The Donald Woods Shriver Papers consist of three typed documents. In the 1965 sermon "The Case of the King of the Jews," Shriver imagines the events leading to Jesus's crucifixion from the point of view of Pontius Pilate. "Justice and Compromise at Chicago: The Case of North Carolina" contains Shriver's reflections on racial politics ...
MoreThe Donald Woods Shriver Papers consist of three typed documents. In the 1965 sermon "The Case of the King of the Jews," Shriver imagines the events leading to Jesus's crucifixion from the point of view of Pontius Pilate. "Justice and Compromise at Chicago: The Case of North Carolina" contains Shriver's reflections on racial politics and the credentials debate after his participation in the North Carolina delegation to the 1968 Democratic National Convention. "Memo to a Young McCarthyite from an Older One," dated 1969, discusses idealism and compromise in politics after peace candidate Eugene McCarthy lost the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination to Hubert Humphrey. Presbyterian minister and former North Carolina State University faculty member Donald Woods Shriver, Jr. (1927- ) received his B.A. from Davidson College in 1951, his B.D. from Union Theological Seminary in 1955, his S.T.M. from Yale University Divinity School in 1957, and his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1963. Shriver began his career at N.C. State in 1962 as the Presbyterian University Minister. He joined the N.C. State faculty in 1964 as the director of Experimental Study of Religion in Society at the School of Liberal Arts under a grant from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, and held this position until 1968. In 1965, Shriver became an adjunct assistant professor of religion, and became an associate professor of religion, as well as the director of the University Program on Science and Society, in 1968.
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