^‘Lance VOL. I. No. 10 ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE, LAURINBURG, N. C. FEBRUARY IS, 1962 Theme; ‘Who Am I?’ Dr. E. H. Jones Begins Services Dr. Edward Jones, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Norfolk, Va., will be meeting St. Andrews students and fac ulty members in chapel and vesper addresses and in plan ned and informal discussion during the three days of Serv ices for C3iristian Growth, to day through Thursday. Bringing to the campus the wisdom of study and experi ence in many institutions, the speaker is a (graduate of Los Angeles High School and Oc cidental College in Los Angel es, California; and of Prince ton Theological Seminary in Princeton, New Jersey. He holds a Master of Arts degree from Princeton Univei*- sity and a Doctor of Divinity degree from Occidental Col lege. In 1931 he married Dorothy Griffiths in Los Anigeles. The couple now have a daughter, Mrs. George A Wilson, a grad uate of Grove City College, Penn., and a son. Robert Grif fiths Jones, twho graduated from Davidson in 1958 and is now working on his Ph. D. degree at Duke University. Dr. Jones served as a chap lain in the Air Corps in World V/ar II from 1943-45. Besides his present position, his pas torates have included the Get tysburg Presbyterian Churdh, Gettysburg, Penn, and State Collage Presbyterian Church, State College, Penn. He was Moderator of the Sy nod of Pennsylvania, 1949-50, and is Moderator-in-Nomination of the Synod of Virginia. A member of the Board of Trustees of Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Va., Dr. Jones is also on the Advisory Board of the Norfolk College of William and Mary. These three days of special services, if utilized, can become the takeoff platform for con- tinuail discussion and thought. Dr. Jones wUl be asked to com pose a list of books and other writings that deal with both oldJashioned and modern ques tions. Students of St. Andrews will either stultify, out of passivity to these currents of hearing, thinking, and saying, or they will igrow, from iparticipation. Until the services begin, and continuing through them, Dr. Jones asks for the prayers of students and faculty, concern ing his ministry and their par ticipation. Dr. Edward Jones, Norfolk, Va., will be on campus today through Thursday. Recital To Be Presented By Professor J. E. Williams John E. Wllliaiins, Associate Professor of Organ, will give his faculty recital on Feb. 18 at 5:00 p.m. in the Laurinburg Presbyterian Church. The re cital is sponsored jointly by St. Andrews and the Laurinburg Presbyterian Church. Mr. Williams received his B.M. from Oberliii Conservatory of Music and his M.M. from the University of Michigan. Upon receiving a Fulbright scholarship in 1954-1955 Mr. Williams furthered his studies at the Royal School of Church Music in Croydon, England. He also received a Presbyterian U. S. scholarship to study with Charles Letestu in Hamburg, Germany, during the summer of 1958. Mr. Williams has been Asso ciate Professor of Organ since he joined the Flora Macdonald faculty in the fall of 1951. While attending school Mr. Williams became a member of Pi Kappa Lamda and Pi Mu Al pha Sinfonia. Mr. Williams was very interested in dramatics and was received into Alpha Psi Omega, the National Hon orary Dramatic Fraternity. SAC To Have Entry In National Contest Vote Monday Night for “Best Dressed Co-Ed Day Students There wiU be a Day StH- d e n t Association meeting' Monday’ Feb. 20 in room 119 of the academic building. This meeting is called by Day Student Ass ociation president Ken Kirby to dis cuss current business and to give the Day Students an 'pportunity to cast their vote in the “Best Dressed” con test. In 1952 Mr. Williams was na tional finalist in the Young Or ganist Contest sponsored by the American Guild of Organ ists. Ml’. Williams has been very active in the AGO and has been past Dean of the Fay etteville Chapter. He has also served as adjudicator In the AGO for the Young Organist Contests and Guild exams. During the Second World War Mr. Williams served in the Intelligence Division of SHAEF, headquarters of Major General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Mr. Williams was a recipient of the Bronze Star. Over the past several years Mr. Williams has given organ recitals in seven states and England. Mr. Williams has chosen the following program for his re cital: Trumpet Voluntary, Jer emiah Clarke Fifers, Dandrieu Prelude and Fugue in c min or, Bach Sonata No. 6, Mendelssohn Toccata