VOL. XXni ATLAN'Tir CllKISTIAN (’()lJ,Kt:K. FKHUl'AKY. 195:1 NO. 4 Courses Added To Evening Curriculum The Curriculum Committee of AC, headed by Dr. Perry Case, has announced the addition of sev* era! new courses in connection with the curriculum of the insi- tution’s Evening College. The new courses are “Develop ment of Skills in Radio Speech and Announcing.” ‘,The Church in Its Community”, “English N o v e 1”, and ‘‘The Community School”. Dr. D. Ray Lindley has appoint- ed Joel p. Lawhon of Wilson, pro gram director of radio station WVOT in Wilson, as instructor in the radio course. Dr. Case pointed out, “The course was added because of the shortage of personnel for an nouncing in the radio stations of North Carolina and the increasing need for the individual making radio speeches to have some back ground in radio.” Lawhon is vice-president of the Wilson Radio Company, owners of radio station WVOT. He came to Wilson in 1048 to help organize the station. Before that time he was head of the continuity Department of radio station WPTF in Raleigh. He attended Furman University where he graduated in 1942 with the A. B. degree in English and speech. The other three courses, “The Church in Its Community,” “Eng- Ugh Novel,” and “The Community School,” will be offered on Satur day in order that they may be tak en by persons now in full time Christian service, teaching, or in other professions in which interest in the courses is high. “The Community School” will be taught by Mr. L. L. Murray, head of the Department of Educa tion at ACC. TTie course, “The Church in Its Community.” will *be similar to the school course in that it will have its “approach to the church iwt merely as a religious insitu- tion but in its broader community setting,” Dr. Laurence C. Smith, acting head of the Department of Religion and Philosophy at ACC, explained. The course in “English Novel” »ill deal with the major novelists of the eighteenth and nineteenth '-t'ntury and will be taught by Mrs. Virginia House of the De partment of English at AC. ♦STREAMLINED CAFETERIA Additional Steam Table Speeds Up Dining Hall Service At ACC With a new steam-table installed, the students of ACC are now able to eat in almost half the time it took with the former operation of only one steam-table. Tile new table was installed dur ing the Christmas holidays at an initial cc«t of about $700, accord ing tf) Mr. Milton Adams, business manager of the school. Mr. Adams also pointed out that a hole had ONE-ACT PLAYS been cut in the wall lK*tween the kitchen and dining room for tray returning by the students. This new arrangement enables two people to do the work that form erly empioy«'d four helper#. With the initiation of the new serving equipment, Mrs. Hoffman, cafeteria director, had aUo ijilti- ated a new serving sc h e d u 1 e. Breakfast is now served from 7: 15 until 7:45 during the week and from 7:30 to 8 on Sunday. Fmm 12 to 12:30 dinner is served during the week and from 12 30 until 1 on Sunday. During Uie wc*ek supper Is servt*d from 5:30 to 6 with no Sui^ay night serving. It has been polntiKi out that a student may have a class until 12:30 and may eat in time for a 1 o’clock class, thanks to the dual line system. Stage And Script Ignores Curse Of Friday The 13th VALENTINE DANCE ST. VALENTINE'S DAY (or rather NIGHT) will be ob.^erved on the ACC campus v/ith a dance sponsored by the Sigma Tau Chi sorority. Jo Anne Moore, dance chair man, is finishing up plans for the eight-til-twelve affair in the dining hall Saturday night. Stag 50 cents. Drag 75 cents. The Stage and Script Club linds no ill omen in the fact that half of the student directors for their program of one-act plays failed to return to the college campus this semester. Asserting that supersti tions about such stuff as Friday the 13th come only from ignorance and lack of confidence, the mem-| bers of the ACC dramatic club ap pear confident that the three one-! act plays to I* presented in How ard Chapel Friday night at eight i Fraternities Get Mid-Year Group Fraternities bfcgan the n e w j semester with their annual mid year initiations on February 7. Although the initation was limited to one day, pledge.s seemed agreed that the one day was filled with plenty of work. Phi Delta Gamma welcomed into their brotherhood Lemuel Harris. Jr. Clinton S. Small. Noah B. Hill. Jr , and James D. McPhail. Sigma Alpha pledged Don SUn- ley, Rodney Smith. George Wil loughby, James Lee. Stacey Honey cutt, Bill Chesnut, Arnold Stanti>n, Sam Moss. J. B. McLawhon, Carl Parrish and Jack Denning, The pledges worked all day in the] yard and house, afterward having| the ritual and a banquet. Phi Kappa Alpha exU-nded the, hand of brotherhood to James Hemby, Bruce Strickland, Gu.