Southern Adventist University KnowledgeExchange@Southern

Southern Accent - Student Newspaper University Archives & Publications

1963

Southern Accent -

Southern Missionary College

Follow this and additional works at: https://knowledge.e.southern.edu/southern_accent

Recommended Citation Southern Missionary College, "Southern Accent August 1963 - June 1964" (1963). Southern Accent - Student Newspaper. 45. https://knowledge.e.southern.edu/southern_accent/45

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Archives & Publications at KnowledgeExchange@Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in Southern Accent - Student Newspaper by an authorized administrator of KnowledgeExchange@Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Susommjmammer Edition

Acceptances Reach 863, Up 77 Over Last Year

Accepted applications for ei breaking figure I man}', Me> roUment for the 1963-64 fall si Canada, , South Afi 1 SMC have reached an Breaking doivn the broad fig- , Thailand and A _ high. As of , ure of 863 we find the boys out- Indies, sill -jtiidents had been accepted, numbering the girls 446 to 417. Monday, September 9, 1 record- will new faces a memorable day for all fre last 'year's There be many -"- -' - - ^ i 383 new students transfer students ; HO former students n urning they beg ngorous

' Junior Nurses , program in Lym 1 boast Chapel while for Get High Scores , In National Exams ; "^ numbering 234, and tl ional League ievemenlTest; Southerr , the

rcentile or above. The class ranked as follow e< Graduates 16 I upper 13 percentile in eye, SMC

At Close of Summer College Service Center Begins Operation in Plaza •icaf nursing 1 Ercentiie in It SMC, t that the de- other step in Collegedale's ov lid and the all plans for thi? campus. Principal speakers for the ci The class chose "Perfection" In charge of this new and id out of thi icing CI to princinle ability apply le events has Candidates for the bachelor of ter 1 friendly gentler ' ning new Phil- the ne of Mr. Victo < ) handle at the Friday has r iology; Jon E. Wil- lips 66 : who had 1 this college. yea 1 liams, history; John ^ 3w pumps. facilities garagt Jr., theology; and Ha =, a..- .... ".^ .".^-. h's ah Foote, religion. ;eloped to keep the inside and Approves "'ell. Advisory Group Those who received t s\d of any car in top condi-

i the old station " elor of science degre 1. this building is indeed an- Of e, Gymnasium Charles Thi e destroyed, but ^ t things 'can't alwa Proposed New Andrew Hai I Heckle, business administration; Audit is hoped that funds for tlit Registration Procedure e Advisoiy Development It Klaus Beale, Lela E. Whorlon pool will be available beforf cil of SMC, composed of and Ed% Former students will regis- completion of the structure. lusiness and professional lary—^ educeducation; Geraldine Pn ter according to the following look around. recently discussed and ap- The start of the project is in- (een Foote, foods and nutritio surname classificalion: ;d the proposed plans for definite, according to President j^onard Noel Filh Monday, September 9 '" Larry Williams V gymnasium at SMC. The C. N. Rees, A^F—8:00-12:00 A.M. approval for the project impi G-0— 1:30-5:00 P.M. Returns to Area, Tuesday, September 10 Left 'On Impulse' Mr. Larrv Williams, former assistant dean of men at South- College,

COLLEGE LIBRARY SOUTHERN MISSIONARY ENCORE Dean's List, Second Semester Sign of Progre! Melmda Allen Sc(ito/iia% Speaktig . . . Sylvia Allen Daryl Anderson Daniel Bartell Ronald Behner Pat Black Mary Arlene Moore Sue Boynion The clamor in support of Sunday closing laws is increas- from SMC—particles Gilbert Burnham Robert Pumphrey ing to a deafening din. Seventh-day Adventists have been over the outside. D ihing* lo told that "Our country shall repudiate every principle of its Herbert Coolidge """J^' ^ William Coolidge Marj' Joyce Russell constitution as a Protestant and Republican government . . . (ime to wash the soot Jack Colhren

, . , is have won- turning to SMC for then we may know that the end near.'" Many Bob Cruise dered how our country, with such a ^heritage of freedom, "^^ '" ""^ ' ^i"^**^ Sara Cunningham could completely turn its back on the principles laid down smc; it became ovc Nolan Darnell by our founding fathers. Today we are gradually seeing For ihe sofco of th Margarel Davis ^MC^m f Mariiee Easier this happen. ^^ [^ Judy Edwards In i960 the Supreme Court, regarded for so many years days will soon be ove Harold Elkins as the palladium of freedom in America, entirely disregarded central heat syaeni g< Mar^- Ann Ford WilUam Tyndall past decisions and under the ° ."^ guise of inierprecaiion, upheld ^^^ Jf Sunday blue laws as being in the of public and Josef Weiss brighiei Laura Hayes Carolyn Wilkinson Jon Williams For many years prior the Court had upheld separarion ' ' Bill Keaty William Willis of church state. In v. and Everson Board of Education, the Gilda Koehl Phillip Wilson court said, and in McColIum v. Board of Education empha- John Leitner Judy Woodruff sized: "Neither a state nor Neil Ludlam Allen the federal government can pass The Best in College Workman laws which aid one religion, aid all religions, or prefer one religion over another. Neither can it force nor influence a , person to go to or remain away from church against his will or force him to profess a belief or disbelief in any religion. '

; punished for entertaining or professing j

attendance.'" In the Everson Amendment requires inditioned to the conflict between Soviet with groups of religious Co'mmiu believers and non-believer Western Democracy. Just as the generation before them „ t require the state to be their adversary. State po' 3 the tramij of Nazi jack boots crossing Europe, today's"genera be used so as handicap religions thai 2m,'" The basic em isis on equality and impartiality was iJons '"' ^*^" Today the Cold teraied in Zorach "We sponsor an attitude War the part of government that shows partiality to any lioncd group and that lets each flourish acc( rtling to the zeal •^"^ » Soviet Foreign Minis' , Andrei A. Gromyko, after I

of its adherents ' dogma. , . . The govern- of intense negotial' mem must be neutral it nearly a decade. when to competition between rI The test-ban treaty is simple- sects. It may not thrust any s( any person. It may coerce anyone to attend church, observe a religious holiday, \ or to take religious instruction. (Emphasis supplied) ^ That this philosophy of onstitutional abo Jaw has been , nuclear explosion" in the atmosphere, outer spac especially commoi the days of the Roosevelt Court '^"^ the treaty to be of "indefinite duration."

Many of the worldjeaders bailed the 1 is apparent when realize that since 1932 the Court has ^"p, departed from prior decisioi to that time, during a span of 150 y As the treaty generally agreed among '"^'^ I 29 t ould very well be this experts that was ahead ii > bombs of disregard for **"' historical preceder n for ' " ~' ^^^ '^^ led in small warheads of the so-called ^re in tactical "general welfare value. Since the United States is behind on powerful bombs, of the majority" that will wreck the stahiJit ^^l[ and ] could , not continue testing \vithout detection, Russia will ; r law and make it possible for all her efforts on the testing of s every principle of i ' . warheads for tactical weapons which when tested canno

: detected. heads of state feel that the peaceful resulls |

' which coidd e ; from the treaty make the risk 1

From oiu- observation of past i deceit and broken pledges, we cannot discount the possibility I that the test-ban will only serve as an opportunity for the Russ' to get farther ahead in their struggle against democracy.

70A&te ^<^Uai (^^ ad infinitum

ir the students will at leasi group of Saturday night pre well informed about aclivi- grams ranging from comedy t i. WSMC-FM ivill be opera t. films, By the way, did you real ize that 1964 will be a lea First let's look at the negative side. One of the first places the student hears of the SA is at the accounting oflice. Looking at

including an early I greater participation broadcast. ned improvements. teen dollars." If he isn't already The Accent | make The Joke, SOUTHERN afflicted forward ACCENT by that dull, strides i.^«,i numb feel- ,„! n ill help studenU find the mg brought on by regislration new face lifting is in store lo he may wonder. help show the "Where in the effecu of new , world does that fifteen dollars columns and other features One of the small groups on ' campus (which according to the w bulletin ^^^ll grow smaller)

er of the fiflei 1 dollars. If an r student eith irse that s noi going to hap- e likes or doesn' hke the metho'

1 next year. of To see to that is the SA am lly the |c)b of this column. iludenu who like to socialize.

:heduled Senai week! Then ihere are Wh; 1 SA ch; Staff Changes and Additions '^^ Near Completion for 1963-64

the 1963-64 school John Merry, native of Olym- ^^"-^ will joinI thetl 513, Wasliingloii,

SSThorlhanTand lypb^^. schools of Washlnf

pie ted in denoi Walla Walla Collect " Adniii rently

ing responsibilities

cceed Mrs. Dorothy ' s head of SMC's hom , SMC parljnenl. Fo sponsibilities iviis!>i..<..i=i...Hanson >«=has u=,.ii years, Noj-man Peek, the ieletics and house- ,. head of ... his aoctoratiJortnrat fcj,i^m,. hold shortly, i.vill join ihe chemistry bia Union Loi of cue, she r. ived Eer M.S. ^|S B™' S JS be» ^Si f' Iowa Slate College, from iiis T- " jj-^ "i '. ,„ 1. i"g on master's degree at ?:, iking additional work q^„,„„ CnU^c,^ S C ,vi1l r„. ^ the Universitysily ofI Maryland ,, „.„ Sh. joining fj staff vnxh thi SMC's Dr. Chinn goes ank of associate professoi Elder Bruce Johnston, gelist, will SMC' physii leparl which ind C. F. Ledford, Religion. Coming vision of - port 1 of his fi-om Emmanuel Mis- Physics Research Continues to SMC ^g I he litliography was clone by College. Elder Johnston y j^^^ e W. C. Starkey Printing Co.; Mr. Walter Herrell of Tn- Under NSF Sponsorship s by the Collcgedale

-^ - The physics department leaching at Andrew of Columbia Union College, doing research this summer ui T Sociely pii^ Mrs. Elfa Edmis 'ng his B.S. there in Busi- der the sponsorship of the Ni ness Administration. His lel the ment were purchased and have College HOHOrS 1 ence includes sales for a working" on -. Heffei bindery and i Ray " " Sfaff Members ion ot Nursing staff, foreman in the CUt pres's where head of the physics depf " Bill Mundy, phys^ power supply, sensiUve lo ten Mr. Robert N. Scan-, professor he became thoroughly ac- y^)^Q ^pg LeaVmq Hutcherson, Charran millionlh of an ampere full a Bob McBeynolds, and scale, and a two pen recorder. Retiring and transferring staff The work being done is of members at Southern Mission- h Dr. Mor- Mr. Victor Taylor, umer. from Atlantic nomers ary College were honored Mon- automobile ( . Union College. and Brs and oth- day night, , with gifts and r branches of ph>';i an informal buffet dinner al the 1 projects, the o children, completed Collegedale Servi of the ng homes for a year Centet ;d chi Chemistry Area and his family, and Taylor Motor "F vah Secures Beckman bile Profe'ssor Scarr is taking Service in Covington, Tenn. The spectt brighieS -'-'^-— —- Dr. Taylor's teach- Taylors b *' echildi much bright* Mcasuring Device ing responsibilities' here. Dr. of which are alunmi of SMC. aduate ^^f^m RecenUy_ Taylor, in turn, will do the same Mr. John (Jake) Westbro .nderbilt University, plans to , al—- t Newbold. Scarr "received his from Luling,_ Texas, has

""

s%rc . tfim Hrha's"' d?,;° put ™'„T"r'i=s?"st ih=, ..Ti','; ^ r Uiebeller nlso continue her residence i shtaE secretary canvassing sionary College among equipped Adyemisl colleges Collegedale ;;oTReiiiro'„".°Hers'. graduate and pastoral ™rt

^-^^ --!' V-'' yj, _^.

59361 * SMC's Temperance Chapter Hefferlin Reads Wins Plaque for Fourth Year Paper and Sees le Southern Missionary Col- Eclipse in Alaska chopier of the American When the recent Ten }uor bills were OnT»J«day.Julv23.Dr R^' perance Society is the re- introdui the Senate and the House, Hefferlin, heid of SMC's ph^y^c ird 500 student depariment, presented f .u- senators and 1 of additional 5(

IV of the college chapters ini from the con e United Stales and Norl

Ackermai Alaska. The AAS chose Al ntlv by Dr. J. M. * of the SMC chapte because it lay in the path ol July 20 solar eclipse. the local chapter hi The paper was finished spring after four years ? SMC chapter, this has bee

Following its presenlj was expre courogemenl General Confer- similar additional wor S^eS?''™^; Adult Beginners Oscillator strengths ii.„aaie »rea sup- Attend Kuuttj's Lifted; chapter, some WSMC-FM Gets Face ATS , they make il possible viiies sponsored in String WorKshop xhibit at the Chatta- .^ . ^ idult abundance of element ' County fair, at , - *""'"K Makes Plans for New Year ilton ^ "" " ""'' !i Southern Missionary Co! FoUo» rtng the prese Station WSMC-FM shown 125 times; 30 progra; music building by Rayn- the r and other in elementary and coimly lii schools; 10,650 Listen n SMC, June ;wi^olh iines were distributed at e27. fair, 23,174 other pieces of

.vent to Tallieetna, a town lioi . thrc ;h Thursday, classes began out 30 to 50 people located agt igram of studio ir 7:00, afternoon classes soulhivesl of pre quality prograr nged for Monday ; 200 miles Miss Anne Wilcox through Thursday. desks \vill add K : Will Join Staff e of the V (Donna Chalm England) conv( " Dr. Hefferl i for adults stalled i during July and August has h"a^ Hllle* course wa; ^.n t^ sky Mily added to the will replace Miss Eliza- strings. The like n Arsdale, who is going so that the participants j solo; a darker, and suddenly it ib o teaching. IVIiss Wilcox, able to play simple and easy orchestra mi i the la. tone qualil 1 became '. acceptable by the hty was on. Board Votes end of the five-day sess i broadcasting time per The planeU Mercuiyy and Venus of ippeared lo the left New Heating then the Corona was noticed around Rlont fOr SmC where the sun was hidden. The sky was not Mack, but a dee blue gradually approaching

1 the .ndingl'^-Pf'^fi^^^yfj When installed this ma- ' '^^°"laUon of°' ^a CantonCantor Package Coal vill furnish a direct news rcdons which were still in sun

O^ming Unit %. hich will : the college, making SMC lig%.. The eclipse totality tasted "^^ °''' ""' ;at plant, the first college v aGout 40 seconds, then a flash P'^" SDA a service. competeti hich wUl consist A partment headed by >f two 300 horse power boilers, has been selected. iioker. conveyor, and ash ejector Several hundred ,vill come completely prefabri- „ ' ' '- .,„«. hght and special pros -ds hav. ""^'her '" »"^ 'a" P"" -f August or the al SMC '•n!?'^"' part of September accord- ', including ^nDon Hall f'rst "J Charles Fleming, busines il Stanford '"B the college. are planned. Announcers have been audi-

k in ; Tom new coal-biu-ning phy The ' lioncd and many positions have Wallers, jraduate mislry guaranteed by its manu^< ' been filled. However, Head An- Stanford Uni ' nouncer Ed Phillips is of ihe and Ron Fo: St. ]_ouis where which is due i opinion that many new stuflents nngsi rks for McDonnell may audition for announcer nosilions which are available be- PRESENT — FUTURE o[ the additional broad- Bill Sin Lynda Holden T hours. Persons interested Mrs. Ackerman Appointed Ben Ringer Carol Olsen r contact Mr. Phillips al Walter Bro> Diane Matihevv Music Head for 1963-64 planned Nolan Dam i;^",r, Alfred Wiil Lila Toome' Barbara West service Jo"? Gardnei Bill Simpkir Ann Foutch N: . Marianne ihf «in Buster Hugi .."L". Ronald Sen Tyndal Gloria McC Wallo ing to Dr. C. N. Rees, SMC's College, Rov Ca> Herbert in Ihe «b«rice ot Dr, Morris Faith for Toda Merwyn Crandell tcle.isio She ha' Gets Acceptance 111 Eiidand iiiid lo itudv Dinno

the conlir : From Loma Linda Mrs, AclLcrman hi in the C Linda Co. Atlantic MariLec ith Lan- Del Hieb cosltr, Mas. sludy David Tonsber^ Doris McCulchen m the Unii..ersnv ol Teache Painter 1 three Ronnie Case Ruth sviil, J, Osc Tuder lastul. PanlGeberi .. Janet studied will Ragdon equirc- Joe Hodoes . Mary Peabody Ct ..'ashsille Leslie \N^alker Glenda Shoemaker Molhis . spent diaries Wheeling Judy York Cily. Ackoii isl lute Don Ssvayze Mary Ann W™'' John Swajze Faye Miller '

SOUTHERN Acam Registration Hits 861; All-Time High; Up 105

! the I

;. He ii ports Professor C. F. W. Futch- er, director of admissions and for tlus year, but more staff pleled by the fall semester i records. This total is 105 more would probably be needed for 1964.

than last year, a gain of abnost the next college year. SMC has almoil doubled i Business Manager Charles opening enrollment i

Ther L 450 i

" [ale campus, and 4.5 liicb has been planned for but 1957 to 861 in 1963. The Boar

It built, will be added to the of Trustees recently voted 1 SMC's clinical e.\perience pro new women's residence hall plan for and limit the enrol gram of the Nursing Divisioi Construction will start on the ment to approximatelj' 1200. is located at the Florida Sani

Orlando campus. 371 Are Oriented Emergency housing has been MV Secretaries Direct provided for the overflow from Into New College Life Special Activities . residence hall ty-one students—298 fre guidance m the future." stated

. students was Dr J W Cassell academic dean. compare Meetmg Lynn Wood Hall me of the annual Mission- ings. 569 m year. Of the chapel tlie orientation group - , Volunteer weekend, Sept. The visitation : and 21, held here on cam- lay the groundw' let,plife deluered by professors ;. Southern Union dignitaries ligious

"^ ommunity students. 1 of the college. and MV Confe i Tivoli Thea- joined the colleg r in Chattanooga. Professor Professor Futcher said a s' vices and oPficial welcomLS weekend activities. jhnston will conduct the meet- i ncrease had been expected, also part of thu schedule

1 ij per ceni. ' In connection with the MV : igs. "The purpose of onentation ' weekend, the CoUegedale church The MV-sponsored social "Go great gain this year is to tr\ to acquaint evangelistic visita- students i,vith the academ I launched an \vill ihe hich cover ,

I Chattanooga area witli house- ademic Dean J. W. Cassell the college

ince—not lo admit you to col- ege but merelj to show j'our WSMC-FM Takes UPI; Onenleos made then- marks in four tests—vocational, Eng- nh general ability, personality First College with Service

i Scoring another first in the field of edu< , SMC the "Aflame ; United Press International news sei-vice. For several years the professors of the communications department ha\e thought

Southern Union Presi ' be desirable to have news service on the campus. It was thought that this Don R. Rees delivered the development of WSMC I ! to students of news and radio. With the 1 Sabbath morning.

I launched the visit Sabbath afternoon. Two-student s knocked on doors the Chattanooga and Look<

Mountain areas, offering a fi Bible course and inviting tli contacu to watch the "It Is Eastwood, Haley Elected Senators By Student Body combination of the "-t Eastwood and Pierce Ha- UPI is a United Press and Interna- vere chosen to fill the two old Service, which lining seats on the SA Sen- ^Jon^' '^^"^ 1958. It is a service — .n a special election Sept. merged in rajho 19. Miss Eastwood was elected agency for member

' chairwoman of the social edu- ti™s . cation committee, and Mr. Ha- petitoi ley was elected programs nitiee chairman.

Also nominated for tlit ite seats were Nancy Steadraan financial, general, fashion, or social education chairwom- sic and alf m and Cecil Petty for pro- radio and te solo, Patricia Mooney; {rams committee chairman. newspapers. trio, Joann Ma I mode, Judy During voting WSMC-FM hours Friday This will enable Woodruff, Martlia Woodruff; remarks, Dr. C. N. Rees; vocal the student prograi solo, Lynda Whitman; trumpet ing to tellers solo, Lloyd Logan. BradweU an .

8c(itowa% Speafcing . - . Be in the 'Know'

By Doug Wai

Article by article the Student Association Constitui the saddest part of this whole story i asked school picnic o October 2 is Perhaps been gradually eroding away. One SA senator, when The annual winch no one should iss. This day is that some students were so unprepared that what he thoughi of the constitution, summed up feelings an event f"". (^"th no classes) s jusl at the they even missed the last Senate meetiiig. They I when besaid: "That antiquated thing!" of ^'; m monotony, didn't hear when their money wa was eliminated right Ume to break "'a' Some time ago the Club Officers' Council year's ^'^"J the ^^ ^elp lease a teletype machine and to step alone invalidated the from the Student Association. This stor this holi C.^'^'A^l^ment are in )ve tlie Accent office! They didn't hear regarding the chartering of | entire article of the constitution ^^ ^^^^^ ^^j^^ ^ the fun. Yet, ^^^^ for coming events! They didn't \ never been revised ide clubs. This section of the constitution has g^-'^g^ain times in past years ;onie confused It the Senate has regularly scheduled i or amended, freshm* '^^^^'' that '"B^ ^^^^ '"° Originally, the various forums of the college were or- fj^^ ^^ conclude lack prepar ganiiied by the Student Association. However, gradually these they iforraed and But tliese students will have a second chance. " - should watch for evenU and he pre] will he forums have grown independent, leaving another - * Some of the coming Senate feat»u-es a n October 12, the Student Associatioi the constitution ready for the scrap pile. mondily news conference with SMC President prograr ent a program. This constitu- As a result of [bis gradual deterioration of th. .^.^...^ r- - . = C. N. Bees and a revision of the SA Therefore, the ne%'flw'Pm.n-ams Coi of sena- ined. the regularly sched- tion. the SA is presently^perating on the judgment tion. Of course, there are y^^^^^^i:':^,^^:^^^^^.^^ ^r^p- tors and faculty advisors. uled Senate debates to heighten interest. Don't ar^tions. The student body is invited to see the time has passed when the constitution could be ^j. be caught unprepared when the next Senate The ^^^^^ ^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ p,^„ ^o,,. ,„ complete revision is place! brought up-to-date by amendment. A ^^^ ^^ ^^g„, j^^ ^ -dosed" night, meeting lakes needed. We strongly suggest that a Constitution Revision Com- mittee be selected, consisting of senators, students at large, Martha Speaks .... and the sponsor of the Student Association. This study tbc flaws and deficiencies of our preseni and make r i.The Discard Narrow. Little Worlds uld then recommendations to tbe President's Council. Since the Student Association has an obligation to make observation (my roommate has of Talge and Jones. Rer recommendations to organize the functions of the college So, fc a goal in Ufe loo). Not only i.vill those hving in a world of which affect the social, economic, physical, intellectual. id blank page of another school you have dates, you'll have bi and camshaft, hors spiritual welfare of tbe students, it is necessary that it have a year spreads before us. Perhaps more interesting and en- p( mo- much if the precious few spare I basicset of principles and outline of government to follow in ids. Remove those living in

it is to fulfill effectively these obligations. rid of Packers and Yankees,

There have been other Student Associations that hai ron and diamond. Remove i males reading audi- one reasc selves no harm (and maybe Uie m my living in the world of their seen the need for constitutional revision, but for j have been nodding approv- if were «"« have failed to anything about it. The revisin ever so much eood) we or another do Miss Hoot- and '"gly- Perhaps little of tbe constitution would be one of the biggest contributioi to play hke a philosopher enany wouldn t be quite so sure ] question^r the 1963-(>4 SA could make to SMC. ourselves a one quiz—namely: What am I here

f**'"'' to rale, wipe tliose smug lot Surely we should be here I ai t an education, a real educa- Chances are tlial (with due your faces. Although . granl )n. Not just Dean's List GPA; ^G^igious^ Spcafoing . Proctor and Gam- barrassed to admit it, I'll n that is but a part of it. Let us ble) 99 44/100 per cent of us n life. Maybe pee would answer, "Why, to get an education, of course." Ha! this "" hackneyed response is, in my gny 'irtoo''many. book"s, music, art, ideas, philo; justified humble observation, bordering swir! Through rationalization some think they are , ophies, that eddies and However, inain complaint wearing what they please. But they aren't. God says "not on falsehood — unintentional my .^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ confining cc aga'"sl the Upsilon Delta 1 m- follow after your own heart and your own eyes, which perhaps, but slill a lie in most ^^^ |^^ ^^ j.^^|, ^^ ' -' - - • ers isnt SO much their narrow- - II t I /M _u ie If, DC\/i i are inclined to go after wantonly^ (Numbers 15:39 RSV) cases. from our self-imposed mold and ^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^.^ j^^lp. instructed iVloses to have the Israelites make tassels headlong into reality and God ^ej,^ ^^^^^ ^^^ ^y ^^^^ ,„ v,,,, „,v,„. ,i,„;,. „a,™w. plunge the borders of their garments and to put a cord of blue (g,,^^^ residents of WRH. Ac he tassels. Thus, by their dress, they were to remember ^^^^ to one who should know, a special people dedicated to God's work, a person highly placed in tlie should show to the world by our dress we are administration, fuUy 90 per cent a special people. of the ladies on this campus art There is no need to wear "eyecatchers." The use of good here for one purpose and one *Vie6Ui^

3r, Cassell, Profess :ontributed to the cians in the are

women. And still sweet Little Miss Hoolenany comes sighing SA-Faculty RelatJo in year after year \vith the old "Here-I-am-men-come-and-gel the Student me" refrain. To quote tbe Ki at SMC. We ston trio, "When ^vill they e hear that this year President Rees will have a monthly news conference with the Student Association Senate. Maybe develop. this vrill allow some problems to be averted before they Infell I Popularity The perennial response; "But Freshmen Not So Green f I have a goal in hfe and am VVin- imbitious and study hard and We understand that Upsilon Delta Phi President Bailey plans jy lo broaden myself inlellec- slead and Sigma Theta Chi President Patty Chu had made nbbons aUy, the fel- lo order green beanies for the freshman boys and green of school. lows On. for tiie freshman girls to wear during the first few days higher However, it seems that the idea didn't make il through a Accent

American graduate school of their choice, but may not have already imdertaken graduate S''Wemi G° Scakrmade work Nominations close Oclo. „ s„u,|,j„ Missionary College Move to Remodeled Quarters ,.™^e"e^r^r^^^ ^^ Chattanooga hvmg w^th faim- ~ as the first president of the lies in connection with the Ex- Approximately 100 fellow- Student Association and the As of Sept. 15 the English new offices and a conference in International Liv- ships will be awarded to out- contribution he made to the and modern language depart- room, all located in the south periment standing candidates been sporting five end of Jones Hall ing- He \vill return lo Germany nominated field of Seventh-day Adventist ^ " " by liaison officers education. While here of accredited Ther r offices are pain UPI Teletype and colleges and universities in the lean- ways In commemoration of the page ed : tel color ntinued from 1) '^mE>"can laeas. United Stales this year. Nomi- contribution that Miss Maude All chairs p-to-date and in son tile noors. desks and nees will be judged on intel- Jones made as a professor at are new and styled with the In this chapel talk he told lectual promise and personality, Soulhei about conditions in East Berlin, I)uis WSMC-FM on a latest office trends. Each ofiice integrity, the Miss Maude Jones genuine in is equipped witli a typewriter the barrier set up there, and religion rial has also been and high potential for Fund is concerned. table, bujlt-ii ml effect upon the effective college teaching. established. Her lenchi lives of the people in East and Funds WE e raised by the nets, book shelves, and 1 of- counseling will be long , Winners «-ill be eligible for fice desk and chairs. of financial WSMC-FM, and tlie Student The conference roon -rves In a personal interview Wolf- give assistance, ishing lo '. with ai mnual ii An ly and varied pur[ 5. It gang aid that imum of f single jple here much n $1500 . class and S2000 for maj ;search nd study room. It than lh"se in Gen

their 1 dependency alloi I further achines designed for only about 6 per ' I three children, and tuition education, should correspond honics, facilities for church while about and fees. Students without fi- with the director of develop- nancial needs also are invited menl. Southern Missionary Col- inda reading office of , ic apply. 1 lege^ Collegedale, Tennessee. and Poet^y. rations depart-

is being given Adjacent Coming LyceuiT

location for it; new desks , for

. nresent, a lack secretaries ain prob- Accordir. Dr. Clyde Busb- It is hoped that Little Debb'es lell, chai of the Commu- rally located so that ihe nications Arts Division, both de- body may obser\'e the Oafmeal — Snak Cakes ;nt partments are well pleased with Raisin Creme — Apple Delighrs the new offices and feel that promote a greater de- Fronsted Fig Bars — Fruit Squares they will gree of efficiency in the future. Nutty Bars — Swiss Rolls Date Filled Banana Twins Collegedale Cabinets, Inc. Helping Over 110 Students to Earn Their Way Through College W.nuf.cturen of High 9»«li'T L.bor.lory Furnilure (or Sohooli and Hoipitali Phone 367-2618 McKee Collegedale, Tenn. Baking Company Owi VIRGINIA WOOLSEY, Telephone 396-2912 S.ptember 26. I«3 Luce Joins SMC Staff MV Launches New Crusade As Food Service Director Take His Word' However, Mr. Luce's expe- rience with The Mission food service dates back before this. Society of ihe CoUegedale Se' Mr. Luce began working in a grocery enUiday Advenlist c}i filled the hen Mr. John Schmidt re- old, and later worked his way gned in order to accept a posi- through South Lancaster Acad-

, emy, South Lancaster, Mass. Afler attending and graduat-

: ing from Atlantic Union Col- lege, Mr. Luce worked ^vith the where he has been food service departments of Co- Food Service Dep; lumbia Union College, Andrews Washington Sanitc Memorial Hospital in Jamaica, Hospital since 1950. and recently at Washington Sanitarium and Hospital. Erianger Hospital This is not the first time the Luces have resided at College- Accords Nurses dale. In 1949 and 1950 Mr. New Recognition Luce was manager of the Col- lege Market and Southern Mer- In consideration of ihe edu- ; his wife cational training Ihat SMC slu- '"6 I SMC. denis of nursing have received by tlie beginning of their fourth year, Erianger Hospital of Chat- Conference Elects tanooga recently changed Its Elder Paul Gates policy on hiring SMC seniors of the Division of Nursing. Associate Pastor Erianger Hospital considers ' ^Showcase for Communism' a senior student of nursing at Southern Missionarj- College the '"> Will Be Douglas Lyceum gisiered nurse church is Mr. Paul Gates, for- and'.^ V her the s: merly of the Rome-Cedarlown "— according to Dr. Harriet Smith, district in the Georgia-Cumber- isorcd, film of a Communist satellite, chairman of the Division of land Conference. will be presented by Neil Doug- the Tabernacle-Audi to- NSF Sponsors This ] Mundy 1 Sept. : SMCs jrsing will be

In filming "Showcase for able t, find emploj-n To Attend Physics Meet Communism," Mr. Douglas had langer to help defra ' the full permission of the So- penses in their semor year at ing the cialist government SMC. Dr. Smith said that such lectures in gas dynamic ' ,. and recordI every phase of life a change in the poHcy at Er- der to gain informalio) PP^- in this Eur. langer is a definite compliment ) SMC's plasma jet 5 of nui arch proje discuss ved, P^^?!^]' "':'._']' ^^ problems of others ^'.^il worked, played, and studied. 111 doing research simil; He recorded the conditions at "i|i being done at SMC. Students the great spas of Czechoslo- 800 and Faculty ^^ As a result of the conference, vakia^and Mr. Mundy has proposed the churches, klndergarl ij p[ Participate in Reception application of an interferometer and training camps. by Dean K. R. Davis and con- i..ntiits from all parts of and laser to the NSF sponsore He sited the castles and sisted of two numbers the Fiiiiil si.ii,.i wore pre?;enl. research project currently ur by the handshaking at SMC's college brass sextet, a duet by Mini.!.. |nN |,.i-.- i n allend- derway at SMC. well as filming the giant, 20,- nual president's reception '. 000-ton presses molding modem

Saturday night. Sept, 14. i \\SM< IM PROGRAM GUIDE ship propellers. Tlie making of Preceding the I Ihe Czech glass, porcelain and program mood

music was I irded plajed b> S>Kia

Lantern," the highest award refreshments for the e\enmg winner at Brussels World s Fair President Hees in his addre-;-; is captured on film. welcomed ill students to South Concluding this film ad\cn ern Missionary College and i ture is the spectacle of the Song which freshman Kirk Campbell and Dance Festival at Slraznice from Highland Academy ex- where 1 singer frf 5(d the hopes and aspira-

pageant of Sla^ian r authentic recordings.

before 8,000 audie the author of While Th and Europe as an Ezplore If, both to be published i

has made on the SMC campu; In 1962 he presented "Russia- the New Face." and \i he showed his fihn on '

Committee of 100 ATS Booth Draws 5,990 Organizes Laymen To Help SMC At City-County Annual Fair

The group, composed of husi- less and professional men, will irrive Sunday aflemoon, and go conducted liy the chairman of dvisory Development

il. Union Secretary LeRoy

J. Leiske. The comiiuttee ^viil liear a financial report by Busi- ness Manager Charles Fleming

Jr., get the latest figures on en- rallmenl from Academic Dean Tlie booth was sponsored by W. Casseil and listen to I. SOUTHERN the ATS chapters of the Chat- Rees lell about ACCEm President C. N. tanooga and CoUegedale SDA plans for the development of churches and by Uie SMC chap-

SA Picnic Attracts 500 SMC Students

To Hamilton Nat. Bank's Lal(e Area

fill cnic n en i 1 la! f 4( t SA annial f p ml [ mib lun In the ^irls aflvard dre% aj- pro\unatelj '3OO iuore fjr the dn> dash Freihman Mar\ Whitlen

it md sf^ff to Haniillon s pi jmores scored ^3 pomts placed first Sophomore \an National Bank s recreaUon area juniars 1<1 and seniors 1 Cockrell took the 100 jaid dash, on the shores of Lake Chicka Swmmung was also sched and also the standing broad

I uled but fe\\ distuibed the late ]ump The freshman team ck and field competition season v.aler placed first m the giils relay. the monung and after Sophom ; ^^g Cummings and Da^e games gave fresh anc team Spindle announced the after Freshmen Whitlen Ph>|; Ihs Chu finished first in ihi tliree-legged race. In th. Heating Units tiDns of slalom skiing, eirls' ri>uu"ig_ broad pimp, Senioi knng saucering and the Due to Arrive alley Win lead lea peJ far nan pi ramid. Wayne lest. Junior Frank Palmou About Oct. 15 and (who organized the on in the sh otpul, S enior Bob Two 300-horsepoucr heaUng uilh Don Long) skiied ale won t sottbal row, and Freshman Jean nton Stoker Corporatirn nf Cununmg md S|iindli amper won V in gjrU lio are expected Ir arinc on munccd the how from a c Kelle ! SMC campus Oct I1 ac able dock decorated as Ta- on the gir ' standi

arles Fleming. It is planned Smuts Vin Rooyen, ; that they mil be in ipeialion theology ma) or ended the aftei For Annual Homecoming " t. 31. supper worship service willi Ai.inoxitnately 300 for new boilers will leplace I ilk on world and chui the three 150-horsepower Idlj ditions

; boilers given to SMC h\ Fiehman Fiank fir; L'doral Works Agen 1 m | rinled to llie taje HO \drd nee nnd also won th

Engineers Complete, Adjust New Sewage Disposal Plant

modern faci "ties for treating lier problem due to apid of sies,- pans ion of enrol hi

000. The fa cilities \ ill se^^e facihtiesatCollegedali stablishn enl5 lo- solved by installing ndcq caled on ih college campus. treatment and sanitar ' sew Constructii 1 of the facilities lo replace the old sc .tic t was started i n the fal of 1962 system,"

1 of , 1963, Touche' Forgot How to Vote?

