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Dogs Top
Guilford
Be it ever so humble, there’s
niace like home. Or at least
Ta was the case here Mon<tey
2t as the Bulldogs downed a
that
finished fourth
ITa competition last year and
^ ITIU record to the
rvm So most people
! lSie Monday night at the
rSuanie would be better
2seeingal-9teamplaya6-l
t as Alfred Hitchcock
Ss says, “Save the ending
®it'appeared to be the same
eildcS'team during the ^irs
half except there was more
iusiams, (Due to the large
crowd-well, larger than
irday night). There was not
fttmuchenthisiasm among the
crowd in the first half. As a
of fact, some poeple left
Se half when the Dogs were
*But the second half was
(pardon the cliche) another ball
eame. AC came back on the floor
with fire in their eyes and desire
in their tummies. AC made 11
points to Guilford’s 5 m the
opening minutes and tied the
same at 48 all with 16-.22 left in
the game. Bob Gant made the
field goal that pushed the Dogs
ahead and they stayed ahead for
the remainder of the game. By
the time you read this, it should
be common knowledge that Ron
Farina made 14 of 17 shots at the
charity line (Dec. 10., he scored
n of the 15 points scored in the
opening minutes of the second
half at Elon -AC dropped
tliatSone 92-79.)
Don’t get the idea that this was
a one man show though, it
wasn’t. There was a great team
effort. The Dogs had a balanced
attack with four players
finishing in the double figures.
Ron lead the attack with 26
points, Gant had 23, Bryan Chalk
contributed 15 and Cliff Black
pushed in 10. If scoring is not
Billy Sauls’, Joe Jeffcoat’s or
Jim Jone’s forte, rebounding is.
By the way, these guys scored 9,
8 and 3 points respectively. The
Bulldogs out-rebounded the
fighting Quakers 42 to 41. They
also out shot the Auakers from
the floor 46 per cent to 47 per
cent.
But dear students, let me
commend you for waking up in
the second half. Those students
ATI ANTlCOiSU&^AN COLLEGE, DECEMBER 17, 1970
a
1
- ^ r 'I
&
points as T
no avail ♦
the fTI!- “P set
night JJr
Christmas is just around the corner and you can find Santa just about anywhere. Miss Nancy
Jackson, a freshman at Atlantic Christian, found Santa last week out at Parkwood and just
couldn’t resist giving the holly man a big hug. I don’t imagine ole Saint Nick minded very much,
do you?
that left to watch the football
game were replaced by students
that heard the yelling going on in
the gym (the ref either made a
bad call or made a good call i.e.
two technicals on the Guilford
team.) Anyway, without your
help or hoarse shouts, the Dogs
would not have been able to push
ahead. It was almost as if we had
an extra ref out there playing on
our team. Therefore your
support is needed to have a
winning season. So much for the
sermon.
Considering that the Guilford
team had an average of five
inches height advantage per
man over AC and considering
David Smith scored 80 points in
his last two games and was held
to only 21 (the Dogs let him have
six) Monday night, the Bulldogs
did a whale of a job defeating
Guilford. It might be considered
an upset by some.
New Art On Campus
By JIM ABBOTT
“Well, I think they are
beautiful if anybody likes them.
But personally I don’t like
them.” This is the reaction one
snack bar worker had towards
the 3 silkscreen prints recently
purchased by the ARA food
service and presently hanging in
the snack bar.
The prints were purchased by
ARA at the urging of Ralph
Grumpier, director of the ARA
food service at ACC. Norbert
Irvine, of the Department of Art
acted on behalf of Crumpler in
making the purchase from he
Corcoran Art Gallery in
Washington, D.C. The framed
prints were reportedly pur-
Lectures
The Convocation Coordinating
Committee devoted its fall
program to drug usage and
abuse. The committee presented
a series of lectures and dis
cussions revolving around three
aspects of the drug scene;
personal experience, legal and
medical aspects and socio-psy-
chological aspects of drug
usage.
