COLLEGIATE LIFE Vol. t - No. 4 NEWS BRIEFS The square dance held March 10 was successful although not as successful as the first one. The same group under new direc tion played for it. The Entertainment Committee is planning a May Day dance with a May queen and a small court. The date hasn’t been set yet. The baseball team is at last underway. Some 21 boys have signed up to play. The uniforms have arrived and practice has started. The first game is sche duled for April 6. Choir attendance lately has been slack. The members are urged to come. Miss Rosemary Shingleton welcomes all. The new advertising manager of the annual is Jo Mahalic. Frances Gulledge, the former manager, had to resign because of insufficient time to do the work. Commencement plans are now being made. According to the last count, approximately 17 people will graduate. Grady Mil ler is chairman of the Cap and Gown Committee and Barbara Murphy is chairman of the Pro gram Committee. The swimming team has folded. Poor attendance was one of the reasons given. Several of Charlotte College’s former students made the honor roll at Carolina last quarter. They were Oscar N. Burgess, Jr., James William Connor, Marcus G. Henderson, and Axel W. Hoke. CHARLOTTE COLLEGE, CHARLOTTE, N. C. March 28, 1950 27 MAKE DEAN'S LIST i»erlative§» Three Students On "A" List The dean’s list for the winter quarter included the names of twenty-seven Charlotte College students who carried the full load of at least fifteen quarter hours of work and maintained an aver age of “A” or “B”. Three students included in the “A” list are Caro lyn Louise Reichard, William E. Senn, Jr., and Robert Paul Ward, Jr. Twenty-four students included in the “B” list are Hugh Hall Adams, Kenneth M. Caldwell, Lewis F. Camp, Jr., Robert Hen drix Cook, Melvin Ray Descaro, Paul Lester Doster, Nancy Jo Elliott, Doris Jean Faulk, Ray mond Miller, Gahagen, James A. Harbison, Gerald Lawrence Haughton, Garland Richard Kir by, Fleet Kirkpatrick, Ray Lewis Kissiah, Richard Terrell Meek, Barbara Murphy, James Ralph Phillips, Clarence Adrian Pope, Leon Sheldon Pitman, Jr., John L. Randall, Deane Richardson, Crayton Edward Rowe, and Don ald Clyde Sopher. Shown above are most of C. C.'s superlatives. Seated, left to right, are David Cash, God s gift lo the ! women: Deane Richardson, most popular; Mary Camp, wittiest: Joan Cook, best dressed: Edith Black- welder, biggest heartbreaker: and Wilma Horne, best looking. Standing, left to right, are Ralph Turner j best looking; Grady Miller, most likely to succeed: Paul Putnam, wittiest; Herman Moore, best dressed: Brice McLaughlin, most co-operative; and Jim Kilgo, best all round. Not present when the picture was made were Alice Leggett, most co-operative: John Jamison, most i popular; and Gene Henderson, biggest bull shooter. Sorority And Fraternity News The Keymen have elected new j officers for this semester. They | are David Cash, president: Bill Prim, vice-president; and George Douglas, secretary-treasurer. The fraternity is planning a formal dance for its members. The Sorority has at last se lected a name. It is now called the Regina Sorority. Regina is the Latin word for “queen”. The new officers are: Carole Hin son, president: Frances Gulledge. vice-president: Mary Camp, sec retary: and Deane Richardson, treasurer. Small gray and maroon hats have been ordered for the members. Tentative plans have been made for a dance to be sponsored by the sorority and the fraterni ty. Tickets will be sold to raise money for the baseball team. The Alumnus Of The Month m ww Geology Class Chalks Up Another Field Trip Well, they’ve been on another! Where to? Lake Waccamaw, a very scenic spot near Wilming ton. Nine students and Dr. Hech- enbleikner spent a busy week-end hunting fossils, going boatriding, and taking in the bowling alleys and night spots of Wilmington. They left Charlotte Saturday morning, spent the day and night at Lake Waccamaw, and left ear ly Sunday morning for Ft. Fisher and Kure’s beach. Sunday night they were back in Charlotte after a very eventful week-end. Joe Bookout Joe Bookout is a name that will probably be put in the dic tionary someday as a synonym for "brains.” Joe, a Phi Beta Kap pa member, was very active all the way through school. In high school