., «. ., Not 2 B.' By Done Walkeh

Qdltokidhj Qpeakinq . . .

« ""

on hou as T p nan one of he ail . "na he But ihei duln ha d of T SMC an t claim h u T h d n n o fad ihe-v i e aim lo Ihe thinking oi some, this honor is not n ended b il -ie a m a pre imII Contrary c fe stil! b h can see only as fa as e f for the near-sighted highbrow who pa k h S.nate and 1 a the book in front of his face. Instead, it is lor Ihe well-de e oped symmetrical student who has not only availed himse I oi a ad of tlie d f 1! f con on academic oppotlunilies, but has also made a nbu a The p cf these na n h d in the other phases of college lile. u L n n e do It the a d Th e urne u be e ba banans and tr o h "Who's Who in Am 1 Collt I Uni doe to evaluate T a n fa e toda If e aie to haie a strong , Citizenship and services lo Ihe schoc oc a on e e one mu pa ticipate and push for and u e Tie dn nust ha\e more of th" i future usefulness. 4. Scholarship. e a d 1 of 11 e d a of ing back and recei\mg hng a a a e o e Th itter plan won't work! e e e on o hat man> of the older d n a e o go en an en dea It seems that the older b. n o e h k fo g an ed !> ' E n a h a d a no h n an stand still; it must elle np e d n a e In ome ays the Student Asso- 1, a on ha en E ng n he la e d e Uon. The time has come men S ep nun be one consists of better student any years, l.SO had stood on the SMC cam \ n fed b oting A e ATS promoters say, "Let's gpa requirement for "Whoa Who." Hoi d ed pe en pa tic pati6 " in the next election.

lised il a lull one-half point lo 2,00.

This is what haj

Under the present system, all students having a gpa of than 2.00 are completely ehminaled as nominees for this hor

s in (he minds oi the senalo s One who played in Ihe bard and he d a ub

vilh a gpa slightly below 2 00 «

ors graduating who have a fa

ation for "Who's Who"?

1 has been asked: "Why hasn't 'Who Who

r this, but I feel that partially it is because sommmkictm

Andrews Univereitv has made allowance lor this a h "'°" ""'"'""™"' '" "Who. Who" -i! U°™o,^end°ITa" ol 2m°H™,,'„„de°nt>™ht h°." h°a'" o' o''u".°a„''d°™^n°a T, may bo condidales oven though Iheh gpa is ahghlly bo ow 2 00 Undoubledly. something needs to be done here on I think il is °'"^" obvious that out present system ol cho " "" ° ' lor -Who's Who- can be improved upon. DD \ Accent Collegiate Chorale Plans Concert for Year

rograi

outlined ror"liie SMC Collegiate Chorale. According to Mr. Don Crook, director, several appoint- ments have already been sched-

Highlighting the year's activ- es is the week-long promo- )nal lour througli Florida.

On Tuesday evening, Oct. 15. the Collegiate Chorale will per-

be performed , ardage gained through of ihi Nohe^ Camera, Self-satisfaction is Passing," score e air. Workman's only Spring," by ^ endelssolin; "The me on a pass from quarter- pherdess," by Shuberl; "Ego Ernie ick Workman to end Mark Touring Overseas American Sum Tui Plaga Doloris." by all, covering 55 yards. Schutz In the second game, Hale Pint Appontment rned back Martin 19-6. Mar- .the first of a c,e

night 5 fro m the Amen fiet ; The Chorale s first appoint 1 kelH for his onl> r Clyde Bush gu, menl is Alumm Weekend Oct Tie big for ncll': Joining the College Choir ' Hile. TrZ 'or Kspecnllj when thej th V will perfoii • wrierback Bushneil hopes too compik hs "g^ iiid frighlened Amen ( for both church sei end Jerr> ill their bra\adi are fii niau) experit-nca i jci ppearmg for the lid iflen frightened -ale Albright sions into a book ) ui Hickok dumped Willis 18 6 Taking a trip ab d h foreign land Hence w . of I' performed for the in the ne\ I game Hickok s run da\s isn t uncomm 1 Clntlanoogi Club for the ning and Bill) Wolcoit s pass Mdlicns of Am h 1 Music ' --• *- e^en^^g program Oct 12 ing kept ^^lllls bottled up r--- t and didn olhei iJp The officer elected b\ this

:ond "' 1 f 1 til la I tint t«entj five member organizn and de ir The next eing caught 5on fall to Hale mixture of bloods of Stefan' perple^ting lutless opporlimitj m the and social off tackle for a 45 yard business pohtical

Sewage Plant Kenneth Spears Succeeds .tdfro Student Finance 1 in West m Pike md the Southern Mr. Kenneth Spears has been which come from SMC or Tei nad tracks and extends lo School. Mr. V\e located on the appointed director of student fi- nessee Temple umtnt plant proc nance, succeeding Mr. Don L. is responsible for oHlce West, who has accepted Ihe duces at the bakery, and he the compan\ )f personnel and office also editor of jiubhcalion for the er for McKee Baking monthly inder the nose of tl ployees, "Little Debbie Ne^ / of CoUegedale. f Notre Something r

' I^"er." najiping it gteefulh Mr. Spears is now hand- busine hng student accounU and work Having attended Mr. Spea placements. He reporls that ab school previously, gradunli-- from SM( ost all students have been |)!ans to aced in jobs on the campus 1966, After serMH- m iii. i t^- in the affiliated industries. Navy for over k for 24 hours nli.le "ng World W.i> I! '^1 'i s„,,pl,of.,r.s,„ Mr West in his new losition Religion Students [roiliiced co lUiiuously lo lacili ' ' ^curing person- .'orked'iiro.l lieid ..,m f^^ Participate in laic the gro Mil of microbes and the bakei and Retreat olhcr orga. sms. Those orE.n- Mayes Bra I Housti Annual

'."" '.'"',,, lents of Ihc

i ,l„,a„iiual Stop and Rest at ,'i',''', liquid, and nerl nonpoll jTiorai ash. The Oaks Motel AfUr Ire imerl by ox dalion

7630 Lee Highway

Inc. CoUegedale Insurance Agency, Rrown Bnilhcrs Conslruclion O.uipony of Chatlanooga buih Auto - Life - Fire - Boats - Homeowners Plans svero prepamd by Phone 396-2062, CoUegedale, Tenn, SchniiUt Engineering Company,

: Tcnni De- Enlarged Joker' Beats Past Publication Dates

Communications Elects Honnum Club President

SMC Board of Trustees Plans Plant Expansion

Douglas Compares WSMC-FM PROGRAM East and West In Czech Lecture The Boiird, in appro\-ing [he

1.) the Women's Resi- SA Sponsors M look cognizance of Highland Trip

This was Mr. Douglas' thirc! toiiseculive prograni on Ihe -, '^''''"i"' SMC campus. His oilier i^vo '"^ \^^^ '""' *'""'" ''"«"'' programs were "Rm-ia— cl„. New Face," and hjy fiir Ilii- vear llie SA Turkey. irai.im on making SMC well- bm

As Mr. Douglas slioweil Ihe grant, i.s pre.senleil ii films, ho leclured, occasionally WS.MC-FM as another means Dr. Hi comparing points of commn- of promotion. hinged nisni and capitalism. Chairman Sleen plans to have Included in the film were lietter publicity for SA elections shots of mountain and country, and programs. General infor celebrations and costumes of inBlion to the student liody will the people. also l» increased

Duo Piano Team Presents First of Fine Arts Series

Nelson and Neal. traveling famed Curtis Inslittile of Mu- liusbnnd and wife piano duo. sic. 14-20 84 37 soumm Accent

Committee of 100 Raises $46,000 for New Gym

The COMMITTEE OF 100, a lors on academic, p The group met on Sunday, of Seventh-day Adventist cial financial group and p . Oct. 13, took a tour of the cam- professional and business lay- ^vill probably mec pus in an o|)en-air, sight-seeing men, receiilly gave or pledged three times a year. bus and listened to reports by $46,000 for the building of a Approximately one-third of President C. N. Rees, Dean new gymnasium at Southern the invited committee was able J. W. Cassell and Business Missionary College. to attend the first meeting; Manager Charles Fleming. Pre- presenting all confer- the other advance appointments: siding was Southern Union Sec-

i of the Southern Union, prevented the entire member- retary LeRoy J. Leiske. Others e COMMITTEE OF 100 will ship from attending. Gibers will on the program included South- he committee em Union President Don R. Rees, and Southern Union De- velopment Director Oscar Hein- rich.

Ingathering Surpasses At an informal banquet, ar- ranged by Food Service Director Any PreviouS"$10,263.16 Ransom Luce and Miss Han" Hanson, head of SMC's home All previous Ingathi sold for S544.5 economics department, the com- Field records at Southern the auction were solicited the Day on mittee members and their wives Missionary College were broken field day for that purpose. were entertained by the follow-

' ing program; Collegiate Chi total of 510,236.16 was raised Fayetteville, Tenn.; as far nt ' rale, Prof. Don Crook, conduct- Accident Injures Linda Pacer students and staff as Morristown, Tenn.; as by SMC ing; violin solo, Patricio Cobos; east as Gatlinburg, Tenn. ' vocal solo, Prof. Dorothy Ackei ~ ' Of this figure, a sum of $1650 phy, N.C.; and as far ' man; piano solo, Beverly Bal given by approximately As Car Hits Teleplione Pole ' cock; tnunpel trio, John Waller, •WO students who partici Lloyd Logan and Ronnie Rees 1 the field day by Members who have joined tudents were imoKed Bud Plait, lost control of the wages for the day. the COMMITTEE OF 100 thus : accident on Apiwn car and tore down a power pole. far are as follows: L. H. De :urda\ mght, Oct 19 The car continued over a 20- lony, Birmingham; Dr. P. L i, and 70 staff members. Religion Fisher, Birmingham; Dr. L. B Piatt, Sharonlaron Ambl.Ambler, Leslie came to rest against a tree. The students were divi.ded into Teachers Hewitt, Huntsville, Ala.; Dr Pitton, Lindajnda Pacer and, Caro 63 bands with five students in Guest Spealcers ^11 of the students except Louis Waller, Candler, N.C, Ijn Neidighhgh Linda Pacer] was Lmda Pacer walked away from G. G. Welch, Kernersville, injured. accident. lone drew 16 stu- At Academies the She remained in (Continued on page 4) Don Platl, drivinf dent bands, transported from Professor Bruce Johnston, SMC by the t^vo college buses. chairman of Southern Mission- Southern Union Home Mis- ary College's Division of Reli- ;ionary Leader S. S. Will and gion, and Pastor Douglas Ben- O. D. McKee Finances ding approximately 35-40 Georgia-Cumberland Home nett, assistant professor of reli- ! per hour when the right Missionary Leader William C. gion, have been invited as spe- New Building For SMC : wheel of the car left the Hatch organized and directed cial guest speakers to two of the ment, causing the c the Atlanta activities where academies in the Southern Un- A new industrial arts center The expansion of tlie depart- out ol -ol and strike iver $1100 was raised. will be finished for the Indus- ment ^vill permit the hiring of pole. On Thursday morning, fol- Professor Johnston will be trial education department by additional industrial faculty, xhe k the right side lowing the field day on Tues- speaker at a Bible conference the beginning of next school During the present school year, of the car where Linda Pace day, the morning chapel was to be held at Highland Acad- year. To be built just south of most of the instruction is being was sitting in the front seat, emy, Portland, Tennessee, No- the new college bindery, it will given by Instructor Drew Tur- Linda was reported in fair con- c field day and those who vember 21 and 22. He was in- expand tlie industrial education lington. dition at the Newell Hospital in d not yet participated were Principal capacity.^ vited by Highland "^^^ building ^viil have indi- Chattanooga later Saturday T -1 .*^^ . given an opportunity to con- Di _ ™ U. ^^^^ laboratory rooms for night. She was the only one of tribute wages. A sum of $350 Pastor Douglas Bennett start- was donated, bringing the field ed last Sunday night the Fall day 'orking and auto pita! and is reported 1 total to $9,718.65. Week' of Prayer at Fletcher Kee Baking Coinpany, has ^6- ' mechai general classroom suffered a broken clavi ion held in SMC's Academy, Fletcher, Nortli Caro- 11 the build- ' ;' offices broken ankle. labemacle-auditorium, the total ' entailed and are in- lina, upon the in^ ' ing costs except that iched (Continued on page its peak of $10,263.16. Fletcher Principal L. E. Westell, by student labor. t^^^^ed the plans. Manufacturer Evangelist Robert Spongier Delays Start Week of Prayer Speaker Of Central Heat The installation of Southern Spangler, of ll ;Min iai De- sota. Florida. Missionary College's new cen- ! General Con- From 1949-1953 Pastor '-l heat plant will probably ference of Seventh-day Ad- Spangler served as evangelist - begin until sometime in ventists, will conduct the in Ohio, Alabama, , November, according to Busi- annual SMC Fall Week of Spir- New York and Texas. While er Manager Charles Fleming. itual Emphasis Oct. 25-Nov. 2. in Texas he accepted appoint- The boilers which are being A native of Dayton, Oliio, ment as secretary of the minis- -;ianufaclured by ihe Queen gty Pastor Spangler was bom May terial department of the Far Boiler Co. "in Charlotte, , Eastern Division of the chiwch's '-^^., 22, 1922. His first assignment have been delayed for an tor the church was as an in- General Conference. He re- ""explained reason. tern pastor in Cleveland in mained at this post from 1954- Before installation of the boil- 1962, when he was named lo ers at SMC, 19+3, they must go to present position. Canton One year later he became his Jhe Stoker Co. of Ohio jiaslor-evangelist for the Flor- Pastor Spangler married ms for final preparaUon. Conference of the church. In wife, Marie, , 1943, Inthemeaniime..thefounda- ida Takor irk, Marj-land. wn tor 1946 he accepted appointment the building lo house at Foresl boilers as Bible instructor will be poured so born September ^«tJj^ Lake Academy in Orlando, Flor- tricia Ann, 5, the cement can be curing held that position until 1946, and Linda Marie, bom support the ida. He ^ 73,000 pound September 3, 1951. , 1947, when he returned to pas- Southern Accent October !*. H63 . martha speaks ' fidtoiaCCy Speafciiig . . . Plea for Self-determination By Mahtha Wilson

! admit that any time a group of people live ; together or go to

its of I school S 0/ pleasure iii il. This knowledRc together there must be

1 MiBsionory College, like manv other educational ' rules lo , guide their behavior But I feel, as did : our Founding sideToble time now. there has been talk about ^ ules should integrating. ; As anyone who has even a According lo sev ral administrators ol the college, pres- foggy idea of the world situa- ure is graduallY beii g applied within tlte chu ch itseU and adirectly by the led ral govemmenl. is a cry for "self-determination" I have little respect for people ze the nght ol the Genei among ethnic groups in Africa md any olhor organilaliona within the church o have their and other areas that once made ay in this mailer we are not willing to concede o the federal up the vast colonial empires overnment the right o pressure in any way. w tielher by an of the late 19th and early s old, 1 eandc e method, a privately own ed and oper- 20lh I able of acting i: !ed instilulion This e iloriol is directed against uch pressure, tliroug ner as the rest of the student ot necessarily for or against integration. body. There is no legal need, how- Deapilo the fact thai the federal government has no ' Nations, tribes, clans and fam- ever, lo penalize all because a right at this time (and should Kennedy's Civil Righla Bill pass.

ities are violently jealous of | . minority need some guidance. we would only grant thai they had the power, not the right) their independence. And this ; Therefore let us make a differ- ' principle is one established by ent set of rules for freslmien. bom the White House to inionn SMC of certain requirements providence, for God ne^er forces , There are two dormitories for anyone. Man is a free moral Undet proposed Civil Rights Bill, the president or J men. House the freshmen sep- agent, with the ability and right , vould hove the power to withhold federal 1< arately as is so often done in Then there is the objection other schools. A wing or a floor

should be decided t that we are a "School of Stan- of the WRH could serve the alion is bemg procUced. ' dards," and we must not com- same purpose for us ladies. The

Even Ihougb the parents ol SMC students pay I promise principle. If you an- ke other Americans, those students applying for fede swer sincerely the question, 1 the future to help finance their expenses -A SMC, ' How many rules involve a

. The I ol c matter of "standard" and "prin- our happy little dale, for I feel :ould r , ciple"? I'm sure you'll find, as

, thai at Southern Missionary allend o I did, that precious few there should be College the lives of students are thought i adults that 99++/100 per cent sometimes umiecessarily super* Asio ennedys who rabe the cry of "diacriminalioi (my favorite percentage, you at the dr hal. we suggesl they take another look b . vised, regimented and ordered. cause it appears that they are about to discriminate a litt I We would all feel quite hurt , I'll be the first to How about it? themselves against nol only private institutions, but also i I and mistreated if, while we were home during the summer,

P.M. our father entered our bed- Touelie' snapped off the light. "^efcgiouQ^y Speakiig . . .

Suppose there is a park near i our home. Suppose that in the

I park there , child moJestei tipped spears, or grizzly-bear '

t the kingdom of God . . and all these traps. And suppose that Father things shall bo added t eaching it? Do walk in the park unless he is i often than not? with us. If, dear friend, you ' and I were, say five or six years

old, things such as these would (

be expected and quite proper. '

The examples of lights out < and the student park are only isly balanced class load? n beginning. There are more: f

When to study. Where not to j meet friends. When to "social- ize" on the campus. When not ur time, and (Z) putting God first to drive. How often to spend weekends at home. Whether to worth on the 24 hours which God i make your bed. Whom not to sit by in church. Where you s may park your car. When you ' may talk on the telephone. All „ these and many, many more are quite well decided for us. r Although I am no psychoio- Jj souMRAijflcaiyj gist, I feel that having my de- ti 'lb shall be facing a world which ^ won't help me the smallest bit p Pebliibrf in deciding, and much that was p bi-«.,Hy ,„™ \„ „t„l„„ ,„d „m,n,r „,m durlnj Hi previously decided for me will 8 " have to be decided by me.

In my opinion, the very fact ' that so much of the trivia of our ] daily life is decided for us im- ' "*•""»•'» Soulli«ni Ml .l...n> C.II.V, ^iXSlr pUes the worst sort of lack of , trust and confidence on the part ; of those doing the deciding. As > ss. a;-: 1I.„U " ' ™is:s;.d°""B™Z you vrill see from the follo' "*"8 of course, that our youlh should have

".', ..=:'R:^".^i:, ?CJ; , "'^*" Mc.l,. Lm.l/S.r^,'n. bUI'Iv Becm T' La a

Bushnells Go Jet to Europe; See Newbold and Queen Elizabeth

Europe money and paid for a passage louW get across the Channel ... it was city of where we took in as pos- God's money we used on ihat sible. trip Our round tickets on toll road in the Alps . . . rode . How I craned my neck Icelandic Air Lines cost $425 doivn the Rhein on lithe mon- as we passed over the Lake each. We were fortunate to ey." We paid our Heavenly Country of middle England! secure them, for we hadn't Father's part in full, and He One would have thought me to planned loo well. We had to gave it back to us almost to the be expecting to see Wordsworth lake what was luckily left— penny in the switch of air lines, himself, looking heavenward flight thai was about to take with open mouth, clutching at off from New York's Idlewild si„ Houn to Scotland BjTOn or Keats or Shelly and Airport just about the time on saying, "Here comes Bushnell. Sunday, , when our SMC ^eatu ocoiia \frankfurt's Top Scholar Seniors would be stickine out lllhe blonde SiewaiUeSS VViLli UlC their;„ diploij;„f ^^ Swedish accent would inform Teaches Greek at SMC of London. I ' Thirty- Iwo thousand lucky you made it. Son." hundred I shall not try to describe 'I was 18 when 1 took the Then it happened. On the plane was full. There Newbold College brick by brick. 1," said Prof. Gerhard F. "Yes, there was a Sabbath .hington, we three seats on each side o Let Pierce Haley or Robert sel, instructor in Greek and says about his stopped at the home of Joan aisle and over twenty roi Pumphrey take care of that. ilical archaeology for the and Virginia Schuler to spend our section alone. We wen For now it is enough to say SMC religion department. I the night. Dr. Schuler just hap- ond class. The slight advantagi that it is a lovely, friendly, le lest," he continued, " going alcoholic beautiful place which has much a scientific aptitude and After finishing High school, IS not enough to to offer to the young person Hasel cemented his decision for pajong the added from America vvho has the good the ministry by entering the fortune to be able to spend at We i seminary in Marienhoehe, Ger- group least one school year there. many, and completing the four- did he of total abstainers. Some folk Queen Eliiabelh 3d. One drank their way clear across city of Frankfurt, a city Just by accident we saw r Studsf thai the Atlantic. They might just population of approxi- Queen EHzabetli the next day. To obtain his B.A. degree, he tEd- ards as well have travelled with the lalely one million. We were trying to buy tickets crossed the Atlantic and at- Always elite. Don'l For his performance he won to Dover and parts beyond, but tended Atlantic Union College. on the look-oi bargain, ihis all-^ talking -ivith the found that all the offices at the the honor of , The summer of 1960, Andrews the Bushnells contacted Mi r group was ju president of Germany. He also old Victoria Station were closed. University awarded him a M.A. Edwards after a thrilling tel( lut of nearly t 6,000 mark scholarship "What's up?" we queried. The in systematic theology, followed andfr nd that dred. {equal to ?4,000 American buy- rather puzzled Bobby cocked liis of bagpipes we iiig power), to be applied for To the tune eye heavenward as though ex- degree, bachelor of divinity, in Majesty's study at any disemplaned on Her pecting a buzz bomb out of the )ntinued science Lines, jet pas- New Testament study. He grad- ^^j, ^^^ ^^^j ^ (German state university. j^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ uated cum laude. ad seen in other parts. Today he is teaching dieology "Study is one of my hobbies," m SMC. A pleasant bus ride on the Divine Providence "wrong" side of the road took On education, he commented [ was. doing," he explains about That wasn't an accident. The us tlnough the lush green Scot- that "American students are not Ibis scientific schooling. "But I Lord had worked out something tish coimtryside, with its pic- required to do a lot of creative to the dollar to show that He work. The facts are all chewed wasn't just directing His wort out for them." Association of advice to the Hebrews i Osteopathic Asked if liis teaching tech- those verses in Malachi whei He speaks oE tithes and offei Offers M500 Scholarships ings. You see, the College ha chai Gerhard was bom in V Chicago—The Auxilinrj- to itude given me a check for my salary fthe ia, Austria, but entered the American Osteopathic Asso- Winners must! for May, June, July and Au- '. and I German public school syst ed." ciation will award up to twenty United States or Canada gust. Should ask been admitted to one L He concluded: "People $1500 scholarships to students must have work Ger- colleges. me about the in East entering osteopathic colleges as of the five osteopathic many. The times of difficulty we were back home? We need- freshmen in the fall of 1964, The SISOO will be paid di- have bred a strength there. Our ed the money, it seemed, foi it waS' announced here by Mrs. rectly to the selected college in he began to feel that h. I we had paid for a new Volks- Clifford W. Millard, Hillsdale, two installments of $750 each called to be a minister. How- wagen to be picked up in Ham- scholarship chf for the freshman and soplio- ever, he continued his schooling Mich., AAOA burg, and we felt pinched. It it and took the rigorous final ex- hard to make up back tithe. , ams from the school. On the I basis of these exams he was ied to compete in the national Physics Department Gets Liquid Nitrogen for Tests

The physics department, According to Mr. William cording to Dr. Raymond Het- Mundy, who is in charge of the J ferlin, has recently received a liquid nitrogen work, knowledge I shipment of liquid nitrogen for e in determining "transition

. obabilities," . or "f-values," for ^vilhin stars or rocket exhausts chemical elements. by spectrum analysis only. I The liquid nitrogen, which Research by the SMC phys- "as a boiling temperature of being spon- -322 ics department is degrees Farenheit, is being sored by the National Sci I used to cool the extremely Ught- Foundation and was start* jlates of a photocell. -— .vork with diy ice has I not produced satisfactory results

F-value is the probable inci- dence of "shell-jumpinB" by -lectrons within an atom This ^hell-mmping, or acquiring of more energy, shows up on the >nfra-red I spectrum which is re- i graphed ^vith the Alumni Meet, Elect McColpin Accent At Annual Event Approximately 200 former students and staff members annual Alrnnni Sports H^meco^mi*^^ Southern Missionary College

Harry Hidsey '53, alumni pres- Steve Hickok skirted right end for 30 yards and a touchdow-n, Special speakers for ihe week- giving his team a i3-fi lead. end were Carribean Union With 10 miiiules left in the President James Fulfer '50, game, Slefansen hit end JeFf vespers speaker; and Pastor scoring 1 5-12 v-idorv for Sieve Hickok's Albright with a 10-yard Robert Wood '47, speaker at was pass. Again the try- for the extra team over Rob Hale. This both the 8:30 and 11:00 am -fought by far the most closely chm-ch services. Wit and'; Saturday night the alumni Hickok look an early seven- onds left in the game. Hale met for worship, supper and a point lead on a 60-yard pass to made one last thrust, bin Hick- business meeting at which the his center, Kenneth Kirkhani. ok got llie ball on downs and following officers were elected Then a pass by Quarterback ran out tlie clock, preserving to serve until Homecoming in Jerry Slefansen his one-point victory, 1964: Mr. Glen McColpin, pres- The try for the e a-poin Charlie Martin's "GaUant ssed. Eight" have been tapped for the Mel Ross Lyceum to Be hard luck of the series. The door retary; iVIrs. Mary has been closed on every at- tempt by the "Eight" to run ^ -Lovable Province'! Times Critic Mr. Mel Ross, vvorid t to Allen Workman's team 13-6 Lauds Singing . and lecturing. i and in tlie Willy Willis-Charhe Of SMC's Chorale Of special interest in this fihn are the walls of Quebec City, . Southern Missionary Col- which have been systematically lege's Collegia le Chorale per- - fortified for four centuries and formed for the Chattanooga Mu- 1 this week when he the only walled city ; remains on sic Club in the new Cadek Con- Hale. ,1) setratory on October 15. Other I In the Sagueney river is lo- In collecting material for tl After the Chorale presented Hickok s cated Bonavenlure Island, the N.C; Dr. J. H. Yoimg, Colimi- film, Mr. Ross and his w Miss Louise famous bird island of hia, S.C; S. M, Boskind, Mel- Ethel, traveled neariy 10,0 j John bourne, Fla.; M'Camy, a James Audubon. The island is Dr, Charles Hall, miles in the Canadian pro^-ince. the home of 60,000 birds. Orlando; William lies, Orlan- do; D. E. 38 Nursing Also shown is Canada's old- Loveridge, Ea- lie, Fla.; Kenneth Rothrock, St S built in 1637, Students Visit sula, where Jacques Car tier Cloud, Fla.; LesUe Sheffi. landed in 1534 to found New Orlando Winter Park, Fla.; L. W. Sim- Campus France, to the new ented by !ho Collegiate Chorale mining kin, Winter Park, Fla.; Thirty-eight fresliman nurs- owns along the Quebec-Ontario if Soulhom Missionary College Anderson, Atlanta; B. T. Byrd, ing students relumed Monday, jorder. The celluloid tour winds Pat Ramsey mder the direction of J. Don Jr., Savannah, Ga,; Charles Oct. 21. from a four-day visit ilong the seacoast and up the >ook. Beverly Bnbcock was ac- Represents SMC Fleming, Collegedale; William on the Orlando camptis at the ugged Sagueney river. Florida Sanitarium and Hospi- Nurses' Hulsey, Collegedale; 0. D. Mc- Mr. Ross has filmed regattas, At Meet tal, Orlando. Kee, Collegedale; C. Star- Pat Ramsey, president of W. ,0 disciplined and polished this celebrations, wood carvers, fish- Miss Florence key, Chattanooga; B. F. Stun- ermen, copper mines, asbestos the Collegiate Nurses' Foriun, associate chairman of SMC' attended the Tennessee Norcross, Ga.; indication of the high quality As- Division of said Nursing, , [ that sociation of Student Nurses' Than Clevel'a; n eiqilorer-pholographerplorer-i this annual trip was designed to , convention in Memphis, M. B. Eliiston, EI I Oct. Atlanta; Dr. acquaint new students nurs- Mr. Ro! las penetrated r ; m mer Bottsford, Ridgetop, Tenn.. ing with faculty and studenU nighf. Dr. Charles Gillit, Henderson- urogra of North and Soi on the Orlando campus state officers for than tlie TSNA for ville, Tenn.; Sam Martz, Ni

, the coming year. group should be ville; Dr. James Van Blaric Working ivith Pat as officers liroud of. Winchester, Tenn. ; of this year's SMC forum will The numbers presented by 'le Pal McCollum, vice presi- the Chorale were hmce all lenl; Polly Dunn, secretary- Is Pissmg To GrcLt the -iinda Thompson, treasurer; La- (Continued from page Spnng bj Mendelssohn The V nar Sinclair, chaplain; Carole Shepherdess b\ ^huberl Ego An accident also occurred at tollins, parliamentarian; andj Sum Tui Plagi Dolons bj the tarbara Clemens, this place on Apison pike Schutz historii . previous night when Later in the year, eigh Saturday Calvin Steve Hop- vill be chosen to represen ; Wood and

' involved-while driv- College Acquires t the national student r kins were

onvention, to be held i . ing a 1954 Chevrolet owned by New Patrol Car antic City, N.J.

Collegedale Cabinets, Inc.

Manufacturers of ffigh QualifY Laboratorv Furniture for Schooli and Hoiprtali SMC's new security offict WilUam Piatt, especied Collegedale, Tenn. rive on the campus Oclobi Telephone 396-2912

Mr. Piatt served on thi

signed because McKee Baking Company

Saturdays.

Before Mr. Piatt ass new duties at SMC, Little Derbies

en Sunday thru Thui 4 P.M. till Midnight Helping over 130 Stud. Friday and Sa+urda' P.M. till 2 A.M. Phone 396-2451 I

SMC WEATHER High Low nr 22.28 B4 52 Oc W-Nov. 2 n 28 smmMcmi Evangelist Spangler Keynotes Man's

ill, God's Love, Satan's Antipathy

God with all of oui

Elder J. R. ^^'"^ >"11 ''ave complel Irinls and one variable in life. secretary of ^'"' happiness." Tlie constants are the power encc Minis- How do we do this? if God and the power of Satan," Wliilc .kp in I love Him.

SMC'S Clark Writes Book On 1844 in U.S. History

Next winter will see the pub- or counteracted the progress of lion of a book by Dr. J. L. the early church. Clark, Having at this point i Congressman Bill Brock bone. Recuper- lory, to be tersely lilled ./5V- ted the bulk of his t shoulder in a Jlic book wll trace tht for the book, Dr. Clark will be

; spare time to Delivers Chapel Address cial^ political, and religi. granted a leave next summer I to finish the manuscript, mak- f 1 . E. G. Whiti Speaker for Tue';da\ dnpel I ing use of Library of Congress till-; time he came u "Jov. 5, was Gjjigressman \^ll of f With I and Harvard University facil- McUon, and made hi iam Brock, representative from _^ ___ ^^^^ ^_ lo prepare for the ministry. I Tennessee's third notorial dis relate this"conipht: net and native of ChatlanooRd In his opening sermon here ments lo the bcgi Coming to SMC b> inviiation nl SMC Friday evening, Millerite niovemei he continued \\ nc\er don Oct, if President C. N. Rees, Rep- 23. Elder Spangler established anything more re "As I noted ll esentative Brock spoke on dc- a basis for the sermons to follow ^^-jih which the y Soutliem Publishii mocracy and its meaning to so- "The best time throughout the week, "Apart I pears in history from God," he slated, "our ex- Clark, "I began early morning. I -ised of llu-ee

;iden, Southern Accent, Rep. Brock later he . I expressed views on college, gov- The congi I

ind 9: = Hyde Completes Rep. Brock graduated from Course /Vnshington and Lee Univer- MSU's ily, Lexington, Va. His star For Doctorate iiilos- According lo Rep. Brock, each Retuming lo SMC Sunday, ophy, and history. letter from his district is per- sonally read by him. Letters Nov. 3, Prof. Gordon M. Hyde, Classifying himself as i ^^"^"ee 150 per day. chairman of the communica- servative. Republican )ro"k tions department, reported the stated that he believes in completion of the last require- opportunity for the race but , Division Heads ment for his doctorate degree. is "strongly opposed" t biu Nominate Nine He will officially graduate pending in this congres ionai pqp Fellowships Dec. 6 from Michigan State University. East Lansing, Mich.

