Page Two
THE GUILFORDIAN
Published weekly by the Zatasian,
Henry Clay, and Philomatbean Literary
Societies.
EDITORIAL STAFF
James M. Harper Editor-in-Chief
Mabel Ingold Managing Editor
Thomas Cheek Athletic Editor
Ernest Scarboro Associate Editor
Norma Belle Wilson .. Associate Editor
Miss N. Era Lasley Alumni Editor
Mary Ellen Lassiter.. Asst. Alumni Ed.
Miss Dorothy Gilbert .. Faculty Adivser
Phillip W. Furnas .... Faculty Adviser
REPORTERS
S. Davis B. Brown
F. Carter A. Stafford
L. Crutchfield F. Allen
D. Wolf J. Lippincott
E. Grimsley P. Tew
G. Hinshaw D. Morris
A. Thompson J. Cochran
BUSINESS STAFF
Wade Mackie Business Manager
Weldon Reece Asst. Business Mgr.
Elizabeth Edgerton Secretary
Glenn Robertson Circulation Mgr.
Edith Trivett .. Asst. Circulation Mgr.
Edward Blair ... Asst. Circulation Mgr
Address all communications to THE
GUILFORDIAN, Guilford College, N. C.
Subscription price $1.50 per year
Entered at the post office in Guilford
College, N. C., as second-class mail
matter.
Our Plans
The GUILFORDIAN made the mis
take the first part of the year of
trying to exist without the proper
business direction. On this basis
it managed to carry on for awhile
hut the inevitable finally happened
and since Christmas it has been im
possible to publish an issue due to
lack of funds to pay off incurred
debts—mainly to the printer.
Largely due to the efforts of Mr.
McCracken, head of the business
and economcis department, a move
ment was started to put the GUIL
FORDIAN back once more upon a
sound financial basis and to ar
range for regular publication in
the future. Members of the staff
and students interested in the wel
fare of the publication showed a
concern that the GUILFORDIAN
should continue as the student
newspaper of the campus, in spite
of the uprising of the ' Penny
Press,' and ways and means for ex
ecuting this program have been the
topics of several resulting meet
ings.
Many plans have been suggested,
with a wide variation in their de
gree of feasibility, and from this
group of ideas the executive board
l'eels that it has some ideas which
will soon have the GUIFORDIAN back
on its feet.
The first of these ideas has to do
with the securing of enough adver
tising to pay for the publication
of the remaining issues of the pa
per since it is from this source that
most of the revenue must come, in
beginning a campaign for adver
tisers it is necessary to obtain the
co-operation of the entire board
and most of the members have sig
nified their willingness to help
carry 011 this program for expenses.
Not only will it be necessary for
the expense of the remaining issues
to be met but the pasl obligations,
incurred during the period when
the publication tried to run con
trary to business logic, must be al
lowed for. The printers have been
more than lenient with us in this
and it is our moral duty to see that
they do not lose money through
their generosity.
Student Obligations
It is not hard to find students
who are willing to support their
college publication morally but
when these same pseudo-enthu
siasts are faced with material obli
gations their ardor vanishes and
the paper is left stranded upon the
sands of well wishes.
We have been perfectly frank in
outlining our proposed program in
regard to re-instating the GUIL
FORDIAN and doubtless there has
been no objection to the plans as
presented up to this point. How
ever, we now turn to a field which
deals more directly with the indi
vidual reader.
In order that we may carry out
our plan of action, it will be neces
sary for practically every student
in school to subscribe to the GUIL
FORDIAN for the rest of the year.
Concessions have been made in
price so that by paying what is
asked for the rest of the year each
subscriber will get his money's
worth.
The immediate benefit of this
idea is quite obvious. To have all
the members of the student body
011 the list of paid subscribers
would add considerably to the
treasury of the organization. This
fact is but one of the reasons for
the necessity, however, for in order
that we may induce merchants in
Greensboro to use the GUILFORDIAN
as a means of advertisement it will
he necessary to show tljat the publi
cation has a campus-wide circula
tion among the students.
The girls have mostly paid
through their respective literary
societies but in so far as the boys'
societies seem not to function regu
larly it will be necessary for the
greater part of them to subscribe
during the coming campaign.
