rhursday, October 15,1981 The Pendulum Page 5 Kailroad I by Susan Troxler Crossing the tracks as you jproach or leave Elon ollege, you may wonder hy a railroad should run so ose to classrooms, dorms id library. 1 For many students, the 1 ilroad does little more I an act as a speed bump. >r others, it rattles glasses I couple of times a day and I en gives members of the I reek system a place to : splay their artistic talents, r) most people, the railroad I of little importance, r It’s difficult to imagine f at this railway system was ice the central interest of e town. Around the turn , the century, six passenger ) ains ran through Elon t eryday. Students arrived at 1 liool either by train or by ] »rse and buggy. The depot k is located across from the 1 (St office, on the college e ie of the tracks. Four mail t lins came through Elon »lily. , The “coming in” of the y iin was a big attraction for e townspeople as well as s e students. Virtually every- y a I lusic, films, fairs, and more Gallery hopes to fire mterest in fine arts, photography The series will feature seven full-color films that will take the viewer to England, Italy, Germany, Australia, Poland, and the United States. All films be gin at 8:15 p.m. and will be shown in Aycock Audit orium on the UNC-G cam pus. Season tickets for the series, which will continue through April, are available by contacting Aycock Audit orium box office at 379-5546 weekdays from 1 to 5:30 p.m. The North Carolina State Fair will be held Friday, Oct. 16 through Saturday, Oct. 24 at the fairgrounds in Raleigh. “The Color of Autumn” in watercolors and oils by 19th and 20th century Euro pean and American painters is the featured exhibit at the Priestley Fine Art Gallery through October. The gallery, located at 100 N. Williamson Ave. in Elon College, is open 1 to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays. A film series about strug gling relationships with family, society, and God is being sponsored by the Epis copal Church of the Holy Comforter. Orson Welles’ “Citizen Kane” will run Friday, Oct. 23, and “A Man for All Se^ons” will be shown on Friday, Oct. 30. Both films begin at 7 p.m. and are open to the public without charge. Discussions will follow the films. by Teresa Warren The Firehouse Galleries’ ctober exhibits feature the Btercolors of Jo Ann Rose, le art work of Wayne pperly, and the photo- aphy of the Alamance nage Makers, a local photography group. Ms. Rose’s work is on display in Gallery I. She is a native of Ohio and now lives in Chapel Hill. Her style is classified as “experimental,” and ranges from traditional watercolor to explorations in techniques of silk-screen and intagUo painting. Professional artist Wayne Epperly is a native Burling ton painter. He has dis played his award-winning oil paintings in Alamance and Guilford counties. His work is exhibited in Gallery II. Gallery III features the work of the Alamance Image Makers, an associate member of the Alamance County Arts Council. The Image Makers’ display will also be exhibited in the Cummings High School Auditorium Nov. 7 for the council’s 25th birthday cele bration. Tickets for this celebration are available at the Arts Center. The cost is $3 for adults and $2 for students and senior citizens. The exhibits in the Fire house Galleries are open to the public and will remain on display until Nov. 1. The Arts Center is located at 135 W. Elm St. in Graham. Coming soon to the Elon College campus are the Con- tiguglia Brothers, duo- Haunted House Friday, Oct. 30 & Saturday, Oct. 31 Sponsored by SGA and SUB pianists, who will present a free concert Thursday, Oct. 29, at 8 p.m. in Whitley Auditorium. This concert is the first in the Lyceum Series programs offered to the public by the college. The Ice Follies and Holi day on Ice Combined Shows are coming to Greensboro Coliseum for 10 perfor mances Tuesday, Oct. 20 through Sunday, Oct. 25. Shows will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 20 through Thursday, Oct. 22. On Fri day, Oct. 23, performances will be at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday shows will be at 11 a.m., 3 p.m., and 8 p.m. while Sunday perform ances will be at 2 and 6 p.m. Tickets for the Ice Follies are on sale at the Greens boro Coliseum box office, all authorized Belk Stores, and Reznicks’ in Winston- Salem. Daryl Hall and John Oates will appear with the Electric Light Orchestra at the Greensboro Coliseum on Saturday, Oct. 17 at 8 p.m. Barry Manilow will also appear at the Coliseum on Saturday, Oct. 31 for an 8 p.m. concert. For more in formation, contact the Greensboro Coliseum box office. The 1981-82 Travelogue Series will open tonight at 8:15 at the University of North Carolina at Greens boro with its first film entitled, “Come to the Castle: The Stately Homes of England.” •’ Do you have a talent which you keep e n inside and wish someone would see? d *11 f your answer is yes, maybe you, your friends or your organization should enter SUB Talent ffife Show ;h ly 8 p,m, Whitley Auditorium in , 2 50' general admission ID Application deadline—Oct. 25 reflects days past TOWN OF ELGN-Thls railroad track has bccome an accepted part of the community of Elon College. Photo by Nader Hamidpour. one turned out to watch the train pass through town. The people of the town also made a point of meeting students when they arrived for a session and seeing them off at the end of each term. The railroad was a prin cipal means of transpor tation until the time cars became common. Passenger service was available until 1964. It was fairly common for students to “hop the train” and ride into Burling ton for a movie. After an evening of entertainment, they hopped a later train back to Elon. Although this sounds a little risky, only one student had a bad accident as a result of this economical traveling. A male student did lose his foot when he fell off the train. There have been only a few fatalities associated with the railway in this area, and none of them has been a student from Elon. The railroad was built through Elon (then known as Mill Point) between 1851 and 1856. Elon was pri marily a railroad settlement until the college was estab lished in 1889. The one- building college opened with 75 to 85 students in 1890. The train service remained the most important mode of transportation. After the fire of 1923 destroyed much of Elon’s campus, the train carried the graduating students to Bur lington for their baccalaur eate service. Three extra cars were hooked to the train, and participants were trans ported to the BurUngton Christian Church for the service. During the time Elon College was actually being buih, Alamance County had no banks. The train brought money from banks in Durham and other large cities through the train’s mail service. The station in Elon College stayed after the passenger service was discon tinued, but shortly thereafter it was torn down and moved to Glen Raven. In 1977 continuous welded rail re placed the tracks’ bolted lengths of steel. This im provement eliminated much of the rickety sound of the railway, and this type of track will eventually replace all of the 10,500 miles of the Southern Railway System. In spite of the fact the railroad may not seem sig nificant to many of us as students, it was a vital part of the Elon College com munity for more than a century. As a matter of fact, it’s possible that the college might not be here if the train had not been here first.