DEDICATION REMEMBER OF NEW REGISTRA BUILDING Ui'W* ULlT?IrliiTTP ULnilPIlTniT TION WEEK NOV. 3 3rd PAGE ^Official Charlotte College Student Publication^ VOLUME 18, NUMBER 1 CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA October, 1963 1 At the Summer Hootenanny, students listen to folk songs by Roger Honkanen. SettinR for the musical evening was the pame room of the Collepe Union. CC and WBT-FM Present Shakespeare This fall Charlotte College will collaborate with WBT-FM in pre senting sixteen of Shakespeare’s plays over radio, beginning on Sun day evening, October 6, and conti nuing each Sunday through Janu ary 19. All broadcasts will start at seven o’clock in the evening. Complete recordings have been secured from the Marlowe Society of London, and each play will be broadcast in its entirety — no cuts to shorten the time, not even for Hamlet. Included in the productions are program notes written by Prof. Sid ney T. Stovell, in consultation with other members of the Department of English. These notes, accord ing to Mr. Stovall, will give an eight-minute introduction for each play and provide brief comments between scenes, occasionally sup plying word pictures for the ac tion on stage. Mr. Clyde McLean, of WBT, is taping the program notes for Sophomores Sponsor Another HOOTENANNY: NINE ACT SUCCESS Saturday night saw Charlotte College’s first major social event of the fall season. Hootenanny 63’/a. At approximately 8:30 an estimated six hundred students be gan arriving in the Library Audi torium carrying blankets, pillows and rugs to sit on. The Sophomore Class sponsored event was opened by Martin Ri- chek at 8:45 when he introduced the first song “This Land Is Your Land” which was sung by all of the nine acts featured in the show. The stars of the show were the Winstons, a local group made up -of Diane Baker, Miss Stanley Coun ty, 1964, and Bill Dobbs, guitarist. The duo met a highly disappointed, but sympathetic audience when it was made known that due to Di ane’s severe cold, the two would not be able to participate actively in the program. Diane and Bill expressed their deep regrets at having to sit quietly on the side lines, because as they put it, Char lotte College is their “second home.” The two were cheered by the audiences singing Happy Birth day to Diane. In spite of Diane’s cold, the Winstons opened the , show with two songs, “Jesus Met a Woman” and “Tomorrow is a Long Time.” Delores Nance, a tall red head ed Garinger High School junior, followed the Winstons with “Little Moses.” Delores accompanied her self on guitar in this haunting folk song. One of the liveliest parts of the show was the appearance of the Sli- mey River Bottom Boys. The group is a segment of the Cata- linas, a local rock and roll group, which has branched off into folk ■ music. Three of the boys are from Charlotte College: Tom Black, gui tar; Jack Stallings, banjo, and Johnny Edwards, guitar. The bass player was Tom Plyer. The four kept up a steady stream of jokes as they sang “Raspberries, Straw berries,” “Blowing In The Wind” and “My Old Man.” The fourth act on the program was an impromptu duet by De- lores Nance and Roger Honkanen. The two sang an ethic folk song, “Dark as a Dungeon.” Three school teachers did not try to teach the audience anything. As the Uptowners, Lynn Rankin, Catherine .Tenrette, and Marilyn Jody, started their act with their theme song, “Roving Man.” Miss Jody, guitarist for the group, was better known to the audience as an English teacher at C. C. The Up towners sang “The Fox” and their own arrangements of Nine Hun dred Miles.” They were joined by the audience on a well known favorite, “Crawdad,” and were fol lowed by “The Most Chivalrous Shark in the Ocean,” and “The Old Banshee.” Pervis Lee, of the downtown Winston’s club led the group in “Michael,” “Jamaica Farewell,” and “Puff.” He also sang “Island In The Sun,” accompanying himself on guitar. Strumming her guitar, little red headed Georgia Graham (Margaret to her friends at C. C.) sang Continued To Cheerleaders Elected New cheerleaders for Char lotte College were elected Tues day night, September 24. Three of the five are graduate of Ga ringer High School in Charlotte. They are Baiha Lukevics, Bonnie Barthen, and Gwen Chapman. Ann Thompson and Gloria Ward are graduates of Myers Park High School. Johnson Collection Reaches Shelves Herschel V. Johnson is one nice man . . . this is the way College librarians describe their greatest benefactor. Johnson donated more than 3,000 books to the school’s library this year, and promises to make eventu ally his whole personal collection available to the young here at CC. Johnson is a well traveled man, having served his country in the foreign services for many years. He graduated from UNC in 1916 and went into the Army, where he served as a captain. Then he entered into a life as a diplomat. Among the long list of places where Johnson represented the United States are Berne, Switzer land; Scofia, Bulgaria; Mexico City, London, and Brazil. He also served several terms as the U. S. Representative on the United Nations’ Security Council, and served as U. S. Minister to Sweden. The books and works of art he collected during his tenure in the foregin service make up his per- \ sonal library, many of which were I stored in warehouses before now. Now, Herschel Johnson donates his collection to CC, almost as fast as he can read them. This donated collection contains many rare edi tions and several in foreign langu ages. Some of the books now in the school library, thanks to Mr. John son, are a sixteen volume collection of Prescott’s works. Tome’s La Livre des Mille Nuitset Une Nuit in eight volumes, A History of ; the Norman Conquest, by Free man, two volumes on Central .4merica by Stephens, and the in teresting Historic Devices, Badges, and War-Cries by B. Palliser. According to Mrs. Mozelle Scher- 1 ger, the librarian, the collection will be used intact here at Charlotte 1 College, with the exception of some i of the foreign language