WEATHER For Mid-October . . .M-m-m! Hard To Tell! MAROON AND GOLD For Maroon and Gold Service, See Staff Members Listed On Mast Head ELON COLLEGE, N. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1948 Season Tickets Go On Sale For Players’ Productions First IRC Speaker Lauds Dewey “U. s. foreign policy could be clar ified by an understanding of Demo cracy,” Attorney Robert H. McNeil, Republican candidate for the state Supreme Court said last week in an address sponsored by the campus chapter of the International Rela tions Club. McNeil, Republican candidate for governor against J. M. Broughton in 1940, was substituting on the IRC platform for Sim DeLapp, state Re publican party chairman, whose ap pearance was cancelled because of illness. In a discussion of the views of the Republfcan party on interna tional policy, McNeil insisted that the fundamental issue was a defini tion of democracy itself. “Democracy,” he said, “is a Re publican form of government ad ministered by democratic process es.” He added that in a democracy a fundamental right is to be a free citizen. While approving of a bi-partisan foreign policy, McNeil aserted that the mistakes of the Democratic ad ministration during the war can now be aired. “Our statesmen were willing to appease Joe Stalin,” he said. He labeled as a “grave mistake” Roose velt’s agreement with Stalin which permitted Russia’s occupation of Berlin. Other mistakes of the administra tion, according to McNeil, have arisen in the treatment of territor ies. He named the ceding of Po land to Russia, and the withholding from China of aid that would have enabled that country to reclaim Northern Korea and Manchuria. McNeil said that there is no fun damental difference between Dew ey’s and Truman’s sense of what should be done overseas, but there i.e a difference in their methods. McNeil, a native oi' Statesville and an 1898 graduate of Wake Forest College, has been practicing law in Washington, D. C., for 45 years. The speaker was introdU|Ced by Mrs. W.F. Few of Durham, National Committee woman from the state of North Carolina for the Republican party. Mrs. Few was introduced by Prof. Earl Danieley, Retpublican can didate for the Alamance County school board. Arrangements have also been completed with state secretaries of the Progressive and Democratic par ties for the appearance of represen tative speakers at Elon under the sponsorship of IRC, according to an announcement made by Elon’s IRC corresponding secretary, Marshall Mace. Efforts are now being made to contact Col. Philip S. Finn, Jr., state chairman of the States Rights Leim- ocratic party, to secure speaker rep resentation for the Dixiecrats. The next IRC speaker will be Miss Mary Price, state chairman of the Progressive Party. She will ap> pear Monday night, October 11, in JSociety Hall. The Democratic party speaker has not yet been determined, according to Mace. It is hoped, he says, that Gapu;: Waynick, state party chair man, will be the speaker. New Faces On Elon Squad Bring New Hope m Students Get Five Shows For ) Last Year’s Price Of Three Tickets Will Be Available Monday In Rotunda Of Alamance With season tickets going on sale Monday, Oct. 11, and with re hearsals in full swing for the first of five productions to be given this year, The Elon Players officially commit themselves to serve “the big gest and best” theatrical fare the school has ever had, admits Mrs. Smith, director. As long as they last, Mrs. Smith says, tickets can be bought at three on-cam,pus sources. A table will be set up in the rotunda of Alamance, each of the Players will have a limited number for sale, and they will be on sale ai the business office. 1 Prices for the tickets remain the ■ — I same as they were last year, when only three productions were staged. Students tickets will sell for $1.80; tickets for off-campus adults will cost $2.40. Both prices include tax. Veterans’ wives and the wives of Are you acquainted with the newcomers on the Elon Varsity? Reading left to right, they are: (top row) J. Wren, Jeff Davis, Harry Farmer, O’Dell Welbourne Len Green wood, Branch Bragg, R. W. Heplar, and Frank Tingley; (middle row) Joe Erickson Bob DiMarco, Joe Bryson, Dick Lee, Ed Watkins, Buford Andrev\^s, and Alvin Pate; bottom row) Nelson Turner, Fred Paul, Bill Barger, Jack Spivey, Heinz Fruh and