cTKe Hilltop Published by the Students of Men’s Hill College BASEBALL teaniVII showing that eve= lake a real winiif :i a~ the hitting, the high number practice. All thj 3 from those thi JED by the spirij most individual •evails. With a !t in the future. !om and moldin' :H fish for putti| basketball gain| wide porticipoti other that wouli OTHER DEPAB’ love some entej r. As a certain CTell and this lent cannot ac a lousy typust. >ps! Green Stamps! We’ve got the Green Stamps! That I Stomps 'vhat (L to R) Larry Honeycutt, “Ginger” Scruggs and od are saying as they examine a pile of the stamps that □rd on our comp^ response to Operation SMASH. Backers of the drive hove ya got a ^ enough S&H stamps to obtain two station wagons for LOpe it will hit s* ®tl*letic department report the operation is picking up it Movemont,” ®re still very much needed as are volunteers who ups, notch! e precious stamps from any source. here money is Ayf idea is io rouiie MaTs Hill Sccnc ... MARS HILL. N. C.. SATURDAY. APRIL 27. 1963 Number 13 them for a co" (tie Department’*®*^ music director BSU is Mars Hill’s rry & Hutchinso'fnior t give a donatioCnr id the coaches,C®/' i appreciated. weekend. asked the facJ,g,^^^ for the next this is a studeii.i , , „ , 4 j 4 i_ j ■( r*®®®** a musical pre- udent body if the touring choir on dousy by any',r. 30), temperance jnembers of the Clio a competitive societies on Thurs- each dorm willfestiture of the new record of the ^\als on the following il contributing V 7) and temperance total. members of the Eu- e achieved witl’’^i'*’*’'iathian societies tiolidoys, if eV^^'sday. Mom or whd- then, contact ^ tonight is “Taras '• — anyone for 8 p.m. love ya got P LSH. d in a series of re- nior music students Spainhour Hall at *t will fea- IBNING STOP^"” on your of the college cents will be Clark Crisp, born in the Fall. E'" history teacher R. Pay cleaning '^*®- Mother and ? nicely; pictures are ough father, pick up May Day Festivities Set Next Saturday Afternoon hear a familiar voice. Arlis Suttles of Mars Hill, an avid “ham” radio club-Dramateers-Literary society leader, has landed a summer job with the Asheville station. ILEANEBiuy appointment on Garner of the has resigned to BCAA To Meet Here Former members of the Busi ness Honor Club will gather here next Saturday for the 24th an nual meeting of the club’s alumni association. (The Business Club is the only one of the honor groups to main tain an organization of its alum ni.) New officers will be elected at the business sessions, which will be held at 4:30 p.m. in the Visual Aids Room of the library. The current president, Jack Grose, will preside. That evening at 7 the annual banquet will be held in the cafe teria. At that time the winner of the club’s medal for outstanding achievement in business studies will be announced and a $150 scholarship for 1963-64 will be awarded. Gayle Maley has been the holder of the scholarship this year. Home Ec Spotlight On Frocks Spring fashions and Mars Hill coeds will be in the spotlight on the main stage in Moore Audi torium Monday night. The annual spring fashion show, sponsored by the Mars Hill Chapter of the American Home Economics Association and by Winner’s Department Store of Asheville, will begin at 7 p.m. There will be an eye-catching display of a variety of spring clothes plus an interesting pro gram of musical entertainment. Clothes made by students in the home economics classes will be modeled by their makers. In addition some of the girls will model the latest and most popu lar college fashions from the Asheville store’s stock. Special guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Holmes of New York City, designers for Winner’s. Such shows are “old hat” for them. They’ve shown their creations at numerous pageants and fashion displays across the country, in cluding the “Miss America Pag eant” at Atlantic City. The entertainment, which will be effectively interspersed with the modeling, will feature the Stage Band, The New Frontier Singers and a talented trio, Brenda Kay Rozier, Curtis Comp ton and Ruth Ramirez. The entire student body and faculty are invited as well as resi dents of the community. Student Art Show Final exhibit of the year, fea turing the works of the art stu dents, will be up by May 6, Joe Chris Robertson said earlier this week. The display will be listed in the official commencement pro gram and hundreds of visitors here for end-of-the-year activities are expected to see it. Mars Hill’s traditional celebra tion of the arrival of May will be held in the amphitheatre behind the Administration Building at 3 p.m. next Saturday, May 4. (In case of rain the program will be in the auditorium.) The crowning of the Queen of May, Miss Elaine Teague of Hickory, the presentation of her royal court and a special drama tics performance, “When Shakes peare’s Ladies Meet,” will high light the afternoon’s activities. Attractive, red-haired Elaine will reign over the festivities sur rounded by a colorful retinue of young maidens and their white dinner-jacketed escorts. She will be crowned by A. D. Frazier. Maid of honor Aleta Welch will be escorted by Jerry Grant. The other members of the court PE Majors To Ballot The election of officers and a discussion of