Newspaper Page Text
published weekly
r
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, DECEMBER 9, 1976
-'NUMBER TWELVE
Good
Evening!
We Got Some Snow
Wilson got its’ first taste of
snow yesterday afternoon, but
unfortunately, none of it stuck.
The National Weather Service
office in Raleigh measured
accumulation at one-forty-
sevenths of an inch. Compare
that with Buffalo, N. Y., which
has received seven feet in the
last four days.
Caroling Party
There will be a caroling
party tommorow at 7 p.m. in
the Student Center.
Entertainment Committee
There will be a very im
portant Entertainment
Committee meeting tonight at
11:00 p.m. in the SGA office.
Others needed at this time will
be: Chuck Finklea, Jones
Fuquay, David Frye, Rusty
Wiggs, Joe Murray, Trip
Johnson, Gaye Jeffreys,
Debbie Robinson, Clint
Holloway and Renee Jenkins,
Christmas Worship
Join with the ACC Vocal
Ensemble and the ACC Brass
Ensemble in Christmas
celebration on Tuesday, Dec.
14 at 11:00 a.m. in Howard
Chapel. The program will
conclude by 11:30.
Daybreak in Concert
The Alpha Omega Christian
Fellowship will present the
Christian rock group
Daybreak in concert on
Saturday, Dec. II after the
basketball game in the old
gym. Bring a blanket to sit on,
and bring a friend. There will
be no admission charge, but
donations will be accepted.
Operation Santa Claus
..The SGA in conjuction with
the Wilson County Mental
Health Association invite you
to join them in making this a
merry Christmas for the
hundreds of residents of North
Carolina’s mental hospitals.
Operation Santa Claus is a
program designed to provide
gifts for these residents and
we need your help. Gifts for
the project can range from
clothing to toilet articles
to tobacco products to coloring
books and crayons. A
collection box for gift items
(unwrapped) will be placed in
Hamlin Student Center. For
niore information contact
Ricky Clayton or David Lee.
Inside Today
•\rtwork 3
Basketball Results 4
I*ateline 3
Editorials 2
forum 2
Soccer Honors 4
Intramurals 4
Rowan 2
Ozone Threat 2
Features 3
Job Opportunities
PRELIMINARY RECRUITING SCHEDULE
Firm
Moore County Schools
FirestoneTireand Rubber
Carolina Power and Light
Export Leaf Tobacco
Wachovia Bank and Trust
Kinston City Schools
Waccamaw Bank and Trust
Burlington Industries
R.J. Reynolds
Chesapeake Public Schools
Talon Division
Location
Carthage, N.C.
Wilson, N.C.
Raleigh, N.C.
Richmond, Va.
Greenville, N.C.
Kinston, N.C.
Whiteville, N.C.
Greensboro, N.C.
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Chesapeake, Va.
Meadville, Penn.
Date
January 18
January 19
January 19
January 25
February 3
February 8
February 16
February 17
February 22
March 16
March 22
This schedule is tentative. New organizations will be added to
this list as soon as correspondence is received concerning a
recruiting date. You are asked to familiarize yourself with
occupational literature concerning these organizations. One
week prior to an organization's arrival on-campus, students are
asked to sign up for interviews in the Placement Office. When
one signs up for an interview, he-she is expected to be present at
that time. Please be sure that the Placement Office has your
placement packet as soon as possible. Any questions concerning
this schedule should be addressed to Mr. Tingle in the Student
Personnel Office.
Thinking of Transferring?
Out-of-State Tuition
Fees Very High
..(CPS) — Many students
across the nation face the
possibility of a dreary siege thai
may last the entire winter.
Trapped on lackluster campuses
that will become overwhelmed
by bad weatherand worse times,
books and familiar faces their
sole sources of solace, they are
left with two choices:sit it out, or
leave.
Comparatively high tuition
fees charged out-of-state
residents by many universities
may influence the less wealthy
to slay put.
Those with the ways and
means, though, may choose to
depart for campuses in more
exotic locales. Even if the
wandering student traveler
decides to relocate to a public
university, however, he can look
forward to exceptionally high
tuition fees which are almost
universally levied on out-of-state
residents.
Dreamers who picture
themselves in a tropical
paradise at the University of
Hawaii at Manua, Near
Honolulu, can expect to pay fees
of $1,125 per year, as compared
to the $450 per year charged for
residents of the state.
One year at Florida State
University in Tallahassee will
cost a non-Florida resident an
additional $1,1236 over and
above the $651 annual
registration fee, though perhaps
the monetary blow will be sof
tened by the nearby Gulf of
Mexico, which the school’s
catalogue says “tempers
climate and offers diverse
recreation.”
