■Yixginia_ March 21-24. ‘The HilMop Foreword Literary Edition ^ ilda ude MONTAGUE LIttKAiO * ^NCY cra.g ^°>TOR..N-CH.eP Krpose-only a two syllable associate editor G^tr ROBERTS “ord—yet it is a word which eoes fATURE EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR ^ [r EDITOR FRANCES WILLINGHAM life. One pVERTisiNG~M^ii^^^^J ~ MARY LOUISE STEWART Carry out his purpose by P'STS . ~ BERNICE LIMER a JIMMY NiEDEMYER making use of Ms talents. IcULTY ADVT^^II ■ MARGARET MORGAN & FREIDA STILES t j j - NORA WILLS a COLLIE GARNER ^^deed, everyone has been given llume XXin some talent, some special ability. ^PRIL, 1951 Number 12 one promising Mars Hill writer publish^^^Tt^students of “limitless possibili- _^ARS hill college — MARS HILL. N O O"® ^ gift Rnti'i originality, of creative powers [Mars Hill, North CaTolin Post Office one capable of pi-monthly during the cnllop.^”.^^ March 3, 1879. Issued becoming an artist, a composer, ^ g year. ^ writer. f) J j It is left to each individual to |,ni|TA||f€ — possibilities; |)REWORn T ^ ll U 11 t Ij It is for each person to see for him- llTPnTTPDT nnd Nancy Crais- tools of life are being inTircoTT^r^^^oline Diggers ^ out for him to make of life PTTER TO A^“nn ^ “Great things are George Presslv ^ not the things that make the great- fsT 0. Massey _ " ®^t show” is a statement made by rpE AMtt Planned—Ed Peterson ^ P°®*^ magazine. In this —Anne Tunstall ^ statement we can see that some “ M,e„ ? r?' ■' r HT8 GP G0D_Alan GraEs- ® thinking which may lead them to iVrnrrpS^~~^n^tha Snow ^ P^'te 7 creative writing, whether it be DST t\t rn Margaret Morgan P^STO 7 long and exquisitely expressed or Te masses—Doris ShirW ^ whether it be short and simply IE REST ARE AT HOME p Page 8 expressed. )ED0WN fever—E r~^'®".® Roberts 9 IIS IS MINE—Franklin Mo Page 9 Creative papers required of the THR CASHTRR^g Wmnrmr Pa^e 9 students of Mars Hill have proved ^0 MUCH GESCHNTPT V Pn^e 10 to be invaluable to the extent that EermorLirV P^^® 10 encouraged students to ^ET’S travail—George P^^® “ '‘^®^ to others. IET.TEVu in spirits ^ ’ Page 11 Prom the creative papers written iFAyPIPlIL feet-MeTBuTEe? ^^ere 12 this year the Hilltop staff has [NEW CHANCE-^Ioami Se^ T P^^® ^2 obtained material for this Literary ILM A ROSE—Winnie P^'® edition. The staff wish to thank , I WAS YOUR AGE”*”^F r r Vr students who have submitted Fxri^° WARMER-Dor!thT W?r”" manuscripts for this edition, and tOSSING THE BAY—,Taeet R i^f Winberry Page 15 bshed it wishes to urge that they i?T®r!^“’'~Winnie ^Tffmfn " ®f life and BLOODY Madison Inwv ix’/l'-/'; P^^® toward their purpose. The Marilyn Bridges Page 16 faff al^o extends its appreciation IPT COUNT—Rita Brinklev ^ Department and to r!!f?^^AM-Ralph Hunt foresight and dili- ilSS tmf !-John Reeves ?! Z T'"* °^ "^P*-®®^ion for original iiSS YOU—Martha Snow P^^® 18 thinking. P^?o 18 —I. L. and N. C. HILLTOP—PAGE ONE ■Keiresnments were servea X„Ta"p™, jT « o„ ,„e pro,™.. Friday night was Dr. G. Kearnie ary and Mar lege Tourinj pi •t Si ap ei jir in ef« ft: the e,” u in par 1 B ns vl • for sell gist an ■ ter ivher ially Pro nson •. ha hal, lerto: r of I ho w; g yeai He, ] lidlar loan, SalisI nont; Lydi: Mary , of C Bisco Jennet iVl IbS V t council