THE CAMPUS CRiER VOL. I ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, DECEMBER 20, 1947 NU. 0 ***** JUST FOR THE SPIRIT OF THINGS, the Campus Crier has gone hack to Christmas, 1946, for the snow scene of Asheville taken from atop Beaucatcher mountain. Up to this writing, all hope for a "White Christmas" in 1947 seems lost, but still its Chtistmas. (Photo reprinted through courtesy of Asheville Citizen-Times and June Glenn, Jr. staff photographer. Editorial iWerrp Cfjrisitmasf For some little time now, the retiring editorial staff of The Campus Crier has been pleasantly annoyed by the ringing of sleigh bells and the good-natured jostling of Christmas shoppers, all har bingers of the holiday observing the birth of Christ. For all of us at Asheville-Biltmore College, the beginning of the Christmas holidays, 1947, will mean a two-week-long rest from studies, a chance to renew acquaintances with relatives and old friends. It will mean more, for the spirit of giving increases each season and countless joys will also be experienced on Christmas morn. But we of The Crier are, like so many others at Asheville-Bilt- more, tots at heart and the joys of receiving have been known to mean more to us than the much-publicized spirit of giving. After careful consultation with our Santa Claus, we have compiled a list of items which would look very good under the Christmas tree at Asheville-Biltmore, and the bewhiskered gent has assured us that these little items may be obtained through the cooperation of all concerned. First of all, there’s this business of a four-year college. Pro viding enough of Asheville’s populace can be interested in this idea, it will prove to be one of the most outstanding features in the City’s growth and development. In order to see this become a reality, Santa informs us, we must all coordinate our efforts toward making full use of what we now Christmas Message As we approach the glorious Yuletide season, let us all be come imbued with the real spirit of Christmas. The time is most propitious for tne man ifestation of brotherly love, tolerance, generosity, and the willingness to share with oth ers our happiness and our many blessings. It is a time for prayer and for universal tnanksgiving for our spiritual heritage. If the peoples of the world accept the precepts and the philosophy of our Saviour, “peace on earth, good will to ward men” will become a real ity and the specter of a third world war will be banished forever from the earth. A new year will be ushered in before our return to classes after Christmas. Let us re solve to make the year 1948 the greatest ever both for ourselves and for our college. To the students and faculty, their friends and loved ones, I wish to extend greetings. May you all have a most joyous holiday season. Sincerely, (Signed) Glenn L. Bushey CCUN GROUP BEING SET UP AT A-B By Nickie Bonarrigo Herbert Wallace, retiring edi- lor-in-cnief of ‘I'he Campus Crier, ana an executive memoer of tfte i^iauiHg Committee of tne Colleg iate Council lor the United i\a- tions, nas announced tnat plans nave aiready been formulated for tne creation of a cnapter of tne CCUN, here at ABC. Working witn a group of interested stu dents and with members of the delegation who attended the re cent conference at Statesville Wallace is confident tnat a very strong and eifective organization IS in the offing. With the blesings and the co operation of tne International Re lations Club, its president, Joe M o r r i s, a.n d its advisor, M r Moser, we should have a work- mg organization and extensive Plans ail ready to operate by Feb. 0, 1948 when the next statewide conference of the CCUN will take place, Wallace said. STATE HEADQUATERS of the CCUN at Chapel Hill, has sent the newly planned group the first issue of its bi-monthly news letter which stated that over seventy students representing 12 schools of Western North Car olina were in attendence during the recent two-day meet. District lA, which is our own district, has been given a headquarters and ihe honor has fallen to Mon- treat college. The next conference, to be held in Statesville on Feb. 5 and 6, will see such famous speakers as Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Ambassador rienri Bonnet from France, and Oscar Ivanessivich, the Ambassador from Argentina. “It seems that the gentle warmth of brotherly love, of new found peace directly after World War II, has suddenly turned into a winter of icy hearts and a ‘cold war’.” These are the words of Lincoln S. H. Kan, State Director of the CCUN that so vividly in dicate the vital need for an or ganization such as the CCUN. The specific and ultimate aim of CCUN is to join with other na tional and international groups in an all out effort to make the United Nations Organization a permanent and effective instru ment for world peace. ROBERTA W. STERLING, N. C. State Secretary-General of CCUN has stated that we, as stu dents, through the CCUN, have accepted a challenge, a challenge that will lead us to carry to the colleges and to all the citizens of North Carolina an intimate under standing of the United Nations. She stated also that the state of North Carolina will have the dis tinction of being the first state wherein its far-sights civic lead ers have met on a common (Continued On Page Three)