Hoke High , Flora Macdonald Seniors
DAR Honors Misses Hostetler, Farrow
Dorcas Hostetler and Beverly
Farrow were honored - last week
when the Upper Cape Fear Chap
ter, Daughter^ of the American
Revolution, met in Red Springs.
They had been designated DAR
Good Citizens of their schools. The
girls and their mothers were guests
at the chapter meeting.
Both are seniors, Miss Hostetler
at Flora Macdonald Academy in
Red Springs, and Miss Farrow at
Hoke County High School.
Also honored was Suwanna
Hammonds, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Hammonds of Red
Springs, who was named DAR
Good Citizen from Red Springs
High School.
Miss Hostetler is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hostetler.
She is president of the Student
Government Association at Flora
Macdonald, is editor of the school
paper and is on the staff of the
annual.
Named to the Distinguished
Society of High School Students,
she also is listed in Who's Who
Among American High School
Students. She* is an officer in the
Beta club and received the coveted
Danforth "1 Dare You" award.
In eighth grade competition,
Dorcas was a district winner in the
state-wide DAR essay contest. She
is a member of the chorus and the
science club, and was a marshall.
In addition to her scholastic
achievements, she is active in
FMA's sports programs, was
named Most Valuable Player on
the tennis team, and also plays
basketball.
At First Baptist Church, Miss
Hostetler teaches Sunday School, is
in the Youth Choir, and is active in
Ac-teens.
Miss Farrow is listed in Who's
Who Among American High
School Students and is the Dis
tinguished Society of American
High School Students. She also is
active In the work of Center Grove
Baptist Church where she teaches
Sunday School and serves as an
usher. Miss Farrow also is in the
Future Business Leaders of
America, is a Senior Volunteer
Tutor, and is a member of Students
in Action for Education, and of the
Hoke High French and Science
clubs.
She is president of the senior
class and was vice president of the
student government in her junior
year. Miss Farrow also was chosen
1981 Miss Echo of Hoke High. She
also is in the high school band and
served as a page on Gov. James
Hunt, Jr.'s, staff last spring.
Miss Farrow is the daughter of
James Edward and Dorothy Far
row. Her mother is a teacher of a
Fifth Grade class at J.W. Turling
ton School.
The Good Citizen program,
sponsored by the North Carolina
Society of the DAR, is open to boys
and girls in high school senior
classes.
The award is based on leader
ship, including personality, self
control, and ability to assume
responsibility; dependability --
truthfulness, loyalty and punc
tuality; service -- cooperation, cour
tesy and consideration of others;
patriotism -- unselfish interest in
family, school, community, and
nation; and scholastic record -- the
student must be ranked academi
cally in the top 10 percent of his or
her class.
October 30 At Upchurch Junior High
Benefit Carnival Planning
'Rolling'
? ir fl
Dorcas Hostetler
' '.CiL MAk&rU
The planning for the Hoke
County Community Halloween
Carnival scheduled for October 30
at Upchurch Junior High School,
from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m., is "really
rolling, Betty Pittman, president
cosh lu- organization,
said this week.
u ^ ^??l^niva, is being sponsored
by the Parent and Volunteers
Committee for the Trainable Multi
handicapped Students of the Hoke
County school system, in coopera
Club thC Raef?rd Kiv^nis
This will be only the second
annual benefit Halloween Carnival
r us," she added, "but the
response from community organi
zations to provide booths, run
concessions, prepare posters and
Marketing Students
Working At Fair
Marketing and Distributive
Education students from Hoke
County High School are actively
involved in the 1982 North Carolina
State Fair in Raleigh.
Twenty-four local students will
man the entire MDE exhibit on
Saturday. October 16.
The State Fair will begin on
October 15 and run through Oc
tober 23.
For the first time, a separate
building, a geodesic dome, has
been devoted to exhibits that have
been planned, developed, and
manned by vocational education
students from throughout the State
of North Carolina.
The theme of the vocational
exhibit is "Carrousel of Skills."
A carrousel simulation has been
established inside the dome utili
zing movement, lights, music, mir
ros, cloth streamers, and horses.
