Newspaper Page Text
Tlie Collegiat^t#
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
Orchestra
To Perform
The Royal Philharmonic Orches
tra of London under the patron
age of the Queen Mother will pre
sent a concert in Raleigh on Wed.,
Oct. 23, 1963. The Royal Philhar
monic, conducted by Sir Malcolm
Sargent, is currently on its first
coast to coast tour of the United
States. While in London the Or
chestra plays for BBC broadcasts
and telecasts and is heard at the
Royal Festival Hall and the Royal
Albert Hall.
After completion of the Philhar
monic’s current tour of the U. S.
it will leave on a tour of the
U.S.S.R. and will present concerts
in Moscow, Leningrad, and Kiev.
Poland, Germany, and Czechosolva-
kia are also stops the Orchestra will
make.
The Philharmonic performance
will be the second concert of the
season for “The Friends of the Col
lege” of which Atlantic Christian
College is a member. Fifteen sea
son memberships have been pur
chased by the college and are avail
able to students on a first-come
first - serve basis. Tickets can be
picked up at the Music Building to
day.
The Concert will be held at Wil
liam Neal Reynolds Coliseum on
the State College campus, and will
begin at 8 p.m.
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, OCTOBER 18, 1963
NUMBER FIVE
Rush Week Success
With 136 Pledges
Rush has come to an end at At
lantic Christian College with 70 girls
pledging sororities and 66 men
pledging fraternities.
Omega Chi heads the sororities
with 26 pledges and Phi Sigma Tau
is following close behind with 23
girls. Sigma Tau Chi received 14
pledges and Delta Sigma has seven.
Delta Sigma Phi received 27 men
with Sigma Phi Epsilon getting 21
pledges. Alpha Sigma Phi has 12
pledges and Sigma Pi has six.
One hundred twenty-four girls par
ticipated in rush activities while
only 93 men rushed.
Eddie Perkins, president of IFC,
has expressed the following state
ment concerning rush: “I think
that rush this year was very suc
cessful although all of the organiza
tions were a little disappointed with
the percentage of rushees that ac
tually pledged. The co-operation
among the different organizations
and the IFC was much better than
in years past.
Rush is an annual event at At
lantic Christian College and is gov
erned by the Inter-fraternity council
which is composed of representa
tives from each Greek organization
on campus.
HARD AT WORK—The “Honeymoon” is over for fall Greek pledges
as they are beginning: to find out. Above one of them gets the treat
ment.
Executive Board Discusses
Proposed “College Bowl”
The Executive Board held its reg
ular meeting Monday night, Oct.
14, 1963 in room 212 of the class
room building. The meeting was
brief due to the absence of several
members who are in Florida.
Richard Surles reported for the
committee set up to assist the Con
cert and Assembly committee on
the “Four Preps Concert.” The com
mittee, proposed an admission
charge of $.75 for students and
$1.50 for outsiders.
Janice Lamm reported on the pro
posed “College Bowl” which is to
be held among the small colleges
in North Carolina. The contests will
be similar to the TV College Bowl
with four students representing each
school. Questions will be made
out by professors from each school
participating.
President Maurice Belanger ex
plained to the Board that a con-
!FC To Spoo.sor
Dance For Pledges
A “Welcome Pledge Dance” spon
sored by the Inter-fraternity Council
will be held Sat. night in the lobby
of the classroom building. The dance
will begin at eight o’clock and termi
nate at 11:45.
The “Spectaculars” from Golds
boro will be featured at the dance
which is admissable only to Greeks,
pledges, and their dates. The pur
pose of the dance is for pledges
and Greeks to ecome better ac
quainted.
Dress for the dance will be infor
mal for the girls and coat and tie
for the boys.
Chaperones for the dance will be
Mr. Robert Delp, Mrs. Sarah Gad
dis and Dr. J. P. Tyndall.
