‘ package, « Preventati, esman Numb, ^mpany, Ka, thorized to ojBATES iwenty-five . 4 ; of three b> s of half a r- lestimable vr the hilltop COME AGAIN G. A.'». Why, take, j of Beatrice jf « A ^ ^ three days >od there foi I HILL DEBATERS TAKE FIRST FOUR FORENSIC TILTS mars hill, north CAROLINA, MARCH 30. 1931. « and ban^ Tettchevs A re ze fell upoirst to Fall. ss the room ■ long stridetoting teams representing ^.moodily,jCollege made their aus- ® .but during the second —larch, and have followed K-fi "/Ironing in an unusual man ind^*^lori^| must it evening. Mar. 13, with ®^ntatives of Eastern Tenn- ^ freedom t’’’" w and s^ tT’ Mars John Joihnson and Hoyle TO-:*-!, young ladies from .3! V ^ »fty. The debate was inter- w-hat i^ only because it was a , Dntest between sexes, but ® e withf the remarkable basis of ^ faction. The eve- Ws 'T^”?°rmance demonstrated ad- “e lhat debates may be carried t" j" members of the opposite ^ ° orderly and chivalrous ’ ^Without detracting from the aro ina. jthe discussion and without ^use h^ the mutual feeling of re- hey we^xists between the two. A in both encounters. Nelson Jarrett and W. 0. Rosser succeeded in gain ing a two-to-one decision upon home ground, while a negative team com posed of John Johnson and Hoyle Lee were awarded a three-to-nothing decision upon the Catawba campus. In a return debate with Eastern Tennessee Teacher’s College, Wed nesday evening, March 25, the affirm ative team of Rosser and Jarrett suc ceeded in impressing a foreign aud ience that their own basis of con tention was fundamentally sound, by (Continued on Page 3) By Many on Campus FRANCES BARNES CHOSEN TO NO. 11 PRES. MOORE ADDRESSES PIEDMONTERS Loyalty and Enthusiasm Shown Group Gathered at Wins ton-Salem. in imie P rr ' Barnes, Osbornt McLean, sn, Eva of the votes cast by the rendered a decision in fa- e negative, the affirmative ninety-seven votes, as con- th one hundred and seven- • the negative, both fafcond forensic clasJt was a the sd debate with Catawba, the was laij-mative team meeting Ca husband Inegative team upon the ^ held ini campus, while the negative where *Iars Hill met the Catawba *Pent. Ae at Salisbury. The local y everyjwere eminently successful ding ri- DIAMOND NIVERSARY ELEBRATION nd College Representatives articipate in Full Day’s I Program. jfor the celebration of the i crept . . 01 me tt of ti of the '-ollege, are rapidly taking .shape. 5 plans have been completed L _ ^^ent Moore, and invitations ■p sent to many who viJl nar- owers L 4-T, . n the exercises. ness tentative pro-j^! exercises in the morning II il representatives P^lJlcges and universities. Pres- eveniil p Univer- auty, Emeritus W. L. Po- y^’^elWake Forest College; and ^^ooks, of State Col- be the principal speakers. ^ t H. T. Turner, of Cullow- I jsident C. H. Trowbridge, of ille; President J. E. Calfee, .illc; President B. B. Daugh- Boone, will make five-minute s or greetings. There will I recognition of all college F^^/^*t*'’es, who have been in- *m a large territory. 30 o’clock will be luncheon led guests and the Buncombe Association, at which time jt Noffsinger, of Virginia In I ■ ( College, and probably Rob editor of the Asheville will speak. ivedll5 in the afternoon former 11a t pastors, and moderators of ons will be recognized. Im- y following will be addresses lucaf** ®taf^'®ats. Judge Grover H. de^ High Point; Dr. Fred F. jpastor First Baptist Church, Coimlle, Tenn.; Gerald W. John- ■ »riaJ winter of the Baltimore Johnson has not yet said J « he will be able to be pre- In spite of unfavorable weather, a large number of loyal alumni from several points in the Piedmont region gathered at the First Bapti.st Church of Winston-Salem last Satuixlay eve ning, where they were addressed by President Moore. Among the towns represented were Winston-Salem, High Point, Thomas- ville, Yadkinville, Wallburg, Walkers- town, Kemersville, East Bend and Charlotte. The following alumni, be sides several visitors, were present at the banquet: Mr. and Mrs. Bob Al len, Lacy M. Butler, Harry T. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Dunn, Miss Wil ma Grant, Paul M. Hendricks, J. T. Joyner, B. B. Mason, J. T. Morgan, Miss Lucile Mock, C. E. Parker, Will iam H. Poindexter, Rev. D P. Smith, Crews Whicker, Mrs. Daisy M. Mar shall, Tate Andrews, Joe Connor, C. H. Jones, D. D. Parsons, Miss Eu- zelia Smart, Mrs. A. E. Barber, Miss Jennie Ballard, Miss Mary Brooks, Miss Hattie Edwards, Miss Howard Mumford, Rev. and Mrs. E. F. Baker, Miss Ethel L. Frye, Miss Blanche Mackie, Mrs. Paul Davis, Miss Edna B. Clinard, E. L. Ponder. In his address Dr. Moore declared that the lives of the alumni are the greatest monument that any college can have and emphasized that the alumni, more even than student bo dies and physical equipment, contrib ute to the reputation of a school. He also stressed the strategic position of Mars Hill College, situated as it is in the center of a large prosperous territory, in which there are compar atively few colleges of any kind, and no other Baptist college. The following were elected officers of the Piedmont Association for the coming year: C. E. Parker, Forsythe County, president; Grover II. Jones, Guilford County, vice - president; Miss Howard Mumford, Davidson County, secretary; Miss Blanche Alackie, Yadkin County, treasurer. