Page 4
The Hilltop of Mars Hill College
Wednesday, May 4,1994 ''Wednesday, May
•Tracy Lynn Smith, Social Work
•Julia Dawn Street, Social Work
•Andrew Robert Thompson, Social
Work
•Elizabeth Bond WnghXSocial Work
August 1994 Graduates
S
■s
3
I
I
Bachelor of Arts
•Angela Pressley Bagwell, Elementary
Education
•Julie Ann Barcafer, Psychology
•Stephen Russell Barrington, Spanish
•Barbara Hughes Black,
Communications/Public Relations
(Marketing & Management)
•Dodie Bea Bowman, Political
Science
•Trace Renee Bumgarner, Elementary
Education
•Dolly Patricia Bush, English
•Sean Earl Carlson, Spanish
•Ashima Chopra,
Communications/Public Relations
(Marketing & Management)
•Sarah Elizabeth Doepner,
Communications/Public Relations
(Arts Management: Music)
•Scott Lee Garber, Art
•Kathy Ann Honeycutt, Art
•David Martin Ingram, Elementary
Education
•Temple Lyman Kessinger III,
Political Science
•Bryan Todd Lentz, Political Science
•Carolyn Teresa Moore, Elementary
Education
•Jack Eugene Moore,
Communications/Public Relations
(Computer Science)
•Ashley Elizabeth Morrison, Music
(Voice)
•Marjorie Maree Myers,
Communications/Public Relations
(Marketing & Management
•Olga Khadgi-Murat Nogaeva,
English
•Kelly Dean Parkinson,
Communications/Public Relations
(Journalism & Writing
•Melissa Erwin Rothwell, Political
Science and History
•Charles Lindbergh Smith II,
Sociology (Criminal Justice)
•Stephen Blair Waddell, Theatre Arts
•Angela Faye Webb, Political Science
and History
Bachelor of Music
•Stephen Labron Whisnant, Music
Education/Instrumental (Tuba)
•Greggory Dewitt Hedden,
Therapeutic Recreation
•Rhonda Willis Hensley, Allied
Health/Nursing
•Dale Steven Hopkins, Jr., Recreation
Administration
•Alison Melissa Kelley, Biology
•Teresa Jilleen Luther, Allied Health
Nursing
•Helen J. McKinney, Business
Administration/General
•Michael Christopher Maney,
Physical Education/Sport
Management
•Dorothy Ann Pierce, Business
Administration/Marketing and
Management
•Amy Dawn Elkins Shuford, Allied
Health/Nursing
•Diane Annette Young Simmons,
Business Administration/General
•Shannon Renee Stevens, Allied
Health/Radiologic Technology
•Donna Anita Styles, Biology
•Nora Blease Ward, Therapeutic
Recreation
•Dionne Elaine Watkins, Allied
Health/Medical Office Technology
•Wenqing Wu, Computer Information
Science
flilltop F
Unc
ewM
jeader
Bachelor of Social Work
•Stacey Angela Buchanan Bryant,
Social Work
•Peggy L. Rozzell, Social Work
By Michaels.
Bachelor of Science
•Leigh Ann Anderson, Business
Administration/Management
•Lucinda Diana Bailey, Accounting
•Sherry Lynn Elizabeth Ball, Business
Administration/Banking & Finance,
Management, Marketing
•Benson Tracy Bracken, Business
Administration/Management
•Steven Warren Braxton, Business
Administration/Management
•Carol Anne Burnette, Recreation
Administration
•Brent Donald Caldwell, Mathematics
and Middle Grades Education
•Deborah Lee Crowder, Business
Administration/General
•Sonya Hope Green, Therapeutic
Recreation
•Mondora Lynn Griggs, Therapeutic
Recreation
•Tammy E. Hall, Business
Administration/General
BE LESS PRODUCTIVE
ATTHEOEEICE.
^54ie office has always been a place to get
ahead. Unfortunately, it’s also a place where natural
resources can fall behind. So here are some easy ways to
reduce waste at the office. Turn off your lights wdien you
leave. Drink out of a mug instead of throwaway cups. And
to cut down on trash, use both sides of a memo. Doing
these things today will help save resources for tomorrow.
Which is truly a job well done. l-800-MY-SHARE.
IT'S A CONNECTED WORLD. DO YOUR SHARE.
A Public Swvica ol .
^i| Share
f.JxAA/v .
'nVvVvv'’^
;
Rol
lltop Editor
Tile Board of Stud
*dia recently h
'fviews for the Mars 1
®ege media leaders
ons on April 14. 1
d was unable to mal
decision on the n
>p editor.
