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MONDAY. JANUARY 14. 1963
REV. WILDERMUTH
Missionary Team Discusses Japan
Missionary action in Japan
will be presented by Rev. and
Mrs. Wesley L. Wildermuth at
the Day Student lounge at
W.C.G. on Wednesday, Jan. 16, at
8 p.m. They represent The
Oriental Missionary Society. The
public is invited.
The Wildermuths have been
missionaries to Japan for the
past ten years. Both have been
teaching in the Tokyo Bible Sem
inary, of which Rev. Wildermuth
is the Vice President. He has
also served as the superinten
dent of the Japan field for the
O.M.S. and is on the Board of
Directors of the Christian Acad
. ... “ Where
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PRESENTS
Miss Jan Prater
- i Jan is a conservative
p |j young freshman from
p Calhoun, Ga. She is ma
p joring in Elementary Ed
' ? ucation and an active
member of the W. A. A.
| in Atlanta after gradu
ation.
MODERN ARTS STUDIO
Dial TE 2-2331
127 Maple Street Carrollton, Georgia
r
TOMORROW'S PROMISE
fis Achievements of Science Promise A Tommorrow of Outstand
ing Achievement So Too, Does Your Future Expand.
WE'RE HERE WITH BANKING SERVICES TO HELP YOU
WEST GEORGIA NATIONAL BANK
Alabama Street Member F. D. I. C.
Winter Production
Cast Named For Honored Play
“You Can’t Take It With You”
By DOYLE SHAW
The West Georgia players, under the direction of
Wallace Buice will present “You Can’t Take It With
You” as their winter quarter production.
The play is a merry, mad com- i
edy aout a wacky Manhattan
family whose members do ex
actly as they please. The
broadway sensation, written by
George S. Kaufman and Moss
Hart, tries to prseent a picture
of the world’s most rugged in
dividualists.
Heading the hilarious charac-
emy, a school for missionary
children.
Through their work in Japa
nese churches in evangelism and
teaching, this couple is prepared
to present a current report of
Gospel outreach in the intriquing
island. They can answer critical
questions on Japanese affairs
and the strategic place of this
nation in the Asian picture.
The Wildermuths will also pre
sent Japanese life in an ex
cellent photo coverage in natural
j color.
You will not want to miss
hearing this talented missionary
team.
THE WEST GEORGIAN
ters is Dick Gammon portraying
Grandpa Vanderhof, who for 35
years has confined his activities
to hunting snakes, practicing dart
throwing, attending commence
ment exercises and ignoring his
income tax payments.
Equally uninhibited is Linda
Patrick who is cast as Penelope,
the accidental playwright whose
career began when a typewriter
was delivered to the house by
mistake.
Abe Gallinan plays the part of
Paul, who passes his time man
ufacturing fireworks in the
cellar. Vernon Cain portrays Mr.
de Pinna, a congenial ice man
who has been a house guest for
eight years. Leona Bolch stars
as Essie who practices her bal
let in the living room. Sonny
Burt is cast as Ed, who gets
into trouble for inserting max
| ims from Trotsky in the candy
boxes which he delivers. Wayne
Libby and Pam Kilpatrick will
supply the love interest in the
roles of Alice and Tony, while
Tony’s parents are played by
Ramon Rogers and Melba Buice.
Other important roles will fea-
I ure Roossell Adams, Clarence
I Blalock, June Green, Gerilla
Wright and Peggy Henderson.
| “You Can’t Take It With
You” received the Pulitzer Prize
as the best play of its season
and the motion picture version
received the Academy award. The
| play is scheduled to appear in
the gymnatorium February 27
through March 1.
Listening Group
Plans for Quarter
The music listening ciub will
meet weekly on Wednesday at
6:30 p.m., during the winter
quarter, in the Gordon Watson
Room of the library. Interested
members of the faculty and the
student body are invited to at
tend these informal sessions.
Although the hour and a quar
ter sessions will primarily fea
ture the works of Bach, Vival
di, Handel, Mozart, Beethoven,
and Brahms, the music of lat
er composers, folk singers, and
jazz musicians will be played
from time to time. The program
for Wednesday January 16, will
feature Mozart’s fortieth sym
phony and Tschailkovsky’s first
piano concerto.
