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ATLANTIC^STIANCOLLFr.P
25.1976
NUMBER SEVENTEEN
X
I Honorary D.D.
r E. Jarman, Managers of the N. C. Christ
Herald Brass Quintet
The Herald Brass Quintet will
appear in concert on the campus
of Atlantic Christian College,
Monday, April 5, at 8 p.m., in
Howard Chapel. The event is
being sponsored by the ACC
Concert and Lecture Committee.
The quintet consists of five
graduates of, The Julliard
School, all soloists in their own
right: Bruce Engel, trumpet;
PaulCostanzo, trumpet; Jerome
Ashby, French horn; John Kelly,
trombone; and Kevin Ladd,
tuba. They will perform a
program of music by late
renaissance, baroque, and
modern composers.
The quintet was founded in
1971 by Bruce Engel, the present
music director. The group has
played numerous concerts in
schools, colleges, and concert
halls including Alice Tully Hall
at Lincoln Center in New York.
It has been in residence at
Queensborough Community
College giving lectures,
demonstrations, and recitals. It
has also been sponsored by The
Lincoln Center Foundation.
William Vacchiano, solo
trumpet for the New York
Philharmonic, says that, “Each
member of the Herald Brass
Quintet is a highly trained
professional brass player and an
exceptionally fine musician.
Representing the highest
standards of American brass
playing, they perform with both
powerful impact and sensitive
lyrical styles. It is really
tremendously exciting to hear
such a well refined and dynamic
brass ensemble.”
Admission is free. The public
is invited.
Creative Writing
The students in English 20
(Creative Writing) at Atlantic
Christian College present
examples of their work during
theSpring semester (1976). They
have attempted to isolate ex
perience and to marry it to
language. To the creative writer
there is a wide gamut of
possibilities available; poetry,
prose, drama. In the interest of
economy, we here include only
poems.
The forms exemplified are:
parody, limerick, haiku,
cinquain, sonnet, and villanelle.
In the free verse poems,
students have experimented
with syllabic patterns and with
jreath cadence to determine line
length. The parody were based
upon the Whitman lyric: “There
Was A Child Went Forth
Everyday.” The sonnets were
written after a study of both
Shakespearean and Italian
patterns.
The short forms have been
popular with the class. The
HAIKU is a Japanese mini-poem
that celebrates one moment of
beauty. An arresting of a
second in time is recorded
without any attempt to
philosophize or moralize. The
CINQUAIN is a very old French
form that has been refined and
popularized by Adelaide
Crapsey. Its five lines are in a 2,
4, 6, 8, 2, syllabic count. This
torm using 1,2, 3, 4,1, syllables
is called the LANTERNE.
LIMERICKS, of course, are still
in vogue. Writing limericks was
a hobby with Woodrow Wilson. It
is still a fine and enjoyable
pastime.
The Villanelle is, next to the
sonnet, the most complex of the
forms attempted. There have
been very few successful poems
in this form produced in English.
Among the best are Dylan
Thomas’ “Do Not Go Gentle Into
That Good Night” and Theodore
Roethke’s “The Waking.” You
will notice that each villanelle
contains only two rimes and that
there is a repetition of two lines
throughout the nineteen lines.
Stage and Script Plays
Membere of Stage and Script
are now in rehearsal for three
«udent-directed one-act plays to
^presented April 1-2 in Howard
Chapel.
1^0 Cross is directing “The
wrds Prayer,” by Francois
P^. In the cast are Jackie
marker, Donna Perrin, Cathy
rt, Karl Hartmann, Donnie
oeman, Eddie Martin, and
wnna Marino. The story tells of
young woman who loses her
faith in God when her brother is
Sance a revolution in
The second plav “The
Candice Ewgan, is
Bamoc by Thomas
Merkle,
Mumh George
M“T>hy combine their talents to
tell the story of a man who rebels
against an Orwellian 1984 state.
Cliff Blowe is directing “The
Celebration of the Destruction of
Man,” by Howard E. Cobtxs.
This unusual allegory traces the
development of-civilization from
the caveman to the present.
Included in the cast are Ivan
Price, Heather Jordan, Debbie
Batrtle, Jerry Blackmon, Ray
Connell, William Haas, Walter
Knight, Donna Marino, and
Shannon Suttle.
Curtain time is eight o clock,
April 1-2 for these three student-
directed one-act plays. There
will be no admission charged.
Phi Mu Sorority
Phi Mu sorority had spring
pledge installation on February
23,1976. The seven new Phi’s are
Susan Brown, Candy Harden,
Susan Jernigan, Lu Ann Jones,
Connie Lail, Susan Tilley, and
Celest Warren. Congratulations,
girls!
Also, the newly appointed
officers have ben assigned and
are as follows: Chaplain; Tricia
Williams; Assistant Chaplain:
Sherree Harrell; Reporter:
Phyllis Parrish; Assistant
Treasurer: Patti Denkins;
Historian: Susan
Registrar: Susie St. Clai,
Channey White; Social Chair
man: Jo Ann Smith; Campus
Activities: Jo Ann Sermons;
Scholarship Chairman: Deborah
Page.
