The Optimist (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 7, Ed. 1, Tuesday, September 20, 1983 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : illus. ; page 11 x 8 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
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Accents:
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News:
'(fat.
Sports
Cats' lose Thomas;
running hack ousted
paged
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Abilene's churches:
1 00 years strong
page 3
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&Uyoluma71 raiSmber 7
::.
United Cable ACU
discuss cable lines
A meeting u conducted Wednesday
to. discuss the lck of United Cable
Television service to the north side of
Jr. Gary 0. McCaleb vice president
and dees of campus life; Dutch
Ueggstt dfascter of KACU-TV; and
Tern Dokn ACU engineer met with
A4vnAia Bosssflf VRVTeal HUInsOi Of
. UiiitedCehkTekviaien.
MeCaleb mU the purpose of the
meeting wh te discuss ft solution fer
the cable situation. "We'd Kke te come
up wHh a solution that k good for us and
feed fer them" Mid McCaleb.
' The eal& was dkeeanectedthk past
rammer when construction began on
the addttiea to the Margret and Her-
msn Brawn library.
The telephone poles en the west side
ef. the library had te he taken down to
atari construction on the wing said Neil
Fry assistant te vke president for
finance. The TV cable that provided
service to the north aide of campus was
Suvug en the potes.
Dekn said the TV CeMe could have
been rerouted and put underground
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TV cask was net put underground with
the telephone eaMe was Hke "Monday
morning quarterbaehmg." Worrying
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gfew wswiv mppwiwi Ulsw nntnlVI Mm
net the answer but instead a sokttion
Team signups begin
for academic contest
Signups for tho ACU College Bowl
will begin Tuesday in the Students'
Association office from 1-5 p.m. said
Steve Sorrells College Bowl co-
director. Signups for the College Bowl an
academk team competition between
ACU students will continue through
Sept. M said SerreUs senior business
manageiwsnt major from Waco. Each
team wiH pay a $M entry fee he said.
SorroMs will co-direct the bowl with
KKy Hargrove senior elementary
education major from Blue Springs
The College Bowl will offer a e
scholarship to the first place team said
SerreUs. Each member of the first
place team will receive a $199
scholarship to apply during the spring
semester be said.
Each team will consist of six ACU
students. Few players and two
alternates wlU make up the six member
teams he said. The teams are open to
ajiy group of six ACU students he said.
Dr. Gary D. McCalob vke president
Air Supply ticket sales
m approach 2500 mark
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evnn mw tvsnnB w vav iui ivvijsm
t ceneert by Friday night said Mark
. Pickle Students' Association
i About liawtkkets kc MWuU
ir sUH avaUabte said Fkkk. tWe
are lM seate wMh aa obstructed ew
i of tk stage that wW net be seM unUl all
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- ' " '
for the existing situation needs to be
found he said.
McCaleb said several alternatives to
reconnect the cable were discussed in
the meeting with Berlin. The two bask
issues considered were whether or not
the cable should be run above or below
ground and whkh routes are the
shortest.
Running the cable underground
might mean digging up a parking lot or
going through underground pipes he
said. . A map of the campus un-
derground would be needed.
McCaleb said Dokn has already
completed some measurements for
running the cable from certain spots on
campus. Dokn said the cable could be
.run underground from Zcllner Hall to
the library and then run above ground
from the library to the Don II. Morris
Center.
Both Edwards Hall and Mabee Hall
may be hooked up from Morris Center
said Dokn.
McCaleb said another issue discussed
in the meeting was the cost and who
would absorb it ACU or United Cable
Television.
'There is no immediate solution to
the cost issue. We are going te wait and
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VW PfWMi mW9mwWlmwiW mnBMB Uw vmr
and men we wp tafc about the east"
saidMeCaleb.
The cable service is used by the
journalism and mass communication
department te receive and to record
cable TV programs for class bv
strtKtien said HeggatL
and dean of campus life said the
scholarship money for the College Bowl
has not been raised yet but he felt
confident it would be raised through
donations.
Trophies also will be awarded to the
first place team members said
Sorrelk
The teams will compete to answer
questions from ACU faculty covering
many different fields said Sorrells.
Questions already received include the
fields of English Bible geology
cultural anthropology and professional
and college sports. More questions will
be included when they are submitted by
faculty.
Tenative times for College Bowl
matches have been set at 8-9:30 p.m. on
Monday Tuesday and Thursday
beginning Sept. 27 said Sorrells.
ACU-TV will film one College Bowl
match each Tuesday and Thursday
said Sorrens. Details on viewing the
matches will be provided to students
when they sign up for the bowl said
Sorrells.
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&Abcm Mt AgwMrgW baIbI Ucettclav Ufl
store sold about Ml tkketa Jay Arty
manager for Record Town said
Monday his store sold about 1W tickets.
