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PUBLISHED WEEKLY
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, OCTOBER 7, 1976
NUMBER FIVE
National Teacher Exam
The National Teacher
Examination (NTE) will be
given at Atlantic Christian
College on Nov. 13,1976.
Scores from the examinations
are used by many states for
certification of teachers, by
many school systems for
selection and identification of
leadership qualities, and by
many colleges as part of their
graduation requirements.
Educational Testing Service,
which prepares and administers
the tests, says they are designed
to measure knowledge gained
from professional and general
education and in 27 subject-
matter fields.
Bulletins of Information
describing registration
procedures and containing
registration forms may be ot>-
tained from Zeb M. Whitehurst
III, Dean of students, or directly
from the National Teacher
Examinations, Educational
Testing Service, Box 911,
Princeton, N.J. 08540.
Good Evening
ATTENTION: Any North
Carolina resident who is a full
time student qualifying for the
North Carolina Legislative
Tuition Grant must complete an
application for same. If you have
not done so, please contact the
Financial Aid Office for an
application form immediately.
This form must be completed
and in the Financial Aid Office
byOct. 11,1976.
The College Republican Club
will meet tonight, Oct. 7th, at 6
p.m. in Hines Hall, room 211. All
members are urged to attend.
The Freshman Class will hold
a very important meeting
tonight, Oct. 7th, at 6 p.m. in
Hardy Alumni Hall. The main
order of business will be class
participation in Homecoming.
All freshmen are urged to at
tend.
Pictures for the yearbook will
be taken this week in Harper
Hall lobby between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. Friday will be a make-up
day. Juniors, seniors and faculty
who have not had their picture
made may have them taken any
day this week. There will be no
class pictures taken after this
week.
Advanced Life Saving will be
offered at the NCSD beginning
Oct. 12th at 7 p.m. The class will
meet ten times. There can be no
absences. Call the Red Cross
office at 237-2171 to get your
name on the roll. Classes will
meet Oct. 12, 14, 19, 21, 26, 28,
and Nov. 2, 4,9, and 11.
As a follow-up activity of
Reading Week, there will be a
discussion of reading on Thurs
day, Oct. 14th, at 11 a.m. in
Hines Hall, room 212. All
students and faculty are invited.
A limited number of free
tickets are available to ACC
students for the North Carolina
Folk Festival on either Oct. 8th
or 9th at 8 p.m. in Reynolds
Coliseum in Raleigh. Tickets
may be picked up on a first
come, first served basis with a
limit of two tickets per person,
from Dr. Schneider in Hines
Hall, room 216 during the
following times: MWF 11-11:30
or 3-3:30; T-Th34.
Students who have not
previously applied for student
teaching during the spring
semester may pick up ap
plication forms in the Education
Dept, office. The last date to be
considered for the spring
semester is Oct. 15th.
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
MAJORS: Please note that Ms.
Peggy Wills, Director of the
Boman Gray School of Medical
Technology in Winston-Salem
will be on campus Thursday,
Oct. 21st, from 1-3 p.m. in room
208 of the Science Building. The
purpose of her visit is to provide
information and advice con
cerning the Med-Tech program.
All majors and others interested
in the program are invited to
meet with her. For further in
formation, contact Robert
Hollar, Medical Technology
advisor, in room 208, Science
Building.
COOKING IN ROOMS: We
have been notified by the Wilson
County Health Dept, that
cooking should take place only in
the two designated kitchen areas
(Harper Hall and Hackney
Hall). The Wilson Fire Dept, has
notified us also that their
department cannot tolerate
cooking in unauthorized areas as
the risk is too great. If you wish
to use one of the two designed
areas, please contact the
resident counselor in charge.
There will be a very important
Junior Class meeting tonight,
Oct. 7th at 6 p.m. in Hines Hall.
All Juniors are urged to attend.
Gamma Delta Iota will meet
tonight at 6:30 in Hines 208. Old
and new members are en
couraged to attend in order to
discuss upcoming activities.
Do you enjoy singing and
lifting Jesus higher? If so, come
to the Alpha Omega Christian
fellowship hour at 7 p.m.,
tonight, Oct. 7th, in the Old Gym.
The SNEA, Student National
Education Association, will be
holding its membership drive for
the next two weeks only. Anyone
wishing to join please do so now.
