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