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Tlie Collegiate
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
Mrs. Pfohl Will
Give Q>ncert
On October 19
Mrs. Tina Pfohl, mezzo soprano
of Wilson, will appear in concert at
Atlantic Christian College in How
ard Chapel on Oct. 19, at 8:15 p.m.
Her performance is being sponsored
by the college’s Department of Mu
sic and Concert Assembly Commit
tee. There will will be no admission
charge.
A native of Montgomery, Ala., Mr
Pfohl is one of the busiest singers
in North Carolina. She has served
for the past four years a soloist for
Duke University’s annual presenta
tion of “The Messiah,” and has al
so sung as soloist with the N. C.
State Choral Society in Raleigh. In
1962, he served as soloist for Duke
Chapel and appeared as soloist for
the annual Commencement Concert
at Chapel Hill. She is currently so
loist with the First Christian
Church in Wilson.
In addition to her many oratorio
performances, Mrs. Pfohl has had
wide opera experience, having sung
roles in “Rigoletto,” “Madame But
terfly,” and “Carmen” with the
Charlotte Opera Association.
Wife of James C. Pfohl, Jr., a
member of Atlantic Christian Col
lege’s Health and Physical Educa
tion Department, she received the
A. B. degree in voice from Queens
College in Charlotte, where she re
ceived the Performance Award dur
ing her senior year. She was soloist
with the College Choir for four
years and was awarded the Col
lege Division Award by the Char
lotte Music Club for her work there.
She has had additional study with
A1 May of New York and the late
Walter Golde of Chapel Hill.
Mrs. Gerschefski, a native of Mor
ristown, Tennessee, is an instructor
of woodwinds, piano, and music the
ory at North Carolina Wesleyan
College. She holds the A. B. degree
from Florida State University in Tal
lahassee.
The program will feature several
groups of art songs in addition to
three arias from operas by Gounod
and Tschaikowsky.
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, OCTOBER 16, 1964
NUMBER FOUR
Stoops To Conquer’
Set To Open On Tuesday
The Accounting Club met Wed
nesday, October 7, with President
Charles Bennett presiding. It was
decided at this meeting to schedule
regular meetings for the first Wed
nesday night of each month.
A special meeting was announced
for the evening of October 27. A
representative of the U. S. General
Accounting Office will be guest
speaker. This meeting is expected
to be a most informative one, es
pecially for those who are consider
ing this or a related career field.
All business students are invited to
attend this special meeting and
those interested in accounting are
encouraged to join the Accounting
Club immediately.
Officers for the year 1964-65 are;
President, Charles Bennett: Vice -
President, Grover Nelms: Secretary
-Treasurer, Jamie Bonner; Report
er, Coak May.
The rollicking, boisterous farce
“She Stoops to Conquer” by Oliver
Goldsmith will be presented in
Howard Chapel at 8:15 on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday October
20th - 22nd by Stage and Script
under the ^onsorship of the Wil
son Kiwanis Qub.
Set in the same period as “Tom
Jones,” the play has all the 18th
Century gusto associated with the
classic book and film and has been
Business Frat
Maps Programs
For 1964-65
Phi Beta Lambda, the business
fraternity on campus, held its sec
ond meeting on Wednesday, October
14, in room 107 of the Classroom
Building. Advisors for this year are
Benjamin Bardin and Mrs. Rachel
Armstrong. Officers were elected at
the first meeting on September 30,
and are as follows: President, El-
wod Vann; Vice - President, Cath
erine Jones; Secretary, Sandra Bunn
Treasurer, Reva Barefoot; Reporter,
Carolyn Haskins; and Historian, Ru
fus Johnson.
The main business of the second
m.eeting was the presentation and
discusion of programs and projects
for the year. Some of the programs
under consideration are as follows:
a Career Day Program which
would offer a valuable means of
contact between students and the
career field into which they hope
to enter; an award to the grad
uating senior at a local high
See BUSINESS FRAT. Page 3
Some 275,000 Students Lose Funds
WASHINGTON (CPS) — An esti
mated 275,000 students have lost the
opportunity to collect up to $90 a
month in cash benefits as a result
of the demise by stalemate of pro
posed social security legislation.
The failure, because of a dispute
over medicare, of a House-Senate
conference committee to reach
agreement on .the final form of a
social security expansion bill killed
a program for aiding some 18 to
22-year-oId students.
The bill was a casualty of Con
gressional adjournment fever, which
was running high after a nine-month
session and with the election only
four weeks away.
The current social security act
provides payments of up to $90 a
month for each child under 18
whose father is deceased, disabled,
or retired. A proposed amendment
to the act would have continued
No Kidnapping
NORMAN, OKAL. (CPS) — The
University of Oklahoma has pro
hibited kidnapping.
Under a new university rule, “any
student who holds another person
under physical constraint or causes
this to be done shall be automatical
ly suspended or dismissed from the
University.”
The university apparently imposed
the ban because of an incident dur
ing an Engineering Week celebration
last year which saw all the queen
candidates kidnapped on the day of
the engineers’ ball.
payments to those who became full
time college students.
