Page Two THE GUILFORDIAN Published semi-monthly by the students of Guilford College dur ing the school year except during examinations and holiday periods. Member North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Editor-in-Chief Thomas Ashcraft Associate Editors George Wilson, Floyd Moore Managing Editor Bernard Foster Assistant Managing Editor Ken Morris Butinet* Manager Melvin Phlllos Circulation: Managers Wm. Vanhoy, .1. W. Kdgerton, Charles Hendricks SPECIAL EDITORS Sports Editor Snag Hartley Assistant Sports Editors David Parker, David Register Robert Hire, Rob I>. Wilson Society Editor Mary Priscilla Rlouch Feature Editors Robert Register, Tom Taylor Secretarial Staff Retty Edwards, Mary Labberton, Amelia Teller REPORTERS Robert Homey, Murray Osbourne, Mary Ellen Gibbs, Wiunabel Gibbs, Barbara Hamlin, James Parker, Robert 1.. Wilson, 1.. M. Gideon, and Cesca Fanning. Photographer Stanley Lewis Cartoonist Alton Blair FACULTY ADVISERS Robert K. Marshall Dorothy L. Gilbert Phillip W. Furnas Address all communications to THE GUILFORDIAN Guilford College, N. C. Subscription price SI.OO per year 1938 Member 1939 P&ocicfed Goßeftiaie Press Entered at the post oflice in Guilford College as second class matter When You re Dancing Tonight ... to the tune of the Social committee's radio-phonograph playing the inevitable recordings, take a little time off. Look around you. You'll Observe . . . that the dance isn't the best one that you have ever attended. You're with as nice and as congenial a group as you have ever seen together at a dance. They will seem to he having fun, but it will not be a red letter dance. There Is Something Lacking . . . and that something is an orchestra. A real live honest to good ness orchestra. And one reason, the main reason, for not having an orchestra is a silly rule. Now . i . is a good time, after a week of intensive activity, for the social conscious of the campus to begin something really constructive. Chang ing the rule prohibiting an off-campus orchestra is a good subject to begin with. Whether or not Sadie Hawkins Week will accomplish anything constructive and lasting remains to be seen. The group that is' responsible for it deserves commendation for doing something about the proverbial "it." This Same Group . . . that has taken the first forward step in the field of action is the logical one to propose some rules alterations. There is much that needs to be done. Progress will be made one step at a time. A revision df the rule governing off-campus orchestras should be the next step. We've Said It Once . . . and we'll say it again. We want a water fountain on the west side of the campus. Those of us who frequently spend an afternoon in the library, Mem or King are just as frequently forced by thirst to go to our respective residence halls some time during the afternoon for a few satisfying gulps of aqua pura. We are not blessed witli the endurance of a camel. We want a water fountain! Quotable Quotes "There is every sign that the capital of Western civilization may cross the Atlantic and find itself in another generation or two on the shores of this new land, so to speak, because that land has in its power the intelligence and moral courage to make itself the outstanding ex emplar of those policies of liberty, of progress and of human service which alone can save and develop our civilization." Columbia univer sity's President Nicholas Murray Butler points to the continued de cline of cultural Europe. • "Democracy and its hazardous position form no basis for a 'new' educational program. Better educational foundations are certainly needed, but they can he built steadily; no complete break with old procedures is required." President ITenry M. Wriston, Brown univer sity, votes against a sweeping revision of education policies and procedures.— A. C. P. THE GUILFORDIAN SECOND-CLASS MATTER BY THK CARRIER Ah Propos SADIE HAWKINS (Seven Itums by Ol' Man Hose's Son Hose, Whut Went t' Collidge) Itnin 1 : Lots o' soo-pressed an' tin soospeekted dee-zires (lone cum t'lite, ain't they? Jest standing at th' bar at Clide's t'watch yo cum'n go is a ree-porter's dooty, an uselly it's Pleas ant. But Ins week—well —some o'th' things, whitch cum t'lite Ah wisht nh'd never saw ner hered. Reemarks an' looks has reeveeled iiuleevidjil feelins with a un-cum-for table broo tality. You uns wuz speshally trants parent las weak. Bm-bare-ass-ingly so. You uns air a harsh lot, most o'yo. Ah wisht ah didn't 110. Itum 2: "lm-portant to hisself as I to me Has each man bin whut woman ever bore." There ain't 110 diihhle standard wher thet quo-tashun is cuncurned. Itum 3: Usually ah'ni snuttin er bout fer noos, but not this time. There's a ad-age back in Dogpatch whitch "speaks to mi cundishun" sez thet "Th'smell o'food'll ketch a hongry, b'ar an dis gust a gorged un." Itum 4: Quote from a camp-pus wolf: Ilo'nell Hart done tore down in one nite everything I bilt up in fo' mnnths. Itum 5: D'.vo ree-meniber when: Menwer men an winunin wer glad of it? Itum (i: This mud ree-niinds me o' mi ol' pappy's advice: Stick t'th' land. 111 a boy, an it'll stick t'yo. Itum 7: Pappy wuzzn't talkin' o' Gillf'rd wimmin. Ityrd rame to class the oilier morn ing and jauntily took his seat. He immediately got up again with a yell of pain. Reason: Palmer lisid left a needle in his pants. Francis (Crab) Lael "will be the first official college referee department head in the history of Lenoir-Rhyne athletics. . . lie was the head of such a department at Guilford last year." That is a quote from the Lenoir- Rhyne paper announcing Crab's ap