A Greetings to BIG and little Brothers ARCHIVES THE CECIL W. ROBBINS UBWW# LOUISBURG C0\JLES£ LOUiSB'JW. N.C. 2/5W Once at Louislmrg Alivay.s a Part Volume II LOriSBURG COLLEGE, LOUISBURG, N. C., OCTOBEll 30, 1942 Number I HOME-COMING OFFERS VARIED EVENTS The annual home-coming of Louis- burg College will be observed on the week-end of October 31 and No vember 1. Miss Lula May Stipe, alumni sec retary and consulting dean, has is sued invitations and planned a va ried program of entertainment. The alumni will have something new in the field of athletic enter tainment this year. Because of the w’ar situation, intramural games have been substituted for intercol legiate games. The athletic contests are to be tag football, obstacle rac ing, blind boxing, and archery. Following the athletic contests, at six-thirty in the dining hall, the ban quet will be held. Mrs. James Ma lone, Louisburg, president of the alumni association, will be toastmis- tress. The guest speaker for the evening will be the Reverend B. C. Reavis, pastor of the First Method ist Church, Henderson. At eight-fifteen in the auditorium, a play, open to the public, will be presented by the Louisburg College Players, under the direction of Miss Virginia Peyatt, instructor in Dra matic Arts. The play to be given, “Fixin’s,” is by the nationally know’n Carolina playwright Paul Green and his sister. A special invitation has been extended the famous writer to be present at the i^roduction. After the play, the college wilJ serve as host at a dance in the social hall. This climaxes tlie first day’s program. On Sunday morning a special ser vice will be held at the Louisburg Methodist Church in recognition of the alumni. The Rt'verend Forest I). Iledden, pastor, will preach the sermon. In spite of transportation short age, there is a promise of a compar atively large attendance at the week end celebration. An especially large number of former students is ex pected from E. C. T. C. and Caro lina. THEY LEAD OUR CAMPUS LIFE NWniQO Y.W.C.A. Holds Candle-Lighting Service In an impressive candle-lighting service the officers of the Young Women’s Christian Association re cently recognized new and former members. Each person who entered was given an unlighted candle. The president, Jessica Womack, opened the service by having the group sing the hymn “Day is Dying in the West,” after w'hich Willie Mae Cherry read a scripture lesson on love. Then Dean Hudgins made an in spiring talk on the significanie of the Y. W. C. A. as a world organization and as an agency for personal devel opment on the local campus. The president then from her can dle lighted the candles of the other officers. They in turn lighted the candles of several members, who passed the light on to others. Soft music followed, and with candles held high the group bowed in silent prayer. Then, with lights still lifted, “Lead On, O King Eternal” was sung by all. A noticeable degree of quiet marked the close of the ser vice as the audience filed slowly out. The chapel was lighted wdth white candles in candelabra, set among ferns and flowers. Stiiiidlii^: >rartha Ann Strowd, iiresident. Girls’ Athletic Assoeiation and I’lii Tlieta Kappa; Katon Holden, president, t'reslinian class; Clarke Stokes, president, Men’s Jlonogrrani riub. Sitting': Wesley Hentry, editor ('OLl'MNS, presi dent, Draniatic ('liib; Bill Andrews, president, (Jlee ('Inl); Mehin Smiley, president, Men’s Student (Sovernnient; Muriel Wliiteluirst, president. Women’s Student Government; MoJfeil Ipock, president, \’W'CA, editor, “Tlie Oak”; Horton Corwin, president, senior class. Stamp and War Relief Drive Progresses Louisburg Honored at W.C. Anniversary New Faculty Members At Louisburg A special w»ar relief effort was made at Louisburg College during the chapel hour October 8. J. E., - Norris, Jr., was leader, conducting xlili I. ,iid the speakers, Charlotte Boone and McNeill Ij)ock. Charlotte’s speech emphasized the dire need of the besieged country of China. McNeil set forth the oppor tunity and need for Tinselfish giving and challenged the lx)uisburg stu dents to contribute to the w'ar effort. Miss Mildred Hudgins, dean of women, informally gave an im pressive description of the ruin and destitution she had seen in the Chi nese section of Shanghai. That night at the regular ten o’clock hour the bookstore was opened—not, however, for ice cream and the like, but for offerings to re lieve human need. Just outside the shop w'as a table with white cover, on which was placed a white marble offering bowl between white candles in korean brass candlehoklers. For about thirty minutes hymns were sung and sacred record music was played. In manner informal but sacred, students appeared and contributed the sum that they usu ally spent at this hour for “eats” or “drinks.” The offering came to $23.70, four times the usual book store spending at this hour. In still further efforts, the two athletic organizations announced that they were going to sponsor a campaign and campus-wide stamp drive. Horton Corwin, secretary and treasurer of the Monogram Club, led the devotional part of the meeting. The athletic program and the drive w’ere presented by Martha Ann Stroud, president of the Girls’ Ath letic Association, and Clark Stokes, president of the Monogram Club. The speakers related how necessary a college program of athletics was to the nation at present and how fitting it was that Ix)uisburg keep its in tramurals and physical education up to the current demand. The Athletic Association, in or der to help our war effort, is re quiring an admission of a defense stamp to the faculty soft ball game. Honor was conferred upon Louis burg College W’lien the president, Dr. as invited as a dele- +li pc1e^>^’a- tion of the Fiftieth Anniversary of I the Woman’s College of the Univer sity of Nortli Carolina. In the opening j)rocession of dele gates from the universities and col leges Dr. Patten was eleventh in line. The order of the ])rocession was determined by the date of the founding of the institution rejjresent- ed. Thus Louisburg