Newspaper Page Text
Black Oak Arkiinsasc Gho
Roberl Klein and
Ingredient was $50:
returns on this con
$797.00, which made
piiid out for the concert total
LIBRA?vY
The Main student
5 00. Gross general public
ert C3HRISTI?lW‘C}©tLB<^x' re
nutuul PB8t;i li)t* door wiiti liujiato
sen
nd $2 50
tickets
juiriHi at
sefore a
student will Ix' allowiti in, and
an A.('. student will Ih‘ allowtni
to purchase no more tluin 2
KvS.A.NDI ulcgins
Tuesday, October 10 in Room
211 of Hines Hall the En
tertainment Committee met to
discuss the Homecoming Con
cert. -Much to the dismay of
several committee members, it
was discovered that Mike Green,
Committee Chairman, had
already chosen and contracted
two bands for the Homecoming
Concert. Mr. Green explained
that he took this responsibility
on himself due to lack of time
and a minimal choice in
available bands. The Com
mittee, per se, never voted on
who or what to have for the
concert. Mr. Green’s choices
were made through a local
Wilson agency, Lamm
productions, and they are Black
Oak Arkansas and Brownsville
Station. Black Oak Arkansas is
Th
well-known on the West Coast,
but a relatively unknown group
on the East Coast. Their music is
basicallv similar to the hard
rock type. To counter-balance
the hard rock sound Brownsville
Station plays music from the
1950s “The kind you heard in
high school to quote Mr. Green.
Therefore, according to the
Committee Chairman, all music
lovers should be satisfied. In
terestingly enough only eight out
of eighteen people present at the
meeting plan to stay for Home
coming.
Next on the order of business
was a budget discussion. The
total budget for the year was
$24,300.00. Robert Klein cost
$1050.00, The Main Ingredient,
$3,575.00, with the sound system
and College Entertainment
Association costing $400.00 for
this concert. Total cost for
e C
$4228.00. The only other ex-
pt'nditure this year has been a
$3000.00 advance payment for
the two Homecoming bands. The
cost for these two bands will be
$4500,00 for Black Oak Arkan
sas; $1500.00 for Brownsville
Station, with approximately
$900.00 alloted for promotion and
sound system costs. This makes
a total of $69(K),00 for the Home
coming Concert.
The next item of business was
a discussion on the price of
tickets and when to put them on
sale. After a verbal battle and
inane argument on how to keep
A C. students from purchasing
student tickets for outsiders, the
Committee decided to charge
tickets.
Following the agreement on
ticket prices Roln'rt Thomas
asked why a concert had to Ix'
held at Homecoming. He statwi
that he would rather h;ue one
g0(xi concert, regardlt'ss of cost,
than two lousy ones. Much
debate followiHi on the principle
of this suggestion and Sieve
Harrell suggested why not have
a student poll to find out what the
students wanted. Both
suggestions were rejwted.
Finally, Chairman Mike
Green brought up the idea of
toving a H(K‘k Opera, Hare
Krishna in concert on Dec. 8.
Ilaie Kri>liiia is hard nx’k, an
electric light show, and ojx-ra all
rollwi into one It is p«>rformeti
by a well-known and renimnetl
group that has played at LSI',
\ a Commonwealth. Holy Cross,
,\ew York, Pittsburgh, and is
schwiuled to [x-rforni at Duke,
K.tM'., and Camptx-11 in this
area Cost for this performance
will Ix- $15tKKK) with publicity
suppliwi by the group Tlx-
Concert and Lecture CommittiH'
will co-sponsor this group and
Fike High School Auditorium
will Ih“ (he l(X-ation of the [x-r-
formance
The last item of l)usiness
anncHinciHi by Mike (irtvn was a
concert by Crown Zeller and
Balls, two kx'al groups, Thurs
day, October 12 in the Old Civm.
