User talk:Tigerbaritone

Looking for sources
Robert Meyers and James Atkinson, possibly other faculty, and several students were fired or expelled by Benson over disagreements on the issue of segregation, and many other faculty/students were also dismissed for expressing a variety of opinions with which Benson took issue (mostly political or theological stuff). I've seen sourcing on that in the past, but am currently having trouble relocating it. Do you have an idea where this can be sourced? Thanks~ Jacona (talk) 12:40, 19 April 2021 (UTC)


 * Meyers discusses his release in Voices of Concern p253: "When the president of the school, under urging by some members of the Bible faculty, decided against renewing my contract, he acted wisely." Michael D. Brown in his Arkansas Times article says "Bill Floyd graduated and moved on. Within three years, Robert Meyers and James Atkinson were gone, too, driven out for their failure to toe the Harding party line". I haven't seen anywhere about students being dismissed; Floyd clearly was allowed to graduate. Tigerbaritone


 * This is not exactly what you asked about because it is mostly about Ganus' tenure, but along the "political stuff" theme from Hicks 1994. I'll quote it at length so you can pick out anything that seems useful to you, starting on p90.

'The severest Harding faculty critic of NEP influence was Dr. James L Atteberry, head of the English Department. In 1966, Atteberry published an unofficial history of Harding College, in which he praised NEP's influence on the development of the school. In this history, Atteberry concluded that the "favorable national image enjoyed by Harding College during the period of accelerated building derived primarily from two focal points. The most important was the widespread popularity of Dr. Benson. But an important concomitant element was the publicity gained through the activities of the National Education Program... [which] continued to win friends for the school; and many individuals initially impressed by Dr. Benson through contacts with the program ultimately became firm supporters of Harding College also." By 1969, after sixteen yeas of service to Harding, Atteberry evidently had completely changed his attitude about NEP. According to Atteberry, (note: p91 begins here) his difficulties with the Harding administration began with a speech he made to the assembled Harding faculty in September 1967. In this speech, entitled "What I would Like to See Harding Be In 1967-1968," he voiced a sincere desire for Harding truly to become a community of scholars who searched for truth, rather than a group of pedantic obscurantists. Atteberry hoped: "that we can commit ourselves to truth-seeking in letters, in science, and religion. I hope we can free ourselves from and keep ourselves uncommitted to any static social, economic, political, or religious views, substituting instead a constant quest for truth in all areas of human understanding. In this connection I hope we can take positive steps to change our national image so that we will be recognized primarily as a Christian rather than as a political institution." Atteberry eventually was asked to resign on April 7, 1969, rather than wait for dismissal by the Harding College Board of Directors. He rather grudgingly resigned. While his resignation may have been a direct result of philosophical and theoretical differences with the Harding administration, he insisted that he never publicly disagreed with any position taken by the administration except about NEP's negative influence on the image of Harding College. In his defense, Atteberry stated: "As far as I can remember, the only program I have ever criticized on the Harding campus is the National Education Program, which I understood over the years to be specifically and officially not a part of Harding College. I have long regretted the national image provided for Harding College because of the presence of the National Education Program offices on her campus. I have expressed myself on this point to Dr. Benson and to Dr. Ganus during their terms as presidents of Harding College. I believe my regret for this unfortunate image is shared by many other people on this campus and away from here. (note: Ref 106 that I'll include below is placed here) In the end, Atteberry's resignation polarized the faculty, and during NEP's years on the campus, several Harding faculty resigned because of philosophical differences with NEP. Included in this group were Dr. Joel Anderson, who went on to become a very outspoken critic of NEP, and Dr. Joseph Spaulding, who had unfavorably reviewed Barry Goldwater's Conscience of a Conservative, thereby incurring the wrath of George (note: p92 begins here) Benson and NEP supporter Dr. Frank Rhodes, who earlier had been a militant anti-Communist speaker among the faculty. (note: Ref 107 that I'll include below is placed here)'

Reference 106 (p160): 'Cited in Atteberry, "Story of Harding College: Spring 1969," 50. According to Atteberry, his faculty opposition was headed by J. D. Bales, the leading NEP advocate on the campus. Cited in Atteberry, "Story of Harding College: Spring 1969," 65.'

Reference 107 (p160): 'Cited in Money, "Church-State Relations," supp., passim. Interestingly, Frank Rhodes later resigned from Harding in bitterness, apparently due to a disagreement with Benson and Bales.'

Tigerbaritone

conversations
I see you have not edited much on wikipedia under this username. Welcome to the encyclopedia! If you have questions on how to make something work, feel free to ask. I appreciate your efforts to improve the George S. Benson article. From the time I first viewed it, I have always felt it would be great to break out the NEP as it's own article, it was a really influential and widely-discussed entity back in the day. Unfortunately, my schedule just won't allow it. I was wondering if you might be interested in doing so? Thanks for listening! Jacona (talk) 13:58, 19 April 2021 (UTC)


 * Thanks ! Yeah, I'm super-new to it. But the helps are pretty good, and I've been learning a lot from you already by copying your syntax. I'm glad you brought up the NEP article, because I had been debating whether to create one. It had been on my list, but when I looked at ones I thought were comparable (i.e. Christian Crusade - Billy James Hargis; Christian Anti-Communist Crusade - Fred Schwarz), I saw that they just re-directed to the founder's page. NEP was maybe a bit more significant, and not entirely a one-man show. So you think it'd be sufficiently notable? Tigerbaritone 3:30, 23 April 2021 (UTC)