College, found ed in 1787, occupied a place just af ter Salem College and immediately before the University of North Car olina. The place was the first of the Methodist institutions in the state, the second of North Carolina insti tutions. The Colleges and Universities pre ceding Louisburg were the follow ing: Harvard University, the Col lege of William and Mary, Yale Uni versity, the University of Pennsyl vania, Washington and Lee Univer sity, Columbia University, Brown University, Rutgers University, Dartmouth College, and Salem Col- lege. One event of the program w^as the presentation of the official delegates, including Dr. Patten, to Dean Jack son, by Miss Jane Summerell, chair man of the faculty committee on the anniversary celebration. This Will Be a More Successful College Year H . . . —I make choices in terms of years, not moments. —I budget my time to suit my courses and other needs. —I realize that each daily lesson is a stepping stone to knowledge. —I do not allow outside in terests to monopolize my time. —I think more of the part I can contribute than the favors or rights that might be given me. Six new members have been add ed to the Louisburg faculty for the current year. ^iliss Mildred Hudgins, dean of women, received her A.H. def^ee at Kandolph-Macon Woman’s ('allege, Lyncliburg, and her M.A. from Sc ers at Union Theological Seminary, New York, and Teachers’ College of Columbia University, New York. Miss Hudgins served one year as di rector of religiotis education at the Edenton Street Methodist Church, Raleigh. From to 1941 she was a missionary in Ja])an. While there she taught English in the Palmer’s Woman’s English Insti tute at Kobe, Japan. Miss Vivian McCall, teacher in the Commercial Departnuuit, is from the Wonum’s College of the Universi ty of North Carolina. She holds an A.B. degree in Secretarial Adminis tration. Last year she taught in Sanford High School. Mrs. A. Paul Bagby, teacher of Frcnch, holds an A.B. degree from (ieorgetown College, Georgetown, Kentucky, and an M.A. degree from Peabody College, Tennessee. Mrs. O. Y. Yarborough, teacher of piano, attended Greensboro Col lege ; Peabody Conservatory, Mary land; Asheville Normal; and the University of North Carolina. For a number of years she has taught music and directed the glee club at Mills High School, Louisburg. Stanley Patten, a graduate of Louisburg College, taught for the first few weeks of the college year as supply in the Science Department. Mr. Patton has attended State Col lege, Raleigh, and expects to receive his B.S. degree in Chemical Engi neering. Mr. P]. C. Dresser has arrived to become head of the Science Depart- I ment. As a graduate student he has had experience in the instruction of { undergraduates at Iowa State Col lege, the University of Mississippi, and the University of Vermont, in the fields of chemistry and bacteri ology. He has had industrial ex perience as bio-chemist and bacteri I ologist at Lanteen Medical Labora 1 tories, Inc., of Chicago and as Chem- I ist with the Anderson Priehard Oil I (Continued on page four) ORIENTATION PRESENTS CAMPUS LIFE With nmch of the uncertainty of the times and yet with serious pur poses, Louisburg College on Sep tember 7 oj>eued its doors for its one huiulred fifty-fifth consecutive year. An increased enrollment in com mercial and engineering students has been cited as a fact related to the present war period. Also, with many of the nation’s youth in ser vice, there is a decrease in boys’ enrollment. The first evening found an appar ently bewildered group of boys and girls assembled in the college chapel. They were mostly freshmen from various parts of the state, though mostly from eastern Carolina, and in a few cases from other states: Virginia, Tennessee, and South Da kota. They had been rained on all day while being housed, but their spirits seemed undampened, if one could judge by their look of expectancy toward the stage. Dr. Patten, Dean Hudgins, and Dean Kilby took their places. Dr. Patten .spoke, welcom ing the students and encouraging them to make the best of their op portunities this year. Student Life Discussed The deans presented tbe ideals of tbe self-government and stn- dent speakers were introduced. Mu riel Whitehurst in simple Imt im pressive words expressed the hope .■ . 1 I that this year would ho most suc- ,carritt (’ollege for Christian Work-1 {o/each of the students. She rs, lennessee. Also she has studied dent council to making life worthily enjoyable for the girls. The boys were told by the dean that the dor mitory was primarily their respon sibility and that he had faith enough in youth to believe that they could make a good situation for student living. Ira Helms set forth an ideal for life on the campus by emphasizing the aim of working in harmony with the council and mak ing student life cooperative gener ally. Yarborough and Kilby Speak Mrs. Yarborough, librarian, laid the store of knowledge of books be fore the group and showed how im portant the library was and how much more important it was that it be used profitably. Mr. Kilby then spoke, dramatic ally throwing himself into his talk. A college education,” he said, “serves to make one become intellec tually independent, socially depend able, morally honored.” Students Speak On Tuesday morning the orien tation program continued with the ])resentation by Phi.Theta Kappa of the extra curricular activities, Martha Ann Stroud, presiding. Speakers on the program were Sue Margaret Harris, speaking on the Young Women’s Cliristian Associa tion and the Athletic Association; Ira Helms, on the International Re lations Club and the Young Men’s Christian Association; Wesley Gen try, on the Dramatic Club and Columns; J. E. Norris, Jr., A. Ca- pella Choir and Christian Service League; Christine Shearin, Alpha Pi Epsilon, and Martha Ann Stroud on Phi Theta Kapi>a. Emphasis was placed again and again by each of the speakers on the budgeting of time in order for the student to get the most possible from activities outside the classroom. The (Continued on page four)