Charter Day Is Celebrated Today VOLUME XX SCHOOL CHARTER PASSES CENTURY TODAY MARKED FOR j INAUGURATION OF CENTENNIAL PLANS Conference Heid to Celebrate One Hundred Years of Co- Education in the South. ADDRESS BY GOVERNOR Binford Presents Program for Rebirth of Guilford to Parallel Start of New Garden. One hundred years ago today, the original charter for New Garden Board ing School was ratified by the assem bly of the state of North Carolina, em powering the trustees to do business and own land under that name. Four years later Founders' hall was com pleted and school opened; in 1888 it became Guilford College. Today the Governor of North Caro lina comes to Guilford to aid in tho launching of the Centennial program which will, in its completion, see the re-birth of a new Guilford four years hence. Fittingly, the celebration of the hun dredth anniversary of Guilford, the oldest co-educational institution in the South, is to be opened with a round table conference on co-education. The conference opens at 10:30 in the auditorium. Mrs. Frances Blanshard, dean of women at Swarthmore College, will address the throng of educators, friends of the college, and students, on the subject of co-education. Dr. Rob ert L. Kelly, executive secretary of the American Association of Colleges, will also speak, choosing his own topic. Dr. A. W. Hobbs, member of the board of trustees and former member of the faculty here, will preside and introduce the speakers. Luncheon in buffet fashion will be served at the dining hall, preparations having ben made to accommodate a large number of visitors. Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus' talk on "Guilford College and North Caro lina" will feature the afternoon ses sion. The governor will be introduced by Dr. D. Carroll, chairman of the board of trustees, who will preside. The main speech is to start at 2:30 in the auditorium. Samuel Haworth will conduct the de votional at the opening of the session. Following the governor's address, President Raymond Binford will pre sent the centennial program to the as sembly. The A Capella choir will sing during the afternoon. A basketball game in the gymnasium tonight will complete the Charter Day celcbration. CLASSES SESENT FEW PROGRAMS IN MEETINGS Freshmen and Sophomores Hear Musi cians; Seniors Discuss Rings With No Definite Result. Music has been the predominating feature in recent class meetings. The first meeting after the holidays, Janu ary 4, the sophomores were entertained by William Collier in a number of piano selections. The other classes ad journed because they did not have a program. January 11. Elizabeth Adams played the piao for the freshmen. The seniors held a business meeting, discussing the problem of clnss rings, but making no definite decision. GUILFORDIAN Binford to Give Centennial Aims President Binford will present comprehensive plans for the centen nial expansion project this after noon at the meeting of the Guil ford College board of trustees. This project, which is already under way, calls for an enlarged physical plant and more adequate equipment; for a select student body of 300 and for a more adequate program of financ ing and endowment; for further de velopment of the new curriculum; for a definite program of character building, involving the relationship of social and religious life to the educational program of a liberal arts college; for a broadened pro gram of institutional service to so ciety, and for the organization of the old students, alumni, and all friends of the college. SWARTHMORE DEAN SPEAKS IN MORNING Dean Blanshard Gives Address on Co-Education at Char ter Day Program. OPEN FORUM TO FOLLOW "Co-education at the College Level" will be the subject of the address of Mrs. Frances Brand Blanshard, dean of women at Swarthmore College, Penn sylvania, at the Centennial program Saturday. Mrs. Blanshard will speak at 10:30. Her address will be followed by an open forum. Dean Blashard is a graduate of Smith College with an A. M. from Columbia. She was instructor at Hollins College, Wellesley, and Michigan State before she went to Swarthmore. At Swarthmore she has been teach ing in the department of philosophy, has been acting dean, associate dean, and in 1928 became dean of the college. Mrs. Blanshard is prominent in the National Association of Deans for Women. She is a member of the Philos ophy Association and a member of the Phi Beta Kappa. GUILFORDIANS CONDUCT OWN CHAPEL PROGRAMS Three Out of Four