Newspaper Page Text
The Collegiate
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, FEBRUARY 23, 1962
NUMBER SIXTEEN
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CIVAL WAR PRODUCTION—The three narrators of the forthcoming: Stage and Script production
of “John Brown’s Body” study a map for their roles. From left to risrht are: Sandra Freedman,
Hatten Hodges and Robert Royall. (Collegiate photo by Steve Blanton)
Stage And Script MemherslSinvBusy
Making Plans For New Production
The satisfactory completion and
performance of any play or drama
program is often credited largely
to people working behind the
scenes. Such wiU be the case of the
forihcoming presentation of “John
Brown’s Body.”
The various committees for this
dramatic reading have been
formed and functioning for some
time now. Handling the task of cos
tumes is Mary Lu Webb. Giving
assistance to Miss Webb are Mrs.
N. R. Saleeby and the Hooker-
Howe Costume Company.
One unique contribution to this
Stage and Script production is or
gan music, provided by Judy
Smith. Jerry Bowers is working
witii other sound effects.
Margaret Walker, assisted by
Randy Ratteree, is handling the ef-
feciive area of lights.
Marcus Hamilton and Cecil Dav
is have already made some out
standing and attractive posters.
Working with them on publicity
are Matilda Woodard and Arthur
Pirtchard.
Carol Colvard will center her be
hind - the - scenes work on the
artful area of make-up. Miss Col
vard will also portray the role of
Mary Lou Wingate in the produc
tion.
The director is Doris C. Hols-
worth, member of the English fac
ulty. The stage is 'onder the man
agership of Parker Wilson, of the
social science faculty.
Hilda Griffin is serving as house
manager.
The schedule for practice ses
sions and performances for next
week is brought to the attention
of aU members of the cast and
crew.
On Monday evening, Feb. 26,
practice wiU begin at 8 p.m., at
which time the entire program will
be rehearsed.
On Tuesday, Feb. 27 at 7 p.m.,
a dress rehearsal of the entire play
will take place. Members of the
cast should check on their costume
before Tuesday night’s rehearsal.
The performances are scheduled
for Thursday and Friday evenings.
On these two nights, those to wear
make-up should rejwrt at 7:30.
Members not wearing make-up,
but scheduled for special costumes
Glenn C. Routt Named
Speaker For RE Week
The Religious Emphasis Week
speaker for this year will ibe Glenn
C. Routt of Texas.
Pat Hines, president of the Cam
pus Christian Association, and Dan
Hensley, director of religious life,
announce some preliminary plans
for RE Week to te observed March
5 through March 9.
Mr. Routt will be the guest
^eaker for this annual event. He
is chairman of the department of
toeology at Brite College of the
Bible, Texas Christian University,
Fort Worth, Texas.
The theme chosen for this week
of concentrated religious thought
Md study is “Faith - So What?”
theme was selected by the
CCA cabinet and a special com-
inittee of RE Week co-workers af
ter much deliberation and discus
sion.
Sessions of lecture and dis
cussions during the week wUl per-
thought wUl center around aspects
of faith for the individual.
General topics for the remainder
01 the week, Tuesday through Fri
day, will be faith for the individual
and’ Christ, faith for the individual
as a student, faith for the individ
ual as a member of society, and
faith for the individual in an age
of anxiety.
Preliminary work has already
been set in motion for the weel^
Plans are now materializing, ana
detailed schedules and arrange
ments are being drawn up m hopes
for a most beneficial and construc
tive five day period.
Chapel Notice
Tuesday, February 26 19«2
Freshmen & seniors m chapel for
In
®Sors^^S in the
Thiiffsday, March 1, 19^
Cooperative Association meeting
in Gym.
should report at 7 p.m. All others,
including stage hands, are asked
to be present by 7:30 p.m.
All members of the college fami
ly will be admitted free of charge
to these performances on Thurs
day and Friday evenings, March
1 and 2 at 8 p.m.
NSSGA President
Makes ACC Visit
By CAROL COLVARD
Lee Kanipe, president of the
North State Student Government
Association, visited Atlantic Chris
tian College Tuesday, Feb. 20, as
part of a regular tour of student
governments who are members of
the association. His AC agenda in
cluded conferences with Mr. D. L.
Warren, Jeff Adams, president of
the Cooperative Association, An in
formal meeting with the members
of the Executive Board, and a
visit to the committee planning
orientation for the coming year.
Mr. Kanipe defined the purpose
of NSSGA as follows: "The pur
pose of NSSGA is to provide,
Many Students
See Launching
Of Col. Glenn
Dismissed classes, a crowded Bo-
hunk, excited talk throughout the
campus, marked the orbital flight
of astronaut John Glenn, Tuesday,
February 20.
Early Tuesday morning, when it
had been learned that Flenn’s
flight would take place, a steady
buzz of conversation began, con
tinuing throughout the day.
The television in the Bohunk, us
ually deserted for games of bridge
and conversation, was surrounded
at times with as many as 40 or 50
students.
Usually normal classes were
held with suspense of Glenn’s his
toric flight on everyone’s mind. In
many classes, professors allowed
radios to be played periodically in
order to be informed of Colonel
Glenn’s position and number of or
bits. Several other classes, were
dismissed and allowed to watch
television.
John Glenn’s orbital flight, com
parable to the Wright Brothers,
was delayed for almost three
months because of technical diffi
culties and adverse weather condi
tions. Making three complete orbits
at a speed of better than 17,000
miles-an-hour, the flight took four
hours and 56 minutes, from blast
off at 9:47 a.m. to impact in
the ocean at 2:43 p.m.
