VOLUME XXIV 'NEWGYM'COMMITTEE SEEKS BRICKS CAMPAIGN MARKS FIRST WEEK OF NEW SEMESTER Thousand Bricks From Each Student and Faculty Mem ber Is Drive's Goal. MILNER, PARSONS LEAD Off-Cam pus Workers to Seek Gifts After Charter Day; Cornerstone Laying May 28. "Three hundred thousand bricks or bust!" So rings the war-cry of the com mittee recently formed to organize campus support of the new gym for Guilford project. In a campus-wide drive, scheduled for tile week of Jan uary 24-31, the committee plans to seek gilts of brick for the projected center of Guilford athletic life from faculty and students alike. For the purpose of tile campaign, bricks are to be priced at •$!•"> a thousand, and the 300,000 goal will call for a gift of slightly less than a thousand bricks from each learner ami teacher. A parallel drive, soliciting the aid of alumni and friends of the college, will be launched ou Charter day, January l.'i, and last until the thirteenth of May. Planned culmination of the pro gram is the- cornerstone laying to take place May 2S —Alumni Day—of next year. Details of llie local organization have not yet been fully worked out. Sub lnitted first to the Cooperative Council, student - administration organization, formation of a central committee was deemed the most efficient method of carrying out (he intensive program to be launched at the beginning of the second semester. Solicitors to under take the canvassing of each dormitory are to be named later. The off-campus division of the gym campaign includes some 200 workers, who will be feted 011 Charter Day. These workers are recruited from past graduating classes and from local alumni assocint ions. Heading the drive are Guilford's President Clyde A. Milncr and Business Manager David IT. Parsons. Chairman D. D. Carroll, of Hie Guilford Board of Trustees, and Clifford Frazier, brother of the board's secretary, are also faking an active part in (lie organi zation plans and will speak in favor of tile project in connection with the Charter Day celebration. Guilford Quakers Invade Blue Devils for Humanity's Sake Determined that Duke should not wait long before Guilford would re turn the call made by its head coacli, Wallace Wade, a group of students, not from the Athletic association, but from the V. W. C. A. and Y. Ml C. A., went down to the Mluc Devils' territory last Sunday. The attraction, however, was not Duke (at least Mr. Anderson would not admit that the memories of the attractive V. W. president down there had lingered on from Xawakawa) but Buck Kester, president of the Southern Tenant Farmers union, who was to speak to "Y" cabinets from all over the state. MY. Kester, who Is a very g/thE'-d GUILFORDIAN Caroling Planned For Thursday Night With Christmas just around the corner, manifold Yuletide activities are planned, a feature of which will be caroling: by the student body, and the choir. This ancient rite will be once again performed on Thursday night, December 16, as ye merry scholars travel the highways and by ways to the various faculty homes around the campus, bringing the Spirit of Christmas to our alma mater and the community. As the evening wears on, the cold and hap py throng will approach the Beit tels\ to be warmed by their well known hospitality and fireplace. HANDEL'S 'MESSIAH' TO BE GIVEN SUNDAY Soloists From Greensboro and Salem College Will Participate. UNDER WE IS' DIRECTION The most famous of George Fred crick Handel's oratorios, "The Mes siah" will be presented Sunday after noon. December lit, by the Guilford College choir and the Guilford Com munity Choral society, under the able direction of Dr. Fzra 11. F. W'eis. The combined choirs will be accompanied by '.lie Guilford Chamber orchestra composed of (Juilford and Greensboro players. Soloists this year will be Mils. 11. E. Armstrong, soprano; Mrs. Armistead Mercer, contralto; Mr. Clifford Blair, tenor; Mr. Sherman Smith, bass. Mrs. Armstrong, of Greensboro, sings at the First Baptist church and the Jewish Synagogue; Mrs. Armistend Mercer also of Greensboro, sings at the First Presbyterian church and has also done light opera in New York. Mr. Blair and Anna Withers, who will be at the organ, come from Salem college. Mr. Sherman Smith is chemistry professor at I'. X. (and is well known for his work with various choral groups. Mrs. Harvey I .Jung will be accompanist. Professor Ilardrc to Speak The new Internatoinal Relations club will inaugurate