cember 12
Mars Hill College
hiUtod
cooperation ...
communication .
understanding
progress.
t'AL ISSUE
MARS HILL, NORTH CAROLINA
Tuesday, December 15, 1970
^JItc ^^liristmas tSiocL
ore to hi* *®*°'
the DGGS
ig games
select a
be easy
IS “There
year. VVe
to play.”
9''’' 3ncj P,
to be ashs^^, a I
lie as big
she wins
given her b® „((
ames will
II start at 7 V
erry
istmas
time of year again. The
thoughts turn to Christ-
you, and presents. I’ve
“'''9 a lot of thinking about
T. your white beard, rein-
especially your presents.
likes to get presents,
*'’®times people don’t get
'I Want, so 1 decided to help
some out this year.
Sure Coach Jack Lytton
/s to have a 7 ’ center who
like Lew Alcindor, drib-
Cousey, and shoot like
Scott. Energetic Jack
'^'1lis might like to have a
''"'tain installed next to his
^ ^6 Wouldn’t have to walk
to the office building
® he wanted a drink.
I _ '^3ry is in desperate need
'taiiy
'libi
■S(|
service by a Brink’s
®3r to haul away the day’s
®°me book published since
^ "t the Civil War. The God
'^^ht really groove on see-
V ®"t’’ painted on the top of
Building.
about the ®rron probably wants some-
f,prv °ne of his economics
) win: L Hii, „ „ ...
^ College might want
I’m sure Dr. Hoffman
Some plain, old-fashion-
"uition.
^^'"'el Would flip over having
sopy^ finished, polished,
tor the press. (The Hill-
ingf
lop m^ have to help).
Perry White just might like to
have a band show up on Christmas
eve and serenade not only him,
but the whole student body.
George Peery probably would
like to have an autographed pic
ture of Spiro Agnew, like the one
in Danny Ray’s office. Dean Sears
may want a junior FBI button and a
little siren to put on his belt.
Maybe the Student Court wants
a framed copy of Mr. Vicar’s ten
points on “How to Win Friends and
Influence People.” I’m sure they
would be glad to hang it in the
SGA bulletin board in the cafe
teria since it has so much empty
space anyway.
WMHC might want two size D
batteries to run the station next
semester. (They don’t have to be
new.) Volunteer Services could
probably use a volunteer.
I’m sure every dorm wants a
house mother like the one Treat
has. Mr. Stegall may want a
golden - throated songbird that
wouldn’t talk back. The Baptist
Church might like a Baptist coilege
across the street from it. Maybe
Dr. Underwood would enjoy a new
pants suit.
I’m positive the Hilltop staff
wants a way out.
Love,
Little Harvey Hilltop
National “Professors' Club" Speaks On
Academic Freedom and Responsibility
Washington, D. C. (CPS) — The
American Association of University
Professors recently emphasized that
“the faculty’s responsibility to de
fend its freedoms cannot be sepa
rated from its responsibility to up
hold those freedoms by its own
actions.” In a statement on Free
dom and Responsibility” developed
against the background of campus
tension and unrest, the elected
Council of the 90,000-member or
ganization of professors offers the
active cooperation of the AAUP in
seeking adherence to basic norms
of professional responsibility and
academic freedom.
The statement, approved unani
mously by the AAUP Council, de
clares that membership in the aca
demic community imposes ... an
obligation to respect the dignity of
others, to acknowledge their right
to express differing opinions, and
to foster and defend intellectual
honesty, freedom of inquiry and in
struction, and free expression on
and off the campus.” As a result,
“The expression of dissent . . .
may not be carried out in ways
which injure individuals or damage
institutional facilities or disrupt the
classes of one’s teachers or col
leagues.”
The AAUP statement calls on
college and university faculties to
“join with other members of the
academic community in the devel
opment of procedures to be used
in the event of serious disruption,”
and to ensure faculty “consultation
in major decisions, particularly
those related to the calling of ex
ternal security forces to the cam
pus.” It encourages each college
and university faculty “to assume
a more positive role as guardian of
academic values against unjustified
assaults from its own members.” To
this end, the AAUP statement sug
gests that faculties give systematic
attention to the development of “a
more versatile body of academic
sanctions,” including warnings and
reprimand, in addition to the ulti
mate sanction of dismissai.
in all sanctioning efforts, the
statement concludes, “it is vital that
proceedings be conducted with fair
ness to the individual, that faculty
judgments play a crucial role and
that adverse judgments be founded
on demonstrated violations of ap
propriate norms.”
