Dean's List,
Honor Roll
Announced
The office of Dean of the Col
lege Clayton Morrisette has re
leased the Dean’s List and Honor
Roll roster for the first semester.
Making comparisions to other
years the report shows there were
20 on the Dean’s List for l%2-63,
first semester, and 18 last year,
with 15 this first semester. There
were 52 on the Honor Roll, for
the first semester, two years ago.
54 last year and 72 the first se
mester this term.
DEAN'S LIST
James Albert Asby,
Ernest Robinson Camp,
Carol A. Corbitt,
Ronnie S. Elliott,
Chris Felts,
Jerry Lee Hardison,
Jo Lynn Hardison,
Myrtle L. Hofler,
Frances Rebecca Jackson,
Mary Olivia Johnson,
Judith Eileen Lowery
Jewel Fay Slaughter,
Sue Anne Strew,
Gaye Nell Styroti,
HONOR ROLL
Thomas Vanney,
Elbert H. Arledge Jr.,
Larry Talmage Baker,
Gloria Dean Barnes,
Betty Blaylock,
Donna Paige Bolton,
Phyllis Marie Boyd,
Alan G. Boyer.
Brenda Faye Brodie,
Freddie Rayford CarroU,
John Spencer Carter Jr.,
Dinah Lou Cloude,
Gilbert W. Cole,
Mary Ann Crabb,
Susan Elaiiie Davis,
Faye Drewry,
Kaye Drewry,
Ted Englebrecht,
Haidee C. Ewell,
Sidney Lee Faucette,
Mary Anna Ferguson,
Charles McKim Fleet,
Allan F. Foote,
M. Don Gaines,
Franklin W. Goins,
Paul Jeffrey Harding,
Douglas B. Harrell,
Ross Lindsey Harris Jr.,
Thomas Hartwell,
Julia L. Hayes,
Julian P. Hendricks,
Carroll Britt Hill Jr.,
Eleanor Joan Hollongsworth,
Robert N. Holt,
Bennie David House,
Carolyn Anne Jenkins,
Linda Ann Johnson,
Richard S. Kenney,
Sarah Jean Laws,
Emily Faye Long,
William McNeill,
Raymond C. Madrin Jr.,
Sharon Diane Martin,
Patricia Lee Mann,
Antonio Martinez,
Grace Pearl Mason,
Okla Basil Meade,
Wayne Medlin,
Charles Morgan Moltz,
Ronnie Moseley,
Furman R. Mulford,
Kenny Myrick,
Leonard Clinton Orem,
Floyd Lee Peed,
Angel Luis Poreze,
June Kay Reid,
Charles Wayne Riley,
Glenn W. Rollins Jr.,
’Travis Lynn Russ,
William N. Sasher,
Edward Massie Simkins,
Mitchell Stanley Jr.,
Kay Hartman Sterling,
Charles Phillip Stevens,
Kenneth E. Stringfellow,
Kenneth Earl Stroud,
Carol Elizabeth Talley,
Paula Ann Tart,
Hilda Kay Whelan,
Joseph M. Willis,
Brenda Mae Woolard.
&LMOSIS
the professors his son had had
in a course.
"I’m delighted to meet you. My
son took math under you last
year, didn’t he?”
“Pardon me,” said the profess
or, "He was exposed to it but he
di^’t take It."
ing he was a female. He counter
ed with this one little note:
"Dear Deanie: I am rooming
over in the men’s dorm and the
boys are just darling. Marion.”
DENSE:
An old gentleman walking in a
London fog heard another ped-
estrain approach and said, "I’m
lost. Can you tell me where I’m
going.
"Into the river,” was the re
ply, I’ve just come out of it.”
OUCHI
“We got a remarkable brand
n’ pigs down our way,” the Ozark
hillbilly said. "Razorbacks, we
call’em. One day one of 'em
found three or four sticks of dyna
mite an’ et’ 'em. A mean mule
come along an' kicked the pig
agin the barn. The dynamite
went off, the barn blowed up,
pieces of the mule came down all
over the county, an’ windows
broke in houses fer miles around.
And let me tell you, fer a couple
of days we had a mighty sick
pig on our hands.”
YEAHI
Noticing that the lady next to
him in church could find no
money in her purse as the col
lection plate was being passed,
the ten year old boy whispered,
"Here, take my dime and I’ll
hide under the seat.”
NATCHERLY
“In what condition was the pat
riarch Job at the end of his life?”
asked the teacher of the quiet boy
who had not had a question.
“Dead,” was the calm reply.
AT CHOWAN:
The father was down at the col
lege having a little visit with his
son. One evening he met one of
HOW NICE
Marion Johnson, student of
journalism at the University of
Minnesota found his name a con
stant source of confusion to his
faculty and student body. The
limit was reached when he re
ceived a note from the dean of
women inquiring about his room
ing situation, she of course think
ENGLISH 101:
A young lad in English com
position class was unusually gra
phic in a theme supposed to be
written about a ball game. When
the teacher came to his paper
she read, “Rain—no game.”
Wrong Crowd
Seaman Guard — How did you
get so completely intoxicated?
Sailor — I got into bad com
pany. I had a bottle of whisky
and the other three guys didn’t
drink.
J. M. HARPER, JR., PRESIDENT
STATE PORT PILOT
Southport. N. C.
Board of Directors
J. M. HARPER. JR., CHM. Ex.-OF.
J. D. FITZ. Sec. Ex.-Of.
HENRY L. WEATHERS. SHELBY
ELIZABETH G. SWINDELL. WILSON
DON HALL, ROANOKE RAPIDS
C. M. OGLE. HENDERSONVILLE
PAUL DICKSON. RaefORD
C. O. JEFFRESS. GREENSBORO
W. CURTIS RUSS. WaynESVILLE
J. P. HUSKINS, Statesville
ORVILLE CAMPBELL. CHAPEL HILL
HENRY L. WEATHERS. VICE-PRESIDENT
DAILY STAR
SHELBY. N. C.
D. FITZ. SEC.-TrEAS.
THE NEWS'HERALD
MORGANTON. N. C.
North Carolina Press Association
OFFICE OF THE
SECRETARY
P. O. BOX 861
MORGANTON. NORTH CAROLINA
January 4, 1965
Mr. Stephen W. Deal
Daily Independent
Kannapolis, N. C.
Dear Stephen;
I am pleased to notify you that you have won Honorable
Mention in Photo Spot Newspictures in the Daily Division
of the 1964 Press Awards Contest.
Checks and Certificates will be presented to contest winners
Thursday evening, January 21 at 8:30 in Carroll Hall at Chapel
Hill by Governor Moore.
A reception honoring the 1964 Award Winners and Governor and
Mrs. Moore will be held in the Ballroom of Carolina Inn
Thursday afternoon at 5:30.
I hope you will be present to receive your award in person
and you will find a reserved section in Carroll Hall for
prize winners.
Please remember there is to be no public announcement of 1964
contest winners until after the presentation by Governor Moore
on Thursday evening.
My congratulations to you and your newspaper and I look forward
to seeing you in Chapel Hill.
Sincerely yours,
J.D. Fitz
Secretary
JDF:ew
GRADUATE WINS AWARD — Above is evidence of the success of the graduates of the School of Graphic Arts. Stephen Deal, now
associated with the Daily Independent, Kannapolis, graduated from Chowan College in 1963.
FOR FEBRUARY, 1965
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