its first meeting of the year 1038 with a talk by Professor Jacques Ilardre, who will present "The Foreign Policy of France" on January 0, in the hut. This topic is especially appropriate at this time, since it so deeply concerns international affairs. | quiet young man, for all his seeming calmness was able lo picture to the stu dents who heard him the actual want (hat existed in the rural sections of the South today and especially the con dition of the sharecroppers. "There are people there," he said, "whose style of dress is determined not by I'arls, but by the kind of Hour that they get for the winter. Flour sacks are the only kind of clothing they can afford." There arc involved, according lo Mr. Kester, not only tile question of conflict between the sharecropper (Continued on Page Four) GUILFORD COLLEGE, N. C., DECEMBER 11, 1937 LASSIES TO FETE SANTA CLAUS AT ANNUAL BAZAAR Effort Made to Supply Fun for Everyone—Dancing and Games Order of Day. HOBBS IS FESTIVE HALL Christmas Gifts to Be Sold and For tunes Told for Inquisitive Merry Makers. This year's Yule-tide festivity will ind its main expression in the annual ba- zaar of the Y. W. C. A. In an effort to accommodate to all tastes, Christmas spirit will be administered in forms varying from a substantial supply of food to subtle decorations of mistletoe. United action on the part of the stu dent body organized into innumerable efficient committees, is responsible for the preparation of this important event. Practical and attractive Christmas gifts will be on sale for nil those for tunates with sufficient purchasing pow er. Very little stress is being put upon tin- .Japanese origin of the commodities for the Y's are known to be strongly in sympathy with the Chinese in the Sino-Japanese conflict. Other features 011 the progrnm include an evening of dancing, which will take various nov elty forms. Those with questionable pro ficiency for "the little apple" or high land fling will be entertained by nu merous games. Refreshments for the campus gourmets are being served by the "baby Y's" in the tea room espe cially constructed for this gala affair. The intense activity of Mary Ilobbs tonight will make the atmosphere of all other celebrations seem soporific in comparison. PLANS FOR CHARTER DAY TO INCLUDE BIG BANQUET Two Hundred Campaign Workers Will Meet to Discuss Drive for New Gym Fund. ENTERTAINMENT TO BE FEATURED One hundred and fourth Charter Day at Guilford College, to be cele brated January l.'t, J! KIN, will honor that group of men and women who have accepted the responsibility and opportunity to "help in the first major construction efforts of the second cen tury" by carrying to alumni and friends of the college the story of the institution and its plans for immediate development of facili.ies. it has been announced. Contributions of Guilford College to co-ed (lent ion, to religion, to social prog ress jind to education served as themes of tlie Charter Day programs for the last four years in the order mentioned. Speakers at these events included Gov. J. C. 1!. Ehringhaus; Dr. Frank P. Gra ham, president of the University of North Carolina; Clarence I'ickett, executive secretary of the American Friends' Service Committee; l)r. Wal- ter Thomas Woody, professor of the history of education at the University of Pennsylvania: and Dr. J. Franklin Drown, of the M'acmillan company. This year the principal program will be held in Founders' hall with a formal banquet to which the houorees, a grouo of about -HO men and women, and the students will be invited. Dr. Dudley (Continued on Page Four) Campus Calendar Saturday, Dec. 11—Y.W.C.A. Christ mas Bazaar in Mary Hohbs Hall. Sunday, Dec. 12—The Messiah. Wednesday, Dec. 15—Cross country team's party in the hut. German club meeting in Founders. Thursday, Dec. 16—Sophomore party in the hut. Senior Chapel in the hut. Carol singing. Friday, Dec. 17—Party at Founders. Party at Mary Hobbs. DEAN BEITTEL GOES TO Y.M.C.A. MEETING Discussion Centered in Com parisons of American and European Religious Trends. ACTED AS CO-DIKECTOK "Religious Trends in the Modern World" drew Dr. A. I). Beittel, dean of Guilford College, to the Atlanta, Ga., Y. M. C. A. conference, where he served as co-leader with Mademoiselle Suzanne de Dietrich of Paris for a three-day round table discussion. Arranged by the National Board of Y. M. C. A.'s, this southern conference centered discussion in the similarities