Q4M seM about 11 tickets Nancy
YlfHaliimM O-ISS Innnkkssnrr said
Monday
The numhsr of future concerts at
ACU depends on the success of (tie Ak
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Optimist
& abilene christian university
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Pard prattiga
Dr. John C. .Sttynfif ACU ciaocor waves to the crowd during the
Weet Texas Fair and Rodeo Parade Saturday morning. Steven was the
orand nwahaTler 1rparab. TrAadtTroiite bean;6n' Ntrth" Fk-
Street arid proceeded to the fafrsrotibde. About 35 coHege' We)h school
Lectures
Wheaton
By la Mcdonald
OoHmMStsH
Dr. John R. McRay professor of the
New Testament at Wheaton Graduate
School will speak at ACU Oct. 5-7 as
part of the Staley Distinguished
Christian Scholar Lecture Program
said Dr. Thomas Olbricht dean of the
College of Liberal and Pine Arts.
The lectureship program was
initiated In 1SOT by the late Thomas F.
Staley an investment banker who
consulted with several prominent
religious speakers to organize lec-
tureship programs for small Christian
colleges.
The program donated stock to ACU in
m for use as capital in obtaining
lecturers who serve with the Staley
Foundation to speak on campus
Olbricht said.
Each year since the donation the
money has been used by the university
to bring speakers to campus he said.
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Graduate School
A rotating committee of four faculty
members two graduate students and at
least one undergraduate student
selects each year's speaker about one
year in advance Olbricht said.
The committee who selected McRay
consisted of Olbricht Dr. LeMoine
Lewis professor of Bible; Dr. John
Willis professor of Bible; Dr.. Ian Fair
associate professor of Bible; Bill Kreli
who received his Master's of Divinity
from ACU in May; Ken Berry who also
received a Master's of Divinity from
ACU in May and Ann Ferguson who
received a bachelor of science degree in
Bible InMay Olbricht said.
This will be the first time McRay lias
spoken at ACU as a Staley lecturer
Olbricht said.
McRay will speak In Chapel on Oct 5
and then at 8:30 p.m. in Culien
Auditorium on "Archaeology and the
Life of Jesus: His youth and beginning
of ministry "
." v
tuesday
and Junior high school bands including the Big Purple participated in trie
parade. Ths fair whicn provides
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professor to speaki
On Oct. 6 at noon in the Main Room of
the Campus Center McRay will speak
on "Jerusalem in the New Testament
Period." At 8:30 that evening he will
continue on the topic of archaeology
and the life of Jesus.
McRay will speak at 10:05 a.m. Oct. 7
to the Graduate Chapel audience on
"The Role of Archaeology In New
Testament Study." At noon he will
lead a discussion on the excavation of
Caesarea Maritime.
McRay received a bachelor of arts
degree from David Lipscomb College in
1954 and was graduated from the
Harding Graduate School of Religion in
1966. He completed his doctorate
degree in New Testament and Early
Christian Literature in 1967 from the
University of Chicago and later studied
at the Hebrew University and Ecole
Biblique both in Jeruselam Israel.
Currently McRay is serving as a
professor of the New Testament at
Campus Center worker
marks 1 5th anniversary
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Ellison said she has "seen a lot of
students cease and go" to 15 years
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"I just de cvarytMag they UM me to"
she said. "I work with good pa sals"
WMiot said. "I'm as errand girl as watt
asaekaaupfir)."
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IBMiti-:-'
sept. 20 1983.
i
tun and enHHteinment for an ages
. . - ...!
... i
" - ' v' ' '""toft
Wheaton Graduate School. Wheatori
hi ton
111. He has served as a lecturer in ar
chaeology at Vandcrbilt Divinity
School director of religious studies til
Middle Tennessee State University;
research associate at W.F. Albright
Institute of Archaeological Research In
.Jerusalem and visiting professor of!
New Testament Studies at Harding
Graduate School of Religion.
He also was an associate professor of
Bible Greek and church history at
David Lipscomb College and assistant
professor of Bible Greek and church i
history at Harding University. '
McRay has travelled extensively and I
supervised excavating teams in
Caesarea Israel for six years. This
year he supervised excavation in
Sepphoris Israel 1
In addition to his work as an an
chaeologlst and teacher McRay also .
conducted tours of the Middle East for
four yean.
frisaas far diaasr and a movie. Whoa
sbs has time off for a vacation site visits
friends Hurst Ettison said
She U a aMmber of the HUlcrest
church of Christ.
JT MU on said she Ukes workiag with
embroidery aad gives her works to
friends as gifts at Christmas Another
bobby of EWssa's k an occasional
gaaas of bewHag. Sbs likss to bow) "just
to pass Dm time" she said.
"Sbs k very dopeasable aad very
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she has known EMkoa for IS years.
"The studsak are very attsativs to
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ACU'KWisassid.
v
1
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The Optimist (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 7, Ed. 1, Tuesday, September 20, 1983, newspaper, September 20, 1983; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth96077/m1/1/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Christian University Library.