Cl (?) Vol, 2j No. 2 IN parade of STATF*^ MONTREAT-ANDERSON COLIEGE October 8, I965 TWO CAROUNAS TAKE T 0 P HONORS In the parade of states at Montreat-Anderson, the two Carolinas take top honors. In, first place is Jlorth Carolina with 137 students and South Carolina leading a close second with 95. Two^ other states which are well' represented are Florida with 67 and 1x2 respectively. remaining top ten- are Georgia, I6; New Jersey, 11j Tennessee, 10j Maryland, 7, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Ohio, li; and Texas, 2.' Washington, D. C., Ala bama, Illinois, New York, Massachusetts, Mississippi Kentucky, California, and Missouri are represented by 1 person each. Foreign students There are i foreign students a t Montreat - Anderson this year. Two are from the Canal Zone, 1 from Venezuela, and 1 from Taiwan. Montreat-Anderson wel comes each of you new students and hopes ttEfc you will feel a part of the student body before you leave. MOONUGH T HIKE PLANNED The W. R, A, has tenta~ tively planned a moonlight hike for the month of Oct ober, to which girls may invite a date. A box sup per will be eaten around a campfire, fcQlowedby sirig- ing and games. that Dr. Nash dealt', very well with one of the' very ijTiportant subjects that peo ple need to think about to day. Dr. Stafford reempha sized the fact -that Dr. Nash pointed out the importance of choosing a system of values that not only influ ence behavior but also that wm provide guilelincs fof developing future at-titixies. DR, NASH SPEAKS Dr. Ethel Nash, a very charming and ‘'interesting lady,- was the first guest lecturer in Montl'cat-Aride■r-• son's lecture-artist series of the 1965-1966 session. Her lecture, entitled »Sex and Marriage,'Vfas well re ceived by some fivehundr ed students, faculty members, and friends of-the college Thursday evening September 30, in Anderson Auditorium. Dr. Nash's lecture pro voked many comments from her listeners. "Ann Boyd felt that Hi Nash was very broad minded and that she was right when she said that the older generation had no .ri’ght to impose their ideas upon us but that they had a responsi -' bility to us to make sure that_we realized .the facts on all sides. Dean Dunn seemed to fbel NEW COURSE AT M. A. C. M 0 n+T'-e a t«Anderson College is very fortunate to have Profaosor John Bridges,a graduate of the University .of ‘ N o r-t h Carolina in Chapel Hill, to teach the first class in Art History. He is also Director efithe-Exhibition and Audio Visuals Room at Pack Memorial Library in Ashville. In the art class there are approximately twenty- four students, who meet at 7:30 P.M. every Monday for a two hour period, and third period every Saturday morning. During the first semester, the students will be studying Italian High Renaissance and Michelangelo, and in t .h e second semester^ Italian Mannerism-the art style of the late l6th Century-Northern Renaiss ance, and later Contempo rary Art. When inter/iewed. Professor Bridges stated that, " the course Art History is a survey of major monuments cf history'- in western art, which contains Egyptian, Middle Eastern, and Mesopotamiari See NEli COURSE , page 6