archives THE dECtL W. ROBBINS Llfif'ARV , Vol. XXIX LOUISBURG COLLEGE, LOUISBURG, N. C. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7,1969 No. 3 Cassandra Lee stars in the role of Saint Joan being presented in the Experimental Theater. Clifford Curry Scheduled For Homecoming Dance The opening celebrations for the 1969 homecoming weekend will begin Friday night, November 21. The Homecoming Dance will be held in the Louisburg College Cafeteria. This semi-formal af fair will begin at eight and last until midnight. The main at traction of the dance will be Clifford Curry who will be backed by Ginger Thompson and the Music Odyssey. A small fee will be charged which is $1.50 per couple and $1.00 stag. Tickets will be on sde as well as at the door. The Homecoming Dance is sponsored by the Sophomore class. The class officers in clude: Gene Crowder, Presi dent; Norman Maxwell, Vice President; Debbie Oliver, Secre tary; and Frank Heacox, Treas urer. These along with the en tire sophomore class have worked diligently for the suc cess of the dance. They are reluctant in charging this small nominal fee; however, they feel that they must in order to meet expenses. “The aim of the officers is to make this Following the movies break fast was served which included a menu of donuts, scrambled eggs, and bacon. Finally, in the wee hours of the morning, everyone returned to the dorms to get a couple of hours of sleep before awakening to the month of November. The program was sponsored for us as a part of the dining program. On behalf of the stu dents, “Columns” would like to thank Mr. Beckham for his cooperation and support plus all those who helped to make this Halloween one of the most enjoyable on the Louisburg campus. -Jeri Holland Louisburg Players Present Saint Joan Ginger Thompson and the Music Odyssey Clifford Curry The Louisburg Players will P leorge Bernard Shaw’s m. ^ .ece, SAINT JOAN, in the Louisburg College Ex perimental Theatre November 5, 6,7,8,17,18,19, and 20 at 7:30 p.m. THE PLAY “In form a chronicle play,” wrote Archibald Henderson, “SAINT JOAN is in spirit a religious drama, a sermon of beauty, eloquence, and com pelling force.” Drama critic Heywood Broun hailed SAINT JOAN as “The finest play written in the English language in our day.” In this play (wrote Hen derson), the greatest forces of the age tcnsdy clash over The Maid. The Catho lic Church, the Inquisition, the Holy Roman Empire, Feudalism and Nationa lism, Protestantism and Ecclesiasticism: these mighty institutions and faiths, embodied in stage figures, wage war to the death over the devoted head of the gallant girl. “What more do you want for a tragedy as great as that of Prometheus?” Shaw observed to me. “All Homecoming ’69 Only Two Weeks Away By Johnnie Ainsley On Saturday, November 22, perhaps the most ambitious and eventful day of this semes ter, the Annual Homecoming will be held here at Louisburg College. Many events are sche duled, including a return con cert by the great Josh White, Jr., after the Homecoming bas ketball game with Southwood. The events will officially be gin at 6 P.M. with an Alumni Office sponsored buffet dinner in the cafeteria. Students will be admitted free. There virill be a $1.75 charge for non-stu dents. Immediately preceeding the dinner, all non-student at tendants are requested to regis ter in Main lobby from 5 to 6 P.M. An informal class reunion, for the purpose of reuniting fornner classmates, will be held from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. A very See HOMECOMING Page 2 the forces that bring about the catastrophe are on the grandest scale; and the in dividual soul on which they press is of the most indomitable force and temper.” THE PLAYERS Winners of seventeen drama awards in the past seven years and awarded first honors in every drama festival they have entered, The Louisburg Players are establishing themselves as one of the exciting playing groups in the state. The star role of Joan is played by Cassandra Lee, a Louisburg High School Senior whose previous roles with The Players have included Juliet in ROMEO AND JULIET, Rosa lind in AS YOU LIKE IT, and Dorine in TARTUFFE. Winner of five acting awards including the State Drama Festival Award in Acting, Miss Lee was a 1968 appointee to the North Carolina Governor’s School in drama, and a 1969 member of the Hammocks Beach Perform ing Arts Institute. John Pike, currently a stu dent at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the 1968 recipient of the William Raymond Taylor Award in Drama at Louisburg College, returns to play the supporting role of Jack Dunois. Other members of the cast are Louisburg College Professor Russell Stott; Bill Robie of Raleigh; Louisburg High School students Charles Latta and Larry Lloyd; and Louis burg College students Norman Maxwell (Washington, D. C.), David Rankin (Milford, Dela ware), Jim Crone (Richmond, Va.), John Harris (Rocky Mount), Charles Echols (Can- boro), Gary Smith (Williams burg, Va.), Mary Lee Hill (Coral Gables, Fla.), Mary Newill (Wilmin^on, Delaware), Chuck Wooten (Raleigh), Bob Hudson (Richmond, Va.), Phil Newsome (Winston-Salem), Curtis Wright (Milford, Dela ware), J. David Schronce (San ford), Alex Sharpe (Greens boro), Worth Kinlaw (Ayden), Patrick Mann (Sanford), Mike Harper (South Hill, Va.), Jane Deese (Graham), ^rbara Jar- rard (Winston-Salem), and Debbie Langston (Henderson). -Sally Versteeg Seated: Gene Crowder, Debbie Oliver - Standing: Frank Heacox, Norman Maxwell Sophomores Elect Officers Gene Crowder has been elected president of the Sopho more Class for the 1969-70 school year in an election held on last Wednesday.' Other Sophomore officers include Norman Maxwell, vice president; Debbie Oliver, l^cre- tary and Frank Heacox. Other nominees for these offices included, president, Vinson Bridgers; vice president, John Mahaney, Reamy Garnett and Randolph Butler; Secre tary, Nancy Davis; Treasurer, Tate Cotton and David Brown. All nominees were required to have a 2.0 average before they were given the privilege of running for an office. •Russ Tolar