Newspaper Page Text
piiRLISHED WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, FEBRUARY 3, 1977
NUMBER FOURT£±N
Good
Evening!
I Feel Terrible
The Flu has been making
the rounds on campus these
past few weeks; it seems that
M one is safe. The infirmary
has had all the patients it can
handle Many have been
forced to miss class. We take a
lode at the Flu on our editorial
page today in. an editorial
entitled “T he Da mnable F lu. ”
Energy Crisis
Based on the energy crisis
and the request of Pres.
Carter to conserve fuel, the
college plans to place campus
thermostats on 68 degrees.
Faculty, staff, and student
cooperation will be ap
preciated.
Depression Seminar
Several local organizations
will sponsor a public in
formation seminar on
depression tonight at 7:30 in
the Learning Center
auditorium in Wilson
Memorial Hospital.
Discussions will cover the
causes and description of the
disease; symptoms;
management and treatment
for the disease; alcohol and
depression; and old age and
depression. The seminar is
designed for professionals, but
should also be helpful to the
general public in furthering
their understanding of a
community health problem.
Registration will begin at 7
p.m.
Gamma Delta Iota
Gamma Delta Iota will meet
tonight at 6; 30 in Hines 208.
Jobs with PACE
Students interested in ap
plying for a job through the
PACE program this summer
may pick up the applications
from the financial aid office.
ACC will certify a certain
number of applications and
the students having the
greatest financial need will be
certified first. If you have
questions concerning the
above program, please corv
tact the financial aid office.
Alpha Omega
The Alpha Omega
Fellowship will meet tonight
at 7:00 in the Old Gym.
Everyone is welcome.
Coffee House
The Campus Christian
Association will sponsor a
coffee-house on Feb. 9 from 9
to 10:30 p.m. in Hardy Alumni
Hall. Featured will be the
Covenant Players Inter
national Repertory Theatre.
They will also be featured in a
worship service on Thursday,
February lo at 11:00 a.m. in
Howard Chapel.
Concert at State
Jazzman Ramsey Lewis will
appear in concert at the
Stewart Theatre on the
campus of N.C. State
University on Sat., Feb. 19.
Performances start at 7 and
^■30 p.m. Tickets may be
purchased at the door.
Students Gain Experience
in Valuable Field Work
Begun in the spring of 1969,
supervised internship or field
experience became an integral
part of the B.S. major for both
psychology and sociology at
ACC. A casual discussion be
tween a faculty member and an
alumnus, Mr. R. B. Hawkins,
class of ’31, led to planning and
the first such work for credit in
the Psychology Department.
Both psychology and sociology
majors took the course entitled
Psychology of Social Work. Mr.
Hawkins, then supervisor for the
Eastern Region of the
Vocational Rehabilitation
Agency, arranged his schedule
to be with the students during his
lunch hour two days a week,
teaching without salary. Lec
tures, discussions, field trips,
and actual work experience
were the content of the course,
as they are now. Several
enrolled at that time are
currently employed by social
agencies in North Carolina,
Later, Mr, Folmsbee in the
Psychology Department was
assigned the course and has
taught it until the present. With
the addition of the B. S. major in
that department and the
beginning of the Social Work
Concentration in Sociology, an
adjunct professor was employed
for the latter program. Mr. Dan
Shingleton, with a M.S.W. from
Commonwealth
and several years
in Social Services,
the interns in that
Virginia
University
experience
supervises
field.
Students have been placed
over the years in Departments of
Social Services in nearby
counties. Several have done field
work at Cherry Hospital;
others have been placed with
youth agencies such as Richard
T. Fountain and Dobbs Schools.
A number have worked at
mental health centers, agencies
for the retarded, and in the
North Carolina Department of
Corrections. A few students have
used their summers as op
portunities to obtain credit by
working in their home com
munities, one as far away as
Bridgeport, Connecticut.
Occasionally, the student is paid
by an internship program
sponsored by the Department of
Human Resources in North
Carolina.
The programs are time con
suming, considering the travel
involved and the written and
oral reports required. However,
almost uniformly, those par
ticipating agree that the effort is
worthwhile in obtaining fir
sthand knowledge of how
classroom theory is applied and
in gaining experience as an asset
toward employment.
