PAGE TWO THE CLARION FEBRUARY 24, 1961 The Lenten Season W'Jien the young men of America left the com forts of home and prepared for war, they were first sent to a training camp, not only to be schooled, but also to be hardened by the process. They were to be made “fit” for war. Lent, too, is the time for training in the necessary disciplines of life. By observing Lent, onei determines whether the pleasures of life have actually become xiiecessities. A few years ago at Brevard College, a group of students decided to observe Lent by abstaining from eating dinner for the 40-day period, and to give the money thus gained to a charitable organization. How ever, these students failed to catch the true signifi cance of Lent, for, even though they did not eat a- ■El MUSIC NOTES 3 The second Lyceum program' for this school year will be on Wednesday night, March 1. PLAYERS INCORPORATED will present Shakespeare’s play The Merchant of Venice. In addition to the faculty and student body, tlie Kiwanis Club of Brevard will be present for this program. We welcome the Kiwanians to our campus and hope that they might wish to make this an an nual “ladies night” affair for their group. Brevard Chamber of Commerce banquet to be held at the Ar mory on Thursday night, March 2. This will be the first appear ance of this group for the spring semester. When You're Alone By Vandalyn Brown I 'i’he College Madrigal Singers lunch in the cafeteria, they later went to a downtown featured in the annual restaurant for their meals. Thus, they had sacrificed - —— - - nothing. During the Lenten season, each person should seek ±o observe greater fidelity to prayer, to emphasize more the daily reading of the Bible, and to show more concern for building concrete religious habits. Physically, Lent is the 40-day period pr^eding Eas ier, beginning on Ash Wednesday and ending on ^ ™ Sunday. But Lent is much more than smply a phys - cal lact It is a time for discipline, for paying attention S 4e needs of one’s own soul, for determining who gmaste? -- man or his appetites. The sacrifices the abstinence from purely social forms, are merely a fort to disengage oneself from the world fx> take a piercing, searching look at life, and to clea life of its less important activities m favoi of disci pline. There Are Others Alpha Beta Gamma and Pi Theta ^appa, I the scho lastic honorary fraternities on campus, have recently held their induction services. To become a member of one or both of these organizations is a much-covet- S honor, and those inducted deserve smcere congrat ulations. This is a recognition of the many they have spent studying, of their exemplary cond as students, of their above-average grades and of Hieir interest in th^iir courses and then school. But this is not to say that these students are the only deserving ones. There are those who are capable ot making only C’s. And many of these students have Sudied as long, have conducted themselves as well have had the same interest, and have made the best grades they are able to make. May they somewhere find the recognition and appreciation which they need and deserve. • And for those who almost made it, but fell sUghtly short of the mark, there is always another chance. For the freshmen there is next year, and for the sopho mores there will be other organizations and other forms of recognition. The important thing is to keep trying — not so that others will know they can meet the standards set by an organization, tout so that they can keep progressing and learn and know within them selves that they have tried. It is a wonderful achievement to meet the require ments of one of these organizations and be accepted into its membership, but it is more importai^ to bring forth the best qualities and the highest effort in order to leam and live as each of us should. till H The fourth program for this year’s Asheville Civic Music Ser ies will be presented on March 4, It will feature Grant Johan- nesen, Pianist. The Chromatic Club of Bre vard College will have its first meeting of the spring semester on Saturday, March 4. It will be gin with supper in the faculty dining room and will be followed by a business session. Those hav ing tickets tor the Asheville con cert will then leave together for this concert. It is hoped that we can find additional tickets for this concert so that more ciub members may attend the program. All members are urged to remember this meeting. Nicholson To Speak During REW March 5-9 Religious Emphasis Week will be held March 5-9, the first ser vice being held Sunday evening March 5, in the Brevard Metho dist church. The speaker for these sessions will be Mr. R. H. Nicholson, pas tor of the First Methodist church There are many different forms of happiness. There is the serene contentment that comes with the living of a full, rich Ijle. There is the unbidden ecs tasy that comes with first love and never returns in the same way. And there is a calmness that comes with having a sense of direction. Even though there are those v/ho say that the object in life is not to be happy, everyone is searching for happiness. Why, then, does it always elude us when we try to trap it and come to us when we least expect it? Happiness comes to different J people in different ways. There are those persons who seem to have