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Daylight Savings Begins 2 AM. Sunday
Tlie Collegiate
;^mP WEEKLY
First Annual
College Bowl
Is Planned
jlie First Annual Atlantic
aristian College Intramural Col
lege Bowl will take place May
5 and ,
Kay Winstead, chairman of
the college bowl committee, has
announced that plans are almost
complete for the event. Pre
liminary rounds will be held
Friday, IWay 5, for the four-
member teams to be sponsored
by the Dorm Associations, each
Greek organization, and the Day
Students. Groups wishing to en
ter a team must contact Mr.
Winstead by Friday, April 28.
Questions dealing with a wide
variety of disciplines are being
prepared by the faculty, and
faculty members will serve as
moderators for the event. Prof.
Eugene Purcell is acting as
faculty coordinator.
On May 5 at 3:30 p. m. pre
liminary rounds will be held at
various points on the campus.
Then, on May 8, the final round
will be held at 8:15 p. m. in
the Choral Room with Chaplain
Hensley acting as the modera
tor, A trophy will be presented
to the organization whose team
is able to prove that it has the
test scholars in the college.
Tri Sigs Mark
Founder^s Day
April 20 marked the Founder’s
Day for Tri Sigmas all over
the country. The sisters of the
Gamma Xi chapter of Sigma
Sigma Sigma celebrated this
annual event with a banquet at
the Imperial Inn. Along with the
sfers, pledges, and alumnae of
the chapter, special guests in
cluding Mrs. Arthur D. Wenger
Miss Sarah Bain Ward, and Mrs.’
Carrie Whitfield joined in the
festive occasion. Marianna Blyth
was the chairman for this year’s
event and Margaret Ruth Thom
as, past president of the so-
ronty jerved as toastmaster.
Miss Thomas was at that time
named Woman of the Year by
rae sisters.
The Founder’s Day celebra-
lon commemorates the estab-
u Sigma Sigma Sigma
Longwood College in Farm-
r iv The so-
grown to en-
Sflll collegiate
jMers and 30,000 members in
1 In April m the Sorority ded-
hSJh Memorial
2 u Woodstock, Vir-
location in the beau-
mu h tn Valley means
E Sigmas as the
of itq founding and much
Lee ^ history. The Mabel
is the per-
‘•>e total u ^ h serves
houses also
and archives'^™^’^ memorabilia
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, APRIL 27, 1967
NUMBER TWENTY TWO
Recipients Named For
Religious Scholarships
Recipients of five named schol- Jack Musick, minister of the
arships in religion for the 1967-
68 academic year at Atlantic
Christian College, have been an
nounced by Dr. Allan R. Sharp,
director of ministerial education.
Recipients were selected by the
faculty of the ACC Department
of Religion and Philosophy and
were granted on the basis of
academic achievement and need.
Dr. William O. Paulsell, chairman of the Religion and Philosophy
department, is shown presenting Dr. C. C. Ware a life member
ship in the Disciples of Christ Historical Society of Nashville,
Tennessee. The life membership was presented in behalf of a
number of Dr. Ware’s friends and the Christian Church of N. C.
in honor of Dr. Ware’s scholarship and work as a historian of
the Christian Church. Dr. Ware is the archivist of the Carolina
Disciplian Collection which is boused in the C. L. Hardy Library.
Miss Privette Awarded
$300 NCEA Scholarship
r’lQccrnnm W/)lrf»1on Hi?h School
Ntew Officers
Alpha Sigma Phi has recently
elected new officers for the com
ing year. The officers are:
Tom Aycock, president; Ash
ley Hooks, vice president; Grant
i Britt, secretary; and Rick Stew-
13rt, treasurer.
j Also elected were Leo Jessup,
ji corresponding secretary; Tommy
il^ngston, intramural manager;
Allen, pledge master; Wiley
I Balance, social chairman; and
j: Demsie Grimes, Interfraternity
l-Council delegate.
^ The new officers will officially
1 assume their new duties after
I the spring banquet which will
, be held at the Holiday Inn Sat-
“™ay night.
The North Carolina Classroom
Teachers Association has an
nounced that Patricia Ann Priv
ette, a junior at Atlantic Chris
tian College, is one of the re
cipients of the Mary Morrow
Scholarship award for 1967-1968.
The scholarship in the amount
of $300 is awarded to a deserv
ing college junior who plans to
teach in North Carolina. This
award will be used by Miss
Privette to finish her senior year
at Atlantic Christian College.
Miss Privette is from Zebu-
lon, N. C. and graduated from
Gold To Serve
As Instructor
John Daniel Gold Jr. of Wil
mington, has been named in
structor in English at Atlantic
Christian College, according to
Dr. Arthur D. Wenger, president
of the college.
Born in Wilson, he attended
the University of North Carolina
and Atlantic Christian College
where he received the A. B.
degree in English. He was
awarded the M. A. degree in
English by the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
He has served as a high school
English instructor and for the
past two years has served as
an English instructor at Wil
mington College.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. John D.
Gold of Wilson, he is married
to the former Miss Matilda Wool-
dard, also of Wilson. 'They are
members of the Presbyterian
Church. He is also a member
of the American Association of
University Professors. Gold will
assume his duties at Atlantic
Christian on Sept. 1, 1967.
Wakelon High SchooT in 1964.
She is an elementary education
major and she will do her stu
dent teaching next fall. She is a
member of the student NCEA
and has taken part in the Forest
Road Housing Project tutoring
program.
