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MAR 2 3 IJ73
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HRISTIAN college, march 22, 1973
^10
NUMBER TWENTY
Members of the college’s faculty and administrative staff recently made pledges amounting to
$40,400.40 in support of the current Fulfillment Fund Program. Some 94 per cent participated in the
effort. Shown are members of the campaign’s Campus Family Committee when they learned of the
final tally. Ashton P. Wiggs served as chairmen of the committee.
Faculty Pledges $40,400.40
Members of the Atlantic
Christian College family
recently gave the college’s
Fulfillment Fund Porgram
substantial boost by pledging
some $40,400.40 to support the
current capital funds effort.
Participating in the program
were 94 per cent of the college’s
faculty and administrative staff.
Concert Scheduled
Martha Bixler and Kenneth
Wollitz, former members of the
famed New York Pro Musica,
will be presented in a concert of
Medieval, Renaissance, and
Baroque music for winds,
Saturday,March24, atSp.m., on
the campus of Atlantic Christian
College, in the choral room of
Hackney Music Building. Their
appearance is sponsored by the
ACC Department of Music.
Miss Bixler and Wollitz will
perform on early instruments
including recorders, krum-
mhorns, bass rankett, and
harpsichord. Their program will
span a musical gamut from 13th
Century English dances called
"Estampies” to a 1963 “Elegia
and Rondo,” by Hans-Martin
Linde. Between these stylistic
extremes will be a Telemann
partita, a Rameau rondeau, a
recercada, by Ortiz; a ballata by
Landini; and “Prins Robbert
Masco,” by van Eyck. The
program will include a
discussion and deonstration of
the instruments being used and
should provide a rare op
portunity for the listener to
become better acquanited the
instruments in use five hundred
years ago.
Miss Bixler and Wollitz will
conduct a recorder workshop for
ACC recorder players and other
interested people Saturday
afternoon. Recorder players
from throughout North Carolina
as well as South Carolina and
Virginia are expected to attend.
Miss Bixler is a graduate of
Smith College and the Yale
University School of Music. She
IS presently completing work
toward a degree in musicology
and performance practice at
rooklyn College. Institutions at
which she has taught include
ycracuse University, the New
lork College of Music, the
wnox School and the Diller-
Waile School of Music. Her
current teaching is private and
at workshops around th country,
nstruments on which she
aches and performs are the
recorder, harpsichord, and
krummhorn. She is the purlished
arranger of several editions of
recorder music for children and
adults.
Wollitz is president of the
American Recorder Society. A
graduate of the University of
California at Berkeley, he has
done graduate work at Brooklyn
College and the Graduate Center
of the City University of New
York.
A reception immediately
following the concert will
provide an opportunity to
discuss with the performers the
music and instruments heard on
the program. The concert, which
is free and open to the public, is a
partof the 1973 ACC Arts
Festival, “The Arts in Medieval
and Renaissance Life.”
Heading the ACC Campus
Family Committee was Ashton
P. Wiggs, assistant professor of
business.
Through the Fulfillment Fund
Program the college is seeking
some $3 million to construct a
new learning resource center,
nursing education building,
acquire additional campus
property, make additional
campus improvements and meet
certain financial obligations.
Commenting on the an
nouncement. T. J. Hackney Jr.,
one of the campaign’s general
co-chairmen, said, 'T am ex
tremely proud of the wonderful
participation by the faculty and
staff of Atlantic Christian
College in our Fulfillment Fund
Program. If we continue to
receive such support from other
sources I am positive we will
reach our goal."
Irvine’s
Works On
Paintings by Norbert Irvine,
assistant professor of art
education at Atlantic Christian
College, are on display this
month in the Washington (D.C.)
Gallery of Art. The show is
entitled “Drawings and Small
Works.” It features 37
Washington area artists and is a
cooperative effort of four other
Washington gallaries — Henri,
Jefferson Place, Protetch, and
Pyramid.
The two paintings by Irvine
are acrylics on wood relief en
titled “Carnival," and
“Pistachio.”
Renato Danese, curator of the
Baltimore Museum, and Nina
Felshin, recent curator of the
Corcoran Gallery of Art,
collaborated on the catalogue for
the show which lists works
valued at over $225,000.
Paul Richard, art critic for
The Washington Post said, the
pieces on display do not compete
with one another. They are there
for delectation ... A sweetness
rules the exhibition, a sense of
lightness and of landscape and of
open air.”
LAFF Again
By JACKIE PARKER
For all you interested kite and
glider fans, Laff (Last Annual
Flight Festival wants you! You
probably heard about the big
wing ding that will take place on
Wedn. April 11, 1973 at 4:00 p.m.
Over spring break, you can all
work on your kite and glider.
Heare are the rules:
KITE RULES
The kite must be supported by
air only for no less than three
minutes and must be at least six
feet in the atmosphere. The kite
must be manpowered only with
no motors orfule.
GLIDER RULES
The glider cannot be fuel
powered, have an engine or a
motor, however, propellants
such as a rubber band in con
nection with a propeller may be
used. It must be an air craft that
sescends at normal angle
without engine power, sufficient
for level flight.
