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Tlie Collegiais
^ L H^DY LIBRARY
tian college
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, FEBRUARY 21, 1964
NUMBER FIFTEEN
ht Must Fall’-At ACC!
Poster Displays
Xo Be Regulated
By Exec Board
The Executive Board of the Co
operative Association at Atlantic
Christian College, at its regular
meeting Monday night, adopted sev
eral regulations governing the dis
play of posters on campus.
Heretofore, persons with posters
pertaining to employment or place
ment are to go through the office
of the Dean of Students for instruc
tions.
All organizations are asked to
keep the size of their posters “with
in reason” because of limited bulle
tin board space. Posters may be
placed on the bulletin boards in the
Bohunk, the Classroom Building and
Science Building. Posters may also
be placed in resident halls providing
permission has been obtained from
the supervisor of the resident hall.
Only one poster is allowed per bul
letin board.
Furthermore, posters viill not be
allowed in the Administration Build
ing, in classrooms unless they per
tain to that class, in or on the
Chapel unless they relate to pro
grams in the Chapel^ in the library
unless they pertain to physical edu
cation or intramurals, or on trees
or shurbbery.
In addition, no chalk, paint or
similar substance will be allowed
on sidewalks or buildings. No post
ers shall be placed on the glass on
the front of the Classroom Building
or on the cafeteria doors.
Also, no poster will be allowed
on campus for more than two weeks
before the event which it announc
es. Posters must be removed with
in 24 hours following the event
and the group must be responsibile
for removing the poster.
Cookie Wickham introduced a reso
lution pertaining to the election of
campus queens to be submitted for
a vote before the entire student
body and if passed to be placed in
the By-Laws of the Constitution.
The resolution stated that future
competitive events, only one title
of a campus queen can be bestowed
upon a competing campus co-ed
within an academic year.
THIS IS A SCENE from the famed British mystery “Night Must Fall” which is being: presented by
Stage & Script on the 27th and 28th of February. Featured here are (left to right) Betty Lee Gray,
Dorothy Wyman, and Robert Roy all.
139 ACC Students Listed On Deanes
Honor Roll For ^63 Fall Semester
One-hundred and thirty-one Atlan
tic Christian College students earn
ed places on the Dean’s List for
academic achievement during the
fall semester of the current aca
demic year, according to Dr. Lewis
H. Swindell Jr., dean of the col
lege.
To earn places on the Dean’s List
students must achieve a 3.20 (B-
plus) grade average for the semes
ter while carrying an average load
of 12 semester hours.
Students named were:
Wilson County: Carrie Belle Aber
nathy, David Adkins, Fred S. Ays-
cue, Barbara Jean Barefoot, Cath
erine Mozingo Boyette, Sandra Bu
chan, Larry Alton Carroll, Elaine
Craig, James C. Fields, Benjamin
'Winter Rally' Is Planned
By College Young Democrats
- the CivU Rights bill now before
the Congress and a plan to realign
College Young Etemocrats from
throughout North Carolina wall ga-
thei- in Raleigh, Friday and Sat
urday, February 21 and 22, 1964 at
the Hotel Sir Walter for a Winter
Rally of their federation (Students
from those schools who do not pre
sently have a YD club on their
campus have been extended a spe
cial invitation to attend.) Over 100
college YD’s are expected to at
tend.
Featured speakers will include:
National Young Democratic Presi
dent J. Alert House, Jr. of Roan
oke Rapids, who is the first North
Carolinian ever to head the na
tional organizatoin; assistant Post
master Beneral Richard Murphy, a
Chapel Hill and a former presi
dent of the National Student Asso
ciation; State YDC President Thom
as 0. Gilmore, who at 27 is the
youngest person ever to head the
Tarheel organization; and members
of the Council of State along with
other party officials.
A special feature of the program
includes the appearance of Tarheel
gubernatorial candidates Beverly
Lake, Dan K. Moore, and Richard
son Preyer on Saturday morning.
Each will address the gathering and
answer questions.
Also to be considered at the rally
are several resolutions pertaining to
voting within the structure of the
Federation.
Registration fee for the rally is
$3.00. The rally will end at noon
Saturday following a lundieon. It
will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday,
February 21, with registraton open
ing at 5 p.m. College students from
every college in the state are urged
to attend.
Students from Atlantic Christian
College who will attend the meet
ing are Robert Royall, Brent HHl
Stuart Lee and Willard Strickland.
Greek Week To Be
March 17-21 At AC
The Interfratemity Council will
sponsor its annual Greek Week from
March 16-21. This week is honoring
the Greeks on campus, and many
activities are scheduled.
The week begins with a Carnival
held on campus. Each sorority and
fraternity will have a booth. The
proceeds will go to the IFC.
Wednesday night, there will be
a Greek Sing in the Chapel. Each
group enters two songs, one of
them being their own sorority or
fraternity song. A tro{rfiy will be
See GREEK Page 3
Glover, Barbara Phyllis Hays, Car
olyn Louise Hollowell, Patricia
Horne, Arnold Jones, Ruth Keleher,
Janice Lamm, Barbara McComas,
Coak Junior May, Diane Dee Moore,
Patricia Mavis Neal, Dewey Over
man, Horace Piner, Douglas Raper,
Mary Lee Redding, Jane Reynolds,
Henry Rogers, Carolyn Doreen
Sams, Jane Stallings, Louise F.
