MAROON AND GOLD Thuiuday, April 19 :'»56 ^Mfiroofi And Gold Intared M second cUm matter »t the Po«t (Mfice at Elon CoDege. N. C. under the Act of March 8. 1879. DeUvered by mail. *1.90 the college year, 50c the quarter. editorial boakd Gary Thompson Ann Stoddard Gary Thonvpiion Neil Johnson Reuben Aiikew Editor-iD-Chiel Assistant Bxiitor Feature Editor Art Editor Staff PhotoRrapher l.uther N. Byrd Faculty Advisor BUSINESS BOARD Jack Undley . Business Manager Ann Stoddard . - Circulation Manager Carl E. Owen Printing Advisor Worden Updyke Press Opcratoi SPORTS STAFF Bit! Walker Sports Editor Ria»OKTi;RS Judith Clark John McGowan Waltrr Edmonds Glenn Garrett GirleU VesUl LcuiH Wilkins Yvoon^ Win»lracl Sounding By LARRY BARNES mOM SUCH A POND THE TUNMa.nTES GOT WATER Sylvia Grady George Hall THURSDAY, APRIL. 1858 VOTE IN THE FINALS It U Spring. And Spring at Elon brings clecOon day. Next Tuesday the finals in the elections will be held. On that day the students who are going to fill the student government and other officcs next year will bo choson, presumably by you, the students. It is important to your wel fare and success as a student body that the persons with ability, leadership, and dependabilly be elected to those positions. You howl about wanting a good student government. You don’t want too much ad ministrative Interference. You want to run the social life on campus, you want an Honor Council that will be for the stU' dent. And yet you don't go to the polls and clect the persons you feel are best suited to lead those organizaeions—you just sit back and grip about the way those elected carry on fheir duties. Each time there has been an election this year, only a small per cent of the studenu voted, making the winners lead ers of the minority. Apparently, the pro verbial Elon voting spirit is dying. But you have one more opportunity this year to cast aside your indifference and help bring some of that old spirit into elec tions again. Take politics out of their crepe, dust them off. and use them. And don’t forget to vote Tuesday. —GBT. REQUIEM A flar?—a flame—and it wa:i gone! Only two short weeks &go South Dorm of “dsar Ole Elon" yielded to the licking tongue of the fire demon and sang its sw«n song amid flaming colors. It is only fitting that we should men tion this Incident in the Maroon and Gold bccause South Dorm had been the object of much discussing for several years. To sonic it wjis an eye-sore; to some a men ace; and to others, a rebc of by-gone days. It had served its purpose! It had stood there for years and years; it had been a home for thousands of men who had come from far and near to make Elon their college; it.iad withstood the ravages of the element amazingly! But its days of service were over. It had begun to weaken and decay, and it had become not only an unsightly object tut also a dangerous one. It stood there only as a structure, very antiquated, very unattractive, and very perilous. So South stands no longer. Yet in its passing, there is no grief nr remorse, but only a memory of what used to be.—GBT WHAT GOOD WILL ONE VOTE DO? Well, One vote has had a lot to do with & lot of things in this country. Thomas Jefferson was elected piesident by one vote. So was John Quincy Adams. Kutherford B. Hayes was elected presi dent by one vote. The first two were named in elections that went to tlie House of Kepresenlatives, and the Hayes elec tion wa.s a contested one that was re ferred to an electoral commission. It was there that he won by ■ gingle Tote. The man wlio case the deciding vote for President Hayes was a congressman from Indiana, a lawyer who wa.s himself elected to Congress by a margin of one TOle. And that one vote for him was cast by a client of his who, although desper- ate>> ill, insiited on being Uken to the polls to vote. Just one vpte gave statehood to Cali fornia, Idaho. Oregon, Texas and Wash- Ington, and today all the millions living In thOM- five sUtes are Americans by just cne vote. Now you may «ay that one »ote situa tion applies only to the past. Well, don’t forgef yiat the Draft Act oif -l^orld War II passrt the House by Just one vote . , . and ,yf)u can carry the "One Voe” hls- eopr op. There is no power like the power of th« ballot —FROM OUTLOOK MAGAZINE. South Dorm now stands like an ominous charred skull, staring disdainfully at pass- ers-by. No more will its ancient halls ring wkh the laughter of Elon students. The Elon student body returned from the Easter holiday to find the South Dor mitory gutted as r lesult of an early morn ing fire. By an act of God, only two stu- denti—Sam Brady and Chang Gill Kim —were in the building at the time the blaze broke out. As you welHtncw, the remainder of the occupants of the build- ing were away from the campus on spring vacation. All of the twenty-four rooms In the familiar structure were damaged by fire, water or smoke, and since the return of the students frcm holidays last week the forty-seven men students who once lived in South have moved into different dorms They have been interspersed in North, Cai^on House ind the third floor of the Christian Education Building. All of them suffered losses in the blaze, and