Page Two THE HILLTOP, MARS HILL COLLEGE, MARS HILL, NORTH CAROLINA Hilltop ^^P'ain Living cni High Th'nking'^ Published by th? S'ud-nts of Mar:; Hill College. Mars Hill, North Carolina Entered as second-class matter February 20, 1926, at the postoffice at Mars Hill, North Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Issued semi-monthly during the college year. Subrerirtion Rate: Year, $1; Issue, 5c. MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS I'U'TRiBUTOR OF COLLEGIATE DIGEST “The House Of Connelly” STAFF Edit or-in-C hie j ...Grady Dover Managing Editor - Lowell A. Shive Associate Editors Lynn Starkweather and Mary Lee Ellington •$Qcicty Editor Virginia Agee Fat.uUy Advisors Mildred Hardin, Elise Rose Dons, and Ramon DeShazo CONTRIBUTORS Dot Pearce, Carol Bartling, Shelia Gulley, Marvin Wilson, Winfred Thompson, 'Betty Lee Spainhour, Stanley Smith, Perry Ingle, Robert Brissie, Wallace Brouse Business Manager ■. - Richard C. Proctor ■ Circuation Managers Wilmer Fisher and Wally Brouse Advertising Manager Marvin Wil;on Vol. XV. November 16, 1940. No. 5. Are Youf- Everyone can hear a loud noise, but not everyone appre ciates it. The soft tones of some musical instrument meet with the approval of more people than the loudest noise ever pro duced. Did you ever stop to compare yourself with a sound? Many ,students are loud noises on the campus, not only figuratively speaking but in reality. You can hear them a long time before ithey appear over the horizon. Other personalities in our midst are spft musical notes in tune with the times. They are those people who always seem to fit into any situation. They are not particularly impressive in any field, but they are welcome company in any crowd. As they move about over the campus they greet their associates with a cheery hello that everyone •remembers with a smile for the rest of the day. When one comes in contact with these people on the campus he experi ences' a feeling of indescribable stimulation and elevation. She is small, but when you see her the day starts over— this time with a song. He is just an ordinary, insignificant fel- ilow, but he brings more cheer and friendship than all the big, imporjant people combined. If you are not the person like that, you should be. If you are just on efficient, loud noise ,"ypu are not so many" when compared with lesser sounds about you. —G.D. Co-operation Please What should we value most from our life at Mars Hill if.we had to choose after graduation—teachers? girl friends? bull sessions? studies? As consumingly important as our experiences seem to us 'now, we are aware that our memories cannot be trusted in later years to recall them all. Ten years from now we'd like to be reminded of our student career. What would be more inspiring at the close of a strenuous day than to sit down and review those happy but plenty tough days spent at the best institution in the country? Such inspira tion is at our command. Ten years from now we can live again these very days . . . through our college annual. Al ready there are twelve members on the Laurel staff v/ho have spent about twenty hours each trying to collect from each stu dent a small fee which is necessary to print this book. If the staff did not have to spend so many hours in simply collecting then- their valuable time could be used in assembling material for a bigger and better college annual. Fellow students, what would be more helpful than for us to consider this subscription as one of the various expenses connected with registration? The Laurel is our book, the priceless record of our experiences dt Mars Hill, and we must work together in every way pos sible to help our staff put out a record of these things we want to remember. ^—R-B- Players in The Carolina Playmakers' production of Paul Green's The House Of Connelly, appearing in the Mars Hill auditorium on Thursday evening, Nov. 21, at 8:00 o'clock. Left to right: Douglas Watson as Will Connelly, Harry Davis as Uncle Bob Connellv, and Miss jean Mmvenzie as Patsy Tate. Honor Clubs Meet F or T bird Time Ours Is A Spirit- Have you ever really stopped to analyze your college? Have you ever paused to consider what Mars Hill means to you? Certainly you are here to learn, to equip yourself in your par ticular field in the world about you. But there are thousands of colleges throughout our lapd that will serve very well in that capacity. There ore plenty of schools that will give you an intensive training in the work that you have chosen for your life. Mars Hill is a spirit that is unquenchable. It represents the ultimate in Christian teaching and principle. Whether you are religiously inclined or not you should appreciate the fine stan dards that are possible here through the influence that this atmosphere permits. As we think of this, let us be justly proud of our outstanding school. Let us co-operate to the fullest in every way to further the noble traditions that we have inherited. When we shall have finished our work here, may we leave this school with this spirit burning even brighter than it has ever burned before. Mars Hill and high living are synonymous. Let us become so steeped in this spirit that we will be increasingly enthu siastic about Mars Hill, thrilling at the very word. There is only one Mors Hill, let us never forget. —M.W. On Tuesday night, Nov. 