PUBLISHED WEEKLY ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, DECEMBER 4, 1959 Queen Ann Reigns At Homecoming Joint Press Will Begin NUMBER NINE Meetings Here Today I Newspaper staff members from ^ Editor of The Richmond Times- I Enterprise, and Mr. Haiiscll is the I the nine North State Conference | Dispatch. I Bureau Chii-f for thu Associated member institutions in North Car- 1 Dale Freeman, Appalachian ■ Press in the Carolinas. ; olina will begin to gather on the i State Teachers College, president Serving as eo - hosts for the campus of Atlantic Christian Col-! of the North State Conference lege late this afternoon to begin a unique weekend meeting. After attending sessions tonight and tomorrow morning the student newspaper delegates will be joined Press Association, will pre.slde at two meetings are The Wilson Daily Times and Atlantic Christian Col- a business session of his organiza- lege tion tomorrow morning. Richard B. VV.vnne of the Asiie ville Citizen, will preside at the on the campus by members of the | opening session of the news coun- North Carolina Associated Press News Council. The two groups are holding joint sessions for the first time in their history and provide a back drop in front of which campus newspaper leaders can mix with their professional counterparts for a discussion of their mutual problems. Highlight of the three - day joint meetings will be a banquet tomor row night in the lobby of the Class room Building scheduled at 7:30 p. m. At that time the two groups will hear an address by John H. Colburn, Richmond, Va., President of The Associated Press Managing Editors Association and Managing cil group tomorrow afternoon, Other officers of the conference press association are Miss Reba Fincher, Catawba College, vice- president, and Miss Bette Pom- frey, Atlantic Christian, secretary and treasurer. Other officers of the news coun cil are David E. Gillespie, Shelby, first vice - president, Henry Co ble, Greensboro, second vice - pres ident, Joseph Brown, High Point, third vice - president, and Paul Hansell, Charlotte, secretary and treasurer. Mr. Gillespie is associated with the Shelby Daily Star, Mr. Coble is with the Greensboro Daily News, Mr. Brown is with the High Point The meetings will officially open tonight with a buffet supper in the faculty luunge uf the A<hninis- tiation Building at 7 p. m. At tending; will be members of the conference association. They will be welconi(!d by Mrs. Elizabeth G. Swindell, Publisher of The Wilson Daily Times. Everettc Bryant, vice - presi dent of the Atlantic Christian Col lege Cooperative Association, will welcome the student editors at the first general session tomorrow, and Dr. Arthur D. Wenger, ACC President, will welcome the news council members at their opening session tomorrow afternoon. . Both groups are planning discus sion sessions during the weekend schedule of meetings. Each group has been invited to attend the other’s sessions. Miss Ann Hamilton, above, blonde sophomore from Smithfield, was named 1959 Homecoming Queen at the college on November 21. She was elected by the student body from a group of 19 contestants. Ann Hamilton Selected ACC Homecoming Queen Tour Schedule Set For Choral Group The Atlantic Christian College student body chose a pretty soph omore coed from Smithfield to reign as its 1959 Homecoming Queen on November 21. Miss Ann Hamilton, a music major, was selected by vote of the student body from a group of 19 contestants entered by various or ganizations on the campus. She was crowned at the half- time of ithe ACC-Pembroke State basketball game played at the WU- son Community Center and then shared the Homecoming spotlight with a Wilson banking official who was named to head the Atlantic Christian College Alumni Asso ciation for the coming year. Foy N. Goforth, Assistant Vice- President of Branch Banking and Trust Company, was elected alum ni president, at a business session held in the college dining haU on Homecoming day. Miss Cinda Bunting of Roberson- ville, and Miss Audrey Finch of Bailey, were elected! as runners- up to Miss Hamilton in the queen’s contest. Miss Bunting represented the Sophomore Class and Miss Finch represented Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity. Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity was the winner of the best house award in the judging of residence haUs on the campus during Home coming. “We had a wonderful Home coming program,” James E. Ful- ghum, chairman of the Home coming Committee, observed. “The rain didn’t hurt the program too much,” he said. A 1960 tour for the Christian College Chorus was an nounced today. The Chorus, under the direc tion of James V. Cobb, Jr., choral director at the college, will leave the ACC campus on Sunday, Jan uary 24, to sing in nine churches in North Carolina and Georgia before returning to the campus on Monday, February 1. It wiU mark the first time that the chorus has toxired in the state of Georgia. The specific schedule calls for the chorus to sing at the First Spring Registration Dean Burt Urges Underway; Expediency Dr. Millard P. Burt, ACC Dean, virged that students register on time this week in order that ui>- perclassmen be able to take ad vantage <A. the priority system in class registration. This year, in registration for the Spring semester, seniors have top priority in registering for classes, followed by juniors, sophomores, and freshmen in that order. Dr. Burt stated that the first three days of the registration have gone smjoothly. “All the difficulties experienc ed in the fall registration seem to have been solved,” Dr. Burt said. The students submit class regis tration cards to their advisors af ter having conferences