For around $2,600 a year, an
out-of-student may be able to
enjoy mild California weather at
one of the nine diverse
University of California cam
puses, if they can gain ad
mittance. The annual cost for
California residents is about
$690. Also, may UC campuses
sport out-of-state contingents
that comprise less than two
percent of the total student
population. At $1,440 per year,
attending one of the California
State University campuses is a
comparative bargain for non
residents.
For those who hunger after
adventure in the frozen north,
the University of Alaska, which
boasts that Mr. McKinley is
visible from downtown
Anchorage, demands only an
additional $600 yearly tuition fee
from out-of-staters who want to
sample a “moderate” winter
climate that averages zero
degrees Farenheit and dips to-30
derees F. Snowshoeing,
snowmobiling, and sleddog
racing are said to be popular
pastimes there.
Scholars willing to take a
gamble on the University of
Nevada at Las Vegas can expect
to pay an extra $1,200
annually unless they can prove
that they are bona fide residents
of the state, with the intent of
making Nevada their “true,
fixed, and permanent home and
place of habitation.” However,
they are warned that “tem
porary absences for more than
one day must be explained” and
that residency will not be
granted if the applicant has been
out of the state more than 10
days in any one year. Such
fidelity w'ould require a great
love on the part of the
prospective resident either for
wager-making or for the
“panorama of rugged redrock
mountains, eroded sandstone
landscapes, and forgotten ghost
towns” that adorn the
surrounding area, according to
the university catalogue.
Money is not altogether
necessary to attend universities
outside one's slate, though. In
most cases, if the prospective
transfer student is willing to
maintain a residence in the slate
w’here he wishes to attend
college, pay taxes there, vote
there, and otherwise bind
himself to its bureaucratic web,
he can usually be reclassified as
a resident after 12 consecutive
months within state lines.
If this seems an inordinate
restriction of personal liberty,
one might attempt to establish
residency within a shorter
period of time using generous
amounts of imagination or
money.
MIHHOH I.M.\(iE: Man and nature combined to create this
interesting reflection on the Branch Hanking and Trust building
on Nash Street. (Staff photo by Pete Chamness)
News Briefs
“Lord INelson
Mass" Tonight
The Atlantic Christian
College Choir with chamber
orchetra, will perform the
“Lord Nelson Mass,” by
Franz Joseph Haydn, tonight
at 8 p.m.. in the sanctuary of
the P'irst Baptist Church of
Wilson.
The “Lord Nelson (or
Imperial) Mass in D minor,”
was composed during Haydn's
second visit to England. It was
created in a burst of in
spiration prompted by news of
the great British admiral's
victory at Abukir, the Battle of
the Nile.
This particular mass is
often acclaimed the most
dramatic and forceful of all 12
Haydn masses. Rarely did he
achieve the persistent
emotional intensity found in
the mass from the first few
martial measures of the Kyrie
to the final swift allegro of the
close of the Agnus Dei.
Conductor for the per
formance will be J. Ross
Albert, chairman of the ACC
Department of Music. The
choir accompanist, Charles
W. Rakow of the ACC music
faculty, will play the organ
part which was added to the
orchestration some years
after the piece was composed.
Brass Ensemble
to Perform
The A. C. C. Brass
Ensemble and Concert Band
will present a joint Christmas
Concert on December 13, 1976
at 8:00 P.M. in Howard
Chapel. The six-piece bra.ss
ensemble, under the direction
of Marvin Lamb, will perform
a variety of early tran
scriptions for brass in
struments including J. S.
Bach's “Sarabande and
Minuet,” Haas's “Two Six
teenth Century F’lemish
Songs,” Susato’s “Three
Dances (from Music Boxes),”
and two dances from Milan's
"Five Dances of the I6th and
17thCenturies"
iNorth Carolina
Artists Exhibit
Thirty recent prints by
North Carolina artists will be
on view at the Case Art
Building Gallery at Atlantic
Christian College from Dec. 3
to Dec. 21. The exhibition,
tilled “North Carolina
Printmakers,” was assem
bled by the North Carolina
Museums, and schools of
North Carolina on loan from
the museum.
The exhibition shows
original work by con
temporary North Carolina
printmakers and points up the
different directions in which
they are working. Such
representational prints as
“Jon” by Durham artist Earl
Mueller are included in the
collection, along with such
abstract prints as
“Discovery” by George
Bireline of Raleigh.
Impressionistic and purist
works are also represented.
Printmaking, or “graphic”
art, has been an occupation of
most of the great artists of the
world since the 15th century
discovery of mechanical ways
to make impressions. Various
media have been utilized to
produce the prints, with ef
fects achieved in black and
white, single color, and multi
color.
Ih tod Sciuggd
Sunday