high school physical education programs will confront the PE Majors Club at its meet ing Monday night in the faculty lounge of the library. The following slate will be of fered by the election chairman, Donald R. Martin: for president, Elizabeth Ammons and Mackie McLendon; for vice president, Buddy Windle and Becky Young blood; for secretary, Larry Honeycutt and Dianne Vaughn; for reporter, Nancy Morgan and Dave Hughes; for social chair man, Glenda Campbell and Grace Carter; for devotional chairman. Ruth Smith and Curtiss Compton. Nominations may be received from the floor, and those elected will be installed at the final meet ing of the year on May 20. The PE programs of large, medium and small high schools will be discussed by members of the club who are graduates of these different sized schools. Coach Ezell and the vice presi dent, Mackie McLendon, are in charge of the program. 4 a new Baptist col- f.4f..^.|.jf.^:.4|i.^L4|i.4.^ometown of Mobile, same school to iidna Eaves, formerly STAURi"” Organist To Display Vast Memory ■REET « N. C. ''■omen Miss Mary Lo in Memorial Mission Asheville, where she treatment for eye zzas , Safi^\ Service )I or 9351 ng choir will sing at session of the annual the State Medical So- leville on May 6. lents within range of o this summer may Mars Hillians who find it diffi cult to memorize a few lines of poetry or a passage of Scripture will be astounded by a musician who will perform here next week. She is Mrs. Catharine Crozier Gleason, one of America’s fore most organists and organ teach ers, who will give a recital in Moore Auditorium at 8 p.m. Sat urday, May 4. Mrs. Gleason has one of the largest memorized repertoires among concert organists. Among the works she plays from memory are Bach’s major organ composi tions as well as pre-Bach' compos ers, the principal works of Cesar Franck, Liszt, Messiaen and Alain. She has also committed to memory the most important works of Dupre and Langlais (who played here last year) and a long list of compositions by living American composers. Formerly head of the organ de partment at Eastman School of Music, Mrs. Gleason is now asso ciate professor of organ at Rollins College in Winter Park, Fla., and organist at Knowles Memorial Chapel there. She is currently on a recital tour which began Apr. 21. First stop was New York, where she lectured at Union Theological Seminary on the history of French organ music and played a recital on the new organ in the Church of the Resurrection. Other appearances were at Rutgers University and the Ca thedral of Mary, Our Queen, in Baltimore. Following her program here she will go to Dearborn, Mich., to present a program of contemporary organ music at the Contemporary Arts Festival. Surprisingly enough, Mrs. Glea son does not favor the works of the past to those of modern com posers in her organ performances. “Contemporary music should be performed while it is fresh and new,” she says; and accord ingly, the works of several mod ern composers will be included in her performance. and their escorts include Brenda Kay Rozier and Paul Clark, Bev erly BeShears and James Cook, Janet Graham and Mackie Mc Lendon, Kay Brooks and Bob Clyde, Anne Sellars and Frank McGirt, Penny Ellison and Kim Fletcher, Ruth Ramirez and David Harris, Bonnie Russell and Larry Rogers, Trudy Fitzgerald and Jerry Chandler, Marsha Ezell and Ken Pearce, Connie Harris and Julius Spears, DeLois Harris and Don Gibbs. The band, under the direction of Wayne Pressley, will play, and little Miss Ann Fish will be the crown bearer. Sara Sellars and Kathy Dunevant will serve as trumpeters, and Emily Bailey and Nancy Trotter will act as pages. The play to be given for the entertainment of the royal court and a host of expected visitors is a clever collection of six of Shakespeare’s most noted leading ladies. It was written by Charles George. The cast features Betty Lou Shaver as Portia from “The Mer chant of Venice,” Dorothy Wood as Kathrine from “The Taming of the Shrew,” Nenon Merrill as Ophelia from “Hamlet,” Mimi Jones as Desdemona from “Othello,” Mary Horton as Juliet from the famous “Romeo and Juliet” and Loy Baird as the cele brated Cleopatra from “Anthony and Cleopatra.” Others in the cast include Richard Brassell, William Long, LaMont Albertson, Douglas West, John Reagan, Reid Potter and A. W. Cappar. Richard Williams will serve as stage manager. The play will be directed by Mrs. Watson. School Cheating Senator’s Target Cheaters are the target of a bill introduced in the state legis lature week before last by Sen. John Jordan; and if it is passed, cheating will become a crime against the state. The bill written by the senator from Wake County would make it a misdemeanor to cheat or to help others cheat on educational examinations. He said his bill was aimed at “the practice of peddling exams, term papers, and answers to col lege tests and mail order study courses.” The bill, Jordan explained, “is broad enough to include all kinds of cheating, since it makes it un lawful to obtain any type of edu cational deg;ree or certificate by fraudulent means.” Jordan said the bill was prompted in part by scandals in volving “answer factories” in other states.

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