ALUMNI NOTES
Notice to Alumni:—Recently
the college Alumni editor sent out
four hundred News sheets to mem
bers of the Alumni Association,
requesting that these be fdled in
and returned at an early date. Sev
eral of these sheets have been re
turned, bringing interesting and
valuable information. With one
of these was enclosed a short let
ter containing the following: "J
am enclosing a few remarks on
the News sheet. I feel that my
accomplishments are not worth
bothering to print but am sending
the sheet anyhow to show you that
I, at least, have a spirit of co-oper
ation." Perhaps a number of the
Alumni feel the same way about
their accomplishments, but the !
Guilfordian Board and officials of
the college hope that they will j
also have the same spirit of co
operation, and that every one of
the four hundred blanks will be
be returned and filled in in detail. J
1903
Ida E. Millis 'O3 is again teach- :
ing Latin and tenth and eleventh
grade English in the Guilford Col
lege high school. This is now a
consolidated high school occupy- '
ing an up-to-date new building
located about a mile from the col- J
lege on the road to Guilford sta- J
tion.
Miss Millis is recording clerk |
of the New Garden Monthly Meet
ing and has just been appointed
Young Peoples' Division Superin
tendent for the Guilford County
Sunday School Association.
During the past summer Miss ,
Millis spent several days at Niag
ara Falls. On her way home she
visited M rs. Hilton Salisbury, for
merly Edith Reynolds, who was a
student at Guilford in 1920-21.
Edith Reynolds was married to
Hilton W. Salisbury on March 24,
1924, and is now living at 175
Penhurst St., Rochester, N. Y.
1906
Joseph M. Purdie 06 is teaching
Spanish and French in the United
States Naval Academy in Annapo
lis, Md. He has held this position
for the past seven years.
Mr. Purdie has an A.B. degree
from Guilford College and both
an A. M. and a Ph.D. from Lin
c oln-Jeflerson University.
Since graduating from Guilford
Mr. Purdie has spent several years
in the mission field. He first fin
ished the work in Mexico which
his father, who was a lifelong
missionary, had begun. He then
went to China where he was prin
cipal of the school and did pasto
ral work al Holguin and Banes.
For five years he had charge of the
Blue Ridge mission near Mt Airv
N. C. y '!
Mr. Purdie is a loyal Guilford
ian and visits the college almost I
every summer. His daughter, Lu
cille, is a member of the present J
sophomore class.
mi
fiufus H. Fitzgerald 'll is, at the
present time, directing a campaign I
for $1,000,000.00 to erect a stu
dent activity building on the cam- j
pus of the State University of
lowa. Ihe contract on the first
section of the building has already
been let.
Besides his duties as director of
this financial campaign Mr. Fitz
gerald is consulting secretary of
the Y.M.C.A. of the University of
lowa, member of the Educational
Committee of the "National Coun
' r ,',' Religion in Higher Educa- |
tion and an elder in the First
Presbyterian church of lowa City.
r , " Edition to his degree from
Guilford College, Mr. Fitzgerald
lias an M.A. degree from the Uni- j
\ersity of Tennessee, and has done !
advanced work in Egypt, Pales-j
tine, and Syria.
Mr. Fitzgerald has this to say of
the denominational college: "Af
ter my twelve years connection ;
with two state universities I am a
firm believer in the denominat-
tional college. Their influence on
the state universities and the in
fluence of the state universities on
them is one of the finest things in
American education.
1916
Fred Morris 16 is postmaster!
at kernersville, N. C. He has.
however, been studying law at the
University of North Carolina, and
successfully passed the bar exami
nation the past summer. He will
probably practice law in Winston-
Salem after January 1, 1925.
Mr. Morris was on the campus
yesterday to see the Guilford-Le
noir football game.
WORK, SAYS DR. HOBBS
!N GHAPET EXERCISES
''l sou Id like to speak a word of
encouragement to the discourag
ed, stated Dr. Hobbs in Friday's
chapel exercises. He quoted the
following from William James'
chapter on habit: "Let no youth
have any enxietv about the upshot
of his education, whatever the line
of it may be. If he keep faithfully
busy each hour of the working day
he may safely leave the final re
sult to itself."
"One need not be concerned,"
works." "We are here for the
| asserted Dr. Hobbs, "provided one
j sake of scholarship, I take it. One
| can do the things set before him
j if one gives them proper attention.
Our main object is to get an edu
cation in order to discover things.
All students should develop their
minds so that they will be among
, the competent ones, and then they
will be able to secure and retain
I good positions."
"A person's time is wasted,"
said the speaker, "if it could be
more profitably employed. Now
is the time to prepare for the final
examinations."
The speaker concluded by men
tioning Pendleton King as study
ing Greek for four hours daily,
thus showing the thoroughness of
preparation of the old school.
MISS KBPF JUSTIFIES
COLLEGIATE TRAINING
Miss kopf in her chapel talk
of last Tuesday related two inci
dents, one of which was about a
business man who had never at
tended college expressed his views,
stating that a college education
was of no benefit to business men.
