lory 10, 19S ord to be es have been s .1 season. ishmen and • idjustment ti iors on soff' t tough cott ow .600, aiit i 13-4; Petf le game. often is to • This year i ;ing. game, Coacl Hill he woul earn we haV Rudy Reeve* men 6’6” el and 10.6 rc cetball. Otf lilt in a daj ight. We’^' those game* TTL PTS AVC 151 15 hiUtod Vol. XLIL No. 10 MARS HILL. NORTH CAROLINA February 24, 1968 United States in 1968 Will Be Discussed Pictured here are six of the seven Spring Symposium team members. They are (top 1. to r.) Dr. Emanuel Carlson, Dr. G. M. Gilbert, and Mr. George Esser. (bottom) Dr. Nevitt Sanford, Mr. Ken- Crawford, and Mr. Michael Katz. Choir, Band Preparing for Spring Tours The concert band, under the ‘''ection of Mr. Wayne Pressley ^^1 the touring choir, under the 'Section of Mr. Robert Rich have ^^tiounced tentative itineraries their spring tours, March 10- , The band plays eight concerts ,!* a five-day tour to South Caro- Monday March 11, is their '*^t performance day with a con- at Mount Holly High School j Mount Holly. Another concert ' the Charlotte area for the same day is being planned. On Tuesday, March 12, the band will be at Manning High School in Manning, S. C. The following day they will play at Southside High in Florence, S. C. Another concert is planned for this area, but plans have not been confirmed. Ridge Springs High, near Co lumbia, S. C., is the location of the next performance. The final day of the tour finds the band back in North Carolina. Concerts Opinions about Macbird Are ^any and Diverse iS Slogan The easiest way to achieve ’*Hny-farm status is to meander /''"ind Mars Hill interviewing J^dents and faculty members Macbird, 1967’s most con- jj^Versial play, which was written Barbara Garson and which is s be presented in the Owen j’^hding March 2, 4 and 5 at 8:00 under the direction of James .^Oftias, assistant professor of ^®fich and dramatics, ij. foliating and systematizing in- uj'^Mual viewpoints on the merits ( having Macbird performed on (|^*''Pus is not unlike calculating Possible combinations of hu- chromosome pairings at the of sex-cell fertilization. .Many are those people who (i^ose Macbird on the grounds it is a poorly written drama Mch is based upon half-truths and non-truths and which gain support through its absurdity and willingness to mock public fig ures. This is the view assumed by most respected critics as well as the establishment world in gen eral. At the opposite pole are those who heartily approbate Macbird both for its literary excellence and its significant commentary on the American political scene. This position is also held by re spected critics though they be considerably fewer in number than those supporting the oppos ing view. But enough of this. What do MaBs Hill people think about Macbird? David Knisley, of the history department, saw the play in At- (Continued on Page 3) are scheduled at Waynesville’s Tuscola High and Pisgah High at Canton. Mr. Pressley stated that he hopes to take the stage band with him on this tour. The choir tours Florida this year and has quite a full sched ule. The choristers leave Mars Hill March 9 and go to Atlanta, Ga., where they sing at the 11 a.m. service Sunday in the First Baptist Church. The service will be televised in the Atlanta area. That night they will be at North Drive Baptist Church, also in At lanta. Monday, they arrive in Kissim mee, Fla., for an evening con cert at the First Baptist Church. Tuesday they go to Avon Park, Fla., and will sing at the First Baptist Church. Wednesday, it’s Ft. Lauderdale for a performance at the Wilton Manors Baptist Church—this one in Merit Island, Fla., near Cape Kennedy. Friday is open, but Mr. Rich hopes to add a performance in the Jack sonville area. Saturday finds the choir at Curtis Baptist Church in Augusta, Ga. On Sunday they are on TV again for the Columbia, S. C. First Baptist Church. The final performance is at the First Bap tist Church, Asheville. Both directors are pleased with what they consider to be excel lent tours. It should be pointed out that this is one of the best ways for people to become ac quainted with Mars Hill College. “The United States in 1968” will be the theme for this year’s spring symposium which consists of a panel of seven distinguished authorities scheduled to lecture during the week of Feb. 26 to March 1. There will be daily dis cussions, seminars, and lectures by the team members, headed by the noted American Broadcasting Company commentator Edward P. Morgan. Others scheduled to speak dur- SGA Holds