Let’s Everyone Vote In The Student Elecetions MAROON AND GOLD AM t?W7b««r CM rw llM*f Foonden’ Da; Prorram TOLITMI M B.9N COLLEGE, N. C. FRIDAY, APRIL 1, I960 NVMBBE 11 founder’s Day Observance Is Set Next Wednesday Selective Service Tests Will Be Given April 28th students of Elon College, along test. A high score on this test may APPEARING IN CAST O ELON PLAYER SHOW I Distler Will Be Featured Speaker For Elon Event with those all over America, will be given the chance on April 28th, to take the annual Selective Ser vice College Qualification Test, ac cording to Prof. Alfred Hassell, Elon registrar, who urged that Elon students take the test at that time. The test is given and scores re corded as a help to local Selec tive Service Boards in considering college students for deferment of the military service -obligations, enabling them to continue their education at either the undergrad uate or graduate levels. Col. Thomas H. Upton, state director of the selective service compensate for low class rating, and high class standing may com pensate for a low test score." He pointed out that “some stu dents do not take the test because student deferment extends a reg istrant's liabilty,” but he added that "other deferments, such a those for ROTC members, exten service liability to 35 years.” He also added that ‘‘no registrant car remain out of service beyond abor the age of 23 without an exem Uon or deferment that extend' liability.” The testing program is to giv promising students a chance ‘ prepare for careers in support program for North Carolina, an- the national interest, and scier. nounced recently that the test will.tific and professional engineerin be given at approximately 500 organizations are urging student colleges throughout the nation. |in those fields to take the tests In urging students to take the Such groups recognize the neci test, he pointed out that it will be given in North Carolina at Ap palachian State College, Brevard College, the University of North Carolina, Davidson College, Duke University, Guilford College, Le noir Rhyne College, N. C. State College, Atlantic Christian Col lege. and Wake Forest College. It will not be given at Elon, but students may take it at any of the other centers. It will also be ^ven at high schools in Asheville and Wilmington. « In explaining the testing pro gram, Colonel Upton stated that ‘‘the test is for the student’s bene fit as well as for the nation's good. A local board should have full information about a student in classifying him, including his fclass standing and score on this for advanced study and that t'l undergraduate students of toda. frequently do not plan gradual biudy until they near graduation, at which time a test score ma; be of much importance in sup porting applications for defer ment. Without such a score on the person’s record, deferment may be denied. Application materials for tli. Iiest are now available at th^ nearest draft board office, bu students must have their applica tions postmarked not later than midnight next Monday, April 7th. Full instructional materials are issued vrith the applications, and Elon students wishing to take the April 28th test should take im mediate action. U.N.C. Professor Given Fraternity^s Honor Key m y The annual Elon College Foun- a part of the Founders' Day pro- ders' Day program, which was gram, will be presented as one originally set for Thursday morn- of the programs of the annual mg, March 10th, will be held ini Elon College Lyceum series. Like Whitley Auditorium next Wednes-jthe trustee meeting and the ori- lay morning, April 6th. The event ginal Flounders' Day observance, was cancelled,on the original date ,'was postponed from its early due to the heavy snow which fell March date due to the weather Jane Morgan, of Greensboro, who has the leading singing role in the Elon Player presentation of ‘ Pajama Game," famed Broadw ay musical show, is seated centcr above, surrounded by other girls who are appearing in the main cMt or chorus of the show. Others with Misa Morgan in the picture, shown left to right, are Loretta Hilliard, of Durham; Chris Fayle, of Burlington; Patty Fayle, of Burlington; Winnie Ann VVatEoa, of Sanford; Pat Jones, of Suffolk, Va.; and Susan Sandefur, of Danville, Va. The musical sho v . pened in Whitley Auditorltm la^t night and will also be prejenteJ tonight and Saturday night Tajama Game’ Will Be Presented Two flore Nights After Fine Opening Show due to the cost of production at Gladys, one of the company see the local level, student tickets have retaries. been sold under the sponsorship A special feature of the produc- of the Sigma Mu Sigma frater- tion is the dances, which were rity, which has done an excellent planned by Tommy Elmore, Elon iob of promotion during the past senior from Burlington, who ap- two weeks. Tickets are still avail- pears as a featured dancer along and tomorrow night, and large ^ able for the showings tonight and with Nancy Dortch, of Richmond, p. I crowds are expected. j tomorrow night. Va., and Francia Hutton, a Burl- chian State College chapter of Pi| enthusiasm of last night's The story, which has its setting ington dance instructor, who is a Gamma Mu. ^audience is any basis for judg- in the Sleep-Tite Pajama Factory, guest artist in the show. Elmore Several alumni members of the ^ rated one features Professor Charles Lynam teams with Miss Dortch in a dance Elon chapter were back on cam- finest Elon Player shows as Sid, the plant’s new superin- number based on “Steam Heat,” was awarded the Honor Key of!pus for the lecture, among them real,tendent, and his romance with and pairs with Miss Hutton in Pi Gamma Mu, national honorary Miss Caroline Powell, who was a