Ihe second was concerning the
will of an old gentleman, This
man, again not a college man, left
a fortune of $124,000. The con
ditions were that his neices and
nephews should not receive a pen
ny till after they had graduated
from college, and then only a
small sum at first. A remark of
the old gentleman was quoted: "J
do know that if I had received a
college education I should have
,'iven more to life and gotten more
out of life."
"College life," said the speaker,
"should develop the intellectual,
so"ial and spiritual sides of our
i 1 \os. All round d?velopme it
is what we want." Four years are
not enough for intelle tual devel
opment for it is a slow process.
Ihe Mentor contains this re
ommendation, "Learn one thin"
a day."
Miss kopf stated that cramming
causes one to lose the connecting
links in a field of knowledge. She
stressed the necessity of attending
to one's social duties and stated
that one should get pleasure out
of them. She emphasized the fact
that neither side of one's develop
ment should he neglected.
E. P. BROWN' 26 ELECTED
(Continued from page 1)
fessors A. 1. Newlin and George
P. Wilson, faculty advisers; B.
Russel Branson, reporter. Re-elec
tions, Ethel Watkins, circulation
manager, and N. Era Laslev.
Alumni reporter. There is still
a vacancy on the reportorial staff
from the Henry Clay and Philo
mathean literary societies.
TH E GUILFORDIAN
A WAGGIN TONGUE
By Beulah Allen
Trinity has launched her ama
teur theatrical season by choosing
Rastand's "Cyrano De Bergerac"
for their production this year. De
spite the difficulties of properly
interpreting the leading role, that
of the name part, they are enthusi
astic over the prospects of staging
the masterpiece. Just who is to
don the hig nose, and portray the
! tragic figure of Cyrano has not
j been announced.
Earlham College's "Mask and
Mantle Club"' which has many am
ateur successes to its credit, such
as "Peg-O-My Heart," ''Daddy-
Long-Legs," etc., is launching out
into new fields. Under its auspi
ces S. H. Clark of the Chatauqua
platform will present at that
college, George Bernard Shaw's
masterpiece "Saint Joan" at an
early date. As a passing comment
, G. li. Shaw seems to have, after
; much argument, convinced the
dramatic critics that he's right
and they are wrong.
Guilford gets her share of Ath
letic fame one way or another.
First, "Chick' Doali, a Guilford
graduate coached a State Cham
pionship team down at N. C. State
in 1924, then Tom Zachary knock
ed the wind out of the New York
Giants in the world series. Be
sides this, Guilford's one time foot
hall star, Tom Cox, was for a time
Captain of State's Wolf pack team
this year, and is still the most out
standing satellite. George Crisp
and Bartemus Nicholson, also one
time Guilford football men are
holding down the bench as "first
class varsity substitutes 011 the
Wolfpack team.
Little Eleanor, who was reared
in a liberal religious atmosphere,
vcisited relatives whose creed was
decidedly straight-laced.
"111 Aunt Maria's church," she
announced 011 her return, "the ser
mons are much louder and much
longer and full of queer words.
I didn t like them, but of course 1
let my expression be impolite;
when the minister said things 1
knew were not so, 1 just crossed
my finger 3. M
FAST HIGH POINT ELEVEN
(Continued from page 1)
quarters the scrubs defense tight
ened and held the Highs scoreless
for the remainder of the game. It
w as during liiese last two quarters
that (he scrubs made most of their
gains but lacked the punch to put
the ball across.
Lineup:
Guilford ( 0) High Point (16)
Hughes r.e. Ingram
Russell r.t. Ellington
Ileece r.g. Warford !
Hammond c . Dallas I
Kee " l.g. Wilson 1
!f le > l.t. Daniels i
•ay I or I.e. Combs
Keynolds q.b. Foust j
-tewart r .h. Wa „
n "' n I.H. Gleason
' n , 1 f.b. Gernander
S ore by periods:
High Poim 10 6 0 o—lo
Gu; If or d 0 0 0 0 0
GUILFORD TAKES DEFEAT
(Continued from pasre 1)
Scores by quarters:
Guilford 0 o 0 ) |
Lenoir-Rhyne () Q 0
Substitutions: Guilford—Wel
born for Pate; Kimrey for Mc-
Bane. Lenoir—Hoover for Brown.
Brown for Conrad, Hood for
Caldwell, Overcash for Sechler. j
Seehler for Rudisill. First downs:
Lenoir-Rhyne—ll; Guilford 8.
Referee. Johnson (Wake Forest);
Timekeeper, Greene (Center Col
lege); Umpire, Doak (N.C. State)
Linesman, Bovles. Quarters 15!
minutes. Attendance 650.
II a man finds a button missing ~
from his shirt three times in sue- (
cession he is privileged to blow up.
Barbee—"lf I were you I would
have more sense."
Branson—"Sure you would."
ty/jm<yry
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