as well as the differences in various European and American religious trends. The purpose of the meeting was to act as an informative confer ence that would serve to stimulate in terest in modern religious tendencies. Attendance for the December 2-4 con ference was limited to a few repre sentative leaders—between 25 and 30 in all—who came from throughout the South. No resolutions or committees were appointed during the conference, the purpose of the meeeting being only informative and quite apart from a regular programed Y. M. C. A. gath ering. Acting as chairman of the round ta ble discussions was Winnifrcd Wygal, of the laboratory division of tlic Na tional Board of the Y. M. C. A. The Atlanta conference is one of four such meetings that are being held in the United States. Two of the other con ferences meet in New York City and the other in Chicago, 111. CO-EDNAS TO ENTERTAIN SWAINS WITH PARTIES Santa Claus to Figure Prominently in Founders and Mary Hohhs Social Affairs. TAFFY, DANCING TO BE FEATURED Witli both Founders and Mary 11 ol ibs concocting figurative stirrup cups to speed departing Guilfordinns 011 their homeward way, it would seem that the answer to most Guilford maidens' prayers would be a heavy fall of pro-Christmas snow to grace their Vuletide festivities. On Decem ber 17. both dormitories will tling their doors wide to the 3-for-5c social lions of the campus for an evening of as- sorted games and taffy-pulling, danc ing and good-clean-fun. Chaperoning at Founders will be Dr. and Mrs. Beit tcl and Santa Claus; at Mary llobbs, Mr. I'ancoast with Miss Coins, Santa Claus, and Mr. I'arsous with Miss Mc- Coll. Both programs include plans for tree-trimming and distribution of gifts by the respective Santa Clauses, though (Continued on Page Four) NUMBER 5 BANQUET SPEAKER SAYS FOOTBALL MOLDS CHARACTER Wallace Wade Pleases His Lis teners With Talk About Modern Football Trends. TILSON, IiYRI) GET AWARD i Coach Smith Awards Twenty Certificates and l'raises Men Who Sat on Bench Football lias grown to be a character building institution, according to tlie coach of one of America's strongest football teams, Wallace Wade, of l>uke university, who held the spotlight ill | tlie annual fall sports banquet held in Founders' hall last Saturday night. Although attention was focused 011 Wade during his short and informal talk, a variety of events were acclaimed by Hie enthusiastic crowd during the remainder of the two-and-one-Ualf-bour program. And. except for the "change of pace" necessary in introductions, talks, awarding ol letters, and giving of praise, the program went along smoothly and with interest, largely due it was thought, to tile fact tlint a hard working social committee, headed by Hetty Trotter, and assisted by Keit.t Sawyer, was in charge. Ir. ltussell I'ope was glad, lie stated, to fall in line with tlie series of faculty toasMnasters, preceded in his two years here by Doctors I'urdom and TJung, and in turn presented Professor Shepard, facility manager of athletics, to report 011 the status of the cross country team. Alvin Mclbuhm. honored by re-eleo tion td the captaincy of tlie team for l!l.'!8, announced the winning of mono grains by six members of the team: A. Mcihohm, T.vree Gilliam, Malcolm Alexander, Charles Undley, Winfred Afeibohm, and Bob Smith. Coach Smith was satisfied to praise tiie work of his eleven and take a few minutes in doing so. Particularly, he said, was it important to mention the work of those boys who did not receive letters in recognition of their partici pation. He announced the election of Paul Chambers anil Wilson Byrd as co captains of the 19:58 team, succeeding Jim McDonald. Certificates authoriz ing the wearing of monograms were given to 20 players and Manager Charles I lines. Kicbard ISinford, .loe McCommons, Thell Overman, John (Continued on Page Three) Anti-Evolnter Alters Textbooks Hattiesburg, Miss. (A.C.P.) A shipment of new biology textbooks at Mississippi State Teachers Col lege produced some fireworks re cently. A chapter on evolution annoyed John M. Frazier, biology teacher, to the extent that he riped out the offensive pages from GO books. His action, a decade after Tennes see's famous "monkey trial," re newed the evolution discussion. Mis sissippi fundamentalists in 1926 had enacted a law forbidding teaching or use of books which related the theory that man "ascended or de scended from a lower order of ani mals."