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Til
WEEKLY
PUBLISHED
Glee Club
performs
JOHN STOUT
The underground vibrations of
u iiniversitv of North Carolina
filled the A.c.a
gymnasium with an un
fLptable choral program at
Tuesday’s Convocation, The
rty member glee club, made
of University of North
Carolina students who may not
be majoring in music but do
have a great interest in singing,
is under the direction of Robert
Giorco.
This chorus has a somewhat
different structure than most
choral groups of its kind stated
the director, Mr. Giorco. “Most
directors prefer to have their
singers set up in sections which
contain singers who share the
same pitch. Unfortunately, when
ihis happens, you usually have
the basses hearing only the
bases and no other voices. But I
have scrambled the sections in
this cliorus so as to allow each
singer to hear the other ones
part. This has been a proven
method in which to allow each
singer to know his exact location
in the number and has made our
overall sound much more
unified.”
The chorus presented its
ecletic repetoire in a fourty
minute program which was
divided into three portions,
allowing three different styles of
music to be presented in the
same program. The first portion
of the program was devoted to
scared choral pieces, which
included a middleage com
position sung in Latin and a
more contemporary Welsh
hymn. The second part of the
program featured traditional
and highly humorous selections
such as that all time best seller
“Sara was a Man” and that
recent chart buster “John
Styles” an unussually structured
composition in which the hero
carries on a dialogue with the
audience. The chorus concluded
its program with an un-
torgetable interpetation on that
contemporary, inspirational
show, “Impossible Dream”
from the movie “The Man of
LaMancha.”
j^ANTIC CHRISTIAN rni i
, NOVEMBER 20. 1969
library
i d
ATLANTIC
CHRISTIAN CQLItfi^ER
TEN
The N.C. Chapter of Alpha Chi, a national honorary scholastic fraternity, recently installed new
officers at Atlantic Christian College. They are, left to right, Emy Swindell of Wilson, president;
Tom Albert of Wilson, regional representative; Kenneth O’Connell of Wilson, treasurer; Lina
Horne of Wilson, secretary; and John Anders of Havelock, vice president.
Alpha Chi Holds Service
New officers were installed Chi, a national honorary
and 2^ Atlantic Christian College scholastic fraternity, on the
students were inducted into the college campus recently.
N.C. Gamma Chapter of Alpha A national honor society
Program
Is Added
An additional convocation
program has been scheduled this
semester for January 6, at 11:00
a m. in Howard Chapel. The
Music Department will present
the Atlantic Christian College
Ensemble and Recorder Consort
in Concert.
With the change in con
vocation procedure from last
year s method of allowing three
Cuts to this fall’s method of
■'equiring attendance at eight
programs it has been noted that
some students are having dif-
iculty adjusting. They selected
certain programs to attent.
See PROGRAM Page 4
Talk Tonight
be a special half-
Taik '^®ek on Campus
Washington
Sr will
M "Overage
a panel
ussion between AC nar
i2v?‘" Moratorium, and
^terviews ^jthNC Senator Sam
Fountain
aired tnn' I Program will be
aired tonight at 9:30 p.m.
founded in 1922, Alpha Chi is a
member of the Association of
College Honor Societies.
Dedicated lo the stimulation of
sound scholarship and scholastic
endeavors and devotion to the
truth, Alpha Chi has as its
objective the promotion and
recognition of scholarship and
those elements of character
which make scholarship.
Membership in the society is
the highest recognition of
scholastic achievements which
may be bestowed upon a student
at Atlantic Christian and
requires a student classification
of junior or senior with over all
accumulative grade average of
3.2 or higher.
Taking office were Emy
Swindell of Wilson, president;
John Anders of Havelock, vice
president; Linda Horne of
Wilson, secretary; Kenneth
O’Connell of Wilson, treasurer;
and Tom Albert of Wilson,
See ALPHA CHI Page 4
Teiser Is Crowned
Homecoming has run its
course for another year at ACC.
The highlight of the homecoming
concert is always the crowning
of the Homecoming queen. This
year’s contest proved no ex
ception to the usual atmosphere
of excitement and suspense.