I quizzed a couple of them as to what the fire did I to them personally. Buck Flemming says— | "I lost all my good clothes, two summer suits, and about ten summer pants, and all my good white shirts, sport shirts, sweaters, one sport coat, two pairs of new shoes, and all of my bed covering. The only summer clothes that I have to my name are two pairs of Bermuda shorts. All my school books were lost. The only book I could find was the Holy Bible. These things are just a few that I have lost. I did not have any insurance on any of my things. So if the college does not pay anything I will lose just about every thing I own. "1 have just bought all my summer clothes down here, and Easter I was go ing to carry all my winter clothes home. But now I have to wear my winter pants when it gets hot. "Right now I own a total of eight pairs of pants. Three of these are wool pants, three khaki, and. of course, my Bermudas.” Ashbum Kirby has this to relate about the fire — “The fire was a bad thing and some of us lost almost everything we had. We are all thankful to the good Lord that we were not in the building asleep be cause some of us would have been killed or possibly ruined for bfe. 1 saved my most treasured possession, tho’. It’s my girl’s picture. 1 was really sweating that thing out! I am now living in the "Greater Carlton House". I have a pretty nice room over there, but nothing here, almost not even West Dorm, could take the place of ole South.” I ran across a downcast Jim Calhoun in the Student Union. He took me out to the front of Mooney and showed me the scorched remains of his belongings. Spread on the grass lay 23 sports shirts, 3 or 4 .'.uits, innumerable pairs of pants, some burned encyclopedias and other objects. Jim was really concerned over his ency clopedias. He had a complete set and not cne was worthy of use. They were valued over $100.00. What really worried him the most was the fact that they were not covered with insurance and he has not finished paying for them yet. I asked him what he figured he lost all toll. He re plied with the eye-opening total of $500 00. An ironic twist of fate was played on Ray Whitley and Hugh Citty. Just the week before they had moved from another dormitory to South. Like so many others, they lost almost all they owned. South was constructed around 1920 and was formerly used as a publishing house by the Southern Convention of Congrega tional Christian Churches before being converted to a dorm some 18 years ago. Mu^h of the w«lei used by residents of the back country of India comes from just such ponds or ",rn“ s’- as pictured abrve It wa. from thir earthen "tank” that Mrs, Tunn.cUffe obtamed wa er foT all evcept d-ink;ng The drinking water was hauled from a pure source many miles away from the Tunnicliffe hom. during all the period that they ^ived on compound Such ponds also served as good hunting grounds for water Birds, as described companylng story, In Which It Is Shown That Life Is Sometimes Rugged In India By The Brighter Side The Student Christian Association, along with the Ministerial Association, have come up with an original and commend able idea. They held a meeting recently to try and see if they could alleviate the present condition of the students of South Dormitory. These organizations plan to fos ter a fund raising campaign. They will a'.k the other students to pledge what they can in the form of monetary, donations. It is up to us as fellow sudents and fellow Christians to give all the aid that is pos sible. We can dig down deep or we can be indifferent to the whole situation but— who knows? It could happen to your dor mitory. That is a thought worth consider-- • ing. After I married I left Lady Doak College to move into a tobacco area some 250 miles north of Ma dras in the out-district of the Tel- egu country, now known as the Andhra District. The Depot, of which my husband was Branch Manager, was 26 miles from the railroad and was situated in a small man-made oasis in the mid dle of fields of tobacco, red pep per, and cholam. This last is a grain resembling wheat, but has a head three times the size and glows even taller than corn. The depot was in the heart of n black cotton soil district; there were no roads leading to it. A dirt "trunk" road (a main thor oughfare) ran somewhere near it. and from this road*we had to drive down cart tracks and over waUi-filled fields to reach our bun galow. During the rains the roil of the area made any sort of locomotion almost impossible; we could not even walk outside our gravel-fill ed compound without sinking knee deep in mud. The trunk road it self. or that part of it in our area, partook of this muddiness, as well as being well broken up by wadis, which became sw:—'len tor rents during a rain. (A wadi is a rocky or sandy watercourse, dry except in the rainy season.) Vehi cular traffic, even to the bullocK cart, was at such times at at a tandstill. A Rugged Trip A baby. cyclone hit the area the day on which we were due to leave Madras for our new home. The tracks jusi below the town of Chirala, the main re-drying and packing center for the Indian Leaf Tobacco Development Company, w'eic washed away. We