Cluster No. 1 of SNCAE will
hold its annual fall meeting
Friday, Oct. 8th, at 9 a.m. in
Harper Hall. All education
majors are urged to attend.
Parking tickets are to be paid
in the Business Office within five
days of issuance. All appeals
must be in writing on a form
supplied by the Student Per
sonnel Office also within five
days. The ticket must ac
company this form.
If you are planning to
graduate in December or May,
stop by the Placement Office
and pick up a registration
packet. Mid-winter graduates
should mail the resumes now! If
you need any assistance on your
resume, see the Placement
Office.
Staff photographer Pete Chamness was at Wrightsvllle Beach In Wilmington this past Sunday
morning and captured this early morning scene. The calmness of the water seems more appropriate
of a lake, but it doesn't seem to bother these fishermen.
AC To Lose 2 Dept. Heads
DR. WINSTEAD
Dr. E. D. Winstead, professor
and chairman of the Atlantic
Christian College Department of
Mathematics, has tendered his
resignation from the college
effective at the close of the
current academic year.
A native of Wilson, Dr. Win
stead is serving in his 15th year
as a member of the college
faculty. He assumed chair
manship of the mathematics
department when it became a
separate department in 1966.
Commenting on the action.
President Wenger said, “Dr.
Winstead, during his tenure at
Atlantic Christian College, has
served as a member of our
faculty with singular ef
fectiveness. This has been true
not only in his role as a teacher
and chairman of the
mathematics department but in
numerous other areas of campus
leadership. We genuinely regret
losing him but wish him well in
any future endeavor.”
Dr. Winstead is a former U.S.
Army officer who retired after
24 years of service with the rank
of lieutenant colonel. He
received the B.S. degree from
Atlantic Christian College, and
the M.Ed. and Ed.D. degrees
from Duke University.
He is married to the former
Miss Josephine W. Minshew of
Black Creek, a graduate of the
Woodard-Herring School of
Nursing.
DR. ST. JOHN
Dr. Kenneth D. St. John,
professor and chairman of the
Atlantic Christian College
Department of Education, will
end a 50-year teaching career
upon retirement from his
position with the college at the
conclusion of the current
academic year.
“Dr. St. John’s term as
chairman of the ACC Depart
ment of Education spans a
period in which teacher
education has undergone sub
stantial changes,” said Dr.
Wenger. “Under his leadership
solid advances have been made
as our teacher education
program has responded to those
changes. The effectiveness of
our graduates serving in public
schools of North Carolina and
elsewhere has been greatly
enhanced through our insights
and leadership. We wish him the
very best as he enters
retirement.”
Dr. St. John joined the ACC
faculty in 1962 and became
chairman of the ACC Depart
ment of Education in 1963, He
has served on ACC Faculty
Evaluating Committees for N. C.
State Approved Teacher
Education Programs.
A native of Ohio, he earned the
B. S. degree from Wittenberg
College, the M. A. Degree from
Kent State University, and the
Ed.D. degree from the
University of Pittsburgh.
He served as board chairman
and elder of the Central
Christian Church (Disciples of
Christ) in Hubbard, where he
taught the Men’s Bible Class for
20 years.
Born on Sept. 28, 1907, he is the
son of the late Lewis and Edna
St, John of Waynesville, Ohio.
He is married to the former Miss
Cora Martin, a graduate of Ohio
University. They have one
daughter, Jacqueline Setny of
Parma, Ohio, who is a graduate
of Baldwin-Wallace College.
Dr. and Mrs. St. John became
members of the First Christian
Church of Wilson in 1962
Joy Butler Recital
Miss Joy Lee Butler, soprano
of Clearwater, Fla., will be
presented in a senior voice
recital by the Atlantic Christian
College Department of Music, on
Thursday, Oct. 14, at 8 p.m., in
Howard Chapel, on the college
campus.
Included in Miss Butler’s
program will be selections by
Mozart, Schubert, Brahms,
Menotti, Foley, Debussy, Duke
and Quilter. She will be ac
companied on the piano by Miss
Dorothy Jane Bostick of the
college music faculty. The
recital is presented in partial
fulfillment of the B. S. degree in
music education at Atlantic
Christian
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Stage and Script will open tonight with “Hie Lion In Winter.” Cnrtain
is at 8:00. The show will continue through Saturday, October 9th.