Founder^s Day Observance Set For Next Thursday Distler To Be Featured Speaker As College R!arks (liarter Date dr. THEODORE DISTLER Featured Speaker Everybody On Hand For The Elon Founder’s Day Dr. Theodore August Distler, executive director of the Associa tion of American Colleges, will be the featured speaker, for the an nual observance of the Elon Col lege Founders’ Day, which will be held on the campus on Thursday, August 10th. The plans are now complete for the Founders Day event, accord ing to Dr. J. E. Danieley, Elon's president, who pointed out that he program will be staged in commemoration of the issuance of the charter of Elon College by the North Carolina legislature, which occurred on March 11, 1889. Although it is not included in I the purpose of the program, and j it was stressed by President Dan- Iiiauguration Anniversary For Danieley ieley, the 1960 Founders’ Day pro gram will also mark the second anniversary of Dr. Danieley's inauguration as the sixth presi dent of the collcge. He was inaug urated in formal exercises held on March 11, 1958. The principal convocation of the 1960 Founders’ Day program will be held in Whitley Auditorium at 10:30 o’clock next Thursday morn ing, March 10th, when Dr. Distler will deliver the Founders’ Day address. The gathering in Whit ley Auditorium v.ill be followed by a buffet luncheon ia the ban quet room of the McEwen Memor ial Dining Hall. Among the guests for the Foun ders’ Day convocation and the luncheon whifch follows will be the members of the Elon College board of trustees, many of whom will te on the campus for the board’s a:;nual spring meeting on Wed- '.esday, March 9th. A large num ber of aUinini and friends of the college from this area are also '.xpocted to attend. Another feature of the obser- ington. His concert, although not a definite part of the Founders’ D.->y program, will be presented as one of the programs of the an nual Elon Collage Lyceum scries. Dr. Theodore August Distler, the featured speaker for the Founders T;iy observance, is a native of Now York. Born in Brooklyn on November 23, 1898. he attended Stevens Preparatory School and Brown University, interrupting his education for a tour of duly in the vaiice ■vill be a musical concert i United States Navy. He then at- in Whitli-'y Auditorium on Wed-! tended New York University, where nesday night, March 9th, by Wil-jhe graduated cum laude in 1922. li.im Kirkpatrick, tenor, of Burl-iHe also received the master's and doctor's degrees from that insti tution and since 1942 has received the honorary doctorate from twen ty-two American colleges and uni versities. After graduation. Dr. Distler be came a member of the faculty of New York University and contin ued 10 serve that university in a number of capacities until 1934. Am.mg the positions he held were I hose of secretary of admissions, n.'^siUjnt director of student wel fare, director of admissions and .-■tiident personnel and as instruc tor in personnel administration. He became dean of Lafayette College in 1934 and succeeded to the presidency of that college In (Continued oB Page Kour) MAROON AND GOLD DR. J. E. DANIELEY Anniversary Marked And All Take Part In Rrllcious Emphasis Services VOLUME 4« ELON COLLEGE, N. a Friday, March 4, 1960 Number 9 Aniiiiai Religious Emphasis Week Planned On March 13-18 STUDENT GROUP WHICH i'LAN.\ED iu(; DANCE j Helitiich To Be Speaker for Campus Meetings Players’ Musical Show To Be March Feature Siiig The high spot of the campus theatre season may be reached when the Klon Pla'- s present “Pajama Game," famed Broad way musical show in Whitley Auditorium on Thursday, March 31st, and Friday and Saturday, April 1st and 2nd. The comedy, telling the story of i love between the superintendent of a pajama factory and a union- minded factory girl, was first pre- i y isented on Broadway on May 13, Appears in i 1954, and proved to be one of the 1 I biggest hits in New York’s long I theatrical history. The show ran for over twenty- |nine months to capacity crowds, piling up a total of 1,061 perform- [ances, which represents the eighth I longest run in American stage an- Earl Spicer, balladeer, was pre- nals. It’s most popular song. "Hey sented in recital in Whitley Audi- There,” sold over 2,500,000 copies torium on Thursday night, Febru- of sheet music and held Number ary 25th, as one of the series of One on the Hit Parade for many Elon College lyceum programs, months. programming examples of both The show is based upon a book. Ballad :5mffer >ears In Elon Recital • By PROF. CLYDE McCANTS (Gnest Critic) English and American folk bal lads, along with Gilbert and Sulli van numbers and two settings of Shakespeare songs, and the small but enthusiastic audience appear ed well pleased with the result There was an aura of informal ity which immediately put the au dience at ease, and no one could deny the singer's distinct gifts as a public entertainer. He is re laxed, witty and clever, but this reviewer found the artist guilty of some serious short-comings as a singer of folk songs. To begin with, the program ranged through a vast repertoire of materials from many areas and many ages; but Spicer performed everything in severely modernized and purified versions that left lit tle of the atmosphere of original sources. “Lord Randal,” for ex ample, loses much of its folk fla vor when the language is modern ized, and the total poetic effect of “The Three