Exercises in Past Two Weeks Led by Home Talent. Three of the four chapel services since the holidays were carried on by members of the faculty and student body of Guilford College. Mr. Purdom spoke on Monday about the Nobel Prize in physics. The whole college stood tip Tuesday to pay silent tribute to the late J. Franklin Davis. Claud I>. Nelson, the Southern Field Secretary, Student Division, of the Y. M. C. A., spoke on "The Religion of Jesus and a New Social Order." John Hugh Williams spoke Friday on "The Honor System." New Members on Staff Two people have been added to the staff of the Guilfordian since the last issue. Dorothy Sturdivant is taking over the "Grist Mill," literary column on the editoral page. Leßoy Miller lias resgned his place as the "Minute Man," but the nejv "Minute Man" wishes his identity kept anonymous GyTHE^c) GUILFORD COLLEGE, N. C., JANUARY IS, 1934 FORTY PAGE STORY OF GUILFORD PUT OUT BY COMMITTEE History Compiled from Many Sources—Copies Avail able for Today. GILBERT IS MAIN AUTHOR Real Beginnings of Quaker Institution Back in England; Dr. Perisho Aids With Reminiscences. George Fox began it back in Eng land when in 1668 lie advised setting up schools "for teaching whatsoever things was civil and ustful in ye crea tion." Thus starts "The Story of Guil ford College," written by Dorothy Lloyd Gilbert with the help of the his tory committee, Professor A. I. Newlin, Mrs. J. Franklin Davis, who helped in research, F. 0. Shepherd, who took care of the business end, and Dr. Ehvood Perisho, who offered anecdotes and reminiscences. The aim of the book, according to its author, is to "interpret some of the outstanding facts concerning Guilford, and as much of the "innate spirit" as they could catch. It is a forty-page hook, with several illustrations. Some of the ideas in the book came from Dr. L. L. Hoblis' unfinished his tory of Guilford. Another interesting source was the unpublished dairy of Delilah Reynolds, who "walked fifteen miles to be here" on the day New Gar den boarding school opened. Other sources were: Works of Elmira Forester Wilson, minutes, catalogues, old "Collegians," and Guilfordians, and works of Dr. Mary M. Hobbs. A former student of Guilford, Fran ces Tonge, contributed the sonnet on Guilford which opens the book. TWENTY STUDENTS SIGN FOR SPEAKING CONTESTS Competition Grouped Under Three Gen eral Big Heads; Both Men and Women Eligible. FORENSIC TOURNEY HEADS LIST Two events of interest to student speakers and debaters, aside from the regular contests for the debating team, were announced in chapel Tuesday morning by Professor Algie Newlin, Chairman of the debating committee. They are the Trl-State Intercollegiate Forensic Tournament to be held at the King Cotton hotel in Greensboro, March S, 0. and 10, and the Peace Oratorical Contest at Lenoir-Rliyne, April 27. Nearly twenty students have given their names for the try-outs for these contests and several more are expected. The states participating in the Fo rensic Tournament are North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. Differ ent events or contests will be the de bates tournament, the men's oratorical contest, women's oratorical contest, after-dinner speaking contest, and con test in extemporaneous speaking. Dates for local tryouts have been set by the debating committee. One Guilford student will be chosen to rep resent each contest. Tryouts for the local debating team will be held Mon day, January 29; for the contest in Greensboro, Friday, February 23, and for the 'peace oratorical contest, Fri day, April 13. EXAMINATIONS CHANGE RATINGSJN CLASSES Those students, now rated as freshmen, sophomores or juniors, who will have sufficient hours after the examinations for a higher standard, will bo classed with the upper bracket and will be expected to attend the new class meetings, according to Miss Era Laslcy, col loge registrar. That is, a student who lacked two hours of being a junior this fall and was consequent ly rated a sophomore until the present, will shift, providing he makes those two hours. Examinations begin at 9 Monday, January 15, and end Monday, Jan uary 22. Seniors register January 15 in the registrar's office. Juniors and sophomores register January 20, Saturday, and Freshmen, Monday, all lower classmen signing up in the biology laboratory. Classes begin at 1:15 Monday aft ernoon and absences will be count ed from then. ALL DEPARTMENTS GIVE EXHIBITIONS Fruit Flies, Term Papers, Elec trical