DECEMBER 4, 1964
THE CLARION
PAGE THRE3
cJ^i^e _y^mon^ ^Le l^ative5 I Jones Hall To ! ‘‘Conflict And Comedy”
Or (^utd .^nd ^iLe5
Thanksgiving holidays are
gyer . • • confound it! After
fow jam-packed, fun-fiUed days
Brevard’s long-suffering student
body trooped back to school to
inake preparations for tough
ing out the next three school
weeks.
Thanksgiving holidays weren’t
all fun, though. Poor Rory lost
one of her contact lenses . . .
somewhere. Funny thing, she
had no idea where to begin
looking for it.
Mr. Miles must have had a
great holiday —he sure didn’t
waste any time grading test pa
pers. Actually, most of us were
rather glad — we couldn’t face
those things on Monday morn-
*”^s. D. returned somewhat re
freshed and probably more de-
tennined than ever to keep old
Jones Hall in some semblance of
order, at least until December
18. After that, of course, there
isn’t much hope.
Basketball season has opened
once again for the Brevard
team. If it’s anything at all like
it was last year, the freshmen
are in for a pleasant surprise.
That is one time when just
about anything can happen —
and does. Remember, though,
we said just about anything.
Maybe somebody will come up
with the bright idea of setting
the lily pond on fire this year.
If you do, try rocket fuel, or
something equally potent. Noth
ing else has proved too effec
tive in the past.
There’s just one thing to keep
us going for the next three
weeks — Christmas holidays
will bring a couple of weeks of
respite from our labor. Chin up
—it has to come!
See you around.
Treva Mitchell
Feature Christmas
At Home
Student Of The Week
Our student of the week is
Miss Judy Dixon, Cullen, Vir
ginia’s contribution to the third
floor new wing goof-offs. She’s
the one with the Beatle haircut,
the accent, and the green army
surplus raincoat.
In high school Judy was a
cheerleader and one of the two
“Sunshine Girls” (the other was
her roommate Billie Lee Wal
ler). She served on her school
paper for four years as repor
ter, business manager, and fea
ture editor; she was also busi
ness manager on the yearbook
sUff. Dixon sums up her high
school years by saying, “I had a
ball!”
Here at Brevard she claims
she hasn’t done anything, but
doubtless the hall proctors
would disagree. Not to be over
looked is the night she spent
trying to place a person to per
son call to John Lennon in New
York City, and the hilarious con
sequences of her conversation
with a Brooklyn opeator who
thought Judy was speaking a
foreign language.
Her two hobbies at the
ent time are the Beatles and
learning to play the guitar. At
her last “recital” in room 331,
she had mastered one note of
Scotch and Soda.
Her plans for next year are
as yet nebulous, but she hopes
to go to work in England, pre
ferably in the vicinity of Liver
pool.
Judy describes her home state
as “G^’s gift to the universe ,
and “the best Commonwealth in
the Union”. She says that “peo
ple in Virginia are absolutely
different from anybody any
where else; they have the grea -
m.
Christmas at home, an annual
affair during the Christmas sea
son at the college, is to be held
this year on Sunday, December
6.
Jones Hall is hostessing the
college-wide event. The entire
student body, faculty, and staff
members, and their families are
invited.
This feature is one of the
highlights of the Christmas sea
son on campus. From 4:30 until
6:00 P.M., the entire dorm is to
be open to visitors. The porch
and parlor decorations will car
ry out the Christmas motif. Ev
ery door in the dorm will be
individually decorated by the
residents of Jones Hall. Prizes
are to be awarded for the door
decorations. A number of prizes
will be awarded, including one
for the most original decoration,
and also one for the most beau
tiful reUgious scene.
Refreshments will be served
in both the parlor and basement
of Jones Hall during the open
house.
Presented In Lyceum
Brevard College’s 1964-1965
Lyceum series opened with Con
flict and Comedy on November
20th.
The program was held in Sims
Campus Center Auditoriiun at
8:15 pjm.
Miss Jo Demmond and Mr.
Frank Wittow presented a pro
gram of short skits of both dra
matic and comedy scenes.
The program was divided in
to two periods of drama, classi
cal and modem. In the first,
scenes from Aristophane’s Ly-
Student Aid
Rickards, III, and Mary Morrow
iRickards. The total value is
$225.
