\0^ ub,. J The Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars Hill College rine/ol.‘TH-I .MARS HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, DECEMBER 14, 1934 No. 6 e dj b oj or, -ben con o tl, stiti int ■ E 1, H ULLOWHEE AND EDNEYVILIE WIN IN W. N. C. SPEAKERS TOURNEY CONTEST WINNERS hirty-Five High Schools Of ir. A’. C. Participate In 9th Contest Sponsored By College. The ninth annual Readers’ and De- ^*'°^aimeis’ contest, sponsored for the ’ast eight years by Mars Hill Col- ^^ge, ended last Saturday with Jane ^ hunter from Cullowhee and Juni nnet the lor 'ressley from Edneyville winning the }aders’ and declaimers’ cups respec- \’ely for the first time. The the p. ii; cups ist year were won by the Saluda and jld Fort high schools. .\bout 95 students and chaperons Lieslere on the college campus during ^e daj's of the contest last Friday Mars^^ Saturday. These came from 32 Th^gh schools throughout Western j^jjorth Carolina. 3 The students who took part in the ^elaimers’ contest were; .\ltamont, ere f”’ Ledford; .Andrews, Carl Scott; gvejlack Mountain, Thomas Summey; j^^j^^ndler, Jerry Israel; Cullowhee, s Er^™®® Hooper; Edneyville, Junior •yyjj^essley; Fairview, Paul Bishop; loth H. B. Buckner, Jr.; Har- s, LawTence Buehanon; Hayesville, jm Parsons; Leicester, Charles Wea- b^i?r; Murphy, Jack Barnett; Pleasant j^ardens, Guy Rabb; Sand Hill, James nwrence; West Buncombe, Mack tell, Ji-.; Woodfin, Grover Penland; . _^_alley Springs, tVoodfin Rhodes; A.J'*fcuitland. Bob Morgan; Ellenboro, forth -Mien; Hollis, Hubert Melton; arshall, Ray Frisby, Mooresboro, ppi on Whitaker; Oak Hill, Glenn Mc- ' eod; Old Fort, Jack Hughes; Row an, Harry Cook; Waynesville, Eu- ■ne Francis; Weaverville, Allen )nda; Wilkesboro, Lee Settle; Bar- rdsville, Harry Brown; Robbins- tVayne Williams; Bald Creek, irl Maney. The readers in the contest were: tamont, Annie 'Williams; .\ndrews. |y- ent Nor mietn ibitha .\bernathy; Black Mountain, >rnelia Brown; Candler, Frances Wing organ; Cullowhee, Jane Hunter; nber Ineyville, Kathleen Bailey; Fair- Boone; Flat Creek, Lo me Burleson; Harris, Helen Green- ence ’ > Hayesville, Myrt Padgett; Leices- •, Edith Morrow; Murphy, Dorothy hn; Pleasant Gardens, Irene Hens- (Continued on page 5) Contest Letters Are Coming In Fast Loris Dover Writes: Others To Be Printed Next ISSU'‘. Mr. Elliott: In response to your plea for let ters regarding the high school sit uation in our stat"', I write this complaint against the high school which I attended as compared with the other high schools represented at this institution. -\t the high school that I at tended, the mathematics course was rather lightly touched and therefore, when I came to this col lege, I was sadly delinquent in this course and it was only with extreme study that I managed to keep ahead in this group. My suggestion, since I found that numerous others were in the same predicament that I was, would be for a complete state and perhaps sectional standardization of all cour.ses which are required for college entrance and college preparation. Perhaps this is a somewhat fool ish suggestion, but I truly believe that it would have a tendency to eliminate such radical variances in the preparation of high school stu dents wlicn they reach the several college campuses of our state and naton. Yours sincerely, LORIS DOVER. NONPARIEL RECEPTION DECLARED SUCCESS 300 Guests Attend; Aeroplane In Afternoon Thrills Members. Jane Hunter and Junior Pressley, Winners of the Ninth Contest. Pres, and Mrs. Moore | Euthalians Present Serve College 37 Yrs. Typical Program Forty-Third Anniversary Cele brated; Costner And Church Win Debate. Heroic Devotion To College And \ Education Of Youth Marks Years Of Service. Working for a cash salary as low as twenty-five dollars a year, and re fusing the presidency of several larg er colleges, taking the covering from their own beds for needy students Before a large crowd of friends and members, the Euthalian Literary Society presented its forty-third ann iversary program in the college audit orium, Saturday evening, December and giving back to the college a large ! 