sh r Volume XXXVI criie Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars Hill College MARS HILL. N. C.. SATURDAY. APRIL 7. 1962 Number 12 IS at' eari' Dblei» taff » , Basf [ p«‘ ue “ e be£ ospe^' JP20 Russians’ Invade Campus Tonight Dean Lynch Pens Story . article by Dean Lynch en “Meeting Personality Prob- ,^nis ifi College” will be published 'o May issue of Baptist ^^‘Ifnt, a Southern Baptist Con- tion collegiate magazine. .Wing examples of students whom he has counselled with in mentioning names, Dean yich pictures various types of j^*'*onality problems collegians are confronted with suggests means of solution. .'“Ollege administrators,” he ex- '1**1 ‘‘seek to understand the Dr ki drives of individual students, but ... if they to .save one such per- tion undertaking ac- Plai needs |hat creates more problems *t solves.” Pio Student, published k. "mly during the school year :1 - - - . i 111 (L n Southern half of the nation. 5, Soa Baptist Sunday School cej^'^d in Nashville, Tenn., re- wide distribution, especially ^^bbins Heads ^Drne Ec Club **iaL?. Robbins, home economics el tjor lotted led by Alwe^jji >nds- j sf lermet*. t bfi' las t ot ide oy have K. lone o\j from Forest City, has been president of the Home scl)Q pics Club for the coming All are k the newly elected officers Plan economics majors who ate return next fall. They vice **■ i^orton of Asheville, first I(o)([j'^tesident; Bonnie Russell of second vice president; Pter.^^°tnas of Kannapolis, treas- iiin ’ ®**d Alia Weaver of Lans- s. Seer 'etary. Q., Others Elected llptie charged with specific }{ ?*itie; •ticlnj 1962-63 schod year 1 "nd*^ Sinclair, who enrolled sec- yille"® Elizabeth Jones of Green- fcr^^' C., devotional chairman; )one I and y stance/ BobL,; letten m V.1CU1) W11L» V.^ll^-»llv i'Pia ^^®ter, reporter; and Vir- «ark, Eteeman of Asheville and rla, Grant of Delray Beach, will be in charge of ttients at the various club , 'I'lj and events next year, a'* Sli ''^ttb’s annual Spring Fash- fpr, originally scheduled for May A has been postponed until ‘ Sponsored by one of the ''ille ^.department stores in Ashe- Pc be show will be held on ?Pd j?Se in the new auditorium ''''test public — including any ®d males — will be invited. State BSU Leadership ^(w®*®nce. at which a of Mars Hillians is to £>6 * fb® morality play 60(r^f®nan." has been post- ^ from Apr. 6 to Apr. Glenn Vernon was earlier this week, conference will still at the First Baptist in MooresviUe. T Serge Jaroff “makes whoopee” Russian style with the Don Cossack Dancers and Chorus. Jaroff, a disgrace to his family and neighbors because of his short stature, has since become the renowned director of two dozen Russian giants who appear tonight in the auditorum. Twenty-four uniformed White Russian giants, led by diminutive 4’10” Serge Jaroff, will appear as the Don Cossack Chorus and Dancers tonight at 8:00 in the auditorium. Nomadick descendants of the Slavs, the Cossacks traditionally supplied the Czarist Russia with its most dashing cavalry troops. After the Revolution, however, they were a beaten and bedraggled group living in the Crimea. In 1920 they were allowed to move to Bulgaria, where they “lived like frogs” but still retained their love for singing. Organized by their director, Jaroff, the Cossack Chorus and Dancers have been singing in the non-Soviet world since 1923, when they presented their first concert in Vienna. Since then they have sung in virtually every country of the world except Red China and Soviet Russia and have been toast ed by former president Dwight D. Eisenhower. Hawkins Will Direct BSU; Installation Slated Tuesday Gene Hawkins, newly elected president of the BSU, and the other members of the executive council for the 1962-63 school year will be formally installed at chapel Tuesday. A sophomore from Roxboro who has been Training Union Director this year. Gene will be the first person to hold an office on the executive council in two consecu tive years — thanks to the fact that he will be one of the college’s first juniors. Offices Added To promote better relationships with the clubs representing other denominations on the campus, three new offices have been created on the council for next year. These will be filled by David Montross of Greenwich, Conn., represent ing the Canterbury Club, which is composed of Episcopalians; Tom Halyburton of Miami, Fla., of the Methodist Student Movement; and John Reagan of Kingsport, Tenn., representing the Presby terians of the Westminster Fel lowship. Others who will be installed at the chapel period include Win field Prevette of Concord, first vice president, succeeding Ralph Halliwill. A freshman ministerial student, “Windy” has been active in the ministerial conference. Training Union and Sunday School. Kay Brooks, a liberal arts fresh man from Charlotte, replaces Sherry Greene as second vice president. Freshman ministerial student Billy Sellers of Lumberton will succeed Jayne Tomlinson as third vice president. Taking over the work of the recording secretary, a position held this year hy Sharon Purcell, is Joy Simpson, a freshman from Franklinton, taking