PUBLISHED WEEKLY ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE, NOVEMBER 11, 1976 NUMBER NINE JACK FROST IS ON HIS WAY: CoM mornings, hot coffee, and the sound of feet shuffling through fallen leaves make recent walks to class a little more pleasurable. (Photo by Peter Chamness) Cox Exhibit Opens The American Diabetes Association Bike-a-thon Circle K, the campus service organiiation, will sponsor the Diabetes Bike-a-thon on Sunday, November 14. from 1:00 to5:00 p.m. The event will be held to raise money for the North Carolina Diabetes Association. Prizes will be awarded; the first prize is a $100 savings bond, second prize is a $50 savings bond, and third prize will be a $25 savings bond. A trophy will be given to the Greek organization which raises the most money. Entry forms are obtainable in the Student Center. Below is a map of the route that will be taken; it is a total of 13.5 miles. BIKE-A-THON COMMUNICATIONS PROVIDED BY AREA CB RADIO OPERATORS Organ Recital Planned ^ Good ^ Evening Roller Skating The United Campus Christian Fellowship will go roller skating tonight from 7 to 10:00. Dinner will be eaten at the First Presbyterian Church at 5:30. The price is only $2.00 if you do not have skates. Rides will leave from Harper Hall at 5:15. WORSHIP SERVICE This Sunday, November 14, there will be a worship service held in Howard Chapel at 11:00 a.m. Chaplain Dan Hensley will deliver the sermon. The service is being sponsored by the Campus Christian Association. All students and friends are urged to come. ADVANCED REGISTRATION dates for the 1977 Spring Semester are as follows: Advisor-Advisee Meeting — Tuesday, Nov. 16 at 11 a.m. Individual Advisor-Advisee Conferences — Nov. 16 - Nov. 23 and Nov. 29 and 30 Advanced Registration Day — Wednesday, Dec. 1 Meeting areas for Advisor- Advisee Meeting Nov. 16 M.AJOR ADVISORS Mr. Brown Mr. Swain Dr. St. John Dr. Hemby Dr. Anderson Dr. Sanford Dr. Parker Dr. Winstead Dr. De Ment Mr. Albert Dr. Barnes Dr. Harris Dr. Tyndall Dr. Capps Dr. Sharp Mr. Bazzle MEETING AREAS Case Art Gallery Chapel Old Gym Hines 202 Hines 112 Wilson Gym Hines 206 Moye Science 105 Music Building 103 Choral Room Hardy Alumni Hines 205 Moye Science 107 Hamlin Student Center Recreation Room Hines 210 Hines 107 Parking Tickets All parking ticket obligations must be cleared before any student may pre register for the second semester. These tickets are to be paid in the Business Office of the Administration Building. Lost and Found Calculator, girl’s ring and choker, several sets of keys. Come by the Student Per sonnel Office to claim items. Junior Class Meeting There will be a very im portant Junior Class meeting tonight at 6 p.m. in Hines Hall, room 111. All juniors should attend. Gospel Choir The ACC Gospel Choir will rehearse tonight at 6:30 p.m. in Hardy Alumni Hall. All members are urged to attend. Joe Cox, considered one of the most outstanding artists and teachers in North Carolina, is currently represented in Atlantic Christian College’s Case Art Gallery, by a group of paintings, drawings and watercolors. The exhibit will remain on display until Nov. 24. A Thurber Carnival To Tour More than five thousand high school students are seeing Stage and Script’s production of A Thurber Carnival in the two weeks preceeding Thanksgiving. The fifty-minute program is a dramatization of the short stories and vignettes of one of America’s best-known humorists. ACC audiences will have the opportunity to see the production in Howard Chapel November 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. The tour to eastern North Carolina high schools, the first ever taken by Stage and Script and sponsored in part by the Admissions office of the College, includes stops at Fike of Wilson, Fayetteville, East and West Carteret, Northern Nash, Elm City and Farmville. ACC students involved in the tour are Cliff Blowe, Ernestine Cobb, Walter Knight, Donna Perrin, Anne Tieche, Jimmy Ward, Wendy Williams, Thomas Barnes, Ray Connell, Kathy Denzler. Some of the Thurber works being dramatized are The Night the Bed Fell, Two Fables For Our Time, The Macbeth Murder Mystery, and Mr. Preble Gets Rid of His Wife. Correction We are sorry but some in correct figures were listed in last week’s story “Dean Announces Fall Enrollment. Freshmen were incorrectly listed as 143. There are ac tually 509 freshmen. The sentence “Female students outnumber male students 918 to 610,” should have read “Female students outnumber male students 1,013 to 675.” Again we regret the error. The works, all dealing with coastal themes drawn from his experience of living and teaching on the North Carolina coast, will provide the viewer with subject matter familiar to residents of the state. An avid sailor, Cox combines work and recreation by carrying on a highly successful workshop for artists each summer at Oriental, where he and his wife Elizabeth, also a sailing enthusiast, maintain a summer cottage. Cox has long been a professor in the North Carolina State University (NCSU) School of Design, where he has repeatedly been chosen for such awards as “Outstanding Teacher” and “Distinguished Professor.” Since 1939 when he won first prize at the Indiana Artists Show, he has been producing, exhibiting and teaching with seemingly inexhaustible energy. He has created an impressive number of murals for public buildings in North Carolina and in several other states. He has produced a series of twelve 30-minute television programs entitled, “Art in Living,” which are now distributed nationally. Lester Southern of Raeford, N.C. will be presented in a junior organ recital by the Atlantic Christian College Department of Music, on Monday, Nov. 15, at 8 p.m., at St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church in Wilson. Included in his program will be: “Toccata and Fugue in d minor,” by J. S. Bach; “Three Choral Preludes,” by Johannes Brahms; “Sixth Sonata,” by Felix Mendelssohn; and “Five Short FYeludes and Intermizzi,” by Herman Schroeder. AH, SWEET KNOWLEDGE!: Every morning, despite the cold, hundreds of ACC students eagerly trod down the path of knowledge to that great bastion of learning — Hines Hall. (Photo by Pele Chamness)

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