Page 10
THE FULL MOON
May 28, 1958
Teen Book Club Is Formed
By County Public Library
The Public Library is spon-^^
soring a Teen Book Club June 10-
August 15. Weekly meetings will
be held on Tuesday mornings at
10 a. m. at the Public Library.
Members of the planning com
mittee include Myra Carpenter,
chairman, Bryan Fox, Miss Mc
Daniel, Suzanne Mauldin, and El
len Rogers.
The plan they have set up is
to elect from their group a chair
man to serve three weeks in a
row and also a parent-sponsor to
serve three weeks. Suzanne Maul
din has been chosen as the first
chairman.
Programs will be arranged in
cluding book talks and other in
teresting information.
Prizes are to be given for the
largest total number of subjects
(best all-around) and for the
largest total of any kind.
Recognition will be given for
the best book talk during each
three weeks perio.d.
Refreshments will be served at
the meetings.
Sociology Classes
Tour Industries
Touring Stanly County indus
tries was a project of the first and
second periods of Coach Webb’s
sociology classes.
Traveling by bus, the group
spent the morning visiting the
following industries: Badin Alu
minum Company, where the pu
pils actually saw the aluminum
being molded into shape; Isen-
hour Brick Yards; and Wiscassett
Cotton Mills, where they saw the
different stages 6otton is process-
Nine To Attend
Debate Workshop
The Debating Club has been in
vited to participate in the Annual
High School Forensic Workshop
at Wake Forest College on July
7-11.
The following students and
Mrs. Little, the debating coach,
will attend the summer study of
public speaking and debate: Jo
Parks, Georgette Lampsi, Lane
Brown, Mike Fusonie, Bryan Fox,
Edith Smith, Bill Burbage, Mar
garet Furr, and Mary Hill Hat
ley. Of this number, only the
first three have had any debating
experience.
Featured on the Workshop
agenda will be classes in debat
ing and public speaking, includ
ing the mechanics of voice con
trol and emphatic delivery, and
contests in debate and extem
poraneous speaking.
The 1957-58 high school de
bate topic dealing with the ques
tion of increasing United States
foreign aid will be studied. The
Wake Forest Library will be open
for research to all high school
students and coaches.
Periods of planned recreation
are being provided. The entire
recreational facilities of Wake
Forest, including the college pool,
ed through in order to make
thread.
After lunch in the school cafe
teria the group concluded their
trip with a visit to the Young
Manufacturing Company in Nor
wood. The students saw how all
the furniture one uses is m-ade
and how efficiently it is done.
HOME CREDIT COMPANY
109 S. Second St. Dial YU 2-1165
STANLY
Funeral Home
AMBULANCE
PHONE YU 2-2288
North Second St.
ALBEMARLE, N. C.
Compliments Of
RACHEL'S
MRS. CONNIE FUSONIE
ALBEMARLE RADIO STORE
i
Radios — TVs — Record Players
123 South Second Street :: Albemarle, N, C.
Finest Furniture
— at —
Best Puces
Maxwell Bros.
Phone YU 2-1413
ELITE BEAUTY SALON
We Specialize In Hair Styling
200 South First Street —:— Phone YU 2-4614
CITY LAUNDRY. Inc.
Phone YU 2-3512
Member of American Institutes of Laundering
BOONE CLEANERS
Phone YU 2-1911
Member o;^ National Institute of Dry Cleaners
Air-Conditioned
CENTRAL
BARBER SHOP
Fred 0, Harwood
Theo. V. Harwood
149 South Second Street
PHONE YU 2-3915
1580 KC 250 W
RADIO WZKY
Football — Baseball — Basketball
— YOUR PUBLIC SERVICE RADIO —
Telephone YU 2-1111 Albemarle, N. C.