The AAUP, which is headquarter
ed in Washington, D. C., has for
fifty-five years been the leader in
setting standards of academic free
dom and responsibility for the
teaching profession.
the Mars Hill College
HillTop
Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor
-Linda Baldwin
Laine Calloway
Feature Editor John Ulmer
Sports Editor Frank Farrell
Advertising Manager Dana Hale
Typist Vicki Lytton
Circulation Manager Perry Springfield
Photographer Ken Stephens
John McNutt
Grace Corbett
Charles Revis
Cathy Carraway
Melody Sue Lake
Gay la Green
Terry Kuykendall
Hank Strub
Ed Sams
Dianne Stephenson
Danny Farrell
Harry Quiett
Second-class postage paid at Mars Hill, N. C.
Published 15 times during the college year.
Box 486-T, Mars Hill, N. C. 28754
Telephone 689-1250
1971 Summer School Schedule
the summer terms most classes meet daily, Monday through Friday. Each day
'hto five periods which are as follows:
Period 1 8:00 a.m. Period 4 — 1:30 p.m.
^’stiod 2 9:50 a.m. Period 5 — 3:20 p.m.
Period 3 — 11:40 a.m.
FIRST SUMMER SESSION
June 7 — July 9, 1971
Course Title
Period
Internship
Day
K Ceramics/Pottery
- i, ®Ofy Clem. Art Ed.
^at/Elem Art Ed. UB
Painting
r- Painting
«||^[,^°ntemp Art History
ADMINISTRATION
“fin Acct
I nice Machines
'ijter Acct
^ost Acct
fin Mgmt
.'"nice Mgmt
MiCs
pfjn Economics
pf'n Economics
p6/sonal Finance
pfin Marketing
Jk! ii, iin Finance
''^oney & Bank
L ^^Ministration
,{l0 ®egin Typing
1
H*® Sci Surv
Q^coratory
pan Botany
Laboratory
t"“uratc
I Colony
•-ab/Fieid
(4)
(2)
(2.3)
(4)
(4)
(3)
(1)
(2)
(2)
(2)
(1)
(2)
(4)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(1)
(4.5)
(1)
(4.5)
(2)
(4.5)
Instructor
Staff
Wing
Wing
Wing
Robertson, J
Robertson, J
Robertson, J
RM
Bingham
Chapman,
Bingham
Bingham
Grose
Cox, R
Narron
Wood, R
Chapman, RM
Grose
Wood, R
Narron
Cox, R
Diercks
TWT Diercks
Taylor
TWT Taylor
MWF Outten
MWF Outten
HISTORY
Modern Europe
U.S. to 1865
Ancient History
Afro/Amer Hist
Early History Asia
GEOGRAPHY
221 World Geog
POLITICAL SCIENCE
221 Amer Pol Systems
331 Internatl Relations
SOCIOLOGY
221 Prin Sociol
222 Cul Anthropology
325 Race Relations
MATHEMATICS
100
105
108
111
223
329
331
333
460
(1)
Remedial Math
Theory Arith
Geom Elem Teachers
Mod Intro Col Math
Calculus II
Found Geom
Intro Mod Alg
Theory Equations
Independent Study
PHYSICS
223 General Physics
225 Engr Physics
FRENCH
111 Elem French
113 Inter French
GERMAN
111 Elem German
113 Inter German
321 German Conver
SPANISH
111 Elem Spanish
113 Inter Spanish
113 Inter Spanish
RUSSIAN
111 Elem Russian
(4)
(3)
(2) W 31
(1)
7:00 W 31
(2)
(1)
(2)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(3)
Jolley
Underwood
Jenkins
Underwood
Huls
Jolley
Peery
Huls
Jenkins
Walkers, D
Halferty
Keiser
Keiser
Sams
Vanderburg
Sams
Vanderburg
Howell
Howell
Wood, A
Wood, A
Kogerma, A
Kogerma, A
Kramer
Kramer
Kogerma, K
Kogerma, K
MaCoy
MaCoy
Kogerma, K