Here’s A Hapyr And Safe Holiday To All MAROON AND GOLD And Loin To Eat For That Turkey Day Dinnrr VOLCME 41 Autumn Term Examination Schedule Set Six full days will be devoted to the examination schedule for the Fall Semester, according to an tannouncement made wlthlu the past week from the office of Dr. H. H. Cunningham, dean of the college- 19th. In making public the schedule for the examinations, it was point ed out that the time of the various exams may not be changed from its scheduled date. ' The complete examination schedule follows: THURSDAY, JANUARY 19 — All 11:30 (TTS) classes will be given from 9 until 12 s’clock that morning, following by all hygiene and physical education activity tests from 2 until 5 o’clock that afternoon. FRIDAY, JANUARY 20 — All 11:30 (MWF) classes will be given from 9 until 12 o’clock that morn ing, followed by all English 10 and English 11 classes from 2 until 5 o’clock that afternoon. SATURDAY, JANUARY 21 — All 10:30 (TTS) classes will be given from 9 until 12 o’clock that morning, with no exams scheduled for that afternoon. MONDAY, JANUARY 23 — All 10:30 (MWF) classes will be given f»om 9 until 12 o’clock that morn ing, with aU French 11, Spanish 11 and German 11 classes given from 2 until 5 o’clock that afternoon. THURSDAY, JANUARY 24 — All 9 o’clock (MWF) classes will be given from 9 until 12 o’clock that morning, with all 9 o’clock (TTS) classes given from 2 until 5 o’clock that afternoon. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25— All 8 o’clock (MWF) classes will be given from 9 until 12 o’clock that morning, followed by all 8 o’clock (TTS) classes from 2 until 5 o’clock that afternoon. ELON COLLEGE. N. C. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 23, 1960 NUMBER 5 Home To Vote Ed Boelte, Elon student body president, believes in practicing what he preaches. The Elon stu dent leader set up the pre-election program to create interest in the national election, urging all eli gible persons to vote. Then he drove home to Vernon Hill, Va., on Monday and was the first per son at the polls on Tuesday, No vember 8th, voting in time to re turn to Elon for his 8 o’clock class. FELLOWSHIP PRAYER FEASTING Every day we can well give thanks for the many blessings we enjoy .. . yet, we set aside one special day for united prayer, good fellowship and feasting, that we may celebrate the bounty of God, together. This Thanksgiving Day, gather with your friends . . . in church ... around the table! Phi Psi Cli Staff Hard At Work On 1961 Book Paper Is Early Due To Holiday The Maroon and Gold is mak- sXep OM) Su| earlier than uAual with this Thanksxivinfr issue, it beinx slated for delivery on Wednesday mominic of the holiday weeJi ra ther than on iU usual Friday morning' schedule. The speed-up in publication for this fifth Is sue of the fail term was made necessary by the fact that many of the Glon students and facul ty will be away from the cam pus the latter part of thifi week. It is aLso announced at thl« time that there will be only one Issue of the Maroon and Gold appearing during: the period be tween Thanksgiving and Christ mas holidays, since there will be only three weeks of classwork between the two vacation per iods. Such being the case, there would not be time for publica tion of two papers, and the Christmas issue will be pub lished during the final week be fore the Yule vacation. I’layers To (iive Oiie-Aet Plays Deeeiiiher 8-9-10 The Elon Players will present two one-act plays, one entitled "A Cool Yule" and the other "The Christmas Stranger," in Mooney Chapel Theatre for three nights on December 8th, 9th and 10th. Curtain time each night will be at 8:30 o’clock. Sam White, dra matics major from Pittsboro, will direct both plays. The cast for "A Cool Yule" in cludes Shirley Foskett, Carol Treg- esor. Jane Harper, Linda Lester, Nancy Young, Cary Keogh, Judy Elliott and Rosalee Radcliffe. The play itself is a rib-tickler about a girl who decided that horse-and- buggy thinking had no part in a jet age. The cast for The Christmas Stranger” include.^ Sandra Rus sell, Edie Kopp, Connie Blake and Richard Milteer. It is a story of a mother and twj daughters who are upset by tragedies on Christ mas Eve until a mysterious stranger visits their home. (Pictures On Paje Four) While many students never give much thought to the college annual until the year’s end, there is a certain group of students who »r« diligently at work on the book 'and in some cases have been work ing on it since this past summer For those who are new at Elon the yearbook is called the Phi P» Cli. This title probably sounds un usual, to say the least, to the ma jority, but it is derived from the first three letters of three literary societies which were active on the Elon campus many years ago. It takes quite a few workers to produce an annual such as the Phi Psi Ch. The book is divided into several sections, each section handled by student editors. Teddy Standley is the editor-in-chief of the Phi Psi Cli and is the student who does most of the work. Ruth Lemmons is her chief aide, serv ing as assistant editor. The editors handling class pic tures and class organisations are Martha Brittle, Becky Hobbs, Don na Kampe. and Dorothy Hawks. The feature editors, working on May Day, Homecoming, and other such events are Judy Wataon and Betsy Carden. Sara Summers, David Marshbum, and Bob Over ton are sports editors, handling both Tarsity and intramural ath letics. Sue Fisk and Jimmy Rosser serve as copy edltori. The invaluable typist positions are adequately filled by the Briggs twins, Cbarlesana and Mary Glenn. Glenda Baumgarner. Bill Cordes. and Don Terrell are the organizations editors. The job of this group