L A. EUDY’S
Gas and Oil
2015 Charlotte Rd.
PHONE YU 2-3016
BIRTHDAYS
JUNE
1 — Junette Huffman
Charles Richardson
Tommy Ritchie
Linda Wilhoit
2 — Kitty Almond
Trevor Sue Burris
3 — Gail Buck
Judy Lowder
4 — Kaye Almond
Jimmy Kluttz
Martha Ann Setzler
6 — Eunice Lee Haynsworth
Vickie Hunsucker
6 — Betty Holt
Judy Mabry
8 — Betty McQuague
Brenda Thompson
10 — Jamie Smith
Johnny Stonestreet
11 — Shirley Hattey
Johnny Saunders
12 — Jeff Hartsell
13 — Eddie E>avis
Gary Pinion
14 — Margaret Barbee
Jerry Bell
Nancy Swaringen
15 — Wayne Honeycutt
Marcia Moses
Roger Smith
16 — Linda Eudy
17 — Pat Lawhom
Marlene Price
Ellen Starnes
18 — Carolyn Huneycutt
Harold Kimmer
Becky Thompson
19" — Susan CashweH
Mike Ross
Bennie Troutman
21 — Roddy Cotton
Sue Smith
Jeannette Varner
23 — Frank Morton
Peggy Tucker
24 — Billie Ray Atkins
Brenda Bailey
Pat Clemmer
25 — Joe Copley
Calvin Lowder
Terry Still
Diane Watkins
27 — Gary Mauldin
28 — Jo Ann Coley
Carolyn Lee
Lois Shaver
Lowell Whitley
Gail Vanderburg
30 — Lana Byrd
Craig Caudle
Joe Ingram
will be available to those attend
ing.
The Workshop will end with a
banquet given for the partici
pants by the college officials.
Sixteen Singers Will Attend
Summer Choral Workshop
Cashwell, Hatley,
Fry Are Honored
Three AHS teachers, Mr. J, L.
Cashwell, Mr. R. C. Hatley, and
Mr, P, B. Fry, have been honored
recently.
Mr. Cashwell has been appoint
ed for a two-year term on the
advisory committee to study cur
ricular in North Carolina’s schools
under the supervision of the
State Board of Education, He is
also a member of the executive
committee dealing with the study
of TV courses in the schools.
Mr, Hatley has been named
an outstanding teacher of high
school physics by the Awards
Committee of the Physics Section
of the North Carolina Academy
of Science, This award carries
with it a year of honorary mem
bership in the N.C.A.S.
Mr, Fry was inducted into the
Phi Delta Kappa, a national hon
or fraternity for men engaged in
the field of education.
“Every time I find something it
belongs to someone.”—Jennings
Burris.
“I don’t want to be a million
aire; I just want to live like one.”
—Norris Jeffrey.
Sixteen AHS students will trav
el to East Carolina College,
Greenville, N. C., June 8, tq_ par
ticipate in the five-day Summer
Choral Workshop.
Those planning to attend are
Ronnie Herrin, Ann Bell, Pam
Treece, Steve Isenhour, Eddie
Wilson, Karen Davis, Pam Sells,
Bill Burbage, Paul Welch, Ron
ald Russell, Betsy Holbrook,
James Renger, Karen Herndon,
Harry Whitley, and Steve Hill,
Mr, and Mrs, Paul Fry will also
be present at the Workshop, as
he is a member of the committee
in charge of this project.
Dr, Larra Hoggard, who will
conduct the singing, is well-
known and loved by N, C, high
school students.
In previous years civic clubs
have provided scholarships for
needy and worthy students wish
ing to attend the Workshop. This
year’s scholarship recipients have
not been announced yet.
The Albemarle group will
travel to and from Grenville in
a bus with the Hic|wy choral
group.
“Flattery will get you some
where, so start talking.”—Frank
ie Hatley.
“That radiator’s giving off cold
heat.”—Ruby Vanhoy.
THE DRUG CENTRE
Prescription Specialists”
YOUR REX,ALL STORE
121 North First Street —Phone YU 2-6612
DENNIS CONCRETE WORKS, Inc.
Dial YU 2-2147
Aquadale Road
P. O, Box 342
Albemarle, N. C.
Best by Every Test
K. & L. DRUG STORE
Prescription Druggist
Complete Fountain Service
YU 2-6013 PHONES YU 2-7314
Salisbury Avenue
Dial YU 2-4913
THE BEAUTY NOOK
OPEN NIGHTS BY APPOINTMENT
FIVE POINTS CLEANERS
**We Clean — You Gleam”
Albemarle, N. C, —;— Dial YU 2-2014
Remember You Always Save At
BELK'S
LEFLER FUNERAL HOME
Air-Conditioned Chapel
Phone YU 2-1197
Albemarle, N, C,
HUCKABEE LUMBER CO.. Inc.
Paints — Building Materials — Lumber
Millwork — Builders Hardware
Coal —Fuel Oil
Phone YU 2-2114