Newspaper Page Text
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, FEBRUARY 10, 1977
NUMBER FIFTEEN
Good
Evening!
Cafeteria Delights
As a public service to our
readers we thought it might be
nice to tell you what it is
you’re eating in the cafeteria
tonight. The main course is
meat loaf with tomato sauce.
The small round things are
Rissole potatoes, and the
nattened brown chunks are
escalloped apples. Tomorrow
nights’ feature will be Ham
and Noodles Au-Gratin. Let s
hear Andy Griffith say
'Ummm good” about that
one.
Boston At Duke
The new group Boston will
bring its’ unique sound to the
Cameron Indoor stadium at
Duke University this Sunday,
Feb. 13 at 8 p.m. Elvin Bishop
will also appear. Next Sunday,
Feb. 20, Kansas and Styx will
be in concert at the Green-
sbcroColiseum.
ThePACE Program
Students interested in ap
plying for a job through the
PACE program this summer
may pick up the applications
from the Financial Aid Office.
dantic Christian College will
certify a limited number of
applications and the students
liaving the greatest financial
need will be certified first. If
you have questions concerning
the above program, please
contact the Financial Aid
Office.
Financial Aid
Students who are presently
receiving financial aid and-or
students wishing to make
apphcation for financial aid
for the 1977-78 school year can
pick up the required forms
from the Financial Aid Office.
Basic Grant Applications are
also available now. Students
must re-apply for financial aid
every year.
Recruiting Dates for Teachers
Seniors in education who are
interested in the Virginia
area, please be aware of
recruitment dates with Suffolk
City Schools on Tuesday, Feb.
15th, and Chesapeake Public
Schools on Wednesday, March
16th. You may sign up for
interviews in the Placement
office.
N.C. Methodist Camps
N.C. Methodist Camps —
We have a few more interview
openings available on Wed
nesday, Feb. 16 th, in the
Placement Office.
Badminton Match
Atlantic Christian will play
William and Mary College in
an extra-mural Collegiate
Badminton Match on Satur
day, Feb. 12th, at 1 p.m. in
Wilson Gym. Players for ACC
will be from Coach Parham’s
Methods Class in Badminton.
Dr. Anard Jaggi will play the
No. 1 Singles Match for ACC
Dr. Jaggi has won the N.C.
Open Badminton Singles
Championship for the past two
years. The public is invited.
Americana
This structure can be found in Greenville’s warehouse district. Most of the buildings in the district
date back to the turn of the century. < By Pete C’hamness—The Collegiate)
The Buckley Ammendment:
Fight for Student Rights
(CPS) — Next time you ask
your professors for letters of
recommendation, either for a
job or graduate school ad
mission, be sure not to remind
them of the Buckley Amend
ment,
If you do, there is a good
chance the referral will be
almost meaningless, if not
misleading.
The Buckley Amendment, an
addition to the Educational
Rights and Privacy Act of 1974,
establishes rights for students
and parents to inspect their own
educational records and
prevents third-party access to
those files without written
permission from the student.
Professors who realize
students have the right to view
their own college files, including
those which contain copies of
letters of recommendation, have
become increasingly reluctant
to write critical, candid letters,
in the belief that students who
see themselves portrayed in a
poor light may come stamping
at the professor’s door. And,
according to the amendment,
the letters and all other papers
can be altered if the student
proves them to be inaccurate,
although a law suit might be
necessary.
This apprehension has led to
an influx of bland recom
mendations at graduate school
admissions offices and em
ployment offices.
Said one college president,
“What do you do if a kid is a
possible suicide and he wants
access to medical school?
Professors don’t want to risk law
suits to say that in a letter.” The
president, Keith Spalding, of
Marshall College in Lancaster,
Penn, is reported to have said he
“wouldn’t trust a written let
ter.”
A biology professor at Trinity
College in Connecticut says he
tells students who won’t promise
not to look at the letters thathe’ll
“be careful to avoid extremes,
use general rather than specific
adjectives, and, all-told, write a
bland and meaningless letter.”
Although similar examples
are not difficult to find, Dr.
Alfred Sumberg, the director of
government relations for the
American Association of
University Professors, said that
he couldn’t comment because
“there has been no major
protest by faculty.”
