PAGE TWO THE PILOT OCTOBER 28, 1961 THE PILOT Published Monthly by the Students of Vol. XVI Gardner^Webb CJoUege October 28, 1961 No. 2 STAFF Editor Tilhe Wilson Business Manager Vivian Hamrick Assistant Business Manager Elizabeth Ledbetter Sports Editors Skip West, Alan Carpenter Staff Writers Mike Champion. Jo Lee Loveland, navi's Moore, Judy Mason, Robert Philyaw, Rob Weir Photographer _ _ Joe Phillips Art Editor .. Jon Ward Faculty Advisor Michael H. Palmer R Founders Day Welcome To the former students and teachers of Boiling Springs High School, Boiling Springs College, and Gardner-WeWa College and to the special guests and friends of the College, we, the students of today’s Gardner-Webb welcome you. Many changes have taken place since you were last here, the most recent ones being the new science building and a new president. We hope you will have time to relearn Gardner- Webb as well as recall with friends the days that you were here. We wish for you to have a most pleasant and enjoyable weekend, so that you may return home with a long-lasting memory of this day. The First Founders Day Gardner-Webb College had its beginning at the 1903 meeting of the Kings Mountain Baptist Association. A com mittee was appointed to investigate the possibility of build ing a Baptist High School. At the 1904 meeting, the committee recommended that a Board of fifteen Trustees be appointed. They were to be representatives of the Association to collect funds, acquire a site and property, and to erect buildings. On Monday, May 8, 1905, the Trustees met to receive propositions from those communities who were bidding for the school to be located in their particular locality. T^ie idea of a denominational school was of significant interest to the people of the Association, especially the location of the school. The Boiling Springs Church offered their old church building and two acres of land. A committee was sent to Shelby to appear before the trustees. A buggy furnished the transportation for these men. When they came out of the meeting, the men found a doll in the buggy evidently left there by some child. They jokingly remarked, “We have brought the first student to the new school.” At a meeting of July 10, 1905, the Trustees selected Boiling Springs as the site for the new school. At the 1905 meeting, the Association voted to ask the Sandy Run Baptist Association to pin them in their project. Sandy Run eagerly accepted and elected 10 trustees to serve jointly with Kings Mountain Association trustees. The Trustees held their first joint meeting on October 27, 1905, at which time they decided to call the school the Boiling Springs High School. A committee was elected to secure a charter. On November 13, 1905, the Trustees decided to erect a brick building costing $10,000. June 1 of the next year the men received the architect’s drawings. D. P. Queen was given the contract to construct the building. The first load of bricks was hauled by a woman — Mrs. J. V. Devenny. She refused help from anyone. A ground-breaking ceremony was held in the spring of 1^7. Work on the building started. The cornerstones were laid on Jure 29, 1907, one for each of the associations. The school opened in October 1907 with Professor J. D. Huggins, Sr., filling the capacity as principal. Ever since the school became a college, Founders Day and Homecoming has been observed on the weekend nearest the 27th of October. It is on this dav that former students November Cometh The wild November comes at last Beneath a veil of rain. The night wind blows its folds aside. Her face is full of pain. — Richard Henry Stoddard Beneath this “veil of rain” is the month that many people would call gloomiest — the dead month. The trees have lost their gold and scarlet splendor of October and stand stark and bare against the gray November sky. Alone and lonely they stand under the hazy glow of the sun. The sombemess of the month is reflected in the hues of the bronze of chrysanthemums and the amber of topaz, in the brown, sere grass and the gray tearful sky. The month in between — a transition period. All the glory of autumn has faded and winter has not yet brought the grace and veneration of old age. And yet beneath the gloom and sombemess lies a strength and courage and hope — buried, perhaps, beneath the face “full of pain,” buried deeply in the heart of Novem ber. November is humble, thankful—thankful for the small est thing in the bareness of her life. The wind stills; the folds of the rain veil slowly close; the face of pain is covered by the pure whiteness and calm of December snows. Contest Slated For Miss G-W The annual Miss Gardner- Webb contest is less than a .month away, according to an tinnouncement from Dean of Stu dent Activities John B. Hiott. The contest will be held early in No vember, so that the winner may participate in various Christmas parades around and after Thanks giving. An entry fee of $1.50 is charg ed various clubs, classes, and other organizations that sponsor girls for the contest. Dean Hiott indicated that the money is used to cover costs of flowers, crown, ribbons, and other materials for the contest. Miss Gardner-Webb is chosen by out-nf-tmvn .iudges on the bases of beauty, poise, and charm, and fv'ifillmg the ideals of Gard- ner-Webb in every-day living. Mfss Ellen (Continued from Page 1) the College. BAND The Kings Mountain High School Band will perform as part of the half-time ceremonies. Sponsors for sophomores are Posemary Temple for Ken San ford, Cheryl Earley for Larry Hy- der, Christine Parker for Gene Allen, Donna Hennessee for Ezra Munn, Collette White for Calvin White, Mary Ann Hill for Bill Emarr, Janice Wilson for Edgar Cox, and Peggy Hoyle for Roy Crisp. During pre-game activities, the Gardner-Webb College chorus will present three selections: “It’s A Grand Night For Singing,” "Stout-Hearted Men,” and "Bat tle Hymn of the Republic.” The chorus is directed by Mrs. Nettie R. Gidney. Festive Gane (Continued from Page 1) 11c.” ALMA MATER Following these numbers the choir, under the direction of Mrs. Robert Gidney, will lead the students, alumni, and other spec tators in the singing of the Alma Mater. To bring to a peak the