were forced to remain in Madras for i week, a state of affairs which we did not mind. When we fin ally managed to reach Chirala it was another eight days before any roads were dry enough, any wa dis low enough, to permit a car lo get through. Our depot, near the village of Kommur. was 26 miles from Chi rala. a short journey which we took many times during dry wea ther. This time, however, we were obliged to travel a circuitous route We circled the perimeter of the Kommur area for 80 miles, and ipent five days on the road. .That we eventually reached Kommur within five days is a tribute to my husband’s driving ability. We were in trouble only twice, both .imes on the last lap of the jour ney when the mud had become so deep and slippery that there '■eemed to be no solid earth any where. The first halt came in the .Tud- dle of what was once the main street of a small village. From that dilemma we were rescued by the help of friendly villagers under the supervision of the Brahmin priest, who even helped in the pushing. The second halt, nearly CHAPTER TWO MRS. DARTH FA TUNNICLIFFE - present), and three sheep. The sheep were a necessity. We were I never certain that we would be I able to get meat when we wanted 'it; and, as it was impossible to buy even mutton near us^we de This is a continuaf>»n of the narration of the experiences of one of Elen’s faculty members in faraway India. In the past issue of the Maroon and Gold Mrs. Tunnicliffe recounted her experiences as a teacher in a girls' college in India. In this issoe he describes the life which she and her husband lived in the Indian back-country, where he was employed with a large tobacco company. There were hardships, of course, but there were also things of almost in describable beauty to be seen. disastrous, was in sight of the de pot. Mud, water, rolling stones and un.seen holes seemed to be the finish of our journey. We were considering the advisability of wading when shouts stopped us. From the depot men came running with three large palmyra mats which they placed in front of the car. As we rolled over each mat it was removed and placed it the front of the foremost mat, thus enabling us to reach firm :round. And so we reached oui compound and the shelter of the bungalow, Home Is Described The compound was about 4 acres of circular land. In the center was the one story T-shaped bungalow, a wide covered veranda running down the front. From the middle of the veranda jutted a large cov ered secUon which we used as an outside sitting-room. This sec tion was partially enclosed by masses of bougainvillaea, climb ing up onto the roof and spread ing out along the sides on a wire trellis. Great splashes of purple, red, pink, and salmon pink were brilliant against the white walls. Beyond the front driveway was a I garden made up entirely of tro- cided to keep our own. The diffi culty came when we wanted to butcher the sheep. Everyone had made such pets of them that 1 invariably received requests to let the sheep live a little longer. For other meat, supposedly beef but more probably water buffalo, we had a standing order f?c‘m Ma dras. Our beef and butter used to come to us fortnightly from a dis tance of 250 miles. Occasionally the meat reached us in a decom posed state. There were no refri gerator cars on the trains; the meat and butter was packed in ? box with sawdust and ice, the whole sewed up in gunny sacking. Should the train be late, or the parcel put off at the wrong sta tion, mest and butter were ined-i ible when they reached Kommur. These parcels of food and any mail that we received had to be brought to us by runner from Chi rala. Kommur had no post offict and no telephones. For any emer gency we still had to rely on a 'unner, or make the journey our- elves by car. Eggs Were Scarce Our chickens were not much ol a sucess as egg producers. Indiar chickens have not been trained to lay more than one egg every other day; furthermore, they sel dom lay at the same time. The re sult was that we rarely got more than one egg a day. Instead we had to send to all surrounding villages within a radius of twelve miles for two dozen eggs. How ever, we did raise fowl to help our larder. Variation in our diet was help ed tremendously by the proximity of teal in the district. India is pical flowering trees, beyond these full of "tanks” (bodies of water a tennis court at the edge of the:about the size of our pond, natural compound and abutting a field of {or man-made to retain as much tobacco. 