Annual Vote Elections for student govern ment positions were held yester day. The Hilltop had already gone to press when the results were announced. Candidates for the offices were: president—Sally Spaulding and Wayne Staples, vice-president— Bobbie Miller and Bill Gardner, secretary — Martha Bruce and Marie Fortenberry. Jean Dunn was unopposed for the office of treasurer. The next round of elections is scheduled to begin Monday. Can didates for class officers will then begin circulating petitions. Interested students are encour aged to run for class office, if qualified. To check qualifications consult your student handbook. Petitions must be turned in to the office of the Dean of Stu dents^ before March 2. Election day is scheduled for March 16. Dorm officers will begin to circulate petitions for the final round of electioneering on March 18. Petitions should be turned in to Dean Lynch by March 22. Elections are set for April 4. Installation of all elected offi cials for the school year 1968- 69 is scheduled for April 16. 1968 Laurel Goes to Press The 1968 edition of the Laurel, the campus yearbook, is sched uled to go to press March 1, ac cording to editor Mike Swaim. He stated that the final 16 pages of the 208-page book are in the final stages of production. The book features more color than past Laurels. Swaim believes that he has captured a new con cept in yearbooks from previous years. The book features eight sections including one section on special events of the year. Swaim believes that a yearbook should be a reflection of student life. In following this belief he has designed the 1968 Laurel to show all phases of student life at Mars Hill, from the unforget table “happenings” to the daily routine of checking an empty mailbox. As is the custom, the cover design and the dedication are kept secret until the presentation of the yearbook. The presenta tion is scheduled for the chapel hour on April 26. ing the week are Kenneth Craw ford, Washington columnist for Newsweek Magazine; Michael Katz, assistant professor of law at the University of North Caro lina at Chapel Hill; George H. Esser, Jr. of Durham, director of the North Carolina Fund; Dr. C. Emanuel Carlson, executive di rector of the Washington-based Baptist Joint Committee on Pub lic Affairs; Dr. Nevitt Sanford of Stanford University, director of the Institute for the Study of Human Problems; and Dr. G. M. Gilbert, internationally known psychologist from Long Island University. The lectures and discussions in corporate such timely topics as changing relationships between church and state, crisis in Ameri ca as a result of the war in Viet nam, political issues of the 1968 elections, crime in the nation, education during the sixties, cities and their problems, and Ameri can youth. The afternoon seminars are slated for 3 p.m. in Memorial Library Auditorium. Lectures will be given at 8 p.m. in Moore Audi torium and also at 10 a.m., Tues day thru Friday mornings. Ques tion and answer sessions are plan ned after each address. The symposium was instituted three years ago as an important part of the spring semester. It is planned and coordinated each year by a faculty committee as a complement to the academic and cultural program of the college. In previous years the speakers have included Howard K. Smith of ABC (twice), Edwin Newman of CBS, Marvin Kalb of NBC, Dr. Frank Graham of the UN, and Leon Volkov of Newsweek. This year’s keynote speaker is Edward P. Morgan. He will speak Monday night on “Our American Crisis in the Far East.” Morgan holds a unique position among American news commentators and writers. His personal experience with history-making men and events includes duty in Saigon and Mos cow as well as Berlin and Lon don. He maintains an intense pride in the independence of his views and his freedom to express them on the air, from the lectern, and in print. Tuesday morning and after noon, Dr. Emanuel Carlson will discuss church-state relations. Dr. Carlson is presently serving as a member on the Commission on Religious Liberty and Human Rights of the Baptist World Alli ance. He also serves as consult ant with a number of national and inter-denominational organi zations dealing with problems of religious liberty and church-state relations. Kenneth G. Crawford of News week will tackle “Issues in 1968” on Tuesday night at 8:00 in Moore Auditorium. Mr. Crawford has known personally every United States President since Coolidge. No other Washington journalist is considered to have (Continued on Page 3)