pointment as head of the referee de partment for the tennis matches there. Does anybody remember that depart ment here? I don't. Of course we all recognized that Crab was history in the raw. Grace and Zero were caught off campus together by our saltant snoop er last week. It is his opinion that any day now they may be caught holding hands. CaulfleUl was definitely in the Sadie Hawkins race, but kept Wilson at a two-foot distance from the minute he suggested "a little West porching." She was doing better with Pearson, but Blouch just whistled. You should have seen him run. Goldberg was the only Daisy Mae to get 11 date with Glamour Hoy Cham bers. She took the direct route to his heart by carrying him a piece of cherry pie (his favorite) baked with her own lily whites. A statistically-minded uplifter in quired meaningfully of me the other day how many cigarettes I'd smoked altogether. Well, let's see now . . I always step 011 butts with my right foot. My steps are about two feet apart when I'm not in a hurry, and I haven't been in a hurry since 1 started smoking. So I calculate that if I'd taken a walk and done nothing hut stamp out all the cigarettes I've smoked, I'd have to have walked thirty and two-tenths miles to do it. I've been smoking for eight years if you want to know what it costs me. Want to investigate me some more? Ex-President Herbert Hoover has been awarded a Doctor of Engineering degree by Stevens Institute of Tech nology. CAMPUS STUFF - By SANDERS J TRY I VARSITY 7^ "Is the dance tonight formal, or can I wear my own clothes?' OPEN FORUM .Air. Thomas Ashcraft, Editor, The GUILFOUMAX. Dear Editor: The Christian Associations wish to thank you for the sentiment expressed editorially in the last edition of the paper concerning the "Spiritual Em phasis Week" in which Dr. and Mrs. Ilornell Hart were present. Activities of the nature of those sponsored during that week are valu able to college students in ways that will not be realized. In many instances, for a long time. Itut there are many of us who caught a renewed interest iu our own pursuits and as a result, are doing better jobs. It may appear that the surge of en thusiasm for social events has been the principal results of the week. On the surface that is true. We believe all of these activities may not be com pletely effective, however, for it is logi cal to assume that the success in that area will not be 100 per cent. We do not advocate activities of this nature to the extent that they will interfere with our regular academic work, which is the primary reason for our presence on Hie campus. We do feel, neverthe less. that they are conductive to a more unified community life. In the realm of spiritual results of the week's programs we think that the Sunday morning forum which is re viewing Ir. Hart's book, "Living Re ligion," is a vital and valuable study. The Guilford Institute is serving ad mirably. At the same time, the inner life of many students has been quick ened to a fuller and richer realization ol' personal religion. We agree with you, Mr. Editor, that our conception of a "Spiritual Em phasis Week" has changed consider ably. The Christian Associations, Pete Moore, Mat'iauua Dow. I'I.ANS KOR MAY DANCE ARE BEING COMPLETED (Continued from Page One) The Modern Dance club, headed by Hetty Locke, is working on a modern version of the minuet to give it more grace and pliability and possibly will originate other dances to teach the gym classes which participate in the May Day fete. The May Court will be elected early iu March in the general spring elec tions from a group of eligible senior women nominated by the senior class. February 18, 1939 LOOSE ENDS By KOIiKKT REGISTER I have a friend (fortunate column ist !) who is a connoisseur. I doubt that he would admit it—or pronounce it. (fenills is seldom spectacular. Vow have seen him in the library, idly tearing leaves from a reserve book and gaping vacantly at simpering co-eds. You have seen him in the dining hall and remarked the unconcern with which he dunked his napkin as lie ogled the eccentricities of feminine mastica tion. His attitude produced one of two re actions in you: if you were the girl in question you though him an apprecia tive fellow:.if yon were the male more indirectly concerned you thought him a—but enough of that, there are ladies present. Vou were wrong: lie is neither. My friend is a gentleman and a'scholar— iml a connoisseur. You have merely ipprchcnded him in the field work of in experiment that has occupied his iiest thought for some time. As his sole confidant and publicist I am in a posi tion to release the results of his re search. Objective observation reveals that there are ten types.' No. I—The campus queen, aloof with her "You'll learn" attitude. She must keep popular at any price—and dot-s --at a price. So. - The pillowy type. A soft, wil lowy creature who is demure on no oc casion at all. No. ">—The tatky type. lias nothing to say and says it with illustrations. A good date for an introvert. No. -1 liig sister. The night mare of passionate young men. A born dictator. No. s—The motherly creature. Con sistent. si nsilile, sympathetic lint motherly. No. ll—The snuggle puppy. Reason number one for Greek letter fraterni ties. No. 7—Sweet but bashful. (It is a professional secret of my typing friend how one tells when a bashful girl is sweet.) No. s The sports enthusiast. Ksscn tially a career woman. Men are quite incidental. .No. 9—The clever girl. Always home ly. If she is pretty she moves into the realm of No. lit—The ideal girl. No elabora tion needed. Anyone can dream.