Eight district scholarsihips val
ued at $1,400 have been award
ed Doris Jean Harrison, Rachel
Alice Ingle, William Douglas
Patterson, Lloyd Gregor Payne,
Judy Fay Sigmon, Charles Por
ter Teague, Barbara Diane War-
man, and Susan Elizabeth Wil
(Continued from Page One)
totaling $480 are Hannelore Mu
eller and Yoshiharu Takahashi.
Children of ordained minis
ters of any denomination are eli
gible to receive grants in the
full amount of tuition for a max
imum of four semesters upon
written application and the
meeting of college admission re
quirements. This year, there
were eight such grants and
these went to David Anthony
Argo, Myra Jane Blanton, Ver-
die Maurine Brandon, Phillip
AUen Clark, Richard Arthur
Greene, James Lawrence Hall,
Joseph S. Johnson, Jr., and Da
vid Michael McPherson. When
totaled, the grants are worth
$1 520.
A provisional grant for stu
dents of the same family attend
ing Brevard College was aw^-
ed individually to Myra Jane
Brandon, Verdie Maurme Bran
don, Charles David Dram, Doris
Jean Harrison,
dolph Harrison, James Cooper
son.
With a total value of $3,175,
twentynnine honor scholarships
for the fall semester were dis
tributed to the following: Da
vid Anthony Argo, Verdie Mau
rine Brandon, John (Harl Brook
shire, Buford Leon Burke, Sus
an Connor Cannon, Carol Eliz-
abeth Crouch, Patricia Juanell
Gash, Bernice Alice George,
Gary Eugene Gillespie, James
Laiwrence Hall, Jimmy Arthur
Hammond, Joan EUzabeth Hol
der, Joseph Preston Holder,
Dennis Melvin Houston, Emily
Gan Jones, Moyce Joe Jones,
Kathryn Louise Leller, Donn Ray
Key, Michael Dean Key, Vir
ginia Dare Lynch, David (Men
Morrow, Robert Lee Pickens, Ir
vin Francis Prescott, Jr., James
Robert Reeves, James Lawton
Roiberts, Patricia Kay Storrs,
Donna Kay Washam, Michael
Emmett Wilson, and Ira Lou
Wrench.
Olin Scholarships worth $400
were awarded Patricia Juanell
Gash, Darrell Lee Hogsed, Cbn-
ton David Owens, and Floyd
Geary Tinsley
sistrata; Macbeth, Shakespeare’s
classic; Moliere’s Tartuffe; and
Strindberg’s The Father, were
presented.
Following an intermissdon, tha
actors presented scenes froia
four modern plays: Shaw’s Man
and Superman; Juno and th«
Pay cock by Sean O’Casey; Ten
nessee Wiliams’ Streetcar Nam
ed Desire, and Isnesco’s hilari
ously funny The Bald Sftprano,.
Demmond and Wittow appear
ed before a packed audience
which felt emotion from low
depths to the highest amuse
ment as the actors switched cos
tumes, scenes, and moods in
quick succession.
Perhaps the two high si^ts
of the program came in the final
m'inutes as ain emotion-packed
scene from Streetcar Named
sire was followed by the uproari
ously funny bus scene from Th«
Bald Soprano.
The audience rocked with
peals of laughter as the couple
on stage maintained straight
faces throughout.
PARSONS
jewelry & GIFTS
Fine Jewelry, (jifts and
Watch Repairing
30 E. Main
MORRIS
PHARMACY
Your Family Drug Store
Corner Main and Broad
JUDY DIXON
est heritage this country has ev
er seen or ever will see . • ^
you could practically spend
your life touring the historical
places in Virginiia.”
All this may be well and good,
but chances are that Virginj^s
State Department would thmk
twice before
Dixon as a tour guide
have to hire an English transla
tor to go along with her.
PAT'S
SHOE MART
Winn-Dixie Building
.■■iiiiitiii"'"'*"'"
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barber SHOP
3 East Main
The College Boy’s Friend
Three Regular Barbers
I never go
into battle without my
RUSSIAN LEATHER
after shave lotion
though sometimes I do forget
my razor blades.
“You Name
It We’ve Got It
Tankersley's Florist
Brevard, N. C.
Member F.T.D.
Phone 3-4240
IMPERIAL DEL ORO For
presents Us fragrances of tne world itf
hand-decorated 22 karat gold
From $2.50 to $17.
The most treasureo name in men’s T01LETS';S
Also ITALIAN tJATHSR and SCOTCH GRAit0
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itiiMiiinimmiii
T^Aimnte^A
BREVARD. H.