1— = The back premises of our com pound at Kommur consisted of kitchens, godowns (storerooms), and servants quarters; a large hen house, the garage, and our own private electric plant. We had the only electricity in our area, even the offices of the depot just across th cart track road were lighted by lar.terns and oil lamps. All the smal villages around us and all over the district, were lit by sim, -lar means. It was always some thing of a thrill to see our bright ly lit house from a distance at night; it looked like a vast ocean liner on a gala night riding at an chor in the darkness. We soon made good use of our back premises. Ere long, in addi tion to the deer we had brought with us, we collected twenty hens and a rooster, ducks, six turkeys, two geese and a gander, five gui nea fowl, a dachshund puppy (which came to us as a Christmas the quidnunc By GARY THOMPSON Army Is Hunting For Theology Students The army is hunting for theology stu dents who can qualify tor second lieu tenant commissions and assignir.enii a, chaplains to home-town Reserve and Nat- ional Guard uniU. ( The program is primarily for iren jn their first and second year at theologicti »eminaries, since senior students may ap- ply directly for first lieuienant commis sions shortly before they're ordained. As the Army sees it, the initial advaa- lages to getting into the program are a chance to attend summer training and De paid for tension courses through the Chaplain School. An eventual advantage is a chance to supplement regular civilijn income by taking part in Reserve affairs after being ordained and assigned to a ciiurch. If you’re a theology student, your fi«t qualification for the program is that you be a full-time student at a recognized sem inary, or be a senior at a recognized col lege dr university planning lo enter a sem inary come fall, ' ■you may also— Have completed 130 undergraduate se mester hours at a recognized college or university. Have the approval of your church d^ nomination for the study of theology. Be over 18, but not have reached your 30th birthday prior to your appointment Sign an agreement ^hat you'll accept a commission as first lieutenant if you're offered one after you re ordained. Agree to serve a minimum of two full ] years of active duty after you re appoint ed as a iirst lieutenant if the Army re quires your services on active duty, (The I Army says it now isn't in need of chap lains on active duty and chances are won't involuntarily call a Reserve unit chap- I lain unless a lull or partil mobilization | occurred.) Meet the general requirements for ap- I pointment as a commissioned officer in | the Army Reserve, All young men who sign up in the pro-1 gram will be eligibel to take the eight- week Summer course at the Chaplain School, eihter between your terms at the | seminary or after graduation. During your course at the school you j will be paid $677 if you have no depen- j dents or $711 if you have dependents. You’ll reecive a uniform allowance of S20U I after you have completed 14 days of the | course and your travel expenses will be ] covered by the Army. After your graduation from the semi nary and you're assigned to a Reserve] unit, you’ll have the opportunity to earn from $500 to $1,000 a year as an active] Reservist, Your assignment, incidentally, will be at or near your local parish. If you’re interested in the program and I feel you're qualified, you should write to I the office of the Chief of Chaplains, De-j partment of the Army, the Pentagon, 1 Washington 25, D. C., for application j blanks and instructions. ram water as the lie of the land will permit—in effect, small re servoirs), at least one near every village, and many in the middle of fields for irrigation purposes. Teal, pin tail, spoebill, and shovel lers, as well as non-edible water birds, inhabited these tanks un til they began to dry up. One of our favorite recreations «as to go out to the tanks in the early morning or late afternoon to shoot teal. O^ten, on getting word by runner of a sudden de luge of directors touring the dis trict and planning to stay for a meal or for the night, we have snatched up our guns and gone out searching for teal. Luckily, they were almost always plenti ful. My task was to steal upon them and fire into their midst a used an air rifle) to raise them. At the other end of the tank were the rest of the huhters who sliot as the birds circled over them. (Continued on Piigs l^ur) Bull Sefisions College customs and traditions change with the times, but the old-fashioned buU sessions survive them all. Any attempt to abolish them would be futile, but they could stand improvement. Perhaps a cam paign for a higher type of bull session with a slogan to "Sling Constructive Bull w ould be advisable. The familiar bull session of today is anything but inspiring. A group of stu dents assemble in a smoke-filled room and frequently discu.ss anything from 'he price of eggs lo the 'best methods of bluff ing the faculty, with ample time for con sideration of other topics of conversation in between. Nigthly meetings at which gossip, slan der, "griping,” and indecent jokes con stitute the program are injurious not only to the participants, but also the persons being discussed. A person’s reputation is not what he is but what other people think he is. Much unhappine,se can be causeii by unjust criticism and false accusation, and all too often it starts as a jest at > bull session. "If you cn’t say somethin* nice about a person, say nothing at all. Bull sessions could and should be scenes of worthwhile discussion. A person train his mind in the right channels, of he may develop it in the worng way. D® bull sessions, in the popular interpretation of the term,. improve the mind ot bene.it anyone? If so. they, are,to be tolerated in moderation. If .ijot, they are to be to^' denined.