PAGE FOUR
THE CLARION
™ARYl3.i9ei
NELSON F. ADAMS
Organ
and
M. THOMAS COUSINS
Baritone
Brevard Methodist Church 4 P. M. Sunday, January 19, 1961
I
Mr. Adams
PSALM XIX Benedetto Marcello
SUITE ON THE FIRST TONE Claude-Nicolas Clerambault
Assisted by the men of the College Madrigal Singers
SUITE FOR A MUSICAL CLOCK George Friedrich Handel
GRAND JEU Du Mage
II
Mr. Cousins
THE PEOPLE THAT WALKED IN DARKNESS from MESSIAH
George Friedrich Handel
ROLLING IN FOAMING BILLOWS from THE CREATION
Joseph Hayden
FROM THE ACCURSED from REQUIEM Giuseppe Verdi
III
Mr. Adams
A ALAN BEWAIL THY GRIEVOUS FALL Johann Sebastian Bach
PRELUDE AND FUGUE IN C MINOR the ARNSTADT
Johann Sebastian Bach
IV
Mr. Cousins
OMNIPOTENCE
THE LORD WILL ROAR from AMOS
THE PROPHET
V
Mr. Adams
SONG OF PEACE
BALLADE IN C
Franz Schubert
Nelson F. Adams
Nicolas Rimsky-Korsakov
Jean Langlais
Joseph Clokey
The WAA has selected the
following girls for the honor
ary basketball team: Joyce
Clark, Patsy Greene, Linda
Taylor, Brenda Salter, Carol
Padgett, Mary Ellen Henley,
Jackie Cabe, Brenda Golden,
Barbara Parks, Jo Gail Gar
ner, Jane Royster, and Dianne
Wallace. Other games are to
be scheduled, but there is
nothing definite.
Your WAA members will
soon be distinguishable in
their new white jackets.
These jackets have been or
dered and will have blue let
tering and blue knit collar
and sleeve cuffs.
The future plans of the
WAA include the forthcom
ing volleyball intramurals
starting next semester.
Clios Order
1961 Club Pins
The Cliosophic Society recent
ly placed orders for the Clio
pin. The pin has the design of
,a gold shield with a sword
through it with 1961 written on
the guard. The pin is lOK gold
VT>ith gold lettering on a black
background. The lettering is
“Kappa Lambda Iota Omega.”
Another order for pins will be
placed in the near future. The
i officers for the Clio Society this
year are as follows: President,
Ed Brewer; Vice-President, Andy
Thornburg; Secretary-Treasurer,
Patrick Houston; Sergeant-of-
Arms, Mike Dunn; and Chaplain,
Johnny Riddle.
KEARNS
GROCERY
and
MEAT MARKET
iiinuiMMMiiiMtiiiiiiiHiiiiiMiiiiMiiiiMnniitiininiii*'
VARNER'S
DRUG STORE
Quality Products
Your Walgreen Pharmacy
BEST OF THE BEST
CREST
Headquarters for School
Supplies
“You Naime It, We’ve Got It.”
Belfe
Club
Corner
The Mnemosynean Society met
January 9 for their monthly-
meeting. Plans were discussed
for the annual Valentine Dance,
which is sponsored by the Mne
mosynean and Delphian Socie
ties. Barbara Beverly was ap
pointed to work as chairman of
the Decoration Committee for
the dance and Brenda Powell
was appointed as chairman of
the Refreshment Committee.
A committee was appointed to
select pins for the Mnemosynean
Society. The girls appointed to
this committee were Gayle John
son, Patsy Reese, Phyllis Voigt,
Brenda Salter, and Martha Bar
nette .
The By-laws committee of the
Delta Phi Chapter of the Phi
Theta Kappa met Monday morn
ing in the art room. The com
mittee discussed the rules of
the present chapter and decided
to let the Faculty Award Com-
mitte help the club choose the
new members at the end of the
semester.
New members are chosen on
the basis of scholarship, lead
ership, and character. Each
member must be in the upper
ten per-cent of the student body,
taking fifteen hours of the arts
and sciences, and show leader
ship qualities about the Brevard
Campus.
