Newspaper Page Text
ACC Completes Homecoming Schedule
Things on campus are really
beginning to buzz as everyone
from students, to tihe administra
tion, to alumni prepare for ACC’s
Homecoming which will be held
on November 5.
Homecoming activities will be
gin with the Homecoming con
cert to be held Friday night,
November 4 in the new Wilson
Gymnasium at 8:15 p.m. The
concert will feature the popular
music group, “The Tams.” A
special feature of the concert
will be the crowning of the
Homecoming Queen during inter
mission. Tickets for the concert
will be available to the public,
and will go on sale October 28
in the lobby of the classroom
buiding. Tickets wiU also be
sold at the door.
Kicking off the activities on
Saturday will be the annual
Homecoming Parade to be held
in downtown Wilson beginning at
10:30 a.m. Appearing in the 40-
unit parade will be a large num
ber of campus beauty queens,
colorful floats sponsored by so
rorities, fraternities and other
campus organizations, and col
lege and high school bands. Pa
rade floats will be designed as
takeoffs from current television
shows and commercials.
Hundreds of alumni from
across the country are slated
to return for class reunions and
take part in the festivities of
the day. Registration for the
event is to begin at 10:00 a.m.
The annual Alumni Luncheon and
Business Meeting is to begin at
12 noon and will be held in
the campus dining hall. Presid
ing over the meeting will be W.
Willard Woodard of Wilson, pres
ident of the Atlantic Christian
College Aliunni Association. Of
ficers for the new year will be
elected during this meeting.
Because of this meeting and
the luncheon for the alumni that
wiU be held in the dining room
special arrangements have been
made for serving lunch to the
student body Saturday. Lunch
for the Students will be served
at 11:30 in the old gym by
Parker’s Barbecue. Students will
be able to use their meal books
for this meal.
Afternoon activities will in
clude dedication of the college’s
New Wilson Gymnasium, Case
Art Building, Hilley Hall, and
the naming of the classroom
building in memory of the late
J. W. Hines of Kinston. Speaker
for the occasion will be Dr. Ira
W. Langston, president of Eu
reka College, Eureka, Illinois, an
alumnus of the college. Later in
the afternoon, guests will be ta
ken on tours of the campus at
which time they will have the
opportunity to visit the new cam
pus buildings. Another attraction
which should be of interest to
both alumni and students is the
“Faculty Art Show” which is
currently being held in the Case
Art Building and which will con
tinue to be held through Home
coming. On Saturday afternoon
a Hospitality Center, located in
Harper Hall Recreation Room,
will also be open for use by
the alumni.
Alumni and students will have
the opportunity of seeing bas
ketball stars of yesteryear in
action against the 1966-67 ACC
basketball team during the Blue-
White game Saturday night. The
game will be held in the New
Wilson Gymnasium and will be
gin at 8 p.m. A concert by the
ACC band will precede the game
and during the half - time the
ACC Vocal Ensemble will per
form. The Homecoming Queen
and her court will also be pre
sented at this time.
Other activities of the day will
include dinners and reunions for
classes of 1937, 1942, 1947, 1952,
1957, and 1962 as well as a
Pioneer Reunion for Classes of
1903-20.
Homecoming activities will
close with the Alumni Home
coming Dance to be heldinHar-
wiU also be held in the lobby
of the J. W. Hines Hall. Music
for this dance will be provided
by the “Mighty Rockets” and
it will be open to all students
with I. D. cards and to all
visiting alumni.
Tlie Collegiate
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, OCTOBER 27, 1966
NUMBER SIX
Miss Nguyen
Aids Army
By JUDY HUMPHREY
Odette iNiguyen, AOC’s foreign
student from Viet Nam, leift
ACC’s campus Sunday, October
23 to be-come an instructor of
Vietnamese To American soldiers
preparing to serve in^ her na
tive Viet iNiam. Odette said when
she left that since American
soldiers are dying in Viet Nam,
she feels she should contribute
jdl that she can to give them a
better chance for survival.
Odette’s teadiing of such phrases
as "change” and “hold that posi
tion” will provide the soldiers
with stronger bases of communi
cation in (battle.
Contributing to the war effort
is not new to Odette. While she
was living in South Vietnam, she
flew on missions with Americans
and Vietnamese in order to in
terpret their communications. It
must not have been easy for
Odette to give up her education
— she is a good student and an
education wiU facilitate her re
ceiving a position in her own
government. But Odette has
chosen to serve her country and
ours at this particular
time when the United States
desperately needs services such
as the one which she is going to
provide. She will teach Vietna
mese in El Paso, Texas for a
period of six months and then
she win either continue in the
same capacity or return' to
school. Whichever Odette decides
to do, she will be a definite as
set to the Vietnamese situation.
Tickets On Sale
For Tournament
The Wilson - Atlantic Christian
College Invitational Brasketbail
Tournament will be held on De-
(^mber 19 and 20. Reserved seat
tickets at a special reduced fac-
ulty-staff-istudent rate of $2.00
Will ibe on sale daily on week
days at the ibox office of the
Wilson Gymnasium. These tick
ets will be put on sale on Oc-
tobw 31 and will be available
until (Friday, November 18. All
of these tidcets will be sold on
a first come - first served ba
sis and they will entitle the
purchaser to admittance to all
four of the games.
These ti<±ets wiU be limited
to one per student and one per
member of the immediate fam
ily of faculty and staff per
sonnel. Students may purchase
adjacent tickets at the standard
$3.00 price for any guests. After
November 18, al unsold (acidty-
staff-student reserved seat tick
ets will be idaced on sale to
the general public.