been born either for joy or tragedy, and when happiness comes to them it comes as bright ness and vivacity and it fills their lives. And there are others who ac cept their happiness knowing that it might not last. They ques tion it and do not let it get too firm a grip on them. Others bring it into their lives with calmness and serenity. V.’hen and if it leaves their lives, they continue with their routine vi'ith no noticeable change even though they are slowly dying in side. Happiness often comes from an unexpected source. We are not expecting it and possibly v/e do not want it from just that particular source, but it is bet ter to accept it than to fight and become weary. For it is what we really want and it is what is best for us. The only thing to question about happiness is if it is real and true or merely a moment of light coming during a dark time seeming to be a ray of eternal joy. Happiness to one person is misery to another, but if we live and love and learn as we should, we will each get a chance to find our own particular type of hap piness. Miss Crook The Clarion Staff PRESS Editor-in-Chi«f ^ Vandialyn Brown Associate Editor Gene McGaha Business Manager Becky SiSmon News Editor Ralph Greene Sports Editor Danny Bost Exchange Editor Barbara Ballew Staff Writers and Typists — Sara Whitmire, Jerry Tillotson, Shelba Jean McKee, John Goins, Joel Stevenson, Jimmy Wilson, Eleanor Mefford, Carole Padgett. By JERRY TILLOTSON I feel sorry for Miss Crook. She was here one day, but then gone the next. She lived in our town all of her life, never ventur ing from its site, even with the advent of automobile and jet- propelled transportation, so they say. I never knew her myself ex cept on sight, but then no one could mistake the pitiful, hunch ed figure in the faded blue gingham dress and the thread bare cashmere coat. She would give a wan smile to passers-by, but her light brown eyes seem ed to be on some object in her mind, looking at it from differ ent angles, but then casting it suddenly aside as something too awesome to touch. What was it, [ wonder. They say that she was once a beautiful woman, with all the young men in town in pur suit of her, but as her mother had died while quite young. Miss Crook was dominated by an ir rational father who kept her in the house, forever berating her about the meek or some person-' al mannerism. He said to her once, “You can make yourself happy by marry ing a man, or you can make me happy by staying with me until 1 die,” Miss Crook never married. She stayed with her father, nev er uttering a complaint, mixing liis medicine, answering his cor respondence arid cleaning the house, until he died ten years later. They say that her eyes held no tears at the funeral. Her young beauty had faded now, and she gave up any ideas about matrimony. She shut up most of the house, covering the furniture in long, tapering white sheets, and used only the first floor of the house as her home. She began going to the quilting part ies and church suppers. She can celled her subscription to Read ers Digest and subscribed to The C hristian Advocate. She was now one of the old crowd. They say that an elderly man in the neigh borhood took an interest in her, but she snubbed him on the streets and he never recovered. Miss Crook doesn’t live in the old chocolate house now, the one with broken windows and sagging porch. She lies under the ground on the hill, in the family cemetery. Her grave is situated in an inopportune location. In —Turn to Page Four of Waynesville, Mr. Nicholson is a native of North Carolina, hav ing been born near Statesville in Iredell County. He graduated from Harmony High School in 1P33 and from Lenoir-Rhyne Col lege in 1937. Mr, Nicholson re ceived his BD degree from Duke University Divinity School and did one and one-half years of special work in the Duke Univer sity Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, During World War II he served as a chaplain in the U. S, Navy and again during the Korean War. He maintains » commission with the rank of Commander in the U, S, Naval Reserve, Mr, Nicholson is married to the former Hazel Montgomery of Statesville, and they have three children, two boys and a girl, ages respectively 13, 11, and 8. Religious Emphasis Week was originated by Mrs, A. W. Flyer, who established a fund, the in terest from which will each year bring an outstanding preacher to the campus. Her husband, the late Dr. A. W. Plyer, was a Methodist minis ter in the Western North Caro lina Conference, He served as a charter member of the Board of Trustees of the college, show ing great interest in the college s work and promises for gromn He was co-editor for the Nortn Carolina Christian Advocate ana served in that capacity for many years. The church suffered a great loss when, in 1956, Plyler died at the age of Mr. Nicholson, speaker for tn forth-coming Religious Emphasi AVeek, will present a talk to Brevard College student body Wednesday, March 8, at the lar assembly service, The library has a display of career pamphlets which hopes the students will to their advantage. If would like ”or1an special career, the will be happy to order pamp lets. A number of new Pho‘® graphy books which the ]0U nalism department gave t library are beginning to com in. These are also on spec display.