Kavens” is com pletely lost. The folk ballad is a peculiar anomaly in literature and music, for our indeterminate ancestors Were capable of expressing in lan guage and melody of sincerity and almost angular simplicity many subtle, complex and almost so- Phistocated overtones. It is the nature of the folk ballad, however, to communicate most significantly ^hen the inherent simplicity and sincerity are intact. Mr. Spicer, on the other band, seemed determined to clothe our heritage of folk literature in neat vocal settings with elaborate pi- ano accompaniments, bath of which doubtless more appropriate for Nineteenth Century parlor ser enades. In such fancified versions, these simple masterpieces inevit- (Continued on Page Four) which was written by Richard Bis- sell, who was quietly directing his family’s century-old pajama fac tory in Dubuque, Iowa, when he wrote the story about a strike in the plant that exploded a romance between the plant superintendent and one of the factory workers. His novel, published under the name of “Seven and One-Half Cents," was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection and was grabbed up by Broadway producers as the basis for the musical show, "Pa jama Game.” Bissell, author of the novel, was called to New York and collaborated with George Ab bott. noted Broadway showman, in transforming the book into the musical show form. Music and lyrics for the show are by Richard Adler and Jerry Ross, long one of the most success ful songwriting teams on Broad way. Most song-writing teams show one member writing the mu sic and the other the lyrics, but Adler and Ross both composed music and lyrics, and their suc cess is attested by the fact that they collaborated on the music for such fine shows as "Guys and Dolls,” "Where’s Charley?” and "The Most Happy Fella." With such a show as a start, Prof. Melvin E. Wooton, director of dramatics here at Elon for the past five years, has lined up one of the finest casts In the history of the campus theatre, with Prof. Charles Lynam, Jane Morgan and Pat Kelly slated for the starring roles. Other leading roles will fea ture Don Terrell, Tom ReUy, Pat Day and Chris Fayle. The complete east, as announced by PiX>f. Wooton, includes Pat KeUy, as Hines; Don Terrell, at Prer; John Williams, as Joe; Tom (Contfawed on Pi«e Fouri The annual Religious Emphasis Week observance for upperclass- ; men will be held on the Elon campus during a six-day period, be- Rinning oHr^Sunday, March 13th, and ending on Friday, March 18th, of the Department of Campus Elon Seniors Rated Iligli On GR Tests The Student D-ince Committ^'o,which planned the successful jN'idwinier Weekend dance in Alum- jlcmorial Gymnasium last Sa ■ • ni?ht. is pictured above. Left to right in the picture, the committee members are as follows: FRONT ROW — Betty Raper, Buddy Frost, Steve Mauldin, Pat Jones, Don Terrell, Barbara Day, George Platt, Mrs. Virginia Hester (Dean of Women), Bill Reid, Jane Morgan. Jane Chlls y and Cliff Hardy. BACK ROW — Foy Crouse, John Williams, Nil- lie Fletcher and Ed Boelte. with the Rev. Hartland Helmich Ministry of the United Church of Christ, as the featured speaker. The general theme tor the week’s observance will be "God’s Heconciliation of Our World in Travail,” with related subjects to be discussed in the series of reii- gious chapel services, which will i I be held each morning from Tues- i day through Friday. Various or-' ganizations will also meet with the There were a number of Elon speaker for luncheon and dinner i College seniors who scored high gatherings, with individual con-;pn the recent Graduate Record ferences on special schedule with; Examinations, which are given in informal sessions for both men and institutions through the country women in West Dormitory from and which furnish a basis for com- 9:30 until 10:30 o’clock each ev- paring Elon students with those enlng. There will also be service [of other colleges and universities throughout the United States. Four of the Elon seniors stood out In the area tests in the Social id winter Dance Proves Gala Event The Elon College students and their dates donned semv formal attire last Saturday ev ening, February 27th, for the annual Mid-Winter Dance, which was termed a complete success by all who attended. The en forced cancellation of the Georre Shearing Concert cut short the scheduled weekend program, but it failed to mar the fe.stive atmosphere at the dance. Ralph Marterie .-uid his Or chestra furnished music for the gala occasion, and many stu dents were so well pleased with the Marterie group that they crowded around the bandstand, hoping te hear special request nnmbers played by the group. Marterie's lively quintet and two oulstanding vocalists added mach to the evening’s entertainment. The AlnmnI Memorial Gym nasium was simply but effective ly decorated to create an atmos phere of winter loveliness for the dance. The white walls sur rounding the large dance floor were decorated with occasional strips of b4dnight blue crepe paper, centered with a band of silver foil. Silver foil “snow- halLs” hung from the center'of the ceiling, creating the Illusion a huge crystal chandelier. The students and their guests sat around white linen-covered tables between dances and at lntemiis.sion time, and plneap- ple-ictnger ale punch and party rookies added a gay note to the festive evening, wltich attract ed more than two hundred fifty