from Symphony No. 5, Widor Greensleeves, Purvis Primitive Organ, Yon Pastorale, Vieme Carillon de West minster, Vierne. GLAMOUR’S annual contest to find the “Ten Best Dressed College Girls in America’” is on again and St. Andrews has been invited by the magazine to help by selecting the “best dressed girl on campus.” The judging standards used by the magazine — and the ones St. Andrews will use to find its candidate —• are good figure, beautiful posture, clean, hining, well-kept hair, good grooming — not just neat, but impeccable; a deft hand with make-up (enough to look pret ty but not overdone); a clear understanding of her fashion type. Also imagination in manag ing a clothes budget; a workable wardrobe plan; individuality in her use of colors, accessories; a suitable campus look (she’s in line with local customs); ap propriate — not rah rah — look for off campus occasions. The young woman who best! meets these qualifications wiU compete with best dressed win ners from hundreds of colleges in the United States and Cana da for top honors in the GLAM OUR contest. A committee representing the campus met Feb. 6 to select the nominees for this contest. They considered the above cri- Frances Wheeler, junior class; Gayle Chandler, sophomore class; Barbie Irby, freshman; Dickie Knowles, Mecklenburg Dorm; Don Brown, Orange Dorm; Mrs. Helen Gustafson, and Miss Nancy Brown. At the regular dormitory meetings Feb. 19 ballots will be distributed and a school-wide vote will be taken for the cam pus’ best dresser. The winner will be announced in the Feb. 27 issue of the newspaper. Photographs of the St. An drews miss in a campus outfit, a daytime off campus outfit, and a party dress and the of ficial entry form will be sent to GLAMOUR by March 1 for the national judging. The maga zine will select a group of semi-finalists and from these the “top ten” will be chosen. The rest of the semi-finalists will be named Honorable Men tion winners. [ The young women who are named GLAMOUR’s 1962 “Ten Best Dressed College Girls in America” will be photogrraphed in the spring for the annual August College Issue and will be flown to New York in June via American Airlines lor a two-week visit as gtiCiits Or-^he magazine. The glamorous visit will be highlighted by a fashion show teria in arriving at the final famed Carnegie Hall where ten who will compete. The con testants’ pictures appear in this issue of The Lance. The committee members were Elaine Ward, chairman; Magie Fishbume, senior class; Mary the winners vwll be introduced to over 1,000 members of the fashion industry. If 1961 is any- think to go by, the 1962 win ners will be wined, dined, feted and gifted at a dizzy pace. aiB. JOHN E. WILLIAMS SAC Students To Keep Prayer Day Sunday, February 18, is Un iversal Day of Prayer, a timt when students of colleges anrl universities in every countn join to pray: for forgiveness in thanks, in praise, in inter cession. Sponsored annually by th^ National Student Christiar Federation, the day will this I year be observed corporately at St. Andrews. Students should watch bulletin boards for fur ther observance plans. SC Fills Honor Council Vacancies Last week the Student Council a p p o inted Ed ward Browning and Earl Vaug han to fill va cancies in the Honor C o uncil. T hese students will serve until spring elections. Earl Monroe V a u g h an was chosen t.o fill the vacancy in BROWNING VAUGHAN the junior class Honor Council representatives. Earl is an Eng lish major and preministerial student and plans to attend Co lumbia Seminary after graduation from St. Andrews. Earl’s home is in Clarksburg, Missouri, and there was a span of thirteen years between his graduation from high school and his first college days which began at PJC. He worked at several retail businesses as well as serving in the U.S. Army before he decided to become a minister. He now calls Fayetteville, N. C. home, where he lives with his wife, Peggy, and their son, Earl, Jr. Earl enjoys salt water fishing and also plays the piano. Edward Parry Browning III, better known as “Ned,” was appointed sophomore Honor Council representative. Ned is from Winchester, Vai, where he attended high school and grad uated in the upper ten per cent of his cla^s. He was also judge of his high school honor council, which adds to his qualifica tions for his new position. An English major, Ned plans to enter T. C. Williams Law School upon graduation from St. Andrews. For hobbies he likes to listen to classical music and play basketball.