THE HILLTOP. MARS HILL COLLEGE. MARS HILL. N. C. Page Three nism ftirp lipnn a ®imp: faat at iitorial was writti :e in Miami and The Cuban Repd changed. (1955-66) was 3n Communist Inatic events in the aple the rights Jill. Some of those e, betraying itfeing . . . Thomas iesires, and delwas heard in Edna ign hands, the 1. . on records play- begon. W^e hferus by his sister, jenerous sacrifit Wheaton of Ashe- 1 hove been at. Worth Daniels to our OSSistonC Raleigh News and e, and especia former administra- , whose closen^to FDR . . . ad- rinciples, madet honor club meet- 3k any country,I’s own voice was n soldiers shoty on radio as far , defending oU(WNCA) and J. A. to go into comt book, From These 3 enough. mt a further mes- , and we ask by defending Ctery Porge donated the henuspherdecorative pieces to >ort oi the Umjicated library. ^‘Let 1 countries, wbtht,” a pageant on who daily red MHC held forth in om the Soviet aphitheatre with an 3 always beeist of 300 to 400. i. To betrccy ‘ otherwise un- le pledges. Inf^ateers production 3, which riskeO^’ an actor won an lice for their fd® character role in normed. The*^a at Staunton, Va., > our shores. . . . Charles '/fuller who or^C ^^^'^ngth of his role 3rs in the . in Wilde’s 1 and peasants* ® Enfanta. Tcmny, neverl945-46) also mark- iry equipment'ings on a sedate old Boy of Pigs d Ministerial Confer- w the free wdhe fall to stop eve- ! left them und nntil early spring unist hands, '^ere too many re- ^ forlomness. ^zations. A minister- our efforts, to leaked up to Miss mconquered 1’ the English de- we thought, t^a Christmas party ipport, our duic- Dr. Moore retired risoned, was ght that we ®AL op SPRINK- fighting. Thd*^nderstorm of indig- ight to die for 4 House Girls” (pro- ht that any 'Cd by Miss Caroline prohibit us fl* of women) down t to create ct I lawyer to get the iples of our In a surprisingly r people. But o one of the most g truth to oul^ndacious practical Kid of suppd^®*' campus that, or ns undertok^®’^ bmmimist t> t only ^ ’I ■— ^ *■ *■ >*• >{• •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' •S' Y guaranteed • list regime. lagine that tb^ rol mobilized* Communist 3se who figb* ith the supp^ satellite, resk* 3 it with ra' i aid, and re outlined oj ;|; task. A hetf^ We (me all^^ nation in , mn us from r Your Mother's Day Flowers Early obtain the l>^md Dr,«'» r ms claim th® orget to Take a Corsage to that ce, win bctC^Special "Somonv.«" x FHE WORLP meone for the Class Banquet. THE mars hill SODA SHOPPE JVhere Ifs Fun To Eat Phone 2501 e we are fref )ecouse we ? S S^'^ORSAGES _ $1.50 to $7.50 not ready deteriorated' mtry in the ^ at becemse see our fld^ rafts that R S H T T T ist tyranny t x A-, we see it S Dur°free^ FLORIST •S' •S' •S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' •S' ■S' ■S' ■f ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' •S' ■S' •S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' ■S' Travel Makes History Come Alive Dr. Underwood Says Of Experience EIGHTY (1935-36) and still in tender youth. Mars Hill heard Miss Francis Perkins, then Secre tary of Labor of the United States, address a chapel meeting in late fall on the commanding topic “. . . moral and ethical principles underlying social se curity legislation” . . . and liked it. The matter concluded, the Secretary filled an abundant number of requests for her auto graph, went to a Madison rug shop, and then returned to an Asheville conference of the lAIABS she was at the time at tending. From Other Campuses... College freshmen and prospec tive freshmen take heart! A spe cial faculty committee at Yale has recommended a revamping of the curriculum and the handling of first-year students. The committee’s report finds that the traditional Freshman Year on the New Haven campus is becoming obsolete. It recom mends that the freshmen be split up and housed with upperclass men and not treated as a separate campus. Student Government is having its hard knocks at Pfeiffer Col lege in Misenheimer, N. C. Seek ing a clearer definition of its rights and responsibilities, the Student Government inactivated itself. The Administration called for new elections to the student group and its reactivation. Two Howard Payne College students in Brownwood, Texas, who bill themselves as “Paul and Paula,” have led the national pa rade of hit songs for four weeks with a recording called “Hey, Paula.” By late March Ray Hildebrand and Jill Jackson were seeing their record approach the two million mark in sales and their album “Songs for Young Lovers” is in the top twenty across the nation. by Marietta Atkins A history teacher worth her salt, Dr. Evelyn Underwood not only talks about history — she has been where much of the world’s important history has oc curred. As most of the pupils of this “new history teacher” know, her insights into enlightening reluc tant