enthusi asm of the fans at homecoming, the 1961 Homecoming Queen will be crowned during the half-time program. To add to the spirit of homecoming and football in gen eral, the visiting Kings Moun tain High School Band, marching specialists, will also perform during half-time. Suecial Dinner (Continued from Page 1) From 1905 until 1928, when it was changed to a junior college, Gardner-Webb was known as Boiling Snrings High School. In 1942, Boiling Springs Junior Col lege became Gardner-Webb. Letter.' were mailed to 134 former faculty members and ad ministration, more than 250 chil dren and grandchildren of the original trustees, and approxi mately 400 graduates of the old high school imdting them to the campus. B. T. Falls, Sr., of Shelby is the only living member of the orig inal board of trustees. Gardner-Webb will also be host to numerous alumni of the College. Farmal Onenin^ (Continued from Page 1) posts with Ordnance Missile Lab oratories from 1951 to 1953. Prior to this position. Dr. Swann was director of research for The American Mineral Spirits Co., Chicago, a manufacturer and marketer of petroleum solvents and chemicals. From 1941 to 1945, Swann was The President's Page The World of The Future We are now dealing with individuals of the 21st century. The average life span of a white person in the United States is now 71 years. Seventy-one years from the present time will be the year 2032. What will be some of the problems we must face? The first great problem will be the great amount of leisure time. Electronics have already made the complete automatic factory a reality. We shall have to deal with it. We shall have the choice between allowing a small fraction of the labor force to produce our goods and the others to live at government expense or cut the work-hour week. I predict the latter. That means more leisure time. How shall we use it? The second great problem we shall face will be to find an answer to the question, “What is life for?” People have been busy trjdng to earn a living. With a shorter work-hour week they will begin to ask for the true meaning of life. Shall we continue to go on our way seeking the answer in TV and recreation or shall we look for the answer in God’s word and way? You and I must determine that. — Eugene Poston Travelling With Tillie By Tiilie Wilson Thirty-five million years ago, the red, gray, and brown, weirdly-carved ridges and valleys of the South Dakota Badlands were lush valleys. Rains and winds have been, and are continually, wearing away the many-shaped ridges. Some of the formations are flat, a few with a dry grass covering; some rounded as a knob; others come to a sharp peak; and some have no definite shape — a combination of many forms. Cedar Pass, a small village, nestles in the Badlands. It is very quaint, looking almost like the TV oowboy towns. It seems to be hiding from the rest of the world, sheltered from all life there in that barren land. A few fossilized remains of prehistoric animals that once roamed the region have been foimd — an early species of the horse (three-toed), an early ancestor of the sheep, and other smaller animals such as mice. The animals, hav ing rather soft teeth, became extinct when the lush grass and foliage began to toughen and tfiey could rjot chew the coarser vegetation. No Life No human being has ever lived in these wasted lands, but there is e\idence that some tribes of prehistoric Indians stayed for periods of time at different intervals, probably to hunt. The first white man to enter Mauvaises Terres was a French-Canadian. The Badlands played a small part in' the settlement of the western United States. Here the last battle between red and white men was fought, although it was not import ant. The Indians, probably sensing eternal defeat, tegan a ghost dance, praying for their savior to come. This activity alarmed the white men, who .called for more calvary to be sent in. This in turn alarmed the Indians and many fled the Badlands, causing more apprehension among the settlers. An accidental shot started the battle, in which about 150 Indians and 30 calvarymen were killed. The fascinating formations also served as a natural fortress for the Souix Indians. To relieve the dull grays and browns, there is sometimes a splotch of yellow or purple decorating the buttresses and pinnacles of the Badlands. The silver of the moon illuminates the lusterless colors of the intricate maze that is the Badlands; there is a quick flip as a prairie dog hastily retreats and all is still. G-W Spiritual Emphasis Week Very SueGessful Say Students _ Spiritual Emphasis Week was brought to a close on FYiday morning, October 6. The last service, held during chapel penod, was one of the most inspirational ones, and a large group was in attendance. The speaker for the. week, the dition to the services held Mon- Reverend M. O. Owens, Jr., cen tered his messages around the theme “His Way—Mine.” In keeping with this theme, each student was encouraged to make Christ’s way his way. The Reverend Owens spoke in chapel Monday," Tuesday, Wed nesday, and during chapel period on Thursday and Friday, in ad- senior research chemist for the Pure Oil Co., Chicago. Early in his career — 1933 to 1938 — Swann was a research chemist for Standard Ultramar ine Co., Huntington, W. Va„ day through Thursday nights at 6:30. IMPRESSIONS Although Spiritual Emphasis Week is over, definite impres sions of the week remain in the minds of the students who at tended the meeting. Several of these impressions ivere expressed: "Better than last year.” "An effective speak er.” “Spirit of the week seems to have had lasting effects.” “The spiritual interest of the campus since that week makes one won der what results would have been attained If the services could have continued another week." the field of dyestuff, pigments, Such comments as these and .ntermediates. „p the students’ Impressions ot Following the formal opening Spiritual Emphasis Week. To program, the new building will follow up this week, the B. S. U. be opened for public viewing, Council is planning more pro- followed by open house In all grams that will be of special 1r- buildings on the campus. terest to students.