TTTTTlj aiidwu 3 seem tP=== Mars HitfVolumi of the nsk have fi' fas horn* ays andj New j imore 0i>| Jsst, XXXIX Hilltop Published by the Students of Mars HiU College MARS HILL. N. C.. SATURDAY. APRIL 24. 1965 Nxunber 13 Coronation Awaits Saturday 3 one oi ^ ans who h ipour at ' [days. Penny ?n to At%p „ j.- • i- = participating in the state- i"'’de spring BSU leadership con- I Campus News Briefs | ir dates 00 stock ic Thonip Holeman hoping t* ibition g* i and the ta’s ne'S'f iveekend- ttlegrouJ' s team tch. ns filled of breai it or co®' ding gel® The dozen members of Mars Sill’s BSU Council for 1965-66 l^fence this weekend at Wingate ^allege. The meet began last night with ® address by ex-Mars Hillian '®vid Craig, current state BSU “'■esident. It will end Sunday. Centered on the race issue, the ">nf( erence progfram will feature mate en* ^ guest speakers: Dr. McLeod srsion oi professor of Christian so- itselfonl^*' ethics at Wake Forest; Dr. w**' R. Grigg, head of the state '"•'Vention’s efforts at interracial jjoperation; and Dewey Hobbs ■> past president of the state I “'’vention. reserves ling thr® i. Beside-' iff has s' will re evide' exciting upport f eating f iseball! Stall in week ac®* ia Hart-^ spring ball. The three amendments to the ^"fs of the Student Govern- n t Association constitution Were voted on Thursday in *Pel incorporate only relatively chang es. I^The first provides for hi-week- >'ather than weekly meetings ^ Ihe Commission. The second “Ulj required attendance ^lass meetings; The third in- ®^«es freshmen dorm represen- on the Commission. ^l^Pen house and a fashion for high school students in- ^^®sted in home economics will .. .gjli. Sponsored by the department ■ '>»day. May 3. tc®' earlier .^s and labs in the Science dding and in the home man- (^hient house from 3-5 p.m. The r's really real, ictivitia^ and ibags d :m lOp t+d-i” tu®® L show ■will be in Moore p-f-f-F*’ Th, e annual open house will he in the home economics class- '^ditorium at 7:30 p.m. Both ®Pts are open to the public. H^^ecorations and clothes for the ® show will be furnished by ^ Marche of Asheville. Mem- of the Mars Hill Chapter of 1 American Home Economics i^j^^ciation, which is helping spon- iij '•die day’s events, will serve as 111 d®ls. Some of the girls will *loa. '-dioir o^n creations from t ding classes taught by Miss 5®' Kendall. »( ®n>or Appreciation Day, a time Pn and fellowship sponsored lll^'die Junior Class in honor of iiu *®niors, will be initiated Sat- ^5 ?■ ®- Park in Brevard. There t|,| de recreation, good food and ii,jj*^**inment provided by the Bus transportation will (j Pl-nished with departure slat- l),,?' 1 a.m. and return at 11- 0 p.m. exhibit, “History of Med- !k 1® event will be held at 'fa sponsored jointly by Davis & Co. pharmaceuti- w'lnse and the Piedmont Uni- Center will hang in the Arts Building gallery May ® 45 paintings by artist Rob 'd 'diom show the development \^®dical skill from primative do the present. They are dlihi. "y authenticated, detailed '•iti 'ngs. - Excellent ratings were received by the Mars Hill College Drama- teers for their presentation of two original plays at the 42nd an nual state-wide drama festival at the Playmakers Theater in Chap el Hill recently. Freshman David Jones won a distinguished acting award for the role of janitor in Mrs. Bonnie Mc- Carson’s play, “The Captive Cap tive.” The play won Mrs. Mc- Carson, a senior from Asheville, an author’s award and the Betty Smith Award for the best secular play entered in festival compe tition. Mike Yelton’s creation, “That I Might See,” won the Pearl Set- zer Deal Award as the best re ligious play. Library Science Courses Slated Six courses in library science will be offered during the sum mer sessions despite the fact that the chief instructor in the field, Mrs. Margaret Bridges, died re cently. John Hough Jr., head of the education department, has an nounced that Mrs. Wayne Press- ley, instructor in the department, will teach children’s literature and audio-visuals during the first summer session, June 7-July 13. Miss Ann Dacus, cataloger on the library staff, will teach cataloging during the same session. Mrs. Douglas Therrell, a mem ber of the education department faculty last year, who has been on a leave of absence completing a masters degree, will return for the second summer session, July 14-Aug. 19. She will teach three courses, adolescent literature, li brary organization and adminis tration, reference materials. The courses are being offered primarily for the benefit of pub lic school personnel who need them for certification in library science. Hough said. Lovely girls in pretty dresses . . This will be the scene of events on May 1 (next Saturday) as Mars Hill College presents its annual May Queen and her court. The May Day events will begin at 3 p.m. in the amphitheater. Leading the line of girls will be the queen, junior Dell Broyhill, who will be crowned by her con sort Dave Clapp. Reigning as maid of honor will be senior Diane Vaughn, escorted by M. 0. Brink- ley. A dozen more coeds, three from each class, have been selected to the queen’s court. The senior at tendants and their escorts are as follows: Judy Baber, Wilbur Dish- man; Peggy Dinkins, C. B. Cole man; and Ruth Ramirez, Troy Parham. Representing the junior class will be Penny Ellison escorted by Harry Alban; Caroline Hayes by Richard Ramirez; and Doris Mar tin by Jerry Martin. The sophomore class chose as its three leading beauties Dianne Coltrain, escorted by Albert Col- train; Nancy Ann Johnson by Ter ry Holland; and Polly Peach by Larry Allen. The freshman attendants and their escorts are Janis Elam, Eric Blackwell; Donna Lewis, Jack Hundley; and Jean Miller, Dan ny Boyd. Karen Marie Smith, five-year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith, will be the