Newspapers / Gardner-Webb University Student Newspaper / Dec. 1, 1949, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUE ■i' HE L U T 194a Shakespeare’s Hamlet Stirs Imagination ^sp“ campufik By ROBERT WKIGHT i very comely young maiden who is ; mixture is complete. Next, stir up Whom do you consider the world’s pure, innocent, and almost too good , ths ingredients or have the honor- greatest chef? Shakespeare! What! I for this world to give the mixture ed and respected king murdered! William Shakespeare, a cook, don’t I a romantic flavor. Bitters—zest is : Keep the mixture in a covered pot be absurd. Have you ever tasted i obtained by adding a little onion or in an old castle and raise the a dish that he created? Yes, I tried | juice or a spineless woman, a queen temperature to the boiling point, one of his masterpieces the other ! whose only guide is passion. Watch This mixture should be watched day. It was a concoction of rare in- j her, for she has a tendency to taint carefully for two and a half hours, gredients skillfully blende.d in exact the other ingredients unless they Does this become boring or tedious? proportions according to a precise are internally sound. Salt—add a Absolutely not, for it holds the ob- recipe. Once you have tasted it, you | young stu.dent who can be both server’s attention by its unusual and too will appreciate the genius of its | honest and loyal, who has courage turbulent reactions. Allow this mix- creator. What do you call this won- i as well as strength, call him Hora- ture to cool and soak, for often derful dish? One Dane Well-Done tio, and add him to keep the final even its value is enhanced by sleep- is my name for it. I can give you a ' mixture from spoiling. Spice—add a irg on it. It does not become stale rough outline of the recipe, for the : crusty old grave-digger to give fla- with age; instead it possesses the major ingredients are: Meat—take l vor and atmosphere to your stew, pecularity of a cud becoming better one sensitive young Dane and let Garlic—add a host of conflicting | the more it is chewed. I call this him soak up virtue, honesty, and and contrasting personalities to keep ! delicacy One Dane Well-Done, but integrity under the watchful eye of | the plot simmering. Yeast—add one | Shakespeare chose to call it simply his 'i-oyal father for twenty-odd ' sexual degenerate years during which a good educa- brother’s crown a tion adds an edge to his keen mind, have the necessai and you get a man. Sugar—add one ments nothing b 1 you I lerb dish P. G. PETTY Jewelry Boiling Springs, N. C. Features Nationally Famous Watches - Diamonds and Silveiwaie Expert Watch Repairing Low Prices The annual B.S.IJ. Christmas Banquet is scheduled for Monday evening, Dec. 19. Christmas caroling will follow, with the students singing to various parts of the community. Have you heard about the deaf and dumb man who fell in the well and broke three fingers yelling for help? COLLEGE GULF SERVICE STATION • GAS • CAR SERVICE Welcome to All Students Boiling Springs, N. C. (Continued from Page 1) does not require a major operation or specialist. For the private citizen, arrange ment is the same as any other clin ic, with charges of a regular treat ment fee. Dr. Wyan Washburn, college phy sician, is head of the clinic, assist ed by two trained nurses, Mrs. Wyan Washburn and Mrs. Jane Jolley, regular college nurse. Flossie Slater, nurses-aid, will serve as an assistant. If work de mands it, however, others will help Plans are to use pre-med students for as much training as possible. In the future, a training course for laboratory technicians and doc- Our health center^leads N. C. ju nior college infirmary facilities. It is actually a little hospital with a doctor and two nurses in attend ance, offering full facilities for both the college and community. To teach the importance of and to maintain good health is the objective Twenty-four hour service is avail able for students and people of this section. Campus Personality of the Month .erica’s By PAT THOMPSON of the most prominent groups the campus is the Marshal Club, rdner-Webb’s own Phi Beta Kappa troupe. This organization is a campus recognition for students who distinguish themselves by four qualities — leadership, scholarship, character, and service. New members are appointed by the faculty and by the members o. the club during the second semester in a “tapping service” of beauty and solemnity. Election to membership m the Society is the supreme award for a well-rounded student. Only those who prove to possess the ideal qualities of a well-rounded student are eligible. CLUB’S PURPOSE The purpose of this organization is to stimulate scholarship, to de velop character, to encourage lea dership, and to create good fellow ship. The club is directed by Dean W. K. Baldwin, a Phi Beta Kappa herself. Ruth Borders and Zeb Moss, co chief marshals, lead the active marshals in many activities on the campus. The officers include Zeb AIoss, president. Sue Curlee, vice- president, and Grace Selvey, secre tary and treasurer. The active marshals are the fol lowing students: Ruth Borders, Floyd Crane, James Cooke, Shirley Huskey, Betty