12, the honor clubs of Mars Hill campus met for the third time this semester. The Scriblerus Club met in Edna Moore Dormitory. Each member responded to the roll- call with the name of an exile writer. The theme of the pro gram was "Masters In Exile." The International Relations Club program was centered about the present world prob lems. The French Club met at the home of Mrs. Nona ' Roberts. Since the theme of the pro gram was "The French Revo lution," many interesting pa pers on this subject were read. The Science Club met in Moore Hall, Room 23. The pro gram consisted of a devotion al period, original paper, an explanation and demonstra tion of Boyles' Law, and a talk concerning mental telepathy. The December meeting of this club will be held at the home of Prof. V. E. Wood. The Business Club met in Treat Parlor. The theme of the program was the beginning, development, and application of Gregg Shorthand. The meeting was adjourned with a prayer. 'The Classical Club met at the home of Mr. J. W. Huff. The program was on Mer cury. . On Monday night the Spa nish Club met in Edna Moore Parlor. The program centered around Ecuador. The meeting ended with the singing of Spanish songs. Carolina Playmakers T o Present Drama Here On Thursday In 1918 when the Carolina Playmakers began, Samuel French, leading publishers of plays in the United States and England, considered North Carolina so lacking in dra matic interest that the state had been struck from their mailing lists, not being worth the price of postage to carry their catalogues. But between the shoals of Hatteras and the peaks of the Great Smokies on the west. North Carolina held vast stores for the pioneers of a native drama: stories of the cavaliers, of plantation ne groes, of old country neigh borhoods, and sea islands where the folk-ways and lan guage of Chaucer survive, of a stirring new life of today—■ all gold to the Playmakers of Carolina. In 1918 the Playmakers set themselves to the task of writ ing and producing plays of their own native life. Eight volumes of the Carolina Play makers' plays by student wri ters have been published since then, and they have been received with much en thusiasm on every side. Max well Anderson averred that they are "likely to be of more moment in the history of drama in the United States than the work of all manufac turers and importers of thea trical novelties who are fam ous as producers of Broad way." The Carolina Playmakers will present The House Of Connelly, Paul Green's drama of the Old South, here on Thursday, Nov. 21, at 8:00 (Continued on page 4) CAMPUS PERSONALITIES Cl ork-Duckwor Ih Venifa Penland: Venita, who is secretary of the Nonpareil Literary Society, secretary of the Y.W.A. Coun cil, secretary of the I.R.C., member of the Excelsior B.T.U., member of the Glee Club, and pianist of the Ruth S. S. Class, is from Burnsville, N. C., where she was award ed a medal for good citizen- shio and was the salutatorion. of her class. Pickles and pea- L: nuts are her favorite foods, M and she is allergic to term papers. Again the quotation, th "Still water runs deep," holds th true, for Venita is a very in- se fluential person on the cam- vi: pus and tends to bring out ro the best in her associates. ctr Madge Allen; pi President of the Clio Literary Society, secretary of the B.S.U. Council, an officer of 34. the I.X.L. B.T.U., and a mem- q ber of the Classical Club, t^j- Madge is very important to Mars Hill. In Forest City, N. C., tor her home town, she was vale- tac dictoriem of her class and was pgt awarded a cup for being the cr best all - round in school, ley Madge has a passion for red q neckties, pineapple sundaes, kni and dill pickles. She has no op{ use for fickle boys, and she the dislikes chocolate ice cream. Col "Oh Johnny Oh Johnny" is Do' said to be her theme song, afte She seemingly is blessed with Q perpetual happiness and has Die' always some cheery, encour- met aging word for her compon- lion ions. SCO! Ann (Rickie) Harris: An adorable creature, always ef- fervescing from an unlimited vocabulary. ^eac ,-c-> scor Religious Challenge the You Can Have Peace mos Rob The- "That in me ye might have peace, in the world ye shall have, tribulation, but be of good cheer I have overcome the v/orld." (Seni ship How much these words cane should mean to us! We have seen in the past that peace ^ treaties of man are mere fjjjj. scraps of paper. But the g^j j treaty of peace that we sign with Christ is one that willschc throughout all eternity.'pj-g^ last May we affix our names to Roth that treaty and know that peace that only He con give, is tR Though we should be in the^Qj^j, midst of a bitter struggle for scho existence may we have thatRcty^ heart-filling peace that makes the 1 us brave, that makes us hove in 1 courage and hope. As the in ■; world continues to reject thiSQ; T peace that Christ promised, 6; " let us as individuals accept it '38, with all our hearts. sand Though our world may seem^^'^'’ to go all to pieces let us keep^^ in time with Him that He instill within our souls His|"^® majestic calm. Have you sign*^'^''^^ ed Christ's treaty of peace? ItP^°® takes two parties to make thiS^®^'^ treaty binding — Christ ond^^®^ you. When you have signed^ . this document of peace youT happiness, your preservation, is assured forever. "I havs® overcome the world." M.W. '