr. F. David Wilson-PHD Mr. Charles V. Wiseman, Jr.-SAB Miss Andra Wood—Individual Membership Mr. Paul C. Wylie-PHD Mr. PL. Yelton-SAB Mr, Robert W. Yelton—PHD -w Young Brothers, Inc.—PHD Zim Zimmerman-PHD by Judge Harold R. Medina G-W Grad School The Board of Trustees and faculty have qiven unanimous approval to the administration concerning steps for G-W’s graduate studies. The in tentions are to initiate a Master of Arts degree program in the 1980 Summer for concentrations in K-3, Middle School and Physical Educa tion. Complete details soon. What is it that binds us so closely to our alma mater? Why do we respond so warmly? Why do we do so much in a myriad of ways to demonstrate our love for the institution that brought us to maturity and helped us to develop our latent talents and capacities and our sense of human values, to appre ciate the beauties, and the harmonies of art and literature, and to strengthen and broaden our intellectual faculties? I respectfully submit that there are three reasons for this. Doubtless there are others, but I stress these three above all others. I shall discuss them in what I think is the inverse order of their importance, but I realize others rnay have different views on the sub ject. First, there is the psychological urge to be identified as a member of the group, the notion of “belonging.” This enhances one’s individual ego and produces a perfectly human feeling of pleasure and security. People like to get on the band wagon if given a rea sonable opportunity to do so. It is the opposite of a feeling that one is on the outside, more or less regarded as dif ferent from the others. Class spirit and class unity inevitably foster this idea of “belonging.” After the lapse of a few years not a single member of the class thinks he is being left out in the cold. Second, there is that spark of fire between the teacher and the pupil, between the institution of learning and the student, that continues with us through life and never ceases to en gender a reciprocal feeling of wcirmth and affection and gratitude. As the rip ples go out endlessly when one throws a pebble into a pond, the effect goes on and on until we join our loved ones in the great beyond. Some of us may perversely seek .to extinguish this spark of fire, while others nurse and foster it with loving care; but, in either event, and no matter what may happen to us, the spark is never extinguished. The third reason is not so widely understood. I shall try to work around to it on the bias, my favorite ap proach. When I was a boy at prep school I simply could not understand why Cicero kept harping on his desire to establish a reputation that would continue down through the ages. Think of the millions of books that were thought to bring imperish able glory to their authors, but now lie buried away in some library and for gotten or wholly destroyed and lost in oblivion. A person does not have to be so very bright to realize that nothing he can do will be sure to con struct an image of himself that will be perceptible to anyone in another fifty or one hundred years. Yes, the deeds of men and women as well as those of their friends and relatives and all that is dear to them will pass into the mist and be no more, as Horace so often reminds us. But the college or univer sity stands out as almost the only real ly solid, permanent fact. It is some thing we can cling to throughout life, and thus become a part of its very permanency and stability through the ages. We may leave our mark upon it, perhaps our very name, in a more or less conspicuous way. Even the annals of the college or the university and its archives with their references to the records of the students and the bene factions of the alumni run back to the time when the memory of man run neth not to the contrary, as the lawyers say. So I think it is the most natural and the most human thing in the world for our alumnus to act as he does. And as he comes back to warm himself in the sun of the campus and opens his cof fers and bestows of his substance to the various drives for Annual Giving and for the Capital Needs of his alma mater, and for the establishment of professorships and scholarships and what not else, we may rest assured that he is well repaid not only in the happiness he enjoys with his class mates and with the alumni of other classes, but also by the satisfaction one always feels in responding to an inner urge and a subconscious motivation. ’President’s Corner (Continued From Page 9.) rhetoric unless every faculty member takes this set of principles seriously and applies it daily in the classroom. The faculty is on the front line, not the president We have a serious group of students who want to learn and be challenged. Above all, they want to be proud of this college and proud of their de grees. Whether they are proud de pends on how the faculty does in the classroom and in other activities they participate in on campus. I am not do ing my job, as president of this college if 1—along with my administrative col leagues—do not provide the faculty with the resources they need to do their jobs in the classrooms. I welcome the fresh viteility on the campus and among the alumni and friends. We are a much better college than many realize or dare to think. We are making progress towards develop ing at Gardner-Webb an inner percep tion of greater pride in what each of us does on a daily basis. I am realistic enough to know that at Gardner-Webb College, as at most independent liberal arts colleges, re sources—both financial and personnel —are always going to be limited; the issue for us will always be allocation. On the other hand, I am an admirer of Ralph Waldo Emerson, and I agree with him when he says, “He only is rich who owns the day.” Our insti tutional audits may never reflect the assets of some privately endowed in stitutions, but with the support and energies of alumni and friends, we can be rich in owning “the day.” It is our time in history. Let us claim it.