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piiRil^O WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE. PPRPCAor
24, 1977
NUMBER SEVENTEEN
Good
Evening!
TOP NEWS OF THE DAY
On the national scene; it has
been reported that Texaco is
withholding 500 billion cubic
feet of natural gas which could
be used to ease this winter’s
fuel shortage ... the Supreme
Court is considering a case of
reverse discrimination ...
President Carter has proposed
a national budget of $459.4
billion ... the House Ethics
Committee is investigating
improper and possibly illegal
lobbying by South Korea on
Capital Hill ... On the in
ternational scene; the guerilla
war rages on in Rhodesia —
Prime Minister Ian Smith is
convinced he can bring
about a peaceful settlement
there ... Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance is in the middle
east trying to negotiate a
peace settlement... the United
States will send a delegation to
Hanoi to discuss the
possibility of reopening
normal diploma tic rela tions...
Span is struggling to form a
democratic government after
the absolute rule of Franco.
PEACE PILGRIM
The Peace Pilgrim will
continue her visit to the
campus tomorrow — she will
speak in several social science
classes. All students are in
vited to attend. Look for an
nouncements outside H219. If
you would like her to speak
before a group, contact the
Social Science Dept.
DIZZY GILLESPIE
ATSTATE
Dizzy Gillespie, the famed
jazz trumpet player, will
appear in concert at the
Stewart Theatre on the
campus of N.C. State
University, Wednesday,
March 2 at 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Tickets will be on sale at the
door.
STUDENT ELECTIONS
All students wishing to file
for any student government
office should submit a written
statement to Ricky Clayton,
SGA president, by March L
SLIDE PRESENTATION
There will be a color slide
presentation entitled
“Artifacts from King Tut’-
Tomb” tomorrow night at o
p m. in the choral room of the
Music Building. Guest
speaker will be J. M. Daniel
r. The program is sponsored
the Wilson County
historical Society. No ad-
imssion will be charged.
^ACHERS SCHOLARSHIP
,, "'iU be a meeting of
students who are receiving
North Carolina State
rospective Teachers
^nolarship Loan on Wednes
day. March 2 in the Choral
w Speight, of the
^^teDept. of Education, will
oe the guest speaker. This is
important meeting so
please make every effort to
8
When W ill It Last
Eastern .North Carolina received four inches of snow the past
two weeks. These are campus scenes from last Saturday
morning’s surprise snowfall. (Photos by Peter C'hamness-The
Collegiate)
Students Asked: What Should
Be Done With The Fountain?
By DALE ADAMS
What would you have done
with four miscalculated cor
nerstones made for the roof of a
building, say for example, the
Hamlin Student Center? Well,
with the imagination of the
Greeks of ’67 and the manpower
of Jones Construction Company,
you could have built a fountain!
Had the construction of the
Student Center gone according
to plan, the space in front of the
Center could very well be empty.
But through the ingenuity of
At
The
Center
several Greek organizations, our
fountain was completed in 1968.
Today, the Campus
Beautification Committee is
trying to decide what to do with
the fountain. Due to problems
with water volume and leakage,
it has not been operating this
year. According to Mr. Lee
Moore, Superintendent of
Buildings and Grounds, this tj?pe
of problem is not new. It seems
that there has always been some
type of problem witt inadequate
water pressure. If the fountain is
to remain in working order,
several adjustments will be
necessary. The Beautification
Committee has considered
several alternatives, among
which is the idea of transforming
the fountain into a planter. The
Collegiate, at the request of the
committee, asked several
students to voice their opinions
on the matter. If these students
are representative of the whole,
it seems that the student body
stands united: they want the
fountain to stay.
The following individuals were
enough to state their
kind
opinion.
Jeff Webb: “I’d like for the
fountain to stay in some form.
It’s a point of attention on the
campus. It could be improved; it
is kind of plain as it is.”
Mike Joyner: “We should keep
it, but it shouldn’t be empty.”
Debra Johnson: “I want it left
where it is. It’s somewhere for
students to gather and talk,
especially in the spring.”