1. Two weeks ago the Philomathian Faculty Well Equipped To Serve College Sixteen Hold Gradual-: Degrees; Three Awarded Honorary Degrees. jrogress Seen In Campus Organizations tare C. tnday School Has 323 Mem- j bers; B. Y. P. U. i Has 262. O A/«^Tnder the leadership of Bob Cost- TTRA'N’ College B. S. U. president, p the other 14 members of the B. quart^^- council, the religious organiza- ^s on the campus have been mak- ^ steady progress since the open- of school in September, ncluded on the council arc repre- tatives from the Sunday school, „ Y. P. U., Y. W. A., Ministerial Ilow uf , jiference. College Church, and nethodj . A • cjotj,e,l“'i*-eer Union. he Sunday school, of which Brown- ffivc y* unifoi is the superintendent, shape largest single religious organ- ion on the campus, having eight it” [ses with a total enrollment of '. Miss Margie Ingle is the gen- secretary. Jhe B. Y. P. U. is the second larg- ^organization. It is composed of «n unions totaling 262 members. I general officers are: Jack Ben- I director; Miss Thelma Killian, ciate director, and Miss Annie kie, general secretary. Next in .according to size is the Y. W. A., enrollment of 122, which 9 per cent of the total number ne young wmmen enrolled at the ge. Miss Annabel Lee is presi- of the Y. W. A. council. The (Continued on page 6) lES The teachers of Mars Hill College are well prepared for the positions which they hold on the faculty. A survey shows that sixteen mem bers of the faculty hold advanced degrees from American universities, three hold honorary degrees, and four have studied abroad. In addition to these the teachers in the departments of fine arts have studied under widely known instructors in their fields. A study of the college catalogue shows that each teacher is specially trained for the subject which he or she teaches. The leading American universities and graduate schools are listed among those attended by members of the faculty. Among those listed are: Duke University, University of North Caro lina, Columbia University, Cornell University, Yale University, Univer sity of Tennessee, University of Chi cago, Northwestern University, Uni versity of Michigan, University of Illinois, Peabody College, University of Pennsylvania, Boston University, Massachusetts Institute of Technol ogy, Ottowa University, Pratt Insti tute. Gifts Reported For Dormitory Fund By KATHERINE ELLIS. Donations for the girls’ new dor mitory are coming in slowly, but steadily. These gifts range from five cents to three hundred dollars, and each gift makes us more eager to see the first stones laid and the first ham mers beating on this long desired pro ject. Contributions have been made by the college students, including both the young men and the young women; by faculty and friends; by (Continued on page 8) part of their meagre income, are rep resentative examples of the material sacrifices which President and Mrs. Moore have made for thirty-seven years at Mars Hill College. Coming to Mars Hill in their youth, they have literally given thir- I ty-seven years of their lives to the College and community. The self- denial, the labor, the dreams, the prayers w'hich they have devoted to the institution through a third of a century will never be fully known. They have done their wmrk not for the praise or reward of man, both be ing averse to blatant publicity and having consistently refused to permit any laudation of themselves or their work. Indeed, the fact that they have been so absorbed in their wmrk that they have not been aware that they w'ere doing anything unusual, and were entirely unconscious of their own heroism is one of the glo ries of their service. When President Moore took charge in 1897 the affairs of the College were at low ebb. This part of the country was passing through a period of financial depression; the College was poorly and inadequately equip ped; there w'ere no dormitories, the building which is now Treat Dorm itory being unfinished and sold for debt; under previous administrations the College had been running a de ficit for current expenses. In the face of these discouraging conditions, the trustees leased the institution to President M'oore, themselves assum ing no financial responsibility. Since that day. Mars Hill has never run a deficit for operating expenses; it has steadily grown in physical equip ment, today having an ninety acre campus, eleven buildings for dormi- (Continued on page 4) Society gave its forty-fourth anniver sary. Serving as officers for the occasion wore: President, Joe Dickson, and Secretary, William Hill. The officers of the society during this term are: President, John Fisher, and Secre tary, Edgar Kirk. The speakers for the evening were: Jack Benson, Watkins Blane, Brown- low Hastings, Raymond Midkiff, Tracy Church, Robert Costner, Neil Hartley, Edgar Kirk. Those giving musical numbers were: John Fisher, George Bauman, and Earle Brock man. Miss Mary Sue Barnett was the accompanist for these numbers. The climax of the formal program was a debate between the four best debaters of the Euthalian Society: Tracy Church, Robert Costner, Edgar Kirk, and Neil Hartley. The subject was Resoh’ed: That the Principal Features of the NRA Should Be Con tinued. Church and Costner uphold ing the affirmative side