PAGE TWO GARDNER-WEBB PILOT MAY, 1945 GARDNER-WEBB PILOT FACULTY NEWS WHO'S WHO Boiling Springs, North Carolina ElliotT^sited junior C0LEE?T1^LBERT STAFF colleges in Mississippi for a Coleen Talbert is the Editor-in-Chief - ^ - Louise Edwards e^rly part of May charming daughter of Mr The summer school faculty and Mrs. J. A. Talbert of Associate Editor - J. T. Jones, Jr. is being employed now, and CliiTside, North Carolina. ]sT„w« Editor Bernice McMurrv Preceding for a After finishing high school News Editor isernice mciviurry session. Among tnose at Cliffside she entered Rob- Eeature Editor Eris Smith employed so far are: Mr. S. inson’s Business College, ^ Trentham, from Union Spartanburg, South Carolina, Religious Editor - Margaret Wacaster University, Jackson, Tennes- where she completed a bus- Sports Editor Polly Camp, Jack Hoyle ^^o will teach biology, iness course. and Mr. W. P. Cavin, from in the year of 1943 she Circulation Manager _ - Louise Martin Wofford College, Spartan- entered Gardner - Webb Col- Reporters Evelyn Harrill, Colleen Hill, Colleen Talbert, ^^ge. As a freshman she was .. Marigold Long, Miss Carolyn Wray, Patricia Sumner, Mr n/ri Mr« j and Members of the Journalism Class. Mr. and Mrs. Smith, their during both years here she son, O. B., and Mr. and Mrs. was pianist for K. K. L. So- Typists Ida Lattimore, Martha Ann Walker, Nancy Trout Green, of Kentucky, visited ciety. During her sophomore W AiioTn Dorothy Smith for the year she had divided her Managing Editor — W. Lawson Allen weekend,^ coming especially time between being secretary — for the May Day exercises. of the Sophomore class, Pilot Published monthly except July and August by Gardner-Webb Mr. and Mrs. Fuller, of reporter and assistant ac- Junior College, Inc., Boiling Springs, North Carolina Kentucky, Mr. Harold Allen, companist to the Glee club. and Miss Ruth Jewell, of Oak She is majoring in Primary , ... „ . , Ridge, Tennessee, were Education and Public School Yearly Subscription Price 50jS guests of Miss Fuller for the of Music and minoring in — weekend of May Day. piano. She plans to attend W. Entered as second-class matter January 5, 1945, at the post a + office at Boiling Springs, N. C„ under Act of August 24, 1912. in Charlotte sh^^^^^^ She is loved by all the stu ping with Miss Patrick, and dents and envied by many then went to her home in for her musical ability. TRIBUTE TO THE SOPHOMORES Cowpens for the remainder These words, simple though they may be, are dedicated' erf the weekend. MACY BLANTON to the Sophomores. You are a wonderful group of students. Mr. Elliott spoke to the Re- Rlariton the lovelv At the beginning of the year, we thought you were beings connaissance Club in Shelby , , ^ ^ 7 with supernatural'powers. Soon, however, we found that on May 8. He also addressed nf you,_like us were human beings, who enjoyed a dash of th^^uatmg c^^s® of t K Blanton^of^Sp^ndale, ^en- fun in your dish of college life. Hospital on the night pontinne her educa- We all dreaded Initiation Day, and how we did com- of May 12. Y intervening plain when it finally arrived! These grumblings, however, A number of the faculty were f.be b«a„se of deep fee.ing inside us .nd we e„- MrTulfc.n* S trom scESl SSe^^ Sif Sofrire =»■»!"* Gardner- Webb, ' We enjoyed also the comradeship of the Freshinan- SnLfSVeVtaSntaU SlThTh“„me town She Sophomore banquet and numbers of other campus activities. Miller at the Cincinnati Con- ipaHer in the Yes, we have truly enjoyed the privilege of being in college Yountr Women’s Auxiliary with you. Our goal is to be as good Sophomores as you have Forest; Miss Cuthbertson ,t ,\™"*B.ptXstude„t K 5“"' f u™ " l£' and Mrs C F Fuller “"1 other religious activi- from the table of life. , Mrs O I'uller pamnlis Her de- o have announced the engage- campus, ner ae THE FUTURE ment of their daughter. Bet- lightful disposition has en- At the present time, we stand on the threshold, trying sy Jane to Mr. Harold Allen SratsTlike '''' to turn our faces both to the past and to the future. The the wedding to be an event of stuaents aiiKe. Sophomores are occupied with thoughts of senior colleges June, or vocations and the sadness wrought by the approaching departure from our fair Alma Mater. The freshmen can PJqus Fof N©Xt Colleen Hill, the attractive think only of seeing the dignified graduates leave and ^ m - - daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. prepare to take the places as the intelligentsia of the student Y601 III TralllinQ B. Hill, of Shelby, entered body. We are all making plans, and as we do, let us resolve . Gardner-Webb last year as a that we shall part and remain friends, that we shall always U II 1 O II freshman. hold close to our hearts the memories of college days, ant She attended Shelby High that we shall never lapse into complacency with the idea Our B. T. U. work is one School where she was pres in mind that we know everything. Let us always strive for of importance and interest, ident of the Glee club in her truth and knowledge. “A little learning is a dangerous and is very helpful to those senior year and also a mem- thing,” but “knowledge is power.” who participate in it. We ber of the Honor Society. o have been quite successful This year Colleen is pres- THOUGHTS this year in our work, but we ident of the Athenean-Kam- As I attempt to put into words what we should feel at hope to profit next year by saeur Society, a member of this happy time when the war in the European theatre has the mistakes we have made, the Student Council, a mem- terminated, a few sentences pass through my mind in never The selecting and planning ber of the Marshall Club and ending procession. I would like to pass them on to you. of programs contribute im- ateo a member of the paper “It is for us, the living rather to be dedicated here to mensely to the attendance and annual staff, the unfinished work which they who fought here have thur and the interest shown in She is planning to attend far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated Training Union work. It is college at Chapel Hill next to the great task remaining before us, that from thes, the duty of the enlistment year where she will continue honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for chairman to enlist members, her major in Sociology. which they gave the last full measure of devotion, that we but if the programs are unin- here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in teresting, one cannot expect vain, that this nation under God, shall have a new birth of a large group. Along with powerful working hands aft- freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, several others, we want to erwards. With concentration ■ for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” work on that particular and enthusiasm, we can main- And to these magnificent lives of prose, I would point next year so that we tain a spiritual and lively like to add three lines from the poem, “In Flanders Field”: may bring our union up to Baptist Training Union in the “If ye break faith with us who die par. future. We shall not sleep, though poppies grow We must set our goal, strive Let us not be found un- In Flanders Field.” to obtain it, and clutch it with faithful!

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