Newspaper Page Text
IANUARY 15, 1976
the collegiate
PAGE THREE
BSU Alive And Well
Coach Ben Pomeroy huddles with the team in a recent home game. His instructions were followed as
the basltetbali team rolled over Wesleyan. The coach should remember that a team likes a coach to
look up to, not down on.
Self-Study Questionnaires
By JOHN PACA
Last week students, faculty
members, and alumni of
Atlantic Christian received
lengthy questionnaires seeking
their evaluations and comments
on many aspects of the college.
The student questionnaire, for
instance, covered the following
areas: Purpose, Organization
and Administration,
Educational Program and
Faculty, Student Development
Services (Social Organizations
and Educational Activities),
Student Development Services
(Counseling and Guidance),
Physical Plant, Special Ac
tivities, and a final section
regarding dormitory facilities.
The questionnaires were a
part of the comprehensive self-
study the college has been un
dergoing since the spring of 1975,
and it will end when a visiting
committee from the Southern
Christian Association validates
the study in the fall of 1976.
Last fall the campus bustled
with activity as administrators,
faculty members, and students
attended meetings and
responded to departmental
questionnaires in connection
with the self-study.
The study is a routine matter
every ten years for institutions
seeking to renew their ac
creditation.
But Dr. J. P. Tyndall, Director
of the Study, and Eugene Pur
cell, chairman, as well as the
faculty members and students
involved, emphasized the
positive effects the study will
have on the college.
By examining things like
teacher effectiveness, extra
curricular activities, and library
facilities, the participants in the
program hope to plan, set goals,
and direct the institution in the
years to come.
Those questionnaires com
pleted and returned will be sent
through a computer, and the
tabulated results will be
available for the nine com-
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mittees on Standards in
February.
These committees will use the
information from the
questionnaires to compile their
reports, which will be due on
April 15.
The percentage of students
and alumni responding to the
comprehensive questionnaires,
according to Dr. Tyndall, will
also be significant in the self-
study’s evaluation.
American Arts
Continued From Page One
Chamber Players with Marvin
Lamb conducting. J. Ross Albert
and Hal Tyson will be soloists.
Albert will sing two sets of
songs by Charles Ives, and
Tyson will perform two
movements of Ives’ ‘‘Sonata
Number 1,” in addition to ac
companying Albert. The
chamber players will perform
two especially innovative works
by Cage. The first work,
“Imaginary Landscape Number
Four,” is scored for 12 radios.
The second work is Cage’s
celebrated piano work, “4
minutes, 33 seconds.”
The second concert will be a
lecture recital bv Linda Pruitt
Stutzenburger on “The Piano
Works of Henry Cowell,” on Jan,
22, at 8 p.m., in the choral room
of Hackney Music Building.
The lecture recital will survey
Cowell’s piano output, breaking
down his compositions into
several distinct categories: tone
cluster pieces, aleatoric pieces,
rhythmically experimental
pieces and inside-the-piano
pieces.
Mrs. Stutzenberger is
chairman of the keyboard
division at Shenadoah Con
servatory of Music, Winchester,
Va. She holds the Bachelor of
Music degree from George
Peabody College and is
currently a doctoral candidate
at the University of Maryland
She has performed on the
Shenadoah Artist Series, the
Shenandoah Arts Festival and
the University of Maryland
International Piano Festival.
Both concerts are open to the
public. There will be no ad
mission charge.
The Baptist Student L'nion is
alive and well on the campus of
■Atlantic Christian Collefje as
proved by the very successful
semester that the BSl’ ex
perienced last fall. A now
meeting place has Ix'en provided
by the First Baptist Church.
Known as "The House,” the
reiiKxieled house on Nash St. has
been the scene of the activities
this year. Along with the new
house came a very capable
advisor in the new assistant
piistor. Bill Edwards. He, along
with Cynthia Overman and
Susan Dubois, leads the BSU in
n\any of its activities.
Besides the meetings on the
secotid and fourth Tuesdays of
each month, the members are
involved in expt'riences that
stem from their Involvement in
BSU. Several members attended
the annual fall convention at
Hidgecrest and exchanged ideas
with students from other
colleges in North Carolina. Ruth
Jordan, Yvette Whitney, and
Lois Ann Wasson acted as
hostesses at the International
Students’ Conference held at
Chowan College over the
Thanksgiving holidays. The
Outreach Team, consisting of
Becky Kigart, Bobby Traylor,
Vvette Whitney, Steve Sorrell.