Prof. Hyde left campus a week ago yesterday to defend

ing of Rev. Mr. Poler Marshall, W. B. Clark Visits The nominations It a banquet attended by ihc Senate. Prof, Hyde's thesis con- college's administrators and di- on Rev. Mr, Mar- SMC to Interview vision chairmen on Oct. 17, in centrated the cafeteria green room. shall's last-year preaching be- fore his Washington congrega- Future Students Students nominated for the fellowships were: Bill Coolidge. p,e,idcnV7-urv;i7"nd''sTp\om^rrp.Mfd=i;t"'ji-i;V'H=yi." Dean of Students VV. B Pattv Chu. Judy Edwards, Major professor for Prof. Clark, of Loma Linda Univt , Ann. M, piv li,.,.™ H.„ Hyde's degree was Dr. Kenneth sily. Classes Name Loma Linda, Calif., visit. j^p Threc Gordon Hnnco, past president of Soulliorn Missionary Colle ind Bar Oci. 21-23. 1 Bei 'Brass' for Coming Year l-know Dean Clark's purpose in coi work i ng Recently electmg offii to SMC was to irded for 19e+-fi5 bv the intervie 1958. Prof. Hyde spent sum- the 1963-6+ school yea personally upper division odrow Wilson National Fel- st mers on clnsswork al MSU, and ship Foundation are intend- the sophomore, junior a iry; Wayne Ben- the University of Wisconsin, and Wayne Mc- Madison, Wis., taking a leave of absence from SMC in 1959- leilical pi-ofos theology n Organizing on Oct. 10. the John Fowler, a , on his degree. Prof. ;iark on the president. Other officer^ I'l iheol- I. Hyde obtained his B.A. in "Today is s 1 single student or a married were: Bill Tyndall. ^.. recei' dent without children ' Cnmi. dent; Sara Ruth Springs, , ary College, Berrien a living stipend of SI800 secretary; Bob Hair, m his : Mich., in 1942. and M.S. I Clark, class of '27, and Lavov Gamer, imlm from the University of Wiscon- cla^sei.Ai.. I mnus of SMC. He v 1 The junior ^n of president Oct men at SMC. , Viflr as its TtiUche! Students Can Choose fidifo/iiaf^y fipeafciiig . . .

: mination" by Mailha Wilsc

SOUTHERN ACCENT. The < columnist. the relully dodge conliovcrsial I jUcy agreeabb to aU.

SOUTHERN ACCENT is the Southern Mifisionory College f^""'- have the choice of accepting or rejecting Since students would not expect to pay o these laws or rules I SMC '"""'- as they ]>lease. Actually, to those lyceums or tuition for classes and then not bo aUowi who uphold laws or rules there I ilil U- exists no law. Only when a man transgresses is he under con- demnation of law. ,^;;;^ At SMC there exist rules. Some bemoan the fact tliat SMC I'on lias these rules, But has anyone heard of an SMC graduate suf- fering social, menial, or moral impairment after he left his | alma mater because he lived a few years under "these rules"? J ^^ e siu- Every year there are many young men who desire to go ic

I our Point or Annapolis, they West and know full well that these I s'^'io*'ls are strongly disciplined. iinmc They have "lights out." Thej- A-hicli rise at a certain lime in the morning and they make their beds. nnol be expressed concurrently. Space does not permil and ^Co'j They are not allowed to socialize to midnight every night wih .ny Umes one is only expressed in response to another. the opposite sex. And yet these schools turn out well-disciplined ..>.T. and sociable young men. No less should be said of SMC. ablishing the truth of our boliei on cOQiroveisial subjects. In- " ;" Why should one conclude that SMC has made the deci-

. mns for its students because rules e.\ist which are for the good ch student to evaluate tor himseU, {we hope open-nundedly !' if ihe student body? Because a rule exists doesn't even begin d objectively) those opinions eicprefised. 111 infer that the individual's power of choice is deprived. SMC DD ciinr students chose to come to SMC. SMC students can choose to slay up past "lights out" and study in the assigned study SMC students can choose the hou of their of their leisur time. SMC studen s can ch

SMC is i ndeed not a penal colony, 1 ut a school of Stan ijjrds, a schoo where young men and wornen can develop sym ni.tricallv. a chool which can e students' lives if its UKlc-nts wll nly allow ihk lo appen lo them. Paul says "But we beseech ou. breth ren, to respect those -^\vi labor an ong you and are over you n the Lord and ad-

higlil)- ill love becaui

] alter his death, hat ^cee

Who to Re-elect? We think the SA should publish in the mir utea how each senator voles on important issues. How else can the SA mem-

Breakfast vs. Chapel I a modern world, might One way to cut down on chapel tardiness Bs would be lo

make it posaibU lor students to got through Ihe breakfast line. By keeping both sides open on chapel morning

What may q. onch one lire may fan an- breakiaal and make it to chapel both on Ihe s fires can be extinguished by cu Iting off

CommocJi+y : Intellect Elder Spongler's sermon series accented m °'h°e°l.X= s'°ofTh^ Zd'em m ^d, with tian thoughts with on imusual commodity: in eUecl. He also rch will have o contend. Their w ritings— seemed to say that Christianity is more than a bevy of rules. along hke r ading course bool but also a viable, at limes pliable, power. -'i.'genl';!!"md on the SMC caipus"!^

read So.en Kierkegaard, nor any o! his kin. Thes will have goodly congregations, always raise their goal, and do much to progress the work. %mmmmm

you're I they fiRUre when Ihcrn ""Ui^onfl^s' 'colku^^nllH '"'8' °^ wfllermTloti^*; w knR^s men 8","! "fs'- 'he big M.A. you ve sa^cJf^l I— "1^ tiK' pdJiorLnl pnge or ''''P'"*' '"''tyle* Ihnl make ih.-m

lu haven't, #97003 c Bushnells See English Royalty, Prime Minister in Trip Abroad

Dowi in tlie Kio Grande Val- ing all my acquair

riages, all looking mighly grand, jr look at the fortunate difficuUy in understanding the and r was somewhat confused. lady without having my London dialect and it mg sounded Princess Margaret went by as s though they were say- pretty

uu.-ns, but of England. „ , ..„. _,^..

Grabbing the camera which ing; "Don't come up here, Mis- . Dr. Jerome Clark had so gener- ler!" So I went up and began Dusly lent, me, I tried to punch aiming my camera at the street ' in sardines lining the which by now was full of 8 hole the beau- ly pictures). And just about bent a bit but tiful horses, dignified street. They redcoats lat time a mightj- shout nn- Tlien, forsak- would not break. witli fantastic black hats, and aI nounced: "The Queen!" Biology Dept. Infects Mice Sevenfy Sfvdenfs Honor and the swaying of the build-

on its last pins, I aimed in the To Study Worm's Life Span Freshman Girl af Party yelling. There she was, a little Southern Missionary College is i lady dre currently conducting a research Linda though Here at SMC Lind-i k em project to determine the life idit-i was going eJne. plowed 28 hours a week at the span of the hymenalepis micro- |

, mght college press and the cafeteria

All Wednesday morning I'. kitchen Shes also gettmg 14 'heeled vehicle she as thmking about how to act, hours hacked off of the pre was in, he can't keep from wav- 961, the work i; the I surprised when the third floor med requirements which shes The project is now under search doni ing and nodding. There was a aid of a grant from tlte girls me the party that irked out for herself S300 I ga\e dark little man riding back- by Dr. H. H. Kuhlman, Science. night like Elise my loommate Tennessee Academy of I wards in the carriage, and at told me the^ were going to I times she would grace him %vith ' I said Linda a smile. That was his honor, But the parl\ at 12 30 pm India, 1 r had a surprise ; the president of She had n the cafeteria green room was great I definitely off scheduli And lixed claimed. Willis, "are found in the duo- Traveler Ross of the and grow ,ging "Happy Birth- Of course, the gift-wrapped It was terrific. I had never denum mice a length of six to eight inches. Narrates Film ided little like a third leather billfold mlh S47 folded been so close lo royalty. They to really looked quite human. The ) it helped. On Scenic Quebec workmen on the scaffolds close I'll put it on my bill," she "Quebec—the Lovable Prov- !o me were letting out undigni- ince," second lyceimi of tlie in a family of seven brothers fied cries, waving their hands Pre SMC school year, drew a near- and sisters, of which she was But ihe speeches by SA and making the old wreck quiv- capacity crowd Saturday night, bo%v to stem. I was hav- ihe oldest. er from , of being infected. Six Oct. 26, to the tabernacle audi- Holding down the 3 p.m. -II ing a teri-ible time getting the infec 5ver)' md WSMC-FM Public Rel; focus, for a severe case . shift at Gallatin Hospital, Queen in week for a period of Director Allen Steele made tions of tremors mixed wth some- After the infection is introduced Personally ited by forget the white billfold her into the system of the mouse, plorer-photogrf Mel temporaril)'. So did the cake in the larva take three weeks film Hashed scenes of the develop into worms. Quebec countryside and com- motion; the building run pcriodicaily Tests will be mented on tlie history of this motion; the sun was g der a cloud. Canada. Gritting my teeth, I placed Band Elects Mr. Ross showed views of the tlic camera to my better eye Officers for rugged terraui along the Sag- and shot. Had I or hadn't I? I deepest river in had. In my collection of rare Year uenay Biver, ' Concert \vith twenty-foot tides views I have an exqui the world The SMC Concert Band se- little ^ I blue 600 miles inland. lected the folloiving officers Oct. ping heads vigorously with Montreal 15 and 17: Wayne Strickland, The two cities of irtled httle brunet gentle- president; Sandria Keller, vice and Quebec—one of them the in block. I like to look at president; Luanc largest French-speaking city in

tary-ti 1 Bill Wood, largest bilmgual city, , the world,

1 1 per and I r of ' Canada's population, and the sured definitely thai i J ' only walled city in any lack of warmth on the part other llie augment s ' s is to plan and had in them of the Queen which has brought North America— Her < contrast of old and ne\v. about the sad estrangement. : the dly and personable act' Mr, Ross portrayed the in day. especially my French of Quebec as liiglily in- realize that make me dividualistic. This trait was The band now numbers ov( , the arcluteclure of , evinced by 70 members. Concerning tli their homes and their way of band, Prof, Hamel says, "It , the best I have ever directed. life.

Collegedale Insurance Agency, Inc. pizza villa Auto - Life - Fire - Boats - \ 3607 RINGGOLD ROAD 629-3311 Phone 396-2062, Collegedale, Tenn.

Open Sunday thru Thursday — 4 P.M. till Midnight Friday and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 A.M. H.M.S. Richards Jr.,

King's Heralds

Conduct Chapel

angelis! H. M. S. Richards and the King's Heralds inducted tlie Cotlege- ^a,>.- »CL-Kty prayer meetinp Oct 2i in Lynn Wood Hall chapel. The next morning, the group presented the chapel pro- gram for SMC students.

Three of tlie members of Ihe King's Heralds—Mr. Jolui d tenor; Mr. itone; and Mr.

. bass-^re for- udenU of SMC. Only Mr.

1. 26 to Nov. 17, gelist Richards and the let will conduct meolings Thirty-^l/o SMC Students le Sevenlh-day Advenlisl ly Center in Atlanta glinc 5 they will I lind t Attend Bible Conference Birminghai the -two SMC sludenls at- Evangelist H. M, S- Richards, Chapel Honors ___^^_ ^^^^ ^^ le annual Southern Un- speaker for the Voice of Pronh- - ^i j i r- rr alvagcd the ball, and then con- „ , ' Glendale. Lalif. War Dead With L ij .1 J- u J . m ' ! Conference held this ecy radio broadcast. rolled the ball much of llie re- Camp Ciunby-Gay, Di'rmg this past s Patriotic Theme naiiiing time. General Conference Field J ' I Cily, Ga. III coniniemoralion of Veler- Anotlier game of ihe week Secretary, E. L. Minchin loNe-, iin's Day on Nov. 11. Ihe Stu- vimesscd first-place Hickok be- Delegate the elei ulh rally Sabbath af- dent AfSDciation of Southern ng filled inio a lie "iih Hale academies

or lop spou because of Hickok 's colleges of General Conference Religious |j-,__ /%——--,*-»_- chnj-el indcd tiie tour-day Liberty Secretary R. R. Hegslad. nOlll UperOTOFS nlinc the editor of Liberty Magazine. Qff^p SerVICC The s ; 19-6, but Uie StnIT "B conducted the nightly s^..

. i i . lir , J ,mI game was actually much closer with ihe SMC 'ne tilled "The Coming Crisi 'Phone Patch' ' "ill I'l' ' lull' ihan the score indicates. Quar- Bible Conference ' - groups I "Phone patch" service is now SM( ...M.;ji(. .li..i,,h. .Ml!;- lerback Biliy Wolcolt sal on the Rees, presidenl; Prof. Bruce id afternoon. Topics being made available to SMC Ihe >[,ir .S|i,,rif;]e(l JiajuKT. sidelines part of ihe game with JohnMon. chairman of the Re- discussed were: sludenls by tlie Amateur Radio Following Ihe prfceiildUon, an injured leg. This could have ligion Division; Elder R. E. "Both Sides of Prayer," "The Attitude of a Club, according to John Lynn, Lou Williams, vice presidenl been n factor in the spiUlering Francis, assistant professor of Christian," and "Winning club president. (lilton National Bank and oRense of Hickok's leani. religion; and Elder Don Crook, Souls f<"" Christ." Conference presi- e Year In the o of a phone patch is amateur rB- dents. College Bible instructors j:-, viii speak ?ek. Willis iMai I . ji oio lanm.arrolanguage totn aescnoeilBcrrihc ineihp i The Keynote address was j , i t , ... --.nd guest speakers from the ' Wednesday night by transmitting of phone c~ General Conference led the dis i betw Such calls require no long dis- tancc charges. Elder Bennett Deleg, , Southern Miss not allowed I Directs Fletcher SA presidenl It proved chai that full .an be found Week of Prayer Of the 27 members of the ' club, eight have their gener Exploring with Christ—Th facet of life." operator's license. Othe R.N.lilies of the Gospel" was ih When asked what impressed u'king"an electrical theoi theme of Prof. Douglas Ben him the most about this year's taught by Mr. A. L. Watt, Bible Conference MV leader sistant professor of physics Robert Pumphery said: "It was g^^^ ^^^ s'.orking on ipija the senes by Pastor Hegslad. l^he reahzadon of just how Mors. i and ; only

, the close the end reallj' is, is mak- and others ber? mg me a new person."

SMC Music Faculty Conducts Annual Musical Performance Gallant Talks to Writers At English Club Feature

Mr Gall "orkmg on u ittono book i ne ^,,„ j ,i rncndly Band a storj of Ihe "^"f^S'on ,1 , ^^^'^"'''"'" ^^'"'^^l ''"? Cuhlishr . marines landmg on I\\o Jmia

Club Spon.sor '^ : _ Gordon , SOUTHERN ACCENT

Chemistry, Peek Invites I SMC Receive Grant Rest of 100 For Research Committee

CON'rMlTTEE OF I Sunday,

Dr. C. N. Rees, SMC's pres- ent, visited in Alabama-Mis-

isippi; Dr. .T. W. Cassell, ademic dean, and Business r Charles Fleming Jr. visited in Georgia-Cumberland and Florida; William H. Tay- lor, SMC's public relations di- 'Who's y\(ho' Taps Nine Ken lucky -Tennessee; Dr. Clyde Bushnell, SMC's Hold represen- talive for the Carolinas, and Mr. Taylor called on prospects bstituled Grignard Rea- Seniors for Membership in the Carolinas. Dr Rees said thai this meet . In this research Ihe similar to the ion produc Is of Grignard Nine SMC seniors have made on the basis of character the SoUTHERr mg wculd be ;ently been nolified of th leadership, and scholarship, ac Southern Ah cording to Academic Dean J. \'\ nembership in Who's Who Majoiing i American Colleges and Unlu

nd pre . of the COMiMITTEE OF Barba He ciid Thi IS an or Id D C ell ; for the doctorale at Burnham :hi A pre med -.tudent sh< I the University of Tennessee and Clemens, roni OneidT K\ received his degree in August, Edwards, Barbara Hoar, Ann From Mobile Ala nui'i i orgnnized lo a 1%3. The title of his doctoral Murphy, tudent Barbara Clemens The group sist the college I dissertation was "Oriho subsii- were nan leen secretai> of the Literal n'.e and a 3enzyl-type Grignard national Ivangehst Club vith Cyanogen." Selectii 1 for Who's Who V Kstot ^ilha

SMC Honors President, ternational Relation'^ Club i news editor of the Southi Holds Memorial Service Graduating with a majnr Southern Missionary College, A special memorial servic Votes economics Jud^ Elwz Board ColJegedale Academy and A. W. vas held Monday at 11:30 A.^ hmie has been SA secretary |ui Spalding Elementary School, all n Lynn Wood Hall Chapel. In Various Items in Co liege dale, dismissed classes ;harge of the program was El- Presidenl's Council added se\ dent of Sigma Theta Chi At Meet on Monday to show honor to ler Gordon Hyde, associate pro- senate-faculty eral names to the Barbara Ho ir has been =ci the late President John F. Ken- essor of speech at SMC. finalized the entin list and then writer literal > director and nedy. All led the fol- director all the hgious pngiami dudi ; the to education niajo WSMC 1 M Barbari i c ind a faculty ? Elemenlao' Barbara Benson has been pres municntionsnnior is from C Ontario ident of the local chapter of thi awa , President lohn- Student National Education As ph-y IS from Munphr 1964 ^Memories' A.popka Fla

iL bMC Board of Trustees Ijert Buniha n pre med Xarte

Makes Progress, V major frc Cihf his edited both SA soi To begin a stud> of ways Says Burnham means to alleviate the ler housmg shortage and

dmg oliice o ; fcr the n Chief Gilbert Bum Umled for Miss Thcin Hemme t complete i mastet s degiee at Michigan State Uni

3 To authnri/e the construe lion of Ihe new industrial edu cation building to be financed r Barbar bj the McKee Baking Co The architect s plans weie approved 4 To approve departmental budgets iffer Some of the SMC industii. a full and enterprise'! were closed 5 To hold the next Board ind da> Mond-i> others closed froi SMC Rees Cassell and Flpmmg at

•nones mil hai ations hereto! ToitcAe/ stwient views fiditoMaMy 2peafcing . . .

^jf'<» Oi Tievet! %m \ I, and ho^ each each r Senators are elected to ren students have long feic (hat the Student body t Many SMC 1 (he student body has a right lo too self- Association of Southern Missionary College was know how each senator n ; ihem in his voting capacity because the SA like 10 se. rs who skip petpetuaiing. This has been true mainly ; Also. I would senate meeting, Constitution requires that: "No person shall be eligible i wiilioul a valid excuse penalized in some way. I think the poin' ' "' re-evaluated, to serve as an executive officer of the Student Association until system should be some of the minor offices com. shall have served at least four months in the Student Senate lie j ..r>l' 1 think the president of the ATS should be on the senate. during the regular academic year." It further states: "At /7i :

Bill Grundsel: I would like lo see a more democratic I discretion the Sluilenl Senate may nominate one. two, or more Ij',1', nii thod ; Ik>4 of electing oflicers adopted. Any student should be able students for each office or position." i tc "^ [or an office instead of being nominated by tlie senate. Since each candidate for an SA office must be nominated ; cm? William Willis: I would like to see some of the chapel: by the Senate, it is easy to understand why SMC students ' proved; more SA chapels of a lighter nature. should wonder about many of the same faces appearing there ''"^^_ should year after year. Respect for the Student Association has worn Doug Berrong: Students have more voice in the , of the school. away because the average SMC student is almost completely Sous excluded from even being a candidate for an SA office since Paula Hebucha: I'm satisfied with the way it is. ] ^l"\-^ his name must first be hit upon by the Student Senate and then han Johnny Goodbrad: I would like lo see it be more acli receive its stamp of apptoval. s could have more say than just the few iha Student not being free to set themselves forth as candi- 1 the as a puppet Viar: have a better way of electing dates for offices, have come to think of the SA i We should our offi- organization run by a particular clique. As a result, student should put more emphasis on platforms so we will know interest has ebbed al candidates stand for. Thus far this year, a total of have attended ' Hoyle: I would like to see gi-eater importance and Out of an enrollment of 871 students

. organizations, if put out in front of the public, on the Collegedale campus this isn't a record to be proud of. ,

. :' boost school spirit. More activity of this type What can you do? Right now, plenty. '

' ;.(.>\c lo lap much of the talent which is going unused, By action of the Student Senate, a Constitutional Revisions Committee has been organized to recommend neces- aid Hey: Change? Frankly. I don't know anything 1 sary changes in the Student Association Constitution. The

Q doubl . But ntinually Committee, with Jim Boyle as its chairman, consists of three lohn G. R< students at large: Robert Pumphrey, Ed Phillips and Zelney slrivirig, I don't really know enough to say much. But if any- is wrong, it's probably students' fault. Half of the Fiman; three Student Senators: Bert Coolidge, Arthur Richert. thing ihe stiidenls just don't care. But then. Ihe SA should inspire them. and Gilbert Burnham; an ex-officio member: David Osborne; i ludy Foulkes: sludenls should go to senate meetings— and two administrative advisors: Elder Davis and Dr. Jack .|^ More nil)- but so should more senators! I feel, however, that the SA is doing five a good job. Since student is a member each of SMC of the SA. he has I the right to freely express his views on voting procedures, ' Pom Smith; I'm satisfied. student representation, organization, etc. We urge the In. James Anderson: It's not the SA's fault we don't go lo senate , '" meetings. I think doing fine job. students of SMC to let themselves he heard. they're a , DD Ill, RonniB Lambeth: I think many new ideas arc a healihv ; | sign. I like the student travel agency and CISO.

BiU CooUdge: I think we should have sei "ith adequate qualifications, of course. I belii having primarj- elections would be the best wa ^ceco^tMtt hold student interest. Aiiyon wh wi^ hpsi a run should be able to have opportunity. We need a I emo system whereby all students have opportunity tc till posi nns or elect their choice To Whom It May Concern: of nominee. It all boils do^ Ihe students inlolligent enough to select officers?" I t eliev tlie

Many Thanks Why Have an SA?

) those adminislralors who brought aboi

1 bo Blraighlened oul bof

Forward Step:

haps Ibis was meant as a joke, but let's look behind Ihe reason for such a joke. Sludenl Opinion. Wo think both can bo ot service lo the SMC student and hope the CISO can be a communications aid The Student Association renders many large and small between Ihe Senate and Ihe student body. services. Il supports the SOUTHERN ACCENT, the MEMORIES.

lake Ihe SIS ' this I dole out Jers? At some sommmPicmi way Ihe othei ity.

Why then i: why.

? Wat t the( ^itb the lators as mere knights and ladie

Perhaps the value of Ihe Sludenl Associalion should lie something inlangible called spirit, morale, or pride. Spirit I'l be evaluated oi written down on the pages of a book- only be blank. Spirit can't be explained it can only

fell. Maybe SA ' I the gible. Fo some. Southern Misaionary Y. lilled with drab buildings v mal faculty. These people are

They leel no pride

.me to a realization o! the real Soulhem Mis-

' and If so lei's give the SA some support from thai angle! SMC Students Abroad Report European Way of Life and Attitudes

By The Staff

What is college life like al a Seventh-day Adventist college Americans. (J. F. K.'s foreign in Europe? What do European aid is not doing its job!1 think of Americans smdents "The racial violence in the the United States? At least and Southern U.S. is i)layed up by lous rules in this school. Foi students who were al stance, the students nine the radio and press here. It irri- Mi College lowed in the libra Southern tates me lo see the one sided rj' are having these ques last ^eai stories that are released about red firs land our Alabama silualion The last Seventh daj Ad\entist colleges , time I wa m London I tallied to the foreign editor of the Lrn The following accounts of don Dail} feUgraph ab ul the college hfe customs and atti khich we all get out and work ludes of the people and ui gen HewTsntoverh impressedi .lost of their jobs are little bos> what the Europein wa-\ b W h Igr If mil eral I hav e enjo'v ed n y bn f j pi f n of hfe IS like have been lo PI n here \er> much h j d n f f I b Id nrded m letters bj some of h Im priuder that I I h ra dd> pi 1 1 these students and made avail Daughter Country UnUl I Dean W« H. Beaven Ends 1 ID h pu gr 1 tlirough ihe courtesy of J rfble saw our land fron d ff ? N 1 p gr 1 Dr J L Clark and the Inter allele I didn t real 1 f Annual ATS Week Sabbath national Relations Club and Dr Clyde Bushnell D W. H. Beaven acadfmi dean of Columbia Union Co Robert Potts a sophomore From Bogenhofen Seminarj lege, Takoma Park Md spol, iov\ attending Newbold College go to the movies. Yet, ihey are in Bogenhofen Austria Bill n Bracknell Berk shire Eng so failhtul in olher things. I Nelson a junior reports believe thijig I land reports the following that the essential Chapd penjd Tuesda> h led Sfudenf Attitudes that count in the long run. The Ga Cumb Temperance Leader This repre >ear students avenge student here does i eral guest speakers scheduled Erickson ds siwaker Cider senting twenlj fi\e countries and some .hehes There are no seem is worldly as the aver; for tlie week, Nov 1 7 23 Erickson Night Newbold. I academy or college student are here at have dressers . , . jusl shelves. There "Temperance along practical on Skid Row.' been interested to find out their is a piece of linoleum in the .. It makes ] lere the standards should attitudes toward the U.S. and middle of the floor. We scrub ] i s chapel period, the

' : tumbling learn muscled Americans. They picture all it and wax it every Friday. SMC

' Americans wealthy They 'Tn the U "i we bu^ many iabbath Observance , lines. Monte Church also read also resent S troops being postage stamjs at timL t U me interestmg Uie wa-v the^ ] a report vvluch correlated ATS save running Bui the Eurspein I stationed in thetr homelands - , te the Sabbath here At work with college seminar Two of Icelandic friends menlahtj wont allow that , I my is Snl work. (another •xample are jealous of the Baker AmeriLan bo\ ) | Music Faculty Mr. Robert G. Strickland, of went and bought a whole sheet . 5 000 U S -JerMCemen stationed [he United Tennessee Temper- of stamps al ihe post office and Presents Annual in Iceland The> slate that the , irrent lesson and the offering ance League, spoke for Thurs- •uldnt get pulat nd that IS aU Then comes Musical Concert I had t lurch immediately at 10 30 IS 185 000 and that the br. Gordon Hyde and Col- tlijught he was filthj The> here is a song the offering American soldiers take entireh . lege Physician T. C. Swinyar, rich Laler he saw ihe w m closing le sermon and then a addressing dorm worship ses- loo man) of their girls' After en. dean buying two or three I Wood Hail chapel. lalking to many of the-^e Euro slamp The European much ing the week. I - ' Tuesday's chapel period s Dorothv Ackerman,, At '

Sabbath iflernoon a walk is . ' lad of SMC's music; Ihe ATS chapter oflicers for " cnnduried h) a member of ihe | It Mr Del Case, or- faculty Evervon^ i urged to ictor Mr, Don Crook, They a ) Rojas, pi go although It IS not obligalori . Dumas Lee Presents Concert , Tictor; Mr. Lyle Ham- ident; Jim Boyle, general presidepresident;, Monte Church president for church ATS work chestra director; Mr, - idem for In Lynn Wood for Fine Arts Miss Mabel Wood, piar yd Erick.

On I walk 1 for higli Soprano Dumas present- — Lee ' of four spiriluals^ "Hold On cied Iho pla; Blinc school work; ivle Foi, ed a concert Sunday, Nov. 10, by Johnson; Dell's "What Kind Man's Bluff Run Sheep Run iry. in Lynn Wood Hall, accom- of Shoes?"; "I'm A-Trav'ling to Drop the Plandkerthief Win! panied by Mr. Ralph Dodds. ihe Grave"; "Ride On, Jesus." 'emi and varirus others Wher Miss Lee, a Seventh-daj' Ad- Por her encore Miss I-ee sang the sun goes down we hav( venlist, has become famous as a humorous spiritual entilled study period There is no wcia a singer in Chicag_o and olher "Scandalized My Name" which pt on these Sibbdlh if ciUes in the easl. She has and on Faith for Today Acquires formed \ vith Mr. Leonard Bi 1 ther walk a stem and the New York Pliil- Director harmoniic Orchestra. SMC Alumnus as

Soprai10 Lee appeared al concert number tw noF the Pine Arts Series

^^lIhl n the first group f g f h CI B k r 1 1 F h Td m numbers presented were s( ler d Ebl H Cb 1 call , . NC F m h h d -nd Mo

The foui numbers in the d 1 1 H If™ C 1 d lA mm second group were all b\ the bl 1 1 1 t Coll 11 1 U y J M M r- Mar\ These n I Al 1 g d t S IC P I

pecialh Noclur ne 1 J 1 1 1 Tb e.1

^vhich 1 cented the pianr I d IIA H( 1 Recn Air De Ln b^ De bus , m ide up firoup three Group four conLimed n urn ber. of a lighter classical

jst bv Sibehus SMC Physics Area Pens Two Reports SA Stresses Patriotism For Physics Papers With Speaicer, Color-guard

the Collcgiale Chorale sang the ^j "Slar-Spangled Banner." j,^^^^ was"honored by ll.e stu Mr, Lew W.llian,!, vice pres- ^^^^ ^^ ^j 5^,^. ,„, ^^ „„ Ham.llon^^N.^tjona^ idem of^ standing service 10 our counlr,- A wreath of red, white and blu( was presented lo Corporal Dosi as a token to be placed by hi on the grave of Soldier Glei

Hefferlin Travels To Out-of-state Physics Meets -« )iid H.'ffi 121 of phys.o w La mi w Collegedale Cabinets, Inc. Slaller-Hillon 9^ ho Vn^^Sy f 'C^^BBH wTi Manolactureri of High Quality York City. Laborafory Furniture C. pa1i» Speaking bcfor for Scltools and HoipilaU ' • C.ll.j'.d'.l Collegedale, Tenn. Telepho 396-2912

'III New York. Dr. Hoffcr) McKee Baiting Company pizza villa Little Derbies 3607 RINGGOLD ROAD 629-3311 Helping over 130 ih Midnight Open Sunday thru Thursday — 4 P.M. till A.M. PhoiK 396-2451 Collegedale, Tenn. Friday and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 '

SOUIHF: COMFPF [ni^iipv

Staff. Students Raise $1332.50 For United Fund

and faculty i SOUTHERN bers of Soulli ACCENT College raised $1,332.50 for the Greater Chattanooga United Fund recently. For a number of years now, SMC has been sup- porting the United Fund, not Chemistry Area Installs only by its gifts, but by its par- New Spectrophotometer

m, head of ihe departn 1 of the Natural

accepted a plaque for the si straight year entitled "1953 rhe instrument will be used for the identification of or- Award for Outstanding compounds by measuring the absorption of the compound Work for the through tlie different wave lengths in the "infra-red," or heat, United Fund." He ac- region. cepted it on behalf of the siu-

The absorption curve is re- Grundset, Chinn the college.