That suspense ended at 9:30
p.m., Friday, November 7 as
Miss Kathryn Teiser was
crowned Homecoming Queen of
Atlantic Christian College for
1969-70.
Miss Teiser, a native of
Henderson, N.C. is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. E.S. Teiser. The
senior Miss is a member of Fhi
Mu Fraternity and a transfer
from Vardell Hall. Alpha Sigma
Phi sponsored Miss Teiser who
i<r, known by all as “Catbir .
The 1969-70 Queen is majoring m
elementary education with a
minor in history.
First runner-up in the annual
selection was Miss Candy Moore
sponsored by Sigma Phi Epsilon
Fraternity. The daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard W. Moore,
Candy is from Falmouth, Maine.
Miss Moore is a member of
Delta Zeta Sorority and occupies
the position of head cheerleader
for her second consecutive year.
Candy is a senior majoring in
English.
Miss Judy Youngblood
sponsored by Sigma Pi frater
nity was second runner-up. Judy
is an English major from
Raleigh, N.C. Her parents are
Mr. and Mrs. T.J. Youngblood.
Tri-Sigma is the sorority in
which Judy is currently serving
as president.
These three finalists were
selected by popular vote from a
field of 16 contestants. Miss
Teisers succeeds Miss Elvyn
Seymour, a Phi Mu, who was
Homecoming Queen, 1968-69.
Pink Slip
Censured
By Board
As new business opened at the
November 17 meeting of the SGA
Executive Board, Joyce
Copeland moved that the Board
use all channels available to
discontinue the sending of pink
slips to the parents of up
perclassmen. She charged that
unsatisfactory reports are
“unnecessary” and show a
“complete lack of faith” in
students’ sense of responsibility.
Copeland added that it is “a little
stupid” to send pink slips to
parents of married students
paying their own bills.
Sieve Bassette inquireS why
freshmen should continue
receiving pink slips.
Copeland answered that
parents of freshmen are more
anxious, but by the time a
student reaches the sophomore
year, he is aware of what is
expected of him. Question was
called and the motion was
passed.
Harold Herring successfully
moved that $276 extra received
in activity fees be divided
between the cheerleaders and
the Campus Awareness Com
mittee.
Stein successfully Moved that
the SGA take steps to reduce the
total numberof convocations.
This motion wasamendedtostate
that a committee composed of
Executive Board members be
appointed to investigate con
vocations and their financing.
Dennis Jones announced that
the Men’s Interdormitory
Association will sponsor a juke
box with free refreshments for
all after the November 22
ballgame.
Sr. Recital
Thomas Albert, Atlantic
Christian College senior music
major from Wilson, will present
his senior tuba recital Monday
night, 8:15 p.m., Nocember 24.
Included on the program will
be “Sonata V” by Galliard,
“Sonata for Tuba and Piano” by
Walter Hartley, “Conzona” by
Pergolesi, “Sento Nel Core” by
Scarlatti, “Per La Gloria” by
D’Adorarri, and “Suite for
Tuba” by Donald Haddad. He
will be assisted by the ACC
Brass Ensemble, directed by
William Duckworth, in
presenting “Sharagan and
Fugue” by Alan Hovhaness.
ACC Grad
Is Named
By Alumni
H. Leman Barnhill, out
standing farmer, warehouse
man and merchant of Wil-
liamston, was named recipient
of the Atlantic Christian College
“Alumnus of the Year” award at
a meeting of the ACC Alumni
Association held during home
coming activities on the college
campus during the past
weekend.
A 1927 graduate of Atlantic
Christian, he was elected to the
institution’s Board of Trustees in
1957. A leading participant in the
development program of the
college, he currently serves as a
member of the board’s Finance
Committee.
While a student at Atlantic
Christian he was a founding
member of Phi Kappa Alpha
fraternity and in 1958 became a
charter member of the Delta
lota chapter of Delta Sigma Phi
national fraternity.
In his hometown he currently
serves on the board of directors
of the Chamber of Commerce,
the Roanoke Country Club, the
Martin County Savings and Loan
Association, and is chairman of
the board of directors of the
Williamston office of Wachovia
Bank and Trust Co. He is
presently president of the
Williamston Development Corp.
and has been instrumental in
See AWARD Page 4