Starling time is 7:30 p.ni .Ml
,\,C, student-s will he admittinl
free of charge.
olle^iate
I Irt'f i-.ui itf nnn sr yiMn/ i»r h.iil. tnil t i-rl.iinh iiithoiil Iffi-tlmii il ii ill in i> t hr
.inylhiiiu htil h.ul." HIhtI <
PUBLISHED WEEKLY ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, OCTOBER 12, 1972 NUMBER SIX
Even three-year olds i>articipate in the Trick or Treat for
UNICEF collection on Halloween. For children of all ages
October 31st has been officially designated National
UNICEF Day by Presidential proclamation.
I Photo: Middletown, N.J., Courier)
McGovern Tour
Coming To Wilson
Unicef Builds For A
More Peaceful World
Children
Concert
HyJ.KOSSALBEI?T
On Saturday night a large
audience of the Wilson Com
munity Concert Association was
thrilled by the Obernkirchen
Children's Choir in the Fike High
School Auditorium.
The young singers from
Schaumburger, Germany, took
the audience on a folksong ex
cursion around the world. They
presented songs from the United
States, Brazil, England, Ger
many and France. They con
tinued with songs from Spain,
Hungary, Sweden, Turkey,
Israeli, and Japan. After the
vocal tour the listeners were
brought back home with the
Spiritual finale, I’m Going to
Sing.
The children proved con
clusively that they could sing in
lovely clear tones. Such a con
cept of child beauty was a
pleasant surprise to many of
those present who are more used
to the little breathy voices so
often associated with children’s
choirs.
It was a delight to hear the
singers control with confidence
and with good vocalise the many
different style of the
Renaissance Madrigal and
Chanson was expressed with
detailed integrity. The songs of
pathos were done with the
sadness that only a hurt child
can feel.
Whether for joyous ex
pressions or for serious laments,
their voices lifted easily and
lovely to high notes and to low.
Their singing seemed to be able
to bend to every mood. The only
exception was evident in the
lusty, slightly bawdy lyrics of
See CONCERT Page 4
Circle K w ill be sponsoring a
bloodmobile in aid to the Red
Cross on Oct, 18-20. It will be
located in Hardy Alumni Hall,
and will be open to all donors
3l these hours:
Wed. 12 - ,5; Thurs. 11 - 4;
Fri. 10 - 2,
There is a tremendous
demand for blood in all areas
of hospital work, and all it
takes to help out is 45 minutes
of your time. What's a brief
moment of pain from a needle,
when you could be saving
someone’s life?
All .\CC students are urged
to come by and help with this
worthy cause.
WILSON, N.C. — The
McGovern Grassroots Grass
hopper Tour will be in Wilson,
Thursday, Oct. 19 to participate
in the grand opening of the local
Wilson County Citizens for
McGovern-Shriver Head
quarters it was announced today
by Mrs. W. E. Fenner, Wilson
County McGovern-Shriver
Campaign Chairwoman.
Among the celebrities
travelling with the tour and
participating in the local
ceremonies will be: Terry
McGovern, daughter of
Democratic presidential can
didate Senator George
McGovern; Liz Carpenter,
former press secretary to Mrs.
Lyndon B, Johnson; Sissy
Farenthald, Democratic
nominee for Governor of Texas
this past year and a nominee for
Vice President at the 1972
Democratic National Con
vention; and James Henry
Faulk, entertainer.
The McGovern Grassroots
Grasshopper Tour is to be a 6-
day swing through the Southern
states to solicit support for the
McGovern-Shriver campaign.
Wilson is the second stop on the
North Carolina segment of the
tour which will also include stops
in Greenville, Raleigh, Durham,
Chapel Hill, and Charlotte.
National media coverage of
the tour will be provided by
representatives of the New York
Times, and major television
networks, including Mike
Wallace on special assignment
for CBS’s program “60
Minutes.”