On Study Leaves ment scans the spectrum. Each Over the few At University cur\'e is as characteristic of the SMC has raised the follow particular compound as a per- 1957—5332; 1958—S696; 195'9 son's fingerprints are character- —S867; 1960—5722; 1961— istic of him. The instrument 51,136; 1962—51,238. Headed may be used on pure sohds, by Mr, Don West, the college professor of chemistry, are on hquids or gases, or on solutions. I has increased its giving and its "eaves this year, studying at the A Becknian IR-5A was in- Jniversity of Tennessee. stalled this suinmer as a demon- Prof. Grundset is on an SMC strator, but it failed to give good btudy leave working toward a resolution in the area where al- in biology, and Dr. cohols characteristically absorb; s doing post-doctoral therefore, a better instnmient inorganic chemistr;'-, was ordered. SMC Concert Band Plays by SMC and a leach- Sponsored xhe spectrophotometer lists ttheUmver- _ . at slightly over S6,300, but ^vith |sily of Tennessee. Sacred, Secular Concerts a 10 per cent educational dis- Prof. Grundset holds the B,A. count, it was purchased for The Southern Missionary rom EMC and the M.A. from 55,680. About half of the pur- College Concert Band, directed it band played a group Valla Walla. He has been at chase price was paid by a Na- by Prof. Lyle Q. Hamel, pre-. of well-known chorales and |SMC since 1957. tional Science Foundation grant sented its first two concerts of you Dr. Chinn joined the SMC to the science division, called the year on Saturday, Dec. 14. Especially featured in tliis Santa several "boys and itafT in 1956. He holds the BA. ly.^ „.^y instrument has a presentation was "The Christ- girls" to the microphone, in- - Walla Walla and , whereas the nrevious The first, a progi-ani of sa- grating, mas Storj'," a medley of yule- cluding "little Maybelle Van- M.S. li.D. dec a s 1 chlo- had tide carols i dermark," dean of women; "lit- from Oregon State College. Dr. I tle Dorothy Ackerman," acting s a research fellow at re solution. chair f Ihe fini 5 divi Oregon Slate College from 1951 I ; and "little Myrtle Wat- o 1955 and in 1955-56. - . * .-. i- i Prof Grundset taught at sev COnstltutlOnOl Committee SA liam Wood, pastor. eral academies, including La I OCieCTSCe|©rfc MPeOSAreOC TOrfor Major Changes Preparatory School be- Newbold College, England, was 5 SMC. His main After three official mecUngs, idy; and it is hoped called to the platform. Santa field of study Revision f combining the expe- j the Constitution Com- asked if he had been a good boy. is determining what re- if other schools, the ideas mittee secular Christmas music during Professor Scarr replied yes. San- visions are necessary to make bers, and gen- into his the evening concert. ta then reached bag and the Student Association Consti- eral student opinion, effective Saturday evening, tiie green- tution better able lo meet the revisions will be drawn up. Women Vote and-white uniformed band needs of a gro^ving student Students assisting Boyle on

[eptlon Jan. 12 program, which contained a According to Professor Ham- wide variety of numbers includ- At Hotel Patten el, plans are currently being I made for spring concert tours. Coolidge, Arthur Richerl, and len of Sigma Theta SA Scheduled are trips to Madison Gilbert Burnham; ex-officio College; and Highland, Bass ' ed pertain to the Student Senat member: David Osborne; and Memorial, Mount Pisgah, and ind the election of SA officen David Osborne, who has done administrative advisors: Dean larration for Christmas con- of Students K. R. Davis and Dr. :erts for the past four years. s of other SDA c Jack L. Cassell. The patriotic theme linked PR Committee Operates ling to have the receptioi March," "The Star Spangled Of SA

I Jan. 12, which had beei planned originally for Nov. 2' Travelers' Aid

i postponed "Hey, Look 'Us' Over " ' Nola, > the death ' John F. Kennedy and se%eral otheis A special I feature of this secbon was Le ' The foi roy Anderson's "BuglerS Hoh soded anothei ^ day," plaicd by ti-umpeters > Lloyd Logan Ronald Rees and ' :udeuls who want ndes John Waller ai companicd by or elsewhere for a week

I of canceling the reception Dr hohda>, or those who cars and desire nders for

I, can call the college pub

Ihe meal. The Married Couph "^lub was originally scheduled he final section of the serve, but has cancelled. m Ring those Christmas I those Rudolph the Red Nosed I on TOth Further arrangements are un- certain. er. Winter Wonder 1 I As of the present, dates for "Sanla Claus fs Com- the reception, which were md contracted Town" turned thoughts t in October, \vill stand 3ut general change. IJ

Trip To SMC mi

fiditoiiiaCfy Spcafcing . . .

Would you care to follow i. You shun hypnolisi till. ^e

' I want lo siiow you something. gy leaches that prayer is just a w, but you know what a rush coUege lile is. is I realize that you don't have state of the mind. Prayer just remember her name now , . . but lliis a \vay of relieving Oiat same Whal! You say you want It seems thai with every day I spend in dosses, broadeni I your "qual" done, to

;. You'll menial unbalance. We now use go back? Back to the old tradi-

It's iust impossible lo imderslond what the pages of hisU . hav( ) do it before i thought control effectively. luaUy say oi what's really going on in the world today. Eve hip. Movies? Yes, tliey're shown Follow me to the basemenl. ever}' day on campus. French Bible? You're going K ', too? I

'. have something hidden there ones are a specialty. (They Do you mean ;ay tliat you | hat I want to show you. bring tlio SA more money.) like 1963 SMC Bui whal I really want to teU you is that since we live in Well, if you must know what Oh. I forget to mention that SMC? You can't mean it You :h complexity, and I have more imporlant things lo do than special machine. wc don't read the Bible any want to go lo church . . bothoiod trying to understand them. I've iound a iew pro- Here more either. The head of tlie lo worships? You still want tt lures that hove helped rid myGcU of Iheso problems. The inside light's psychology dep£ dried up clustei Let me say first Ihal one of the best things you can do to on now. What? Oh— thi; of Chi But chine is going to lake us twenty proved ihal all writ- wait! I don't understand It is except for using it to start a tiie in ihe firoptacc. Not only years ahead. If I can turn the . Holy Canon were A sleepy figure raised his luld you avoid the newspaper, but also news broadcasts on in balanced. head from a chemislry book, " lio and TV. You can never really understand exactly what's ' . . . I'd hate for us lo wind up me what our religion took a pencil fi ht cmvway; and if you do, il only makes you worry. What in iho middle of the Great i ve're still Christians picked his wa lerencG should it make lo you what's going on over in Hun- Flood! I fountain. ry or Berlin? You're thousands of miles away. You see, I am going to take Something else helpful too: You should ignore elections. you into the lime period that . Thai 1 The PO - A Breed Apart which Here we are. No\v step oul By Robin Simmons

He is a breed apart, a rarity among oddities, and is ofti And oboul Ihis palriolic wish wash, don't pay an' Dwn to infest college campuses—even our fair enviro I Ihal. When folks lalk about Ihose who died foi ' dueled lours here before. I'll nt of super scholastic pursuits. isl shrug il off. That was a long lime ago. No seni show you some things that 1 oUTself stirred up over a bunch of fellows you didn'l o The Pseudo-optimist, henceforth referred to only bet you've never seen before 2 confused with a similar Neutrality is trail | another good lo develop. U > First, maybe I'd better bring jtstanding chai I you up lo date. His first and most I Yes, things around SMC fi- vious identifying nally changed. Remembe worships were required. is his limp smile—^which I carries about as much I

warmth as the hastily- [ painted grin of a id merely conform lo your fellowmon's will. Alle: half-sober carnival down. is iust a stale of I This unique grin is for- were mGnlally I ever upon the PO's vis- If you can develop Ihis trail, and I don't think il' ivould be no need for your ird because you're aUeady well on your way, Ame aee, no matter ubat thcl n. You back there in Ihe era" just haven't reached

? of menial balance like

ve. It's understandable I

oying ; mary facial 'Reading Maketh a Full Man' B Typit,

characteristic of the PO is his inane warbling. He i heard continually muttering such soul-satiating phra "Cheer up, Charlie—things could be worse!" having appar-j >uld 1 r guess how much Iwok. Not just recognizing ently never heard that things probably are worse.

ords, but completing the transfer of ideas and Very often the PO is an extcemely lonely person whol upon your ability lo read," loughls from the authors' mind to the book's craves understanding and friendship. This is apparei sily admissions officer. "College : iige and finally to your mind that's reading. — cause the only time he himself does not cry to be optimistic I states some other autlioritative soi And it's hard. Dr. Adier says that most people is when some tragedy, any tragedy, befalls his immedia simply cannot read, and that he knows only one or two people who read well. It should never be said that the PO is beyond help. Psychologist Reading is ultimately an arl. But like any John C, Flanagan, dubbed The Pseudo-optimist will mend his maladjustments with our! "one of llie nation's lop testmakers," recently art, il can be broken down into skills. And like true understanding. Let us band together in understanding I any olher sol of skills, Ihe skills of published a progress report on the results of a reading as we attempt true optimism; that is, facing reality with testing pr must be (I) acquired, (2) coordinated and (3) thoughts of success. infor American youth. In this report Flanagan dicates that the average high-school senior paring lo onler college understands only ) lift weights loo, I suppose, per cent of what he reads in Louisa May jdy can pick up the bar. I weights and therefore I'm SOUMRAiyiCCFiVr Mill Tlie e competition in weight lift- .-elftli-g r Modern ing? No. I haven't re Screen and Silver Screen. 54 per cent of the tliat imporlanl? Saturday Evening Post. 55 per cent of Time. School is competili and 28 per cent of the Atlantic Monthly. I like i or not. And how With all the stress on reading, why do such well we read as much lifter's as a score de- \ ' In of the ob- pends on liis developed muscles. ' Reading lakes practice. Where many of us ! pt^hension slop is after step one—we acquire the basic skill. And wc spend the rest of our lives per- . I believe forming step Iwo. We don't practice. But if simply that j reading really is imporlanl, and it is also diffi- - cull, wouldn't much practice make much sense? \ Tims the fact: the more wc read, the bet- j ler we read. The more we wrestle with an \ author, the more he will bless us. The more I of the University of Chi- we read, the more supple our intellectual mus- cles will be. The more wc read, the bettor able ' .ill be to contend with the everyday com- ! of life. 1

Nixon Looms as Possibility I •5fcBv" ^To Run Against L B. Johnson

i has to date shown the man who came within ;l m seeking the 119,000 votes of victory last Governor George time, Mr. Richard Nixon. He Michigan suffered is the one Republican who is

adicall) recon Repubh _y for the l^b4 ture in ipaign The possibility that fiscal reform program. Both shows that Mr. Nixon It r Barrj Goldwater will Go^erno^ Scranlon and Gov- sti-ongest candidate the Repuh- n mted as the Repubh ernor Romne\ face the haiidi- licans could ph 1 d date ha-; dm i.he. f ^ell-kn. sident Johnson,

bU and : md the c le can know for Rich It a| pears thai

Dormitory Men Indicate 'Lumberjack' by Cooper be elected b> carnmg tlie Ideas, Views on Reception '^ ith the Rock\ Mountain area the Mid\%est, and several I Is SA Benefit Program

people ludience. ; Approximately 1,500 He f Up- they re-asked under the ci semi-annual io sick of terns ^nded the SA !. 0( stances. lefit which this year pre- lie throws stone tfong t Johnscin as the thes « Time changeth the he ted Don Cooper and his per- sees; therefore. Democratic candidate thiii plan °P r falls apart Although the ne\% 'T'f' I If ihings go the way I v '^ President is a liberal at heart and is trying to the Ken °^' Music get SMC nedj program through the Con ^^^

i identified in nianj Faculty Gives \y^^ , the anti-chivalric lady-ask-gen- nimds as somewhat of a tleraan plan is that if tradition

t rred , Madison Concert • I think all previi is to he upheld, the men should iPaulBi A group of the music faculty ments for the recep 1 of an Alaska Saturday night dissatisfied Southern Democrats even though gave the lyceum be omitted, and seeii Jan. should re-ask back into the fold. Jfew know exists." College, *^''* '°' '^^ book-work o program at Madison ise to exams I feel ^ If the Repubhcai coordinator. e interesting and many Madison, Tenn., Dec. 7. ihould be put off Pa'"t "E the , thej humorous jaui^ts across Appearing from SMC were until a later dat think the ladies of WRH select a candidate can 1 lAlaska by Cooper and iiis log- Mrs. Dorothy Ackerman, con- who nistake by voting does make much dif- buddj' Arnie took tbeni tralto; Lyle Hamel, clarinetist; President Johnson in the large . I think the states Roy W. Scarr, pianist and read- industrial of the Nortli- ; should be post- should re- ask. A lot of new "" er; and Miss Mabel Wood, 1""^'" '"''"""'"' '" "'^''- couples have formed. siand on civil rights and other ruary or""ZMarch. such population cen- , .r. .. , , • Ja"- 12 is all right wlh me. Mrs. Ackerman sang a group issues of vital interest to the ^ ^^^^.^ I ^j^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ the boys should ask the of songa by modern composers people of the_ North Governor [}}^'^^ jjffg^^^^^ ^ut the girls should

. as ^^ell as a group of v,e\l re ask the boys. Differences of '^" r known favorite'? Among Mr opmion have obviously ai-isen s over 12 It will probabh eliminf Hamel s presentations were ) doubtful that he can betw. Also it Concerto for Clarinet bj Mo ' le the political liability of the Valentine banquet his -wife of some thir will be ainalmost impossible for ?art and the well kno^vn In - Drcmg students ' dnn Love Call Miss Wood di the Orlando \orced mother of children Since the girls asked for dates

I Scranton of I think it would be better if

nann and Mr Scarr did igs from Wilham Shakes and Eugene Fieldi

i^as. siranded in a wilderness for some da->s and had to live on terns eggs and bet ries The t-vpenence caused Coopei to year there The SMC Coni

Band will appear at i n the weekend of Api

McKee Baking Company

Little Debb'es

eir way through college.

Collegedale, Tenn. Haley and Robert Sum shiging "I Wonder as I Wan- der." The Woodruff sisters, Martha and Judy, sang a song about a sleigh ride. Collegedale Insurance Agency, Inc. pizza villa A recorded Christmas story was told by Gregory Peck. Mr. students and Auto - Life - Fire - Boats - Homeowners 3407 RINGGOLD ROAD Haley invited all faculty to tlie SMC cafeteria

429.33 1 Phone 39«.20i2, Collegedale, Tenn. for doughnuts and hot choco- entire Open Sunday thru Thursday — 4 P.M. till Midnight late. At the cafeteria the group of students and faculty "CII U, (or All You, l„,„,.„„ N.»Ji." Friday and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 A.M. sang Christmas carols led by SA President David Osborne. ' '

Accent WSMC-FM Starts New Student Sports Opinion Service By Frank Palmour The Collegiate Instilule of Siudenl Opinion, a new student id for McNutl's ind Kelly upinion senice al Soulhcm Mis- e with 15 and Workman" sionary College, is being direct- Cummings ^vilh 13 points each ed by Harry Spring, a sopho- for Workman's team. more theology major, under the In other games Turner de- sponsorship of WSMC-FM. feated Willis 68-49i McNutt Among tlie present projects is come downed Wilhs 75-66; Workman a 13-minute broadcast on ( s have stopped Turner 52-45; WSMC-FM consisting of panel iptains Willis domied Workman 5 discussions on topics of current 'Tiger" McNutt, interest. CISO hopes to start Chuck Tun airing impromptu sludent views and Alien Workman. Pedagogy Class The season opened Visits Chicago Nutt's learn playing Worl To See Organs ; la long general -interest man's. Sl.irling for McNu The organ pedagogy polls, and taking polls strictly S f dH 1 class visited Chicago for the use of special commit- and environs Nov. 25—Dec. 1 "to get an idea

of what a good pipe organ is," Chemistry Department according to Mr. Del Case, in- siructor in organ at SMC. '"" 11 The class, one of leaching w'''p„t" ;t.r Gets $5000 Research Grant ^ , ^, d R I methods for the organ, According Director Spnng, primar- 10 > , .""" ^ -r> ru . a , , > .u f ^^''^ Chemistry deparlmenl c.-iUon^; workmg on the project, f d ily for organ CISO has tremendous potenlial p majors and min-

has just been awarded a grant of This is the second grant that <"'s. saw and ' and allhoueh il is now in ils jh c m b k d heard pipe and ,Ho pejrolemn Re- SMC has received from ,« electronic organs al colleges emb™cLge,itpromises,oS5,000b , , ^ h r h If and for search Fund which is adnunis- Petroleum Research Fund this build inlo an effective media f f ur churches in northern . " => g 'ered by tlie American Chemi- school year. Dr. Norman Peek. ^ ' ' belter understanding between Organs seen included 20- P°'"" '" ' d McNutt by the studenis and between students "I Society. This grant is to assistant professor of chemislry, Jf.^" —'.—...... unu....;. uigan, earlier -<'-' at uie naiimne, "" and foculiv cover tlic time period from June this year received a Rockefeller Memorial ^ I. 1964 10 Aug. 31. 1966 and is grant for "individual funda- The second half was far dif- '" ''^^ Chapel, at the University Fleming Reports :earch in "periodale oxi- mental researching in the pe- fereni, however, with McNutt of " Chicago; the Allen of various organic com. troleum field." The grant, pulling slowly away. The final electronic pound s. vill be Tg^"; the Aeolian-Skinner On Progress score- McNutt 65 Workman or- Of Heat Plant the St. Paul Church of Christ, ?"'" '"7"^'' °" in Chicago; tlie Casavant Ono r,f the two boilers being m for the game J°"" ^hi 2, 6- organ at the Hope, Faith, and built for central °>' °^- SMC's new Disubstiluted were vith points , Grii McNutt 22 SMC's 1 Charity Catholic church, in Chi- heat plant was sent to the Can- >"«" "^ "ivision. pre\ and Stefanson ton Stoker Company of Ohio on A cago; and the Schantz organ at

eranl f^om /he 1 Re- Dec, 11, according to Business Wheaton College, Wheaton, Dl.

Manager Charles Fleming The eight-member class trav- siderable support for The boiler is expected (Q jij.^ ' elled in cars, two slaying over , participation in ihe past. Music Department Buys jpi^g_ Sabbath at Andrews University.

r the Students who have I Berrien Springs, Mich. They ganic cliemistry and qi l\ Four New Basses for Band were in Chicago on Thanks- been dve analysis are eligible tly thi purchased by esents the giving day. While in the city I ig bj' on this project, while receiving cj^r^ ultima! nship support. Siudenl work and they stayed at Hinsdale Sani . Thes I tone, ac- lolte. N. C„ %vill replace the will continue throughout the ,arium and Hospital, needed fi lamel. ;nl "soot faclorv" behind school year, and Dr. Christensen j^^ ^j^^^^ consisting of Mar quite some lime, according lo t-j s Hall, will probably spend summer va- imme listed at Iha and Judy Woodruff, Sandri Prof. Lyle Q. Hamel. SMC band S6,000. Bas^s an ually pur- ''"^*^"""- Keller. SyK-ia Sellars, Carolyn chased every- 25 ] 30 years, Bumham, Elaine Anderson, WSMC-FM PROGRAM GUIDE The old basses played differ- ' however. Cases were : Elaine English, and Jerry Al- enl lypes of scales, and horns in bought lo keep the inslrum.Zl.,^}^° reporled several humor- the same key were needed. The from being dented when mt cidenl new inslruments have a "trig- about. ger" tuning slide, which also J^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^f j,^^ ^^^^^^ helps m keeping notes in tune. ^^^^^ „,^,^ ^^,,,1, ^^(j,^,^ i Crook, Kuutti mel expressed bells. This finish college admin- ihan gold lacquer. Direct Groups for ialing the The bass player ': In 'Messiah' The college music department presented the Messiah, by George Frederick Handel, Fri- day night, Dec. 13, in SMC's iabernacle auditorium. The Messiah was sung by combined choral organiza-

i with visiting singers from surrounding area. They col- 2 accompanied by the orchestra, and freshman ly Babcock at the piano.

nd Miss Mabel Wood, <

laff. ihe organ. Monthly Supplcn Raymond 1 of Mr. ind Mr. J. Don Crook of the music deparlmenl- i ?lb-'l

Loma Linda Accepts Five SMC Pre -Med Students

r SMC s udents ; has edited botli the Me o ies and the N Accent during his Chemistry Club and head usher of the Ushers' Cluh. He also has been named Sabbath School

;upen: I and church deii

Gitbe t ButI Pti cia ic a Chu recently refiu- Gill Tyndall Ch Don M 11 rid ^^ ]] an Bill Tyndall, a married bio Tjndall all of the da of 64 r pres dent of Sigma Tlie- Dgy major, minoring in chen of accept istry, has been president of tf i from the denon natio al of her phjs father. Dr. Cn- aan Ushers' Club and Colportei q1 of ed ne Perc Dun leb Chu of he mounlain hos- Club, and ^ sident of 1- cla s of ro also lated al at One da, Ky. Palty. p senior class. La Sierra College, near Riv- erside, Calif., wll have IC grad- ril of four bun il n uates, the largest number from one college, in next year's LLU Both Chu and Bumham an freshman medicine class. isled in the current Who's Whi n American Colleges and Uni This class, if it retains its present number, will out-total the present freshman class by nling and cycling, Gilbert Graduating lonors, Percy E Most of the accepted students

1 double major are currently studying at Sev-

enth-day Adventisl liberal ; •ges ir the United Stal isoumRN /[cam .1 though S(

[Women Entertain SMC Alumnus Men at Hotel Patten Accepts Post On 'These Times'

. the Alabama room thaUanooga's Hotel Patten. Mr. Phillips graduated wilh ecial adaptation of "The major in theologj' and minors Fined the communications and Instorj'. of Ihe Before accepting the job wiih rogram. Opening with the title was attending mg, sung by Darleen Palerson, "lo ty of Mis le remainder of the program .1 of Journalisi where icluded: "Seventeen Going on doing gradua I Eighteen," sung by Marth; oodruff and Charles Lindsey; a." by Mrs. Dorothy Ack-

; "Do Re Mi," by Pat ill be replacing Pas '"'' "Repri Nurses . Going 10 Sophomore I by Mrs. Dorothy Ackerman and , Martha Woodruff; "My Favor- Take Pledge I Are Cappedr hings," by Sherrie Tram- and •'Climb Every Moun- | ' by Mrs. Ackerman and : the SOUTHEBN ACCE a chorus made up of Billie Flow- I ^^as mtroduced b\ Dder Doug the Southern Memori I in Lynn Wood Hall January , Judy Whitman, Pat Hor- las Bennett of SMC rollov>mg and edited the Joke, , 24. Iwath, Judy Woodruff, Sandy ' Superintendent r Wiine si>ecial mu'sic bi the Nur e ind 1963. JOsbome, Carol Rollins. Polly ' Foster of the Kentucky Tennes Tno—Polly Dunn iVIehnda Al Dunn. Shirley ' J len and Darken Biadwill I Sherrie Trambl Roll was calkd b> Miss Thr NSC Advises ence M Culpan a sociale pro -lor lo the ictual cap SMC Students Cycle Accident . I pmg Each young lad^ had To Inform Board I Kills Bob Gould. ,en a friend m the nur!,mg Academy I Student cap her Dr Harnelt Smith Eighteen-vear-c-- " I I Gould, a senior at your draft board I Academy, was kille , keep 3f Jan. 22, when his ed," advises J. R. Nelson, carrying himself and r of the National Service Joys, collided with a m by Hemy Fish of College- Jale at the Collegedale Plaza. , I Other youths injured in the 1> accident were: Mike Crowson, who f was dismissed from Er- | langer imum scholastic timl r 1 re nl whicl- Hospital after trealmcnl ! ogni^ed b> SMC and il Dim lied will dro]

. sion of Nursmg ncc rdiuR 1 look It college Miss Culpan lliLir status will Members of ihe capping pri imjoi lant- Not on gram committee were Pit Hor walh, Pat McCollum. Linda beiieliil by notifviJ held Sunday. Ja ynn Wood Hall Chape "" Zadie Garner. son c.mcluded. leni Missionary CoUe"! —

Mastering the IQ Test

Qdliom% Speafcing . . . your_ egi>— ^vro^gly, but Recently much has been said slso ! with a logical no- Id prob- regarding the value of intelli- plaining the gence quotient, or IQ, tests. ably stand a boost or two). reasoning behiid your answer. If Tliese tests are highly regarded the reason is now serve a useful the Has man, in his quest for knowledge, fotgotlen Ihat just as It may grad- purpo-se lo mention why a hi er that you are a profound imporlont as learning facts is understanding them? and j IQ test ii (de- afier Ibl, date oiler Some teachers readily dish-out list fool. decision I feel It irable The reasons are o The in most i and page ofter page for raemonzation dale, teKl after lexl. nd enurely reasonable. is something of a tossup. place oi memory work But is this education? Granted, the courses neniioned djscemible lo the In closing, I should like lo I cannot be dispuled in the educative process, Some If must almost entirely be of thb nature, but shouldn t many vill naturally be with teachers careful precautions, a hif others be interpretative and explicative? Shouldn't : expected of you—henceforth score is slill made. This is o challenge their sludenU asking Ihem: "Why did this happen' viously regrettable but som you learn from this to beneHl you in your and "Whal con people , belo« aierage, however, times unavoidable. (You kno' lilelime?'' will manel at your drive and of course, that all men arei education? Is it to gradu What b the purpose oi a college can usualh be done throng energy and ambition, and at the really created equal). can spew forlh walking encyclopedias Ihal ' ale a bunch of something no roore complicate ; \%onder that you have survived If you (horrors) are one il is those and facts on a particular subject? I hope noli If far. 'You dales than celf h^-pnosis your schooling thus the few who scores high on i of Great vity Dei red will be m demand because IQ test, there just isn't much As for writing utensils I have jour supposed de hope for your rescue, as you duate from the standard procedui clisco\ered through jears of and bull doggedness obviously aren't smart enough self sacnliang and painstaking Occasionally, it to make a lower, more logical, h accurate research that a

U educaUon leaches that Napoleon was defeated a loo in 1815. but doesn't teach why Napoleon was def Touche!

dgination both highh desirdblp College should develop withm students a desire t

el A g md liabil to de\ jp when ,

' immeshed in the entdnglements ,

of an IQ test i

^(^ StueC^? of the helpful because dage which goes something like Uiia: "The more give yourself a

forget, the more you forget the less lU know, so why study? The less you study the less you kn, Wher > Start less you forget, the less you forget 11 Most people, when taking an study?" If IQ lest, start at the beginning and work towards the end. This lo gainsay the noble "ar for o moment adempling is a common mistake which you t

I I am trying to bring our reasons (or studying m\ ' start should avoid. You may at ^ \. On a college campus more than any other plac the beginning if you vrish, but ' strong feeling that we study simply for the grad don

rk from the end of the ,

test towards tlie beginning. This J isons lor being in college. It Is my belief Ihal we should study particular maneuver is one i marUy because we want to. which I have originated and

' Then comes the defending argument: "I do study the sub-. have modestly called the Sim- ienu, I would like to rcspEclfully I I , mons-sHp-over, or S.S.O. This 'hy do ]

' is particular point of strategy ,

I this til made. Why c

theology lo t I tesl is graded, it \vill become major have ;

' history of music, a business major Bible doctrines, or o apparent thai you had plenty

student speech? The answer is guile simple. A pre-mec . of time for the whole test, ,

who studied nothing but chemistry would be just as unl since questions were answered i as a theolocfy student who studied nolhing but Bible. throughout. It also shows you '

' I quick mind, due to the We were given minds capable of iar greater use ih :t that we make of Ihem. The basic desire in each of us lo nclusions. balanced is reason enough lor studying. To be able , important factor often an intelligent approach lo life with its myriad circur An is during requires a sizable portion of experience and inteUec erlooked behavior I s test. It is of utmost impor- is goined primarily through Ihe noble "arl" of sludy. ^

nervousness and exaspera- i n. Tliese poin

somwm tmcim lam questions, never fails to ir taking Ihe sam.

Editor's Note: With the blare of inly trum- pets, we wish to announce the Bl ~z Accent's yearly literary edition.

dar hai been set for April 7. erip.d".°boul Poetry, prose, verie or worse. ;

humor, essays, short-short stor- I-ghis e

bl^cfc-QUl urgo to be immortally etched In h»l "ttt

Gut do it now. Deadline ™,s l-lilk.l „d

March 22. u bj^ mJing Magazh — I

WSMC-FM Installs New Hegstad Documents Equipment WSMC FRI began Us acU- Liberty Restrictions ues for 1964 with new renlnr I Elder broadca';UnE Roland R. Hegstad, Liberty magazine and has held I and rebuilt religious libertj- secretary of the the position of book editor i,vilh General Conference of Seventh- the Southern Publishing Asso- 515(10 I day Adventists, spoke Jan. 22 ciation, NashviUe, Tenn. He Included in the pui chased for 'Wednesday evening prayer graduated from Walla Walla eqiupnient wa*; a new Cwi I meeting in Lynn Wood Hall College, College Place, Wash., e control coiisol, made bj auditorium, and took his graduate work at Equipment Inc At -onic An«Irews_Univeriity, Quality parts Relating the impact of Lib- proposed Sun- ^pnng' , Mich. in. Elder Heg- ..,._ :es two pre am s>slem the approximately 1 ihe former Elder Vandeman ' Assists Program Of MV Society Elder George E. Vandeman, lie Equipment Inc. iently mobilizing movements iry of the General revive calendar reform and zed Ampex sales and , Conference of Seventh-day Ad- ter for the South. Burnham Takes Bike Trip nforce the proposed calendar

burgeoning influence of lal Of 1100 Miles in 4 States "Countdoi sponsored by the :, the ;asmg p Bob McReynolds, station techni- Collegedale Mi Twenty-two-year-old Gilbert spied a fam: looking Volks- :h-pushed Sunday legisla- who claims that WSMC- teer Society. Burnham, a senior pre-med stu- wagen. Appi tor clos- tors and pressure in unexpected now has a signal second- dent at Soutliern IVIissionary er obser\'ation, he iscovered positions. .^,-..v>ne in the area. Associated College, left Collegedale Dec 20 the vacationing Di nd Mrs closely in the project was James Vatican attempts to obtam a for Savannah, Ga., on an ele\ Glide Bushnell seat in the were en-hundred-mile bicycle )Our Qthe f,hts spent ui the also documented by Elder Heg- ney covering four Southern Vandeman as he opened the Sunsh_ State were passed stad in the hour talk. states in fifteen Friday vesper program. dajs m Hames Cit ... ^u u.iuiKe evemng ^ TheTu chapel1, , ofc the,u w s f , Women „, ^ , iFederal Report In Savannah, Gilbert slept m gro\e under a Irutt processing The Countdo-.vn program now ^^^^^^^^^ pjall, usual meeting his sleeping bag hi'; first night shack and m Pl-e for the Wednesday nigh^ -/- |Calls Smoking on the gi-otmds of the consolate m a schoolbus IZTT^^J r^.fl.^.l^ t^^o^"" t due building of the Netheriand ^^ hile sleepmg in the shelter tlotional Hazard ting's being held i He spent the next da> sight ome things as he calls them Tivoli Theater. Elder Bruce Washington, D.C. — The ' Wood Hall Ch.pel i order seeing and heading north ncdl,™ wa;°ta8 bs Johnston, head of the theology indemnatioii of smoking by a ««onniiodatc Ihe ^pected monei Mr Burnham »ll"?ii lliem '"' ot « and ihey l"ief has made an impact on the >ndge decided to find some drank lo Elder Hegstad is e ilion. The 387-page report, Icompiled by a committee of ten Scientists, indicted cigarettes as troopers and once by a ci h deadly menace to United ..n unidentified man opened his Film 'eo*? Bnrnhani "^^^ ^' Color (States health. car door just as Mr. Burnham f":"^- door edge- ''='' " quesoomng whil m General Luther 1 passed. Hitting tlie 've^e Smith BTerry, who released the repor Next Lyceum by promised that the The first lyceum night of tlie auditorium. Admission is as us- aiplly „ new semester will see world es- ual for the lyceum series.

, and Gilbert accepted S ^"' hor Mr. Nico! The film will explore (with Burnham spent Ihe night at the P'"''^'' mmediate effect of the report ' Mr. Smith) the nigged beauty for Smith and ilor nbn, "Aus- ^a? local YMCA building $1.35 noted m the stock market of the island conthienl. Ticket- and returned with his bicycle Iraha." T eteran lecturer is prices dropped slightly for holders will see marine oddities, It cost Gilbert a twent> five 1 the travelogue obacco company stocks vild buffalo. cents handling charge to carrj' n the tabernacle P'^'J Indications are that an m his bicjcle back to Savannah Teased advertising campaign b\ train where he again pedaled nay soon be launched by ma or tobacco companies to offset

;hould be impressive in His first mght in Florida was color. spent -ileepmg behind a bill board sign ]ust off U.S. Inghway "Austraha" will emphasize AlA. The billboard, he said, people—people riding steers, "broke the chilhng wind." people bucking giant , people himting photographs and people surfing in the Pacific. I Siuiday" Catliolic than churches i ! the campus of Wom- Mr. Smitli has made a repu- United States. ' en's College at St. Augustine, I Americans tation as e.vplorer of the strange,

e spending almost twi i follo\ving days took him The remote and interesting. He lias uch to smoke as they ai . to Daytona Beach, Sanford and journeyed in the Far East and iting to their churches. Oriando. While in Oriando, he in Europe as well as the South

Tibet IS the subject of the new Collegedale Cabinets, Inc. est of his fi\e books Golden Doorway to Tibet During th Manufacturers of High Oualily \ ar Itp served as a secret agent for the Secret S ^^ ce in Thai for Scliooli Ind Hospttali JlaniandFrmce Collegedale, Tenn. Telephone 396-2912

McKee Baking Company unaling ') enu llj St.

Little Debb'es luc ng films or lecturing spend his Umc in his n

Cdl fornid at his fishing 1 ;

Pat Ramsey SA Sponsors Talks Wins Student Nurse Title Patricia Ramsey, South' senior nnrs On ^Emergent iug student at SMC, has been 1 Represenlalive Bill Brock named Miss "The Emergent Soulh," a lec- Student Nurse for leak Feb. 9 on the political Tennessee's District Four, ' nnd Oie currenl polili- The Miss cholarship Conimiltee of the i lake-up Student Nurse con test is sponsored Studenl annually i, this district by the Tennessee L. Association Arlliur Richerl, Scholarship J. Ch . of Student Nurses. series of history at SMC. Those student Commitlee chairman. The nurses choosing I will be designed fleets ind for Ihe emergin] the groiving South Soul lecture will begui quired to submit Each a 3,000-\vord 1

for induslnal dcvelop- nt in Tennessee w-ill speak the induslnal and economi- gro^^th in the South. superin- Dt. John LeL-^on, 1 public health nui SMC Gives schools in Atlanta, ilenl of

I present, April 5, the de- 1900 Persons apmcnls of education in the MTOught in our educational sy Southern Union Officials Collegedale had its first tern due to Ihe present "Sabjn Sunday" Jan. 19 when heaval in our nation, over 1,930 students and resi- X-ater in the spring a final li Teli SMC Nurses of Needs of! title on Feb. : lunity filed lure will li niu-sing c; Nashville, through the A. W. Spalding Ele- progress of mcntary School to receive the The speakc presidents were hosts to the stu- this area. He further stated tiiat in person and be inlervievve denis of nursing at Soutliern the nursing profession is a \'ital by a panel of judges. Missionary College at a ban- part of the right arm of the — - quel recently. work and that the Southern MPS. ACkermail Union appreciates greatly tlie hear of the C:„_c wCICtTIWilSSoloc+IOnc f work that the nurses are doing ^'^

the Southern Items on the program, which At Cadclc Recitol I Conference and in the -was conducted by the Collegiate Contralto Dorothy Ackerman.

