NELSON BEIL. LIBRARY Volume 1, No. 9 Montreat-Anderson College Marchs, 1978 M-AC singers on TV - Photo by Ken Lakln Last Friday, the General Assembly performed in the cafeteria for prospective students The General Assembly is a y group of 12 Montreat- Anderson College students which performs con temporary Christian music throughout western North Carolina nd much of the Southeast. Popular at special church services and on the campuses of many private schools, the group also per forms at hospitals, prisons and retirement centers. During March, General Assembly will make a two- week tour of Georgia and Florida, performing at 10 churches and schools. The tour will take the group to the Augusta, Georgia area, and to Orlando, Melbourne, Ft. Pierce, West Palm Beach, and Fort Lauderdale, Florida. In April, the General Assembly will perform in the Myrtle Beach, South Carolina area and in Florence, S.C. During the Florence ap pearance, the group will tape its half-hour performance at WBTW-TV, and the tape will be aired as a segment of the station’ s “Involvement’ program. ' The General Assembly singers of Montreat-Anderson College have been invited to make a half-hour appearance at the CBS affiliate television station in Florence, S.C. The station, WBTW-TV, serves the northeastern quarter of South Carolina and much of southeastern North Carolina. The invitation was issued to the General Assembly by WBTW-TV News Director Jim Griffin, producer of the station’ s “Involvement’’program. Rev. Evers - MAC Student Of The Past Returns by Allen Meadows The Black Mountain Bijou, Saturday night dances with Davidson and. Presbyterian Colleges, a trampoline in place of Hardees, private ' rooms and baths,Blue vs. Gold softball matches, and a relaxation class all have something in common. They are all part of a nostalgic look at the Montreat campus scene during the late 50’s as related by alumanae Reverend Pansie Evers. Reverend Evers, who spoke at Montreat-Anderson College in Chapel on Wednesday March 1, attended Montreat College when it was a 4 yeai- women’s institute back in 1958 and received an English and Bible degree. Following this accomplishment, Evers received various honorary awards and became the first woman to graduate from Union Tlieological Seminary. Reverend Evers, now pastor of the Mt. Vernon Springs Presbyterian Church near Siler City, N.C., gaveAletheia during her visit here a trip down memory lane, passed the restlessness of &e 60 ’s back to a simpler time of Chuck Berry, Frankie Vali, President Kennedy, and the inevitable trampoline! ‘ ‘ I can remember racing back from Asheville many times, ”comments Mrs. Evers as the subject|of|curfew came up. Although she was lucky enough to own a car during her Senior year at Montreat, the Black Mountain Cab Service was the primary means of student tran sportation then; and the place to go was the movie theatre, a shaky, tin-roofed remnant of the past located in the heart of downtown Black Mountain. ‘ ‘ Jeff Chandler was my favorite screen star, and of course there was Elizabeth Taylor, ’ ’ reminisced Rev. Evers. She also mentioned ‘ ‘ The Silver Chalice ’’with Paul Newman in one of his first roles, and ‘ ‘ The Robe, ’’And if time permitted during their town visit, then the trampoline located where Hardees is today was the target of in- tertainment. The terms were simple according to Evers, ‘ ‘ pay a quarter and ‘ tramp ’all New Phi Theta Kappa Members Inducted by Laura Dendy Sunday February 19, thirteen new members were inducted into the Phi Theta Kappa honorary society. These new members are Janet Carlton, Allen Crawford, Elizabeth Hilliard, Mark Jackson, Rick Lawing, Frances Messer, Leslie Milling, David Siegrist, Sherry Taylor, Lynne Titus, Elizabeth Van Dooten. Cole Wells, and Cecil Young. According to Eddie Blan chard, president of the PTK,“this was the largest group of students to be in duct^ in the past several years.” Rev. Dr. John Akers presented the address at the PTK induction service. He chose the topic of Wisdom. Dr. Akers reminded the students that the wisdom they haveis!aIgift|from|God and he admonished them to use that wisdom to the glory of God and not for their own glory. Phi Theta Kappa is the national honorary society of junior colleges! and the Montreat-Anderson College Campus maintains the Mu Lambda Chapter. Eligible students must be enrolled for at least 15 academic hours each semester and have been in the top 10 percent of the student body. Other requirements include maintaining a 3.5 comulative average and good citizenship. Tlie PTK is a service or ganization as well as an honorary society. PTK members have performed many services for the school this year including addressing 1800 Christmas cards for the school. March 27-28 the PTK will be sponsoring Fine Arts Week. During that week MAC students will have the op portunity to exhibit for judging their own creative works. The catagories for judging will include: painting, sketching, craft work and literary works. Congratulations to the new members of the PTK and Good Luck as you continue to pursue new heights of academic achievement this semester. you want ” Off-campus wasn ’ t the only sight of activities however, just as it is not now. ‘ ‘ We had son^thing going on all the time. 0 f course we missed dating, but a trip ' home now and then combined with several weekend dances with the men from Davidson and Prebysterian Colleges solved that. ” Interim Week Cancelled For Next Year by David Teague In a meeting held on February 15, the faculty of Montreat-Anderson College upheld their decision not to have Interim Week for the 1978-1979 school year. The faculty had agreed to reconsider their decision after a motion in favor of Interim Week was presented to them by the SGA. The announcement was made during Convocation On Monday, February 27 by acting Dean Virginia Buchanan. Ms. Buchanan said that the main reason for the cancellation is the self- study for reaccredidation that Montreat-Anderson must undergo next year. Every 1C years schools are asked to dc this by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, and a considerable amount of extra work will b placed; on the faculty. Ms. Buchanan went on t( say, however, that the possibility is left open for off campus trips by the facult] during the first week o January, during mid-tern break and in May of next year. ‘ ‘ Myself and many others were primarily interested in learning and growing spiritually. The majority of students were Christians and most students were willing to go along with a 5 day-a-w^k Chapel policy, plus required Church and vespers at tendance. There wasn’t much TV either, so we got to know each other and shared a iovong fellowship. ’ ’ (sound familiar?) Rev. Evers, who was the Editor of the yearbook - Sun Dial, remembered too of ice skating on Lake Susan (whatever that is) and playing soccer, basketball, and soft- ball. Although the com petition was intramural with Blue vs. Gold teams, the joy of winning and the agony of defeat still existed, In her talk befor the student body in Chapel Wednesday, Rev. Evers began by remarking ‘ ‘ I remember those compulsory Chapel meetings and being weary of the speakers quality. Now as I stand before you I realize that you don ’ t know me from Adam ’s housecat! ” Rev. Evers closed with the following remark, ‘ ‘ God caUed me to Montreat College through the words of a friend of mine who had attended the school: This place made an impression on me. The teachers were so Christian that an unreal world was created for me. The nonor code was such a pleasant alternative to the cheating I had experienced in high school. It was a wonderful 4 year experience. PhcKo Dy CarolyM Marttn'