This committee discussed the
ways in which the club could be
improved this year and in years
to come, as well as the annual
trip to the Biltmore estate, rules
of the club, and the banquet
initiating the new members.
The committee consisted of
Ilena King; Dorothy Hunsucker;
Gene McGaha; and chairman,
Marie Teele.
Alan Wallace
(Continued from Page One)
years Mr. Wallace conducted
Public Speaking classes for his
business associates.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace came
from Glencoe, Illinois, a suburb
of Chicago, to live at High Ris
ing on the Greenville highway.
"One visit in Brevard convinced
us that we would like to become
permanent Tar Heels in West
ern North Carolina,” said Mr.
Wallace. In the short time in
which they have established
their home here, they have made
a wide circle of friends and be
come active in community ac
tivities.
JIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIillllltlllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllltllllilll
CO-ED THEATRE
SUN. — MON. — TUE.
Read A Newspaper
New Year’s resolutions are a
little obsolete now that we are
members of that great and in
tellectual group known as “.stu
dents”. However late it may be
— I’d like to suggest just one
resolution that would be profit
able as well as enjoyable for all
of us. “Read a newspaper, a good
one, every day.”
. Of course there has always
been a lot of discussion about
the problem that college stu
dents are not aware of contem
porary problems, they have little
or no concept of current affairs.
This will not, I grant you, guar
antee you an “A” in social stud
ies, nor will it assure you of
those extra points in psychology
— but the point is — history is
being made! We are living in
a terribly advanced age, one
of “Men in Space”, of money
moving at a terrific velocity, of
wonder drugs and miracle lip
sticks, and such atrocities as
“Huckleberry Hound” and “Lady
Chatterly’s Lover”.
I am certain that if you do
not know that William the Con
queror was responsible for the
Battle of Hastings — and is not a
wrestler who unmasked the
great “Bolo” — you will never
know it. However ,it is not easy
to excuse students who, in a
survey quite recently, stated:
That Castro is the capital of
Cuba; that Carmen de Sapio is a
Salvation Army worker; that a
missle is an arrow that didn’t
hit the target, (while this
sounds quite logical); or that
Governor Faubus is a rock n’
roll singer-confusing him with
Fabian. Also it has been dis
covered that college students do
not know the capitals of the fifty
states. Two questioned didn’t
even know that the national capi-
tol was located in Washington,
D. C.
While much of the news can
be seen or heard on one or other
illilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllvfiltlllllttllllllllllMIIUI
WA
of the audio-visual media it ■
impossible to include more a
the most important natioi!
news, with a small amount of j!
cal gossip and prattle. The ne»
papers, however, include the n,.
jor stories of the day, as well
the minor ones, and the humai,
interest stories.
It would be impossible to sij
for certain just how profitaljij
this resolution could be to you
For instance — you might finj
stories of fabulous discovery o(
Greek or Etruscan artifacts (J
points, at the least, from It
Dubois). Perhaps you can lean
about a new type of psydj
analysis- maybe add a point j
psychology. There will be defii
itely much to interest the stit
dents of government, sociolo®
religion, and economics. Win
knows? Maybe you’ll win “Coin-
word”.
iMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiittiiiit VI
LOST & FOUND
Found:
Girl’s brown knit gloves
Man’s brown leather
Gray hat
Boy’s shirt (left after gleecte
tour)
Boy’s gray coat
Blue cap
Assorted keys and fountaii
pens
Girl’s white bulky knit sweil
er
Boy’s light blue wind hreaie
Girl’s black umbrella
All these may be picked upi
the reception desk in the CjI'
us Center Building.
Bikas Restauranl
EAT HERE IF IT
KILLS YOU — WE NEED
THE MONEY!
AL'S DRIVE-IN
COLLEGE HANGOUT
Behind Winn-Dixie
“Al” — Owner
SONYA WILDE • JAMES FRANCiSOS
FRIENDS MEET
— at the —
BOOK STORE
SODA SHOP
POST OFFICE
‘‘On The Campus
99
SIMS STUDENT CENTER
BUILDING