Miss Barbara Eisenstadt,
former drug user of the
University of Florida visited the
ACC campus Dec. 2 and 3 to talk
with students concerned with the
drug scene. Miss Eisenstadt, a
consultant to the National Insti
tute of Mental Health is
presently working in the
rehabilitation phase of the druge
scene. In her discussion with
students and faculty members,
Three student directed one-act
plays were presented on campus
last Wednesday and Friday
nights. In the plali “Winners,”
Gwen Doughty and Steve Hunt
portray teenage lovers in
“trouble” prior to their up-
See LECTURES Page 2 coming marriage.
chased for $25.00 each.
Collaborating in the making of
two of the prints were two well
known artists, Lou Stovall and
Lloyd McNeill. McNeill was the
single conceiver of the “Love
Now” print. Irvine told the
Collegiate that the “Feed kids”
poster was done irigi2nally to
help raise funds for Biarfra
relief agencies. Irvine also noted
that one critic for the
Washington Post acclained the
print as, “one of the greatest
ever to be produced by gthe
Corcoran workshop.”
The bicycle print was done by
Stovall and McNeill for a
‘bicycle day’ held last year on
the elipse in D.C.
For the past year or so, the
Corcoran has assisted in the
sponsoring of a silkscreen
workshop in D.C located near
Dupont Circle. The workship,
said Irvine provided a place
where kids mainly from the
ghetto could come anytime day
or night and work with
silkscreens. However this ap
proach soon proved to be too
expensive to cintinue. Now the
workshop is open 2 afternoons
each week almost exclusively to
ghetto children.
Although the workshop idea is
relatively new, Irvine said,
attempts are being made to
establish similar workshops at
Rutgers University and at
Morehouse College in Atlanta.
Irvine praised Crumpler and
ARA for taking the “first step in
the purchasing art work for a
building on campus.” The
college itself has done nothing in
this area he observed. Irvine is
hopeful that in the near future
the college will take the
initiative to either seek art work
on a loan basis or purchase art
forms to be placed on campus
and in various buildings.
NUMBER TWELVE
Governor
Speaks
The N. C. Department of Con
servation and Development held
a banquet in the Atlantic Chris
tian (College Student Center
Cafeteria last Friday. Digni
taries included Governor Bob
Scott, Congressman L. H.
Fountain, and Astronaut Donn
Eisele of Apollo 7. The meeting,
honoring members of the State
Board of C&D, was preceded by
a demonstration organized by
the ACC chapter of ZPG.
The number of ACC students
involved is elusive, depending
upon the source of information.
Onlookers report about 25
student carrying placards with
such slogans as, “Will the New
Hope Be Lost Hope,” and
“Pollution is a Now Problem.”
News and Observer reports
stretched the figure to 60, which
ZPG members claim 50 ACC
students were involved. The
actual number of CC partici
pants seems to hover between 20
and 25. Other participants are
neighborhood residents and
students from other schools.
The News and Observer
reports as well as ZPG’s figure
seems to have been inspired by
including interested onlookers
who appeared when the
governor stepped outside to talk
to the protestors.
Governor Scott talked to the
students promising state action
on the cleaning of our natural
resources, “but it cannot be done
overnight.”
The demonstration, prompted
by the controversial New Hope
Dam project dedicated by Scott
last week, was peaceful and
orderly. ZPG spokesman,
Harvey Davis, expressed mal
content with press coverage at
the Saturday morning meeting
of the C&D indicating forceful
conduct by his group. He told the
committee he and his fellows
only wished to establish lines of
communication and that the
invitation to the Saturday
meeting was an affirmative step
in that direction.
Davis went further to offer the
assistance of his group in
cleaning up the environment. He
and William Davis wrote a letter
to the editor of the Daily Times
thanking them for their fair
coverage of the demonstration.
It was in this letter that ZPG
claimed the 50 ACC student
figure.
Governor Bob Scott spoke to a
gathering of demonstrators
Friday night outside the Student
Center. Scott spoke to the
students on the subject of
ecology. Although the demon
stration was a peaceful one news
coveraged deemed it differently.