Newspapers / Mars Hill University Student … / Jan. 14, 1956, edition 1 / Page 1
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HILL UULLtbt RIAL LIBRARY December ir Stude^^^ To You Ratk CTKe Hilltop 1 On Your Exams Published by the Students of Mars Hill College Graduated At liars Hill Colld= ail Elliott, DonKXX ckwell, and Joam t place ratings n. 1 , ''itrifCTudents Will week-end at Booi State Teachers St to the ten pai es which are: U. , J /1| Tech, East Tertcfiif q llnqa ewman, Gardner^ vlUOV d Henry, Lenoir ^ „ . , ^ville Hill College is graduating IHottl a freshmat™ts at the end of this, 1 won his fin These students are J. Ls. men’s after-dinneJ’-*’ Fred Parsons. Kroe, sophomorfDuyck, Jr., is a veteran , Md., men’s impg from Asheville and a ing; Kroe and major. He is a member I sophomore fronH"Club and President of men’s problem s(T. F. He plans to enter \dams, Memphis, orest College. , women’s poetryParsons is a veteran from of these speaker:, Alabama. He is a social ition with from najor and plans to trans- lividual speakers Mississippi College. Fred’s le former Audrey Hope Stogner, a sopl Columbiana, Ala., will rlotte, placed sec© same college as a junior tion, David Wri| >r Lenoir Rhyne individual debate — lond‘best"‘¥h:?»an To Direct ition with eighte^l 1 PI* • and eighteen nillOrai UlDlC Men’s division in annual High School 'Xnfa'i;? tS>i Febtua^ 10 and 1C !1 was ranked s^t director will be Dr. A. and Norman supervisor of ton, Virginia, ma l v ‘ • Hill team. , • 1: It gives an opportunity MARS HILL, N. C., SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1956 Ntimber 7 Pictured above are the presidents of the nine scholastic Honor Clubs. They are (seated), left to "ght; Wayne Nunn, Fr^ch, Joyce Genton, Spanish; Doris Phillips, Orpheon, and William Deal, Science. Standing in the same order a^; Harry Mamlm, German, Vernon Culpepper, Scriblerus; Hugh Freeze, International Rela tions; Lamar Robinson, Logothia, and Fieldy Dize, Business. Mem bership in an honor club denotes high scholarship m all courses pursued and particularly in one course. Freshmen who meet re quirements will be invited to join one of the clubs at the first meeting next semester. Orpheon-Scriblerus Hold Fifth Annual Joint Meet One of the most keenly anticipated meetings of the Orpheon and Scriblerus Honor Clubs was held Tuesday, January 10, at 7:30 p.m. in Edna Moore Parlor. This was a joint meeting of these two honor clubs. A program presenting the life of Edith Sitwell in Literature and Music was the subject of discussion. Those taking part on this program were Vernon Culpepper, greetings; Doris Phillips, response; Jimmy Taylor, devotional thought; Nita Luffman, “The Fabulous Sit- Laurel Beauty Group Named Fieldy Dize, editor of the wells”; Martha Barnette, “Ger trude Stein”; Sandra Hickman Sitwell, Edith Sitwell by Stein; Mary Elizabeth Kenyon, Heart and Mind by Sitwell; and Sylvia Brissie, Facade, 1923-1949. Music was furnished for the Facade by ented singers in Western denly there was (Carolina to associate and a multitude Vith others of like talent; 3st praising Goo j|. endeavors to stimulate ry to God in the^mjgj^|.g ^-be directors earth peace, gooi,j^g with them to greater en- Luke 2: 13-ljn for the finest in choral and to finer performance rds. ER’S clinic this year consists of indents and 22 directors, inting 22 schools. The two- ^RT?\/Tr^7rogram includes many re- ^ ■'■'^Ys, but will be interspersed ES YOU and conferences, re in periods, and entertain- •UR CAR The climax of the two-day T Til Tr , will be a concert at 7:30 lave The Verj,,y February 11. est of Holida'f^^^^^ and their high schools *aul B. Fry, Albermarle; Butt, Bakersville; Mrs. Friday, Dallas; Talmage p'LQRXS^'^^’ Erwin; Martha E. Wired Anywherasson, Glen Alpine, Earl H. • Fine Selection Hendersonville; L. S. FOR CHRiSTM^g-Cole, ^ Mountain; Henry Clay Ed- :"x Mars Hill; Bob Black, • 1 . Holly; Joshua Tyler, New- cial Christmas (;^onover; Woodfine C. ^es 75c and $les, Owen; Mrs. J. M. Win- shing You A Rosman; Mrs. Helen C. Y CHRISTMA&e, Rutherfordton-Spindale; and a Ramona B. Rhodes, Saluda; Y NEW YEAR Alice W. Turner, Shelby; Margaret S. Muse, States- E. E. Sloan, Troutman; Ramona B. Rhodes, Try on Schools; George Wilson, ese; Mary Louise Clements, :es Central; and Charles L. , Jr., Waynesville. Thirty-Three New Students; Three From Other Countries Mars Hill College is admitting thirty-three new students tor the second semester of 1955-56. These students include seven girls an twenty-six men. One student has attended IVIars Hill previous y and is returning. Among the courses to be taken by the students will be Art, Liberal Arts for Men and W^omen, Civil and Electrical Engineering, Law, Commerce, Pre-medical, Nursing, Elementary Teachers, Business, and Physical Education. Second Semester Registration Slated January 30, 31 ^ — J VV CVO A CiX JLV.