Plans Now Being Made
For Greek Week At ACC
Plans are underway for Greek
Week which wiU be held on March
28, 29, 30, and 31. The committees
for the various activitie® have
been appointed, they are: commit
tee chairman for Talent and Stunt
night, Miss Carol Colvard; com
mittee co-chairmen for the ban
quet, Miss Patricia Collins and
Mr. Jimmy Silverthorne; commit
tee co-chairmen for the dance on
Friday, Miss Janet Blackwood and
Miss Nancy Roberson; committee
chairman for the concert Mr. Don
Brubaker; the committee co-chair
men for the dance on Saturday
night, Miss Jaxie Daughtry and
Mr. Jack Hussey. Working closely
with the various committees is the
Greek Week Co-ordinator, Mr. J.
Jelly Adams, and IFC President,
Mr. BUI Barker.
I^e activities planned for Wed
nesday, March 28, and Thursday,
Women’s Intramurals
The 1962 intramural basketball
season for the women of Atlantic
Christian College began Wednes
day, February 14, in the campus
gymnasium. TTie opening game be
tween Sigma Tau Chi sorority and
Caldwell Hall women.
Miss Mary Anna Taylor who is
in charge of this activity stated
that the purpose of intramural bas
ketball is relaxation and fun. With
this aim in mind, aU students are
urged to attend the games and
support their teams. The schedule
wiU be posted in the gymnasium;
WACR radio will also announce the
dates of play.
All girls interested in playing
should contact one of the following
girls: Pat Roberson, Phi Sigma
Tau; Freshman, Miriam Paul;
Caldwell HaU, Marian Pulley; Del
ta Sigma, Mary Ann Britt; Omega
Chi, Linda Morris; Sigma Tau Chi,
i Sandy Huggins.
March 29, will be limited to
Greeks; in the remaining activi
ties, the Greeks and their dates
will ibe admitted. The admission
to these festivities are included in
the IFC dues paid by each fraterni
ty and sorority member to his or
her organization; therefore, entitl
ing every Greek on ^campus to at
tend without any additional fee.
Tlhe features of Greek week are:
Wednesday, March 28, ■will be Tal
ent and Stunt night, each fraterni
ty and sorority will present talent
and stunts, a prize for the best of
each wiU be presented; Thursday,
March 29, will be the banquet and
speaker: Friday, March 30, will be
a dance featuring “Maurice and
the Zodiacs.” Saturday, March 31,
will be the climatic r>oint of Greek
Week when the Journeymen wiU
wiU present a concert; concluding
Greek Week will be the dance
featuring “The Rocking Caban-
nas.”
A note of interest; WACR will
soon be playing some of the Jour
neymen’s tunes “Soft Winds of
Summer” and an album entitled
“The Journeymen.”
Basketball Squad
Honored On Monday
Members of the Atlantic Chris
tian CoUege Varsity and Junior
Varsity basketball squads were
guests of the BuUdog Club at a
special dinner held at Parker’s
Restaurant Monday evening.
Presiding over the dinner was
Edward L. Cloyd Jr., Director of
Athletics. Speakers for the even
ing were Coach Jack MCComas
and Junior Varsity Coach Frank
Montgomery.
Palyers of each squad were in
troduced individually by their
coaches and awards were made to
several players.
through a state association, the
gathering and communicating of
all the memiber schools. We have
two conferences a year, at which
we have discussion groups on the
different problems facing the indi
vidual schools. In these discus
sions, the representatives are able
to receive the solutions which oth
er member governments have em
ployed in alleviating their own sit
uations. The representatives ex
change new ideas for improving
their student governments and new
ways to serve the students.”
The next conference of the mem
ber schools will be at Catawba
College Sunday, April 29 and Mon
day, April 30. The purpose of this
meeting will be the election of of
ficers for the coming year and a
discussion of problems.
Mr. Kanipe explained that while
LEE KANIPE
the structure and amount of actual
governing power varies greatly be
tween student governments, the
purposes and problems arc often
very smilar. In his current cir
cuit, he visited East Carolina Col
lege Monday and St. Andrews Wed
nesday. Other member schools ' in
clude Western Carolina, Appala-
chain State Teachers’ College, Ca
tawba College, Pfeiffer, Elon Col
lege, Guilford College, High Point,
Lenoir Rhyne, and Atlantic Chris
tian. About ten other schools are
now being considered for member
ship.
Mr. Kanipe was asked to evalu
ate the association. He replied as
follows; “I think the NS^A is
very valuable to its member
schools. At our conferences, a
great deal of information is re^
ceived by the representatives and
this information is taken back to
the respective student govern
ments and given to them. This
gives aU the schools a vast knowl
edge of what is happening in stu
dents government at other
schools, and gives them new ideas
for improving and better serving
the students.
“The association could be much
more valuable if the member
schools would make use of it. One
way to do this is to contact the
central office at Catawba and ask
for the solutions used by other
schools.
“We are now working on joint
ly sponsoring tours of well-known
performers to all member schools.
We could contact these perform
ers and contract them for a visit
to the eleven schools and by doing
this, the respective schools would
be able to obtain good performers
at reduce drates.
One of the faults that I find is
not in the association itself, but
in the response from the student
governments of the member
schools. This fault lies on the
shoulders of the officers of each
school. The NSSGA sent out a
questionnaire asking for informa
tion which was needed immediate
ly, and the local officers waited
a month 'before returning this in
formation. Such occurrences hamp
er the efficient functioning of NS
SGA.”
Lee Kanipe is a resident of Hick
ory, and a senior at Lenoir Rhyne
where he is comjpleting a double
major in business adminLstration
and history. He is Chairman of the
Leadership Training Committee, a
member of the Honor Code Com
mittee, a dormatory representative
to the Student Commission, and
a class representative to the Stu
dent Cabinet. He is a member of
Tau Kappa Epsilon social frater
nity and currently holds tiie office
of social chairman.