Nita Parker: “I think they
should cut it on, if people
wouldn’t abuse it. I definitely
think that it should stay, but it
should be used.”
Debra Lane: “It should stay; I
don’t think they should turn it
into a planter.”
Mike Sawyer: “It’s called a
fountain therefore it should
serve as a fountain. If there are
problems that limit its use as a
fountain, they should be
corrected. If there is concern
about abuse, all fountains are
abused. Our fountain should
serve as a fountain. I don’t think
they should turn it into a planter.
Then it would really be abused.
The Greeks gift should be
rpQnpoted ”
Ray Silverthorne: “I’d like to
see it running without soap suds.
It should be larger, have more
jets, and be lighted at night. It
would be nice if they could put
some rock pebbles in the bottom.
I’d like to know how they’re
going to keep it clean.”
All members of the
Beautification Committee have
shown great interest in obtaining
student opinion on this matter.
They would welcome yours. Dr.
Graham heads this committee
and is concerned about the
student’s wishes. He and others
on the committee would like to
hear from you. Perhaps they will
not be able to comply with all
wishes such as Ron Morton s
who suggested “a nude Greek
statute that sprays water” or G.
Todd’s, who suggested that they
“put in a few sharks, but it is
certain that the committee will
do their best to please the
majority of the students.
=News in Brief=
Dr. Wenger Suffers Heart Attack
Dr. Arthur D. Wenger, president of the college, suffered a
heart attack while at his home last Saturday afternoon. He was
admitted to the intensive care unit of the Wilson Memorial
Hospital; he cannot receive, as yet, visitors. His condition is
listed as fair to poor according to the patient information service
at the hospital. Dr. Wenger is expected to be incapacitated for
some time — it is impossible at this time to determine exactly
how long.
Chamber Ensemble Performs
The Atlantic Christian College Contemporary Chamber
Ensemble will perform at the 2nd Annual North Carolina State
Composers Symposium to be held at Salem College today.
The ensemble specializes in performing 20th century ex
perimental music. Serving as conductor is Marvin Lamb, of the
ACC music faculty.
The ensemble will perform two works by Atlantic Christian
College composer, “Phonemes” for acappella choir, by I^mb,
and “11-11-11-18" for indeterminate ensemble, by J. Ross
Albert, chairman of the ACC Department of Music.
The North Carolina State Composers Symposium is a three-
day invitational series of concerts, student music reading
sessions and lectures held on the Salem College Campus.
Speaker for this years symposium is Robert Ward, Pulitzer
Prize winning composer.
Following his speech. Dr. Ward will by joined by Lamb, Albert
and Thomas Turner, composer-in residence at UNC-Charlotte,
for an open seminar on the topic, “Whither Wander Music?”
The North Carolina State Composers Symposium is sponsored
by Salem College, North Carolina School of the Arts and a grant
from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation
Art Students Visit New York
The third annual Art Department trip to New York City
began on Wednesday, February 9 when four art faculty mem
bers and twenty students left Atlantic Christian at 5:30 a.m.
Stopping in Washington, D.C., the group visited the Hirschorn
Museum, the National Gallery of Art, and the Phillips Collec
tion. Tired but excited, they reached New York City around 9:00
p.m.
On Thursday, informal groups went to the Metropolitan and
Guggenheim Museums and to private galleries. Groups went to
the Frick Collection, the Museum of Modern Art, the Cloisters,
and to China Town on Friday. Some went to the Brooklyn
Museum by subway on Saturday, then on to Greenwich Village,
and later to the Rockefeller Center for ice skating. Before
leaving New York, some saw the play “Godspell,” the movie “A
Star is Born, ’ the Empire State Building, Times Square, St.
Patrick's Cathedral, the Rockefeller Center, and many stores
and shops (and delis).
On the fifth day of the trip, the group left the Big Apple at 9:30
a.m. for the Philadelphia Museum of Art. After 485 miles, the
weary but enlightened and inspired artists arrived back in
Wilson around 11:00 p.m. Sunday.