“THE TAMS” will kick off the 1966 Homecoming activities
with a concert in the Wilson Gymnasium on Friday night,
November 4 at 8:15 P.M. Tickets for this concert will be avail
able to the public and will go on sale on October 28 in the lobby
of the classroom building. The price of the tickets will be $1.25
for students and $2.00 for adults.
S&S To Stage Tragedy
By Maxwell Anderson
Wimterset, a tragedy by Max- Hummel, Jhn Burroughs, Bolb
well Anderson, will be playing Noble, and Clifford Poole. Win'
in Howard Chapel, October 27
and 28 at 8:il5 p.m. Theodore F.
Shank states that it is “a play
of social injustice, revenge, and
renunciation, set in the New
York slums in a dilapidated tene
ment close to the towering Man
hattan Bridge; written chiefly
in verse. 'Mio, the son of a radi
cal named iBomagna who was
executtd for murder, is con
sumed with the desire to clear
his father’s name. On the track
of Garth, the one witness who
could exonerate his father, Mio
meets IMiriamne, Garth’s sister.
They fall deeply in love. The
girl and her father w.pt to pro
tect Garth, who is closely
watched by the real killer,
gangster Trock Estrella. An old
and demented man. Judge Gaunt,
who sentenced Romagna to
death, tries to justify his de
cision. Mio could force Garth to
testify, but Miriamne has caused
him to lose the taste for re
venge. In the end the lovers de
fy death together and are killed.
Severd minor characters, repre
senting the very poor, form a
counterpoint of squalor and frus
tration which transcended by
the poetic impact of the love
story." . ,
flbe princ^iles are as fol
lows: Sandra Edwards, Harold
terset is directed and designed
by Cecil Willis.
T caching
Some 50 public school teachers
in Eastern North Carolina who
will supervise Atlantic Christian
College’s student teachers in
their respective schools during
the current academic semester,
will meet here on' the College
campus Saturday, Oct. ac
cording to Warren R. Tait, di
rector of student teaching.
The purpose of the meeting
will ibe to acquaint the supervis
ing teachers \vith the college,
its education faculty and teacher
education program. Among those
participating in the meeting will
be Dr. Lewis H. Swindell Jr.,
dean of the college and Dr.
Kenneth D. St. John chairman of
the ACC Department of Educa
tion and Psychology.
ccording to Tait, ACC will
have SO student teachers this
fall. Eighteen will be teaching
in the elementary grades while
the remainder will be teaching
in high schools. Participating
school systems include Edenton
City Schools, Elm City Schools,
Johnston County Schools, Nash
County Schools, (ftalei^ City
Schools, Greensboro City Schools,
Wayne County Schools, Wilson
City and Wil^ County Schools.
AC Teacher Education
Program Is Accredited
Atlantic Christian College’sChristian College becomes one
teacher education program has
received full accreditation by the
National Council for Accredita
tion of Teacher Education
(NCATE), according to Rolf W.
Larson, durector of the organiza
tion. The college’s accreditation
came at a meeting of the council
held in Washington, D. C., Oct.
4-6.
With the granting of this spe
cialized accreditation, Atlantic
Claire Cod
To Perform
Miss Claire Cod, nationally
known' concert organist, will ap
pear in Wilson on Nov. 6-7, to
give a concert and conduct a
master class in organ. Her
appearance is being sponsored
by the Assembly and Concert
Committee of Atlantic Christian
College.
Both appearances wiU be at
St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church.
Miss Ck>ci’s recital will be held
on Sunday, Nov. 6, beginning at
4 p.m. The master class will
be held on Monday, Nov. 7, be
ginning at 11 a.m. The public
is invited. There wMl be no ad
mission charge.
EMiss Coci has performed with
major symphony orchestras, has
given recitals from coast to
coast, and was the first organist
of her sex to ibe invited to per
form at West Point. She has
been given much praise by news
papers in both the iU. S. and
Europe.
At present she is one of the
accredited teachers of Union
Theological Seihinary, New Yorik,
and heads the organ department
at Dal'Croze School of Music. In
1959 she was awarded the honor
ary degree. Doctor of Music,
from Defiance College and in
1959 she also estaiblished the
American Academy of Music and
Arts, in Tenafly, New Jersey.
of five private and church-related
colleges in North Carolina which
have received NCATE accredi
tation, according to NCATE’s
most recently issued listmg of
accredited colleges.
The NCATE accreditation cov
ers the college’s programs for
the training of elementary and
secondary teachers at the bache
lor’s degree level and officially
dates from Sept. 1, 1%5.
Commenting on the NCATE
announcement. Dr. Arthur D.
Wenger, president of the college,
said, “While Atlantic Christian
College has been regionally ac
credited by the Southern Associ
ation of colleges and schools
since 1955, this additional
specialized accreditation of its
teacher education program will
provide its students in the field
of teacher education with many
important benefits. Among these
are reciprocal certification by
departments of public instruc
tion in numerous other states
which recognize the certification
of NCATE-approved institutions.”
The National Council for Ac
creditation of Teacher Education
is a voluntary accrediting body
devoted exclusively to the evalua
tion and accreditation of teacher
education programs. It is rec
ognized by the National Com
mission on Accrediting as the
only national accrediting body
for the field of teacher education
which includes the preparation
of teachers for all grades and
subjects at the elementary and
secondary school levels.
The council is made up of rep
resentatives of five constituent
organizations plus committee
representatives. The major pur
poses of NCATE are: (1) The
formulation of policies, standards
and procedures for the accredi
tation of institutional programs
of teacher education. (2) The
See PROGRAM Page 4