students can be most discon certing; she literally cuts through the bluff! Nor is the “new teach er” — who first taught at Mars Hill in 1944 and returned this year from a four-year leave of absence to earn the Ph.D. degree at the University of North Caro lina — a person to quail at mere ignorance. When Gen. MacArthur lands in the middle of the War of 1812 or, through some student’s protesting his own world, Viet nam bangs into agrarian reform. Dr. Underwood clarifies the mat ters as best she can — even if it involves a few moments of class dissention instead of a simple stu dent-teacher debate — before she returns to her lecture. Ag almost every student who has interrupted her class with such side viewpoints has found. Dr. Underwood can relate inci dents of past to current history (and vice versa) appreciably. How does a history teacher learn to relate the past and the present or clarify the present through the past? How does she learn to clarify the present when a dissimilar subject, such as the Vietnam-agrarian reform exam ple, intrudes? The good doctor is rightly more than just “bookish” in her ap proach to the problem. She has traveled and studied in Europe— her special field—a total of three full summers since 1949. Here are some of the things she has to say about the value of travels and why, if a student can afford them, they make studies more Remember Joy, Simple Sermon Sermons — some banal and some rather refreshing — are commonplace at Mars Hill, but Reader’s Digest reports one of the shortest and brightest that anyone could want: At an Impromptu testimonial service at her church an elderly Negro woman was asked the se cret of her happiness as evidenced by her always-smiling face. After a moment’s thought she replied, “Joy; just that one word — J-O-Y!” When quizzed about her answ er, she explained, “Folks don’t smile enough. If they think of Joy, maybe they would go around looking less glum. “J” stands for Jesus, “O” is for others and “Y” is for yourself. Jesus, Others, Yourself; then you got JOY.” Tjs I PROTECT YOUR SKIN! ^ See us for Suntan Lotion, I 1 ^Ixiby oiL and other Iotions.|| MARS HILL 5Cr 10 meaningful: “It makes history come alive to walk the roads of people one has read about in a book. It puts blood in their veins. I had always struggled through the Holy Ro man Empire and the Thirty Years War. It is one of the most diffi cult periods of European history to study or teach. “On the Rhine, when you pass one castle after another and be gin to realize these were the homes of those lords you read about, the patterns become clear er in your mind. The pages of that section of the history book begin to be something more than just dry pages. “Very frankly, I went to Eng land most prejudiced against the English. Snobbish? They are not. London is like a great big, little town in so many ways that the matter seems to come down to personalities, not a cold nation ality at all. “You can stop on the street to look at the flowers in a lady’s yard all you wish — it was one of the things I enjoyed most. The English love flowers. Everyone has flowers and everyone works on them. Such work and their love for it impressed me as indicative of a basic virtue in their values of appreciation.” Edinburgh, London, Paris, Mi lan . . . wherever Dr. Underwood went, she found that people were basically the same. Much, in fact, like Americans . . . except for a certain slight difference: “The people are more leisurely than we are. Our material ad vantages are more, but philosophi cally . . . well, they are just not as much interested in these things as we are. A lot of them still think in terms of the past, especially where the country has been poor in recent years. DR. UNDERWOOD “As in Italy. They still eval uate much in terms of the more glorious days of Rome and the proud Renaissance. “How does one go? Well, I had felt it was important to visit Europe and I had always wanted to go. Then one day Mrs. Watson and I were talking and she said, ‘Let’s go to Europe next year.’ “ ‘All right,’ I said. “It surprised her. “ ‘Do you really mean it?’ she asked. “So I wrote that night to the travel agencies for information on the cheapest way to go best for the money, and we went. (Mrs. Watson studied at Oxford while Dr. Underwood studied at the University of Edinburgh.) Two summers later my sister went with me; then, later I went back a third time. That’s the only way to go — just decide and then do it! “And,” she said with a certain note of triumph in her voice, “the water in Paris may be bad, but ... I drank some.” Quality and Style for Misses and Juniors Phone 2801 Mrs. Cora Lee Murray THE LITTLE SHOP *■ ■S' ■S' ■S' *■ ■i' •j' *■ *■ *• ■S' ■fi •ii •* •S 'f •S' ■S' •S' •S' 4' •S' •S' •S' + 4' -S' •S' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4- 4' 4> 4' 4- 4' 4* * 4> 4i calls for MARS HILL PHARMACY