Welcome to
IdfjetLodht
(Church
WILLIAM A. TYSON. JR.. Minister
11:00 A. M Morning Worship
7:30 P. M Evening Worship
10:00 A. M Sunday School
6:00 P. M M. Y. F. Supper and Program
fJUsP On Campus MaShnJman
y y (Author of “I Was, a Teen-age Dwarf ”, “The Many
Ixtves of Dof)ie Gillis”, etc.)
INFERIORITY CAN BE FUN
The second gravest problem confronting college students to
day is inferiority feelings. (The first gravest problem is of
course, the recent outbreak of moult among sorority house
canaries.) Let us today look into the causes of inferiority
feelings and their possible cures.
Psychologists divide inferiority feelings into three principal
categories:
1. Physical inferiority.
2. Mental inferiority.
3. Financial inferiority.
(A few say there is also a fourth category: ichthyological
inferiority—a feeling that other people have prettier fish—
but I believe this is common only along the coasts and in the
Great Lakes area.)
Let us start with the feeling of physical inferiority, perhaps
the easiest to understand. Naturally we are inclined to feel
inferior to the brawny football captain or the beautiful home
coming queen. But we should not. Ixiok at all the people,
neither brawny nor beautiful, who have made their marks in
the world. Look at Napoleon. Look at Socrates. Ixiok at
(Bgflwf&i**-- JRjK WraiißHßK. .ml L
MkcbieJ fa (eel minor
What I mean is that you can’t always tell what’s inside a
package by looking at the outside. (Sometimes, of course, you
can. Take Marlboro Cigarettes, for example. Just one glance
at that jolly red-and-white package—so bright and pert —so
neat but not gaudy—so perfectly in place whether you are at
a formal dinner or a beach picnic—so invariably correct for
any time, clime, or condition—one look, I say, at this paragon
of packs and you knov) it has to contain cigarettes of absolute
perfection. And you are right! That pure white Marlboro
filter, that fine, flavorful blend of Marlboro tobaccos, will
give you a smoke to make the welkin ring, whatever that is.
So those of you who have just been sitting and admiring your
Marlboro packs since the beginning of the semester, why don’t
you open a pack and light one? Light a cigarette, I mean
not the package. Then you can settle back and smoke your
Marlboro and, at the same time, continue to gaze rapturously
at the pack. Thus you will be twice as happy as you are il
that is possible.)
But I digress. Let us turn now to the second category
mental inferiority. A lot of people think they are dumber than
other people. This is not so. It must be remembered that there
are different kinds of intelligence. Take, for instance, the clas
sic case of the Sigafoos brothers, Claude and Sturbridge, stu
dents at Wake Fores! It was always assumed that Claude was
the more intelligent just because he knew more than Stur
bridge about the arts, the sciences, the social sciences, the hu
manities, and like that. Sturbridge, on the other hand, was ten
times smarter than Claude when it came to tying granny knots.
But no matter; every body looked down on “Stupid Sturbridge,”
as they called him and looked up at “Clever Claude,” as they
calied him. But who do you think turned out to be the smart
one when their granny almost got loose and ran away? You
guessed it—good old Stupid Sturbridge.
We arrive now at the final category, financial inferiority.
One way to deal with this condition is to increase your income.
You can, for example, become a fence. Or you can pose for a
life class, if your college is well heated.
But a better way to handle financial inferiority is to accept
it philosophically. Look on the bright side of poverty. True,
others may have more money than you have, but look at all
the things you have that they don t— debts, for instance, and
hunger cramps.
And what about friendship? You don’t need money to have
friends, and let me tell you something, good jieople: the older
you get the more you will realize that nothing is so precious as
friendship, and the richest man in the world is the one with
the most money. ® 1963 M “ shulm “
* * *
Rich or poor, you can all afford the pleasure of Marlboro t
available at popular prices in all 50 states of the Lnion .
PAGE THREE