The national reporters are
accompanying the tour in an
effort to sample public opinion at
each stop and draw together a
composite picture of Southern
voter reaction to the McGovern-
Shriver campaign.
In addition to the Wilson
County citizens for McGovern-
Shriver Chairwoman, Mrs.
Fenner, other local McGovern-
Shriver volunteers participating
in the planning of the grand
opening ceremonies include
Mrs. B. B. Plyler Jr., Howard
Jones, Dr. William Duckworth,
Jim Abbott, and Kim Taylor,
Student Coordinator for
McGovern-Shriver at Atlantic
Christian College.
The time for the grand opening
See McGOVERN Page 4
In 19()5, when UNICKF was
awarded the Nobel Prize for
F^cace, a member of the Nolx'l
Committee remarked, "To
create a peaceful world, we
must begin with the children.”
If children are to take an
active part in building in
ternational cooperation, they
must be Ix'tter fed, healthy, and
educated. The United Nations
Children's Fund is dedicated to
removing the obstacles to
growth faced by the one billion
children now living in the
developing countries of Africa,
Asia, and Latin America.
In every project UNICEF and
its partner — the developing
country — share responsibility.
Most of UNICEF’s assistance
takes the form of needed
equipment, while over one-third
of its aid supports the training of
l(X,'al teachers, health workers
and other personnel. The
assisted country makes sub
stantial commitments of its
manpower and natural
resources which more than
match the value of UNICEF’s
investment. On the average, the
assisted nation spends $2.50 for
every dollar UNICEF spends on
its child care programs.
Because of this sharing of
responsibility and because
UNICEF selects pilot or
demonstration projects which
can serve as mixlels for more
extensive national efforts,
UNICEF aid acts as a catalyst.
It stimulates programs that
countries can carry on for their
own children. UNICEF’s in
ternational staff, located
throughout the developing
world, assists local ad
ministrators in making the most
effective use of UNICEF aid
within the context of the coun
try's development plaas, and
coordinates this aid with other
agencies in international
I n d i % i (1 u a I class
photographs may be picked up
(HI .Monday, October 23,
Tuesday, October 2t; and
Wednesday, October 25.
Pictures may be picked up
between the hours of !(-,00 a,m.
and 5:(I0 p.m. in Hardy .Alumni
Hall. Students will vh(H)se
pictures for the class section
in the yearbook and also
evainine proofs for their own
personal purchase.
development.
For over 25 years, the funding
for these programs has Ix'en
entirely voluntary — by govern
ments and private organizations
and individuals who support
U.MCEF. During most of those
years, an important and growing
source of UNICEF's income has
been the Trick or Treat
collection on Halloween. The
coins which are dropped into the
familiar black and orange
cartons by U.S. citizens add up
to millions of dollars (almost
$3,500,000 last year) for
UNICEF's worldwide child care
efforts.
Collecting for UNICEF
rewards America’s own children
with a sense of sharing, and
helps to bring fo<Kl and water,
the relief of p;un, the t(X)ls of
learning, and the knowledge that
others care to millions of young
sters in 111 countries of the
developing world.
NTE
Scheduled
The National Teacher
Examinations will be ad
ministered on November 11,
1972, at Atlantic Christian
College I Hardy Alumni Hall)
which lias btH?n designated as a
test center.
According to Zeb M.
Whitehurst, HI, Dean of
Students, college seniors
preparing to teach and teachers
applying for positioas in sch(X)l
systems which encourage or
require the NTE are eligible to
take the tests. In addition, the
designation of Atlantic Christian
College as a test center for these
examinations will give
prospective teachers in this area
an opportunity to compare their
performance on the
examinations with candidates
throughout the country who take
the tests, Whitehurst said.
Last year approximately
120,000 candidates took the
examinations wich are designed
to assess cognitive knowledge
and understanding in
professional education, general
education and subject-field
specialization. The
examinations, which are
prepared and administered by
Educational Testing Service of
See NTK Page 4