^4. -X. —J Laurel, has released the names of Phyllis Curtis, Bill Gibson, Joe seven girls chosen by student vote Scab, Paul Caudill, Mr. Robert to appear in the beauty section of the L«wrH. They are: Jo Weber, International Relations a religious education major from jjonor Club program Monday, Statesville; Margaret Anne Mat- January 9, in Stroup Parlor was thews, Florence, S. C., who is tak- centered mainly on Europe. It ing a secretarial course; Donnie featured a visit to England and Smith, pursuing a liberal arts France and other countries education, from Lincolnton; Mona through the use of picture slides Hyde elementary education. At- which Miss Evelyn Underwood, lanta ’ Ga.; Gail Love, science, of the History Department, made from’ Asheville; Peggy Haynes, while on a tour of Europe this Asheville, taking elementary teach- past summer. Following this, a er’s course; and Dot Walker, who short talk on the recent French is majoring in mathematics, from election, which has completely Burlington. (Continued on Page 4) Dean Lee has released the plans for second semester regis tration. All students are urged to see their advisors for preliminary registration some time between January 13 and January 21. This is very important and every stu dent expecting to register for the second semester must see his or her advisor during the period in dicated above. Registration will take place in the large room on the ground floor of Spilman in what was the Reserve Library. All first year students will register Monday, January 30, and all second-year students will register Tuesday, January 31. Class work for the second semester will begin at eight o’clock Wednesday, Febru ary 1, 1956. easons reetings To bu All rs. Locke Robinson, a member he library staff, underwent jry for an eye ailment at As- :is HILL Park Hospital in Asheville T? 1V/T A Christmas holidays. * T?nKincnn ^ rpQiVlpnl- nf Robinson is a resident of ■s Hill. Beginning Monday, Feb ruary 6 (7:30 A. M.) and going through Saturday, February 11, students^ may come by the President’s of fice and sign up for the room which they will occupy during the 1956-57 session. Your present room will be held for you until Monday, February 13. Six states and three foreign countries are represented by the students. The foreign countries are Alaska, Korea, and China. The former student returning is Roy Holder of Greenville, South Carolina. Entering from North Carolina are; Mary Leigh Ball, Diana Jo Clark, Lois Marie Potts, Thomas Clark Brown, Grover Cleveland Cauthen III, John William Ens- core, Robert Randolph Huddles ton, Jimmie Lee Matthews, Joseph M. Reeves, Jimmie Lee Steels, Richard B. Telfair, Jr., Jere Cooper Thompson, Thomas Need ham Park, Jr., and Thomas Car rol Williamson. From Florida come David La- Verne Duncan, William Porter May, William Carlton Perry, Jr., and John Douglas Rooks. Coming from Virginia are Mrs. Georgie Lee McKnight Edwards, Marilyn Edal Wood, Hubert Beazley Douglass, Delmar Hector Igo, Jr., and Allen Ljnthicum Spruill. South Carolina is represented by Frances Rebekah Gillespie, David Lorrain Eagerton, and “J” “W” Rhyne. Others are Lillian Sung, China; Sei Man Chang, Korea; Robert James, Anchorage, Alaska; Ed ward Timothy Kenny, Jr., New York; Yong Sung Pyun, Korea, and Edward Hally Weber, Jr., Maryland. In the absence of Mrs. Robin son, Miss Daisy Anderson, former head librarian of the college, has been assisting in the library. Shakespeare May Bi 'His Own Granpaw As a controversy currently rages concerning the actual authorship of the plays attributed to Shakes peare, the January 2, 1956, Asheville Citizen reports a plan to gain new information on the subject and the Yale University Press facsimile edition of the Firet Folio of the plays, published in 1623, goes into its third printing. The book, known as the fac simile edition of Mr. William Shakespeare’s Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies has recently been acquired by the Miemorial Library. The edition presents photostatic copies of the original pages which have been reduced by about one- fifth for more convenient han dling. The book also contains a large print of the Droeshout por trait of Shakespeare, several poems written in honor of Shakespeare, and a Table of Contents called the “Catalogue” which lists the thirty-five plays in the folio, some seventeen of which had never been published before and in all prob ability would have been lost alto gether if it had not been for the work of Shakespeare’s friends and admirers, John Heminge and Hen ry Condell, editors of the 1623 edition. The original copies of the First Folio sold for one pound in 1623, but today the most recent sale of one copy brought its own er $100,000. Shakespeare himself never made any effort to see that his plays were published during his lifetime. Reasons for this were that most printers did not follow stage directions, that plays were often lost as companies moved from theatre to theatre, and actors often refused to give up their copies for fear reading the playa would cut attendance. New light may be thrown on the Shakespeare controversy in the near future when an old tomb in the County Kent Church in Eng land is opened. The tomb contains the remains of one Thomas Wal- singham, an admirer of Christo pher Marlowe who, according to Calvin Hoffman, a New York writer and investigator, wrote the plays attributed to Shakespeare. Advocates of this theory think that Marlowe was not killed in a tav ern brawl as has long been sup posed, but was hidden away by his friends as he wrote the plays. This seclusion was necessarj^ to protect Marlowe who was being sought for suspected treason. In order to get the plays before the public, says the theory, a young country bumpkin, come to the city to seek his fortune, was picked to be their “author,” and so he has remained in the minds of men ever since. However, the theorists do not think the patron Walsinghan would have let this great secret be perpetrated forever and so may have left some evidence to prove the truth in his final resting place. In the January edition of Col lege English, William Frost of Santa Barbara College treats the (Continued on Page 4)
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Jan. 14, 1956, edition 1
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