Joyce Jones, Evelyn Krause, Betty Logan, George Mc- Swain, Zeb Moss, Margie Nanney, Roy Lee Smith, and Paul Williams. HOME EC GROUP Another growing club on our cam pus is the Evelyn Lytton Home Eco- ve or I nomics Club. The club has various and I speakers who lecture on child care, TtaTwart" of the 1 Personal care, designing, and fields of home economics. This club is thoughtful fan might grow so thoughtful a less organ of any basketball squad, the student manager. Guard that man! Sink that ball! or yea, coach, you’ve come bac n-ee mediums through which the average fan extols the big f the coach for a successful night or consoles them for a .drenched o victory or less, little mention is ever made of tl hardwood, that king of the towels, the student manager. , ^ , There are student managers, and there are student managers, and Gard- under the leadership of Mrs. Carlyle er-Webb College, home of North Carolina’s junior college Bulldogs, be- | Cornwell, director of the college eves it has one of the best in the game. This conviction is no idle suppo- : Home Economics Department, sition, either. Head Coach Wayne Bradburn and Assistant Coach Nor- j Anyone who is enrolled in the ■ ■ ■ of whom have seen a few years of sports on and off Home Economics Department or the fields, call Bill Dodge, a Miami, Florida, ex-G.I. student, the best 1 those who have had a previous football and basketball manager they have ever seen in operation. Dodge j course in home economics and have 1 a supreme job managing the G-W football squad this fall, also. a marked interest in the club, are ‘Often it’s a problem to keep equipment right on tap and reliable boys I eligible for membership. The mem- to handle it, especially in a small school, but we have that and more in j bers receive each month a very in- Dodge,” Coach Bradburn contends. | teresting magazine called “The Col- Little did Dodge intend to manage a baskettjall team when he came [ hecon.” The purpose of this club is 1 G-W last winter at the turn of the mid-term. All he was interested in 1 to stimulate a deeper interest in as an e.ducation and a chance to get out and put some of his sales- j Home Economics and to pr manship experiences to a test. High School at Andrew Jackson in Miami i contacts with state and national had always been with him a matter of attending classes until 12 noon I home economists, and then rushing to a wholesale cigar and tobacco company for his out- i This club holds its initiation si “fortunate necessity,” according to members in the Home . rtment Laboratory. The simple but beautiful ceremony is conducted by candle light. This year the table was centered at one end of the room and covered with a white cloth. A lighted Betty Lamp was placed in the center with light ed white tapers on each side. OFFICERS LEAD CEREMONY Shirley Huskey, vice president. side sales experience. The job v Bill. He liked basketball at the Miami high, but never had time to play, and hen he reached Gardner-Webb after dropping out of a crowded Florida State University at Tallahassee in 1948, he found there would be time to manage a sport he had never had time to play. The average basketball fan knows no more about the duties of a stu- , dent basketball manager than he does about Milton’s “Paradise Lost,” ( let alone “Regained.” Offhand, the job looks colorful—trips to the fi ^ winds, sideline views of winter’s giant sport, and sprinkles of the spot- : light when it shines on heroes. Offhand, it is colorful. But for every escorted the initiates into tl ' drudgery formed a semicircle around the table. She then pre- The biggest respoC3ibility for him rests in his custody of team equip- rented them for initiation, ment. He has 15 to 20 uniforms to be washed every week, an,d the same The president, Ruth Borders, gave number of practice uniforms to keep shaped up. Pounds of socks have to an interesting discussion on privi- be washed frequently. Arrangements for the room and board of visiting leges and obligations of the Home teams is often looked after by G-W’s Manager Dodge. Gym equipment Economics Club, has to be maintained, etc., etc. Ruth Dillard, secretary, explain- j I symbolism of the Betty Lamp, be taped and ^j^ich is the symbol of home eco nomics ideals. All the equipment is not inanimate. There are ankles sore shoulder muscles to be baked. Now and then Dodge handles a let ter to the coaches and managers of visiting teams, and offers good words to a prospective player. This latter type of work could be called secre tarial in some leagues. The initiates gave the club pledg? and then lighted their candles from the Betty Lamp. The president So, there you have it—from masseur to private secretary—all in one ' pinned on each girl measuring easy season. Did someone say easy? Move over. Dodge has a word for 1 spoons tied with ribbons of the club that—a word in the name of all college basketball managers throughout I colors, yellow and blue, and extend- this colossal gymnasium called U. S. A. : ed to them a welcome.
Gardner-Webb University Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 1, 1949, edition 1
4
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