BSU To Meet On Tuesday
The Baptist Student Union of At
lantic Christian College will hold its
third meeting of the year Tuesday
night, Oct 22 at seven o’clock in
the Fellowship Hall of the First
Baptist Church.
Guest speaker will be Betty Mac
intosh of Duke University who cur
rently serves as L-I-S-T-E-N Chair
man of the north Carolina Chapter
of the Baptist Student Union. Miss
Macintosh wall explain the ideas and
aims of the program which she
heads.
Also attending the meeting will
be Miss Evelyn Pointer, religious
activities director of the First Bap
tist Church, Rev. William Bussey,
pastor of the First Baptist Church
and pastor advisor of the Atlantic
Christian BSU, Miss Jesse Daniel,
faculty advisor of the group, and
Dan Hensley, chaplain of the college
and Dean of men.
Delegates from the ACC Baptist
Student Union will attend the state
convention which will be held in
Greensboro, N. C. on Nov. 1-3 at
the First Baptist Church.
Speaker for the convention of
Friday wiU be Dr. William Hall,
assistant professor of New Testa
ment Interpretation at the Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary.
Speakers for Sat. wiU be Dr. 0. L.
Sherrill, executive secretary of the
general Baptist State Convention and
Dr. Howard Moody, pastor of Jud-
son Memorial Church in New York
City. Dr, Hull will readdress the
group on Sunday. General theme
for the convention will be “Freedom
Through Bondage.”
ference will be held at Hood Col
lege in Maryland on the weekend
of Nov. 1st. The conference will
feature many noted speakers and
will be conducted in a manner so
as to give each delegation attend
ing a chance to participate. Rich
ard Surles proposed that ACC send
a delegation and the motion was
passed by the Board. Several mem
bers of the Board volunteered to
attend and Mr. Surles was appoint
ed chairman of the group.
Sally Forbes, Day Student repre
sentative, spoke on the subject of
a Day Student bulletin board. She
commented that several Day Stu
dents had approached her about the
matter of not having information
about forth coming campus events
and that a bulletin board should be
put up in a place convenient to Day
Students.
President Belanger announced that
Madame Nhu of South Viet Nam
would speak in Raleigh at North
Carolina State College of the Uni
versity of North Carolina at Ral
eigh. He proposed that a delegation
be sent from ACC to attend the
address. Several board members ex
pressed a desire to go.
The Four Preps
Coming To ACC
The night of Oct. 28, 1963 the
students of Atlantic Christian Col
lege will be treated to a concert
by the “Four Preps.” Admission
price for students is $.75 and non-
students $1.50. Tickets will be on
sale in the Classroom Building
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963 through
Monday Oct. 28, 1963 from 9:00 to
12:00 and 2:00 to 4:00.
The Four Preps have become na
tional celebrities in the recording
field and they have accomplished
this feat in a short number of
years. They began singing in 1957
for Capitol Records and introduced
such hits as, “Dreamy Eyes,” “26
Miles,” “Big Man,” “Down by the
Station,” and others. Besides cutting
records they have appeared on such
Nationwide TV programs as, Ed
Sullivan’s, Tennessee Ernie Ford,
Ozzie and Harriet and Dick Clark.
In addition to TV they have ap
peared in the Los Angeles’ Coco
nut Grove, the Crescendo night
club, the Dunes Hotel, Las Vegas
and at Lake Tahoe.
The group offers a program of
diversified entertainment with their
own songs plus imitiation of other
vocal groups. Their chatter between
songs and zany antics will add re
freshing enjoyment to the program
and is sure to make the evening a
memorable one.
Stage And Script To Give
^Out Of The Frying Pan’
On Thursday and Friday, Oct. 24
and 25, Stage and Script will pre
sent its first production of the new
school year when it stages the rio-
tious farce-comedy, “Out Of The
Frying Pan,” in Howard Chapel at
8:15.
The play was one of the big
comedy hits of the 1940-41 season
on Broadway and has been one of
the most popular plays in summer
stock and with community theatres.