persons, including both students and faculty members, all of whom quite obviously enjoyed the dance with its lively music by the famous Marterie gronp. The evening was climaxed for many tired but happy students when the orchestra played “Goodnijcht. Sweethearts,” with the well-konwn Marlboro theme as a postlude. Clutching souve nirs taken from the decorations, many couples reloctantly left the gymnasium and were forced to remember once again that there is a curfew at tht girls* dormitory. for Evening School student each evening at 8 o’clock. The entire program is to be staged under the direction of a' Science Division, including Wil- Helmich Is Active Leader In Youth Work The Rev. Hartland H. Helmich, who is to be the featured speaker for the annual Religious Empha sis Week for upperclassmen on the Elon College campus, is one •f the outxtandlBg figures in new United Church of Christ, which was formed by the union of the Congregational Christian and Ev- angelica land Reformed church groups. A graduate of Central College, Fayette, Mo., he had his theolo gical training at the Eden Theolo gical Seminary, Webster Groves. Mo., and he has also had gradu ate work at the University of Chi cago. He is an ordained mlnistei Church. Among the ministerial positions he has filled, he was at one time a member of the staff for the Stu dent Christian Movement in New York State and of the same move ment In the Middle Atlantic Re gion. He Is also a former campus pastor for the Evangelical and Reformed Church at the Univer sity of Pennsylvania. Since 1952 he has served as di rector of the Department of Cam pus Christian Life of the Evan gelical and Reformed Church and as co-exeeutlve secretary of the United Studedt FeUowship, the national student Christian move- of the Evangelical and Reformed I ment of the combined Congrega tional Christian Churches and the Evangelical and Reformed Church. From 1954 until 1956 he was chair man of the executive committee of the United Student Christian Council, which is the America sec tion of the World’s Student Chris tian Federation. He is at present serving as a member of the provisional execu tive committee of the United Cam pus Christian Fellowship, which is engaged in preparation for a union in August of this year of the student Christian movements of the Disciples of Christ, the Ev angelical United Brethren Church the United Presbyteiran Church of (Continuea on Page Four) special faculty-student committee. Faculty members of the commit tee include Dr, W. W. Sloan, Prof. John Kittenger, Dr. Paul Cheek, Dr. Richard iUfl «nd Prqf. John S. Graves, student members of the group are Jimmy Humphrey. represenUng the Student Christian Association; Bob Overton, for the Pan Hellenic Council; Beverly Ward, for the Ministerial Associa tion; Marion Glasgow, for the Women’s Athletic Association; and Maurice Brosky. for the "E” Men's Club. Rev. Helmich will meet with members of the faculty and their wives and husbands at 4 o'clock on Sunday afternoon. March 13th, at which time orientation plans for the week will be discussed. Students of the planning commit tee will meet with him at 7 o’clock that Sunday night for last-minute planning details. The visiting speaker wUl make his first appearance at the 11 o’clock services at the Elon Col lege Community Church on Sun day morning, March 13th. After the faculty and student confer ences later that day. he will have only one meeting on Monday. March 14th. that a gathering with the Ministerial Association on Monday night at 8 o’clock. Various campus organizations wUl serve as official hosU for the Rev. Helmich for each day of the week. Host groups Include the "E” Men’s Club for Monday, the Stu dent Christian Association for Tuesday, the Pan-Hellenic CouncU for Wednesday, the Ministerial Association for Thursday and the Women’s Athletic AssociatioD for Friday. In discussing plans for the Re- Uam Welch, of Dorchester, Mass., In the upper 9 per cent in the na tion; James Elder, of Burlington, in the upper 18 per cent; Robert Worthington, of Huntingdon Val ley, Pa., in the upper 20 per cent; and Thomas Shreve, of Liberty, In the upper 25 per cent. There were also four of the Elod students in the upper brackets in the area tests in the Humanities Division. James Elder and Jack Goins, both of Burlington, were in the upper 13 per cent in this divi sion; with Raymond Thomas, of Burlington, in the upper 19 per cent; and Joyce Harrell, of Saint Brides, Va.. in the upper 23 per cent nationally. Richard Whittenton. of Greens- (Contlnued on Page Kour) boro. Was tops for Elon in the Na tural Science Division, scoring in the upper 20 per cent nationally in the science area tests. There were also three of the Elon seniors who scored high on the advanced tests in various areas. Mary Lou Booth, of Hamp ton, Va., was in the upper 19 per cent nationally on the advanced biology test; Jack Goins, of Burl ington, was in the upper 25 per cent on the advanced test on econ omics; and Joyce Harrell, of Saint Brides. Va.. ranked in the upper 11 per cent in the advanced test in the field of education. The statistics were complied and released from the office of Dr. H. H. Cunningham, dean of the college, under whose direction the examinationr were administered on the Elon College campus. Fol lowing a policy adopted severalv years ago, all members of the ior class at Elon are required / take the Graduate Record inatlon each year.