T Travelogue to Russia." out- CNF; announcements, Patricia Singing in the University of | clice needs McCoUum, vice president of Chattanooga's Cadek Hall, Mrs. and called CNF; report on Memphis trip to Ackerman was accompanied by help staff them. TASA Stale Convention, Palri- Prof. Robert Scarr, SMC's visit-

' "^ ' _ ' " ~ " itroduction of ing professor of piano from Union, said that guests, Dr.'C. N. Rees, SMC's Newbold College, Berkshire, nis on president; speakers: Mr. Donald England.

WSMC-FM PROGRAM GUIDE

Sigma Tlieta Clii Chooses Ina Dunn as President Tw.r,l,i,^T I SOUTHERN ACCENT

Semester SA Selects Dean's List Candidates Includes 20 ForVacancies The Sludenl Senate of SMC recently nominated candidates

posts presently vacant in the Student Association. The senate accepted the resig- nation of Claude Steen, public

Wol ;d SA Pns\ dent David Osborne that h would not attend SMC the set

Nominated by the

candic' , for the healUi id labor e Randall Crow and pre- Board Votes Ad Building studer dDougWalk- iship of the For Needed Classrooms c Relations Com i of Tui Pitma!

1 build = oi the the ! fiy major; an< m line bes in the college s pan college facilitj of the fastest meeUngs Two field scJiools will

if Trustees mei SMC Pi lent C N Rees week The board also loted to offer i ipus last the board said Wood Hall the pres a physical education major be i Lynn tj^a't'JhV plan to build the ne« ig ne\t Septembei and ti building buildi tudied for son alleM

Ujiion President The board Don R Rees chairman of the aihrn J'rior bodrd t Id the faculty Tuesdaj night at a social gathermg lliat entl^

Members Approve Church ^^{^V^« Haley Directs Talent Show „ » mo™, „ ,,a.i To Cost ^500,000, Seat 1850 ^^ p^^^ ^.^ p.^^^ Awards Other actions taken b> the trumpeting and spoofing, e ght ^vi„ners The Collegedale church accepted Sel g, atur' board included an appropriation , ophies in Saturday night's s plans for the new Collegedale church at of $15,(100 for the Field School Id in the tabe made auditorium. day night, Feb. 1. II Evangelism Elder Bruce ,\ Roias Pie rce Haley, Chuck Scarbrough and the The new church, v^th a seating ca be of e named tops in tlie program. completed by the fall of 1965 Construct The SA-sponsored progra summer, according to Elder Roy B Thui the direction of Pierce Haley, programs mon, Collegedale pastor. The chuich wi be built on the hill across the road fn.i Mas Rojas. smging "Figaro," from the the college Medical Center. opera Barber of Seville, was I'oted top in For the f t few ye. the "Vocal—Old Standards" church should e In the Spanish vein, P How focused on Espana in his pia no perform- hership increasing steadily, the niem- ance of "Maleguena," lakin top in the ;11 probably outgrow the seating Chuck Scarbrough's top v ocal number Thi ew structure, when completed, revolved around the song "01' represent a total investment of ap- as Chuck, garbed and tinted, imately $500,000. Furnishings and himself at the piano. litect's fees will take $100,000. In the humorous section. the Nurses' Vlurphy ii.v Sabbath School division rooms are Group—Polly Dunn, Brenda and ' Lament." ined Three \vill be on the grwund level Patsy Osbonie—sang "Nurse. ig the Arthur Spaldmg Elementary "0 play- ' Sol Mio"; Lloyd Logan, )ol UnUl ddditions are added 1 singing

Venice"; an augmented "Nurses' Group," singing '-When the Stars G to Sleep": and the "Beauty Shop Girls, ' medleying of light songs. 85 will be to the right side and the wi,]. a group of hapuslr> will be to tlie left side of the Admission to the program emcecd by pulpil which vvdl be in the center Choral Director Don Crook

Voting was by ballots collected at the

The Southern Union Building Commit '^ has unanimously approved the buildinR plans, and passage by the General Con .

Eastern Mediterranean '

Sdtoiaiy speafcitig . . Troubled Wotsrs

liv-e, the next three months. -- oloodshd and violence have government ropresenti. Snch , and for force would l)e manned dcycles. shattered the uneasy truce from Turkey by talks aimed toward a troops from NATO nations and healthy ^.liich has existed on the island fruitless of the crisis. would include over a thousand of since 1960, and the solution anxious to coritnbute U. S combat troops. ^d thut „,d hatred between Turk and Always was Russian All this has left Greek has been resurrected. to any civil stnfe Archbishop Nik-ita Khrushchev, who Makanos in an uncomfortable inq dif- ^, , , , J L 1 , boss The old feud broke mto vio- ^^j^^,^j|y exchanged angry squeeze. He fears that if he December when neu- ''^"^'^ ^.^ Western nations over allows the landing of a NATO r hand- Archbishop "»'"' F«»<1™' intervention." force, it will end in island ouTin- , ..(^eign p. ""ti"'" I™1» ''^"'^ "S his long-avowed goal of unifica-

fear spread, so d Q dorm As ''^ ^°°^ used lo '"P S"*P^" '

SA Promises and Results Mdcddn By Doug ^ surf; ^ __^ with nluch liad been obtained ^^^^ ^ ^^^ second half of man who had to formult independence in indis- quickly. iLriayrvou'^ghreveiTlrrunicYciesV""*^ 1960 ^^^ ^^j^^j ^.^^^ ^^^^^ ,_, ^^od plans rather Progi |iulabl\ disintegraled. rather ^^^ ^^ evaluate past campaign progressed from a Exactl) ^^ho should step in promises and plans. Has tlie liike to a funny lumbe, /^- ^mCCH l

by the public relations i niitlee is a helpful innov; thai wasn't included m ea plans. Sponsored trips tn i

A Job Weil-Done n the back lo Programs Comr

nity. Now: One faith. .

t MANY churches. Late

students of SMC ii

iry worthwhile, otl On +0 Collegedale!?!

oi the catetprr iS Manager Charles Fleming, with a doubling the atmosphere b\ muM, ye, thai one ol SMCs new boUers was aclually has been improved

apptai ling's own words, "U you can believe anything duties of this comnutlee an Stoker Co.) say, one is really supposed lo second semester. The progress of the Soullitrr. a Pup-Tents" Maybe? i\ler,on« is to l«e» ^''"; ' unknown. Perhaps the editor i seconc wholeheartedly in the abilily and inlegrily of planning a surprise for ltd. Our trusi was slrengthened recently with semester. Maybe an annunl? lenl ol a new adminbtralion building's being WSMC-FM •his, we beheve, is a wise move. More space souMRw fmm ive offices and more space lor classes has a WSMC-FM has made grea changes with n

modeled quar

*itnving I By 19G4-65 il h s been otiici lly estimated ihfi tlie station is the college will probably incr "" by 100. vor lify for higher power before Mad College "hi^r

' per ded as of M y, 19G4. This inin unate appening CBl ably u the nroUmenl of SMC. cmd an appre inb ol ncrease is sir he nolol How car Ih IHIi pe haps?

For +h e N eedy

We a the n Iho t rn de Id ke ep thcmselv^ we 1 inform ed n the of the planned inij"''*''!^^ -or this reoso )ppo^r°urdty Many may need semester show ninding and inform those whoz:;" °di z appear. If second beginniiS^ 'i ch Iho ight has gone in Ih ihe completion of Sl«do..l sone "Kme made first semester, tlie Y tiniB spent ii bo Last Minute Supplement Boilers Arrive At Last Darkness Doomed As Sootless Units Finally Find SMC T RT L N BLR T

Chang Chooses SMC

another one." He took another to San Francisco and Greyhounding Chirles Chang is from Taiwan. the continent brown scroll and let it dangle be- across to SMC, but 'Eejore ihe bombing." says lie needs time to absorb side the first, one in each hand. the local CkirleJ, lecoild jei'ie.ihr accoiiiUiiig holding them high. idioms and ptonundition. imienl at SMC. "ivi i-^rv mh. We "My wife says that maybe these "I am working twenty hours a '" week. I diink. Tomorrow I find a '"''' ""^ ^^ t'w'x''it'!''rv''LLr^w ^"^ '" job." '^' Khoo?'-'' his application Charles is considering selling the After was ac '^^sZ'l''lVo2P~''''"'' few picture scrolls, or as they are cepled, Charles traveled half-way Tao Hsun, alias Charles Chang ciUed in Formosa kuo wha (freely around the world—across an ocean was born in Taiwan, April Ching. transliterated), that he could bring and a coalinettt—lo be schooled al n 1932. He remembers very viv- SMC. with him. , times of unrest and agita- dly the Half a Globe Someone in Taiwan told me that lon in his country. was good school," "I am taking only nine hours of this a he ex- Taiwan Mis- plained. He graduited from class work," he said. "I cannot read junior college in sionir)' College, a or hear English weU enough yet.'' "The people here are friendly. his country, in ipSl. He iJien Already speaking two languages, Many students have talked with me. of wr.rkcd in the treasurer's office Chinese and Japanese. Charles had Not just a few, but many. I appreci- Union he South China Island studied Enghsh before flying by jet ate Ibis very much."

Ad- "I have been a Seventh-day WSMC-FM PROGRAM GUIDE

Tucs.: Radio "When 1 was 111 the armyr be SUNDAY Your Doctor— 11^30 A.M. Voice of Prophccy-R.T Sdbbaih. They donH •12:00 P.M. Sunday Seronnde— 10 keep the 10:15 Dal'e"lLn™N^^~^^ want you to keep h. there is no easy "'""""'°"^" your best way. You just have to do • 3:00 Medically Spcnking-T. D 'lO:30 Si'^" Off in everything and hope they do not

7;00 Datc-line-N After five months of the two-year 1I5 Woml'"'Tworld-N military training, whidi Medical Milostones— Honorable Mention compulsory y.W iiO p'.M. Dale-line— he began after he had been an SDA 5' 30 SoLUhern Sirenadp— only one year, Charles' father died 5:30 Southern Serenade— 600 Devotional Moods— Being the only son, he was released ./ JO or ,li.™ (B M.mg, o, btllt,) /or 6:30 A Quiet Placi^H f om the army and allowed to return iiSSfT"'' mother and hi horn to upport h 7:M FM Clnssroom— 7^30 Be«de SliU Walers—

Wfe Pan S d obei

k d f h h dan .

SMC's Nursing Department Nurses j Conducts Class for

I steeply The Extension Division of SMC began

L„t Southern Accent Lost Minute Supplement Train Smashes Boiler, Otiier Unit Deiivered Passenger Train Derails, Occupants Unharmed In Collision with Boiler With one of SMCs long-heralded boilers safely delivered, boiler number two was hit yesterday, Feb. 13, crossing a railroad track, by the "Georgian 93."

The 30-car train, pulled by three dresel engines, collided with the boiler- laden truck just inside the city limits of Ringgold, Ga., at approximately 8:30 A.M. yesterday.

The train was traveling at approxi- mately 30 miles per hour.

Persons on the train, some still sleep- ing in their berths, were unharmed, as far as is now known. The majority of the cars and the three diesels, totaling 4500 horsepower, were overturned on impact. The cab of the truck was across the rrack when the accident occurred.

The driver of the cab and trailer is

This accident climaxes a four-month series of difficulties in SMCs push to nsiall a new sootless central heating plant. Boilers were successively scheduled SMC-bound boiler pose foj Accent photographer after collis for delivery in June, rhe last week of yesterday mor lin passengers, some scill sle iping in their berths, were unharmed, '. apparently August, the first weeks of October, and ruined. Truck leeing his truck, is also unh rt. The accident slows down deliver^ the last of January. One of the two

; been expected here for fou: ashless units finally was trucked onto campus Feb. 12, missing contracted de- livery date by a mere 120 days. One New Boiler Finally Arrives The single delivered boiler will be installed, according to Business Man- ager Charles Fleming, and will be used alone until another boiler finally makes

it to SMC.

The boiler in the collision is appar-

The heating unit was being mobilized by Home Transportation Company. Le- gal possession of the boiler rests with Canton Stoker Co.. Canton, Ohio, un-

til delivery at the college.

The driver of the truck bringing the boiler from Canton, Ohio, tried unsuc- cessfully to get clearance at Ringgold to bring the boiler directly to College- dale. Not getting clearance, he drove on to Marietta, Ga. Truck, boiler, and driver were on their way back from Marietta when mauled by the train. The reason for refusal of passage from Ringgold before going to Mariet- ta, Ga„ to SMC is still unexplained. The two boilers, contracted last year, were principal parts of the new central heating plant being grounded behind Jones Hall. The delay in delivery was caused by Queen City Boiler Works, Charlotte, N.C., subsidiary contractor of the Canton Stoker Co. SMCs contract was with Canton.

According to Mr. Fleming, the halt- ing delivery schedule on the boiler that was delivered was due to enigmatic pro- ceedings at Charlotte. Canton, once in possession of the basic boilers, which-^— amid the shouts built by Queen City, - shipped them off to SMC i; f joy from of rejoicmg m honor of the them and residcnrs of Jones Hall G sioned sootless atmosphere of SMCs pi- ^Georgian 93'Smashes New Boiler, Derails Staff Photos By Gilbert Burnham

(I) Gandy dancers with jacks and spike hammer begin relocacing the track as the clean up begins. In order to move the 100-ton locomotives it will be necessary for the L&N railroad to bring in a special derrick. (2) From left to right are (he second and third. units of the three unit loco- pic- pulling the southbound "Georgian." (3) In the center of the eorgian 93", (4) headed south o Atlanta from Chicago, lies helpless in Ring- gold, Ga. Home Transportacion Co.'s tcacco and trailer (5 and 7) that was carrying the boiler was completely demolished as the di ver quickly ran from the truck, escaping in- jury. Curious onlookers (6) were attracted to the site for hours following the accident as railroad men worked frantically in rain clear the track. Chang Chooses SMC

from Taiwan, another one." He took another lo San Francisco and Greyhoundinp I brown scroll and let it dangle be- across the oml>i>,P.- sayi continent to SMC, bj *'<^c '^'^ °"^ '" ^^^^ ^^"'^> "^ """^^ ''"'^ '*» liUT aceoiinl'me *"* absorb the loril holding them high. idioms and e were rich. \v\ pronunciation. "My w^f^ sjys that maybe these "I am working vid a ston and twenty hcwrs j "" help pay for me to go to week. I think. cojUal ciiy of Tomorrow I find i

' .' All selling the s is considering After hh ,

^^' lire scrolls, or as they are cepled, Charh Chang Tao Hsun, alias Chjrles "' Formosa kuo whj (freely around the wo Chang, was bom in Taiwan. April " , that he d bring and a conlhieii 1}, 1932. He rememben very viv- ""' ' '"^ '^''" ' Slobe ^'7o>neor,e i„ f^ ^V™!""'"' "^If - Taiu-an .old n>.

He graduated from Tajwan Mis- .. ..j _.|^j^ ^.^^^ ,,g ^^^j ^^^^^^ ^^^j p/tf,„e^. sionao- College, a junior college in - „j.^^ ^_. ^^^ g^^n^,^ ^^[, ^^^^^ j,^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ then his countr)-. m 1961. He speaking languages. Already two AL(>/> j/tf^fi((j Adte Wif^ u-,/; worked m the treasurer s office of ^.^^^ ^^^ j^p,^^^_ Charles had Nor jus, a /,., few. m.„y. I ,p^ the South .land Union ^^^-^^ English before flying by jet .ite ibis very much." Office. "I have been a Seventh-day Ad- WSMC-FM PROGRAM GUIDE

Honorable Mention

n after he had b

! only one year, Charles' father died.

. Being the only son. he was rele.ued from the army and allowed to return home o upport h mother and his who sug nurse, second , B / n g SMC

!5 ears old. Her

SMC's Nursing Department | Conducts Class for Nurses

The Extension Division of SMC began offering on Jan. 29 a course entitled "Professional Nursing Today" for graduate nurses in ihe Chattanooga-Hamilion County area.

The course, to be taught by Miss Florence M. Culpan, associate of SMC's Division of Nursing, and Miss Zerita Hagermin.

Foud on Wednesday evenings, ;

io.

Mrs. Armena Abemathy. presi- of dent of the Chattanooga district

worked suggested the course and started, iih SMC in getting it

to raduate nurse student .ment of nursing, stre"' »- concepts. trends and prattic^ ues, research in nursing advanced nd opportunities for

appoint- class it scheduled

take the enrolled may -

^\ve hackh, Iversen Speaker For WSMC-FM Second Birthday V j„„ T. On,-ille Iversen asso- at( adio and television secre- a of the (>pn me sp

theo serv ance of WSMC- adio's second birthday. chapel service. Ede rivers mmentedonthe At the half it was McNu ela onshi ot behind h ' 2+, Turner 21. losses, Workman's with two k of The second half opened the Seventh-day Ad- for third place two ga: g mtl lied en t Church. To open McNutt's team hitting eigh this behind Workman are Tui ^ ograjn quick points and opening p Dr. Gordon M. Hyde, and Willis. lead to 11 points. They One of the closest games fartnent, read letters of their lead large and inci cc fc a u ataon and commendati -vith s f om he s left college administratit

s poii Ihe fin started i SMC BOARD VOTES Showing del AD. BUILDING Nicol Smith's 'Australia' scripUon (Continued from page 1) "Talge 303," writtei pulled to up within ; and produced by Dr. Hyde' offset tuition raises. Money was Shown to Capacity House also appropriated to remodel the

1 Mr. Nicol Smith College Laundry narrated his The majority of the lyceun- then liit three more foul shol celluloid tour of the general staff of WSMC-FM, El- Dr. J. L. Clark, ; continent however, emphasized Austral "under the bolt" at der Iversen spoke again, this - of histon', tlie tab- ia's urbanity and increasini to make up the last tJiree points. emacle-audi tori urn Saturday affluence. time spelling out various Gen- High night, Feb. 1. eral Conference scorers for McNutt's Mr. Smith believes that Aus goals for edu- team were McNutt Traveler cational broadcasting. 5 book, 1S44, on the Mil- with 20 Smith made good his tralia's "untamed wilderness He told points and Hale and Marchant advance publicity to emphasize aspects have been played up toi what some other SDA college with 14 points each. For Turn- people in his program, "Aus- much. Shots of city dwelle er's team it was Perry wth 18 's of the famed goals. points, and Gamer with 15 At the luncheon. Station Man- ofiles of Australian Autlior of five books, ; voted the following facul- P' farmers, the lat- ager Des Cummings reviewed isinessnien, est of which is . Elfa Ednii In another officials, and ani- Golden Doorway game of the week, some of the recent major ad- to sing; Elder Gerhard Workman downed Willis by the als. Tibet, Smith was once a se- vancements made by the sta- Hasel, religion; Elder Herman lopsided score 67-42, ^" Thailand. of Reveng- Heading into the interior of %^^. ^'^'^''S^. ?.e^"* Sydney, Melbout ing later for Ihe loss to Work- ; man, Willis rebutted Turner led Alice Springs and .i > m r. ^"i^, ''i' '^^.^''f' ""'*'' "*" SMC, Elder Iversen addressed then penetrated the -;^ildemess. ^'"' '" ^"T'N^^^'-4'"'-aha lyceum.f oint meeting of the Commu- ations and Religion Clubs at I'clock that evening.

Concordia Choir Sings Here Feb. 15, Sponsored by Fine Arts Committee

The Concordia Choir, under around die soutliern coast and m^i^^g the direcUon of Prof, Paul J. north along the western coast Christiansen, wiU appear at to Trondheim, stopping at all Soutliern Missionary College principal cities. Saturday night, Feb, 15. ^j,^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^,j ^^ The group of 65 singers from 8 p.m. in tlie Tabemad e- Audi Concordia College, Moorshead, lorium. Arrangements for the Minn., won ivide acclaim on a concert are tmder the supervi- recent toiu- of Europe ivith spe- sion of Mr. Del Gise, chairman cial concerts at the Brussels of the Fine Arts Committee, World's Fair and ihe Vienna SMC students and faculty Music Festival. The tour for members may gain admission 196+ takes ihe group through by showing iheir identification- many of tlie Southern stales and lyce the Midwest, esident price is $1.50,

Singing a capella, the choir vAW present a program rang- LITERARY EDITION ing from IGtIi century classics Sylvia The deadline for the AC- Sellers' down through the Bach era to CENT'S IHerary edition has Nothing bcolsa piiza — eicupl maybe our tpaglicfu" Senior Recital tlie contemporary masters. Sev- been indelibly sot for March 22. eral works written by the di- Event fallier, of Feb. 9 villa rector's F. Melius Chris- pross, short dories, parodies, pizza tiansen, will also be heard. ratire. humor, essays, and short- short stories. The edition will In 1958 tlie choral group 3407 RINGGOLD ROAD make if. flamboyant appear- 629.3311 „,, i-eu. o in oiviij of Europe. At the first concert s all upcoming poets and authors • Art Chapel. Prince The recital Open Sunday thru Thursday — 4 P.M. till Midnight in Oslo, Norway's Crown have been waiting for to break Olaf and Crown Princess Mnr into Ihe literary light. REMEM- Fr day and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 A.M. tha were honored guests. BER MARCH 22. From Oslo, the choir traveled

*""= '" E Major", I H.vJ . I "l^t' Andante co„ Varia 1' Inc. Cabinets. Inc. A i, •^''"P"'' "Maiurka in Collegedale Insurance Agency. Collegedale

M=na(jctar.r. of Higk Qaallly Auto - Life - Fire - Boats - Honneowners

iier Tenn. . the 396-20(2, Collegedale, concert, music ma Phone Collegedale, Tenn. '"id . minora ™.. V ^ ^"dsonip "'"'•"^ faculty Telephone 3M-2912

pCh^?f.'''^«>'^-^-'>d drank GCs N. W. Dunn Speaks at Legion SMC Professors Conduct Mission Promotion The Collegedale MV Society's Foreign Bible Meet at Highland Christ's Legion, direct- ed by David Taylor, partkipaie in the uljJ staged its Professors Bruce Johnston lo armual mission pageant Friday conference Jan, 5 I and Robert Francis of SMC's Bible 2 g^l evening, Jan. 31. Elder N. W. .„ir„i«n ^P^nnienl along wlh Over 300 students Dunn, associate secrelarj' of Uie n Hyde, General Conference, was special

___. , journe,,— , speaker for the weekend service. Academy, Portland, Ter schools. Also pi Elder Dunn spoke after the 1 parade of muld- cos tinned Elder D. A. Delafieid, i dents and faculty members, r Floridian Bill lies '^tZ^l^^Z resenting a large majority of world mission divisions, Chapel i Speaks at ,tut''"HTaven™StJT; filed down the center aisle the tabernacle-auditorium. On Success in Life woach- and conducled a group on mpusi Emphasized in his sermc ViUiani A. Des of the insui Professor Hyde took rum- both Friday night and at S e firm of Hemdon, lies an of the early Sabbatli batli church services, was

tt, Orlando, Fin., spoke Tue^ need of qualified teachers ;

„„_,, ,, -. ,- - - uuLidd a study group eniiiled to SMC sludenls on "Four E!e- ..you^ Ljfe's Calling" in the ijienls of Success." academy hhrary. supervised Mr, lies lold students tliat Professor Francis ' "*"' "' study group on ho' " Serving as principal of Lont Star Intermediate School of Te.v-

as in 1919, Elder Dunn tlieii

received his first introduction to Awards Available | Higher a denominational career. He went to the mission field in To Honor Academy Grads 1927 as an education secretary in the South American Unioii, Fla.; Greater Miami Acad- Oufslanding seniors from de- land, staying until 1946. After work- of Uie emy, Miami, Fla.; Highland itional academies ing as tlie educational secretary Academy, Portland, Tenn.; Lit- Southern Union will be awarded of the Southern Con- tie Creek Academy, Concord, bigger scholarships than ever ference for one year, he was before, according to SMC Presi- Tenn.; Madison College Acad- promoted to his present position I denl C. N. Rees. as associate secretary of the Dr. Rees said tliat the Be General Conference. The B,A, degree was awarded ' scholarships from §50 to SlOO Elder Dunn at Union College, e qualifying The selec Lincoln, Neb,, in 1924. He re-

I further iheir edui ceived his M.A. Irom Southern Methodist University, ,

Schol irded 1 College Day? to those seniors who have been nominated by the lacuIUes of Renee Toylor Will Narrate Lyceum, iheir respective academies. Unusual Hunza-Land Color Film Each year the college, with the several local conferences of unii Miss Rem , joumal- The inhabitants of this the Southern Union Conference, awards SlOO tuition scholarships the best-seller Hunza Land, will cer or heart attacks; they have. students graduating from the present her documentaiy film,

"Hunza—The Valley of Eternal and lliey are usually . llie following basis: one scholar- menially Youth," at SMC Saturday night, physically and alert | ship for each academy senior Feb, 22. well past the age of 100. class of 25 graduates or less; and Miss Taylor's movie, complet- lmoi.vn of the un for each additional 25 graduates. Little is ed in 1962, tells the story of the people of Hunza, a small Mos-

SlOO : lem slate located high in the Himalayas of West Pakistan. Rule and Brodeur Stun Hunza has been isolated from tlie e of one-half civilized world for over Spectators With L/nf-Tr/p 2,000 years. Few people from the outside world have ever ;tory about the Hunzakul's Tlie following schools are eli- P can b a d d c bo n of he e viewed the valley or its nearly longevity, habits and customs. gible to participate in this tlie u so d Soi om T n plan: 30,000 inhabitants. In order to Vliss Taylor collaborated on Bass Memorial the ^ Academy, Lum- reach the valley, 16,000-foot making of the film ivith ' berlon, Miss.; Collegedale Acad- mountain passes must be crossed King and Queen of Hunza nt emy, Collegedale, Tenn.; Fletch- by mule, jeep or on foot. er Academy, Fletcher, N.C .

; Forest Lake Academy, Miih- nd D d Brod

Heinrich Heads 100 Committee, Succeeds Leiske andi a k on Tue d Elder 0..car Heinrich, public relations ^ director for the South- - era Union Conference, has been 'Jppoinled chairman of SMC's COMMITTEE OF 100 FOR PROGRESS, according to Union President Don R. Rees, chair- man of the college board,

EiderHeinrich succeeds Elder ilam m Toms Che\rolet. LeRoy J. Leiske, who has been lie way up, Uie lire on one elected president of ihe Georgi^i- e unicycles exploded. Dave Cumberland Conference, Jed into the back seat and The ged it. COMMITTEE OF luO

oup of business and r.rn. ley surted down at 4:20 igew Boiler Students Elect Ward, Installation Crowson Gets Started and Pitman Id Feb. fit this spring. Chairman Crow- 3, Ihrec coi airmen son is a '61 graduate of High- 'and Academy, Portland, Tenn. SMCs r"charl.s Flenu»l!. recent resignees. Elected Junior Theology Major Tui manager. vere busintss Randall Crowson, heallh Pitman, Highland graduate of boilers are bcinf ol- The old nd labor; Tui Pitman, public '60, is planning to pubhsh a con.- (or sale. Several fi,„d relalions; and Rex Ward, lec- Senate mug book before College been conlacled. aiia ranies have Days. In it will be a brief his- bid ™ll be cons.d- Ihe highest tory of each senator along walh the boilers In inlerviews with the „,l If necessary Southern his present office duties and be sold for scrap. Accent, each chair- will what else the senator thinks The second boiler, again to jld be accomplished i lowboy trail. mth be transported by plans for Ihe remnant of the office. , This i its way toward er. will make in about 10 or 11 I Collegedale to iMr. Fleni- eeks, according

While building tlie boilers. Stoker Company last _Bnton logy led frc year took ten tons of Ij'pical I Lake Academy, Ma it- land. Fla., in 1961. Chairman Ward hopes to hold the current basketball playoff in a Cleve- l.ind, Tenn., gym. Bleachers for the SMC recreation field are in

on llie old boiler will be SOUTHERN llie planning slate. He hopes I I done ACCENT mUrely estinct. "We'll teach the central heal init," said Mr. Fleming. Election Revisions Face Vote IVIarcli 1 ow the field to two candidates, ind unless one candidate re- :eives over 50% of the vole in lary, general elections

.11 ihen be held as usual. Any Candidates for editors of thi Accent and the Memories

50% ( will tions board." which will

in changes include con E t>vo Senate commilt

man of the Health i Two Staff Members alion Committee -will r for office-holding has also been Apr. 19 Announced Earn Higher Degrees For College Doys Mr. Robert W. Merchant, SMC's annual C II D \ college treasurer, and Music In- has been el ( A| I program structor Don Crook have suc- 19-21. All those who ate | cessfully jumped anotlier edu- ne fail fo Mr. Merchant's Master of Bu- .%ith. well. coming to SMC The Constitutional Revisions Merchant cational hurdle. Mr. degree, Students desiring the 64-65 school je lould siness Administration lo part of the has passed the last conferred upon him during the specified Senate seats will, in oposed changes, was headed p examination in certified public the proposed revisions, submit b) SA Vice President Jim Mr. Crook has their accounting, and names and platforms to Boile Olher members were: completed work on his M.S. in I the SA office, instead of being Phil Wilson, Robert Pumphrey, aled by the Senate. Bert Coolidge, David Osborne, .T being approved by the Judy Edwards, Arthur Richert,

ti icil, , All those planning Gilbert Burnham, and Tin Pit- placed on the primary bal- should respond lo David Os- man. Dean of Student Affairs candid borne. SMC's Sludenl Associa- K. R. Davis met with the corn-

|SMC Physics Department Takes Lease on Gas Laser A model 720 gas laser, leased slightly less than the cm I the V SMC physicj department radiated by Ifmrn IMasor Optics Inc.. has light. nsulled in the physics j,,, jj,, i.|j„a „„ ,,„, ''"", I'""'' •Dr Bay hX" "^

The device iviU be used by J}l''„ "" ""•- " - - ItSSst" h""?^ »"""> |i«.Tl.ew.rdra rla/s'^igj; """ '""'"'^ '»'

|£j^SttrS^rbr™S .r^™.""..e 1» Ptobe the waves." to accomplish re plasS, ,ue> f, "ean, of esoteric methods. "surgery," to examine dirty Iheor lni,;"!"""'"e °' " yardlong er water, to tost the |quari^ lube illumina filled y^^^^ ^^ f^." relativitj', and to

sible. the laser is powered ol the mi e thousandths of a watt, r !