crown- bearer. Pages will be Mary Owens and Mary Oxentine and trumpet ers will be Betty Biggers and Brenda Withers. As part of the entertainment, six girls will perform a Spanish dance. The six are Jean Ellis, Sandra Honbarrier, Jonatha Rob erts, Brenda Robbins, Sylvia Williams and Bonnie Alexander. The drama department, under the direction of Mrs. Elizabeth Watson, will present a Spanish comedy, “A Sunny Morning,” the setting of which is a park in Mad rid. It is the story of an aged couple who had been in love. Star ring in the play will be Alice Crutchfield, Kay Brooks, David Jones and Jimmy Alexander DELL BROYHILL . . . Queen of May Professional Helps Play Professional choreography has been enlisted to help insure a top-notch performance in the forthcoming musical comedy “Lit tle Mary Sunshine.” The play, which is already in rehearsals under the direction of James Thomas of the drama fac ulty, is scheduled for presenta tion in Moore Auditorium Satur day, May 8. Earl Bagley, a professional choreographer from Jacksonville, Fla., was on the campus Apr. 4- 12 to help work o,ut the dance routines for the production. Set in the mountains of Colo rado, the play’s action is a merry chase led by forest rangers trying to capture a band of notorious Indians who have been threatening Little Mary Sunshine. The play ends happily with Good triumphing over Evil and the In dians rehabilitated, but before the final curtain there’s many a good laugh and lively song. Additional details on the cast and crew will be published in the next issue of the Hilltop. New SGA Officers Assume Duties The new administration of Stu dent Government Association of ficers who were installed during chapel Thursday have now as sumed their duties for 1965-66. Supporting the four student body officers — Chris Pappas, Art Earp, Mary Lynn Bunting and Louis Turner — is the Sen ate, composed of the president of each class and five senior, four junior, three sophomore and two freshmen senators (the latter pair to be elected this fall). Senior senators are Ricke Coth ran, class president, Tom Hall, Ron Harvey, Rita Propst, Beverly Silverio and Jim Whetstone. From the Junior Class are pres ident Craig Covey, Bill Carter, Dianne Freeman, Sue McCall and Mack Smith. Jim Dyer, Paul Early, Martha Morris and president Carroll Reed represent the Sophomore Class. The remaining class officers in clude the vice presidents, secre taries and treasurers as follows: Senior Class, M. O. Brinkley, De- lores Baxter and Bobby Hauser; Junior Class, Carolyn Broome, Judy Hill and Patsy McDowell; Sophomore Class, Jim Smith, Nancy Pease and Sandra Duck. New members of the Commis sion, which is comprised of dorm officers, includes the following: Ruff Wheless, president of Mel rose; Henry Corn and Mike Hot- tle, president and secretary-treas urer of Treat; Tom Haslett, sec retary-treasurer of Myers. Commuters are represented by Jackie Mitchell, president; Patty Murray, vice president; Janis Elam, secretary-treasurer; and Judy Allen, reporter. Wade Tucker and Mike Groce, presidents of Landers and Wall cottages respectively, are com missioners representing cottage residents. Robert Glenn and Phil Edwards are presidents of Woodrow and Bowden houses. Commissioners from Girls’ Hill include Willa Plemmons and Mary Owens, president and vice presi dent respectively from Huffman; Alice Crutchfield and Barbara Blythe from Stroupe; Jane Sulli van, Dolly Lavery and secretary- treasurer Lois Shearon from Pox. Edna Moore officers will be chosen in the fall. Piano Duo Due Back Nelson and Neal, America’s most popular two-piano team, will give a concert in Moore Auditor ium at 8 p.m. Friday. This husband and wife duo has received more national magazine space than any other two-piano team in the world. Articles have appeared in the Ladies’ Home Journal, Cornet and This Week magazines. The couple has also been featured on NBC-TV’s “This Is Your Life” program. Mr. Neal’s best-selling autobiography Wave As You Pass was published re cently. They have played at Mars Hill numerous times. Allison Nelson, Australia’s leading child prodigy, toured that country more extensively than any other Austrialian-bom artist. In 1944 she came to this country to study at the famed Curtis In stitute of Music in Philadelphia. There she met and later married Harry Lee Neal, a boy from Ten nessee, who was studying with the renowned pedagogue, Isabelle Vengerova. They have played over a thous and concerts in many parts of the world. They spend their summers at Manorhouse, an ante helium mansion in Paris, Tenn., where they devote themselves to prac tice, research and teaching the students who come from all over America to study with them. On tour the artists travel in a custom-designed bus which in cludes living facilities for eight adults. The bus consists of a complete kitchen and bath, hot and cold running water, electric power plant, and two beautifully matched Baldwin Concert Grand pianos. Their three children have accompanied them often on their tours. Rita Wins Scholarship One of four scholarships of fered throughout the state by the North Carolina Education Asso ciation has been won by Rita Propst, junior from Hickory. The $200 awards for 1965-66 are limited to rising seniors who intend to teach in the state after graduation. They are called Mary Morrow Scholarships after the first state president of the NCEA Division of Classroom Teachers. Selected ■with Rita from 24 nominations were Inez Kennedy of Catawba, Brenda Mantooth of East Carolina and Anne Wiggins of UNC Greensboro. Funds for the scholarships are contributed by the classroom teachers of the state. Recipients are selected on the basis of char acter, financial need, personality, evidence of promise in the teach ing field and scholastic achieve ment in the upper one-third of their class.