Eleanor Harmen, and Debbie
Cosy, lus made several singing
appearances in churches. Under
the direction of Clyde Patterson,
a Ih‘11 choir has also bi>en
organized. Cynthia Overman,
Melba Etheridge. Ruth Jordan,
•Angela Edwards. Cathy Turner,
Lois .Ann Wasson, Susan Dubois,
and Ricky Clayton gave their
first performance before
Christmas
.A lock-in was held in
Decemlx'r and from thcxse who
made through the entire night, it
was learned that the l(K’k-in was
a success.
Special thanks for a produc
tive year in BSl' go to Bill
Edwards and Dr. Roger Bullard
for their time and leadership
to Cynthia Overman and Susan
Dubois who planned the
meetings, and to Frances Currm
who headed up the c(M>king
committee.
.An open invitation is extended
to everyone to come and eat
supper with the BSU on the
meeting nights at 5 o’clock.
.Marsha Cunninglmm
People We Know.
Dr. Ruby G. Barnes, chairman
of the Atlantic Christian College
Department of Nursing, has
been appointed to the Joint
Advisory Committee on Nursing
Education to the State Board of
Education.
The appointment was made
jointly by Dr. William C. Friday,
president of the University of
■North Carolina, and Dr. Ben f:.
Fountain Jr., president of the
N.C. Department of Community
Colleges.
Dr. Barnes' appointment will
be for a term beginning
January, 1976 through
Decemter, 1978.
Five members of the Atlantic
Christian College Department of
■Nursing have recently been
elected to state and local offices
in the .North Carolina Nurses'
Association (NCNA).
Dr. Ruby G. Barnes was
named chairman of the Forum
on Baccalaureate and Higher
Degree Education.
■Mrs. Peggy Dulaney was
named chairman of the
Psychiatric-Mental Health
■Nursing Division.
Mrs. Agnes Vester was named
as secretary for District 18,
NCNA.
Mrs. Jessie Sisk was named as
treasurer for District 18, NCNA.
Mrs. Evelyn Pruden was
selected as a member of the
Nominating Committee for
District 18, NCNA,
David Arnold of Wilson, a
senior music education major,
hiis been named recipient of the
(Iroves L. Herring .Memorial
Scholarship at Atlantic Christiar
College for the current academic
year.
The scholarship is available to
an (xiLstanding senior majoring
in music at the college,
RecipienLs are chosen by a jury
of two music faculty members
and one student. Arnold was
selected for the .scholarship on
his ability as a music composer.
In addition to the scholarship
award, he was recipient of first
prize in the College Division of
the North Carolina Music
Teachers Asswiation Com
position Contest. He has been
invited as a student participant
to the North Carolina Composers
Conference to be held at Salem
College, in January, 1976.
In the spring of 1975, Arnold
was selectt>d to participate in an
electronic music master class
held by .Morton Subotneck at the
University of .North Carolina at
Greensboro. He has studied
composition with William Duck
worth and Marvin Lamb,
Art Weaving
Continued F
design problems which confront
the painter and sculptor are
present in Mrs. Horie’s
hangings: color, texture, shape,
space, technique, and ex
pression, The familiarity of the
yarns and the weaving technique
makes it easier, perhaps, for the
spectator to understand and
appreciate the creative process
than would be the case with
painting and sculpture where
subject matter is often
demanded.
Sizes range from sym
metrical, sensitive pieces to
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Frostings
WORLD
Halrdeslgners
John Price
Larry Pierce
rom Page One
powerful examples which
demand attention, Theweavings
in the show include such varied
pieces as an authentic Scotch
plaid rendered in an appealing
heavy yarn, a powerful hanging
of rich velvets and fluffy yarn
fringes, and a 10-foot three-
dimensional hanging suspended
from the ceiling and draped
across the center of the gallery.
■Many pieces contain humorous
elements which provide an ef
fective change of pace.
Those interested in the arts
should find the show to be
especially interesting. The
closing date is Jan. 30.
Individuals and school groups
are welcome. There is no ad
mission charge. Gallery hours
are: weekdays, 10 a.m.-4:30
p.m., and Sundays, 1:30-3:30
p.m.
Still waters
run deep