Sal Gero. Two Freshmen not shown are Dick Buchanan and Roily Ellis. J. Wren is no longer with the squad. Mademoiselle Magazine Opens Contest For Students Math Professor Coble A Busy Man; Teacher, Farmer, Surveyor—Husband Art Dept. Has First Exhibit This Week The Art Department’s first ex hibit of the year ends today with the final showing of oil paintings by Grace Bliss Stewart in the Listening Room of Alamance. Doors are open from 8:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m., and this evening after dinner. Miss Stewart’s 15 paintings, all of which were given excellent reviews in New York City papers, have been on exhibition since Tuesday. They were sent on tour from New York, where they were first shown, by the Studio Guild. According to Prof. Lila Clare Newman, th^re are to be three other art exhibits this year, in addition to one or two showings of Elon artists’ works. Bom in Atchison, Kansas, Miss Stewart has spent 10 years in world 'travel, circling the globe. She has held eight “one-man” exhibitions in New York City, with the last one being held on 57th street in 1946. Her work has been exhibited in many of the most imiportant art centers of the country. Science Club Elects Officers The campus Science Club elected officers for the year in a meeting held Monday night, Sept. 26, ac- 'cording to an announcement made this week by Prof. Paul S. Reddish, 'faculty advisor. The new officers are: Floyd Boyce, president; Harold Wjlliam- (Continued On Page Four) Popular Instructor Has Time For Everything By WILLIAM LIVESAY Prof. Albert Coble of the Mathe matics department here at Elon is a man who believes in honest toil and plenty of it. In addition to holding the posi tion of math instructor, he, with his brother, operates a farm of 160 acres. One would think that such a schedule would constitute a full time job for one man, but Profes sor Coble, somehow or other, is able to find some spare time. And what does he do in that spare time? Does he relax with a cross word puzzle or quietly count his fingers? No, he tramps over hill and dale surveying. In the last few years. Professor Coble has been associated in one way or another with three different branches of the Armed Forces. Shortly afler receiving his A. B. here at Elon, he returned to instruct an Air Forces detachment, then sta tioned here, in different phases of higher mathematics. Later he went to the University of North Caro lina, and, while working for his M. A., fell afoul of a group of Marines who yearned for knowledge of math ematics. Then came Uncle Sam’s greetings to Professor Coble himself, and off he went to don the Navy blue. Af ter his stint with the gobs, he re turned to Elon as a full-taime in structor. Until last winter, Professor Coble was, to all appearances, a confirmed bachelor. However, one of his dot ing students introduced him one day to a Miss Elizabeth Wall, a peach right from Georgia. A whirlwind courtship followed, and ere summer had waned. Professor Coble waa among the married. The man has time for everything! More About Elon Faculty Members Harold J. Pope, a native of St. Petersburg, Fla., is a new line coach on the Elon coaching staff and in structor in a service course of phys ical education. Mr. Pope attended high school for two years in New London, Conn., and finished high school in St. Pet ersburg, Fla. He received his B.A. degree at the University of North Carolina, and is now completing work on a master’s degree in physi cal education at the University. Before coming to Elon, Mr. Pope was head coach in football, basket ball, and baseball at Mt. Olive, N. C. He spent three and a half years in the Coast Guard during the war as a Chief Boatswain’s Mate. He lives now in North dormi tory, but he and Mrs. Pope plan to 'move soon to a five-room bungalow which is now being built. Mrs. Pope is from Durham. There is yet one other Pope — “Butch,’ a daughter, age three and a half. Mr. PV3pe likes Elon, he says. “Very nice school, and the eidminis- tration is very hospitable. With more enthusiasm he adds, “And the prospects look good for the new gymnasium.” Elon has been blessed with a con- noiseur of the spoken language of Latin Aimerican, the Far East and the Mediterranean. Mr. W. D. Ivie who joins the language department, is teaching three calsses in first year Spanish and one