Newspapers / Louisburg College Student Newspaper / Feb. 4, 1972, edition 1 / Page 1
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ARCHIVES THECECILW. ROBBINS LIBRAKV LOUISBURG COLLEGE LOUISBURG.N.C. 27549 Vol. XXXI LOUISBURG COLLEGE, LOUISBURG, N. C. FEBRUARY 4, 1972 Number 4 Entertainment Committee Meets A meeting of the Entertain ment Committee was held in the Main Conference Room Wednesday, January 26, at 5:00 p.m. Voting members of the committee agreed to contract Uriah Heep for a March concert. It was also stated that there will be a spring dance. The concert is to be held in the college gymnasium. It will also feature the group Warm. URIAH HEEP WARM PBL Begins Active Year The Louisburg College Chapter of Phi Beta Lambda held its monthly meeting on Tuesday, January H; At that time, Len Wester, of Louis- btirg, gave a report on the Christmas project sponsored by the chapter--that of helping a needy family through the Franklin County Welfare Department. After the reading of the minutes and the treasurer’s report, Kathy Rush, of Southern Pines, was appointed corresponding secretary, and Cade Beasley, of Louisburg, was appointed assistant historian by Calvin Bunn, president of the chapter. The meeting w^ highlighted by a very good film, “Careers in the World of Tomorrow.” it told of the importance of good grooming and being well dressed. At the close of the film, each member received a complimentary pamphlet, which was also concerned with the importance of being neat and well dressed. The group then discussed the upcoming PBL state con vention in March, and made a few tentative plans for it. Prior to this meeting, the chapter had held three meet ings: one in September for the purpose of giving information to prospective members; one in October, at which time officers were elected and a former member, who is now employed by the college, told of her work; one in November, at which time officers were formally installed and new members were inducted into the chapter. Alice Mustian-Reporter Fred Waring Heads Cultural Events Program Nero To Appear One of the finest components of the Louisburg College Cultural Events Series was the January 24, Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians Concert. The concert was the first appearance by the group at a junior college in the south. The group, composed of approximately forty orchestra and choir members, has a fifty-five-year history of per formances. The Pennsylvanians’ oi^anizer and trainer, Mr. Fred M. Waring, has become one of the most prominent figures in American music. Born in Tyrone, Pennsylvania, on June 9, 1900, Mr. Waring studied at Pennsylvania State. He wrote numerous college songs, and appeared in several musicals on Broadway. His first show with the Pennsylvanians was in 1923 in Chicago. Mr. Waring now makes his home in Swanee-on- Delaware, Pennsylvania. One of the most popular SGA Wants You To Get Involved Are you, the students of Louisburg College, the least bit concerned about what’s happening on our campus? The Freshmen, Sophomores and SGA. officers are! The SGA held a meeting Tuesday night, and decided it was time to get you involved in campus affairs. There was an open SGA meeting in the College Auditorium, January 27 at 11:00 a.m. Every other Thursday there will be a similar meeting. Matters such as a concert with Uriah Heep, committees to get you involved in student activities, com plaints or gripes about any thing, future dances and functions will all be discussed. You have elected your own officers BUT they cannot get anything done without your help and support. Jeanne Krischer, Secretary SGA Louisburg Players The Louisburg Players will present their second major attraction for the academic year with presentations of February 9, 10,11,12,14,15, 16, 17, 18, and 19. Their first attraction was the very stirring and thought-provoking Bury the Dead. The February perfor mances will be at 8:00 p.m. in the Experimental Theatre. performers in the Pennsylvan ians is Clyde Sechler of Danivlle, Pennsylvania. At present he is Mr. Waring’s assistant choral director. The youngest Pennsylvanian to go on the road is eighteen-year-old “Buddy” Wachter of Balti- . more. He plays the banjo, the mandolin, and the guitar. The featured soloist is Betty Ann McCall, also famous for her talent on the accordian. She has performed at Carnegie Hall, the White House, the Olympic Theatre of Paris, and the International Trade Fair in Frankfurt, Germany. The Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians Concert on January 24, in the College Auditorium was certainly one of the most magnificent performances ever seen at Louisburg College and was also a wonderful part of the College’s celebration of its 185th anniversary. New Faces If jOu see a few new faces around oampus this semester it’s not your imagination. Twenty-two students entered Louisburg College for the first time, and former students returned for the spring semester. They are as follows; New Students entering for Spring Semester Deborah Lee Butler Michael Lynn Capps Zebulon Vance Coble John Horton Dowdy Floyd McDill Edwards Betty Ellison James M. Galloway Michael C. Goswick Johnny Ray Gupton Rita Kemp Peggy Moore Joseph Orr Dorothy Puckett John Herman Rigsbee Nancy Rogers Dovie Allen Scholl Billy Seacrist Michael Harold Spring Rhoda Leigh Tabor William Randall Watson Patricia Woodcock William Young Former Students re-entering for Spring Semester Hugh Van Barden Steven Eugene Cooke Stuart Douglas Coward Henry Wheless Cutchin Hickman Lee Finch . William Robert McCanless William A. Munyan Craig W. Sledge Jac Versteeg Christine Washburn Myron Craig West J. Doyle Wheeler Betty Keith Wright Freddie Yarborough PETER NERO Louisburg College has been fortunate enough to procure two widely-known personal ities for the Cultural Events Lecture Series. The first of these was Pat Paulsen, and, on February 24, Peter Nero will speak on the evolution of music from early times to the present. (Please note that the Peter Nero performance is a lecture, not a concert.) Peter Nero, born in Brooklyn, began taking piano lessons at the age of seven, and by the time he was fourteen, Nero had won many awards and a Juliiard scholarship. He attended the New York High School of Music and Art, Juliiard, and Brooklyn College. After working the bar and club circuit for almost six years, RCA signed Peter Nero to his first recording contract. During the next eight years, Nero recorded twenty-three albums before signing with Columbia Records in 1969. The great pianist has performed with such orchestras and symphonies as the Royal Philharmonic, and the Cleve land Symphony, and the Boston Symphony. “Peter Nero Looks at the Music Revolution” will be heard in the College Auditor ium on February 24, at 8:00. Glass Exhibit The Art Gallery in the Fine Arts Building is housing two exhibits for the public during January, February, and March. The Toledo Glass Exhibit, on display from January 8 through February 6, is on loan from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D. C. The Louisburg College Permanent Collection of Prints and Paintings will be on display from February 8 through March 30.
Louisburg College Student Newspaper
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Feb. 4, 1972, edition 1
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