crch 15, 19! oir ata ENJOY SPRING Q*he Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars Hill College ATTEND CONCERTS Seven La by Theodo 2d during rvice, Mar on of J. E soloists we \nne Webe Chapma aid Deato i former st ollege, grad now atten e of the Ut rolina. E :ian in Ash lerts will I r the Bapti tivals durii 10-14. T( ill be hel e judging the state i isboro, Kin )urham, at ch 14, M one of thr High Scho gh Point. se party tot liege, Fridt e theme v' ^rld.” Jei for the tef er the met graduate ' Among tl srincipal o( Ison, form' noon, durit the Y. W.; :hosen, belt le afternot officers wt , Janie D> 'ollege; Vit 'ale Rodgel ;; Secretat Vingate O therine “Windov da Wat' idow Pad Idry, leeting c>' ock Sund Volume XXXn Tlelson-Tledl To Perform A piano concert by the duo- piano team. Nelson and Neal, will be given May 3, at 8 o’clock in the college auditorium. Selec tions will be taken from the works of great composers. “Fugue in G Minor” by Bach, “Fantasy in F Minor” by Schubert, “The Car nival of the Animals” by Saint Saens, and “La Valse” by Rauel a few of the selections to be included on the program. Miss Nelson (Mrs. Neal in private life) was Australia’s lead ing child prodigy and was brought to this country by Eugene Or- otandy in 1944. While studying with Rudolf Serkin at the Curtis Institute she met and fell in love with Harry Neal who was study- •ng there with the renowned pedagogue, Mmme. Isabelle Ver- gerova. In the nine years since they met while studying at the famed Cur- ris Institute in Philadelphia, Miss Nelson and Harry Neal have be come one of the world’s most popular and distinguished two- Piano teams. They have been leatured on their own television 2nd coast-to-coast radio series, and nave played 661 concerts on two continents in the last seven years. Nelson and Neal are noted lor Aeir tasteful transcriptions, al- though they specialize in original nterature. Recently, their life story was featured in Ladies Home Journal, Inter dramatized over CBS-TV 2nd is soon to be published (by Rippincott) in Mr. Neal’s own ''’ords in an autobiography Wave Yo« Pass! MARS HILL. NORTH CAROLINA. SATURDAY. APRIL 26, 1958 Number 13 :ions will arch 19 : commid' ^ the ball p now. EW ind id ^ost crutifuliy ng nea^ whcrt :eep otJl >1—ON^ RS Business Alumni Slates Banquet The twentieth annual meeting the Business Club Alumni As sociation is being held today, April During the banquet, the name *^1 the Business Club Medal Win- '’ct will be announced. This 2Ward is presented at Commence- '^cnt to the member of the Busi- •^css Club, in the graduating class, "^1^0, in the opinion of the faculty 'Members of the Business Depart- l^cnt, has best measured up to the 'oeals of the club. Three events will take place opring the day. The regular busi- Pess meeting is scheduled to be Pcld at 4:30 p.m. in Moore Hall. 6:30 p.m., a banquet will be S^tved in Coyte-Bridges Dining . 2II. A reception will be held the faculty lounge at 9:30 p.m. I Pose attending these various ’jPetions will be present members the Business Club, alumni of ,!*c club, faculty members of the , Psiness Department, and admin- '^ftative officials. Harold Abernathy of Charlotte, PPvv serving as president of the o^Pciation, will be in charge of I ® meeting. Other officers are jPpn Lackey, vice-president, and ^tbara Stewart, secretary, of (Continued on Page Four) Stoessel’s “Suite Antique.” Dr. and Mrs. Alden are gradu ates of Oberlin Conservatory. They formerly taught music at Meredith College, and Dr. Alden now teaches at the University of North Carolina. They are the parents of two daughters, whom they are bringing on their visit to Mars Hill. Dr. Schanhan, who is retiring this year, has taught organ and graduate work in Theory for many years in the University of North Carolina. He comes from a long line of musicians, and his mother taught the royal children of Germany. He is the author of several books on folk music, the latest being released by the Duke University Press in December, 1957. His wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Souther Schinhan, is a former voice teacher in Mars Hill College. Dr. Schinhan has recently do nated to the college library a generous collection of music in cluding many rare and out of print compositions. The collection which is now being catalogued, is an addition to a previous gift by Dr. Schinhan. Further details will be given at a later date. Following the concert an in formal reception honoring the musicians will be held in the par lor of Spilman dormitory. Mem bers of the faculty in the Music Department will be hosts. Friends of the honorees, faculty and staff, and their wives and husbands will be guests. Fete To Honor iew BSll Fonndl The retiring BSU Council will give a banquet Tuesday evening, April 29, for the new council members. The theme for the banquet is “Symphony of Life.” The main speaker will be the Rev. Jerry F. Potter of Portland, Oregon, now a resident of Thom- asville and missionary to the deaf in North Carolina. The newly-elected BSU Coun- cill was installed in an evening service at the Mars Hill Baptist Church, April 13. Installed in a candlelight service were Allen Freeman Page, president; Sue Campbell, first vice-president; Karen Hopkins, second vice-presi dent; Martha (2olburn, third vice- president; Sally Rigsbee, secretary; David E. Price, treasurer; Ray Otis, publicity; Bob Freund, mu sic; Bob Blanton, Sunday School; Eugene Funderburke, Training Union; Albert Blackwell, town representative; Loretta Duncan, Y.W.A., President; Nancy Car- roll, Volunteers for Christ; Will iam