with the advisors. Then the cards go to the registrar. The student picks up his class cards the next day at the Social Committee Sets Christmas Dance Date The Social Committee of the Cooperative Association is this week planning the Annual Christ mas Dance to be held in the lobby of the classroom building December 12. Miss Sarah Bain Ward, Dean of Women,. announced today that plans are being completed for the dance which will be open to all members of the campus family and their dates. The attire for the dance will be formal. “However,” Dean Ward said, “we don’t want people to stay away from the dance be cause they don’t have formal dress.” Miss Ward explained further that men might wear dark suits and women party dresses. Larry Phares, a senior, is the student chairman of the social committee which is responsible for the preparations for the dance. The senior member of the com mittee serves as chairman each year. In addition to Phares, Dick Knox, Miss Janet Blackwood, and Miss Carol Barber are members of the committee. The preparations for the dance are being made by some 35 peo ple who are serving on various committees responsible for de tailed preparations. The music for the dance will be provided by the Quintones from Raleigh. Miss Ward annoimced that at the intermission of the dance, the members of the committee who have worked on the dance pre parations would be recognized. 'The faculty members of the So cial Committee will serve as cha perones for the affair. They are Mrs. Dorothy Eagles, Warren Tait, Gene Featherstone, Ashton Wiggs, Mrs. Jan T. Boles, Mrs. Lynne West, Mrs. Irpe Har rell, and Miss Jesse Daniel. registrar’s office and then fills In his name. Dr. Burt warned that any stu dent who does not go through the registration procedures on time may lose his priority privilei;^s. If a class is closed and the stu dent is late registering, he will not be allowed to get in the class. Schedule changes wUl be made on January 27, if the change is due to failure of a course. Stu dents on academic probation wiU not register until January 27. Atlantic Christian Church in Rocky Mount on Sunday, morning, January 24, and at the First Christian Church in Wilmington that night. On Monday night, January 25, the chorus is scheduled to sing at the First Christian Church, Savannah, Ga., and from there wiU move to Wrightsville, Ga., to sing at the First Christian Church on Tuesday night, January 26. On Wednesday night, January 27, the chorus will sing at the Houston Avenue Christian Church in Ma con, Ga., and will move from there to Augusta, Ga., on Thurs day night, January 28, to sing at the Central Christian Church. On Friday night, January 29, the chorus is scheduled to sing at the First Christian Church in Winder, Ga. After a layoff on Saturday, January 30, in Atlanta, Ga., the chorus will sing at the First Christian Church, Atlanta, on Sunday morning, January 31, and at the Peachtree Christian Church, Atlanta, on Sunday afternoon. The group wiU return to the ACC campus the following day. Traveling by chartered bus, the group wm include 41 persons, it was announced. Rooms Available In New Dorm Men students currently enrolled at Atlantic Christian CoUego who would like to live in the new men’s dormitory the second semes ter, may make the arrangements by contacting the Student Life Of fice at the college. John W. Stair, Director of Stu dent Life, said today his office is now taking reservations from those men students who are liv ing out in town and who would like to live in the new dormitory. Currently under constriuction, the dormitory is scheduled to be com*- pleted around January 1. In order to make a reservation for a dormitory room, each stu dent must deposit $20 as a room reservation fee, Mr. Stair observ ed. After making the deposit with his office, Mr. Stair said the stu dents would be sent to the House mother, Mrs. Essie Davis, to get a specific room assignment. Calendar Tuesday, December 8 Freshmen and Seniors, Chapel Service-Music Department. So{Aomores and Juniors, class meetings. Thursday, December 10 Sophomores and Juniors, Chapel service - Music Departn»ent. Freshmen and Seniors, class meetings. Students To Cooperate In Yule Gift Project Miss Sarah Bain Ward, Dean of Women, announced this week that Atlantic Christian College stu dents win be asked to support the annual project to give gifts to deserving children in the Wil son area. As in the past, gifts wUl be purchased to be distributed by the Wilson Jaycees and the Wil son Recreation Department at a party on Christmas Eve. The students will purchase gifts to be given to a chUd of a designa ted age. For example, one might purchase a toy to be given to a boy seven years old. As in the past, students will be asked to spend approximately $1.00 for the gifts. “If a student feels that he or she wants to spend j more than one dollar, gifts for more than one child should be purchased,” Miss Ward said. The annual project of giving gifts has been a ACC tradition for some 35 years. Miss Ward pointed out. Monday and Tuesday, a table will be set up in the lobby of the classroom building where students may sign up to give the gifts. I hope that every ACC student will support this project,” said the Dean of Women, “for it is a real privilege to help these deserv ing children.” This year, as in the past years, “Miss Ward is giving away child ren.” GIFTS FOR NEEDY—Atlantic Christian Collefre students and faculty members create a scene similar to the one above each year during the Yuletide season when they present grifts to be turned over to needy children in the community by the Wilson Jaycees and the Wilson Recreation Department.

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