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, March 26-28, an art exhibit was pre sented as a project of the art educa tion class which is being taught by Miss Bowden. The exhibit consisted of valuable copies of various paintings of old masters. The paintings sent out by the American Federation of Arts, with its headquarters at Washington D. C. Thursday the paintings were exhib ited to the C-2 class, Friday to the C-l’s and High School students, and Saturday to the students and faculty at large. The paintings were viewed with appreciation by the greater portion of the student body. The exhibit is a portion of a wide spread movement toward public ap preciation of art. In connection with this, several students of the art class plan to attend -the Southeastern As sociation of Arts, which meets at Spartanburg, April 22-23, of which the instructor. Miss Bowden, is a charto'r member. REIGN AS QUEEN OF MAY The sixty-nine persons who made up the Oxford Group, closed their second meeting in Asheville on Sun- . ..... day night with an overflow meeting j other members of the faculty attend- at the First Baptist Church. I ing the conference in Asheville. MEMBERS OF THE OXFORD GROUP VISIT CAMPUS Twenty-six Nominated for Places; Maid of Honor Selected. Messrs, William Reeves and Cas tellanos Kermit, of Mississippi and New York respectively, attending a fellowship conference in Asheville this week, were visitors on the cam pus last Tuesday, both of them speak ing in chapel. Sixty-nine men and women, most of them from the universities of America and Europe, members of what is widely known as the Oxford Movement, are holding a week of fellowship at the Battery Park Hotel in Asheville. Members of the group, under the name of First Century Christian Fellowship, are concerned with x>ersonal and vital matters of Christianity and experience in the face of conventionality and indiffer ence. Those visiting Mars Hill came up on the invitation of Mr. England and Florence Johnson to Be Maid of Honor. GYM CLUB STAGES KID PARTY, MAY QUEEN IS ANNOUNCED Miss Frances Barnes Is Chosen for Spring Festival. May Queen Announced in a Novel Manner; Fashion Show Feature. How to Fail ' evening many of the visitors hably remain for reunion in ’s literary societies. Music at ■vice will be furnished by the ’. Ip chorus and members of ical faculty. Complain. Exaggerate. Be sarcastic. Ge a glutton.. Be conceited. Scorn advice. Procrastinate. Be indifferent. Praise no one. Be a pessimist. Repeat rumors. Break promi^s. Refuse to learn. Travel the ruts. Keep late hours. Neglect your health. Evade responsibility. Be a chronic grouch. Work without a plan. Do as little as possible. Always have an excuse. Be a chronic borrower. —Exchange. Elizabeth Wilburn The members of the happiest club on the Hill, the Gym Olub, were treat ed to a party Saturday night. Mar. 21, which presented a spectacle that would warm the heart of any old maid. It was called a Kid Party and from all appearance, there were nothing but kids present. Even the old woman who lived in a shoe was not blessed with as large and as mis chievous a family as toddled about the gymnasium. Jack and Jill, with all their friends and relatives, held full sway, playing “Farmer’s in the Dell, “Drop the Hanky,” and only such games as delight the hearts of dear little children. Naughty tom boys mus.sed the hair ribbons of ma ma’s babies and some even stole the rag dolls right out of their moth er’s loving arms. Even before the exuberant spirits of the kids had reached full force, Mrs. Douglas Robinson, the director for the evening, announced a unique fashion show which would exhibit the right and wrong in styles. The chil dren were frightened at first when the room was darkened, but when the bright spotlight appeared and older sisters quieted -the little ones by holding their hands, all became still. Mrs. Robinson announced the models a.s the spotlight caught them at the door and brought them in. The right and wrong attire for tennis was shown respectively by Beatrice .lohnson and Flora Huffman. .Street costumes, correct and incon-ect, were modeled by Johnnie Wannamaker and Elizabeth Wilburn; dress for after noon wear by Elizabeth Corpening and Feme Hoover; church dress by Edna Stroude and Florilla Ervin; school apparel by Helen Beckwith and Estalena Rogers; and the dress for an informal party by Harriet Hall and Marguerite Green. A mo del bathing girl was represented by Pearl Howell. Then came the de mure and old-fashioned girl in the person of Vemie Huffman to be fol lowed by the sensible and attractive girl of 1931 