Fair viewers will walk through the
exhibit on a pathway which begins
with vocational development, winds
through the other vocational edu
cation program areas (agriculture,
business and office, health oc
cupations, home economics, in
dustrial arts, trade and industrial
education) and culminates with the
marketing and distributive educa
tion exhibit and the futures area.
^'8^ students who will
participate are Kenneth Purcell
Towanna Burkes. Rovenia
LeGrand, Johnnie Thompson, To
wanda Quick, Charlotte Leadford
Vicky Blue. Wanda Brown. Noei
Jones. Ave jo Woods. Pam Bryan.
Tamey Baldwin. Tonya Holt, Paula
Locklear. Mary McArn, Sharon
Thornton, and Donna Watson.
These students will be ac
companied by local Vocational
Director Harold Gillis, his wife
and Eleanor Snead. MDE Teacher
Coordinator.
It is hoped that many local
people will be able to attend the
State Fair on October 16 so that
you may have an opportunity to see
these local students perform as they
represent marketing and distribu
tive education students across the
state. Plan now to attend the Fair
and visit the Vocational Exhibit.
You will be (lad you did!
The
Newt-Journal
The News-Journal is pub
lished every Thursday by Dick
son Press Inc. at 119 W.
Elwood Avenue, Raeford, N.C.
28376. Second Class postage is
paid at Raeford, N.C. (USPS
388-260). Subscription rates
are payable in advance at $8
per year, $4.25 for six months
and $2.25 for three months.
donate door prizes has been over
whelming."
"So far, we have about a dozen
different groups lined up to help
out," reported Jeanne Sisk, vice
president of the TMH Parents
Group.
The plans call for activities for
kids of all ages, with Carnival
booths, demonstrations, bake
sales, an auction, and an old
fashioned country store which the
parents will want to visit.
There also will be clowns, a
dance exhibition, an artist at work,
a dunking booth, a Cake Walk,
costume judging, pumpkin judg
ing, Haunted House, raffles, "The
Gorge," Pie in the Face, and
Target Practice.
Supporters and participants in
clude Faberge, Inc., Betty Grice,
TMH Parents, the Raeford Ki
wanis Club, the Raeford-Hoke
County Chamber of Commerce, the
Raeford Lions Gub, the Raeford
Merchants' Association, the Rae
ford Junior Woman's Qub, the
NAACP of Hoke County, Hoke
County High School, the Order of
the Eastern Star, Upchurch Junior
High, Sandhills Youth Center, the
Hoke County Blazers semi-pro
baseball team, Hoke County volun
teer fire departments and their
auxiliaries, the Hoke County Parks
and Recreation Department, Post
20 of the American Legion, the
Rangerettes of the Woodmen of the
World, the Raeford Jaycees and
Jaycettes, church groups, 4-H
clubs. Scouts, Hoke County Bee
keepers Association, the Hoke
Tennis Association.
The booths and activities include
"See the Spook," "Witches Brew,"
dart-throwing at balloons, balloon
bust, bobbing for apples. Bingo,
bean bag toss, baseball throw, fish
pond, arm wrestling, guessing
weight or age, tug-o'-war, a fortune
teller, arcade games, ring the
bottle, dunking booth, "Get the
Celebrity," ring toss, car races,
greased pole climb, demolition
derby, tire toss, "Clown Face" and
"Tar Heel" painting, and duck
pond.
Concession stands will offer hot
dogs, soft drinks, popcorn, coffee,
and bakery foods for sale.
?' m 1 i ?* ? : f- ;
Beverly Farrow
Rohrbacker Gets BS
From UNC-Greensboro
Caroline Rohrbacker of Raeford
was among 365 persons who com
pleted their degree requirements
during summer school at the
University of North Carolina at
Greensboro.
The 365 students completing
their degrees during summer school
at UNC-G included 10 at the
doctoral level, three who finished
specialist in education degrees, 151
master's degree recipients and 201
undergraduates.
Miss Rohrbacker, a mathematics
major, daughter of Stanley Rohr
backer, California, completed a
bachelor of science degree.
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The- Weekend While Quantities Lett. Quantities
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Main SWMt Rseford. N. C.
9-0 Mon.-Sat. 1-6 Sunday
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