Coerced Religion >

£c(toiaMy Qpeafcing . . . "1 Cfjrisftian J^ation?"

leeking lo bring the Court intol lisfavor

But the undeniable fac p Konal i-r ticisiii b> penod Inl the Court did not fo f h numerr us propo'ied Consli ebgious exercises and the study I ndnients to estab

[J Mhecmii in as a Chri'Jlia irOormorelegis

The chief objection of Ihe student body regarding Ibe 5tu> la li\e propo al= to o\ernde lli Associalion, and a well (ustilJed one in our opinion, has l L

mltiln^L'.^ that ^viUioul ubt. ^.noll^ of this caustic re made oU nominolions for Senale posts, students unknown by, d nded on emotiona' unfriendly to. or considered unqualified were just out of luck potent question has continued to This obvious centtaJizolion of power deoll a damaging blow indingof the Court can public debate. Tlie question of SMC atudenlfi. Because the suits were brought non-Christians, the forth OS a candidate for cerloin SA offices, is, we believe, a step by immedi- deduction of Joe Citizen was forward. inders tan ding of t ate those (.lews, agnostics, Catho-

jf a free, religiously that the Court had completely lics, Protestants of all shades, pluralistic society. outlawed all religious study and any other religious or not-re- lot. herelofore rousl too common in SMC elections; and Ih^ pro- Adverse Reactions exercise in public schools. This ligious persons) who differ wiih viding for an oleclion of the SA chaplain by the student body, was probably the prod- The gravilv of the situation delusion instead of his being nominated and elected by tbe church- uct of reporting the t is attested lo by the immediate bad by After all, the office ol chaplain does have a vole, and nol only This brings us to the neM reprasenls. but also spends the hard-earned money of SMC point of misconception; the ba- s decisions. This r students. Do SMC eludenls choose their eenntors or not? sic nature of government and DD the of belief. essence Christian |

which the government has sol About Face possession in a \ree society

fice it to say that the slate

essentially a coercive unit. I 1) They, like I, have prob- " med sludent, but he changed ablj' heard some preacher or opposition to this is the Chri' Pobfi.h.°J bNv.Sly'SSl lor ..mion, ,ni »n„>m ram, dirnig ftt mi «h«.l j...r and .„„ duHB, & nmm.r, &„md jnd.r iht S.MI^ S„M evangelist stand in the pulpit lian concept of the free will f.% wcond-clni, matter . I9I9, ol^Uie Post Odlec ot CoUegedale. Tcn- and brag about llimldng Greek, tivated by love. him." or graduating with the lowest " "' '""^" '"""-- P^"" 5'^°^ ''"' f"™''!" Relig ra"'^S2.M^year. ' ™ gpa in his class. Immediately Many of yo' Ther ; dif-l you get the impression that he r>bn,l,.nt TTi. !lt,de.jAu..tail,„.^ wa™ Mini.aar, Call.,.. probably isn't too bright and ient)| it a person like this can make 3nd adherence to its beliefsl it through theologj', then it are voluntary. If the govern-l must not be very hard. Sad to menl of God is voluntarj " say, : this can people say that the cc 2) Sometimes a student real government ought to r ly will have chosen a course o,

whose very nature is volimlary?B he goes in search of anothei

Tyi>i,ti The only logically c ...... !!!!!!_^,"^'evcrly O'Danahue, Charlotte McKee Kay Cherry profession —which many time; -""' is theology. But all too often wi EdSMtw'::::::::::: miiim"" nile out all together the possi the slate should be secular and bility that this may be God'^ the church (beliefs and e.\er- change his major during or after chosen method of calling ihi: cises included) voluntarily re- his freshman year, but the vidual. ligious. How can the ProtestanI strange fact is that when any- Christian force iiis beliefs on a one changes from anything lo theology, Jew, Catholic Why Closed? it is generally as- ! of the Pro Somebody boo-boood wo Ihmk when Ihey m„d

ized that it really isn't too diffi- might be ventured: Could i cult lo get through that Christian America Devious Deadlines these wilh (| ticularly Pro The conservative .loll ol the SOUTHERN ACCENT wi.hoii lo oxpreio its lant and Calliolic) is losing Bincero thonka lo the College | Presij lor the press' cooperalion in pulling oul Iho faith in God and His lost issue ol Ihe ACCENT. Through devious dond- m., „d unloroseen oiroumslmcea my yoi ond boilor-lroln collisions. Ilnei

influences of the | Touche! Bible; th. 3re, let us rei, 1 public schools. I I

lade harder; or better on this "do-good" element thai they might expose these poor ! a right to know and neglected young people to the Bible by personal work instead of "passing the buck to the 'alley. Whal stale rightly i . We 1 this cold, formal, and coercue

I Iho hoal centra] plant would fi mor is that they an Who is able to work through personal, voluntary, love in and that's the way it should be. spired labor for others—a God Maybe some of the other pro- Who does not need the coercion

; by follow- the think of the words 1 Health and Labor Coi of the state! I . It s igion of Christ: "This people honor-

eih Me with t! Mark ; far from Me." lade what they should be! 7:6. n

0. /NstuaentwnoiegraaepoinT C. After the deadline for ap- ihe-Sea, Calif., Mr. Walker look pKcdtloni has passed, Ihe to explore the hold up to and including lo tlie water Student Senate, when it Soulh Seas, Australia and the may deem it necessary, may Far East. grade point average is Z.25 over-all, or 2.4 for the pre- for any Student Association vious semester, can hold up office. The names of all can. didatei, along wllh their Couples platforms or qualifications, c-VLTSZLZ"^! Married Shalt be brought before the altlrTJ'frrihe^prevloui Hold Banquet Pfesldent's Council of the ^' college. "" ^"^"^ "^ '° poTn'tf On Cupid's Day D. The candidate's name shall Cu|iid was still shooting Sun- D. Senate, in co. appear or. the ballot when The Student day night, Feb. 16, at Uie Plii tho President's Council ap- Beta Gamma's Married Cou- shall deter- proves his application. dent's Council, ples' Club Valentine banquet. c. The secretary shall post the the college cafeteria. t^'Te earried"by^each office held in candidate's name and plat-

, couples attended form or qualifications at , Forlv-five least 48 the seiWformal event, dubbed hours before the the office of president of the Stu- election. (he first Valentine banquet ever staged by the organization. f- outline A primary election, in which ly to the student body an C-omes Up," a fea- <>>all be included the r^ames of W,% ideals and the objectives "The Sun °f all candidates for all of- candlelight fices, will be held. his administration, i.e., his plat- ing the buffet-style form. The platforrris of the candi- rcphmj— of the human '""'y dates for SA president. Southern representations election, its results heart, along with well-placed lent appropriate at- candidate editor, and WSMC-FM general flowers, an receivos over fif- party-going manager shall be published in the mosphere lo the the time dieters and tlieir husbands. lio is Southern Accent prior to declared elected. If no of election. President Jim Dunn, com- the club's place m *ifty'pe,'ce*ntoTThe"voI« Section (d) A convenient time menting on =«t. said be feels that there shall be a gen- and place for the balloting by the college life, eral Couples' Forum election between the student body shall be determined ihc Married ""> a "valuable social out- candidates who have re- by the Student Administrative provides students, and ^p^«d the highest number Council and announced by the let for the married increased fceling^of president on the bulletin board at also gives Local Editor Will Address SMC Seniors Mr. John N. Pophar eral managing editor of "the I Chattanooga Daily Times, ivill speaker be the for senior prej. entalion to be held in the taber- nacle-auditorium March 5 at

Forme

Mr. Popham is a famiUar ntr-l ure on the SMC campus, hav-l ing been guest lecturer for tliel Scholarship Committee' ture Series in 1962-63.

Last year he addressed the I meeting of the Southern As didn't give any evideni ciation of Schools and Colleg hand ihal it would be «eek Turnu nuilaM^d MrNui at Memphis, Tenn. as it was. During Uie fir-it h Before coming to the of play it was Willis b> Tim points, 37 to 27. But Workina: wilh McNull holding the h end of Ihp score. Bui from Predicts half, il v Flying Club lip-off of Iho second

As Miss Mabel Wood pi, double dribbling, and llio bn^ Flights by March 15 the processional, 83 sumtr ket was no good. June, and two-year gradua High-point men (or Willi will take their places in the! la; Club J were Ron Stephens and Bil front of the tabernacle audito- and Iljing bj the i 3 Cleveland Tenn f num to be presented by Aca Mirch accoidmg lo lut Pit Presently tlie club is using demic Dean John W Cassell ii I loaned Link Trainer for PrP'^ident C Rees Seniors Hold nslnimenl training Bj this N Pilman further staled that Dr Gordon H-\ de of tl p Discussions fljing enlhustasis of SMC had ni Iwen hoping lo start a club for At Casseirs r onh did plans

bold College and Mrs Dorothy! Aclierman acting head of the|

SMC Academic Dean the special music JohnW Cassell, in Uie Collcge- munily. Elder W. D, Frazee, paslor Chorale Plans ildwood, Ga., Sovenlh. enlist church, led the Two Concerts discussio a, entitled "The Sane- For Weekend

Elder Frazee explained and SMC's Collegiate Chorale, 1 der the direction of Mr. Don ol 11 e wilderness d Hebrew Crook, is scheduled for tw

Previous disrussions were "The News and tlie Bible," iviih The first is to be presented! Dr. Jerome Clark, ossodale pro- in the Seventh-day Advt fessor of hislory, and "Last Day church at Altamont, Tenn,, Fril Events." mill Elder E. L, Pin- day evening, Feb. 28. The fQ!-| genot, from Dalian. Ga.

^Vhen asked about fuinre .i.,i-

Willin.nTvnd,dl.,,i,l. "We pla n other inspiria,; sul,-

d the plan is lor (a,e discussio unlil era "0 Uniol ,11 be Purcell's Sing Lord"; Sateren's choral cy- T 2-Day Redeemer"; Thomp- Workshop :Ie, "The | Alleluia"; and Richter's Held to Aid SMC Creation." The program is di- Colporteur Group '

50HrHfRIV ACCENT

Campus Men Visit Orlando For Banquet I ' Approximately 25 men I SMC's Collegedale campus Ineyed to tlie Orlando campus meet approximately 25 nurs- held „,z students at a banquet 1^ Orlando's Tiki Restaurant, I Feb. 29. After driving to the Tiki, the tuples ushered themselves into

Following the Polynesian eal of Waikike salad, poi, Sa- oan pago, taki-tike, rolls, and eloa-aki; the Kappa-Kape |Klub, Orlando, nurses club, pre- program "Moments to

es, the girls' chorus vnlli Si

I Kathy Dillon sang Rogers partment head; Robert Scarr and Hammerslein's "Getting to who performed a piano solo, You." After that, KKK GCs Minchin Emphasizes "Nocturne" by Grieg; J. Mabel IPresident Beverly Shacklett Wood, organist; and Dorothy velcomed the CoUegedaie visi- Ackerman, vocal soloist of "My Practical Prayer" by Squire. An other Rogers and Ham- Christian Living nerstein creation, "Some En- Scholarship awards were an- Elder E. L. Minchin, general Using as a thei "Hal- South New I chanted Evening," was Zealand Confer nounced by Dr. Harriet Smith render- field secretary of the General lelujah! What a Reeves, led by Bill Kirstein, saxophonist. professor of nursing. Conference of Seventh-day Ad- speaker's lopics )rk among young peo- Mrs. Anne Murphy was pre- ventists, is conducling the an- from "In Quest t I when he became dean sented the A, E. Dale Memorial nual spring Week of Spiritual Love, Courtship a id music teacher at tlie Scholarship darinet, after wliich Kirsteii for evidence of out- "Dehverance 1 Emphasis here at SMC. Accent- 1? I Missionarj' Col- standing scholarship and Pat Osborne combined their and Chris- ing practical . voices for a vocal duet, "Blue Christianity in ev- The W. B. Gal- cial emphasis during the week South Wales Hawaii." eryday living. Elder Minchin Confer has been "The Science of Pray- him to be MV si The final musical perform- has conducted two church serv- "' ubject, 1931, and the yea ance was a vocal solo, "Mo- ices, the daily Drning chapels, ^{^^^ Minchin" id the 1946 he spent iii th regular , Sylvi :tering this pacitj- in the Australian Union. Pow ; his Marc which In 1946 Elder Minchin tran vital hnli Northern Europe ; will appear in Who's Who in Students lion with his Maker. and Sabbatli School American Colleges and Uniuer- Announce of the-Brilish Union. Four sities: Barbara To complete his week-long Benson, Gilbert

series. Elder Minchin is expect- s later he was called to take Bumham, Patfi' Chu, Barbara he same tlie lAdvanced Studies ed to tell "How to Resist Temp- work in North- Clemmens, William Coolidge, Euro pef Judy Edwards, Barbara Hoar, lege of Osteopatliy and Surget^', "sacrifice" for tlie finishing of J the post Anne Murphy, and France where he \vill study osteopathy. God's lolds 1954. Tart lend I either professional o While attending SMC, Don has t make-up editor of both the Southern Memoi New SA Election Revisions and the Joker. Eighteen -year-old senior Ce- Miss Vote for Second Time cil Petty, majoring in chemistry Elder Minchin has been A Student Association general assembly meeting on Mar. and minoring in mathematics, nected vrith the Advei in Lynn Wood Hall Chapel was for tlie second time dismissei has been accepted at the Uni- Church's young people' without voting on the proposed SA Constitutional revisions. Ai I Bands Visit versity of California at Berkley, ice of at least two-thirds of the student body " where he has been offered a as a quoruni, as is stipulated in the SA Cor 29 Churches teaching assistantshtp. He has also been accepted by the Uni- In versity of Califf I Seminars nth-day ed a ;esearcl leO-miJe Cecil has rad of South* which of the I Missionary Cc Ij will I benefitine he choos bands Ph.D. degree in chemistry, Gerald Kelly, a Band co-o Gladwn state- " 26 |^«"ds and chemistry, mil atiend the "Uni- over 100 student. ^'^''^'^y^ °^ Tennessee School of *" tnis project. Tj-picajC""*' Dentistry in Memphis, Tenn., '!« •"= '''"I bsgin the study . a b.„d Trder'n'""?.?"' ".'";" of dentistry. ".•-..""•nyMuntor,

'°w major, ,. ' .„ ";;ho';"x,P^^",5 Jim"^T^^f .p^^f will fiR tlie 11 .1 , Vandenberghe attend 1''""?'' Em^'^y i«. Assil'n "'t University School of

students•' ^"'' is currently a staff photograph- Pf^paredPreosrL torf ^ , furnish the ^, '""'^^ fo, the Southern Accent. I story, spe- riaf" V^onaU Beliner, a three-year Patiioietii. accom- [ pre-dcntal student, has been ac- cepted for tlie study of dentistry- e a ])roject at both Loma Linda University rtment. El- School of Dentistry and Emory I is acting University School of Dentistry. ce of Elder Ronnie states that he plans to attend Emory University. =^= Concerning 'Policies' -, A Plea To Be Included By Beht Coolidge

i^^S litis 'f^^M directly affect decisions tliat their everyday life on campus. for power, does the Student Association do This is not a demand control, but simply an or what can it do? One such or for included. For this time is right now. just before appeal to he writer, along wih the SA, rec- ognizes that the college admin- istration of necessity must be the governing body, and respon- e on the "OUT." In sible to the

gof t partially e SA is doing, Stuc Lack of Faith Collcg &»//,cT» hUMonary Studei T. S. Geraty, following the I I how , based iame line of thought, stated that I ley (the students jd in dealing with the administral just that the Stitdetil Affairs Committee Word arrived and the effec cipation voted this past Sunday mornitie la open all Saturday nights ! the psycho for the l%i-65 school year. All dormitory students will be logical results the student .... included permitted off campus two Saturday nights per mouth (the periences from feeling two nights are to he chosen by the students). that put him sobdly behind the Much the same was sa The above unreadable editorial (you might try with a Elder F. R. Millard at the 13lii 'I site, magnifying glass or microscope) was to be printed full workshop in Washington, D. C, eigfil hy six Inches, in this edition of the SOUTHERN ACCENT. TOUCHE! Then, at the last, last minute, we received the minutes of the telling the new policy Sat- Foolish Originalifies Sludtnt Affairs Committee of for Mutual c urday nights. been informed by a reliable source that (We've fidence bet^veen the SA and the | some effort was made to keep us uninformed until after the article had been printed). part of the workings of this | Dealing with the open-closed Saturday night situation to campus if the SA i Tught, I can find no- some length, the editorial quoted the views on open-closed the backing and support Saturday nights of four SMC facidty members who are on the Tenth In an address to the >adyl Student Affairs Committee, Annual Intercollegiate Work- bit the Despite the fact that the new action look a of shop held on this campus in "fire" out of this edition of the SOUTHERN ACCENT, we do April, 1960, Dr, F. 0. Ritten- feel it is the beginning of an improvement. However, since students must remain on the campus two Saturday nights of the month, we hope at least two programs will be worth attending. Looking back aver this post year's calendar, we are fear- ful there will he months when students will have little to choose from when deciding which nights to remain on campus. DD VUliC o^ 0iUicUm oiically. lusl whe e i. the thin- ructive" w'sn"i?r

" Are wo r ever to bo cri col? Like Candide's biend. re we .Joing lo 8l of all possiblo worlds? Unfor. unMoly" '^If'critid^"n '^re^^^V suggest thn : Martin 1 uthet would h ivo lived a long and Iruitl I Uie- I'an is""0^" d To luclanlly, OB a Catholic priest. And Ge moUB— And tiEit a the nc Ml bdng a colkse p. a plontali oyol British laxpayor. o virluQ Some pe sons rcaily no or ulter a word of criticiam simply be auao Iboy don't core ono way or the other ens, whal hap OS hmjihs, bo%vl for r

sowmmPmm

lo thinking by Ihe two recent tries o Faculty Turn Frenchmen For Program

hosted "Soir de Paris," Feb. 29 in the taber- nacle-auditorium. Variety was the keynote of the faculty pro- gram which featured music and novelty numbers. Musical numbers included "The Whistler" by Mrs. Char- lotte Cassell, "The Last Time I Saw Paris" by Mrs. Carol Her-

In the instrumental section .n and marimba were represented. "Lucky Star" was played by Mr. Victor Moores, "Meditation from ATS Teams Visiting Thais" by Mr. Don West, and Other scores were Bill Wood 'Le Cygne," by Mrs. Elsie over Tucker 56-42, Chuck Watt. Mrs, Edna Mathematics Club Scarr and I Woods taking Tucker 40-29, Public High Schools Mrs. Catherine Bushnell gave and Pintacuda over Bill Wood duet piano versions of "Kitty- The SMC chapter of the Ipians to Purchase foi according to P, Yiar, vice president in cha Bearded s prcsenUy e beatnik artist Dr. In i of on-campus affairs. Clyde Bushnell produced iMinivac Computer public high sev- re, the The highlight on this yes eral creations, including "Bear Malliematics Club of schools, Seventh-day Adventisi class basketball campus temperance calendai churches, and tlie SMC has recently announced senior class team 64-62. college stu- I dent body. the National Oratorical Contest, Spanish Armada. a project lo finance the pur- The juniors led at the half open to all ^r. Hyd. Lloyd SDA colleges. One ^_ chase of a Minivac 601 Digital 36-29 thanks to Junior Fonvard Erickson, vice presi- dent in winner, representing and "Football at Computer, according to Randall John Green's sharp shooting charge of public schools, each par- cheh^se'" r, Jerome Clark's Crowson, club president. that reports tliat temperance teams licular college, mil meet accounted for 15 points. here "BeUeve have already 'l In the second half the seniors visited 12 local sometime in to The 15-meniber club v April compete thumbnail "sketch" of ami to high schools and have 14 more nance the 5135 comput began surge steadily fon,vard for the SlOO first prize. France. definite dates as LaVoy Gamer, senior for- to fill. d, The of dU bo A booth 11 ored 19 points. an \\ h n the final whistle blew, nental p U C 11 g PI WSMC-FM PROGRAM GUIDE th n rs were just Iwo points 1 film. P d b h nd 64-62. Monte Church, vice president H gl scorer for the juniors in charge of local SDA church- J 1 n Green vvith 19 points, es, says tliat his group's tlieme d LaVoy Gamer for the sen-

ance." With 25 chiu-ches as

-..«„, ^.,„„-^-™„™,* .».™*«"- i* "me ago to Dr. "^ head of ihc Posits I , pizza villa 3607 RINGGOLD ROAD 629-3311 ""ewscienlificequiii Thursday — 4 P.M. till MidnigM " 'I'lil Ope Sunday thru by Dr. Hetfcr rlday and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 A.M. State Industrial Head Second SA Lecturer

peech, Di-. Clark said that "if i ks you, 'Will thj again?', tell them, I

Tennessee Jaycees| Man of the Year Is SMC Graduate

L. Wayne Rimmer, op.

Man of the I

\\ -wd Hall Fi.b 23 Teacher Education Group Feb. 22 in Gatlinbui^, Tenn. Relieving the SouLlis his Dr. Rimmer, Want in a Paslor." Offers Membership ton Dr Clark noted that in a practicing op Friday evening the worlcshof SMC 1938 Ihe South had 28 per cent tometrist in South Pittsburg Tenn., comes from ended with an appeal by Eldei of the United f Knoxville

bank deposits and less Orlando, Fla., and they hav AACTE comprises iting in Chicago Feb. than 5 percent of the savings t'^™ children, Gregory, 5 and| colleges 650 and imii deposits." Jeffery, 4.

i all types "have Wlien asked what who The agricultural growth of He is a member and firstl " valuable to organize e pur- the South " kable. "In elder of the Rankin Ct iproving the quality 1959 a third of number of Seventh-day Adventist chui October, inviting SMC lo join ^f teacher edu( cotton farms with 60 per cent Rankin Cove, Tenn. of Ihe acreage produced a big- Selected from among 48 c "Southern Missionary Col- Membership, after initial ac crop than in 1939," tenders throughout Tennessee,! ?peakers. lege," wrote "has ceptance, is contingent upon ihi Wo need Mr. Pomeroy, Dr. Clai ~ leading Dr. Rimmer's election been idonlified by payment of annual educational dues com f Souther leaders the ihe in shifted fro

lanu fa during i - llieology major Will- vDr^ch said, "The work- to ihe education of teachers." s a verj' revealing and SMC was recommended lo AACTE after which AACTE th are thirsting for llie invited the college lo make ap- iling Water of Life— irisl. The ideas and ma-

Conrad Hilton Hotel in Chicago. Chattanooga Symphony Performs in Fine Arts Series

SMC student Patricio (

chestra, which is noted as one Lecturer Walker of the best small-city orches- Narrates Film tras in the nation. Twenly-four- yeor-old Patricio has been ^v^th On Switzerland the Chattanooga Symphony Lecturer Phil Walker, orld since comuig to Collegedale in traveler, presented his elogue, "Incomparable S land," March 7 in SMC's Manager Dunn nacle auditorium. The 90-minule film Collegedale Insurance Agency, Inc. Talks to Seniors sieclions in Sunday night' On Employment Auto - Life - Fire - Boats - Homeowners s Symphony No. -f in B fit Scenic Railway by the Phone 396-2062, Collegedale, Tenn. Lake ich composer Roger Roger. and Hospital, Glmdole, Calif, of Zurich and I Heg>'i told the story of the visited SlMC litis past week. anging of the Guard" by Mr. Duntt interviewed senior I for the benefit of tlie chil'- I and mierpreled other com- [ions between numbers.

he program was begun by ianitarium and Hospital. rees Musicales" by Britten, Graduating from Andrews 'ays. Mr. John Robin !r selections mcluded («r- Collegedale Cabinets, Inc. | estor of Mr. Walker ; of "Don Quixote" by Tele- Monufactuteri of I Ihe Mayflower expe n, "U Toinbeau de Coup- High Qualil, " by Ravel, "Eine kleine

Collegedale, Tenn. admin Telephone 396-2912 later placed under his tration. He has been personi manager at Glendale since left Puerto Rico. ICoolidge, Pitman SA Candidates SA Tn and Public Relations ChaYrma^n Tui Pitman have declared themselves candidates for the ofnce of Student AssociaUon president for the coming school

SOUTHERN ACCENT IStudents Manage ICo//ege for a Day

Faculty members and admin-

ampufi Thursday, Mar. Beginning the day, Chatta- day at SMC. nooga Mayor Ralph Kelley spoke for Teach Indents 7:iO chapel, challeng- Auto Crash ing citizens to political partici- pation and increased awareness. Kills Student faculty, for The purpose of the one-day peacefully departed. of responsibility, according to Bob Roblyer President a President'; SMC's C. N. Rees, A memorial ser\-ice for Rob- ICouncil was was to acquaint the student held in the Confer ert Roblyer, freshman theology body with the "inner, day-to- or, who was killed spring day working of the college and ition in a head-on collision, give the student administrators held Friday evening, April and student faculty an oppor- tunity to make suggestions to were filled by Jim the college on improvements." Boyle, liles from \ who occupied the aca- his horn students dean's office; Don Dixon, Other assuming re- mond, Miss., at the time of his sponsibilities for the day were: Wilson Foundation Awards Smuts Van Rooyen, pastor of He was on his way home af- Collegedale church; Randall Petty Graduate Fellowship ter visiting his fiancee, Nancy Crowson, health service; Pierce Fail, in Mobile, Ala. Cecil Petty, senior chemistry from Albany. Gn. His grant Haley, music department chair- Tlie service Friday evening major, has been appointed as ivill cover all fees and tuition man; Re.v Ward, physical edu- consisted of a short biographi- a graduate fellow by the Wood- in addition to tlie sum of $1,800 Johnston dep rthur cal sketch, read by Academic Chosen row Wilson Foundation. for living expenses. Bruce will Richert, adm Former SMC student, Bnice receive an additional allowance ords; Larry L,eas, student f To Help Prepare Gerhart, a graduate of 1961, for dependents since he is mar- nance; Kenneth Spears, ti-eai was awarded a qualifying year ried end has three children. urer; John Fowler, testing; Pai as a graduate fellow. [Youth having been accepted to the Sermons Viar, counseling; Jerry Hoyli library; James Gilloi will indicate' that if Bruce does sity of California at San Diego, ; held bolh in dean of men; Bailei well in his first year of graduate Petty plans to work for his r Jackso , Miss dean of nu-n; In^i t study, he will subsequently con- Ph.D. degree in physical or- and in Atlanta. He "ghl leading Seventh-day Ad- ganic chemistry. in AUanla. ' ."^"eel'S's to prepare Dean of Men K, R. Davis I "le1U Seniorc With a scholastic minor in ,„"'/'-""onssprmnnc torf,.^ the,1 1965/ncc SA President David Osbonw I ^1VMv niatliemalics. Petty is currently Week of tended the funeral well I I Prayer, accord- ""^"^"^ed manv SMC sUidenI clV^r'"^'* from the Emily Dickin- tnerat Conference

I MV Ad- ;on, Ian Fleming, and Henry r'*'"7 Committ Over 300 Seniors ' ^^nily in San Other To Attend SMC editor pf the '63 "-garoF.W.'D^rmorcWrX For College Days

'• E- J- Over 300 high school and Folkenberg, R. r; |!!M.s.i,icS SMC in 1961.

"J''''s >vi]l be English. He is presently teach- Arriving on the afternoon of ing at Mount Pisgah Academy, 19th, the visiting seniors parade of Candler, N. C. [ be greeted by a -''">». As. 't^tr™ The Woodrow Wilson Foun- Pwitles "^ °' "« ^""e De dation grants scholarships wth •^'"""l °' ""' Confer™"'"' the purpose of encouraging qualified persons to enter col- "'I'd " •» I T™1,°V''™.°'"- lege-level teaching. Awards are made primarily to students m = on originality --

fidteiaiy Speafcing Carbon Copy Students (i&aH^d /l(^ By Joseph P. Priest /^ oripnally designed has the lasting appeal t College canii)use lechnical and spe ialized, our re E given essary for progress of any kind orld grows more G individuals at anytime'lulS; have become vj ui; iiisLiiuu"..^ I a. o church lo spread the truth we develo Epoaaibilily s the equipment with which to this ob more diHicult .wld'wbich, in itself, indicates that ^ mplicaled age. the d an im In this CO ,..:«<. i= In be reached, there must be within o 1 every type of duty be attempted only to improve successluUy carry the quality of the end product. _ _ about in lize, cmd do s mething seems t( procedure, not merely for the (ge campuses today, there sake of "bein"' for men v ° the swelling eed in the church w ork carboncopyisni; that is to say, there peculiar. the Joneses Too much originality unloosed Ml much keeping up ivith upon an un oing a wonderJul job in area suspecting and rather dull world at one time but too often they a e called on to can be damaging, where ihey re trained, because rooted individualities labor where hey are not qualiKed ,vil] not ha- do 1 istilled into the studer httls ong ago we think is worth the heart lo be "different." on: nol have group of the denominalions moa should set lo their passing Why This does not mean that anarcliy pre-planned and t his o"ti future. Their reaction to a in and lliat each person shouJd set up new and revolution^ is mass ely how elie live our use idea is and m Daliesque or Beatnickian organization of behav- ary to stifle it immediately at whatever nicative polenlial av lilable to us. wdtliin the cost necessary. Ridicule ior and deportment patterns, but that and laughter is one overlooked tha of II is unio tiinale that many tiir es counsel is individuality should their supreme weapons along , with a Spartan available at the c might easily be and not, itubborrmess to reveal that they do feel nli^'^^Ld\S e valued and honored the fox I le case, ignored and suppressed. of pro_ gnawing at thi de. This iiiTmen Irtdn ed as specialists in th se areas, yet uses them little This tendency to believe the book and only disc-ouraging. uUy compete with the thou- le book, and—what is more damaging—a ccept- college campusi sand" aTstimuhSlht'wori'd,"? Ip we can gel ig at face value without seriously questioning

le validit>- of any statement made by anyone, n&ion as necessary, to think and to demon- producing a society of robot-like carhon copies te that they do have minds, and that they hicli as time progresses grow more and more succeed, -with the fact that they are imagina- ^ac^ia^i^ ^itne idiftinct. Originality is the only quahty that individuals as one of their greatest assets.

I— Humanities' Two Choices

sudden flowering of Iriondline; and confusion. A statement n leased by tlie Hudson instituti choices of behavior patterns; i which ate on the table in the coming SA elections. emploj-ed by the Federal Goi Hellinistic pleasure seeking, c Ab someone once observed, the "thinking man's filter" is B. Struggling to stop the snov spectrum of impressions that his head. Filtering and sortbg the aiecls of this world c balling slide of anthropoid sel is continually forced upon us requires judicious use of that dii- destruction, which is impossib! fidonl commodity—collegiate intelligence. Vole—by aU means vote. Sixty percent, the slice of the Sfl

student interest in student govommenl. Although it could be Toucfie!

r that the hand that slops your back if Article Authenticated will, The only palpable solutions your vote and spend your money. Lefs base i know that one of e than impressions and freshly sprung friend- them will have to work if there is going to be a world." operation to prepare it for those Wliat produces such pessi- who have shown their worthi- I mism? Two facts: 1. Ultimate ness by lives of selflessness and I weapons, 2. Himian nature; love, and who have all 'Viecv^icittt neither of which is particularly their natures lo he chi appealing. from the earthly to the he A Good Beginning This gloomy prognostic£ Though it's nol possible lor os to specify which candidates, or how many, filed to run for oliices in the coming Student Asso- ciation elecliona. wo do know thai the results was "better than we expected." to quote SA President David Osborne. We're glad for Ihe good beginning ol Ihe new system and hope stu- dents wiU turn out to vole on election day with at least equal

SM Deserter (^r^SS' ""n^^^r^X Which the Greatest? wore We happy to have Carolyn Luce, copy editor of the Student Movemeni of Andrews University, give us a litlle help reading copy Missionary" College lor this edition o! the ACCENT. When the SM staff gets wind of it, wo hope Ihey don't hang her for desertion.