were given a two to one decision by the judges. The highspot of the evening came at the finale when the entire society formed on the stage a beautiful fig ure, using Miss Kathryn Ellis, Presi dent of the Nonpareils to lead. The stage, bathed in soft lights, was deco rated with the society colors, with the throne for the “Fair Nonpareil’’ dominating the scene. Marshals for the occasion were: La- Fayette Wrenn, Chief; Garlon Ham rick, Leslie Griffin, Kathryn Hollo- well, Paulino Livesay, and Evelyn Shepard. The Nonpariel Literary Society of Mars Hill College held a reception in the administration building Saturday evenng, December 8, ^t 8:00 o’clock to celebrate their thirty-eighth anni versary. There were three hundred guests in attendance, who were greeted by th four presidents of the literary so cieties: Miss Katherine Ellis, Non pariel; John Fisher, Euthalian; Eliza beth Denham, Clio; and Lionel Hoff man, Philomathian; Dr. and Mrs. R. L. Moore, and Dean and Mrs. I. N. Carr. Among the guests were facul ty members, former Nons and Eus, and several members of the Clio-Phi society. As the guests assembled, a musical program was rendered in the Clio-Phi Literary Society hall. After which the guests were invited into the Non- Eu hall, where the past, present, and future of Nonpariel was depicted. The past was presented by Dr. Er ma Henderson, a practicing physic ian in Asheville, and a former presi dent of the Nonpariel Literary So ciety. The present was represented by the present ])resident of the Non- pariels, Jliss Katherine Ellis of Clay ton. Miss Plllis was accompanied at the piano by Miss Mary Sue Barnett and John Fisher on the marimba. Immediately following. Miss Mar tha Mao Glazener rendered an essay entitled “Non-Eu”, written by David Ma.shburn, a former Euthalian. This essay deals with the ideals and won derful spirit of the two societies. Miss Mary Stringfield and Calvin Stringfield, Jr., as future Nonpariel and Euthalian members represented the future. Miss Stringfield played a violin solo accompanied at the piano by Miss Mary Sue Barnett. Mr. Stringfield played a piano solo en titled “Tango”. After the society songs, the guests were then given gold keys at memen toes of the occasion, and as keys to pure gold hearts of Nonpariels. The guests then assembled in the Art studio. A large cake in the form (Continued on page 8) 115 Are Enrolled In Music Department Glee Club, Orchestra, Chorus Are Popular. Service Of Staff Totals 414 Years Wednesday evening the follow ing officers were elected for the Philomathian Literary Society: Harold MqGuire, president; Ernest Dudley, vice president; Clay Hem- ric, recording secretary; Ernest Symms, corresponding secretary; Major Arrowood, censon; Erskine Plemmons, treasurer; Carmon C. Green, seer; Thomas Fulk, chap lain; Reid Smith, chorister; Glynn Balch, English critic; Wallace Smith, expression critic; Roland Bittle, fines collector; James Reid, dues collector; Ralph Bowen, news reporter; Charles Fisher, janitor. The 32 members of the faculty and administrative officers on the Mars Hill College staff have served the col lege in aggregate 414 years. The tenure of office for individuals range from one year to thirty-seven years. Nineteen have been at Mars Hill for ten or more years. President and Mrs. Moore have served the college longest, having been at Mars Hill for thirty-seven years. Next to them in point of ser vice are Mrs. Robinson, Miss Bowden, and Mr. Stringfield. The character of the college is in no small degree determined by these who have devoted their lives to Mars Hill through the years. One hundred and fifteen students enrolled in the music department of Mars Hill College this year. As com pared with the enrollment of last year this number shows a consider able increase. The Mars Hill College is becoming widely known for the unusual oppor tunities it affords in the field of mus ic. Courses are offered by well trained teachers of recognized ability in nearly any phase of music that one might desire. Besides the regular curriculum there are several organizations to which students who have shown some degree of musical talent may belong, such as the glee club, orchestra, male chorus, and male quartet. Live Extra-Curricular Organizations Last year the glee club visited a number of churches in Western North Carolina, and gave programs which were very favorably received. The fact that the glee club travels makes it well-known, especially in the western part of the state. The organ ization consists of about thirty-eight members. Plans have been complet ed for trips to be made next semes ter. Since instruction is being given in the playing of most of the impor- (Continued on page 7)