Octobt ^en — Lions won their second the season hy heating irson-Newman JV, 27-7, ay. ixxvn ^The Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars Hill College MARS HILL. N. C.. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1962 ars Hill tries patience of Job LN on the Mors Hi 5 large group o should be a g ! evident athlei 3 are "dead ar will do both thf Lviduals would ng one from hi? gh school lette; ork and ability lere is somethi 'ho wears a hi itions of the H| nd Lees McRo ue and gold si s coming away re all consecutr team matching together stred ops this is a g I games with thf 11-0. The overaf ( fact that Lees to a decisive i ;r Cup race sho| who for a shoi [rgin, now trailC for the Chio bmitted his ap; is expected to nth the termim Hill, is a Bapt| > status this ye former Compbe) nterS as the b^ this is where the group from Canton will be stationed . . . oops, that’s beyond the fence, reral years, Ko? Band Director Wayne Pressley explains to John Lackey, Glenda Robinette and Alice Swof- ady attained th’ .** *1*® agenda for Band Day next Saturday. More than 300 high school and junior high sicians will join the Mars Hill band in presenting a varied musical program during the game ilftime. The first of a series of fac- * ulty recitals will be presented at| 8 p.m. Tuesday in Spainhour! Hall by Robert Rich» voice in- structor and director of choirs.* Number 3 this STo"' .r.egetown far taking pla* 1. In the a defeated NOT unique overwhelmed r}^' I" Pfeiffer College the cottages the cards serve as 2\.Q ® ^ell as tickets for insored activities. The :re will be some leem to have set one of m this year on ;ts thinking. He claims level, with the pthing which influences ictice game wilrs in an election is the at some laterion of the candidate’s . soccer playersir, uncle, father or 3ted by Coach .i, he adds, if the candi- on the practic no famous ancestors, esday and Fridayange his name to Ken- recreational acti hit the Mars f Weekly schedtENTION IN CUBA is , will be announV the students at Pres- the ANNOUNCtfollege, Clinton, S. C., the co-recreatioi’ ^ student opinion aturday, sponsH^'y completed by the under the POKING, campus news- Virginia Hart, > PoU 83 per cent ti boy-girl with 16 per Dale Henson Only 18 per cent Slyder, who f® armed interven- 50 and 75 yar^® cent said that jump and the should not be taken The best ari>^^’® American consent, d by freshman P sophomore JofARTIN LUTHER KING s in the softbal'e students of Wake For- race was a freS. last week and received ToTh “"“I" aish line befor«^. I’*® speech. King, a linister and native of Park Inn hosting HEC nish ponents. lowing the tracJ'^® *^® f‘rst in a college squared off ia^fing nationally promi- ■ball. More co-r*es. lated before tl>' The North Carolina Home Eco nomics Association will hold its annual convention at the Grove Park Inn of Asheville Nov. 2-3 with several Mars Hill students attending. Band day scheduled for Oct. 27 Band Day, an annual event at Mars Hill, will take place on the Mars Hill High School field Oc tober 27th with eight bands par ticipating. In addition to our own band, there will be representatives from seven junior and senior high school bands from the sur rounding Western Carolina com munities. These attending and their direc tors are: Bethel High, James Galloway; Canton High, Carroll Shaver; Clyde High, Ronald C. Muench; David Millard Junion High (Asheville), Miss Pat Laye; Lee H. Edwards High (Asheville) Ed Benson; Murphy High, Ed Reynolds; and North Buncombe High (Weaverville), Neil Wilson. The approximately 370 high school musicians who will invade our campus for the day will cli max their visit by presenting pre game and half-time entertain ment for our game with Marion at 7:30. Mrs. Howell, club advisor, says that the convention will include a breakfast meeting of the col lege club chapters. Delegates from Mars Hill will be chosen at the next meeting of the club, Oct. 22. Featured speaker for the meeting will be Mrs. Elizabeth G. Parham, home economist with the Carolina Power and Light Company. The Grove Park convention will feature as its main speakers Dr. Naomi Adbanese, dean of home economics at Woman’s College; Dr. R. L. Lovvern, director of research of the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station of N. C. State College; Richard H. Wright III, founder and pres ident of Wright Homes, Inc.; and Dr. Marjorie Knoll, head of the economics department of Pennsyl vania State University. At the Miami convention dur ing the summer, “The Mars Hill College Chapter of the American Home Economics Association” was adopted as the new name for the college home