But, all this has resulted in
feelings by both professional and
educational admissions officers
that the written recom
mendation system is im
practical under the restrictions
of the Buckley Amendment.
Bloodmobile to
Visit Campus
The American Red Cross
Bloodmobile will be in Hardy
Alumni Hall on Thursday and
Friday of this week. All
students, faculty, and staff are
encouraged to help the ARC
meet its need for 450 pints of
blood.
Although many reasons are
imagined or invented for not
donating blood, four excuses
seem to be most common among
the members of our academic
community. Perhaps the
weakest excuse is, “No one has
ever asked me to donate blood.”
Well, consider yourself invited.
Just as lame is the catch-all,
“I’m too busy.” The entire
procedure takes approximately
45-60 minutes and the actual
donation takes less than 10
minutes. Is one hour too much
for anyone to spare when he or
she may help save someone’s
life?
Finally, many people seem to
be concerned that “thev’ll take
too much and I’ll feel weak.”
Naturally, giving blood affects
people differently, but because
your body discards old blood and
manufactures new blood con
tinually, the volume you give
(less than one pint) will be
replaced within hours. Any
feelings of dizziness or weakness
you might experience can be
reduced by having a good meal
before donating.
Bloodmobile scheule:
Thursday 11:00-4:00
Friday 10:00-3.00
News in Brief
INC Artists Exhil)it VtOrks
WILSON, N. C. — A sampling of some of the typical work
being produced by comtemporary North Carolina artists is now
on exhibit in the Case Art Building on the Atlantic Christian
College campus. The exhibit will continue through Feb. 25.
The exhibition is a selection of 20 works for the :i9th Annual
North Carolina Artists Exhibition (NCAE), which was on view
Dec. 2through Jan. 9 at the N. C. Museum of Art in Raleigh.
Called "North Carolina Artists Exhibition, Part II,” the show
includes works representing a variety of art stvles and media,
including monoprint, watercolor, serigraph, pastels,
photography, acrylic, pencil and hthography.
“A good representation of photography is a welcomed ad
dition to this year's exhibit. The six photographs show a depth of
artistic expression and a mastery of technical facility that in
dicates photography by North Carolina artists has come of
age,” said Marshall.
The works for both circulating exhibitions were selected by
the panel that juried the NCAE, selecting 127 works for the show
from 1,186 entries: E. John Bullard, director of the High
Museum of Art in Atlanta; and Tracy Atkinson, former director
of the Milwaukee Art Center.
Commenting on the show, Atkinson said that “North Carolina
is in the forefront of contemporary trends in art .”
Reminder on NTE
WILSON, N. .C — Prospective teachers who plan to take the
National Teacher Examinations on Feb. 19, 1977, at Atlantic
Christian College, were reminded today that they have less than
two weeks to register with Educational Testing Service (ETS) of
Princeton, N. J.
Zeb. M. Whitehurst III, dean of students, said registrations
must be mailed in time to reach ETS no later than Jan. 27.
Registration forms and instructions may be obtained from Dean
Whitehurst at Atlantic Christian College or directly from the
National Teacher Examinations, ETS, Box 911, Princeton, N. J.
08540.
Piano Recital to be Held
Dr. George Lucktenberg, concert artist, will appear in a
fortepiano recital at Atlantic Christian College, Thursday, Feb.
10, in the choral room of Hackney Music Building on the college
campus. The concert is being sponsored by the ACC Concert and
Lecture Committee in conjunction with the ACC Keyboard
Festival.
Dr. Lucktenberg tours with his own elegant replica of an 18th
century instrument, the fortepiano. The visually beautiful in
strument was the forerunner of the modern ' ‘grand piano. ”
A frequent feature of the artist's recitals is an invitation to the
audience at the end of the program to join him on stage for a
close-up examination and explanation of the mechanism of the
exceptional instrument. His program will include works by
Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, and Duffek.
A native of Columbus, Ohio, Dr. Lucktenberg holds degrees
from the University of Illinois and Florida State University, and
the Artist’s Diploma from the State Academy of Music in
Vienna, Austria.
He has received Fulbright and Ford Foundation grants for
advanced research study, and is the author of several published
articles as well as editions of music pedagogical and concert
use.