editions. Mrs. Scherger also said that a val uation of the collection by Mr. Charles R. Brockmann, a noted Charlotte bookman who headed the I Charlotte Public Library Book Ac- i quisition department for fifteen NEA Elects Officers The Student NEA of Charlotte College held its first meeting of the fall term on Friday, September 20, in the College Union. The purpose of the meeting was to organize for the activities of the coming year. The following officers were elected: Mr. Ralph King, President; Mrs. Ethel Phipps, vice-president; Mrs. Nancy Robertson, secretary; Mrs. Shirley Buchanan, treasurer. A membership committee was ap pointed under the chairmanship of Miss Patsy Helfner. Tentative plans discussed includ ed sending delegates to the Nation al Education Association conven tions. An open house for the Fu ture Teachers’ clubs of the area is projected. Miss Mary Denny, faculty super visor, and Mr. Larry Lynn, out going president, gave short talks on the importance of the NEA in the field of education. The next meeting of the NEA will be held on Friday, October 4, at 5 P.M. This meeting is timed for the convenience of night stu dents. It will convene for dinner in the college cafeteria. Guests Attend CCUN Dinner The Collegiate Council for the United Nations’ held an informal dinner meeting in the college cafe teria on Wednesday, September 18, 1963. The guest of honor at this meeting was George Thomas. years, placed their value at $4,377. But Mrs. Scherger said the books were worth much more to the Col lege because of the expense of buying them one at a time. All in all, there’s a lot of good reading enjoyment to be found in Mr. Johnson’s gift, and we are very thankful for this opportunity to learn. Celanese Gift Yields $40,000 Income Thursday, July 11, 1963, Celanese Corporation of America announced it was presenting the Charlotte College Foundation an industrial facility worth more than $1 mil lion. Burlington Industries, in Bur lington, North Carolina, where the plant is located, have announced during the past month that they plan to lease the plant from the Charlotte College Foundation. Re cently it was disclosed that the yield will be over $40,000 annually. This amount should be greater, for next to the plant is a tract of land that can be leased to another company. James R. Kennedy, executive vice-president of Celanese, upon transfer of the deed to Mr. W. H. Barnhardt, chairman of the Foun dation, stated that the gift was made to “promote scientific and engineering education at Charlotte College.” He also stated that Ce lanese “knows of no better way to express our thanks (for favors ex tended since Celanese has been in Charlotte) than by some endeavor which might promote the educa tional opportunities for the young people of Charlotte and the sur rounding Piedmont area.” The presentation of the indus trial property was made at a special convocation in the College Union. In addition to the ad ministration, faculty, and summer students of Charlotte College, many leaders of education and business in the larger Charlotte community were in attendance, as well as a number of elected officials, both state and local. Although the gift was made without any restrictions, Celanese did request the College to consider using the income from the proper ty to supplement faculty salaries in the science curricula. The Charlotte College Founda tion, which was incorporated for the purpose of receiving and ad ministering gifts to the College, becomes the legal owner of the property. It is the ambition of the Foundation to accumulate addition al gifts providing comparable in come to sustain other curricula in the College. broadcast. At the conclusion of the series, WBT intends to give the College complete types of all the program notes. The radio series opens with the triology on Prince Hal—Henry IV, Part I on October 6, Henry IV, Part II on October 13, and Henry V on October 20. The programming shifts to come dy on October 27, when Twelfth Night will be broadcast. For the remainder of the series, tragedy and comedy will alternate — with one history play included. Plays for November will be IJo- meo an d/uliet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Macbeth, and The Merchant of Venice in that order. December broadcasts will offer on successive Sunday evenings Hamlet, The Winter’s Tale, Antony and Cleopatra, King John, and Cymbeline. The series over FM radio will conclude in January with Measure for Measure, King Lear, and The Tempest. Mr. Thomas is a former student Charlotte College student and a former member of the C.C.U.N. group. He is presently attending Swarthmore College in Pennsyl vania. Two other special guests were also honored at this meeting. These were Mr. and Mrs. Sada Desai from India. Mrs. Desai has been in the United States for only three weeks. The Desai’s two children are remaining in India. The Charlotte College Chapter of the Collegiate Council for the United Nations is a member of the International C.C.U.N., which has been organized on campuses in thirty-one nations, including the United States. Phi Theta Kappa Pledges Four On Wednesday, August 21, 1963, the following students were in ducted into the Charlotte College chapter of Phi Theta Kappa: George Callahan, Faye Thompson, Jean Thompson, and Bob Schaef fer. These four students signed the roll of Charlotte College’s honor society during a candlelight pledge service. They were presented with pins bearing an engraved head of Minerva, goddess of wisdom. Iota Lambda, the Charlotte Col lege chapter, gives a scholarship to a deserving student each year. The 1963 scholarship was awarded to Margaret Ross. This year, in addition to the scho larship, the group plans to conduct tours of the campus. They will escort visitors and show them va rious points of interest. Members will be host to Sunday afternoon visitors. The Phi Theta Kappa chapter has six officers: David Baucom, presi dent; David Wilson, vice-president; Ann Hood, secretary; Ann Black, historian, and Glinda Trull, re porter.