The printers have practically
presented us with this issue as a
means of discovering the true feel
ing of the student body toward the
|GUILFORDIAN. If you favor the con
tinuation of this publication you
must join in as one of the financial
supporters. Do not hang back and
wait to see if the idea will go
through before you give your sup
port. for this spirit will only insure
the failure of the paper.
"You're our judge and jury.
What is the verdict?
Our fate is in your hands."
Two memories afflicted with spring
fever: a spick and span New Garden
Infirmary.
♦ •
t Greensboro, N. C. i
i i
t !"'' * * *"*"* ]
\ isit Sporting Goods
I Department
\ COBLE HARDWARE \
| GREENSBORO, N. C. |
I (CIIAS. S. COW.E, Representative) 1
1 ;
See us for
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry
SASLOW'S JEWELRY CO.
.'MM! S. Elm Opposite National Theater
10 Per Cent Reduction to College
Boys and Girls
I'rojnpt Serrlec DII Ml Repairing
THE GUILFORDIAN
N. Y. MUSICAL ART CONCERT
TO RE HELD TUESDAY EVENING
(Continued from Page One)
mark of intellgience and distinction on
all she attempts.
Paul Bernard, second violin, and
Louis Kaufman, the viola player, have
brilliant records of concert tours, alone
and with other noted artists. Both are
soloists of note, but in their work in
the quartet they achieve heights in
their performance as a unit.
To Felix M. Warburg is due the dis
tinction of the fact that four Stradi
varii are played. The Musical Art
Quartet is the only one in America to
hold the honor of playing four such
precious instruments. Not only to the
ear but. also to the eye is a Stradi
various an unfailing delight, and thus
the mood of richness and beauty is
complete.
The quartet plays as the ideal quar
tet should play; full-voiced, warm
blooded. striving for the peaks aud
depths, the nobilities and the heroisms
of their chosen art.
GREENSBORO
HARDWARE CO.
Hardware
OUR STORE WELCOMES YOU
221 S. Ehn Street Greensboro, N. C
■ jt-'m" ~ i==
j c \
UP FROM THE OXCART
"Acceleration, rather than structural changes, is the key
to an understanding of our recent economic develop
ments."—From the report of President Hoover's
Committee on Recent Economic Changes
, > y ESTERDAY, the rumble, creak, and plod of cart and
join vs IN THE GENERAL oxen. To-day and to-morrow the zoom of airplanes. Faster
ELECTRIC HOUR. BROADCAST J • N - _
EVERY- SATURDAY AT 9 P.M., production. Faster consumption. Faster communication.
E.S.T. ON A NATION-WIDE J , , (
N.B.C. NETWORK
Significant of electr city's part in the modern speeding-up
process is the fact that during the last seven years, con
, - sumption of electric power increased three and one-half
GENERAL times as fast as p°p uiati ° n *
General Electric and its subsidiaries have developed and
liyir Iji 1 II 1 11 II" (t built much of the larger apparatus that generates this power
11 J II i II IJI as well as the apparatus which utilizes it in industry and in
the home.
The college-trained men who come every year to General
Electric take a responsible part in the planning, production,
and distribution of electric products, and at the same time
receive further technical or business training.
91-734DH
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK
RAYMOND A. WALLS APPEARS
IN PIANO RECITAL
(Continued from Page One)
"I'm Troubled in Mind," Coleridge-
Taylor. (Selected from a Negro spir
itual).
"Bamboula" (African Dance), Cole
ridge-Taylor.
"Immortality," Walls. (An explana
tion of unending death).
"Barcarolle," Walls. (Sad experi
ences in one's life.
"Wooing," Walls.
"Rapsodie Hongrotse," Liszt.
Graduates!
Let us serve you after gradua-I
tion. Let us make you a loan,j
build your home, and insure!
; your happiness.
Come in to see us I
SOUTHERN REAL
ESTATE GO.
104 N. Elm St. j
GREENSBORO, N. C. j
February 25, 1930
POMONA TERRA COTTA
COMPANY
Manufacturers of Sewer and Drain
Pipes and Other Clay Products
Annual Capacity, 3,000 Carloads
POMONA, N. C.
If. Gsjj
J WINSTON-SALEM, N. C !
J,
a
!
I I
I Schiffman'si
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