Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC)

 - Class of 1945

Page 9 of 24

 

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 9 of 24
Page 9 of 24



Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 8
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Page 9 text:

Edna Rowland Pinetown, N. C. Caldwell House President 3; Chairman Registration H. S. Senior Week-End 3; International Relations Club 2; Dodo Bio Club 1. A.C.I.S. 3. VOULA SOUFAS Wilson, N. C. Jessie Tubner Erwin, N. C. Glee Club 1, 2, 3; President Glee Club 4; Delta Sigma Sorority 2, 3, 4; Vice President 3, President 4, Delta Sigma; Woman ' s Dormitory Council 4; Social Com- mittee 4; Concert Committee 4; Voice Recital 4. Edna Waters Pinetown, N. C. Dodo Bio Club 1; International Relations Club 2. Graduated in 3 years.

Page 8 text:

£ en,iat£ Julia Gliarmis Wilson, N. C. Treasurer Class 1; Dramatics Club 1, 4; Music En- semble 1; Staff Collegiate 1; President Debating Club 2; Representative Forensic Tournaments 2; Treasurer Class 4; Founder and President A.C.I. S. 4; President International Relations Club 4; Maid of Honor May Day 4; Town Girls ' Club 1, 2, 4. Dorothy Greene Macon, Ga. Honor Roll 1, 2, 3; Golden Knot Honor Society 2, 3; Vice President, Chaplain, Historian Delta Sigma Sorority 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 3; College Publicity Com- mittee 1 ; Feature Editor Collegiate 1 ; Essay Cup Win- ner 1; Marshal 1, 2, 3; Staff Torchlight 2, 3; Associate Editor Torchlight 2; Concert Committee 2; S.C.A. Cabinet 2; President Class 1; Secretary Woman ' s Dormitory Council 3; Radio Planning Council 3; Vice President International Relations Club 3. Rachel Jones Bailey, N. C. WA.A. 1, 2, 3; Secretary W.A.A. 3; President Class 2; Staff Torchlight 2, 3; Business Manager Torchlight 3; Phi Sigma Tau Sorority 2, 3; President Phi Sigma Tau 3; Attendant May Day 3; Treasurer Education Club 2; Director One-Act Play 3. Mildred Moye Walstonburg, N. C. International Relations Club 2, 3; French Club 1. Graduated in 3 years.



Page 10 text:

cJ-tldotu at L la at 1945 THE LAST SOUVENIR has been pasted in the scrapbook. No more space; many are the pages which contain a record of the events of our four years at Atlantic Christian Col- lege. Held between blue and white covers are memories of days which have gone by so quickly that at times it was impossible to re- cord passing events. Our freshman year was much like that of any other group. We went through the usual ordeal of getting accustomed to strange peo- ple, places, and things. For to us A. C. Col- lege was as new and different as any place could be. Little did we know then the love for it we would have four years later. We chose as our officers : Elizabeth White, presi- dent; Billy Barnes, vice president; Miriam Johnson, secretary; Bryan Parsons, treasurer. Then, we settled down to the business of learning. And we did learn! We learned that friends, parties, picnics, and fun were all a part of college life, as were mathematics, Spanish, English, and biology. The attack upon Pearl Harbor dampened our gay Christ- mas spirits and added a serious note to our lives. In the fall of 1942, we saw even greater changes as we returned to Wilson. Many of our classmates did not return; but those who did, elected as their officers : Miriam Johnson James, president; Helen Renfrow, vice presi- dent; Elizabeth White, secretary; and Wil- lard Woodard, treasurer. True, we lost many of our classmates, but we gained a few new ones: Doris Baumrind, Mildred Everette, Vera Loftin, and Lyle Reid Starling. We had the usual parties and picnics, and we enter- tained the seniors. Spring came, but the cam- pus had a barren look; without the boys who were called into the armed services, A. C. College was not the same. In our junior year, although our class had a few boys who were not in the service, our officers were all girls: president, Caro Lee Morgan; vice president, Helen Renfrow; secretary, Lois Webb; and treasurer, Grace Hill. Studies and classes took up a great deal of our time, the rest of which we spent at the Y store, the College Grocery, and the movies. We entertained the seniors at a the- ater party in the spring. Commencement came only too soon , taking away many of our best friends. Our first three college years passed by quickly. The scrapbook is getting worn; but on the remaining pages are memories vivid and real, because they center around the activities of our last year at A. C. C. Our officers — A. C. A Young, president; Betty Nethercutt, vice president; Lucille Boyette, secretary; and Julia Gliarmis, treasurer — managed effi- ciently about forty seniors, the class of 1945. For the fourth time, Dr. Hartsock was chosen as class sponsor. The main feature of the fall was practice teaching. Our class, even though it had lost many of its original members, had added, through the wartime speed-up pro- gram, many new members. At the end of the first semester, we lost several of our classmates by graduation: Ada Katharine Coor, Grace Hall, Mary Emma Perry, Char- lotte Ruth Gray, Ruby Davis, Lois Webb, Lottie Vann, and Rella Pace. During the year, three senior girls, Rella Pace, Elizabeth White, and Jessie Turner, were presented by the Music Department in voice recitals. How proud we were of them! By attending sum- mer sessions, over half of the members of our class were able to graduate in three years. During our senior year, souvenirs were recorded of the picnic which the Junior class gave us in April; pictures of May Day, which featured many members of our class; pic- tures of spring invading the campus and our hearts; movie tickets; and Hit Parade rat- ings. Throughout the year, entries were re- corded in diaries, telling about the fun in Sarie ' s Basement, V-mail letters, Frank Sinatra and Van Johnson, Papa and Butch, and our steadies, cabbage, beans, and potatoes. The mystery of the year was the recipe for the tomato goulash we were served frequently in Hardy Dining Hall. Al- most before we were aware of it, Septem- ber had turned into May; and registration had become graduation. The scrapbook of our college days is com- pleted. To say Good-bye to a life that has meant everything to us for four years is as impossible as it is to predict the future. Both the past and the future have a place in our lives; the past we hold, and the future is be- fore us. Here the scrapbook ends. Large as it is, its pages lack many souvenirs of the small events of life at A. C. College. Some may look at the book and wonder, but we remem- ber and smile. A — Helen Renfrow and Lucille Boyette, Class Historians. 10

Suggestions in the Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) collection:

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Atlantic Christian College - Pine Knot Yearbook (Wilson, NC) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949


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