liberal arts. Wayne Merchant, a business student (sophomore) from Spar tanburg, S. C., will relieve Faye Coker as treasurer. Carol Moore of Clarksville, Tenn., a sophomore music major, is the new music director. The task of directing the college student’s department of the Sun day School falls to Harold Keown, freshman ministerial student from Charleston, S. C. He replaces Reginald Carter. Filling in the new president’s old job as director of the student Training Union will he David Crook, another freshman minis terial student from Charlotte. Retaining the position he has held on the council this year as director of the missions program is Dan Keels, sophomore from Florence, S. C., who also is a ministerial student. Among other duties, Dan is chief chauffeur of the “mission huggy.” Beth Briggs, freshman, replaces Hazel West as the Town Repre sentative on the council. Linda Willette, freshman from Durham who plans to become a director of religious education, will gain valuable experience as the new publicity chairman, succeed ing Ann Brookshire. Presidency of the YWA, which includes the task of representing that coed organization on the council, passes from Starr Keller to freshman Darla Sanford of Sa vannah, Ga. Bob Cheek, freshman pre-med ical student from Saluda, S. C., has been chosen by the Volunteers for Christ to represent that or ganization on the council. He suc ceeds Jane Milam. Club ‘Visits’ Russia Is there any personal freedom in the Soviet Union? Are Russian churches propaganda outlets for the Communist Party? Can Christian evangelism be practiced in Russia? Reginald C. Smith, who has huilt his retirement home in Ashe ville lived in the Soviet Union from 1938-40 and has worked in countries around the world. He will show pictures of Russia and discuss his observations of Russian life at the 6:30 p.m. meeting of Presbyterian students in the B.S.U. Room of Spilman. Faculty Kin Receive Grants Special grants for graduate study have been awarded to three chil dren of Mars Hill College faculty members. President and Mrs. Blackwell’s son Albert, who is a senior en gineering student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was re cently awarded a Rockefeller Brothers Theological Fellowship. He will study at Harvard Divinity School. Miss Carol Kendall, whose father is head of the Bible depart ment and whose sister is a music student here, received a $1,500 as- sistantship in home economics at Woman’s College. A graduate of Mars Hill, like Blackwell, she is currently a senior at Meredith College in Raleigh. David, son of Dean and Mrs. W. L. Lynch, will return to Salz burg, Austria, where he studied during the 1960-61 school year, on a graduate assistantship. A senior majoring in organ at Ober- lin (Ohio) College, he will work with members of the junior class who study in Salzburg. The group was sworn m as American citizens in a mass cere mony during 1936. Having stud ied the Constitution in Russian and English, each was able to repeat it from memory. The singers can do whistles, cat-calls and girlish laughter and can simu late the sound of horses’ hoofs by clicking their tongues. Before each recital Jaroff, who was a lieutenant in the Russia machine gun corps in World War I, inspects his men. Those who fail to pass are reprimanded and made to pay a fine. Coastal Tour Tonight’s performance will be part of their 33rd coast-to-coast tour of the United States and Canada. Their repertoire includes Russian church music such as After Easter Prayer and God Have Mercy On Us; soldier and folk ditties like Kounak, Bardura, Two Soldiers Songs; comedy in the form of Berry Picking, and Cossack dances. Hit High Notes The voices of the chorus cover a range from A below low-C to G above high-C. The New York Herald Tribune claims the tenors can sing higher and the basses lower than any other choir appear ing before the public. Tonight’s program includes 13 songs and two Cossack dances. ‘Beat Draft’ Test Apr. 17 Draft-eligible Mars Hillians can help themselves stay in school by scoring well on the Selective Service College Qualification Test, which will be given at David Mil lard Junior High School in Ashe ville on Apr. 17. Other Factors Scores provide local selective service boards twice with evidence of the student’s aptitude for con tinuing in college, although the scores are not the only determin ing factor. The test, in use since 1951, will be given in more than 500 cities and towns across the nation. Other sites in North Carolina include Brevard, Boone, Hickory, Win ston-Salem, Raleigh, Durham, Greensboro and Chapel Hill. Information about the test may be obtained from any local selec tive service board. Avg. Age 23 “At the present time,” says state selective service system direc tor Col. Thomas Upton, “North Carolina local boards reach men for induction at about age 23. Students generally can finish their undergraduate studies by then, but those hoping to continue study in graduate school, a deferment will be necessary. Also, heavier draft calls would lower the age, in which case it would become necessary even for undergraduates to seek a deferment.”