-; Wooler, John O'Conall, Benjamin] Bernier, Kelly Byrum and Billy, Weathcrsby. New officers elected, are Craven Sumerall, president;, Billy Draughn, vice-president; Al-! len Ross, treasurer: Felix Lat>aki,l secretary; Fitzhugh Thompson j sergeant-at-arms; and Jack Wood-j ard; reporter. I o'clock are going to Ix; a great success and highly entertaining. Mrs. Doris Campbell Holsworth, dramatics coach, has taken over the direction of Eugene O'Neill'i "Where the Cross is Made." Pro- paration of the play was t)egun l.i.st semester by Dick Bene, who has transferred to Wake Forest Col lege. Sailor's Htorjr In the cast of the "Where Uie Cross Is Made" are some seasoned actors who have been sci-n in plays here at college and also some new comers to the campus stage. Paul Crouch, who played Michael' Barnes, the editor of the collt y Yellow Jacket," Is playing Nati Bartlett, a young writer who has j been forced by his father to be .•< sailor. Huby Wiggins, who app<-ared a.", the farmer’s wife in "The Yellow (Continued on Page Two) Boykin. Flowers Get New Duties A senior from St. Stephens. S C., Joyce Joye has been named president of the Women’s * Dorm> itf)ry Council for the spring semes ter. Other officers elected were Al- tha Jean Warren of Newton Grove, House President; Ruth Sanderson. Beaulaville, Secretary; Barbara Hutchins, Winjfton-SaJem, Treasur er; and Jean Dickerson, Louls- burg, Marjorie Doss, Raleigh, Lfiis Ann Thomas. Elm City, Dorothy Darden, Eureka, Jerry Ball, Char lotte. and Shirley House. Charles ton. S. C., Hall Representatives. Roy L. Coggins, of Sanford, was graduated from jet plUH training in ceremonies in IX*cember and commissioned a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force. Lt. Coggin, 22. attended Atlantic Christian College, for three years. While In college he played baskets ball and worked on the yearbook staff. He li a member of the Sig ma Alpha Fraternity. .Mr*. hUltiM l>. Boykin of Wils^>n. has l>een nam<*d a full time In structor in English and languat‘.<. Mr*. John F'lowrrs of Wiljwm, ha^ b«*en named lnstructi»r in Mience in ACC's growing Evening Col lege. Mrs. Bf>ykin ha serv*.fJ viously as an instrucUir m th** night school and in summer schfxjl. She comes to ACC ;.flerj having taught languages at Char*j les L. Coon High School in Wils^mj since 1947. She Is a graduate of AtlanUt Christian and is currently work-, ing for her graduate d<‘.’n*<’ t .secondary education and Knglibh. j i Mrs. f’lowers wjfe of John M. ' I Flowers, ACC professor vf C*hem-' i is try. Is a native of Sflmn. She' I graduates] frr>m W.C.U.N.C. with aj I degree in chemistry and bjology. and previously taught at William: I and Mary. I Connie Jordan has been I by the Executive IVjard tr> fill the ■ post of senUjr representative on! ‘ the Social Ojmmittee. She luc- I ceeds Betsy Miller. January grad-j ' uate. Mrs. Wilson Says 'One Of The Worst' Regardmg the .nei*ral eanipu-H .• < re. Peggy Miirtin, Carol I^m*. Bill C'hesnut. RoImtI Mijore, Howard Ham. Betty Knight Richard Zlg- lar, and Callie PrcKrtor are f»r have U*en in the hospital. Dr. Ix>ng \^as out of ? chool a while with the mumps too. So hurry and get well and keep well. Spring will s‘Km b** here! Historian Talks To Visiting Ministers "The leading historian of Dis ciples of Christ hlstf)ry■’ was the main stxsiker at the Annual Mm- Isters week program held on the ACC campus February 10-12. Speaking on tlie lecture ivrlry establishr : at the Univeriiity of Chicago Dl.in- ity Scho<)l. Other si>eakers lnclud<*d Rt;:..; Allen, secretary of the North Car olina Christian Churches; Mrs. K. K. Beckett of Wllmingt/m, presi dent of the Ministers Wivr:: Aj^ k:- iation, and Mrs T, S, Newb^^ld of Durham, executive M*creLary of the North Carolina CVnincll o f Church Women. Rev. R. Paul Parker of H >->k- ertry on our new dean. James K. Motidy Also, news of High School Day, AC’CVs traveling caravan, at.-^ Ba.teball.