Newspapers / Mars Hill University Student … / Oct. 27, 1951, edition 1 / Page 1
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Oct. IS. 195 nts ings ormal and Ir sic of the pr he meeting o'olume XXVI s Club held 1 : at 6:30 Mo lat kind of i used for described t smbers of tl iche Richari tions and t of the atteni fes describ e clothes use' dding; Jewi the duties e decoratio iception. Lo votion on th idding.” ^Ke Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars HiU College * MARS HILL. N. C.. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1951 Number 3 :e note. )r the ban«- ondays m ^ !^..jj^ramateers Take Stage Nov. 9 '^odeman Has ILead Role K OF Or. Chester Swor 1^0 Appear Here In Chapel Program ^ ^-Chester Swor, nationally ; ^ ° lecturer and conference j ^ will speak during the col- ®ge chapel period on Wednesday, tlctober 31 Dj, • owor, a native of Mississippi, T I Ki from Mississippi T I O N Pollege for Men, his M.A. from the INA R K hifof North Carolina, and L ,from Baylor University. ^ ^ professional diploma in ^Pce from Columbia Univer- T_. rias also attended Oxford diversity. Ifo^fh ®Wor has been abroad twice U . ® purpose of attending youth erences. Prior to 1942 he was i n a Ifess*^ Associate Pro- -xjjjjj^^uglish at the Mississippi rs c e 1 :y ; 1, at uie mississippi for Men. Since 1942 he has veled an average of 45,000 ®^oh year in Southern Bap- Pur ”^'^oPfion territory for the of lecturing and leading year '^°*'^orences. For several fire'^* Swor has led the camp- R Q ®orvices at Ridgecrest during “•S.U. Week. Underwood, Jolley 'n Attend Meeting iftar/** ^'^olyn Underwood and Mr. ^ill 'Volley will represent Mars Itbg 'College History Department at era meeting of the South- historical Association, in an,j ^^°«iery, Ala., November 8, 9, Win with China and Russia *'0pics ^ outstanding thrgg*,^®^ discussions during the of ^y Session. Avery 0. Craven be tu ^ University of Chicago will 0 the 1 '^'siiy 01 jjj, o®-Pquet speaker, trip 4*' Jolley will also make the o Montgomery. The story revolves around the father, a genius in speeding up production in factories, who be lieves the same methods he uses in factories can be applied to the rearing of his twelve harum- scarum children. The complications his theory presents, and the rebel lion of his oldest daughter, who is beginning to have a mind of her own, keep the play moving at a fast pace. Other membei-s of the cast are as follows: Mrs. Gilbreth, the mo ther, Nancy Wright; Anne, Joan Schwab; Frank, Glen Holt; Ernes tine, Mary Anne Jones; Martha, Patsy Stubbs; Fred, Tommy Rob erts; Lillian, Barbara Donehoo; Bill, Charles Varni; Dan, Carter Elmore; Jackie, Llewellyn Lan ders; Julie, Betty Albert Sodeman; Dickie, Eric Blackwell; Bobbie, Larry Fowler; Mrs. Fitzgerald, the housekeeper, Margaret Wilson; Dr. Burton, the family doctor, Jack Loadman; Joe Scales, a cheer leader, Ralph Riley; Miss Brill, a teacher, Rowena Gee; Larry, a boy friend, Bart Daniel. Members of the Dramateers, dramatics class, and Mr. Robert son’s art education class are co operating in the staging of the play. Committees are as follows: Staging, Ralph Riley (manager), Frank Burton, Jack Buckner, Bob Herring, and Joe Hucks; Sound Effects, Gentry Crisp and R. L. Crisp; Lighting, Archie Jones and Ben Hensley; Costumes, June Grubb and Rowena Gee; Publicity, Grimes Creason (chairman), Mar- that Anne Reeves, Pat Pinson, Mary Ausband, Anne McGuire, Anne Carter, Christine Ferrell, and Ethel Evans. Hudspeth, McCarn, Gibson Lead Halls Three of the four campus literary societies have announced election results for the anniversary-reception term. Leading the societies as presidents are: Phyllis McCorn, Clio; Margaret Huds peth, Nonpareil; and Jim Gibson, Philomothia. All of the presidents moved up from the vice-presidency. ~ ^ Euthalians were planning elec- Campus Observes Annual UN Day the band or ng an appeaj lay any typ^ tid especiallj trombone above is the cast for Cheaper By The Dozen. Left to right are Larry Fowler, Eric Blackwell BpHv er Barbara Donehoo, Llewellyn Landers, Patsy Stubbs, Mary Anne Jones Jean Schwab ns an ^^/rigS'^""’ Charles Varni, Glen Holt, and Tommy Roberts. Standing in reL are Mnl^deman^ need of us Lowell F. Sodemcm, pcBtor of the Mars Hill Baptist Church, will ploy the lead role of the father in "Cheaper By The Dozen " Perrv Claris adc^trtion of the best-seller, by Frank Gilbreth and Ernes- tme Gilbreth Corey. The play, the fall production of the Drama teers, will be presented on Friday evening, November 9 at 8'00 o'clock, in the college auditorium. Mrs. Elizabeth Watson is di recting the play. Music Department Announces Plans For Choral Clinic Mars Hill will hold its fourth annual high school choral clinic on February 8, and 9. Select members of high school glee clubs and their directors are invited to take part. A group of nearly two hundred of these musicians will rehearse two days on a selected glee club repertoire which they have been assigned to learn prior to the time of the