The Theatre Handbook for that year
calls it “the best comedy in years
for college and community theater
groups, as it is filled with humorous
situations and laugh after laugh.”
Written by Francis Swann, the
Officers Elected
For Science Club
The Science Club met Monday
Oct. 14, 1963 with Hartwell Fuller
presiding. The following officers
were elected for this year: Presi
dent - Julius Wooten; Vicepresident-
Hartwell Fuller; Secretary - treas
urer - Tempie Brake.
Dr. Tyndall spoke about the plans
for future meetings and the objec
tives of the club. It was decided
to meet every third Monday night
at 7 p.m. in the Science Building.
The dues were set at $1.00. The
sponsors this year are Dr. Tyndall,
Dr. Newton, and Mr. Taylor. Re
freshments were served and the
club adjourned.
Cordon E, Mercer
Appointed At ACC
Gordon E. Mercer, educated at
Wake Forest College and the Uni
versity of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, has been appointed instructor
of history at Atlantic Christian Col
lege.
A native of Hampton, Va., Mercer
is married to the former Myra Car
penter of Albemarle. He is Method
ist by denominational preference.
“I am thoroughly impressed with
the attitudes of the students at At
lantic Christian. They seem to be
really interested in forming inter-
lectual opinions of their own con
cerning current events.” This was
the statement made by the latest
addition to the history department
when asked about his opinion of
the college.
Mercer plans to work on his PhD
at the University of North Carolina
in the near future.
plot concerns three young men and
three young women who share an
apartment in New York City. They
are would - be stage folk and have
been driven to this scheme by the
lack of money. It is a whacky plan
they have in mind, for the apart
ment they rent is immediately above
that of a Broadway producer who
has quite a hit running and is about
to cast a road company of the play.
They rehearse the play which he is
currently producing but the problem
is —• how to get him upstairs to see
it? It so happens that the producer
is a amateur chef of some consider
able ability, and right in the middle
of a culinary concoction he runs out
of flour. He comes upstairs to bor
row a cup. The kids have him in
the house and they aren’r going to
let him out until he sees some evi
dence of their ability. So to impress
him they stage a murder scene.
The six young actors are played
by Floyd Harnage, Fred Barber,
George Farr, Ray Torrey, Betty
Lee Gray ad Grace Driscoll. Their
landlady, who always seems to be
“out to lunch” is Penny Kirk, while
Robert Royall appears as the the
atrical producer. Jo Ann Davis is
the unwilling and unresponsive
corpse and Jim Burroughs is a
stuffy, blustering Bostonian. The two
cops, who don’t solve the mystery
and end up as mystified are Clif
ford Poole and Ray Fisher. The
play has been directed by Mr. Ce
cil Willis with B. H. Marshall as
Technical Assistant and Jimmy Pol
lard as Stage Manager.
All Stage and Script productions
are free to ACC students, faculty,
and staff, and season tickets for
this year’s productions may be
picked up in the lobby of the
Classroom Building on Monday,
Oct. 21 from 10 to 12 and 1 to 3:30.
Resolution Passed
The faculty of Atlantic Chris
tian College has given its approv
al to a resolution favoring the
admission of qualified Negro stu
dents.
The faculty voiced its feelings
in a recent vote on a resolution
presented by the College’s Cen
tral Committee on Instruction.
Results of the vote, by secret
ballot, was 54 for 8 against.
Purpose of the resolution was
to convey to the Atlantic Chris
tian College Board of Trustees
the feelings of the faculty on
admission of qualified Negroes.
SHOWN ABOVE ARE THE FOUR PREPS who will visit the Atlan
tic Christian campus gym on Monday night Oct. 28, 1963, at 8 p.m.
Admission charge will be $.75 for students and $1.50 for non-students.
Students wishing to buy tickets are urged to buy them early because
seating capacity is limited.