Stokes, George Stronach, William
Dougas Vick, Gerald Walston, Jo
Ann Watson, Gaines L. Whicker,
George-Anne Willard, Sidney Jean
Wilson, and Elinor Workman, all
of Wilson. Others are: Linda Bunn,
Sims; Bettie Jean Eason, Elm City;
Sally B. Forbes, Valeria Worrell,
Stantonsburg; Carolyn Lamm, Jill
Marie Simpson, Lucama; Richard
James McIntosh, Saratoga.
Nash County: David Alford, John
nie D. Hales, Phyllis Ann Hales, and
Sara W. Johnson, Middlesex; Joan
Faye Bass, Lester G. Brantley, Lor-
rie Tunnell, Spring Hope; Max
Roland Gessner, Betty Lee Gray,
Augustan G. Griffin, Nashville.
Johnston County: Suzanne Scott
Bailey, Sarah Carolyn Boyette, Jack
ie Cockrell, Onnalee Hinnant, Kay
Frances Narron, Kenly; Audrey
Lane Brown, Janice LaCelle, Ruth
Norris Price, Selma; Hazel Creech,
Smithfield; James Floors, Prince
ton; Charles Thomas Martin, Four
Oaks; Glenda Faye Parker, Benson.
Wayne County: Frederick G.
Bogue, Jane Bradshaw, Bonnie Cud-
dington, Grover Thomas Dees, Fre
mont; Josephine Bundy, Mt. Olive;
Helen P. Edmundson, Pikeville; Mil
dred Everette, Quinton R. Hare,
Mary Lois Neel, Charles Eugene
Price, Kenneth Bruce Taylor, Golds
boro; and Anne Mozingo Waters,
Seven Springs.
See 139 STUDENTS Page -1
New York Brass Quintet
Scheduled To Perform
The only ensemble of its knid
concertizing regularly throughout the
world, the New York Brass Quin
tet which will perform at Fike
High School on Sunday February
23, at 3:30 was formed over seven
years ago by a highly skilled group
of instrumentalists. All graduates
of JuUiard School of Music, its
members had acquired both enor
mous experience and enviable pres
tige as individual performers in or
chestras headed by such notables
as Stokowski, Reiner, Stravinsky,
Casals, and Bernstein.
Yet these superbly trained play
ers felt a need to express them
selves as individuals rather than as
participants in a large orchestral
body. Realizing that since the Sec
ond World War there had been a
rapid growth of interest in brass
music, the five instrumentalists de
cided to form a team, to recreate
both the older Renaissance and
baroque music for brasses and to
establish a new chamber music for
themselves. To this end, they have
succeeded admirably.
Armed with two trumpets (Rob
ert Nagel and Ted Weis), French
horn (Paul Ingraham), trombone
(John Swallow), and tuba (Harvey
Phillips), the New York Brass
Quintet has achieved an amazing
record.
Stage And Script
To Perform Play
On Feb. 27 And 28
On Thursday and Friday, Febru
ary 27th and 28th, Stage and Script
will present the famous British mys
tery “Night Must Fall” in Hovr-
ard Chapel at 8:15 p.m. This play
is one of the most famous psy
chological murder plays and was
produced in London and New York
with great success. Its author is
Emlyn Williams, one of the leading
modern English playwrights, whose
“The Corn Is Green” was produced
several years ago by Stage and
Script to great campus acclaim.
In the play it is no secret that
Danny, a bell hop who arrives at
the Bramson bungalow, has already
murdered one woman, and there is
little doubt that he will soon mur
der another — the wealthy and
aged Mrs. Bramson. He gradually Jn
sinuates himself into her affections
in a skillful manner, at the same
time managing to prevent her
niece — who has guessed his prev
ious connections with murder —
from giving him away. For Dan Is
a dashing young assassin whom she
firmly believes she hates, but as a
matter of fact she is fascinated by
him beyond measure. Dan is a com
pletely selfish, self-centered psycho
path with no feelings and a vast
imagination, who is perpetually act
ing for his own edification the part
of a murderer, and is only unhappy
because he cannot share his secret
with the world. The last act is filled
with excitement as the audience is
kept guessing as to whether or not
he will succeed in his plan to mur
der his bcnefactoress.
The role of Danny has been play
ed by several of the best young
American actors in the professional
theater and in 1937 Robert Mont
gomery won an Academy Award for
See STAGE & SCRIPT Page 4
Students Urged
To Donate Blood
The Wilson County Bloodmobile
will be at the First Baptist Church
Monday, March 16 from one to sev
en p.m. and Tuesday, March 17
from ten a.m. to four p.m.
Hatten Hodges is the Bloodmo
bile Chairman for Atlantic Christian
College. The goa^ for the college
is 125 donors. Twenty per cent of
the faculty have made pledges. ACC
students are urged to pledge blood
for this worthy cause. Anyone need
ing transportation, please contact
Hatten Hodges.
If under twenty - one years
of age, one must have written con
sent from parents. The age lim
it is not effective if married or if
active status in the Armed Forces.
THE NEW YORK BRASS QUINTET will perform at Fike Ilijrii
School Ml Sunday, February 23 at 3:30. Its members are all gradu
ates of JuilUard School of Music. ^ a e an graaa