clinic. They will present a program of this material on Satur day night of February 9, for the public, for which performance a large number of out of town guests are expected. The clinic committee reports that Mr. Arnold E. Hoffman, State Supervisor of Public School Music, has agreed to direct the clinic chorus. Famous Violinrst Plays in Series Miss Claire Wellman, violinist, of Minneapolis, Minn., appeared in recital in the Mars Hill College au ditorium on Saturday, October 13. Miss Wellman was the original “Evelyn And Her Violin” with Phil Spitalny’s all-girl orchestra, was with Major Bowes for a time, and more recently has played as “Eve lyn” on the Hour of Charm. The violin used by the artist was made in 1781. Included in the re cital, which was in the lyceum series, were both classical and mo dern numbers. United Nation Day was observed on the Hill on October 24. During the day’s chapel period a program was given by the International Re lations Club explaining the United Nation’s purpose and the things it had accomplished. Taking part on the program wei-e Jim Greene, Carl Cannon, Gene Roberts, and Lionel Cornel, who led a men’s choral group in singing a Russian hymn. Miss Un derwood was in charge of the pro gram. United Nations Day is an inter national event intended to ac quaint the people of the world with the United Nations, its plans and purposes. Drive Ends For Station V^agon; BSU Buys Chevy A station wagon was purchased by the Mission Council Wednesday when Corbin Cooper, chairman of the drive received a thirty dollar check. This check completed the goal of $1400 set by the mission council earlier. Contributions were received from individual students, faculty members, home churches, and friends of the students. The station wagon will be used by the council for getting to and from places where they are spon soring mission work. The drive, which lasted about three weeks, was initiated when the Mission Council unanimously agreed that a new station wagon was needed. The old one had caus ed trouble and had a center of gravity that the council felt was entirely too high for mountain driving. tions as the paper went to press. Other Clio officers elected in cluded the following: Bea Adams, vice-president; Rachel Granger, secretary; and Jewel Beauford, censor. Nonpareil officers are: Nancy Wright and Freida Styles, vice-presidents; Martha Looper, secretary; and Sarah Thomas, cen sor. Officers for Philomathia in clude: Bill Leary, literary vice- president; Ed McGowan, anniver sary vice - president; Jim Green, secretary; and Bill Jennings, cen sor. Officers will begin work on an niversary and reception programs immediately. Try - outs for debat ing, declaiming and oratory for the biggest events in the society year have already been announced by the officers, while the vice-presi dents are making arrangements for the anniversary finales and re ceptions. Euthalian and Nonpareil will present their programs on Thanks giving and the following Saturday, while Philomathia and Clio will present their programs a week and two weeks later respectively. MHC Forensic Club Divides In Groups The campus Forensics organiza- will be divided into two groups this year. There will be a division for debating and another for oratory. Mr. Jolley and Miss Underwood will be sponsors for the debate teams. The debate topic this year deals with whether or not price control and permanent wages should be adopted. Ramon DeShazo will be the sponsor for orations, declamations, after-dinner speaking and im promptus. Mrs. Watson, in connec tion with her work in dramatics, will have charge of the dramatic readings. BSU Members to State Convention Forty had paid their registration fee for the B.S.U. Convention in Charlotte as the paper went to press. Many more were expected to sign up. The group is to leave here on Friday, November 2, in char tered buses. The Twenty-Second Annual Convention of Baptist Students in North Carolina will be held at the First Baptist Church in Charlotte on November 2-3-4. Approximately one thousand students represent ing forty colleges and universities of North Carolina will be in at tendance. Homes of Charlotte church people will be open to en tertain these students on Friday and Saturday nights. Attend Annual in Charlotte The theme of the convention is: “Christian Frontiers.” The follow ing platform addresses are plan ned: Dr. George Heaton, Myers Park Baptist Church, Charlotte, “The Frontiers Of Friendship”; Dr. J. B. Weatherspoon, Southern Baptist Seminary, Louisville, Ky., “Venturing In Worship”; Dr! George Kelsey, New York, N. Y., Exploring In Stewardship”; Dr. John Wayland, North Wilkesboro, “Claiming Our Sonship”; Miss Ina- belle Coleman, Missionary to China, “The Frontiers Of Chris tian Missions”; Miss Beverly Neil- son, G r e e n V ille, S. C., “Aloha From Hawaii.”
Mars Hill University Student Newspaper
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Oct. 27, 1951, edition 1
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