THE GUILFORDIAN THROUGH this gateway many a youth has en tered a richer life. A life that lies beyoncl the home and high school horizon. The college unfolds a wider world to the growing mind. With the microscope we look at things too small for the eye to see, with the telescope we look farther than the eye can see, through history and phi losophy we find new answers to the problems of life. Come! Enter this Gate! It Guilford College, the oldest co-educational institution in the South, is well situated, both for convenience and for natural beauty. One mile from the railroad and six miles THE oldest building on the campus was-completed in 1837 and is known as Founders Hall. It was substantially -remodeled and enlarged in 1908 so that it is now a c >llllllO dious girls dormitory with a dining hall in which the men of the college, the Founders girls and several mem bers of the faculty, have their meals. Here in many re spects the life of the college centers. It is the common meeting ground of the stu dents after meals and many are the old time socials that its parlors have witnessed 011 Sat urday evenings. The monthly class meet ings held here are gay times for the students. The Philomathean and Zatasian Literary Societies with their well-furnished an d 1 • • n i i_ _ n _ • dignified halls give . valuable training to tlie girls. Here also is the Y. W. C. A. hall, and the room in which the college weekly paper is edited. The reception room of the matron, Miss Benbow, has for many years afforded the members of the faculty a We present this week in the Guilfordian Supple ment an introduction to the campus. In later issues the buildings, Laboratories and life will be featured. THE GATE WAY The Gateway to Guilford, the oldest co-educational college in the South. A college rich in traditions, old in experience, but voung with present day life and enthusiasm. FOUNDERS HALL ' Bft 'A? -vv.u - . -y Founders Hall; erected 1837; school opened here that year with twenty-five boys and twenty-five girls. Now a girls' dormitory and Faculty home, the center of the college life. SUPPLEMENT TO ISSUE OF APRIL 20, 1921 uers nan witn its typical southern verandah set in a grove of spruce and magnolia trees with rows of boxwood and other shrubbery border ing the building. common meeting place. Indeed all who have been connect ed A\ ith Guilford ( olleg'e have fond, if not sacred, memories hovering about this heart of the institution—Founders Hall. z adhered to the great fundamentals of the ( hristian Faith, Guilford has exerted a marvelous influence for honesty and uprightness of charac ter in the citizenship of our state. It has builded the faith of its fathers into the lives of its children. from Greensboro, it affords, with its thirty acres of cam pus and two hundred and sixty acres of farm and woods, one of the beauty spots of the Old North State. As one approches, the ar tistic Entrance Gateway of brick with granite bases and capstones, the gift of the class of 1909, is the first thing seen. From this gateway a long drive, bordered by rows of maple trees, leads directly through the campus to Foun- The men who laid the foundation of this building eighty years ago were men of stern character, simple hab its and great faith. The stability of their character was built in to the life of the in stitution as well as into the walls of its halls. New Garden Boarding School, as Guilford was then called, was one of the few schools in the South that did not miss a session during the Civil War. Always operated by men and women who have been progressive in their search for the truth, but who have firmly