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

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