Rev. Robert E. Jarman,
minister to the First Christian
Church of New Castle. Ind.. will
be awarded the honorary doctor
of divinity (D.D.) degree by
Atlantic Christian College,
during its annual spring com
mencement to be held here May
14.
A native of Kinston. N. C., he is
a 1940 graduate of Atlantic
Christian College. While a
student at the college he served
as president of the freshman
class, business manager of the
student yearbook and during his
senior year was president of the
ACC Student Government
Association. He also served as
student pastor to Athen’s Chapel
Christian Church and Bath
Christian Church, both in Bath.
N. C.
He was ordained to the
Christian ministry by the North
Carolina Christian Missionary
Society and Gordon Street
Christian Church in Kinston, N.
C. Upon graduation from
Atlantic Christian he entered
Vanderbilt Divinity School,
Vanderbilt University and was
awarded the M.Div. degree in
1943.
Following his graduation from
Vanderbilt he served as pastor
of the First Christian Church in
Cleveland, Tenn., and in 1945
accepted a pastorate at the First
Christian Church in Murray, Ky.
Following a seven-year
ministry in Kentucky, Rev.
Jarman became minister to the
Elm Street Christian Church in
Greensboro, N. C., which later
became the First Christian
Church of Greensboro. While in
Greensboro he served on the
Atlantic Christian College Board
of Trustees for three years and
also served on the Board of
Managers of the N. C. Christian
Missionary Society, serving two
terms as chairman.
He served as first vice
president for the International
Convention of Christian Chur
ches held in Louisville. Ky., in
1960. He presided over the
church’s Louisville convention,
assuming this position because
of the illness of the president. He
became minister to the Hanover
Avenue Christian Church in
Richmond. Va.. in 1959. While
there Rev. Jarman was active in
the alumni affairs of Atlantic
Christian College through its
Richmond Chapter, and served
in various capacities in the
Disciples Council and served his
state as president of the
Disciples Ministers and as a
member of the Division of the
Ministry.
Following nearly eight years
in Richmond. Rev. Jarman
accepted the pastorate of the
First Christian Church, New
Castle. Ind. While there he has
actively participated in the work
of his church in the state. He has
served for a number of years on
the Regional Board, Chairman
of the Stewardship Task Force,
minister representative of the
Appeal for Response in Faith,
vice chairman of the Regional
Board and at present is serving
as chairman of the Personnel
Committee of the Regional
Board. He serves on the staff of
Christian Theological Seminary
as a supervisor of students.
Rev. Jarman is married to the
former Miss June Hatcher of
Louisville, Ky. They have two
sons. Davis 27, a graduate of
Atlantic Christian College and
Texas Christian University; and
Mark 21, a junior at Texas
Christian University.
Goings On
Freebies
Free tickets are available to
ACC students for the London
Symphony concert at 8:00 P.M.
on either March 28 or 29 in
Raleigh’s Reynolds Coliseum.
Tickets may be picked up at the
information desk at the Student
Center. They are provided by the
Concert and Lecture Com
mittee’s participation in the
Friends of the College Series.
Lillian Woo to Visit ACC
The Young Democrat Club of
Atlantic Christian College will
host Lillian Woo, Democratic
candidate for State Auditor on
Wendesday, March 31. Ms. Woo
will meet with students in the
student center from 4:00 to 5:00
in the afternoon. At 8:00 p.m.
there will be a question-and-
answer session at Hines Hall in
Room 208. All interested
students are encouraged to conie
and the public is invited.
Wilson O.I.C. presents the 1st
Annual Miss O.I.C. Beauty
Pageant. All young ladies in
terested in competing should
contact Mildred Summerfield,
the director of O.I.C. Training,
at 291-0038 or 243-3607.
The pageant will be judged on
three parts: swimsuit, evening
gown, and talent competitions.
The Wilson O.I.C. will furnish
swimsuits and gowns.
There will be a student-faculty
basketball game, the BSU vs.
the faculty, in the Old Gym on
Tuesday, March 30, at 8:00 P.M.
Everyone is invited to come out
to share in the fun and great
entertainment. Admission is SO
cents.
Gamma Delta
Gamma Delta Iota, the newly-
formed social and service
organization, has been par
ticipating in a number of events
on campus this semester.
Among tiK events were a series
of basketball games with the
BSU and the recent completion
of painting the exterior of the
infirmary. The painting of the
infirmary, which took place this
past Saturday, was a great
success. Another project taking
place is the publication of the
New Student Register.
Gamma Delta Iota is planning
to give an Easter party for group
of children at the School
for the Deaf on Wednesday,
April 7.
Gamma Delta Iota meets
Thursday nights at 6:30 in Hines
208. The next meeting will be
April 1.
_ j are as toiiows: unapiain; °
A Wink Is As Good As A Nod To A Blind Horee