Page Two THE HILLTOP. MARS HILL COLLEGE. MARS HILL. N. C. September 23. 1961 Septembi The Campus Paper Begins Anew With this issue the Hilltop marks a new be ginning — a new year, a new staff and a new faculty advisor. We hope it will be the begin ning of a fruitful and enjoyable year. At pres ent the staff is incomplete and inexperienced, but we are eager to learn. A smile when you offer your criticism will go a long way toward making the latter more welcome. A new feature of the paper is the addition of Dick Bibler’s famous cartoon “Little Man on Campus.” We chuckled over the 140 samples, and we believe you’ll chuckle over the 14 selec tions we made. (If you want to see the other 126, drop by the Hilltop office sometime after we finally get established in The Office Building — formerly The Old Music Building.) If you want to get a little ink on your thumb and try your hand at helping put out a bi-month ly campus newspaper, watch the bulletin boards for an announcement of the first staff meeting early next week. There’s work enough for every one who’s willing to. Next issue is scheduled for October 7. If your club or campus organization is doing something newsworthy, let us know. If you ve got an idea for a good editorial, develop it, write it out and let us talk with you about it. The Hilltop is supposed to be a student newspaper! Library Staff Is Eager To Serve The library staff and student library assistants welcome you to Memorial Library for study and research. The advantage of knowing how to use the library facilities properly will enable you to take part in college activities sooner. By knowing how to find library materials you can get your assign ments faster and will make better grades. Do you have a sheet of the New Library Poli cies for this year? You will profit by carefully reading it. It is newer than the one in the red Library Handbook. It is posted on bulletin boards throughout the library. The Library Handbook is like a road map to you on your important college journey. You are encouraged to keep it with you all the time and use it for reference. All organizations, including the societies, are asked to talk with a library staff member about available materials for programs and projects. Every student is invited to enjoy our displays and bulletin board in the library lobby. A list of the new books in the library will be posted on the bulletin board. —Thelma Taylor. Published by the Students of Mars Hill College QTie Hilltop PRESS LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS College Nurse Starts African Adventure A life-long dream of being a foreign mission ary has come true for Miss Eva Brewer, resident nurse in the college infirmary who flew to Africa earlier this month. She will be back in time to resume her duties when school opens in September 1962, but this year will be the thrill of a lifetime for the mis- sions-minded volunteer who was 60 in August. " Now WMV CANT TH' OP YOU QUN& i4lT HAKO iN UKe WlTZSKY^ Miss Brewer’s assignment to the Baptist hos pital in Nalerigu, a northeastern city in the new Republic of Ghana in West Africa, climaxed an intense search by the Foreign Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention and by Dr. George M. Faile, Jr., a young South Carolinian who is head of the hospital. A Mars Hill alumnus in the United States on furlough. Dr. Faile came here in May to speak at the college and in the church. He told of his medical work among 105,000 natives in the vicinity of Nalerigu, where 12,000 patients were treated in a five-month period soon after the hospital opened. A nurse in the hospital is due to come to the U.S. on a year’s furlough this month. Failure to replace her could lead to confiscation of the hospital by the government of Ghana, but there is a shortage of nurses volunteering for mission ary service and the Foreign Mission Board had no one to send. Summer Brouglit Campus Clianges, N umerous Improvcmerits During the summer, while most of us were away, several major changes were effected on the campus. Finishing touches, changes and improvements were wrought on the new auditorium and fine arts building, the old music building, Spilman, the gym, various cottages and fac ulty homes and the campus un der the direction of the depart ment of buildings and grounds. Requiring most in time, ef fort and expense was the task Presbyterians Meet Tomorrow The Westminster Fellowship, which is composed of Presbyte rian students, meets every Sun day night at 7:00 in the B. S. U. Room. Program topics for the com ing meetings are: What Is a Christian? Christian Vocation, and Missions. Filmstrips will be shown in connection with the programs. Refreshments will be served during a social period after each meeting. ]im Little is president and John Reagan, vice-president. Second-Class postage paid at Mars '' Hill, N. C. Published semi-monthly during the college year. Volume XXXVI September 23. 