Carol Peele, a senior psychology major, learns by working wilh the
meiitallv retarded.
Cold Paralyzes Nation
The severe cold blitz that has
left at least 75 Americans dead
and sliced deeply into natural
gas supplies has forced millions
of Americans off the job or out of
school.
Thousands of schools, par
ticularly in the Northeast, were
closed Monday as state officials
fought to preserve diminishing
gas supplies.
The gas shortage forced toe
layoff of more than 1.5 million
workers in areas where plants
and businesses were ordered to
close or reduce operations so
availabe heating fuel could be
used for homes in the Northeast
and Midwest.
At least two states ordered
emergency measures to deal
with the weather and energy
crisis.
More than 75 deaths were
attributed to the weather during
the brutal storms and frigid
temperatures of recent days.
In North Carolina, the low
pressure system moving east
ward dusted the southeastern
counties of the state with less
than an inch of snow early
Monday. The National Weather
Service in Wilmington reported
there was about % of an inch of
accumulation.
The heavy demand for
unemployment comj^iKation
due to weather related layoffs
will put new pressure on state
unemployment compensation
funds that are already 3.6 billion
dollars in debt, the government
said.
Among the states hardest hit
by the chill were New York and
Pennsylvania, both of which
were declared eligible for
federal disaster relief. Pres.
Carter said Monday that
Florida, where the winter citrus
crop suffered extensive damage
from the freeze, could get
federal help.
According to the nation s
weathermen, February will see
no relief; record low tem
peratures are expected. North
Carolina has already recorded a
record low on Jan. 17 of-1 degree
farenheit.
Dean Swindell
to Retire
Dr. Lewis H. Swindell Jr.,
dean of Atlantic Christian Col
lege, will conclude a 36-year
career in the field/«f education
upon retirement from his
position with the college at the
end of the current academic
year, according to an an
nouncement today by Dr. Arthur
D. Wenger, president of the
college.
Commenting on the announce-
“During his tenure as
academic dean at Atlantic Chris
tian College, Dr. Swindell has
provided highly significant
leadership in the development of
an increasingly effective
academic program.
See DEAN Page 3
News in Brief
Cast Set for “Glass Men^erie
A.C.C. drama director Paul Crouch has just announced the
cast list for Stage and Script s first pr(xluction of the spring
semester. The cast for "The Glass .Menagerie ' by Tennessee
Williams is: Jim Ward as Tom. Thomas Barnes as Jim, Donna
Perrin as Amanda, and La Vee Hamer as Laura
The play will be done in a new way for Stage and Script; the
audience will sit on three sides of the playing area The play will
be presented February 24-26 at 8:00 p.m. in Hardy Alumni Hall.
A.C.C. students will be admitted free as will the A.C.C. faculty,
staff and their families. Cost for general admission is $1.50 for
adults and 50 cent for students.
Operatic Scenes Presented
"An Evening of Operatic Scenes in English," an opera
threatre production by the ACC Dept, of Music, was presented
last Friday and Saturday night in Howard Chapel.
Directed by James Powers, the program consisted of .scenes
from Bizets' "Carmen," Sir Douglas Metres' "The Ballad ol
Baby Doe," and Gounods' "Faust." Each scene was presented
in English.
Dr. Nakhre to Appear on T.V.
Dr. Amrut Nakhre will give a talk on "Crime and Justice in
North Carolina" on WITN T.V. The program entitled "Tempo
77" can be seen Sunday, Feb 6 at 11:30 a.m. on Channel 7. The
show will last for one-half hour.
Dr. Marshall Presents Lecture
A lecture entitled "The Value of Language Learning Today"
was presented by Dr. David F. Marshall last night in the choral
room of the music building.
Dr. Marshall's lecture provided an examination of the
theories for and against loreign language mastery. The
presentation examined the validity of foreign language learning
for college graduates and touched on various defenses and at
tacks such as the Whorfian hypothesis, general semantics,
psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic discoveries, and the
question of the possibility of translation from one language to
another.
Dr. Marshall received the B.A. degree from Texas Christian
University, the M.Div. degree from Union Theological
Seminary in New York, and the Ph.D. degree in linguistics from
New York University. He is a 1976-77 Lilly Scholar at Duke
University.