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Western Carolinian Volume 30 Number 17

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  • Page 4 The Western Carolinian Friday, March 19, 1965 After-College Interest Survey Is Conducted The college student's quest for the good life stems more from a quiet rebelliion against society's values than it does from men at San Francisco State College suggests. Findings of that study are summarized in a Psychological Reports monograph by Robert E. Mogar, a member of the Division of Psychology. "That rebellion," he declares, "should take the form of passive disengagement (from society) rather than positive protest indicates that traditional values are not oppressive so much as irrelevant to many students." Given a choice of 12 items, nearly two-thirds of the men (62%) rated economic security, careers, and family life as their three most important concerns after college. Almost all the students who felt this way were majoring in engineering, the physical sciences, and business administration. Almost, without exception, they placed family above career and career above the welfare of other people. Few discussed their career in terms of intrinsic interest, social usefulness, or self-fulfillment. More than half the freshman women (53%) ranked family concerns first in importance, followed by a combination of economic security, developing a personal identity, or religious beliefs. While the majority of men and women put their first concern for the "good life" first, a substantial minority put "developing a personal identity at the head of their list of expected concerns after graduation. Music Scholarships On Saturday, March 27, from ten to twelve A.M., members of the music faculty of Western Carolina College will be holding scholarship audtions and entrance interviews at Cagle Music Company, Asheville. Scholarship auditions will be held for applicants who wish to enter in the fall of 1965. Preliminary Interviews will be scheduled for students who plan to enter in the fall of 1966. Interested music students should make appointments by writing to Dr. Richard Renfro, WCC, Cullowhee. Baptist Center Dedicated Two Level Structure Contains Speakers Are Named For Religious Emphasis Series Two noted speakers will participate in a Religious Emphasis series at Western Carolina College March 28-31, sponsored by the Inter-Faith Council. The Reverend C. Roland Gerhold of Newark, New Jersey, and Father John Barry of Sylva will alternate as evening speakers in the Gallery of Hunter Library Sunday through Tuesday of that week. They will speak by invitation in various classrooms and other group gatherings and both will be available for discussion sessions following the evening meetings. Father Barry is *» native of Chicago, and was educated for the Catholic priesthood at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in Chicago and at Glenmary Seminary, Cincinnati, Ohio. He was ordained June 1, 1957, and served as assistant pastor and pastor in Sylvania, Georgia, from 1957 to 1962. Since that time he has held pastorates at St. Francis Church, Franklin, and at St. Mary's in Sylva. He is a member of the Sylva Lions Club, Secretary of the Jackson County Jaycees, coach of Little League baseball, President of the Macon County Mental Health Association, and Chairman of Jackson County's 1965 Heart Fund. The Reverend Gerhold is a native of New York City and was educated at Concordia Collegiate Institute at Bronxville and Concordia Theological Seminary in S* Louis, Missouri. He served at Faith Lutheran Church at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and founded a Lutheran church at Chappaqua, New York. The major portion of his iaier service has been in the field of special missions to the deaf. He founded the Mission to the Deaf of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod in New England, and serves as misionary to the deaf in New Jersey. He also train, seminarians for this specialized work. He is advisor to and member of various professional organizations related to this work to visual aids, and to the production of religious literature. Mrs. Gerhold will accompany her husband to the campus, and will be available for discussions with women students. Dr. John B. Bennett, a to the dean at WCC, is faculty advisor for the Inter-Faith Council, and Alex Boyle ol Jacksonville is President. Many Modern Features The Baptist Student Center, located at the entrance to campus, was dedicated on Sunday, March 7, in ceremonies involving students, local people, and visitors. Open House was held on Sunday, March 14, at which time many others had opportunity to view this new facility. Among those present for suitable for public programs on the main floor and a similar room for social and recreational events on a lower floor. Other features are: a small private chapel, library, hostess apartment, guest room, kitchen, offices for the chaplain and receptionist, and a Balcony on the lower level. Stanford University President Slams Berkley Demonstrations Describing the presence of 200 or more outsiders in the recent Berkeley demonstrations as a "regrettable intrusion" on the University of California, President Wallace Sterling of Stanford University told an annual convocation that "What has happened at Berkeley is not a mere fad, nor has it been altogether spontaneous, nor is its cause to be found completely within the university. "If occurrences such as those at Berkeley spread to other campuses, the spread will not necessarily by haphazard like the spread of panty raids. I see in the events at Berkeley an element that is not concerned merely with free speech or with judicial process or with personalizing a univere- THE HIDE-AWAY Sandwiches - Breakfast Short Orders All Student Needs Nationally Advertised Drugs and Cosmetics Monday - Saturday Open 7:30 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. ity. This element is one of disruption and is, in its essence, as undemocratic as can be. I have no way of measuring it, but I am persuaded that it exists." Nothing that college enrollments nationally are expected to double from five to ten million students in the next 15 years, President Sterling said, "Size, as a feature of depersonalization, has strong potential for persistency into the future. This potential will be greatest where enrollments are greatest, namely in large institutions in the public sector." President Sterling observed, "on one hand, students will argue that the university should stop acting 'in loco parentis,' . . . On the other hand, the same students will deplore depersonalization of the university." THE $125,000 BAPTIST STUDENT UNION, RECENTLY completed, was dedicated on Sunday, March 7. Open house at the new building was held the following Sunday, March 14. The structure includes many recreational and entertainment facilities. dedication ceremonies were: Dr. Perry W. Crouch, General Secretary of the Baptist State Convention; Dr. William Smith, Secretary of Student Work; and the Reverend Quen- tin Perreault, former Cullowhee pastor who now coordinates BSU work in North Carolina from Charlotte. Dr. Crouch presented the building on behalf of the Convention, which had provided the funds for the $126,743 structure. Dr. Smith addressed the assembly on "The Why of This Ministry," explaining that there are more than 1100 Baptist students at WCC, and that Baptists of the state have a responsibility to give them opportunity to maintain their church ties. "The students need the spiritual influence now," he said, "and in turn the churches need educated leadership for the future." The two-level structure contains a large assembly room Students Linda Boring and Kohlen Flynn explained how the BSU operates. According to their statements, any Baptist student may become a member, and in so doing he agrees to accept a commission in some phase of the student work. These are faith, citizenship, worship, outreach, and fellowship. The commissions meet on different evenings, and the BSU is happy to supply detailed information to anyone interested. The Reverend Colon Godwin is Baptist Chaplain, and has an office in the new building. THANK YOU LOW COST EUROPEAN TOUR—ideal for college students. Visit Portugal, Spain, Italy, Austria, Switzerland, France, and England. $788. Conducted by Professors John and Ina F. Van Noppen, Appalachian State Teachers College. Write Box 30, Boone, N. C. Cullowhee Hi-Way Service GAS FOR LESS Tires - Tubes - Wash Grease - Batteries - Oil Radford Hooper, Owner-Mgr. Little Juan speaks for millions of needy children oi every race, creed and color, ■who thank you for your support of Catholic Belief Services which made it possible to fill his plate, clothe his body, cure his sickness ana give him hope. You can help others like him by sending* donation to the 1965 CATHOLIC BISHOPS' FUND FOR THE NEEDY OVERSEAS, Empire State Bldg., New York 1, N.Y. (Or the nearest Catholic church.;
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