represented by Mary Frances Clark. Each child profited greatly and resolved deep down in her heart to use good -taste in dress when she grew to be a young lady. Yet the shifting spotlight wavered only slightly at this time, for next to be borught within its rays was the May Queen of 1931. All eyes .strained into the darkness and everyone wait ed with deep interest. When the lim light brightened into a soft circle around the bridelike figure of Miss Frances Barnes, happy applause rang out and .she was acclaimed a true Queen of the May. Then every hand and heart appraised as the maid of honor Miss F’lorence John.son. The other attendants appeared in their (Continued on Page 3) Much interest is being centered just now in plans for the annual May Day Festival which will take place on Sat urday afternoon May 2. The first step was recently taken with -the election of the queen and attendants by the student body. At Mars HiU, being queen or one of the attendants, means more than at most other colleges. A group of twenty-six girls who had been approved in conduct, scholar ship, beauty, and popularity, was sub mitted. The students voted for queen and ten attendants. The group from which the students chose those who will be honored on May Day consisted of the following: Ray Gibbs, Dorothy Whatley, Flor ence Johnson, Willie Newell, Beak rice Johnson, Sibyl Pace, Dona Maude Shouse, Sarah Pox, Margaret Ham rick, Mildred Elmore, Ruth Robert son, Grace Elkins, Mildred Meares, Kate Allison, Louise Smith, Ruth Nalle, Pearl Howell, Frances Bames, Madge Linney, Helen Beckwith, Har riet Hall, Elizabeth Wilburn, Nannie McFarland, Katherine Rollins, Edna Henderson, and Grace West. The results of the election held in chapel showed Frances Barnes elect- de queen by an overwhelming major ity. Florence Johnson will be maid of honor, and the following will be attendants: .Sarah Pox, Ruth Robert son, Kate Allison, Louise Smith, Sihyl Pace, Mildred Meares, Dorothy What ley, Ray Gibbs, Madge Linnie, and Nannie McFarland. Mildred Elmo-re, Willie Newell, and Grace West are al- (Continued on Page 2) HIS HERITAGE” IS PRESENTED Miss Barnes' Play Given Premiere in Auditorium. NUMBER OF SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE FOR M. H. GRADS Leading Schools Recog nize Quality of M. H. Work. The fact that the students of Mars Hill College ore favorably received by the various nstituti .ns of higher learning is evidenced by the num erous scholarships which are offered to Mars Hill students fay senior col leges and universities. At present, -there is but one scho larship available for women. This is hundred-and-forty-dollar aid to ward expenses at Coker Co-llege. There are this year six former Mars Hill students attending institu- tkmK at which they have received scholarships. These are as follows: at the University of North Carolina, Frank Dale; at Washington and Lee University, William C. Capel; at Furman, H. A. Lynch; at Wake For est, T. Carl Brown, T. L. Austin, and Edd Fox. Scholarships are offered occasion ally by the University of Tennessee, Mai-yville College, Catawba College, Carson and Newman, and Richmond University. The University of Chi cago, also, is offering this year a scholarship in the school of commerce worth three hundred dollars. Mars Hill is recognized in the South as an outstanding junior college, and full credit is given for work done here at the leading colleges and uni- ! versities. At seven o’clock, Monday evening, March 23, the cast of -the play, “His Heritage,” by Miss Frances Barnes, a member of this year’s Senior class, presented a public dress rehe.arsal in the college auditorium. This play was awarded third place in the state contest in the classifica tion into which Mars Hill falls. As first and .second places were awarded to the .Seaboard Woman’s Club, and its membei-s could present but one. Miss Barnes was given the oppor tunity of prc.senting her play. This was done on the afternoon of March 20, and both the play and the acting received favorable commendation. The play was one of a group of play.s presented at the Dramatic Festival, in connection wth the state contest at Chapel Hill. Excellent acting characterized the entire play. Tom Moore, playing the leading role in the guise of the Doc tor, easily stole the acting honors. Opposite him played Eula May Hes ter, as the Doctor’s wife. Wade Baker acted the part of a night visitor, while Miss Bames herself acted the part of the nurse. The play concerns itself with a single night in the Doctor’s life, when under the influence of the sin of his progenitors he committed murder to gain a certain ambition. It is reveal ed -to him that if he lives his son will unconsciously become like him, and eventually commit the same sin. The only way to stop this eternal taint of character is to blot out his own life. After a supreme struggle with him-, self, he takes poison, and thus ends his own life, and with it the heritage of blood.