i^onta^ue Library Mars Hill CpilesQ Feb. 7, rs Elected 3 Unions Group captains art' Hilda Goode. , XVII ke president is C . Vice-president is" nd mission leader >n |m I las. Group captaiiMlII L. 0111101 and Gena Jo Fant. i..d On 28 nice Dennis, ^ bvce Ellis, GeDr"^ well-known liam Ferguson, correspondent, and i e n n e t h speak in underburk. Viols'^* college auditorium an Gilreath, February 28, at .a Hamby, Don 1"°'^*'’ of the college nita Hill, Sarah P^S^am. ^^‘■^,°'^’y‘C‘8bt year old world ■s, Faye Lavendei has won several awards for ton Nan Long, k in different fields, among )pal McCall, \Vie Peabody Award in Radio, John Madison, endell Wilkie One World ris Miller, Bob INl and the Legion of Honor VIoore, Alicia Offance. He has also written s are Violet Ov| books, including the well- ken, Dottie Phi Berlin Diary and Midcen- Cliffogene Pilk^^^ey, and has written num- irolyn Poston, Jrticles for such magazines as ley Revan, Gailb the Atlantic, Life, and }uelyn Roberts, al, Mildred Scl • n e Simmons, L .Ghicago and reared in Martha SwaTp^^^’ Iowa, he graduated ^mas, Alva College in Iowa. :r, Jeannette \Va„ graduation he \Vatson. " , ^’^^ces and within onths obtained a job on the -^ition of the Chicago Trib- covered such events i-mdbergh landing in 1927 e winter Olympics in 1928. rooving to the home edition ?PT7X.TTT7'n.-?ff^^*^ covered the League “>■« international VTTHEW HAVW009 STKfKT eville, N. C. i eaving the 7rihune in he later worked for the Paris ^ J the Kew York Herald, ipC'^^Continued on Page 4) ir To Participate 'iioral Festival Touring Choir I dvaPT'u College Chor- ®n7"i.°^the Western North National t Mo be iry 28 group will sing three selec- be l ^bich it will ;ne with the other colleges and > oFn^'T^'^ another of 'be direc- 1^- Si!PP West- rth Carolina Teachers’ Col- loves a Vatefc choir began its annual off- ^ ^ch in Burnsviut^ and'th^^'''' .7/ . ■e difjerent and V'^tb at the First — so much fun ch in Weaverville on cene. Better shof of Februarv i HAlmark Valentd . ‘'^ttiary 15 ,, Religious . HE iwco a group sang a ^•sday’s evening Focus Week selection for service. The JDENt i \TEB '»8in in SS'”® Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars Hill College MARS HILL. N. C.. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1953 Number 10 .it A sfc." In India, the rise of Ghandi, and rri Paris, London, h the Balkans, Berlin, and Spivey To Appear In Recital Tuesday Orman Spivey, baritone, a mem ber of the Mars Hill College music faculty, will appear in recit'd Tues day evening, February 24, at 7:30 p. m. in the college auditorium. He will be accompanied at the piano by Miss Alice Martin, also a mem ber of the music faculty as instruct or in piano and violin. The recital program which con sists of six groups, begins with an aria from The Creation (Haydn), "Rolling in Foaming Billows”. Group two features three old Eng lish Art Songs — "Come, Again Sweet Love” (Dowland), ‘Next Winter Comes Slowly” (Purcell), and "Arise, Ye Subterranean W inds (Purcell). The Italian group in cludes "Deh Contentatevi” (Caris- simi), "Plaisir d’amor” (Martini), and from Verdi’s opera. La Travita, the aria, "Di Provenza il mar, il suol”. Among the German Art Songs are "In Meiner Heimal (Trunk), "Auf Eines Altes Bild^ (Wolf) and "Midsummer Night” (Grieg), which will be sung in English. After an intermission Mr. Spivey will sing the popular French aria from Massenet’s opera Herodiade, "Vision Fugitive”. The program concludes with a group of Contemporary Art Songs including "O 'Thou Billowy Harvestfield! (Rachmaninoff), "To L i zb i e Brown” (Finzi), "Rollieum-Ror- um” (Finzi) and "I Hear An Army” (Barber). Mr. Spivey is an instructor in voice and piano, and is the director of the Women’s and the Men’s Glee Clubs. He received his Bachelor of Music Degree in applied voice from Houghton College, Houghton, New York. All students having poems, essa5’s, or other articles which they wish to submit for the Literary Edition are reminded that all material must be in the Hilltop office by February 28. Scholastic Honor Clubs Initiate New Members During the past week honor clubs have been initiating new members. On Monday night, February 16, the Science and Spanish Clubs held their meetings, and on Tuesday, the I7th, the German, Business, Inter national Relations, Scriblerus, French and Orpheon clubs met. The new members of the German Club are Sue Waldrop, Gary Lee Tillman, William Boyce Hegler, Charles Green, Betty Pike, Mar- tha Swanson, Britt Hudson, and Present for the signing of the ehurch contract were: Seated: R. V. Moss, Secretary-Treasurer of the Hickory Construction Company; Bruc Sams, Chairman of the Building Committee; Henry I. Gaines, Architect. Second row: R. Key, estimator; Bryson Tilson, Dean Ralph M. Lee, and the Rev. Lowell F. Sodeman. Church Contract Signed; Construction Begins April 1 Op Tuesday morning, February 10, officials of the Hickory Construc tion Company of Hickory, N. C., signed the final contract for the con struction of the new Mars Hill Baptist Church. Construction will begin on or before April 1, and the new building is expeaed to be completed by the first of June, 1954. The contract price of the build ing, which will include separate rooms for each of the college Sun day School classes and an auditor ium with a normal capacity of 1100, is $284,996. Room for recreation al facilities is planned, as well as a large general assembly room, facil ities for the presentation of relig ious drama, and a choir loft which will seat 60. The total Sunday School capacity will be 700. The building is being constructed on a lot purchased for the purpose and adjacent to Edna Moore dormitory. A planning committee is also at work on plans for a new personage, to be constructed on a lot on the high school ridge road. Construc tion will begin as soon as possible, and the house will be completed by the first of September. The college is purchasing the property on which both the church and the present parsonage stand. In commenting on the comple tion of plans for the project, pastor Lowell F. Sodeman said, "At long last, after many years of planning, we shall have adequate facilities for a well-balanced and comprehensive program of Christian education within the local church. Week by week, student contributions to the unified church budget are helping to cut down the amount of money which must be borrowed to com plete the project.” Societies Prepare For Society Day With Forensic Term well under way both boy’s societies are mak ing preparations for Society Day activities at the end of the year. So ciety Day pits the Euthalian and Philomathian Societies against each other in competitions including temperance readings, orations, dec lamations, and debate. The Philomathian Society has already held contests in temperance readings and orations. Debates are scheduled for February 23, and dec lamations will close the Forensic Term events. Winners in Phi temperance read ing contest were Wayne Cooper and Bobby Wyatt. Emmett Elledge is the alternate. In orations Clinnie Reddick and Bobby Wyatt were se lected to represent Philomathia. Euthalian contests will be held in the near future. Twenty-four Eu- thalians have signed up for the various events. Delegates To Attend Mock U.N. The International Relations Club is planning to send five delegates to the Student United Nations to be held at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee, February 26, 27, and 28. Mars Hill College will be the only North Carolina school taking part in the model of the United Nations General Assembly, and will represent the country of Israel. Three of the delegates, C-II members of the club, are Bill Jones, Talmadge Williams, and Ira Green. C-Is who will attend are Hey ward Moore, Jimmy Potts. Other delegates will attend the assembly from such schools as Alabama Poly technic, the University of Mississip pi, Ohio State University, East Tennessee State College, and Van derbilt University of Tennessee. Prizes will be offered in the form of three cups which will be award ed according to points scored by the delegations. Speakers at the as sembly will include Senator Estes Kefauver, Senator Sherman Cooper, and Congressman Pat Sutton. The assembly is sponsored by the School of Law at Cumberland, in cooperation with the Nashville schools, the Collegiate Council for the United Nations, and the Amer ican Association for the United Na tions. Charles Varni. The program was divided into three parts: the influ ence of German colonists and cul ture in the early history of our coun try, German games, and German songs. Business Club met in Huffman Parlor. The program centered around the ideals of the club. After the program the initiation service for new members was held. The new members are Peggy Huss, Charles Bobo, Bobby Coley, Viola Gallimore, Donald Hammond, Jan et Spangler, Jane Cook, Barbara Priddy, Juanita Hill, Joanne AVatson, Joyce Strickland, Jean Smith, Barbara Beasley, Sadie Rae Dixon, and Geneva Greer. 'The newly elected officers of the Busi ness Club are as follows: President, Ted Buckner; vice president, Har riet Rudd; secretary, Betty King; treasurer, Thomas Lamb; reporter, Doris Hearon. The theme of the Science Club program was "Great Men of Science.” Taking part were Frances Jenkins, Frieda Smithwick, John Lee, and Phil Scett. The new mem bers that were inducted after the program are Alildred Ayers, John Bhke, Ruth Bramlett, Bob Brown, Helen Brown, Cozette Draffin, Mary Ann Elliott, Albert Emory, David Heizer, Richard Hughes, Marie Kornegay, Nan Long, Patsy Meats, Alicia Osteen, Ruth Poston, and John Spicer. New members of the Internation al Relations Club are: Kenneth Freeman, John Madison, Carolyn Royal, Tommy Funderburke, Dot Childer, Geraldine Simmons, Gean Gilreath, Doris Miller, Jackie Rob erts, Wanda McCurry, Violet Over- (Continued on Page 4) Dramateers Select Play For Festival "The Will”, an English play by James Matthew Berry, has been se lected by the Mars Hill Dramateers Club to be given at the annual Car olina Dramatic Festival, to be held April 15-18, at Chapel Hill. The play covers a period of twenty years,, dealing with events which occurred during the reigns of Queen Victoria, King Edward and King George V. The cast consists of one female and six male characters. Tryouts for these parts are to be held March 5, with all interested persons invited to try for the parts. David Morrow, Dottie Phillips, and Alva Wallace were winners at a final dramatic reading con test held in the Playhouse, Feb. 18. They will be a part of the forensic team which will represent the college at Fredericksburg, Vir ginia, at a tournament the first week in April.