in second year Spanish. Mr. Ivie is also known to his (Continued On Rage Four) Mademoiselle magazine has open-j members will be admitted ed its annual contest for CoUege ' student tickets. Board members and its 1949 College production, “What a Guest Editors. Life,” is scheduled for Nov. 11 and College Guest Editors will be 12. brought to New York City for four j Promising Year weeks (June 6 through July 1) to i jn more ways than one. Mars, help write and edit the annual Au- j Smith declares, this is The Players’ gust College Issue of Mademoiselle. | niost promising season. Member- They will be paid round-trip trans- i ship of the organization is the larg- portation, plus a regular salary for j gst it has ever been. With a larger their work. number of workers, there is made possible a ‘division of labor” im possible with The Players before, and, in part, at least, Mrs. Smith .'s more ambitious undertaking. ' Too, the expanded program for the year offers The Players a traui- ing broader in scope and a greater dissemination of that training than could be accomplished with a small er group staging fewer productions, Guest Editor, undergraduates must be members of Mademoiselle’s na- justifies the group’i tional College Board during the 1948-49 college year. Twenty Col lege Guest Editors will be selected from the College Board. They will be chosen on the basis of three as signments to be given by Mademoi selle during the year . This means that the first step in becoming a Mademoiselle College | Smith declares. Guest Editor is to join Mademoi selle’s College Board now. Interested coeds should see Mr. Bruton for details about rules for joining the College Board. College Band Thought Too Small Players From “All Over” No less than eight states are rep resented on The Players roster this year, and much of the talent is any thing but green. John Vance, an Iowa boy, has had considerable experience in radio work in Mason City, Iowa. Bob Wright from Springfield, Mass., has a background of experience with The Civic Theatre there. Tony Ferrar hails from New York, Miss Joan Bolwell is from Rhode Island, With only 19 members in the band so far this year, Band Publicity Director Andy Meredith this week isued a plea for student musicians to join the band. Interested students and there are other representatives are asked by Mr. Meredith to come Virginia, West Virginia. and to band practice Monday, Wednes- Carolina. day or Friday nights at 7:00 o’clock. | It would seem that the Player to Mr. Meredith expresed some anx- 1 watch this year is Robert Rubinet, iety of the fact that the band, at its present size, is unable to make an impressive showing in football game half-time parades. This year, Mr. Meredith pointed out, band members are to be awarded school letters, with stars for each year beyond one served with the band. Officers Elected At a rehearsal held last week, the Band elected officers for the year. The new officers are: George Shack leford, president; Jack Castle, vice- president; Miss Charlotte Rothgeb, secretary-treasurer; Andy Meredith, publicity director; and Todd Femey- hough, custodian. Band members are: Bob Dalrym- ple. Miss Charlotte Rothgeb, John Amide, Andy Meredith, Newman Byrd, Jack Castl», Todd Ferney- hough, Morris .Prevette, Paul Shep herd, Bill Kivett, Jerry Lea, George Shakleford, Ray McKenzie, Miss Ro berta Winstead, Miss Marie Knight, Miss Penny Harmon, Jean Thomp son, Miss Sophie White, Robert Yost, and Miss Evelyne Moore. another New York student. He is, his co-workers say, “a find,’ a young man “of natural talent.” Mr. Rubinet has had experience in public school dramatics and in a church group. Not the least of his marlcs of distinction, according to his female admirers, is his resem blance of Cary Grant. Annual Awards Every year, awards are made at the annual Players’ Banquet to the year’s outstanding actor and actress and to the outstanding supporting actor and actress. Names of the winners are inscribed on a plaque which remains in the possession of the organization. “Our having five shows this year,” Mr. Smith says, “offers an ad vantage to the Players and the judges aUke.” The committee of fac ulty members to serve as judges has not yet been selected. Other Plays A final selection of plays to be produced this year was announced (Continued On Page Four)