4The Daily Tar HeelFriday, April 6, 1990
BSM choir concert
BRIAN SPRINGER
Staff Writer
Social consciousness through music
will fill Great Hall when the Black
Student Movement (BSM) Gospel
Choir presents its annual spring con
cert this Sunday. This year's concert is
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a tribute to freed South African Na
tional Congress leader Nelson Man
dela and has the theme "Love Has No
Color."
Mandela exemplifies the BSM Gos
pel Choir's goal of "Unity in the '90s."
Like Mahatma Gandhi and Martin
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ELLIOT ROAD
atE. FRANKLIN
967-4737
Tom Hanks Meg Ryan
VOLCANO 5:00
JOE VERSUS THE
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Touchstone
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OR DISCOUNT TICKETS ACCEPTED
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to honor
Luther King Jr., Mandela has lived by
the philosophy of satyagraha, or non
violent resistance.
By coming to the concert, the audi
ence will be able to participate in the
choir's effort to realize Mandela's
dream. Admission to the concert is ei
ther $1 or a non-perishable food item.
Monetary donations will go towards
the Nicole Anderson-Broome scholar
ship fund and food contributions will
be given to the InterFaith Council.
This marks the first time that the
BSM Gospel Choir has held a fund
raiser for outside organizations.
Francine Randolph Cummings in
spired the BSM Gospel Choir in late
1971. Since then, the choir has helped
to preserve the black cultural musical
heritage through numerous appearances
on campus and along the Eastern Sea
board. The choir has earned many awards,
including that of North Carolina's Best
College Gospel Choir in 1974. In 1985
and 1986, the choir finished fourth in
the McDonald's Gospel Fest, a compe-
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Orphb
Mandela
tition with more than 140 choirs par
ticipating. Unfortunately, the BSM
Gospel Choir will miss this year's
McDonald's competition, since it con
flicts with the spring concert.
During the past 19 years, the BSM
Gospel Choir has highlighted many
annual events such as Race Relations
Week and Homecoming. The choir
recently performed to great acclaim at
the Federal Correctional Institute in
Butner, in honor of Black History
Month.
The choir's longevity is especially
impressive since it has no faculty ad
viser. Instead, it depends on student
leadership within the choir and from its
parent group, the Black Student Move
ment. The family atmosphere in the
choir has served to enhance its solidar
ity. "(The choir) revolves around people
working for the common good," said
member Emily Watkins, a junior jour
nalism major from Wake Forest.
Service activities such as this year's
spring concert will allow everyone to
aid in the BSM Gospel Choir's pursuit
of unity while getting to enjoy some
great music besides.
The Black Student Movement Gos
pel Choir will present its annual spring
concert in tribute of Nelson Mandela
on Sunday, April 8, at 3 p.m. in Great
Hall. Admission is $1 or a non-perishable
food item. For more information
call 962-9001.
Legal Problems?
call
Orrin Robbins
Attorney at Law
968-1825
ItdafiJ&UlUIftl I
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HENRY V
Nightly 7:009:30
Sat & Sun Matinee 2:004:30
The First Power
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1990 TR0MA INC yj J
Classes a
SBinnimer
By LAURA WILLIAMS
Staff Writer
Think or swim?
Summertime once meant long hot
days riding your bike or begging Mom
to take you to the pool. The idea of
sitting in stuffy classrooms during the
summer was ridiculous.
But many students actually enjoy
spending the summer months in
Chapel Hill. Some attend summer
school in order to graduate on time,
and others use it as an excuse to spend
vacation away from home. Some think
summer school is just plain fun.
"There's a different atmosphere.
There's less pressure," Estella Ste
wart, a senior industrial relations major
from Laurinburg, who has spent five
summer sessions at UNC, said. "You
get one course over in six weeks rather
than three months."
Summer school condenses classes
into five and a half weeks, most
meeting for 90 minute periods every
day. Course credit is equivalent to
credit given for fall and spring courses.
Some students said they liked the
class load of the summer sessions
because theyonly take two courses.
"I don't think (the classes) are
harder or easier, but the amount of
work is more reasonable," Stewart
said.
Katherine Wu, a sophomore phys
ics major from Greensboro, said the
work wasn't easier for everyone.
"I've heard people say (the classes)
were harder because they cram so
much in five weeks. I think it depends
on the classes you take. They were
easy for me," she said.
Marvin Hembrick, a junior com
puter science major from Durham,
said the accelerated pace of summer
school classes forces students to keep
up with their work.
"It forces you to work hard because
class is every day. During the regular
semester you don't always study every
day because class only meets a couple
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7:30 9:30
Teenage Mutant
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sacrifice
of times a week," he said. .
Hembrick said he liked summer
school because more teaching assis
tants taught the classes.
"There's more TA's teaching dur
ing the summer. They're younger and
more like the students so they don't
pile all the work on," he said. ;
"They are more sympathetic that
it's summer and you have to be there."
Hembrick, who runs the 400 and
800 meters for the track team, said
many athletes go to summer school
after a busy semester with sports..
But students in school don't neces
sarily sacrifice their summer vaca
tions. When classes end for the day,
students have time to relax and-to
enjoy Chapel Hill in the summertime.
Wu, who spent a session last sum
mer living in Manly Residence Hall,
said she spent her free time watching
movies in the student union and sit
ting in the sun in the arboretum.
"The work load was lighter so I
had time to relax and go swimming."
Some students stay in Chapel Hill
in the summer because they find it
more exciting than their hometowns.
Many people think that their home
town is dull and that there are -no
opportunities there, Stewart said. ,
"Some use summer school as a
scapegoat so they don't have to;go
home and work." They just stay and
take classes, she said.
Wu said she wanted to stay in
Chapel Hill so she could get a job
related to her physics major at More
head Planetarium.
"I didn't have anything that I had
to do at home. I didn't have a job,"
Summer school is also a conven
ient option for students with intern
ships for part of the summer, she said.
The first summer session begins
with registration on May 21. Classes
start May 22 and end June 26. Regis-.
tration for the second session is June
28, and classes begin June 29 and end
August 3. i
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