Complacent Students

> BMEraphicfll, (like Univmily ot p^ . ^ , Dr. Letson bacJcA Is Lecturer

(Y By Ali-en Workman For Series Speaking on the "Educational and Social Trends" in the South, Dr. John W. Letson, superin- tendent of the Atlanta public schools, presented the third lec- ture April 5, on the "Emergent South," sponsored by ihe SA Scholarship All-Siars to the sui-prise of ail Committee under the direction by a score of 75-73. However, in of Chairman Ar- Uie final showdown at the gj'm Ihur Richerl. in Cleveland, the All-Stars were ahead 83-79 when the final buzzer sounded. At the end of lems in the South today the first half it fast was a toss growing technical age tl up with a tied game 31-31. world is now in. "The world

In the second half tlie scene not like it used to be, and is n was changed when tbe All-Stars going to be like it is," Dr. L< opened a gap and widened it >ints uitli tlie deadly "The Soutli has and is mak- of i shooting Albright . Ste- ing more rapid strides than any vens. With i other section of the country, but McNutt's te; SMC Chorale Travels, still that doesn't alter the fact the margin but failed t Sings in that we have a gi-eal distance Shows Florida Tour , SA Nutt for organizing a top-notch The S^'IC CoUegiale Chorale Mobile, vie^ved the USS Lexing- ball team. made Film a concert lour March 24- ton in Pensacola, and watched Florida Soft April visiting Ball 1, southern cities the fish and ski show at Cj-press and sightseeing. With the sharp crack of a Gardens in Silver Springs, Fla. )f the countiy, il On 'Flipper' bat and the cry "play ball" I Leaving one day before Entertainment on the bus realize that all i floating through the wind on spring vacation began, the 26- was provided by the banjos and .veil educated "Flipper" was presented soft breezes we know that member group sang their con- voices of Bob Summerour, lohn Saturday night, March 21, by spring is here and right behind I cert repertoire at Mobile, Ala.. Strickland, lames Herman, and "The SouUi's success is de- I the Programs Committee of the soft ball. The league A cap- Pensacola, Fla., Miami, Fla.. Wayne Benson. pendent upon the degree to and Jacksomdlle, Fla. which we are able to raise the

It educaUonal level and achieve- well ment of her people," Dr. Letson everj' ever, at Greater Miami A irium free of charge. s story of a Travel by college bus encoiui- "Flipper" was the Churches performed for or at Representative William E, Dy Flip- Plajdng time is 5:30 Tuesday, ered rain rather consistently. and a dolphin. When were the Mobile Seventh-day Brock of the Tliird District of ?r, the dolphin, was wounded Wednesday, and Thursday and Interspersed among church Adventist church, the Pensa- Tennessee will present the next 7:30 on fisits I by a diver's spear, he was taken Sunday and Thursday and programs, the chorale cola church, the Orlando Cen- lecture of tlie "Emergent South" home and nursed back to health ;isiled Belfingrath Gardens in tral chiu-ch, llie Kress I Memorial series April 26, 7:30 p.m. in church, and the Jacksonville Lynn Wood Hall Chapel. lived on the Florida Keys, and church. an unusual friendship Representative Brock's lec- devel- night, th( oped between them. In one of ture will he on "Political Change" in the South. He has morie Flipper saved J spoken several other limes on s life from the attack of a Uie SMC campus. i-eating shark. One of the highlights of Ihe vas the scenery which lally filmed on Florida's

Chalmers talks On Psychology In the Home

r E. M. Chalmers, for ^ngelist of the Kentucky see Conference, present Ihe 'j"— topic "Psychologj' in th " al tlie fourUi seni« group of the yea aay evening, March 13. The group assembled at tl I'ame ' . of Acad "

I W.Casse

fjbiliiy „„,„„^ ,„^ ^^^^^ I and parent-child relations v%. """"2 Ihe subjecu discussed. EUler Chahners is currently "orking on his doctorate ir "1 psychology SMC Band To Perform Club Gives History College Days Documents to SMC Tl 'MC h i

tion of all the documen be made at a later dale. The presentation to SMC v

one of 23 such gifts that t Exchange Club educational institutions in die Chattanooga area. H Guest speaker for the occa- as Ihe Rev. Robert Wil- SA Assembly ! H R Chattanooga's jastor of Passes Revision St "Methodist Church and mber of the Kxchange Club. For Constitution A revision of the Student As- Leland T. Fussell Ex- Mr. sociation Constitution with re- mher. Mr Kob- change Cluhm to by-laws on election gard | ert Wright, pre idem of Ihe Ex- procedures was passed by , Club, n ade Ihe formal majority vote of the SMC stu the Freedom 'r«™ dent body in chapel March 17 Dr. C. Rees, Shrine N The new procedure allow SMC's students to file for most Senat Mr. Blair laufmar led positions by submitting befon Travel Film SMC's studen body i the Kamen's Color pledge to the n g, and th and qualifii SA secretary, ference 5 academy sile near Cal- Follows Cortes in Mexico for SouthEHN Accent editor houn, Ga. The band also loured rravel-fiiin producer Clifford Southern Memories editor, anc presented his film, WSMC-FM general managei Tenn., ant! Madisc Kamen are, however, selected by pub Madison, Tenn. :o—On Uie Trail of Cor-

audi ce^sfull) for 1 will be routed toward , SMC's tabernacle 19+5 i -nedti Fletcher and Bass Memorial rium Saturday night, Apnl 4 Academy, This progran nted Me\ foreign travel and id unusual pholographj and enjoyed in poinl of view. It followed the stanl -lucces;, Toda-v Mr Ka Producers Parade route of the Spanish expedition men has earned an excellent led by Cortes, as it disco\ered reputation as one of the ledd To Award Prizes and conquered the empire of ing travel film produci Montezuma and the United States At Value of $500 Modem Mexico was shown and Over in prizes will be S500 interpreted as it was affected way during the "Pro- by the inlroducdon of Euro- King, Tyndall pean culture to form one of the tabemoclc-auditorium, Sat- iportanl of today's Direct Seniors urday night, Apr^l 11. La",j„. In Tacky Party' Conlestanis, chosen from tJie After lending Uie Univ« n-ill audience, have an oppor- sjiy of { The senior class of Southern tunity to ivin many quality jng from Missionary College conducted a prizes will include which a f,\\y "tacky party" Saturday night, complete eight-place setting of chi March 14, in the A. W. Spald- Community Plate silverware. Chicago Academy of Fine ArLi. ing Elementary School base- Awards mil be supplied by This art background is reflected nianufacturers and local mer- in the excellent composition and The 32 seniors and chants. color of his photography, and members, dressed as tramj Sponsored by the Business also in Ihe higlily descriptive hillbillies, were led in a vai Club, I ? program \ of games by James King.

chosen to. be the recipient

a pie-throwing contest, ii Fowler's Oration Wins day-old pies. Several bull's- 2 SNEA Representatives ATS's $100 First Award Lecture at SMC Meetings

of education and by

faculties of Collegedale : demy and the Spalding cle-

- chosen careers as leach-

Carrigan and Mrs. Col-

it with various commit-

Mrs. ColHer has been a leadi- 3r and supervisor in several schools in Wilson and David- :"n counties, Tennessee. She lids the bachelor's degree from

for llie National Com- on Teacher Education, Uni" a graduate of the he ersity of Wisconsin, and lolds the Ph.D. from Princeton niversily. Arrangements " M. r laffe edii. ;

380 Seniors Visit Campus [Secondary School Seniors Participate in College Days ' ' - indary - Appro: - -ndus trial uu v^.-.j-u^ tour hool seniors a.t of the campus, visiting annual College such dny for SMC's places as the bindery, broom shop, cabinet shop, and ifter dinner yester- McKee's bakery e escorted Later this after comers by the parade wU be a sofiball ga I irom /our representing campus the I of cars freshmen at the recreatioi I clubs and classes. Visitors -will after a wel- capture yet i »ther of vu„^y«college "- "" lifeu,e , by Jim Boyie,Boyle, vice presi- g'ufiPfef """t-r^ come ^he candlehghl inner m tl Idem of the SA, and worsliip cafeteria from six •-onducted by Smuts Van Roo- until seve the ,en, SA chaplain, SMC Following at eight o'clock and performed its spring con-

„,. informalive program illus- trating various aspects of col- lege education. After chapel this morning. SOUTHERN ACCtm ^"'^"^ Southern Miiiionary CoHege, CollBqedflle. Tennessee. April 20, 1964 nTH Students Choose Coolidge President SMC students elected Be:, Coolidge Student Association SMC's yearbook. jiresident in primary election Business mana ]iroceedings held April 14 and 15. Coolidge, a junior account- ing major and SA m Ihe office o rTiuI Memories; and Byron Griffin, lie Relations Committee chair- theologj' major junior business major from Or- man; Lloyd Erickson, junior lando, Fla., for the Accent. theology major. Scholarship Ed Phillips, a junior theology Committee chairman, Wayne major, was approved as WSMC- Strickland, junior psychology FM general manager. major. Programs Comhiittee Bob Murphv, SOUTHERN ACCENT edif cations major, was electei Freshman Mary Ellen Davis, chairman; and Ellen Mauldin. president over Rex Ward, theology major and Recn Orator Committee chairman. William Hoffer Others filling the SA t

live offices ^vill be Janice I Is National ATS Winner John Phillip Sousa Award I Wilham Hoffer, junior theologj' major from Columbia Union liege, . Washington, D. C, walked off ivith a $100 first prize in Goes to David Osborne ^""''^' ^'^^ ' ,<:"yT^ National Collegiate Oratorical Contest held David Osborne, s. 11 SML April 18.

I Fowler, SMC senior theology major, took S75 by last Saturday ni

ihe band officers innunl award. Under the direction of Prof. Ly!e Q. Hamel. the band pro- senators will at- enT'^ii.^'^'^ given $50 checks by Elder Jame- ^""^'^'"tli Annual as- I Easier!, T Scully, General Conference '^'"^- -'^-'->'' ' ™ --^'^ '^-P"-- ^C {".'^"^^'^And?"^TT-University, ferrien ParUcipants in the evenhig's ^P""gs- Mich., )^.24 April speaking were: Ingrid Schw- ^ nates, Andrews University; :„,7"^^™ling SMC Dale R. Kongorski, Atlantic will be tion for band; Leroy Anderson's AssociaUon Union College; Herbert Larsen. I Sn n President- "Bugler's J-ioliday," trumpeted "* Coolidge, Canadian Union College; W'il- I dom 171 Vice Presi- by John Waller, Lloyd Logan, " °°" Di^o". I 'am Hoffer, Columbia Union I Eflv i South- .nnd Ron Rees; and "Parade of ^^^ Editor-Elect College; Roy Graybell, La 1 mLu Bob Ihe Wooden Soldiers." '''°''"'^''" '^femories Sierra College; David TiU- E^lT PI 70-member band per- "^^ •'^" "'orth, Madison College; Sharon anrl c L Lauterhahn " acfiolarship Committee Dobbin, Oakwood College; Rulh "^^"-ElectLlovd Erickson Morgan, Oshawa Missionary ''"^ College; Felicia Le Vere. Pacific I r , for evner. u 'T'i'-eprpsoniedtrl Union College; John Fowler. "I. w , ='^-'- '^ 'ho'fl^/ ^^,^?*"' SMC; Ray Daniels. Sou.hwes,- ern College; Ciroi.- Sun flean K n r, Union 'l^""nr '"' ^^ ^^'^"^'^' Spahgle. Union College: and uiill 1 '« ""''^ ""^ Walla Walla AndrnJ' T. ° ""'P Rus^el Thomas. "' Universily. Col!e;.e. . Welcome to gditodiaMy Sfieafcing . . Uuche! SMC Welcome to Southern Missionary College! Many of you have traveled long distances to visit our campus dur ing these College Days. Even though your stay is short we feel that if you utilize every moment, the time you spe a here will be of great benefit to you.

visit—College Days. It was probably for the College largely determines your future pus lot our firsl success. As vo choose a college, you must consider: first, the scholastic op" portunities, facilities and achievements; second, the oppor- tunity of physical and social growth; and third, the reach either the point of turn, or no return. soon we would program for achieving spiritual maturity. This lime ust Ihiee short months alter graduation nestled valley come SMC's of campus life with its spiritual he SMC campus for the second time—to intelleaual, social and physical ingredients, well seasoned succeed or fail. Southern hospitality, stirred with with academic chal- For the senior gr adualing from high school or academV' lenges and warmed to perfection with the finest of student- the next few months o his life are perhaps the most crucial. The faculty cooperation, surely provides a successful recipe for uring this short lime may well determine the educational needs of the progressive, enthusiastic the complete future c urse ol his life. He must choose whether ho will be one of the mllions m our country wilh an madequole College Days has been completely planned and exe- education, or whether he will reach for o higher goal. Nol only cuted by the Student Association so that you may see is it important that h col- lege as the student sees it. heartily also that he decide to be a success as he begins college. We endorse Southern Missionary College and again sincerely welcome you to A college educol on, like so many other worthwhile things lerminalion, devotion, and in some cases David Osrorne, oven doprivolion.' but such a short lime ol discipline and hard- Presitlent

. Do so judiciously. SOUTHERN ACCENT /i^ Ad . . .

The new election procedures proposed by the special com mitlee headed by Mr. Jim Boyle ond passed by the genorc assembly of the Student Association ore, we beheve, a slep L

lea. Although senate nor

lo proceed with utmost eliicioncy? 'iU nol bo long. Ahhough there is a certain warm

senato do it, ii Ihis new syalom is lo work as intended, porlici- palion musi be wholehearted and unfettered by fears of ex-

°"'""'' ""'" .:.:„.'.-;,„, °' "" °'"''°"- "^'' """'> "^ J 'm,k J K„a„ of ™'°seU°u''''ou™h'v''° Bu]in?« M.„,T, ' Uilhnm H TD>l<.f

All,, all. wo givo much ollonlion lo Ihe numbor of .ludonls voling m oleclion. m How much ol on indicolion i, Iho num. bor Strife ol sludenls willingly alonding lor oUico? in the Brotherhood

F,.,-l,. r .|,i. ,„ !, hurling IKirlers such as backward liUle

(1.1 1. 1 :' '.i ( 'vi-d in Albania to fortify llieir claim

' "»-V' lo ideological guidance of world

;';; '"::'' Much of Ihe Chinese dii- ^ .";';:l!l" Greetings, Visitors Wilh a hcmd woory Irom note laking, we batlle-scarred col-

hope thol through your visil voi^ w^ b'^co^l' n J^!!!;!? j .'i;:,ii',!,i'r,:^;;:i, h SMC at least lo some degree, and consider it for w!h° !„ liave'pioclaiiiied 'to the >v'.rid iligntnent of this clec- the near conijilelion of their

Prime Necessities lo relalialo from Pek- This ing was purisl Mao Tse-lung, umbreUa-swiping has gol lo stop! As Dr C onod in chapel rgps Ihni Khrushchev last Tuesday, the impression o( the s< was "sn 1 on capilalism" and that Okay, the Russiaris were party ing exponentially, are casnu- so umbrellas are jual about a prime nee splillers. To furlher underscore covetous eye on neighbormg ^' I Collegedal*— but carefully examine the next om suessof Ihoinlraparty beria's vast sparsely popu- lated lands, which agriculmra'- msis evo rywliero lo "repudiate ist Khrushchev plans lo shorliv Down 7:30 Chapels Voting Rights uidate" Russia's parly place in cultivation.

ales- platforms lo place Iho foundation lo iho in- in ihe parly power struggle, ihe 7;30 chapel program 1 |iy. In lerms of creasing now of caustic thai ide«- speoker-convenience. sluder,t.ale, incul- hope grows dimmer logical unity may be achieved

leadersh p. From Ihe days of ussia has been iradi- tionally anointed with party leadersh 1, and It has been only

Western circks. iln^ 1'" ' of oppos lion too imwerful to stamp on W' 1 has anson. Now the "purily" both Russia and " who style themselves Chinese may/xy lo ouiM

as miht ' nt revniutionarv fol- each other, %^ich may briC!:

about ihemsclves sup- 522221 SMC EXPANDS TO MEET GROwTnG NEEDS Southern SDA Youth Plan European Tour

Fifiy-one Sevcnlli-day Ad-

vonlist young people, including Froni Mun cli Uio travelers several from SMC, will tty from %ill go to Ao Iria an. llien as- New York July 14 for a monlh Ihe Alps 10 Ilalv lour of Europe. Sponsored bj' Then on the Soulhcni Union MV So- mt nnil ,0 Valican. Other ciety, tile trip will also provide pols sucli as 1CC0U.C mbs anil Irnnsporlation for 97 persons ill b« V sited. 11 c "roup •111 lllCD CO north

. 11 .,„.,. ,„ opcndent city ol

I„ s„,„„,-l nd the our iviU

GC's Archa Dart Speal(s at SMC got acoss the English channel On Home, School laundry problems? I .lo.k nc.ir the Wldte Cliffs l,,vi-i While in England, the 'I- of London, Westminster "V, Big Ben, and the Kew dens are some of the places

xlinbttrg castle, famous for Protestant reformer Joint

Scotland. Cassell's home on "Will My Aftei a stoj. at Newboid Col- Home Succeed?" Throughout Uuvelcrs will «y back the week Elder Dart spoke on Vo.-k City Augusi 17. home planning, child raismg It Is Written' being and other topics pertinent to Gets -

and I Elder Johnston said. "This is one of the lop questions asked Paul's AMOCO Service **" Advcntist college campuses." The r college will provide patronage wilt always pizza villa Iransportation by bus for the opening i the personal attention of night. However, a 3607 RINGGOLD ROAD slight charge will later be made Paul Hufton 629-3311 The Johnston Collegedale meetings Avill Open Sunday thru Thursday — 4 P.M. till Midnight be the Te largest booking the Ti- Phone 396-3437 Friday voh Theatre has had. and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 A.M. [jfnijrflgfn Accent lUterary Supplement) I Will Not Doubt One in Four ould not choose the cross He bids me carry. Nor may 1 now Love's wisdom fully trace; By Judy Edwa .'ill not doubi while day by day I'm taking

ler up! His grace— strength. His love— through th. experience themselves, my my resting plai without a doubt, that was Steven taking younger sister. plate. No one else ;ition at home could Steven enjoys life fullest, wlielhei St, unveil and siiU , a stance bat left such handed, playing fielder for an all i 1, Chri coveted team uniform and O r the convey or feeding carroU lo his pet proudnoss. Thy gr. -my • ;ngih, Thy love—my resting plac feeling of not, he even has his serioi I such a brother, has od

of nij' room and mixing all mj- variou; 5 th no inbetween He's also quite clc nerfumes together. lacks. I )U might as well have cut off his big where when I have a dale, only asn't too long afterwards that Steven how well-versed he is by glee- jjrrj]i]fijf)i5i) ^,35 ^ at his old habit of eating huge peanut fully reciting some gem of wisdom such as— I (,u|,e( dwiches—and I didn't have the heart Ki55 and hugi Kiss and hug. Smack your baby ,0 ,gi| him. Yes. he's still wearing a size 30 Needless lo say, I'm more tlian Unfell by hinds with rough and c m the mug!" ]jg],! mbarrassed. Fortimalely, however, the fellows j^^j, iy Mantle is Steven's hero at the present, isuallv understand, and some have even been „. fj^ ioyed al Christmas lo receive a left- e and go;

handed ball glove, and he is known as "south- t will not know;

paw ;hi nost cherished p

Yes, he is a pest at times and almost drives anathema me insane: he leaves his dirty clothes all over the [ilace; teases me lo no end; and refuses to revisited help me when I desperately need him. But re- gardless of all this he has the cutest lopsided grin, and can get the most sheepish and inno-

cent look on his face at times; he is at last be- ginning to care about his appearance; and ho was so sincere when he bought me a bottle of "Blue Waltz" i)erfume for Christmas. Without

a doubt, he is "great," and when he looks up

! keep trying, though. vith his and s "Tell

t . I : know he ;till kid

Now That I'm Here Bternal Enigma

iward Hurnbly plo freedom. By Jane; Fl^ndehs

Mm must have his rights: Ihr,>05h (ke week of school are r aw supreme Two Pair I feci different into mine. He's over. Someh w 1 narrow

inside. I 1 lai heard thit aflei unfettered every ilav \ou are 1 different well. Oh, il isiii't jiossible that He I'm lea-s'Uig loi Burden, '"""':" The iii'-"i- '} n, I chmging icrv lege, I just can 'I go—lu' Of the wort 11 ha>o lite nine

[6 IS, asked the second. lifetnuc ^-^

..' thing? l-.n .-! 1 i] IS so wondei Tnu complete free dom it separates fr iends.

No 'SSTZt

con bo !

led «msibly. Bui

WhafB funny?

Oh. nothing.

^afs funny? q^j, ^^^^^

^^"- I kinda thought il, <;omplGie freedom. Sharply prl with wot Thoughllei! a

Quest a true gentleman

Bv BAJiniiiA Ho.in

miicli in nioriumGntal deeds A Irue cenllenisn '^ mve^ and so Alone—and lonely as innumerable small ones— a by his very rarity is llie more balanced man. His v smile, an understanding word, 1 walk Ihrough the Iwilighl . precious, as pure and valuable igent and thorough; Ophir. or a raked lawn—themselves whole-hearted. as Ihe golden wedge of His s

is kind and forniuig i liii H N fir laughter, spontaneous and pu,, Whispering lullabies Th A gentleman is never cru 1 intangibles—both in or crude. His life The genllo wind rocks is railier J„„'. itiated by tact am! refineme To peaceful dreams r small blessings; and tior a mere surface polishing as udied. yet automatic with The creatures of Ihe day, a cloth, but rennenitni rpo give such and larger come from a fiery trial. And snugly tucks the edges ) g o otiiers. Fear, deceit, and hatred have A g eman fears neither no place 01 the nighl around. in the life of a genll,- play. s life ii gh but mixes them in bal- love, manifest lovi o his felloi (lan and to his God. It i; The lull mcxin casts born of beholding the greatest exhibit of love in history — the love of God, And a gentleman Upon Ihe new-lallen snow, Tribute to a Teacher power Weaving myriad diamonds of that love in his life. He is under, above and through all Inlricately potlerned a Christian. A gentleman is a Your life an inspiration, reflection Alter Ihe similitude of the Babe of Bethle- Your ever-ready smile. hem, tlie Youth in the carpen- 01 the Elars— ter shop, the Master Te.

And plants within our hearts the goal As (hey sparkle NO HEADLIGHTS

To reach the heavenly shore. OntI 3sel No glass

Yours not to build a temple. Some (ailights! Won't pass Yours not to build a shrine. No grill But charaaers you've helped to mold Full trunk Will last throughout all time; Low hill Save Ihe throbbing None of out lives that you have touched Faint clunk Oi my youlhlul Will ever be the same— hearl wheels Alone—but nol Because we've sat down lonely , . at your feet No

... I walk Ihrough the And learned of Jesus' name.

—Carol Davis

Ode to ii Toad

The Lost Art I wandered idly down ihe road ^tetririty:

Through flowered fields and forests fair, JitiE ^imttcs

A dijjemil kind oj joy: My observations A toad, last idly sitting there. indicate that d,e overage male collegian (I lije lave This enigmatic never made an extended stud) Beside of hi oun e a the brool. beneath a leaf. m Allow, no one lo lusle

InUd. t ted in n Anlicipated thrilli.

All lejl IIS is lod,iy: Unconsdoui of me in the shad. He hopped and jumped from side to side.

Then quietly I draw ray blade: From which to extract My treasure I'd not bo denied! Reluctantly relinquished

Lije. I. ff nr I d rrng Arjd yet: f n Oh h n The iilllmate

Reality is jotmd Away from thotighl

(thought is imaugihie);

II springs below. b,(,assio„ouly

There is life. —Cecil Petty irs 13y John Hathaway

Two rooms.

One was cold, dnrk. and dump. The other — bright, ioUy. nnii

^^^o men. Why, sure. I'll admit almost One was n quiel— saintly— fellow with rat-bites all 'Twould be greatly unlit tiny red incisions bore Icsliniony over his bod}'. The to the weeks he For them lo appear smelly dungeon. had spent in the The man was scantily clothed, I of clolh But the things they iving only a single piece lo cover his seemingly wcight- do lo inspire those curls one time he had been a great il takes them longer than oy< ii ^iriicliire. At man. The majestic an And il all costs enough lo finance a prince . . ntiires of his darkness-lightened face wero evidence enough. But As they pour on concoctions Ihal would now wn5 think . . . and hope, 1 he coidd do

Rm far above the coldnes.s was another man ... a man in no Thei

wcG like the first. He was clothed in ail the regalia of a monarch.

All about him courtesans swayed v\ilh the chants of the East. He

was cnioying biniself immensely . . .so il seemed. I

wo men. Two rooms. And where could more contrast be

' Where one room was to be desired ... the other, cold and

vas to be shunned. Or was it?

Gaily pushing and wrenching with such And ilien, by various and assort, tender care Till il looks like a snatch from a surgeon's nightm vas emptied. The chopping axe (reserved only for the saline lasle

if human blood) was again dropped. The severed head was viewed nan above the dungeon with disgust. And the man above

aid-. "So he was belter than me, eh?"

\ then . . . after centuries of sand and wind had defaced

One — lying on a lone island in the middle of a bumi

[of fire, crying out in curses for the end to come. The otlie

1 they're all Ihrough I \ ind and noble figure. Closely resembling ihe one whost

had adorned a silver platter many years ago.

one lone candle Tulip Bulbs

The world In sin and darkness lay, For one 1 loved— lo plant her tulip bulb With blacbnesi far too thick fo pier With Care

The Village Fool

Wilh longing anticipalio Hollow-headed nonsense

1 awaited her Just a lack of brains Delighl Smiling, vapid countenance Won't take any pains Approbation But still has just enough sense

To come in when it rains. "Why did you plant Ibt —Joseph P. Priest

EARLY BIRD

Jndle in the night,

light and found the extricates llie anneUda

not withstanding the fact

that the

Neglects to light the world around. punctual annelida is apprehended. — '

Passenger Pigeons n.]|]fiy fi] I't

love a hundred times, of Jonathan Edwards, I've been in has happened to tlie educated preacher? great Calvinist on-, What ' "Edwards locked himself in his study But never really once; How does the "call" lo tlie ministry come lo Davis said, "witli his books. He stayed' student who has just flunked ihcr I've dated many gallant knights an aspiring pre-mec! qualitative chemical analysis? Wliy does the even kissed a dunce. And Southern Accent staff have lo edit so severely copy wrillen iiy iheolog}' majors? Where do some pastors pick up Uieir licenses to butcher They whisper wondrous flatteries; analoeies. manele grammar, and sliorl-circuit (At least they make some try; logic? Do some preachers read Time once a monlh, cultivate their handshakes, and consider I listen quite intently Ihemselvcs educated? Give liie minister back his job. Raise the . For I iove their pretty lies, dards. Sift out all Ihe public relations men." CftrU- porleurs. adniinistralors, Shafer iself ; and psoudo-psycl gists. a Perhaps I'll love a hundred more. lianilr Today— \he "parson" w.is likely lo be When man graduates wilh a degre the besi educated man in Iowti. theology, lei him be a theologian! And maybe only one. Today? "The advent of a higldy educated But for the present I don't care public/' says Shafer. "'has put die minister close I'm having lots of fun. to ihebollom of the listings of educated persons,"

Jene Carroll Is the well-versed, polished, but consecrated — minister going the way of ihe American buffalo, the kiwi, the dodo bird, the whooping crane, the 7*^ ^atid4' pe

shadows I Just what, then, has happened lo the educated d deep sought the face of Jesus, Impressing Girls

asped faith's Vey, 'til through the clouds above rr

He has mutated to a man whose sole talent is all too often a rather consislenlh cu-ded abdit\ slarts looking i 1 Ihe opposite se\ in a where-have-you-bcen-a lo arouse us emolionall} my-Iifc altitude rather than his previous outlook of I'm-going- He his forgotten die price of literature put-lhis-icc-crej n-conc-down-your-bnck. tliis and memorized the «h Ics k When feeling i Could He forg ""'"•" m'ry m.d. m. d catalogs for automatic washers and Volkswngcns He has at limes lost not onlj a pride m his pro fession but to a large latilude the reil quilifi C.™„„.oN ....Iwlll o,ca..,h.,o„,

to bebe\e nothing foi which M, n.m. i, w «=„ on )h. h.„d,o(J.,u,, rospeclive date Friday afler- itle ndciuile e\idence A G 1'"' • tuating class of Loma Now, justified iweet poac with God is mine

Maryonne on the spot; for if In glorioui ho

t doe^ t havi [I dale TkT.. ihed ab rosd. Hi> lo

''I'' li ,i„.il„„^. will, ""'""H Sam,) Then, too, if she docs -R. E. DuBo! wani lo go uilh Sam, fi'fls Uit- a liltle funny saying she doesn't ers, unconsciously afraid that ihe; wdl spide have a dale—rather like a lojecl in a broom faclory. up an odd piece lo their ha'^lih as^Lnihlcd jig saw puzzles? Somehow, though, Sam blunders through the asking process What a lack of the faith the\ lime recommend! and passes swiflly-/oo swifUy for Man-annc. And finally Its Saturday nigbt, 7:00 lo be exact. The program is lo be^n at Conducting men's \vorship a few nights ago. 8:00; all the good seals are taken by 7:30, and Dean Marj'anne sUll K. R. Da^-is touched an aspect of Ihe life hasn't been told what lime her date is coming. About 7:35 the phone rings, Sam. He'il lif ]i\- in l") nnniilr^. Earth Bound

Thirty ],ii,., -^ minule?; ,, I..- .!.,nr.,cp. As Man-anne floats do«Ti the stair- Ij. :, . l,e mutters ''Hur " . "p! We'll be \au- I ;„ After 7 ,,. niOias, lea^^ng hi. date to struggle into !„ ,, , „<, right ami iluough Ihe sleeve in time to ..wU ,i.. ...wunu.^ Joor before it mashes lier in the face.

At the program Maryanne breathes a sigh of relief, for I don't really undei there's nothing much that can go wrong just sitU'ng. But. alas, conies candlelight hour. Wilh glo^ving eyes she sleals a glance al her date. Charm-Iioy is slouched in his chair, munching on a cookie while his eyes zigMg back and forth looking over all the To sec girls in sight, And neither is it I Vacant eyes Lalei n get. And slow steps ling Sam Wandering aimlessly Ahead. Maryanne Knowins nothing shcllor. Bui ho suclHuctl'Sar Save a twilight world—

To s

Streon, through yon, hoorl

— losoph p. Pri,

THE BEE vocab of a five year

lu lb ant Tl I udl s

— I . 01 AgaMTjIlE \Fire Fighters Dampen Flames

range things as well as possible.

After reporUng back to the slaUon, the dispatcher, or com- pany member who remains at the station during a fire, writes up the report in more detail. Thus far since its eslablish- inent in 1952, the fire depart- ment has saved approximately 53,000,000 worth of property, according to Mr. R. H. Sanborn. Mr. Sanborn is chairman of

SHryock Calls SMC Evangelism Field School 'Friendliest College' Set Eigbte

ducting ( llie college hasn't changed its porsonalily," said Dr. Harold Shrj ock. "SMC is still Ihc friondlicsl of our colleges," week on campus Dr. Shrjwk spoke about lli

cdly'his [Kisilion as widely Iliiohti columnist and speaki Wrilinc a seveii-vear-old column in tho Youl/t's Instructor, a reeular column for Life and Health, and contributing frequently to Signs of the Times. Dr. Shryock also travels across the counlr>' speaking to audiences on health and adiuslment.

As chairman of the deparlmeni of anatomy at LLU, he is.

tended the

in Denver , Colo.

Aside from a fe" weeLs now ind then helpmg fnends I ,e never practiced medicine he siid Mj interest is leaching ioctor has manj fit Ids ojicn to liini

MoU\e he feel-^ is one of llic pnnnri qualifications of a d MD All other things being cleir hr,«o%er brams ne%er

Wlia 5 Dr Shr [pge c r like'

One of his best sub|ccK wis Fn .1 h (Toda^ ho is a membei iM\iitors) Oh \eE—and chtmisin be added Ilhoughlthe ibdt I would be a cliemistr>

He placed cell, ni ibe PUC orchestra performed in the string texlet nnd look hi lum bun f, pr ident of die men s club

I would Itkp lo li ; p It n . ^"""^ Stad.nt Association— if 1 u )i 1 n" Kmimenlecf

the of , 1, , , At end In 1 1 nicd stliool he was asked to leacb tr\ f cbcmi i I ( which he did One course laugbl i ,1 i, he wis q mi _, rlass be hadn t oven taken as an undrrgndnli

Nevertheless n was during this >oar that sonic llimg reall) clicked nnd be kncv\ that teachinR was what he wanted to do Graduating eighth in n rlT.e nf ^^ he hurdkd bit 1! month

Harold Shrjock author Gov Frank Clement of Ten icn books and professor of nessee who was at the Inn fjr ni\ at Loma Lmda Uni anothei ippomtment, paid a \ ^^ IS (,uest speikor for short \isit to the banquet and ir \\i V on the SMC spoke for i few minutes us \|,il (,10 The week EnterliiiiimBnl for the ban n led b\ tlie Social quet wds Collegedale Cabinets, i" presented b> Univer Rep Brock is a mem Inc. iti n Committee of the sny of Chattanooga laleni the U S House of Repn The purpose of the week v tues elected November of Cha 1 Pit Cas To broaden the scope of 5 from tlie third district oJ

hich their -Mews on love courts] Collegedale, Tenn iiing and mainage according to 1 lecture will be presented b\ Telephone 396.2912 the Eastwood Social Cducali Oak Ridge Institute of NuJ ind Committee chairman Studies The topic disci "lip ird, and SmuK > re cro,„Kd cul iJlmBalllacul College Hi Fi t held Tuesday Eniatrd Village RHODES 7. al ihe Holi- Cleveland, Tenn. Furniture Company Open 'til f P.M.

7177 All Lee Highway dy Muliis, Darid long-playing record albums Pat Eastwood. Phone 892-2225 at LOW-LOW Prices COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS $3.98 Albums for $2.91 $4.98 Albums for $3.88

.lr.|,e„daWe $5.98 Albums for $4.85

Missionary WARNING SENIORS: nounces plans 964 Summer McKee Baking Company As a student at SMC next year, listening directed to to WSMC-FM may be^ W. Cflsiel! Little Debfaies come a habit. Helping eoHegs- over 130 Siudenti to earn Iheir way through SOaiHERN ACCENT

Cyril Dean Two Firsts

Completes . iMt Mark SMC ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ , ^ ^ 1 NIGHTLY Ed.D. Work AT 7.30 IT IS WRITTEN PRESENTS BIBLE IN THE HAND Music Week Dean, director WITH BRUCE JOHNSTON -CHATTANOOGA EVANGELISTIC 1 Mr Cyril F. CRUSADf education de- during National Music Week, I otSMC's physical TONIGHT THE SECRET OF A HAPPY HOME May 3-9, on the campus of Iparimcni, ^villbea^va^dedthc Southern Missionary College ac- lEdD, degree in physical educa- ^ g g 7 cording to Mrs. Dorothy Acker- man, acting chairman of the

y at chapel, Sandria Nashville, Tenn. anist, a string en- I and Mr Dean passed his oral ex- ble performed for the first aminations April 23. His 280- His- paBe thesis was entitled A torkd Study of Physical Fil- 1790 Saturday night. May 2, ne!s in the United States— On Orchestra, under the through 1961. the SMC direction of Prof. Raymond Kuutli, gave a program in Lynn alion, with n Wood Hall Chapel. On this health and sociol- program the first two move- ments of a sUring quartet, writ- ten by Joseph Priest, were per- Audiences Run 1300-1500 formed for the first time. Other features of National iught at PUC from 1950 Music Week were a piano re- m. Tlie University' of cital on Sunday night. May 3, At ^It Is Written' Crusade was land in 1950 was the by Beverly Babcock. She

; of his M.Ed, degree in assisted by her sister, Barbara, "It is Written" opened April in homes, giving out education. physical 25 in Chattanooga's Tivoli The- lesson studies in On Monday . vening. May A Mr. Dean came to SMC from atre. Speaker for the meetings with the TV prograi ital in the Fin. chair- for ten years, uicluding crusades there was i is Elder Bruce Johnston, Associated with I Arts Auditf 1 featuring mu man of SMC's Division of Re- in Washington and California. Elder Gordon Hender '" ""' He was associated with Pastor was a hymn Geoi^e Vandeman at the Ford chapel today, there The crusade is being carried festival under the direction of on ^vilh the cooperation of SMC, Ray Meetings II Professors J. Don Crook, the Collcgedate Seventh-day Ad- Lyie Hamel. topics of vital Is Writti ...... Kuutli, and Q. ventist Church, and the Chat- j'j|| afternoon. May I, showing t] toII be On Sabbath Seventh-day Adventist I and tanooga ^f :n away 9, the combined Theory Church. Music classes will fQ[. to those History of Faure's Requiem in tlie Opening Night pr« tendance present Fine Arts Cliapel. I SMC Delegates Elder Johnston felt "very en- problems of tlie araged" by the response and in which the wo Visit Andrews U. spir ically paged, were used by the audi- I fested a Vogel and Harrison For SA Workshop He estimated the opening ence as they turned to the prop- I crowd at 1300. Mr. Ben Five Student Association offi- Johnston. Picnics dress, theatre manager, se by Elder Are Scenes of cers-elect for the ISe-l-eS aca- 1450. The theatre seats Has Held 30 Crusades :ntly attended The opening Elder Johnston, who is the dealt Rebelhon," coordinator and slafi represen- of human suf- lem tative of "It Is Written," has ril 23-24 at Andrews Univer- underclassmen chose of orgia. The sity, put on 30 crusades, many Berrien Springs, Mich. rk for tlieir all day round of events. jjs tu'i them in the Midwest, including Chosen played loming Softball theme for this year's cussed, IndianapoUs, Chicago and South The freshmen and sophomores workshop n obstacle race was "scrutiny," and a B.A. from 'it Is WriHen' Bend. He holds lis purpose was to "determine Walla College, the M.A. of their afternoon. Thet^^ "It Is Written" television Walla I Uic lurisdiction of the SA now, University and classman food committee program has been on Channel from Potomac headed the lower _. " - -lould he," accord- T^F^^ from Andrews Univer- Luce, director of SMC food service, 3 sbice late fall, and hundreds the B.D. Mr. Ransom I m to Bin Haynor, Andrews of students have beet University's SA president.