he won the J. C. Ott’s Award and Scholarship given by Central High School for outstand ing leadership and citizenship and the Lions’ Club Award and Scholarship for "outstanding work done in the physical sciences.” After finishing high school he entered N. C. State College to work toward a B. S. degree in chemical engineering: however, the following year he changed schools and entered Charlotte College where he stayed for two terms. Although Joe’s record in chemistry was above average, he was dissatisfied and uninterested in his work. Consequently, he de- Sigma Pi Alpha Fraternity Will Initiate C. C. Students Eleven language students of Charlotte College will be initiat ed into the Sigma Pi Alpha national honorary fraternity April 15 at Mitchell College in States ville, North Carolina. Deane Richardson. Nancy Jo Elliott, Ray Kisiah, and Wayne Hooks will go from the Spanish 21 class. Mary Camp, Barbara Murphy, Doris Faulk, and Lewi.? Camp will go from the French 21 class. Carole Hinson, Bill Senn and Gene Henderson will go from the French 2 class. Dr. Pierre Macy, Charlotte Col lege’s French professor, will be the after dinner speaker at this occasion. cided to drop engineering anH take up economics. He completed his work at the university Dec ember 16, 1949 with, by the way. a 94.7 average and will receive his diploma June 5, 1950. Now that Joe has finished school he is working for the Jefferson Standard Life In surance Company and is plan ning to be married soon. The lucky girl is Evelyn Michaels. Charlotte College is proud to have Joe Bookout as a member of her alumni. Woodworking Class Offered At C.C. A second class in woodworking is being taught at Charlotte Col lege this quarter. This non-college credit course, open to men and women, began March 21, and the class meets Tuesday nights from 7 to 10 o’clock. This course will last for 12 weeks. Enrollment, lim ited to 20 students, is partially filled. Claude A. Bell of the industrial arts department of Central High school is the instructor for the course. Mr. Bell received his Bach elor’s degree from Western Ken tucky State college and his Mas ter’s degree from the University of Missouri. Instruction is given in machine and hand woodworking. The pow- ! er tools available for the class are lathes, planers, saws (circu lar, band, and jig), jointer, drill press with router bits and mor tising attachments, and sanding equipment. The course is presented to pro vide basic hand and machine in struction for beginning students and power tools and additional information for the advanced woodworker. The first class in woodworking offered at Charlotte college was given during the winter quarter, w’hich closed on the night of March 17. It was accompanied by capacity enrollment of 21 stu- dents. Merchandising Students Offered New Course Another one of the new courses which are being offered at C. C. this Spring quarter is business law. This is one of the courses in the curriculum designed to train merchandising students. Other courses offered in the new quarter for this group of students are business mathematics and marketing. William Webb, with an A.B. degree from Washington and Lee in 1942, and an LL.B. degree from Harvard University in 1948, is the instructor of the class in business law. Mr. Webb, who has recently passed the written exam ination for the North Carolina bar, is now associated witH gen eral counsel’s office of Belk De partment stores. His more than three years of service during the war were spent in AAF Board headquarters. Although a native j of Cincinnati, Mr. Webb’s mar riage to a niece of Mrs. Andrew Blair has brought him to Char lotte. The course in business law in cludes a survey of the law of con tractors and the law of sales. Al so, brief attention is paid to the legal aspects of various types of business organizations. It is a I course which will be of signifi- I cance to persons whose business 1 activities involve dealing with , present or future purchases of i merchandise or services. The pur- j pose of this course is not to teach law in the academic sense, but ! to furnish an elementary guide to the legal aspects of everyday commercial transactions. The class in business law, lim ited to 35 students, now has less than a dozen vacancies in it.