QTie Hilltop Published By The Students Of Mars Hill College in 'L. XIV. MARS HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, OCTOBER 7, 1939 NO. 2 SvERY Other Week ay its By CHARLES R. GREENE es, ♦ FOUNDERS’ DAY Mext week is Mars Hill’s birth- r. Students past and present *•*•1 sing praises to her name, and Jjnds will lay Wreaths at her Jeshold. Friends of the college Jen speak of Mars Hill in the ^clinine gender. She is not so ;^inine after all; she doesn’t Je to tell her age. Next week, ■S^ says, is her eighty-fourth $;hday. Her life has been long, ;Jl during a period of eighty- Jr years stories of heroism are ^Qembered and forgotten. Un- Jwn to many of the students J this campus are the stories Jt cling like spider webs to his- ^ y of Mars Hill college. year 1856 is far away, but ^s easy to see a dusky head ^ing heavily in two big, black |ds behind heavy iroii, bars. It E|je head of “Old Joe,’’ the negro e who was taken by contrac- , Shackleford and Clayton, af- ;n’s| they had finished the first ge building in 1856. Old Joe erson must have had a vision outh clamoring for the higher ,gs of life as he waited patient- or his white master to pay debt for the first college ‘^^ding and remove him from he historian will be interested knowing that in 1866 the ich Broad Institute became s Hill college, chartered “with power of conferring all such ■ees and marks of distinction ire usually conferred in col- s and seminaries of learn- he founders of Mars Hill col- were a “little group of will- men’’ who feared only God blazed the way for the beacon education to cast its beams 1 the hills of Western North I'plina. Men like W. A. G. n and Edward Carter Were Washingtons and Madisons of institution, and this genera- should justly honor them, eulogy to the builders of Hm college would be ade- ;e without mentioning Dr. and Founders’ Day To Be Celebrated, Oct. 12, As Alumni Return; Home-Coming Is Planned, Program Of Day’s Events Scheduled NEW SCIENCE BUILDING Above is pictured the architect’s dream of what the new science building will look like when completed. Construction of the edifice will start Saturday, October 14th, in a ceremony conducted at the selected site. The new building will provide the students of Mars Hill with better facilities for science courses. New literary society halls will be included in the structure. Dramateers Meet, Elect New Officers Tryouts Held For “The Ro mantic Age”, Their First Production The Dramatic club met Sep tember 18 and elected officers for the coming year. The following officers were elected: president, Gordon Bernard; vice-president, Mary Corpening; secretary, Anne Lewis; treasurer; Ralph Jinette; reporter, Geraldine Shields. After a brief business meeting, tryouts were held for the fall play, which will be given Octo ber 14. In their first appearance the dramatic club will present a three-act comedy, “The Romantic Age” by A. A. Milne. The cast will include as Henry Knowle, Gordon Bernard; as Mary Knowle, (Continued on page 4) (Continued on page 3) jns To Charter ^^Busses For Games rs^ents Offered Trips To I Three Out-Of-Town Games re . IIS year the students of Mars Cn I college will be given an op- jnity to attend three of the & lall games that will be played Ip- ’ from home. These games be played with Lees-McRae iruce Pine, W. C. C. at Cullo- ■, and Brevard at Brevard, id- icording to Coach Roberts, prices will be as follows: to ce Pine, round trip and t, $1.00; to W. C. T. C., $1.25 d trip, ticket extra; to Bre- inv For the ard-Mars Hill game there be no admission charge for Hill students. These trips be made in chartered Queen buses. Students are asked to lase tickets as early as pos- m order that the number of Cj ' needed for the trips may be n. Founders’ Day Events 10:45A.M.—Program in Au ditorium. Dr. Fred F. Brown will be the princi pal speaker. Music will be offered by the college or chestra and double trio. 12:00 Noon—Lunch served in the college dining hall for visitors and students. 3:00 P. M.—Football game with Lees-McRae at Spruce Pine. 8:00 P.M.—Play, “The Ro mantic Age,” presented by the Dramateers in the col lege Auditorium. “Bazaar Of India” Presented Here By Mr. William Willett Forensic Club Starts New Year Officers Elected, Preliminary Query Chosen As Quarrel ers Start Their Fuss On Tuesday, September 19, a meeting of all previous members of the Forensic club was held in Room 6 of Moore Hall. This meet ing was promoted by Bartlett Dorr for the purpose of reorgan izing the members and arousing interest of talented and public spirited new students on the cam pus. Officers elected to serve for the coming year are as follows: chair man, Martha Lee Grayson; secre tary, James Thomas; general as sistant, Bartlett Dorr. These officials, with the assist ance of Mr. J. B. Huff, announc ed a query to the general assem bly of all debaters and public speakers at the next meeting held on Monday, September 25. The query selected is “Resolv ed that the section on arms and munitions in the Embargo Act of 1935 should be repealed.” Upon announcement of the query, affirmative and negative teams were formed. Seven teams of girls and fourteen teams of men debaters were chosen. Each team will have an opportunity to debate within the next few weeks in preliminary rounds to which the public is invited. The first of these debates will take place on October 9. Through these early skirmishes the students