Newspapers / Gardner-Webb University Student Newspaper / Sept. 1, 1949, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR THE PILOT SEPTEMBER, 1949 of proport Mrs. Dorothy Hamrick The load credit they efficient example of that fact fall separately Welcome To A New Way SI^£:UNi sinsfiMi CARS 55 TP JfK > i accuracy and p NEW DEAN ARRIVES (Continued from Page 1) After teaching English and La tin in South Carolina high schools, Professor Baldwin went to Nigeria, West Africa, to serve as mission ary for nine years. Resident Dean of Women and Instructor in the Baptist Woman’s College, Abeokuta, Nigeria, and Principal of the Bap tist Girls’ School at Agbor seemed not enough, for while at Agbor, Miss Baldwin set about building a school from the mud of a Nigerian jungle. An account of this, “r ’ You Ever Build a School,” was wr ten in the November, 1947, editi. of the Window of Y. W. A. Later Miss Baldwin was Dean of Women of the Baptist College of Pinevil'-e, Louisiana. Editor of the program for the In termediate Girls’ Auxiliary in World Comrades for about five years. Dean Baldwin is listed in , “Who’s Who in the South and the j Southwest” and belongs to the Na tional Association of the Deans of Women and to the American College Personnel Association. Welcome to North Carolina! To many of you who have passed this sign recently, we extend a very hearty welcome, not only to North Carolina, but to Gardner-Webb Col lege as well. As the road stretches out into the distance and goes on, so will this year which is before you. It is be ginning now—this year of 1940-50 with it’s work and play. There are so many things ahead, breakfast at 7:30, football games in rain or shine, pep rallies, burning of the midnight oil at exam time, bull ses sions about nothing in particular and everything in general. Yes, there are many things ahead at Gard ner-Webb this year. The friends you make of your schoolmates, your professors, and of all with whom you come in con tact, is one of the most important things. If you would have a friend be a friend. “A man that hath friends must show himself friendly.” Friendship is one of the most im portant “ships,” and you will find the Gardner-Webb campus one of the most conducive environments for it. Perhaps you would not or could not have come to college had it not been for Gardner-Webb. We are proud to have you as one o us, and we are confident that you will strive to uphold the high stand ards that are here. Just as the end of the road above cannot be seen, neither can be seen the direction which each of us shal' take after our years at Gardner- Webb; nevertheless, that road which led us here shall never be forgot ten. Here’s hoping-you like a Tar Heel college in the land of rolling hills, where the weak grow strong and the strong grow great. E. B. CHAPMAN & SON PACKERS AND DEALERS WHOLESALE FRESH AND CURED MEATS South Broad Street Extension — Gastonia, N. C. GARDNER-WEBB’S NEAREST DEPT. STORE CRAWLEY'S STORE CLOTHES SHOES SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY BUY and SAVE Boiling Spring's, N. C. r\ RELAX or STUDY While Your Clothes Are Being Laundered At The BOILING SPRINGS’ SELF - SERVICE LAUNDRETTE Owner — Robert Bridges It Pays To Advertise G. T. McSWAIN'S CASH STORE * Groceries ® Meats © Furniture O School Supplies Boiling Springs, N. C. instructor. New faculty members leave first faculty meeting. Left to right: Mr. E. W. Vosecky, acting bursar and instructor of commerce; Mrs. Carlyle Cornwell, director of college home economics department; Dean Willie Kate Baldwin, new dean of women for the college; and Miss Margaret Fales, college organ instructor and director of the Boiling Springs Baptist Church choir. New Faculty Members Miss Willie Kate Baldwin, of Lau rens, S. C., will serve as Dean of Women. She graduated from Win- throp College and received her Mas ter’s degree from The Baptist Train- mg School, Louisville, Kentucky. Miss Margaret Fales of Wilming- N. C., will be the pipe organ Miss Fales graduated rrom Westminster Choir College in 1949. Mrs. Carlyle Cornwell, Home Eco nomics Instructor, graduated from Winthrop College and received her Master’s degree from the Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina. Mrs. Cornwell did further graduate work at Ohio State Uni- ;rsity in 1945, and was connected ith Queens College, Charlotte, be- ire coming to Gardner-Webb. Mr. E. W. Vosecky, instructor of commerce, graduated from North western University in 1948 and re ceived his M.A. Degree from North western in 1949. history instructor, attended ’BUt- more College, and graduated from Western Carolina Teachers College. He received his M.A. Degree from Duke University. Mr. Troutman is from Asheville, N. C. Mr. Norman Harris of Ridgecrest, N. C., will serve as physical educa tion instructor. Coach Harris gradu ated from High Point College in
Gardner-Webb University Student Newspaper
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Sept. 1, 1949, edition 1
4
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