Students in vocational, junior, pri
vate or public colleges would have
received payments until tlieir 22nd
birthday. ,
The “child benefits” were to be
extended to students on the theory
that full-time students over 18 are
as financially dependent as children
under 18.
MOST POPULAR—Jetta Purcell, Miss Most Popular Freshman Girl,
is pictured above with Gareth Jones, her escort, at the Most Popular
Freshman Girl Dance last Saturday. Jones is president of Sigma
Phi Epsilon, the fraternity which sponsored Miss Purcell.
Miss Ward Discusses Co-Op
At Executive Board Meeting
The Executive Board held its an- >
nual fall dinner Monday night at j
Parker’s Restaurant. President Lee
Horne introduced the guest speaker;
who was Miss Sarah B. Ward, Dean
of Women.
The Cooperative Association was
the topic of Miss Ward’s speech,
and she discussed some of its past
history. She presented an old Col
legiate which was dated 1936, and
the paper’s headlines stated that
a Cooperative Association had been
formed. The paper related that the
College had adopted this system
of government from a similar one
used at Hood College in Maryland.
Miss Ward commented that Mr. Mil
ton Adams, present A. C. C. Busi
ness Manager, was the first Presi
dent of the Co-op, and that she
was the second President.
She concluded her speech by say
ing that she felt that it would be
good to see a girl run for Presi
dent, and that , in any form of gover
ment you need the wisdom and age,
and the experience of practice to
achieve good government; no matter
what form of government is in prac
tice.
After Miss Ward’s speech the
Board moved into regular business.
Kathy Traylor, Junior Senator, mov-
See EXEC BOARD Page 3
called the finest comedy written in
English. It was originally presented
in London in 1773 and its first New
York production was later that same
year. It has been produced many
times on Broadway with the most
recent pnxiuctions being in 1949 and
1960. So great is its popularity that
is has been included in the cross
country tour of the National R^re-
tory Theater which is now appear
ing at the University of North Caro
lina - Greensboro.
“She Stoops to Conquer,” one of
the greatest and funniest of all
comedies, deals with Marlow, a
gentleman of fashion of London,
who has been matched with Kate
Harcastle, though they have never
met. Marlow and his friend Hastings,
on their way to the Hardcastles,
are directed to the house as an
inn by the prankster Tony Lump
kin, Mrs. Hardcastle’s son by an
earlier marriage. They are deceived
into thinking Mr. Hardcastle is the
landlord and Kate a maid. Kate
takes advantage of the misunder
standings to break down Marlow’s
reserve while Hastings and Miss
Neville, Mrs. Hardcastle’s niece,
plan an elopement and are a'betted
by Tony. A covery of inept servants
and assorted drunks add to the
merriment and the mistakes of the
night are finally and pleasantly cor
rected at the final curtain.
Several players well-known to cam
pus audiences are featured in
the cast with George Farr appear
ing as Marlow, Fred Barber as Mr.
Hardcastle and Penny Kirk as Mrs.
Hardcastle. Rae Torrey, who is re
membered for her performance as
Dottie Ctoburn in “Out of The Fry-
tcng Pan” appears in another “diz
zy dame” role as Constance Ne
ville. The leading female role of
Kate Hardcastle is being portrayed
by new-comer Maureen Ryan with
Fred Edwards, (Mr. Hardcastle),
Jack Tobin (Hastings), George
THE ACC bulldogs began their first practice session last Monday afternoon at the Wilson Recrea
tion Center. (Above) The Bulldogs are practicing defensive maneuvers, one part of several fundamen
tals used Monday. The first game is scheduled for November 28 at the Recreation Center when the team
hnst Tatawba College. The Bulldogs will practice at the Center every afternoon except Tuesday
wS toe team will hold sessions in the college gym.
See PLAY Page 4
New Journal
In Preparation
The Department of Art and De
partment of English have begun
work on the new journal which they
plan to launch in mid-December of
this year. Assisted by a small stu
dent - staff, Arnold and Dr. Hart-
sock are now reading contributions
which have already been submitted
and are discussing lay-out and art
work.
The magazine will be the joint
project of the two departments and
will be financed by contributions,
by sales, and by other means which
will be announed later. The first
issue will be made possible by the
Doris Holsworth Memorial Fund.
The magazine will be a printed one.
The editors hope to maintain a
high quality of work, and they are
eager to receive contributionsfrom
students, from faculty members,
from administration or staff, from
alumni, from the community, from
anyone who is doing interesting
work. Short stories, poems, plays,
essays, reviews, musical composi
tions, drawing, paintings, good pho
tography, architectural drawings,
photographs of sculpture —• all of
these will be welcomed for consider
ation. A dead-line for the first issue
has been set for November 1.
Those interested in submitting ma
terial may give it to Arnold or to
Dr. Hartsock. Literary materials
should be taken to the English Of
fice on the second floor; art and
musical contributions should be tak
en to the Art Office on the first
floor of the Classroom Building.