Snider, Brotherhood; Kath leen Satterfield, Y.T.C.; Donald Van DeVeer, mission council chairman; Gerald Roper, min isterial conference; and James Northcott, Methodist Student Representative. Tuck, Charmichael To Rule Over May Day Celebration Rae Tuck of Atlanta, Georgia, will be crowned May Queen by her escort Joe Arnold, of Bristol, Virginia, in the amphitheater Saturday, May 3, in the annual presentation of the May Court. Barbara Car michael of Thomasville will serve as Maid of Honor. Court attendants representing the sophomore class will be Bea Champion, Jama Keene, Carolyn Laughlin, Ann Reid, and Barbara Dale Rodgers. Janet Caudle, Mary Lawrence, Beverly Rogers, Sandra Rogers, and Peggy BeShears are Dr. Hoyt C. Blackwell, Mrs. Ida Lee Hutchins Felch, Mr. James Jackson Harris, Jr., and Mrs. Harris were participants in the cere mony on Friday, April 18, in the Mars Hill Baptist Church, dedicating the Ida Lee Hutchins Felch Foundation, which is being established as a living foundation for Mars Hill College. Mr. Harris presented the initial gift of an undisclosed amount on behalf of his wife and himself, then delivered the dedicatory address. Dr. Blackwell accepted the foundation for the college. Dr. Raymond Nelson gave the invocation and the benediction; and John C. Christian played the processional and recessional. The foundation is unrestricted and is to be used in whatever way college authorities deem wise. Mr. Harris, a resident of Charlotte, is a graduate of Mars Hill, class of 1957. Recital To Be Given By Duo-Violinists A recital by Dorothy and Edgar Alden, duo-violinists assisted by Jan Philip Schinhan, pianist, will be presented at 8 o’clock April 26, in the college auditorium. Included on the program will be Henry Purcell’s “Golden Sonata,” George Philipp Teleman’s “Sonata in G for Two Violins,” Bach’s “Trio Sonata in C Major,” Bahuslau Martinu’s “Three Madrigals for Violin and Viola,” Christian Sendings “Allegretto and Adagio” from “Serenade, opus 92,” and Albert Music Graduates Present Recitals Mars Hill College Department of Music will present in graduat ing recital Monday evening. May 5, Jean Cox, mezzo-soprano; Joe Purcell, pianist; and Thomas Teague, baritone. Miss Cox, from Hartsville, S. C., has studied voice for two years with Rufus Norris and is a piano pupil of Miss Anna Hines. She is a member of the College Choir, and has also been soloist in the church choir. She was so prano soloist for the performance of Bach’s “Christmas Oratorio” last December. Among her num bers wil be “Thanks Be to Thee” by Handel and “L’Amour Est Un” from Bizet’s Carmen. A piano major studying with John Sinclair, Joe Purcell has a minor in voice under Rufus Norris. His selections will include “Preludes I and II” by George Gershwin; “Etude, opus 10, No. 3” by Chopin; and “Lotus Land” by Scott. Joe comes from Raleigh and has been for two years a member of the College Choir. From Kernersville, Tom Teague has studied voice for two years with Rufus Norris. He has been a member of the College Choir during both his years at Mars Hill and was baritone soloist for the December ’57 performance of Bach’s “Christmas Oratorio”. Tom also has a piano minor, studying with John Sinclair. He will sing “So Appears Thy Holy Day”, Bach; “Non Vogl’io Se Non Vederit”, Scarlatti; “Avant de Quitter ces Lieux”, Gounod; and “An Old Song Re-sung”, Griffes. Apppearing in graduating re cital on April 21, were Gerald Deaton, tenor; Thomas Reynolds, baritone; and Cynthia Waldrop, pianist. Edith Shepherd was ac companist. The program included the fol lowing numbers sung by Gerald Deaton: “If With All Your Hearts” from Elijah, Men delssohn; “Le Charme”, Chaus- son; “Bonjour Suzon”, Delibes; “La Donna e Mobile” from Rigoletto, by Verdi. Miss Wal drop played two movements of “Sonata in F Major” by Mozart; “Minuet and Trio in B Minor”, Schubert; “Nocturne, Opus, 54 no. 4”, Grieg; and “Clog Dance” by Hanson. Thomas Reynolds sang the reci tative and aria “Lord, God of to represent the freshman class. Paula Sams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Sams of the mathematics department, will act as crown bearer. Featured as the entertainment will be a play entitled, “The Ro mance of the Willow Plate” by Ethel Van De Veer. In the cast will be Bryan Miller as the Man darin ; Lynn Sowder, Koongsee- see, his daughter; Ronnie Mont gomery, Chang, the Mandarin’s secretary; Ronnie Montgomery, the property man; Anna Owens, Victoria Norris, and Rhuemma Rae Tuck Carter will act as incense hearers. The play is a Chinese tragi comedy consisting of a prologue and seven fragments which tells the legend of the blue willow plate pattern. The story follows the tragic love affair between the Mandarin’s daughter, Kongsee-see and Chang, the secretary. There is a bridge extending between Mandarin’s house and Chang’s which the lovers are forbidden to cross over. Above the bridge are two doves which represent the spirits of the lovers. Abraham” from Elijah by Men delssohn ; “Pieta, Signore”, Stra- della; “Je ne veux pas autre chose”, Widor; and “Non piu andrai” from Le Nozze Di Figaro, Mozart. Gerald and Thomas sang the duet “Solenne in Quest ’Ora” from La Forza Del Destino, by Verdi. Gerald is a native of Green wood, S. C. He is a member of the College Choir and the church choir and has been both vice- president and president of the Orpheon Club. Thomas is li- hrarian of the College Choir and has been president of the Orpheon Cluh. He comes from Clifton Forge, Virginia. Cynthia is from Greenville, S. C. She is a member of the church choir and the campus choir.