Harold and Faye hear evidence to the fact that swinging sometimes upsets the equilibrium. The inn - noted for food, drink, music. checkers. and long sessions of gab. Whether a Lowly Freshman or Dignified Senior Mid-semester exams were finished in NOVEMBER, and we welcomed the thirty-first Annual Lectureship, "The Church and the Faith Once For All Delivered." Marshall Keeble spoke the final night to a beyond capacity crowd. "The Great Big Doorstep" was the fall dramatics production. Then Thanksgiving vacation gave a pleasant ending to a busy month. Three short weeks between Thanksgiving holidays and Christmas vacation, and they were filled to the brim. Highlighting the A Cappella Chorus tour was the appearance on a national television program. Another highlight was the fact that the chorus had new Westpoint gray robes. The student body caroling party around the Christmas tree which the men had erected on the front lawn put us in the spirit for a MERRY CHRISTMAS. Barbara. Duane, Lora Ann, and Jerome enjoy listening to records in the library. .. --" . , , , . ......... - .. ,- After holidays everyone settled down to concentrate on studies and term papers. A bright spot was Maurice Evan's movie production of "Richard II." A rather quiet JANUARY ended with mental exercises - those dreaded exams. FEBRUARY brought new faces, new classes and those traditional registration lines - yes, second semester had begun. Dr. F. W. Mattox, Dean of Students, went on leave of absence to write a church history textbook. Professor Jim Atkinson left his classroom duties to become field man for the college. We were inspired to study harder when the Dean's List of Honor Students was released. "Our Town," with all its impressive simplicity, took the spotlight as the winter's production . Sophomores prepare the display for their county rarm Christmas collection.
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