entertainment highllghU of the' a member of the workers' Grlev- presenting “Jealousy Ballet.” one social science fraternity, at a'charter member of the Elon chap- gQ at Elon. lance Committee, which Is staging I of the famed dance numbers of meeting of the Elon Alpha Chap-'ter; Terry Emmerson, of Wash- second campus mus-|a strike in the plant. Doing an in this area the preceding day. Dr. Theodore August Distler, executive director of the Associa tion of American Colleges, who was to be the featured speaker when the program was first sche duled, will fill a belated engage ment and will deliver the key note address in exercises to be held at 11 o'clock Wednesday morning. In announcing the rescheduling of the Founders' Day observance. Dr. J. E. Danieley, Elon president, stated that the college's board of trustees will hold Its spring meet ing on the campus next Wednes- lay as an added feature of the ■ iy. The trustees were originally 0 hold their meeting on Wednes- lay, March 9th, but their gath- ■ring was also cancelled at that time due to the snow. Alumni Expected The fact that the trustees will be on the campus that day assures a distinguished guest list for the Founders' Day program, which is also expected to attract many of Elon's alumni and friends from this area. All present for the ob servance will be guests of the col lege at a buffet luncheon to be held in McEwen Memorial Dining Hall at noon. Another feature of the obser vance will l>e a musical concert in Whitley Auditorium next Tues day night. April 5th, by William An enthusiastic opening-rii;'!' crowd watched the Elon Player presentation of ‘‘Pajama Game,” great Broadway musical show, which opened a three-night stand in Whitley Auditorium last night. The show will be repeated tonight conditions. Honors Church Leaders The Founders' Day program is planned each year as a tribute to the leaders of the Congregational Christian Church, who founded the college more than seventy years ago. The church leaders laid plans for the college at a meeting held at old Providence Church at Graham in September, 1888, and the North Carolina Leg islature granted the charter for the institution on March 11, 1889. Dr. Distler, who makes his first appearance as a speaker on the Elon campus, is a native of Brook lyn. He attended Stevens Prepar atory School and Brown Univer sity, interrupting bis education for naval service during World War I. He later attended New York University, where he was graduated and still later received the master's and doctor's degrees. He held faculty posts at New York University and was later dean and president of Lafayette College. He left the presidency of Lafayette in 19M when he was named to his present position as executive director of the Associa tion of American Colleges. He also holds membership in numerous ed ucational organizations and is widely known as a speaker at edu cational meetings in various parts of the nation. Within the past two weeks he appeared as guest speak- Dr. Fletcher M. Green, Kenan Professor of History and chair man of the history department at the University of North Carolina Kirkpatrick, tenor, of Burlington, er at a meeting held »n the Wake His concert, which is not really (Forest campus in Winston-Salem. Political Interest Lags As Voting Time Nears The campus political pot wasltlme before Friday, April 15th. still on the lukewarm side this The rising sophomore, junior and week as filing got underway for senior classes will name five mem- ter of the group on Thursday night, March 24th. The presentation of the award, highest given by the social science organization, was by Dr. H. H. Cunningham, dean of the college and chairman of the history de partment at Elon, who bestowed he honor upon authorization of the national trustees of the group and in his official capacity as vice-chancellor of the Atlantic Re gion of PI Gamma Mu. Dr. Cunningham, after reading he Ideals of the organization,cit- ed Dr. Green as “one who ex emplifies the ideals of Pi Gamma Mu in his capacity as Kenan Pro fessor and chairman of the his tory department at the University of North Carolina.” He further de scribed Dr. Green as a person ecognized both nationally and in- “rnationally for his contributions to .social science. The award ceermony was held connection with the annual Pi Gamma Mu lecture, which was delivered by Dr. Green in the Mooney Chapel Theatre on the Kion campus. The lecture, entitled “On Tour With Andrew Jackson,” *'as heard by a capacity crowd vhieh included a number of vis itors from othe irnstitutions. Among the visitors were Dr. and Irs. W. H. Cartwright, of Duke niversity; Dr. S. C. J)eskins, of igh Point College; and a dele- ation of five from the Appala- ington, D. C.; and James Shep-j-.^j jtagpd by Prof. M. E.'outstanding job opposite Professor herd and John Patterson, now m law school at the University of North Carolina. All gu^ts were introduced by Jimmy Elder, who presided over the meeting. Prior to the lecture meeting Dr. and Mrs. Green were guests at a dinner in the private dining room of McEwen Memorial Din ing Hall, and they were also hon ored at a reception given after ward in the Mooney Reception Room. Wooten on the Elon stage, and ‘hp.'c who have seen it say that it is ever, beter than his last year’s m'jficil presentation of “Annie Get Your Gun, " which was ac claimed at that time as an un qualified success. Due to the unusually high roy alty demanded for this show and :.ynam in the girls’ singing lead the Broadway show. The suppotring cast, which in cludes some of the most talented is Jane Morgan, of Greensboro, stage performers in the Elon stu- who plays the role of Babe. Other outstanding performances are given by Pat