May 3. 1969 HB lerican Hom^ .pril 21, 1969. ig. The Fall 7 Cansler; Is* Ice-chairman, Ddwin; Treas- onna Arrow- otional chair- irman, Emily thay Hodges, Franklin, e Home Eco- Carolina Uni- litty Cansler, mily Sanders, ell and Miss that also at- 1 elected Miss icademic year r at Brown, or, beige Val- idition, has 5 ler will sell )1 contact her. from Greens- nal golf tour- last weekend roximately was recently reign Mission the Journey >rk alongside s of training )st in RecifO' Lward, ;olleg« haptet metn' i-l969' aftof uno>' Stan Mars ;rad- and ;om« also )jeci, rorti; ig the phonO' nd Alexandnf Myers Dortn- Cadenza delivery issue feature lars Hill •arded a le publicatin next sprif^j 1 a $750 grn” lis year’s ating throo^l jgh approP^' 9-70 Cadeh^j :sted pers°^, n the May 3. 1969 MARS HILL. N. C. Page Three Radio BroadcastsSOS Dear Fellow Students, The campus radio station (WMHC) is a long sought reality which is finally nearing comple- lion. One large hurdle remains: the purchase of 6 RC-6A transmit ters, one to be installed in each dorm or dorm complex. This type nt Carrier Current facility is labled 3 satellite system, and, due to the wiring on campus, the most prac tical to install. It is also the simplest to expand. This system Was planned with the advice and ^Valuation of Low Power Broad cast Co. and engineers of the Inter collegiate Broadcast System (IBS), cf which we are now a member.' have received further assist ance in a variety of forms from ^TV at V.P.I. Depending upon *nms received from S.G.A. and student-faculty contributions, we Will order a corresponding number at transmitters. They should arrive June 1st and be installed through WESCO during the first session of summer school. At this time we will begin testing of the audio signal and training interest ed students for air, and other sta tion work. We should be “air borne” for the beginning of the fall semester. You can help us meet this schedule by contributing to the radio fund (make checks to MHC Radio Club Account — con tributions are deductible) and, or, by attending the May 4th show ing of “I Love You Alice B. Tok- las” with Peter Sellers. (Sunday afternoon — 2:00). A station has been built by a few despite the skepticism of many. It cannot operate without the help of many. We ask for your financial support and your participation in a project which can produce prog ress — through communication. Sincerely, Tim EUmoie Station Manager - WMHC Harris to Speak to BCAA The Business Club Alumni As- ^'kiation of Mars Hill College will J°ld its 30th annual meeting to- aay beginning at 4:30 p.m. in the ^brary Auditorium. The day’s ^^vities will include a banquet p.m. in the Coyte Bridges Din- 1*'S HaU with a reception follow- in the Faculty Lounge of Me- '*'orial Libreiry. Members of the Association are Jaade up of former members of be Business Honor Club of Mars ^bl College. Officers are Presi- etit Jackie Mitchell, Vice-Presi- ®ht Casey Frederick and Secre- taj.. Qe, ■y Mary Anne Joyce. Speaker for the banquet will be a'- Edward C. Harris of Atlanta, ■°rgia, partner. Price, Water- ‘°Use and Co. He will speak on tb, subject “What’s In the Annual MARS HILL SHOE SHOP Friendly Service Quality Workmanship under Robinson Fumitiu'e Store Report.” Music will be furnished by Miss Connie Parker. Mr. Ralph Jinnette of Goldsboro will be recognized as an honorary member of the BCAA. Honorary membership is extended to a grad uate of the Department of Busi ness Administration who has achieved notable success in the business world and who has made a worthy contribution to his church and his community. Grad uating members of the Business Club will be welcomed into the Association by Mitchell. Bob Drake, president of the Business Club, will respond. The Association members are currently making contributions to the Mildred Loraine Bingham Scholarship Fund and a project for the proposed Blackwell Build ing. Since 1960, in access of $5200 has been received for the scholar ship fund from which $1400 has been paid in nine scholarships. The recipient for the current year is Bob Pegg. The scholarship win ner for 1969-70 will be annoimced at the banquet. In addition to the awarding of the scholarship the BCAA medal winners, the WaU Street Journal medal winners and the SAM Award winner will also be an nounced. More than 50 out-of- town guests are expected. HAPPINESS IS YOUR OWN GRADUATION- VERY BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF '69 WE HAVE ENJOYED YOUR FRIENDSHIP The MARS THEATRE People CONGRATULATIONS 1969 GRADUATES! We also want to wish our other students a Wonderful Summer and hope to see you again Next Year Your College Bookstore This is how the space in the Fine Arts Building looked last fall when a few interested students began serious work toward a long-awaited campus radio