is arranging pictures for fraternities, sororities, and tl>« majority of campus organizations. Danny Gee handles one of the most important posts on the staff, business manager. He contacts local merchants and sella ad«, which reduce the cost of the «■- nual to the students. This year, one of the valuable additions to the sUff is not a student at Elon. Jack Lambetk. very competent photographer, is currently a student at Williams High School in Burlington. Most of the pictures which appear in this paper and in the annual are the result of his work. One big change to be noticed in the 1961 Phi Psi Cli will be the presentation of a theme, which (Continued on Pago t’uurf Kernodle Named Leader For Elon Loyalty Drive Dr. Charles E. Kernodle, Jr.,i of Burlington, a graduate of Elon with the Class of 1938, has just been named chairman of the Elon College Loyalty Fund for the 1960- 61 college year, according to an announcement made this week from the office of Prof. Robert Baxter, director of development for the coUege. The Loyalty Fund program, which is a new undertaking for the college, is designed as an ap peal to the loyal alumni and friends of the college for contri butions to a fund, which will be applied to the financial needs of the institution. The appeal replac e's the former system of collecting sanik^'ial dues from the college’s alumnt Specific ,application of the Loy alty Fund cou'tributions will be to provide an increaiK® faculty sal aries and also to provide addi tional scholarship aid iof worthy students. Both applications rep resent long-felt needs, and Dr- Kernodle has stated that he hopes to secure gifts from an increased Cumber of donors this year. The plans for the 1960-61 Loy- CHAIRMAN ♦ DR. C. E. KERNODLE altv Fund appeal call for solici tation among former Elon stu dents in Alamance and Guilford Counties in North Carolina and among those who reside in the Norfolk and Suffolk areas of Tide water Virginia. Otner areas will be soUcited in other years. Students Seek Campus Posts In Special Vote Lee Mullis. a junior from Myrtle Beach, S. C., was named last week to fill a vacancy on the Student Council, 'being chosen in a special campus election in which a total of four offices were at stake. At the same time Fred Shull, ji'nior from Burlington, was chos en as one of five junior class members of the Student Senate, but lack of a majority made it necessary to hold a second bal loting on Tuesday of this week to select a women’s memi)er of the Student Council and a sophomore member in the Student Senate. The balloting yesterday saw Laura Marie Barnes, of Elo« Col lege, Arlene Side, of Franklin Square, N. Y., and Denyse Theo dore, of North Belmor, N. Y., all running for the girls’ post on the Student Council; while Clyde or- don, of Burlingtten, and Nancy Rountree, of Sunbury, as candi dates for the sophomore Senate seat Results of yesterday's vote were not known at paper deadline time. Elon Choir Will Appear In Twenty-Eighth Annual Presentation Of Hadel’s ‘Messiah’ December 9th The Elon College Choir will pre sent its twenty-eighth annual ren dition of Handel’s immortal ora torio, “The Messiah," in Whitley Auditorium at 4 o’clock on Sun-1 day afternoon, December 4th, ac cording to plans just made public by the college music department this week. The Handel masterpiece, which has thrilled Christmas season audiences in both Europe and America for more than 200 years, has been presented by the Elon Choir each Yule season for more than a quarter of a century, aad it has become one of the real high lights of the musical calendar in this area each year. The Elon student singers pre sented "The Messiah” for the first time in 1933, and the sequence of annual presentations has been un broken since that time. Each year the orat»rio attracts one of the largest crowds of the year on the campus, and hundreds of music lovars in this section of North Carolina return to bear again its thrilling arias and choruses. The Handel production will be directed this year by Prof. Charles Lynam, who first began taking part in th« annual Elon program DIRECTOR ORGANIST jf PROF. CHARLF.S LYNAM as a student singer during his un dergraduate days. Since gradua tion he Ims taken part several times, and last year he sang the mighty bass solos. He ascends the director's podium for the first time this year. At the organ, as he has been PROF. FLETCHER MOORE for many years, will be Prof. Fletcher Moore, who will play the accompaniment for Hie student singing group and soloists. Music lovers have to look forward each year to his organ interpretations of the great Handel musical com position. I In making public the plans for ithe 1960 presentation. Prof. Ly- ,nam stated that a number of Elon I alumni, former members of the j choir, have been invited to return ! and join once more in singing the great choruses they sang in their ; student days. The four soloists who will ap pear as guest artists with the ' Elon Choir this year include three new stars, with three of the four I soloi.sts coming from Greensboro 'and the fourth from Reidsville. Peggy Sue Russell, of Greens- jboro, will appear as -soprano solo- ,1st; while Frances Wilson, of ; Reidsville, will sing the contralto ! numbers. Neil Jennings, of Greens boro, will appear as bass soloist; and Paul Berry, also of Greens boro, will sing the tenor parts. Mi«s Ruseell, Miss Wilson Jennings are the new guests I Berry sang the tenor role winter. The great oratorio, which l« based upon the story of Christ, tells of the prophecies and antici pations of the coming of the Mes- sia, following with the story of his sufferings and death and final ly his triumphant resurrection. (Contloaed oo Page Kour) and but last