>er 23. 196i October 23. 1965
THE HILLTOP. MARS HILL COLLEGE. MARS HILL. N. C.
Page Three
National Home Economics
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A first-hand account of the na
tional convention of the Ameri-
Home Economics Association
J'sld this summer in Atlantic City,
J., -will be given to members
®f the Mars Hill College Chapter
the AHEA at a meeting
Thursday night (Oct. 28) by Mrs.
™ary Howell.
A report will also be given by
®ur members of the chapter on
their attendance Oct. 16 at a re-
®6arch graduate study seminar at
,he University of North Carolina
>u Greensboro. Increasing their
knowledge of graduate study
chapter chairman Melba
^awkins, Judith Ball, Mrs. Phoebe
atnam and Betty Wise. They
^ere accompanied on the trip by
Howell.
pires to the vice presidency.
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At the first meeting of the
Mars Hill Chapter on Sept. 26,
Frances Stewart was elected sec
retary. The goals and the work
of the chapter were explained to
new members. The officers were
introduced and programs for the
year were previewed. Pins were
presented to chapter members
who earned them last spring.
Last week the chapter met to
hear Mrs. Elizabeth Parham, a
home economist for Carolina
Power and Light Co., discuss job
opportunities and responsibilities
.in the field of utilities.
It was announced that two
members of the chapter would
campaign for state offices in the
NCHEA. Bee Mayo seeks the job
of reporter and Beth Douglas as-
Vet Sues
His Profs
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CORSAGES
ARRANGEMENTS
Phone 689-2642
Main Street
New Pep Club Seeks
Members and Funds
SALT LAKE CITY (CPS)—A
student has filed suit against
three University of Utah profes
sors who he contends “did mali
ciously persuade the University
of Utah” to expel him.
The suit was filed in August
in U. S. District Court by Michael
Smith against two of his teachers,
Wilberta Moore and Glenn I.
Latham, and his department
head, James E. Cole. Smith, a
veteran with a second teaching
certificate, was to have received
his special education degree at
the end of the summer session.
Smith told members of the
press after filing the $102,400
damage suit that the charges
“thrown against” him were in
competency, moral laxity, and
several tardies, besides not hav
ing his lesson plans done. Smith
said he had asked if he could de
fend himself, but that Cole had
responded, “It’s all decided.”
“I tricked them though,” Smith
said, “and got them to admit it
wasn’t my academic work; it’s
my personality.”
“As far as I’m concerned,
what happened to Mr. Smith is
one of the most gross misuses of
academic power I’ve seen,”
Smith’s attorney Carl Nemelka
said.
A similar suit was filed this
summer in East Lansing, Mich.,
where Paul A. Schiff has asked
a U. S. District Court to order
Michigan State University to re
admit him to its master’s program
in history after he was dismissed
in June for “acting to disrupt
the organization of the univer
sity.”
Possible redress for students
suing universities and professors
who do not follow etablished pro
cedure when expelling or sus
pending students was indicated
recently in a Vermont Federal
District Court Decision.
Before dismissing a complaint
from a former University of Ver
mont medical student who was
suing for re-admission. Judge
Ernest W. Gibson said he would
order the university “to conduct
a fair and impartial hearing” if
he found that it had “acted ar
bitrarily, capriciously, or in bad
faith” in dismissing a student.
After a hearing, however, the
judge ruled that no evidence was
produced in this particular case
to substantiate the complaint
that the university’s action had
not followed the established pro
cedure.
i I
t f
IMARS HILLI
I FLORIST I
CUT GLASS
The newly-founded Pep Club
will whoop it up at 7:00 p.m.
Tuesday (Oct. 26) in the Library
Auditorium with a membership
round-up.
“The more members we have
Radio Station
‘In The Dark’
The proposed campus radio
station, WMHC—or whatever its
call letters will be—it temporar
ily but literally blacked out.
Being slowly constructed in
the Montague Building under the
direction of Craig Covey and the
financial patronage of the Stu
dent Government Association, the
station has not actually gotten
on the air yet; but already its
operations are in the dark thanks
to a confusion of instructions to
the painters.
The room which will serve as
the control center for the station
has three windows in it. Two
open onto the Marshall Highway
and are an avenue of noise.
Craig asked that they be painted
black and sealed off with sound
proofing and a sheetrock wall.
A painter from the buildings
and grounds crew applied a heavy
coat to both windows and left.
Soon he returned and applied
an equally heavy coat to the
third window in the room.
“I thought it was odd,” he ex
plained later, “but those were my
instructions.”
Craig arrived too late to pre
vent the mishap and had to settle
for a promise of a paint removal
job on the third window.
the more projects we can under
take and the more functions we
can sponsor,” said the club presi
dent Steve Hines.
Open to all students without
dues or fees, the club was estab
lished last month “to promote
student support of all matters
that are designed to better the
college community; to encourage
student body participation in col
lege functions; to further student
support of school activities, es
pecially athletic events.”
The organization, which di
rected the election and crowning
of the Rat Queen, is currently
engaged in a project of advertis
ing the varsity football games
and encouraging student body
support of the team. This is be
ing done primarily through the
sale of booster ribbons and in the
placing of banners and posters
around the campus.
With money raised from the
sale of ribbons and other game
souvenirs the club plans to fi
nance future projects. These in
clude the subsidizing of bus trips
to away games. Club leaders also
anticipate the sponsoring of a
hootenanny, the holding of cor
dial gatherings in connection with
athletic events and similar under
takings.
“The amount of projects we
will attempt will be directly pro
portional to the number of mem
bers we have,” Hines explained.
“If a student is unable to attend
the membership rally Tuesday
night, he or she should notify a
member of the club of his or her
interest or have an attending
friend sign up.
I *
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i EDWARDS’ SINCLAIR SERVICE f
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Dial 689-2431
Mors Hill. N. C.
ifl Dry Cleaning & Shirt Laundry t
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+ Professional Service |;
4 Shirts Returned on Hanger or in Box
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Coin-Op Laimdry Open Daily from 7:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M.
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ifl Some New Washers Have Been Added ^
I MARS HILL CLEANERS |
I I
I The *
MARS HILL SODA SHOPPE
and
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WE ARE HAPPY TO SERVE YOU I
CAMPUS CORNER
Simdries Short Orders Regular Meals
Telephones 689-6353 or 689-4396 Open 7 A.M.