Flight as defined by the judges
is sustained movement through
the air by a heavier than air,
craft. This is not the same as a
falling object.
Everybody go out and build
those kites and gliders. LAFI is
gonna be a real gas!!
Fulfillment Funds Plans
Bland \V Worley of Winston-
Salem, and T. J Hackney Jr , of
V\ilson, have been named
general co-chairmen to head
Atlantic Christian College s
recently announced $3 million
1'ulfillnient Fund Program,
according to Dr. Arthur 1).
Wenger, president of the college
Worley is president of The
Wachovia Corp , Winston-
Salem. Hackney is president of
Hackney Bros. Body Co.. Wilson.
Commenting on the an
nouncement, Dr Wenger said.
"Acceptance of the top
leadership posts in our
Fulfillment Fund Program by
NCSL
Next week, March 28 through
April 1, while you are in Florida
or lazing at home or maybe
working (Perish the thought!)
seven students will be
representing you in Raleigh at
the North Carolina Student
Legislature. There will be four
and a half days of meetings.
Colleges, universities and
technical institutes from all over
North Carolina will be in at
tendance. NCSL is a mock
General Assembly which North
Carolina’s leaders pay a great
deal of attention to. More than
forty pieces of legislation will be
acted on next week. There will
be bills pertaining to medical
care, gun control, newspersons
privilege and many other topics
of interest.
Representing Atlantic
Christian will be Otis Carter, A1
Johnson, Robbie Steen, Linda
Edwards, Kim Taylor, Shannon
Wilson, and Cindy Kramer.
ACC's bills include: (1) a bill
creating a consumer’s counsel,
(21 Legislation calling for in
centives to industry in an effort
to halt pollution, and (3) A bill
allowing certain groups to have
raffles and bigo games and
providing certain exceptions.
The consumer bill is possibly the
most far-reaching. It charges
the attorney general to go to bat
for individuals in obtaining
information pertaining to prices
and rate making cases. The
intentions of the pollution bill is
to allow industries to pollute at
so much cost per pound of
pollutant. The idea is to charge
See NCSL I’age 4
.Mr Hackney and Mr Worley
already has set a high level of
expectacny for our campaign
Both men bring vast experience
from other major fund raising
efforts in which they have been
involved
■'.Mr Hackney is a former
.\tlantic Christian College
campaign chairman while Mr
Worley s experience has l>een in
major campgians in the Win
ston-Salem-Greensboro area
Their success in recruiting
absoluely top flight leadership
for the campaign already has
Ix'en established as has their
their ability to secure major
advance gift commitments. The
kind of leadership they are
providing goes a long way
toward assuring success of our
program"
Through the capital fund
program, the college exfx'cts to
construct a new learning
resource center. nursing
education building, acquire
additional campus property,
make additional campus im
provements and meet certain
financial obligations.
Worley currently serves as a
member of the Atlantic
Christian College Board of
Trustees, A native of Kinston, he
attended Atlantic Christian
College and was graduated from
the University of North
Carolina He is also a graduate
of the Graduate School of
Banking, Rutgers University
and the Executive Program at
the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.
He is past president of the
.North Carolina Bankers
AssiK'iation; chairman of the
Greensboro College Board of
Trustees; past president and life
member of the Greensboro
Chamber of Commerce;
.National Chairman, Volunteer
State Chairmen. U. S. Savings
Bonds Program; and president.
Area 11, Boy Scouts of America.
Hackney currently serves as
chairman of the Atlantic
Christian College Board of
Trustees, a pxisition he has held
since 19()5. He has been a
member of the board since 1957.
A native of Wilson, he became
the fourth president of Hackney
Bros. Body Co., in 1956, having
earlier served as secretary-
treasurer of the organization
with which he became affiliated
in 1941
Duckworth Honored
Dr. William Duckwor+h,
Atlantic Christian College music
faculty member, recently
received notice that a 30 minute
program of his compositions was
programmed by Atlanta radio
station WGKA as a part of a
series of programs devoted to
American composers. These
programs ran throughout
February which is American
Music Month.
The works featured on the
W'GKA program were ’’Gambit''
for solo percussion and elec-
See
“Little
Big Man'
Hardy Hall
March 24
tronic tape; 'An Imaginary
Death-Dance " for oboe and
guitar; "A Ballad in Time and
Space” for tenor .saxophone
quartet; and "Non-Ticking
Tenuous Tintinnabule Time” for
4 electric metronomes and
percussion quartet.
Dr and .Mrs. Duckworth were
in Atlanta in early March to
attend the 10th Annual Sym
posium of Contemporary Music
for Brass where his “Sequence
One” for trombone and per
cussion was performed. The
symposium, held annually at
Georgia State University, in
vites composers from
throughout the world to submit
new works incorporating barss
instruments. The works selected
are performed in a series of
concerts throiiehoiit the 3 rl3v
EVENT. A $500 commission is
awarded one of the participating
composers. This year is the
second time a composition by
Duckworth has been chosen by
the Selections Committee of the
symposium.