The Mary Morrow Scholarship
Fund was named in memory of
Miss Mary Frank Morrow who
served as the first president of
the North Carolina Classrooni
Teachers Association, a division
of the NCEA. In 1931 the first
local unit of CTA was organized
in Greensboro with Miss Morrow
as president. The state Assopia-
tion was organized the follow
ing year.
.Other winners for 1967-1968
are; Olivia A. Aycoth, CharWtte,
UNC-Chapel Hill; Roberta Eryle-
man, Asheville, UNC-Greensboro;
Mary Lorena Morely, Winter-
ville, East Carolina; Sandra
Strickland, Fayetteville, Fayette
ville Methodist College; and Ruth
Elaine Stevenson, Statesville, Ap
palachian State Teachers Col
lege.
Crucible To
Go On Sale
The spring issue of CRUCI
BLE, a magazine of creative
ideas, will be released to the
public on May 1. The maga
zine is co-edited by Russell Ar
nold, Chairman of the depart
ment of art, and Mildred Hart-
sock, Chairman of the depart
ment of English at Atlantic
Christian College.
This issue will contain silk
screen prints by the initema-
tionally known Sister Mary Co-
rita, a series of paintings by
Edward Dugmore who is a well-
known New York painter and
second generation abstract ex
pressionist, a seriagraphed, full
color centerfold by the local
print maker Thomas Marshall,
and a number of other art works
in different media. The litera
ture will include a statement
by Richard Bell Associates, a
respected landscape architectu
ral firm, regarding their philos-
phy of landscape architectural
design, several short stories and
approximately thirty poems.
There will also be a ten-sheet
musical score for three instru
ments written by William Duck
worth while he was at the Uni
versity of Illinois.
CRUCIBLE will go on sale
for the first week of May in the
Lobby of Hines Hall (formerly
classroom building) at Atlantic
Christian College. Anyone not
able to obtain a copy at this
time may contact Thomas Mar
shall, Circulation Editor, Art De
partment Atlantic Christian Col
lege.
Hookerton-Airy Grove Unity was
named recip
ient of the
Gardner-
Weeks Memo
rial Scholar
ship which is
valued at $500.
A rising senior,
Musick is a
native of Ala
bama and for
the past two
Musick years was re
cipient of the Wallace Memorial
Scholarship. He is married and
father of two children.
Richard L. Harrison Jr. was
named winner of the W. R. Rob
erson Scholarship. Son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard L. Harrison of
Washington, N. C., he has been
a scholarship holder since en
tering Atlantic Christian as a
freshman.
The W. D. Adams Sr. Scholar
ship, being awarded for the first
time and made possible through
a gift of the late W. D. Adams
Sr., of Wilson, will be presented
to Charles Wolfe of Asheville.
A rising senior, Wolfe is cur
rently serving as editor of the
college newspaper “The Collegi
ate,” and as minister of educa
tion at Northwest C hi r i s t i a n
Churcii in Kinston. He is the son
of Mrs. Florence Wolfe, 85 Fard-
fax Ave., Ashevlle.
Douglas M. Dexter of Dudley,
was named recipient of the Wal
lace Memorial Scholarship. Dex
ter is president - elect of the
ACC Student Government Asso
ciation and has served as youth
worker at the First Christian
Church of Williamston and Ar
lington "Street Baptist Church in
Rocky Mount. He will serve as
minister to the Eden Christian
Church in Snow Hill during his
senior year at ACC.
The Faye Brinson Memorial
Scholarship will be awarded to
Wiley D. Harris Jr., of Raleigh.
A rising senior, he is presently
serving as minister to the Bath
Christian Church, Bath. He is
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
Harris of Raleigh.
Finer Named Associate
Professor Of Education
Dr. Rexford E. Piner of Tal- Fla.
lahassee, Fla., has been named
associate professor of education
at Atlantic Christian College, ac
cording to Dr. Arthur D. Wen
ger, president of the college.
Bom in Wilmington, he attend
ed Wihnington College and East
Carolina College where he earn
ed the B. S. and M. A. de
grees. He has completed his
doctoral studies and will be
awarded the Ed. D. degree in
administration and supervision at
Florida State University on April
Dr. Piner is a member of
Phi Delta Kappa; a former
member of NEA, NCEA, Di
vision of Principals NCEA and
N. C. English Teachers Associa
tion. He is a member of Faith
Presbyterian Church in Talla
hassee. He is married to the for
mer Miss Wilma Jean Stampley
of Greenville, N. C. Dr. Piner
.will assume his duties at At
lantic Christian on Sept. 1.
Student
Recital
There will be a Student Re
cital featuring Ann Biggs, pianist
and Williard Griffin, tenor on
Monday night May 1 at 8:15
p.m. in Howard Chapel. Miss
Biggs will play selections from
Beethovan, Chopin, and Mendel
ssohn. Mr. Griffin will sing a
Recitative Aria from “The Cre
ation” by Haydn and also four
French songs. The general pub
lic is cordially invited to at
tend.
20.
He served as English teacher
and baseball coach at Leland
High School, Leland, from 1951-
1955; principal and eighth grade
teacher in Bertie County from
1955-57, and was elementary su
pervisor and director of summer
school at New Hanover County
Schools, 1960-61. Dr. Piner served
as principal of the Wahl-Coates
Laboratory School, East Carolina
College, 1961-65. While at ECC
he also served as extension in
structor and summer school in
structor. In 1961 he served on
the Southern Association visiting
team to evaluate Greensboro
schools and in 1966 served on
the State School Plant Survey
team in Wakulla County, Fla., as
well as the State School Plant
Survey team in Bay County,
REXFORD PINER