are preparing them selves for clashes on the inter collegiate query, which will be posted within the next few weeks. Professor J. B. Huff, director of forensics here, has been de lighted by the large number of enthusiastic students who are contesting for positions on the varsity teams. “Who is the Czar of India?” asked a certain Mars Hill student last Friday morning. Soon every body was asking the same ques tion. No one seemed to be able to answer it. The new students were looking forward with high hopes to seeing the new Hindu ruler. One student was determin ed to get a little ahead of all the rest. She hastened to the library and consulted one of the largest encyclopedias. First she looked under “India,” but she could not find the Czar of India. Then she looked for “Czar.” Still she could find no information about this In dian dignitary. Finally she asked a faculty member about the Czar of India. With a downcast expres sion she returned to her room and there in the quietness learned from her roommate the horrible truth. There is no Czar of India. According to the announcement in chapel the Czar was coming, but there is no Hindu Czar. Was it all a joke? No, somebody had misunderstood. On Saturday evening, Septem ber 30, Mr. William Willett, lec turer and former engineer who worked in India for six years, presented to the students and fac ulty “Bazaar of India.” Begin ning where the Orient begins. Port Said at the west and of Suez, all present embarked for a trip to India. After passing through the Suez Canal, the group sight ed the place where Moses led the Israelites across the Red Sea. A little farther east Mount Sinai was seen towering to the left of the sea. A brief stop was in Aden, Arabia. Here the first real glimpse of Oriental life was seen. And then came Bombay, with its popu lation of over a million people, its 2600 castes, and its 46 races who speak over 200 languages and numerous dialects. The sacred quarters of the Zorastrians were visited. A bazaar was taking place in one of the market-places, and peoples of all types were crowd ing the narrow streets of this (Continued on page 4) College To Observe Its 84th Birthday ♦ Dr. Fred F. Brown To Be Principal Speaker On Morning Program Commemorating eighty - four years of useful service as an in stitution of higher learning. Mars Hill college will present its an nual Founders’ Day program next Saturday morning, October 12, at 10:45 in the chapel auditorium. The highlight of the morning program will be an address by Dr. Fred F. Brown, pastor of the First Baptist church, Knoxville Tennessee. Dr. Brown, an alum nus of Mars Hill, is one of the outstanding ministers of the South. During the morning program, in which Dr. Brown will speak, a double trio and the college or chestra will present musical se lections. The noon meal,, served in the college dining hall at 12:00, will be open, not only to the stu dents, but also to visitors. In the afternoon, at three o’clock. Mars Hill’s eleven will play Lees-McRae at Spruce Pine and in the evening at 8:00 the dramateers, under the direction of Miss Bonnie Wingert, will present as their first pro duction a three-act comedy, “The Romantic Age,” by A. A. Milne. Gordon Bernard and Emily Pat rick will head the cast. One of the major events of the day will be the breaking of ground to start the construction of the new science building. Several nota bles will take part in the ceremo ny. During the morning program the music department will pre sent a double trio and numbers by the college orchestra. Sebren, New Prof., Develops Good Band Was Former Instructor At Black Mountain High, Berea College Mr. Herbert Sebren, a new ad dition to the faculty of Mars Hill college, has performed the mirac ulous task of organizing an ex cellent college band in the short period of one month. He is the first faculty member to devote his entire time to instruction in wind and other band instruments. Mr. Sebren was graduated from Mars Hill college with the class of ’36. Before entering Mars Hill, he graduated from Asheville high school. He was an instructor at Black Mountain high school for two years before matriculating in ’37 at Berea college, from which he was recently graduated. Although Mr. Sebren was a student in Berea college, he be came assistant director of the band and taught private lessons. In addition to this training he at- (Continued on page 4) D.A.R. To Unveil Grave Marker Near Mars Hill Memorial To Be Erected At Grave of James-Jennings, Early Madison Settler Under the auspices o f the Asheville chapter of the D.A.R., a federal marker today will be unveiled at the grave of James Jennings, Revolutionary war sol dier and one of the first settlers of what is now Madison county. The unveiling ceremony will be held at the little cemetery, near Mars Hill and just off the new Asheville-Johnson City highway, where James Jennings was buried in 1837. Mrs. J. G. Stikeleather will represent the Asheville chapter of the D. A. R. Mrs. Herbert Win ston, of Asheville, Mrs. John Smith, of Mars Hill, and Profes sor J. B. Huff, of Mars Hill, great- great-grandchildren of Jennings, are the committee in charge .>f arrangements. Jennings enlisted for service in the Revolutionary war in Colonel Adam Stephen’s Virginia regi ment and fought in the battles of Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine, and Germantown and, according (Continued on page 3)