^ Mclnemey, a jun
.^"fflunications maj
r be the editor for i
'I yearbook. He 1
5®dy decided the thei
ed the cover, a
® over the ofSce. Del
. tern was the editor
P-1994.
I^trina Cox and L
will become (
*°>‘s of the Caden
*is rismg junior Zook
from Huntersvi]
MHC Home To Ranking
Racquetball Player
Some Will Make It Far
B
ly Jennifer McKinster
Hilltop Staff Writer
By Freda B. Dias
Hiiltc
Hilltop Assistant Editor
Mars Hill College is the
unwitting host to the
amateur racquetball player
who is ranked second in the
state of N.C. and seventeenth
in the nation. He is freshman
Richard Myers, from
Gastonia, N.C.
Myers has been playing
racquetball since he was
eight years old. He began
playing through his local
YMCA. He currently
practices at least two to three
times a week, and competes
in tournaments whenever he
can. Tul-tex T-shirt
company has sponsored him
in some of these
tournaments.
Myers became second in
the state when he won the
America Amateur
Racquetball Association
(AARA) Championship
'Tournament in Charlotte
several months ago.
If he takes first place in
the next championship
tournament, he will be
eligible to go pro and
compete for cash prizes.
'The Hilltop would like to
wish Richard Myers the best
of luck in all his upcoming
competitions.
Commencement, continued from page 1
began his climb to the top in
1956 by becoming the local
farm and government
reporter for the Goldsboro
New-Arffts. He later
became reporter and editor
for the Norfolk Virginian
Pilot, the RaJei^ News and
Observer, and the Detroit
Free Press.
Roberts has also served
as chief southern and civil
rights reporter for The New
York Times during the tense
years of 1965-67. Roberts
was also in charge of
correspondence to South
Vietnam in 1968-69 for the
Times. He has also been
national editor for the
metropolitan newspaper.
Roberts received Mars
Hill’s Alumnus of the Year
award in 1970 for his
achievements. Later, he
went on the become
executive editor for the
Philadelphia Inquirer. Now,
Roberts is a professor of
journalism at the University
of Maryland at College Park.
Graduation weekend
will be the final page for the
class of 1994 as students at
MHC. Many tears will be
shed. They will hold dear
their memories and move on
to make new ones. These
graduates will always be
loved and cherished by their
fellow classmates and
underclassmen.
Graduation is approaching quickly. For
many ,this a time to look back on the semester
and reflect.
For others this is a time to tie up loose
ends, reflect on four years of college, and
worry about what life after college will be like.
Questions like, "will I be able to get a job
after graduation?" and "what am I going to do
with the rest of my life?" are being asked.
These questions are not new to seniors.
They will probably be asked by seniors 200
years from now.
What is the point, you ask? Well, the
point is is that seniors have been asking these
questions as long as seniors have been
aroimd, but for one former Mars Hill College
graduate, the answers have come fairly easily.
Nancy Alise, as she is known in theaters
throughout the east coast, midwest, and
Canada, received her degree in 19% in
Musical Theater from Mars Hill College.
Since then she has maintained fairly steady
employment as an actress.
Upon leaving Mars Hill, Nancy Ali.se
played the part of Charlotte in the Musical
Charlotte’s Web.
Since then she has played a variety of
parts that include such characters as a nun, a
mistress, and a star-to-be.
The theaters that she has worked with
include Cumberland County Playhouse,
Classic Arts theater, and the Molly Brown
Theater in Hannibal, Miss. ■ h fH
This past winter Nancy toured i
Caravan Co., in Omaha, NB i”
Christmas Carol. It was here that
her fiance, Brigg O’Brien. uft
Currently, Nancy is in Wichita, KS
she is playing one of the lead charactef*
Smoke on the Mountain. j ’
In January, Nancy and her husba® .jj k ^Umstein of Pisg;
be moving to New York City to pursu®
careers on Broadway. .
enior
^ajor!
iljWichael S. Rot
jj, P Editor
Mars Hill seme
holding exhibits
, finest works
Jfilatt Art GaUei
%w is part of tht
the artists ai
Katl
Gre(
We wish both of them the best
^rforr
Jones
P Staff Writer
|(jj^Ursday, April 21
L Ppers performed
Packed Moore Ai
Review was compr
p ^ as well as skits o
“fiowstoppers is
^ fiirough the work
lu? Thisse, Bethan)
^'^hel, and Jeff Whi
^sHill. Theme