economics club. Alumna Loretta Duncan, a graduate of Mars Hill in 1959, is one of the 59 graduate as sistants at Appalachian State Teachers College for the cur rent school year. Miss Duncan’s assistantship is in English. She is an Eng lish major, specializing in jun ior college instruction. As an undergraduate at AST, she was active in the chorus. Baptist Student Union and the Verni- cian Society. The “Book of Job” will be pre sented in Moore auditorium Thursday, Nov. 1, at 8 p.m. by the Everyman Players, a profes sional acting troupe which has toured two continents. The drama is under the direc tion of Orlin and Irene Corey, purportedly one of the most no table man-wife teams in the American theater. Their unique style in theatrical production has received international recognition, culminating in “The Book of Job.” Presented in the Greek manner, with a protagonist and a male and female chorus, the production was adapted by Mr. Corey from the Old Testament story of Job, whose patience and forebearing gave him and his Look two ways says committee The campus safety committee, an organization established to promote less accidents through better safety, is now working on its program for the school year. Under the direction of Mr. Em mett Sams, last year’s Laurel dedication winner and teacher in the mathematics department; and Mr. Richard Hoffman, a member of the social science department, the committee has already been responsible for one fire drill and for having crossing sections marked across the highway. “Of particular importance in this matter is the habit of look ing both ways before crossing streets,” said Mr. Sams. “And,” added Mr. Hoffman, “we certain ly want to avoid the panic we had two years ago when the old auditorium burned down.” Sim ple safety precautions are being stressed and the committee has formulated plans for further safe ty practice which will be made known at a later date. God a victory over the tempta tions of Beelzebub. Mr. and Mrs. Corey are both graduates of Baylor University, where they received their M.A. degn'ees in drama. Mrs. Corey procured her M.A. with an em phasis on design and is respon sible for the mosaic costumes and Byzantium setting of the play, in which the actors’ costumes are mosaic, including mosaic masks. Mr. Corey claims to be interested in religious drama and made this the theme of his master’s thesis. “When this production was per formed beneath the Atomium at the Brussell’s World Fair,” re marked producer-director Orlin Corey, “it was for many a re minder that the eternal search for meaning in life remains man’s greatest quest. God’s purpose in history is no less essential to our times than it was in the age of the Bedouins.” Now making a tour of a limit ed number of colleges and uni versities, the drama has been put on the “must see” lists by THE NEW YORK TIMES, CHICAGO DAILY NEWS, TIME and NEWS WEEK. “The Book of Job” is the third item in this year’s lyceum series. Following this production will be Basil Rathbone, who will appear Dec. 4. BOOK OF JOB PLAYERS On the Mars Hill scene THE ROYAL AMBASSADORS from the western part of Tar- heelia will be feted with a tour of the Mars Hill campus Oct. 27. They will also be honored guests at the football game with Marion and will get to view the band-day program and be treated to dinner. Mr. B. W. Jackson, state R. A. secretary, will be in charge. PROPER TABLE MANNERS was the topic of discussion at the Oct. 10 meeting of the Home Economics department. A pro gram was given in each of the girls’ dorms with emphasis on proper seating, correct use of napkins and which foods were to be eaten with the fingers. The program was sponsored by the woman’s student council and the various house officers. AN EMORY UNIVERSITY nur.sing representative. Miss Vir ginia Proctor, will be at the col lege on Wednesday, Oct. 31, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Miss Proctor is director of student development for the Emory Nursing School. MARS HILL HIGH SCHOOL is now offering night courses which lead to all degrees offered by the University of North Carolina and North Carolina State College. A year of college work at either freshman, sophomore or junior level may be taken. Classes are held each Monday and Wednesday night from 7-9 p.m. More than 130 courses are being proffered. The number of the courses are the same as those appearing in the catalogues of UNC and NC State. Classes are also being held for individuals seeking to complete their high school studies. The program is sponsored with the cooperation of the two col leges.

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