station. A quick trip up to the studios of WMHC (lo cated at the back of the auditorium, behind the stage) will show any interested person how much work has been done this year. The transformation is amazing. Spock's Babies Now Adults Nobody ever knocks a guy for writing a baby book, says Phyllis Dubrow in the UCLA Daily Bruin. And while the Joe McCarthys, the Rockwells and the Carmichaels get nailed with “extremist” labels, it just doesn’t sound logical that a pediatrician would want to change the world. But everyone forgot about Dr. Spock. The Good Doctor wrote a little manual about 21 years ago that promised to reveal The Se crets of Raising a Well-Behaved Child. Try to understand the kid, the doctor said. Listen to him. Don’t tell the kid he can’t have a nickel for a Hershey bar; explain to him why not. Don’t yeU at him; talk to him. Treat him like an in dividual. “Spock” became a household word and Spock’s Baby Book was faithfully placed beside the fam ily Bible and the TV Guide. Moth ers everywhere believed they were committing sacrilege if every they raised their voices against their offspring and got gray hairs won dering Where They Went Wrong every time the tyke shed two tears. So by the time the little guy was five feet taU, he had the world on a string and his parents wrapped around his little finger. The world was his oyster; he could do no wrong. But while Daddy could give in when the kid asked for an ice cream cone, when the kid wants a pink and blue world, there isn’t much Daddy can do. The kid, however, stiU figures that’s Dad dy’s fault. So the kid goes to college be lieving the moon is his if he wants it. He wants the Multiversity and the Great Society to listen to him just like everyone else has all his life; he doesn’t want there to be war any more and he doesn’t want to go into the army. He wants to change the world— and all of a sudden he’s got a vote. So here we are with a whole generation of Spock babies on the verge of adulthood. Re-enter the Good Doctor, unfurling a banner strangely matching that of his fos ter offspring. And this time it is to them he says, “Okay, babies, follow me.” Court Acts on Student Dissent The U. S. Supreme Court has refused to hear the appeal of a group of students from Bluefield State College, W. Va., who con tended their suspension from col lege was a violation of the First Amendment. The students had been suspend ed after they were accused of dis rupting a football game in Octo ber, 1967, and following the col lege president to a parking lot where they rocked his car and beat upon it. In the majority opinion. Justice Abe Fortas, commented on the relationship of student protest and freedom of speech: “The petitoners were suspended from college not for expressing their opinions on a matter of sub stance, but for violent and destruc tive interference with the rights of others. An adequate hearing was afforded them on the issue of suspension. The petitioners con tend their conduct was protected by the First Amendment, but the findings (of lower courts) estab lish that the petitioners engaged in an aggressive and violent dem onstration, and not in peaceful, nondisruptive expression . . . The petitioners’ conduct was not clearly protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments.” The case is considered important for setting a precedent on the boundary line between allowable freedom of expression and viol ent and destructive action. Baptist Students Convene “Journey Inward, Journey Out ward” was the theme of the State Baptist Student Union convention held in Gastonia on April 18-20. During this time students repre senting colleges and universities throughout North Carolina ex plored the need for a balance be tween an inward, personal faith and an outward faith which min isters to the needs of others. Miss Elizabeth O’Connor, of the Church of Our Saviour in Wash ington, D. C., discussed the mis sion outreaches of the church. These include a coffee house min istry, a Restoration Corps, which repairs broken-down slum tene ments, a group which finds homes for destitute children, and a Viet nam Mission which helps war- wounded children. These projects are the outgrowth of Christian concern and decication and are a journey outward guided by the journey inward of faith. Nine students from MHC at tended, including David Smith, outgoing president of the State BSU and Jo Ann Pace, newly elected Secretary-Treasurer. On Sunday the black students from the various schools present ed a challenge called “Black and White Together.” During the sing ing of “We Shall Overcine” the leader alternately read the follow ing two piercing statements. “The price of hating other human be ings is loving oneself less.” We shall have our manhood or the earth will be leveled by our at tempts to gain it.