Kelly, of Plea sant Ridge, Va., who appears as Hines, a floor supervisor; and by Barbara Day, of South Boston, Va., who appears in the cast as dent body, did much to make last night’s opening performance high ly enjoyable, as did the members of the Elon Choir, which appeared as the singing chorus under di rection of Prof. Patrick Johnson and with Prof. Clyde McCants as accompanist. Music Contest Staged At Elon More than one hundred youthful musicians were on the Elon cam pus on Saturday, Macrh 20th, for ■the Eastern Piedmont District Mu sic Festival, staged under spon sorship of the North Carolina Fed eration of Music Clubs. Judges for the event included Prnf. Patrick Johnson and Mrs. Alfred Hassell, piano; Prof. Charles Lynam, voice; Mrs. T. H. Mackintosh and Mrs. Herbert Co ble, hymn players; Prof. Patrick Johnson, violin; and Prof. Fletch er Moore and Prof. Fred Sahl- mann, for the night contest in plaoo. Collsge Choir To Give Fourteenth Aiinual ‘Set^en Last Words’ Cantata The T’kn Tollege Choir will hit one of *he '•-'Th spots of the 1959- 60 collejre vear on Sunday after- .noon, April 10th, when the stu dent singers will offer its four teenth annual presentation of The odore DuBois’s world-famous can tata, “The Seven Last Words of Chris*,” in WhiUey AndltoTium. The program is set for 4 o’clock In the afternoon. The Choir formerly presented this great Easter classic on Eas ter Sunday itself, but in recent years it has been given on the Sunday preceding Easter. The ear lier presentation was decided upon when the college changed its an nual spring vacation to include the Easter weekend, a fact which meant that the students would be away from the campus on the holiday date. The DuBois masterpiece, as per haps no other musical composi tion can, tells the story of the first Easter and the sufferings of Christ on the Cross, and the singing of the great composition has long been an outstanding feature of the Lenten season on the Elon campus and In the Burlington area of North Carolina. The cantata Is of scriptural background, telling as it does of the seven great speeches of Christ during the hours which he spent on the Cross. Each of the speech es is dramatic, but more impres sive than any other Is the seventh and final one, which the Elon Choir uses as the cHmax to Its annual program. Many music lovers in this sec tion hear the program year after year, and those who have heard It always look forward to the highly dramatic climax, in which the singing of the “Seventh Word” is followed by an organ interlude The program this year will be presented once more under the direction of Prof. Patrick John son, with Prof. Fletcher IVIoore to appear as organ accompanist and with Prof. Charles Lynam appear- n'' as one of the baritone soloists. Student soloists for the 1960 cantata include Pat Jones, soprano, of Suffolk, Va.; Harolyu Sawyer, soprano, of Burlington; Judith Townend, soprano, of Elon Col lege; Douglas Scott, tenor, of Dur ham; Jay Strickland, tenor, of Reidsvllle; Ray Thomas, tenor, of Elon College; Ronnie Strickland, baritone, of Durham; and Walter Bass, baritone, of South Boston, Va. the various Student Government end class officers, for Student President Linwood Hurd reported on Tuesday afternoon that no can didate for major offices had made final filing committment at that time. The filing got underway on Mon day of this week in the Student Government office, with a filing deadline set for next Mpnday April 4th. This period was set for candidates to file for the ma jor Student Body offices of pres ident, vice-president and secre- tary-treasurer as well as for the officers of the ri.sing sophomore, junior and senior classes. The deadline by which candi dates must file for these offices comes on Monday, but candidates for the class representatives in the Student Senate may file at any Slu(l'*nts F’raise Work Of Clinrcli Student appreciation for the ser vices and facilities of the Elon College Community Church was voiced by student speakers at a special service held at the church on Monday night of this week. The service was arranged by Prof, John Graves, college chaplajn. Those participating in the ser vices were James Marshman, of Audenreid, Pa., who presided; Dan Hulaeapple, of Middletown, N. Y.; Phyllis Hopkins, of Reiasvllle; and John Ling, of Sibu, Sarawak. Richard Apperson, of Newport News, Va., was pianist. bers from each class in the Sen ate. These five serve along with the class officers in the campus legislative body. A student assembly is planned for Monday, April 11th, when can didates for the various offices will have the privilege of making cam paign speeches. This will be fol lowed on the next day, Tuesday, April 12th, by the annual cam pus election, which will be final unless the ballot results require a run-off. Any run-off would prob ably be held on Thursday, April 14th. The voting for the Student Sen ate representatives from the three classes, since filing does not close until the day before spring holi days, will be delayed until after the vacation is ended. Senate can didates will have an opportunity to speak to the students on Mon day, April 25th, with balloting set for Tuesday, April 26th. All new Student Government officers will be formally installed in ceremon ies set for Monday, May 2nd, The fact that no candidates had filed for major student offices as late as Tuesday of this week in dicated continuation of the apathy and lack of interest of the student body, a condition which has ex isted on the campus for the past two years or more. This is reflect ed in the fact that there have been no contests for either of the three main Student Government posts in the two most recent an nual elections. \