Measuring Instru ments Are Included. OLD MANUSCRIPT SHOWN An exhibition to which many mem bers of the faculty contributed exam ples of their students' work and some of their department's equipment will be given in the library and in the biol ogy laboratory on Charter Pay. Be sides the faculty's contributions, an cient manuscripts belonging to Miss Laura Worth and the Centennial cam pus and building plans will be shown. Some of the contributions of the physics department are a potentiome ter for the calibration of electrical measuring instruments, a large size electrical measuring instrument, a one meter concave grating spectograph for photographing spectra, photographs of various spectra, and a photo-electrical cell. . Miss Ricks will exhibit some rare books and pamphlets. Miss Gilbert and Mr. Furnas con tributed some English term papers nncl theses. Dr. Campbell will exhibit some fruit flies for genetics and other specimens. Miss Bruce will show some home economics work. Mr. Fleming contrib utes some pictures and examples of student's work in French. Mrs. Milner exhibits Julia Blair Ilodgin's personnel cards and some of last year's geometrical and free hand drawings done in Philosophy 10, notes from Philosophy 10, and syllabi of Philosophy 103, 104, Psychology 1 and Sociology. NOAH'S CHOIR SINGS ON AFTERNOON PROGRAM The Guilford College choir under the direction of Max Noah is going to sing this afternoon as a part of the Charter Day program. The numbers that they will sing are: "Hail! Gladdening Light," Wood; "Lo, in the Time Appointed," Healy Willan; "All Breathing Life, Sing and Praise Ye the Lord," J. S. Bach; "Adoramus Te," G. P. da Pales trina; "Ava Marie," Wetzel, and Psalm CXLVIII," Gustav Hoist. Inauguration Of Plans For Centennial NUMBER 6 J. FRANKLIN DAVIS QUIETLY PASSES ON TUESDAY MORNING Beloved Professor of Guilford Ends a Long Life of Service. FORMED LINK WITH PAST Came Here in 1888, First Year of the College, and Was Active Until 1931. A living link to tlie past of Guilford College is gone with the death of Pro fessor .T. Franklin Davis, Tuesday morning at his home on Station road. Professor Davis was a member of the faculty when Guilford opened as a college in 1888. Ilis mother, Annie Henley, was one of the twenty-five girls enrolled at the opening of New Garden Hoarding School in 1837. For more than 42 years Professor Davis was a member of the faculty in active service, withdrawing November, 1931, on ac count of a stroke of paralysis. His name, however, was carried on the roll until his death. Death came quietly at 4 :30 Tuesday morning as the result of a heart at tack. He had been a semi-invalid for two years but recently had been able to go out for short automobile rides. On Monday lie went to Greensboro to get his hair trimmed In preparation f'.r tlie Charter Day exercises. He had been married to Mrs. Jose phine Rhodes Davis for about six years. She, a resident of Philadelphia, for merly taught music at Guilford. She is at present interested in the Guil ford college club and other activities of the nature. Professor Davis' two daughters, Mrs. C. S. McArthur, Elizabethtown, and Mrs. E. C. Winslow, Tarboro, his son Henry Davis, of High Point, all gradu ated from Guilford. Besides these and Ills wife, Professor Davis Is survived by an older brother, Stephen Davis, of Deep River. RHODES SCHOLARSHIP GOES TO CAROLINA MAN Guilford's Candidates Were Bill Edger ton, Who Rated Among the First Five, and Dave Parsons. North Carolina candidate for the Ce cil Rhodes Scholarships to Oxford as announced by the state selection com mittee is Robert Barnette, of Shanghai, China, who is a student at the Univer sity of North Carolina. He will go to Atlanta where the scholarships will be awarded to four students from Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessee, North Caro lina, Georgia and Florida. Guilford's candidates for these schol arships were William Edgerton and David Parsons. Both are reported to have ranked high, especially Edgerton, who was rated among the first five. Robert Lassiter, of Yale, was the other North Carolina student who com peted for the final choice by the state committee. Form Discussion Group A group of freshmen formed a dis cussion group about two months ago which meets every Sunday night at 6:30 at Professor Newlin's home to dis cuss social, economic, political and re ligious questions. To encourage the members to express their opinions, it was made a semi-secret society.