I M A Thanksgiving Word from Spider Webbs page 2 An indepth look at Disney’s "Beauty and the Beast" page 5 INSIDE: Crossword p.6 Movies p,5 Dateline p.6 Spider Webbs p.2 Endnotes p.6 Timeout p.2 Features p.3,4 Letters to the Editor, p.2 THE HILLTOP -65. Issue 5 Monday, November 25, 1991 "Bah-Humbug" — Banceteller Style i % ■ ^^in-*^®'^ceteller, one of the most excit- Ai^ . and theatre companies in ^ P^’^sent their heartwarm- [)ij,|°®'^ce-theatre rendition of Charles A-Christmas Carol in Moore 9,l9q on Monday, December r>ian ninety minute perfor- 'Ce will begin at 8:00pm. ^ounded in 1975, Danceteller has for more than a half-million ®fice members coast-to-coast 9*^°ut the US during the past 17 JP^Odi Company’s award-winning |iri of A Christmas Carol is now season of touring. In the i^.j *he ten performers of the en- ® portray some fifty different Dickens characters, all in Victorian finery. ^-^rding to The Philadelphia In- Danceteller’s production of A ^gstsY^3g§_Carol is, "A joyful affair that ^icke° story...just as i^6en '^ould have imagined had he ® choreographer." A Christmas Carol has been told in many forms; Danceteller’s is one of the most unusual renditions. On lengthy tours, Charles Dickens himself read his beloved tale aloud to enthusiastic American audiences in the 1860's. Danceteller’s festive production of the Carol- which combines dance with drama, with the dancers speaking the words of their characters much like ac tors in a play- is full of high spirits, heartfelt emotions, and exuberant dancing. "Dickens would like Dickens," notes The Philadelphia Inquirer, "and the dancing has a Victorian touch in keeping with the period... the two mediums mix with nary a hitch." Everyone’s favorite characters will be there: crotchety old Scrooge, the terrifying apparition of Jacob Marley, the rustic merrymakers at the Fezziwig Ball, the Ghosts of Christmas Past and Present (not to mention the towering Ghost of Christmas Yet-to-Come), as well as bespectacled, shivering Bob continued on page 3 ! 'f ) I ■^1 Scrooge shudders in fear of the Ghost of Christmas-Yet-to-Come in Dicken’s A Christmas Carol cunuMUtfu UM ijayc o Shelter from the city a city with a skyline il- hgM a glamorous horizon across ^ of glimmering nights and ■fiilciu nights making many a - ^ bream come true; a city full •'-‘^'11 UV-/IMC? u UI7, a lun ' ^'^'^'^y'og bay after day to be Atlanta: a ghost town of homeless people con- Hg,. ^ Searching for some kind of '''SrfgjJ® ^ost students went home °'"®ak to enjoy some of Mom’s and take a break from iife, fourteen Mars Hill stu- iJrcf^.^oog with Mars Hill Baptist pastor Tutterow JriQj 1° Atlanta, Georgia, to look . giarnorous skyline and bights. Instead, they found themselves looking face to face with reality everytime they looked into the eyes of a man, woman, or child who has found themselves with no place to call home. Their welcome into the city was a frightening one, to say the least. Fear and anxiety took hold as they wit nessed a man beating on a car and chanting loudly for everyone to hear. Excitement vanished and silence over came them. "When I first got there, it was like a culture shock...my first reac tion was to lock the door," remembers sophomore Suzi Holcombe. Tutterow, who escorted the students, remembers the doubts crossing his mind as to whether or not he should even let anyone get out of the van. Senior Carol Jo Howell contributing editor Tammy Condrey comments that the one way to overcome that fear was to know "...there was always a security in having lots of people around that you knew." Though Tutterow at first felt "an apprehension about what was to be found" among the group, he saw no fear in them after their initial introduc tion to the environment. The volunteers spread their labor among several locations, each of which had a specific purpose to serve the homeless. The Samaritan House, which sheltered the students during their stay, is a daytime shelter for the homeless that focuses on helping them find jobs. By giving them a place to shower and dressing them up in a suit and tie, they are given the confidence of walking into a job interview without feeling like someone who just walked in off the streets. Condrey feels her work ar the Samaritan House was her most rewarding experience of the trip, commenting, “It was great to spend some quality time with the guys who came there." The "quality time" each volunteer spent with the individuals they en countered seems to have left a lasting impression upon them all. While work ing at St. Luke’s Soup Kitchen, for ex ample, junior Laura Blakewood observes "how great it was to see how much the people really appreciated it all...they were happy to get anything." The greatest impression left by the continued on page 4