1961 Number 1 STAFF FOR THIS ISSUE Advertising Gary Murdock, Franklin Calhoun Circulation Manager Ken Huneycutt Editorial Assistants Janice Elland, John Grier, Dick Ergenbright, Roy Bowers, Joyce Craft, Pat Phelps Reporters Walt Whittaker, Arlis Suttles, Thelma Taylor, Don Andrews, Marietta Atkins, Kim Fletcher, Jean Jernigan, Tina Stokes, Sandy Sheffield, Miriam Jones Faculty Advisor Walter Smith Lyceum Series (Continued from Page 1) A visiting artist. Miss Kath erine Bacon, will present a piano recital on Nov. 28; then, on Dec. 5, Miss Anna Hines, an other member of the music faculty, will give a' piano re cital. Climaxing the semester’s musical menu will be a concert by Metropolitan baritone soloist William Warfield on Jan. 5. Movies, which have been an integral part of the entertain ment planned by the college in recent years for students and faculty, will be announced as soon as the installation of mod ern new equipment is com pleted. of making ready the new Rob ert Lee Moore Memorial Audi torium and Fine Arts Building. The 1800-seat auditorium was completed in time for the North Carolina school superin tendents to hold their annual meeting in it early in August, but some areas of the beautiful and useful structure still have not received the final touch. Those responsible for the job hope to have the building com plete by the formal dedication in mid-October. Elsewhere on the campus changes have taken place. The old music building, which is now officially called Office Building,” was converted into office space for faculty members and the Hilltop and Laurel St3.ffs» The space in Spilman Annex formerly used for faculty offices was converted into dormitory rooms for 14 boys, and the large open bay area on the ground floor of Spilman is being made into a lounge for commuting students. No longer do we have “Moore Hall”; it is now called _ “The Administration Building. The gymnasium has a new floor on the basketball court. Miss Hart’s office has been moved to the street floor level, and the former WRA office downstairs will be converted in to a weight-lifting workout room, according to Coach Hen derson. New flooring and accoustical tile have been laid on the ground floor of the Science building, Robinson Cottage next to the library has been torn down, several other cottages and faculty homes have been equipped with new heating sys tems and walks from the library to the Student Center and Sci ence Building have been hard surfaced. One of the changes which the Hilltop applauds most is the new seating arrangement in chapel, where the young ladies and young men have been “in tegrated.” Leave of Absence Dr. Faile considered Miss Brewer and ap proached President Blackwell, on the possibility of her being given a year’s leave of absence. “I told bim,” Dr. Blackwell recalls, “although it would be difficult to find a replacement for Miss Brewer, I could not let that stand in the way of her having this opportunity. It will be a rich and rewarcling experience.” (Fortunately, the College was able to secure the services of Mrs. Mary McCall, who has had extensive nursing experience including super visory responsibilities at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Asheville for the last four years.) When Dr. Faile broached the subject. Miss Brewer was skeptical of his sincerity at first; but after they talked for a long time, she accepted the offer with gratitude. It was an answer to a life-long prayer. Back in 1919, long before her red hair be came streaked with gray. Miss Brewer entered the high school division here. She felt called by God to be a missionary nurse and had volun teered her life to that goal. After four years of high school here she under went three years of nurses training at Birming ham Baptist Hospital, not far from her home m northern Alabama. Then she studied a year at Carver School of Missions in Louisville, Ky-> which was then called Woman’s Missionary Union Training School. Despite such elaborate preparations, however, her hopes of going overseas as a missionary nurse were thwarted. Family obligations kept her working in the States. She served as nurse a the school in Louisville for nine years before re turning to Mars Hill in 1940 as college nurse- Loves Missions „ “Although I never got to the mission field, she explained, “that phase of our denomina tional work has always had first place in roy heart; so you can see why I readily accepted Fade’s invitation. This will be a great clima^^ in my life.” When summer school ended, she packed away many personal effects she had to leave in stor age and drove to Collegedale, Tenn., where her 80-year-old mother and a brother live. Early n' September she boarded a plane in Birmingham for the first leg of the flight to Africa for a long' awaited taste of missionary life. A brief account of the trip came to Miss Edna Eaves in a recent letter from Miss Brewer: . . had a fine trip over. Flying 34,000 fe^‘ up in the air and above the clouds is quite »n experience. I came by jet and we made the trip from New York to Accra, Ghana, in 24 Itonm- Daylight at 2 a.m. and breakfast at 3 were su prises to me. Sunrise and sunset over the ncea were sights to behold! The trip caused me *•, comprehend more fully the greatness of Got and the beauty of his handiwork.” Li I We 1 ntember support team ca the inte to do it of the football your CO Your someone Name henton, I «uce, Ls Urter, B Carver, E Chandler, Conner, g Dean, Lin mshman, §PPs, Jim hamigiieti hreeman, Gruetter, gamhn, I gammond dice, Jen tioneycut l^inebeiTy hivengooc ^abry, a: ^azuca, ] McCall,’“ ^cClure, Mfilikin, ] Hoss, J. ( JJeal, Mic yttley, M kaschall. ptiillips, 1 ^ostell, B P^.tchett, Rus RCyr §°od, Bol Spouse, «te- „-JWart, : |tough, E ^onng, g