Opening meeting for the workshop was held Wednesday lughl, I April 22. The keynote ' ress was delivered Thursday ning by Dr. Uef Tobiassen. I P™«sor of history and political ^''"-" It Andrews University.

I JJM Erickson, SciioVa 1 Committee chairman-elert yVorkshop . . u..,e| Pr?^' Sevenih-da, <^s represented spent mc Thursday dar-"" ^^ and Fi lsivM'""^.P'"^"ginoneof th QdHomHH^ Speafeing

ilect visited the compui Recently a delegation of sen inter-coUegiate sisler colleges for an oi one oi the denominational m eight schools were presen

expressed by various govemmenl. Many worthwhile poiiQts were lead faculty sponsors and sludenl student leaders remarked On a couple of occasionB. how ever, because ollit:ers did all the work that at Iheir coUege the SA

nl that if Ihey wonted a project or program. Their argum was

delegation. We Southerners North but it didn-t impress our

election dayj W n'l laiy during the Iwo recent SA Ihon the when we Ton well over 10 percen higher in our voting

eighty students who contribute weekly time to WSMC-

SMC sludoi "AIN'T IT TERRIBLE HOW SOME OF THEM WORLDLY UNIVERSITIES ACT?'

fourths of Iho ; Union this sum; louche! ^ic(4Afioi*it

pporl of SA and sludenl-planncd programs. Thank Dave EIW Enlightenments

B for this year's success, and let's support Bert Coolidge After

or. We have something others don't hove. leeed r r Stuc •" tliiek „.Hil. our SA's .hort comings, it is (ar (i '^P"' 41,. I..S) ecti.o among those o( the esstere SOA colleges. There !s room (or much Improvement, 'iftincUc ^eicatloH^ ne area v/e did find our SA deficient in was that of stcc Of th, eight colic

» Student

We Are Appreciative . . lur way of thinling. this year's College Days .crop ol aporo lime is whol wi)l pnl n. oh.cd.

g one we've erperienced thus far. A word I hove a motto that you con moko port of your liie il you led, .e think, to those who sacrificed much of t so desire—a mollo which will enable you 1o slop worrying onii Especially to SA President David Osbotni Stan living. Toko minulo vocations throughout Iho day—short periods of time, alone in Ihe recesses of your mind.

Take time to contemplate and take stock of your life. WhUe al work, or between classes, or even after a meal. Take time lo leTuthtglllu™ Fof PontJerance p.pJi. .ther things. I hoi» "The teacher must make rules lo guide the conduct of his "''" ™'" '"'" '''°"''' '" '"" *"'' "•"'""Si''""''' «"'' °"" ""'" liTOre'r ""J

Thus he will toC.Sri.^'^si'^ '«'»'» 'lie student so that he will bo convicted of Its justice. helped l^etf "Kftew Tt^t feel a responsibility to see that the rules which he himself has " Counse New Leader mity of raccoons and a family of minks. We've been glad to have SOUTHERN ACCENT Edltor-Eled The raccoons worshipped the Big White Raccoon who lived Robert Murphy little edition of the ACCENT a very remolo place get a ink or. his fingers this called raccoon hoavon. He directly guided we've Murphy supervised the assignment stories and has assisted as oUairs of raccoons on earth did o( and a (airly g od job of it, too. staff put the paper together. Just on. more oditioo for this year's

edfoirs of raccoons and minks, however. ho minks who orcn'l subjoci to any particular god, scoffed Tt Ihe raccoons r thoir old-limo thirjdng. "It's time to throw oa these rules nd rogulalions and become modern." lust liko their enomiea the minks, the race ons SOUMRA/yiCCCAir had to go the forest water hole lo drink. Bui this wate onagod by Iho minks. And when the Ultle race ini commpn drink, the minka told them Ihal il wasn't Ihe Big While Raccoon in Ihe ll«hl f sludEni opini at had made ovorylhing. Il just happened, the' said. Tho owla. fortnightly PI ^li™!l r'iz And then one night the" cwiniccoo^n had a vision. In it ha as told that Iho ^li^r'^29!.^^ 'Tut-s", raccoons should build thoir c wn water hole. lero Iho iiyjl minks wouldn't deceive tho youngst rs' minds. And so tho raccoons got logelher and wo ked very hard. Pubtlihonr Tlie Student AsseclGti valor hole. Here

And alter many years, a now gonoralion o raccoons 1"''° d IS thov gre hy they should drink only at thoii own water hole. Il ^Z^.

And so one afternoon Ihe younger raccoon de d d iBit tho minks. As the lively young raccoons le 1 lor the mioks' r hole. Iho old roce Sports Prof. Scarr On Local TV Three Times Spotlight Mr. Roy Searr, exchange teacher of Southern Mission- ary College's music department, appeared April 22 on "Woman's Whirl," a daily program at 5 A.M. on WDEF-TV.Chaltanoo- here ind mth Jacobs Softball IS single I the ram Desp.U Ihe" the runner to come third 1 This Mr. Scarr's third , has beei 1 pitch I weather there ha\e 4 allowed Jacohi out of thi I games pla>ed Whirl." In the first gai I scheduled Mr. Scarr, who is from New- defeated and the bold College in England and has iMeicliant 4-3 Marchant led the pJate

last half of the In the ne\t i 1 up to the There a man held lal inmng was Marchant first T.vith I In another game Kell> Shakespeare, doMTied Hannah 12 4 In the I Chorale Visits The first part oE the pro- first mnmg Kelly led off mth Churches gram was a discussion of the Area life and works of iVIr. Shakes- During Concerts peare led by Betty Mack, the I for Collegiate Chorale per SMC s Rep. Brock Presents "Worn I's Whirl." Caroly Lavv- omied at Nashville and freshman at SMC, April as Kelly's lead was heighte enceburg, Tenn., 18, ig "Where the Bee 1963-64 by back to back home runs lart of the chorale's Final Sucks." Following her number, Martin and Series Lecture Osborne. Mr. Scarr gave a reading from Climaxing the "Emergent --'""'' -="- Hannah's team scored ""-"a """;' Shakespeare's" "" ^empsst.Tde South" lecture series, Third Dis- sons, of the difiiculty he expe- the chorale went to Nasi g^^^ ^^e read 'hile in the J, trict Representative William E. Iville where the first concert wf e of [he shipwrecked jest- Brock III addressed SMC fac- given at the Nashville Fin !r to the king. ulty and students April 26th failed to do so. Mr. Scarr's appearances have __ The team standings i group left for ed below. Look them oi be at the ball field to cal climate that has emerged tic rhe chorale sang in a Meth- in the South, Rep. Brock said tei SMC Orchestra st church which had been the change has brought an in- ^^ t to the chorale for the con- Performs Annual t. The La^vrenceburg church tional politics. The growth of mbers provided sack lunches Spring Concert the two-party system along i.vith in the choir members to eat increasing industriahzation and lie ; I an Southern Missionary Col- the return journey to Col- in government lege's 40 member sj-mphony and the affairi of their nation," orchestra, conducted by Mr. Brock said. Raymond Kuutti, presented its

Following lis speech, Rep. spring concert Saturday eve- d a nimiber of ning. May 2. Mr. Brock pointed out that tated that he felt Performed during the concert benefiting more iMay 9 Lyceum To Feature tory that Tennessee had a larger were Handel's Harp Concerto, urban population than rural. played by iVIr. Robert Sear em-owned induf i-ating the piano; Bruch's Violin Can- [Dalai in tlie South. Lama's Tibet Escape be provided by the enterprise system Tourisf Center presented by Palrido Cobos; Mr. Thuhlen Jigme Norbu, brotlier of Dalai Lama, supreme ^ ' Considering its central loca- QuortcHe /Vo. written by ilual rather than the Fed ' govem- and /, and temporal leader of Tibet, will appear in person at meni," Rep. Brock tion, Congi-essman Brock stated Joseph Priest, a junior music tabemacle-audilorium, May 9 at 8 o'clock. that Chattanooga has the po- major, and performed by a vio- Mr. Norbu will lecture the culture Rep. Brock stated that he on and customs of Tibet, tential of Dimtry becoming a noted tour- lin quartet composed of Pat now dominated by Red China. film the joined the Republican party in A showing ist center. Mooney, Mr. Kuutti, Patricio actual escape of the Dalai Lama I In closing, Rep. Brock de- Cobos, and Mr. Jeraid Peele. !i Tibet will also be shown. clined to take a stand on metro The orchestra presented other s the brother of the Dalai Lama, government for Chattanooga classical works including t'-4 r/e- Norbu gives the firsi ||amily and Hamilton County. Metro fienne Suite by Bizet, and Pe- account ever rendered m has subsequently been defeated, tite Suite by Gluck. America of the solemn cere-

ariGs of his country, includii life ni the Dalai Lama's palace He TOUR EUROPE! gives an account of Dalai LMnas escape from the Red ^"inese, and also of his o^vn 21 - DAY ALL-EXPENSE PAID TOUR OF: harbor flight.

^^^ °^ ^'eht, after IrhJl^'cmidhood I years of shepherd life

AUS. 3 - AUG. 24

$937.— pizza villa KILTY'S TOUR AGENCY 3607 RINGGOLD ROAD 629-3311

Open Sunday thru Thursddy — 4 P.M. *ill MidnIgM

Friday and Saturday — 4 P.M. till 2 A.M. SMC Hosts Six SMC Students Prospective To Attend Newbold Collegians don as possible," he s Ofc,

problem. Llovd and Leslia S t year. colporleur this summrr- n k by SA Secretary Judy Fdwards 00," added Lloyd's ™ll ,v„rk at summeTcL"'" . male Leslie Pi Eton who tamp. By, one way or another, SMC ri> going to Newbold ne\l «ill Each guesl was given a green- ivell represented at Newbold bordered name card to be worn t yer- ' during College Days. 6i\ SMC students plan to at tend the Enghsh Seventh day The SMC Concert Band, un- Adienua College for the 1964 Faculty der the direction of Professor to Hold 65 school ear And the> all Lyie Q. Hamel, presented its J Banquet ha^e things thei want to do Sunday performance Sunday night, Ap- ril 19. For SMC Seniors David Osborne, band narra- "Passport to Your Future" ?d sa\ s Sopho is lor, received the John Philhp Iho theme planned for [o\le Oh -ves— the Sousa Award from SMC'^ Prei- amiual senior- faculty banquet ant to go skin di\ I this ' idcnt C. N. Rees at the concert. Sunday evening, I' - The ving t 6; 30 with ; Elizabeth Travis Is reception . planned chapel program Mon- Green Room of the cafett Robert Sum , freshman day morning, to seniors from Following the reception, biology major, wants to attend sen- the Southern Union academies. iors and faculty will ^Secretary of Year' Newbold "to see the everyday sit do«ii Pisgah to a meal planned and served Ml Academy's Gwen life in another society—not just under the direction of Miss Har- Young was the wnner of the to take pictures of the tourist II named Secretary of the Yeai riette typing contest sponsored by llie Hanson in co-operation with Miss Thelma Hemnie, and rnnnally i Mr. Ransom Luce, food ser\'ice In I, llic college fresh- g^^^^ Veek 10 the student cho n by the college secretarial n defeated the academy ;.- director of the college. teachers. iors by a score of nine to eight. The evening's program, In the April 28th prese ion, Elizabeth was cited for her planned by a committee The prospective collegians "dependability, personality a di- were taken on a tour of the rected by Mr. Lynn Sauls, the campus buildings and industries Trivett Receives emcee, will feature various fac- Monday ulty lalent. afternoon sponsored by Full Fellowship i Whit.

'., pinned For Further ranged by Mrs. Walter Herrell Study |

[Z"^"Sdl"dHand'^k the theme using th Band Completes ml-Z'^'alt'^cLmSZ ""minS crelanes. of gold and blue. ^^^ Portland, Tonn' has re- Concert Schedule de from her secretarial ce»ed a full fellow hip from On Carolina Tour s Elizabeth has completed the Um\er<;iij of Oregon Medi Seniors Attend Annual concenlraung cai School m Portland Oregon 54 he also plays the ie college bond a Campout at Falls Creek d sing's v\o in the ^«11 full Fiftj four Southern iMission tion of the Fall Creek Fd S^SO per 1 ar\ College seniors and their camp Assistant penses famihes attended the annual j,, Ca j^^^^ j„„ „; ^^jc a, , -will Creel Falls State Park Spam indl Secretar> be offered a fello\\ship for fur ,p,„t„ ,„ ,t, p„j„ .

SOUTHERN ACCENT

97 Grads Hear Dr. Howe At 48th Commencement Cressler, Betty Fail, Rosalind motto, "Perfec Throughout Hendren, Gwendolyn Lambeth, Infinity." Anne Murphy, Sylvia Powers, lege's 48th annual Commenci John Fowler, senioenior class Patricia Ramsey, Elizabeth menl service May 31. president, presented as tl Wilson, Linda Wolcott, Rebec- Escorting the graduating sen- gift, SlOO to -be added to tht Woods, RajTnond Bartles, rs down the aisle were the fund started by the 1963 Sen- Homer Buell Jr., Frank Gam- members of SMC. ior Class for a Campus Direc- ble, Carole Branch, Sharon n colorful academic Doyle, Lynda England, Jean

Other cLas The Commencement address ill Tyndall, > was delivered by Dr, Walter dent; Sara Cunningham, secre- A. Howe, associate secretarj' of tary; Barbara Zilke, assistant the Department of Education secretary; Bob Hale, treasurer; of the General Conference of and LaVoy Garner, Seventh-day Adventists, pastor. Camp Meeting Set Dr. John W. Cassell, aca- Gilbert Patricia Chu, demic dean of SMC, presented Bumham, Gary Cobb, James Dunn, Ger- For -27 the degree candidates, and Pres- ald Kelly, Richard MitzeUelt, ident C. N. Rees conferred de- >MC's Entries Win At Collegedale Speaker tor the Consecration James Wolcott Ul, Barbai service, held May 29, was El- Hoar. Mary Ann Deakins, der E. L. Marley, president of *en League Again Mul- the KentuckyTennessee Con- Haley HI, David

. t fre 1 Eng- awards given by the Instructor. ference. June 18-27. 5 and eight c according to Nliss Evlyn Lind- Elder E. C. Banks, profes- Speakers for the event mil Walter Brow Titing students received S1,H0 berg, associate professor of Eng- sor of Applied Theology at include Elder R. A. Anderson, Robert DuBose, James King, n ibis year's Youth's Instructor lish. Andrews University, Berrien secretary of the GC Ministerial Waher Marshall, David Os- n League competition. Second place award winners Springs, Mich., was speaker for Association; Elder J, 0. Iver- borne, Gary Randolph, Maximo son, secreUry of the GC Radio ($30) for tlie Freshman Eng- " and TV Department; and "It ian Lester, Carol Eldridge lish di-idsion are Karen Flem- May 30. fcnd Class of Syl- Is Written" speaker, Elder Becky Skender in the ing, Judith Foulkes, Patricia SMC's Senior 1964 Sellers, Robert McEndree, George Vandeman. freshman English competition, Mooney and Mary Whilten. Charles Martin, Pitts, IZeleny Fiman and Bernice Evan Elder H. M. S. Richards, Jr., In the Advanced Writer's jGearbart (who won 5150 each James Terrell, Charles Wilson, and the "Voice of Prophecy" section, second place awards Dorm Clubs Elect Norma Ake, Barbara Benson, radio broadcast "B" group will nith double-length stories) won went to Smuts van Rooyen and Darleen Da^ns, Dorothy Long- be present tor lirst place awards in the Ad- Larry Cavlness a weekend of the Bob Murphy, ley, Melinda "Loveni k'anced Writers section. McRae, camp meeting. Third place awards in the Billie Flowers Mitchell, Sarah Satterthwaiti T.vill Virian's story was accepted And Elder George Vandeman Freshman English section Donald Strawn, Frances Tarli by the Guide. This year Guide went conduct a special "It Is Writ- to Sharon Hurtig (Guide), Jim S. C. Ullom, EveljTi Straw crusade meeting at Chat- iwards were separate from the ten" Pen League Gatten (Instructor), and Su- Gloria Tyndall, Judy Edwards, tanooga's Tivoli Tiieatre the program. "" zanne Mizelle (Instructor). Dai " " " Sunday following camp meet- Third place in the Advanced Clei section went to Pierce Haley. Acceptances by the Guide, at Delta Phi were Larry Cavi- $20 each, were stories by Grace ness, president; Randall Crow- Committee of 100 Breaks Allen, Nancy Clark, Clara Cun- son, vice president; Jerry Evans, ningham, Barbara DuPuy, Con- secretary; Gerald Van Hoy, Ground for New PE Center Carcich Testifies jiie Eien, Earnest Elkins, Ava- treasurer; and Tony Torres, I Other speakers were Dr. Before Judiciary lon Halverslott, David Jewelt, C. N. Rees, SMC's president; I Dick Mosley, Candis Pender, Sigma Theta Chi Elder Don R. Rees, chairman House Stanley Pennington, Marshall following officers: Billie Flow- I Committee of SMC's Board of Trustees and ers, president; Judy Vance, re- The General Conference of Schmehl and Donald Plait. building at Southern Mi Southern Union president; Dr, MvenUi-day I'outh's Instructor accept- ligious vice president; Paula Adventists, renre- ary College. CjTil Dean, head of SMC's phy- senled by ances, at $20 each, went to Rabuka, secretary; Lynette Elder Theod9re Car- Principal speaker for the oc- Mi, »ice Carol Baker, Gayle Foulch, Lester, treasurer; and Bonnie president of the GC casion was Mr. Scott L. Pro- •nil president Bruce McClay, Patricia Miller Schwerin, assistant treasurer. of the COMMITTEE of Ihe church's basco Jr., civic leader in Chat- chairman ^n? and Terry Snyder. Both Billie Flowers and Lar- 100; William lies, an I American Division, tes- tanooga and Hamilton County OF and Senate « May 20 before the House Creative writing acceptances, ry Caviness will have Boarj Orlando member of the COM- I and vice chairman of the J;*';;"^- Committee nt to Don Dixon positions for the coming college MITTEE OF 100. I on relieion of American National Bank a and Robin Si Trust Co. Master of ceremonies was """""l I il''^','';""'' expressed Mr, Charles Fleming, Jr., I 111; belief that "the nurture of SMC's business manager. I ^bgiou, concepts, and partici- ^ill ( guon The I I m such religious exer- ately $200,000, exclu- ^^ I ,^\ prayer and ;„ the read- sive ot ttie swimming pool, The l»e»t the Bible, are the proper COMMITTEE OF 100 has raised or 'pledged three-fourths of this total—5150,000,

The I ""'-'''« "•lteraZ"or I fte'i',1 by the Georgia-Cumberland ™ Bill of Highu," according to Elder I ^'cich Conference, stated that "Ihe re- LeRoy J. Leiske, conference

Three basketball courts, c |l>"»-idedbyth?Fir.,''"* Amendr"i menf -is^ , rooms, offices, a handball c tl-at "churcl I ^nd s,,!!'v'^^^ and lockerooms ivill be aci '*^ function effect mos^ modated in the new strucl

Architect is Mr. Don Kirl ""• seeks 'ml ii, ^', to con- '"e oiher, i™'. or to ininrtere .

'7^ ^<^<^ ^

ved Prime Ho' he did accept foreign 1 arty has been split wth dis Finale id when he could gel it for sensioi) dunng the last ye^. tliese programs. In world poli- Nehru refused to pick a succ' ll is with a certain feeling ol reliel and sentiment a lily that followed , Nehru other politician ^vu[l I secede the editoi'a awivcl chair and rubble of discarded copy policy of neutralism, and was enough suppoi both the to nexl years SOUTHERN ACCENT editor, Robert Murphy. denounced hy Commu- party factions s and the West o was born a Brahmir Like most college newspapers, the ACCENT has in the post Nehru of the West's dissatisfac- Lai Much Bahadur Shastri, Nehru However. or member of the highest so- year experienced both lurbulenl and calm waters. tion with Nehru was an out- deputy in recent months cial order among the Hindus, , of the activities of liis such is necessary il a newspaper is lo make an honest attempt growth Moraqi Desai, the fonner compassion for 1 but Nehru's defense to satisfy (he principles oi trulhiul and objective joumaliam. former na Menon. Menon made many is a possibility that a Such turbulence, when it has occurred. I hope may hove slimu- the independen' comrrn attacks on the United mise candidate may be selecied moved from Shortly after Nehru died, the ; during the long 1 In- fight for independence, but lalt n the goal year's ACCENT the "Thei„ • While n has been ol this SOUTHERN when India did become a sov- 2. did not agree with his lo give a well-bolanced, accurate image of college life at ereign nation in 1947. Nehru Selecting e te min- all must admit that he was Southern Missionary College. There have been those, of course, assumed the prime ministry likely to be smooth of the great leaders of the ti it his death. who have at times (elt that tipped little loo and held until the scales were a because the ruling Congress tieth century. for to one side or the other. Then again, there have been those Nehru's political philosophy confusing. He who did not think there should be a bolonce at oil. In effect was sometimes believed that neither capitahsm they said: "Swing the pendulum all the way over and hold il nor socialism alone could solve India's problems, and he began The extreme "be-" wing has asked: "What makes you a program of state socialii heavy industrj'. think a college newspaper should hove any criticism in omed to Sooty Darkne all?" And wo have replied: "Should we consider our readers, both on campus and oil gulhbio enough to beUeve that every- thing is perfect at SMC? Would not such an inferred asaump- Touc/ie!

On the other hand the lar-oxtreme "screom-forih" wing has cried: "The very idea that our newspaper should have college

pubhc relations in ill Why doesn't it strike out viciously for what we want regardless of the college?" Of these we have ajked; "Whol makes you think the students and collage are always on opposite sides of the fence? Don't students and col- logo aUke want what is truly in the best interests of all? How then can we bo so vicious?"

! COMMITTEE of 100 i Nee , the ajority falls between these that those oi such far-flung philosophies more often spe Students of SMC have for the past two years been learn- ing Prayer to express ihomselvos publicly through the SOUTHERN AC- Ruling CENT. Wo are glad for the many letters lo the editor we have Judiciary CommiHee

offrcral i continue to spook frooly in the future. Il is important that alu- j„.. 1 ._ ._, ^ society.

i Adventli \ there ^ what flcfuatly denounce fhe decision as unChrisflan. We plicitly with jhe General Conference ihaf "Ihe nuH

I would expross my gra the staff of this year's SOUTHERN ACCENT. On mai ns t has been nol only willing lo go the extra mile, the extra night without ates, Rodney Bryant and Harold White, I extend af ilo their dopendobility. Crossroads Also, to Mr. WiUiam H. Tayloi ad visor. I am indebted for much o( his timo and inle islabilily and the Jrld. In We are now upon the bor- ders of World War HI. You almost every phase of life, revo- and I are standing at the cross- lutionary changes are transpir- roads of eternity. At this late ing that are significant in the hour we find ourselves in the light of Bible prophecy. midst of a stormy world, and, we Today, the troubles in Viet as we look into the future our ^wiwmmm Nam, Berlin. and South wonder what lies ahead of America indicate we arc living nation and chiirch. in earth's last hour. This lime of perplexity and anxiety in

NT September : 1 SS25 per yea or Jesus Christ? Is not our refuge at the foot of the croi Jesus said: "Peace give ployed on WSMC ij unto you; my peace give I Id givelh,

troubled, neither let

Practically every Individual

s fearful of an a'

able "God i d r them" from any 'W President C. N, Rees Announces S oufharn Acre Mew College Faculty Additions M.S. degrees from Columbia Union College and the Univer- degree in physical education. ^^^" recently an- sity of I fiiUv lia^« Maryland, where he Since that time she has taughi by Dr. C, N. Rees, niinced P.E. at Union CoUeRe, Lincoln of SMC Eighteen Lidenl Mr. John Moffatt, who will Neb. faculty members are join ^,w the communications de- to take up duties Miss Enid Wilson, a gradu- ,d,cdiiled parmient, grew up in the Ha- college next fall, ate of Andrews University , the The- at wanan Islands. Before joininB ological Seminary, the Seventh-day Adventist will also ling to SMC is Elder church in 1961, Mr. Moffatt xvijj women. Miss Wilson's degree Rudolf R. Aussner, who was a professional actor for I IS a Elder Aussner tliree B.A. in ancient languages. IMcb Gcmiar. years, and a reporter for She has recently been teaching ^adiiated from And^e^vs Unt- Dun and Bradstroet; he has history and Bible at Blue Moun- tliis sprmg ^^^th a mau- been a free-lance -vvriter. Jcrsily tain Academy, in education, and Hamburg, Pa. ler's degree Mr. Moffatt graduated from graduate from the Uni- New dean of ivill Sacramento State College women at the Notre Dame in July SMC Division of Nursing i'ersity of (B.A.) and from Pacific Un- in in German. Orlando, Fla., is I rtidi an M.A. ion College (M.A.) He taught Miss Edna Stonebunier. Graduating Mr Stewart J. Crook is to at Columbia Union College last from depart- Washington Missionarj- College join llie SMC music in 1924, Miss Stonebumer rr incnl, coming from Shcnnan- Mr. Lynn Sauls, presently where ceived a B.S. degree in hom doali Valley Academy teaching at Collegedale Acad- I lies, Martz, McKee, Hulsey emy, will be attending the State University of Iowa next Elected to if Madison Col- Lead SMC, year, working on his Ph.D. in 100 Group and The University of ge, English. He graduated from Mr. William lies of Orlan- of Trustees of Southern Mis- receiving his B.A., ennessee, SMC in 1956 and Peabody Col- do, Fla., was elected president sionary College on iu building S.. and M.S., respectively. -"'" let of Southern Missionary Col- program, its academic program, Joining the industrial arts lege's COMMITTEE OF 100 at and its financial program. tion partment will be Mr, John from Columbia Union Col- its May 20 organizational meet- Tlie committee also organ- lege, |t. Durichek, Mr. Durichek has Takoma Park, Md., and ing, according to Dr. C. N. ized itself as a corporation. her t Highland Academy for M.A. degree from New Rees, president of SMC. York University with Iflve years, where he ha 1952 ivith majors in education a major Mr. Sam Marlz of Nashville was selected SMC Appoints the industrial arts ue- and religion. Mr. Stanley will as vice president; Mr. William J. Hulsey, o^vner- , director of the band complete his master's degree in J. Don Crook choir, and manager of Collegedale Cab- fend coach for the SMC is Miss Louesa Peters, llurabling team. He graduated at Michigan Slate University. Assistant in PR 1 Peabody College in 1959 To teach in the business de- Elder J. Don Crook, instruc- 0. D. owner-manager |\illi an M.A. in industrial arts. partment next year will be Mr. McKee, tor in music, has been named of McKee Baking Company, assistant director e of SMC. Cecil Rolfe. Mr. Rolfe is work- of public re- was elected vice president and Elder Frank Holbrook, who ing on his thesis. The Eco- lations at Southern Missionary I College, according to Dr. C. N. , the theology depart- nomics of Public Medicine, for The CON-IMITTEE OF 100 re, received a M.Th. his Ph.D. degree from the Uni- Bees, SMC's president. Elder will pegree from Andrews Univer- versity of Maryland. Graduat- 1 Col- Crook work part "'62, majoring in Old ing from Washington Mission- time in public relations, < It. Elder Holbrook ary College and the University Tivoli Meetings Shennandoah Val- of Maryland, he has receive office manager for two years. imy from 1962-64. the B.A. degree and M.B.;* Successful; 95 choruses, which New dean of women at iHe graduated from Washing- .%ill accompany him or PR Di- Southern Missionary College is Decisions Made Iton Missionary College, Poto- ector William H. Taylor on Miss Evaline West. Graduating Appri tely 95 pers from Union College in Lincoln, Elder Crook is a graduate of Academy in Californi Neb., Miss West received a of the Seventh -day Adventist I the M.Th.. the degrees of B.A , he taughi English and journal- church as a result of the M.A,, and evan- I B.D. ism. He will be working on his a major in English, and later gelistic series recently held in Miss Carolyn Luce, Ph.D. in magazine journalism now fin- an M.A. degree from Andrews Chattanooga's Tivoli 'Theatre. |ishing Tennessee. work on an M.A do- at Syracuse Universitj', Syra- University area of guid- in the Elder Crook has heen the di- ^ec at Andrews University, cuse, New York, during the ance and counseling. She has Elder Bruce Johnston, chairman rector of the SMC Collegiate vill teach English and Utera- 1964-65 school year. been dean of women at Sun- of SMC's Religion Division. Chorale and the College Choir. lire next year, replacing Miss Taking over the college band n)'dale Academy and South- Over 1,000 Bibles were given The Chorale toured extensively, I Ann Pamsh. Miss Luce crad- next year will be Mr. William western Union College, Just away lo persons attending ten under his directing over the uated from SMC in I 1960. and F. Young. He has most recently prior to coming to SMC. Miss of the twenty-five meetings past few years. This j-ear the laugljt English and Spanish at aught at Adolphian Academj', West was an English super- held. group toured Florida, Alabama, l%!iland Academy for three Before the beginning of the and Tennessee. Recently the yean, She has studied at I llie ihe academy at Union College. campaign, groundwork had Chorale cut a long-play record -versity of Mexico and Po- Univ ind the Elder F. H, Hewitt, now pas- been laid by SMC students for that will be on sale at camp le University, tor of the Baton Rouge, La., almost a year. SludenU visited meetings llnoughout the South- ''ling the Di«sion of Nur?- Michigan Slate University, church, will be the now College- in Uie homes of Chattanooga >"ll be Mr. Carl Miller, who Miss Mary Mooy will serve dale Academy principal. Elder Idents and distributed "It is Elder Crook will work di- ^^.*'*l^"t professor rectly with Mr. Taylor on pub- am,"^^''" as an associate dean of women. Hewitt was formerly principal ?^ Maryland. Miss Mooy graduated from Em- of Ozark Academy, Gentrj', conjunction with the weekly lic relations, promotion trips, I ^l'-.\ Millerxrn"";"'^ I has his B.S. and manuel Missionarj' College in ivision program. and special programs. SNEA Solicits Communications Department Textbooks For Missions In Retrospect and Prospect [ Vll > The Student National Educa lion Association of Southern Five years ago. Southern Fellowship, and high raling in .Ix iB IV ". nary College recently

degree offerings— billing emphasis public relalions. This spring. Bar

greo in c Barbara has dis An integral part of the work herself as a sludcm of the communications depart- cum laude, receiv is the educational radio station, to Who's Who i. WSMC-FM. This "Stu- Schools and Colleges dent Voice of Southern Mis- year becai sionary College- «-il] receive sold in the United Slates. e

of admissions and records. increasing communications de- raff 1 Barbara Benson, Joan Aitkins, of Regisiralion for the ei mands the Seventh-day Ad- ''^^'•'"6 ^^^ ployeTbj'theCh. Pam Smitli and Gretchen Rog- lie Librarj'; Kenneth Stewart, Watrous Takes principal of Collegedale Acad- ey. SNEA members sold ball- emy, 3 years, gomg to Greater History point pens and raised over Group Miami Academy as principal; $30. On Tour of South Charles Read, head of Secre- Contributions totaling $1 34 tarial Scie postage money were given by people , going to Pacific Union Social Science This coal ^"^"^K^ College, Angivin, Califon The history department if =PO"so''ed a one-week :hould provide the motivation a similar position. Professor sponsoring o one-week South- DDr. and the "feel" of largo-scale Lyle Hamel, director of the hislory_lour, and a field broadi Everett of „ The second is to SMC Concert Band, going to ibe divi; SMC a program of Sheyenne River Academy, Har- lions research, anal- The tc le- vey. North Dakota, as principal. nd development which hour upi 1,000 Expected invaluable Miss Maybelle Vandermark, ^!> eluded 'f 'he dean ^f I, 2 years, going For Next Year tasks. The third is to to the General Confei states of Alabama, Mississippi training for those show- Seventh-day Adventists, Wash- Says Futcher gram in the city of Charlotte, itudc for Georgia, and Ten- religious mag- inglon, D.C.; R. W. Scarr, Students accepted to South-

visiting exchange professor, 1 ern Missionary College for the year, returning lo Newbold 1964-65 college year ntmibered Lyceum of the Social Sciem eDiv College in England; Raymond 759, as of May 25, according Series to Include in to Mr. C. F. W. Futcher, dh-ec- was charge of t Kuutti, director of the SMC tor of admissions and records. 12 Events for '64-'65 High iwinls of the trip were Orchestra, 3 years; Miss Ann Year Enrollment this time Washington, Ga., place of the years, going t at same formal dissolving of the Con- Boston Univer- last year was 627. or 132 les5 than this year. federate States of America's Wilcox, as- Cabinet; students Andersonville, Ga., lo- year, being Of the 769, former | cation of the well-kno^vn Civil number 519, \vith 240 new en- War prison; Montgomerj-, roUees. Girls outnumber the Ala., custodian, 4 boys, where the first 382-377. capitol of the private busi- Confederate States of America Pendergrass Next year's freshman class was located; thus acad and VicksburR and elementary school far consists of 173 raduales and 50 new lat- years; Mrs. Helen Whary bool graduates Georgia Cumberland

n nda Conference is

tuckj Tennessee with 77 Cj bna Conference ^vith 72 \ bama Mississippi

edicil 33 Enrollment for m

pected to climb (