ER 11, 1982- MERRY CHRISTMAS j^OLUME LVI, Number 4 ent, such as®* Iso involved i” est classes s”' cs. elp students ;rs leadership J act as an ad''’ ‘ hich may gaj She also )us activities Ht'’ “s sponsored) rrii le a concert . ■ ^ a billiards A IIC =rl£hristmas From is especialh 11^1 Hill. She 'vajl come and se i ^ ■ they need I'ama and rt Depts. itj drama, and art depart- tlie'^ ^^rs Hill College are combin- ^^i^nts to present a Christmas ludg community. This gift will 85 voice chorus, the brass Ihe school’s Aeolian-Skinner j *'^h has 65 ranks and four man- in„ choir, and art works de- birth of Christ. P Thomas, assistant profes- i^be college and director ding job tn ^ orus, explains that “We already ey are Mike_ Christmas concert on the Serving the Mars Hill College Community Thursday, DECEMBER 9, 1982 Leslie Riv ’jjbnid h’ ^ began thinking that we 3ns to the s o something other than the tra- 'cert >f^^'^^'Up-on-the-risers-and-sing the first departure from jffed. staging Dr. Thomas con- knew Dr. Virgil Gray had he V slides in several of the directed, so I approached 'kin • ‘casiDiiiiy oi using slides '^lion with the music.’’ ■ ^ "Out fu ^ ^'^'''’iun feasibility of ? ^Crgg ^ decided on a back-projec- v! with a high-power to insure enough light. ? lUrug .^'^bnicalities settled, the r%g do the chairman of the art j ^’’ce j ’ doe Chris Robertson, for pleq^^ ^olecting works to project. ji|dtUpoj, ^ range of art from the r do master works of artists d^onaissance through the ^ eras. «d On, on of music came next. “I ®f the esoterical music that '1-. V EN-, ix:' PHOTO BY DAVID WACHTER Wren College Union changed its look on Tuesday as the campus celebrated an ‘Old Fashioned Christmas.’’ choirs sometimes like to sing,” stated Thomas, “because I wanted this to be a time that everyone could come together and share in the story of Christ’s com ing.” Traditional Christmas carols will play an important role in the concert, includ ing a candlelit “Silent Night.” Selec tions from Bach’s Christmas oratorio will serve as transitions from music to narration, and portions of the Lutheran Advent chorale will also be sung. The narration will be provided by the Speech Choir, a 20-member chorus of 10 male and 10 female voices especially formed to present dramatic readings. Their text will be taken from the Bible, and will include Old Testament prophets foretelling the Messiah’s coming as well as the New Testament story of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem. “There came a time when I thought all of this might end up looking ‘gim micky’,” notes Dr. Thomas, “but after several rehearsals and viewing the slides, I believe that this will be a moving ex perience for all who attend.” The concert will be presented Thurs day evening, December 9, at 8:15 p.m. in the college’s Moore Auditorium. There will be no admission charge and the public is invited to participate. SART Achieves Honors The North American Association of Summer Sessions (NAASS) has awarded Mars Hill College its highest honor for a non-credit summer program during the association’s annual conference held in Vancouver, British Columbia, recently. “A Week in the World of a Profes sional Repertory Theatre” was selected by the Innovative and Creative Awards Committee of NAASS for its total im mersion of participants in the life of the Southern Appalachian Repertory Thea tre, which is based at the college during, the summer. James W. Thomas, manag ing director of the theatre, was also the instructor for the class. Trustee Meeting Mars Hill College’s Board of Trustees will hold their semi-annual business meeting Friday, December 10, beginning at 10 am in Harris Media Center. The trustees will review the President’s Report on 1981-82, an accounting of the year’s activities, and other business.. This will be the first meeting for sever al new trustees, who will attend although their terms do not officially begin until January 1, 1983. Those new members include Mrs. Mollie Minis Hedgecock, an accountant and farmer from High Point; Bernard Lennon, an Evergreen farmer and busi ness man who is an alumnus; the Rev. Jack Painter of Belmont, also a Mars Hill alumnus and pastor of the First Baptist Church in Belmont; and Samuel Rutland of Charlotte, owner of Rutland Plastics. Other trustees who have served a pre vious term and will be beginning a new term on the 36-member board include Elizabeth Baker of Marshall; Kyle Carver of Leicester; Webb Ellis of Ashe ville; L. Alvin Philpott of Lexington; Rom Sparks of Charlotte; and Leonard Tilson of Winston-Salem.