Roosevelt or Ruin VOLUME XXIII CHAPEL COMMITTEE TO MAKE CHANGES IN YEAR'S PROGRAM Classes to lie Seated' for First Time Without Respect of Sex. STUDENTS TO SUGGEST Mr. Samuel Haworth is Chairman of Committee; Beittel, Weis, I)orey, and Ruble Are Members. The eliapel list which appeared on the bulletin Itonrd in the lobby of Memorial hall Friday morning, Septem ber 18, was th first in the history of the college to seat the classes alphabetically without respect to sex. This change was brought about by the efforts of the fac ulty-student chapl committee, which in itself is a novelty designed to mini mize student dissatisfaction with the old chapel set-up. The chapel has long held an import ant place in the life of the college, and the faculty have looked upon it as an integral part in the education if the students. In addition to the student representation on the chapel board, tin* student body has been urged to make suggestions concerning improvements of the system. A number of student organizations have been approached with a view to being responsible for one or more pro grams. Increased singing of both sa cred and secular songs is planned to carry out the committee's plan for in creased student participation in chapel programs. At its meeting on. Thursday, Septem ber 24, the committee considered one of the chapel comments current on cam pus—that greater quality and less quan tity is eminently desirald:. The membership of the chapel group are Samuel Haworth, chairman; Drs. A. I). Beitt.l and E. H. F. Weis, faeult.v members; and Frank Dorey and Kath erene Ruble, representatives of the stu dent body. GUILFORD COLLEGE CHOIR HAS LARGE MEMBERSHIP Dr. Weis Begins Second Year as I)irec tor; Committee Members Are ElectedSeptemhcr 18. TRIP TO FLORIDA IS RUMORED The A Capella Choir of Guilford Col lege started its ninth s.ason last week with 7(> students seeking membership. This nearly doubles that of last year. On Friday, September 18, the mem bers of the choir committee wer ■ elect ed by the group. Those getting the positions were: Senior Representative, I J. T. New; Junior Representative, Bet ty Trotter; Sophomore Representative, Alvin Mcibohm; Freshman Representa tive, Mary Ellen Daw; Representative at-large, Hill (Jrigg; Representative to the Student Affairs Board, Keitt Saw yer. Dr. Ezra H. F. Weis, head of the Department of Music, is beginning his second year as director of the choir. It is rumored that the choir is consid ering a trip to Florida during the Christmas vacation. Class '3B Elects Officers The Class of '36 elected on May 21, JSI36, as its officers for the next five years, the following: James Fulp, Ker nersville, X. C„ president; Julia Can non, Guilford College, secretary; Daryl Kent, South Glen Falls, N. Y„ vice president; Edgar Meibolun, Greensboro, chairman of gift committee; Misses Mary Bryant, Woodland, and Anna Na omi Binford, Guilford College, joint historians. o/THE^D GUILFORDIAN Added to Faculty MISS IK>VJK CIIKXAUJ/r DR. MILNER VISITS TERCENTENARY FETE Guilford's President Invited to Attend Harvard's Anni versary Celebration. CEREMONY LASTS 3 DAYS Ilr. i'lyde A. .Milner. I'r ■-ident 'of Guilford College, recently attended the eelelnation of Harvard's Tercentenary year as a representative of tli • college. The tliree-day official ceremony, li.'ld from September I."> to 18 at Cambridge, Mass., is only part of aa extensive pro gram which lias been going oa for a month or longer. I)r. Milner is o:-. of several college prcsirten s Invited by the Harvard au thorities to at on:l the formal rit s, which included various a adeaiie pro ce-sions, a speech by President Roose velt, and othi*r similar firietions At ;he •conclusion of his stay at the university, I >r. Milner proceeded to New York city, where he attended sev eral alumni meetings and conferred with local members of tile Centennial committee. WORK ON STUDENT HUT WILL BEGIN THIS FALL Centennial Project, Bijrun Last Spring hy the Student Btrdy, to Become a Reality, Dr. Milner Siys. The I Int. tlie project of the stu dent lied;* for the 1 'eiiteunial year be gun Inst sprins, is nliout t:> become ii reality. I>r. Clyde A. Mllner, president of tlic college, aii'iounced last xvwl; tlint tlic inon '.v f >r the student center, which is t;> be made from the old laun dry between Founder's and .Mary llolilis' Halls, has been raised, lie said that actual work on the building would begin early this fall. Tile money for the project was raised through the giving of entertainments by the different organizations and by individual subsTiptions of the stu dents. Tlie class of gave as its class gift the brick fireplace in the Hut. The repairs necessary on the building inclu le a hardwood floor, a new roof, a Colonial dior, the annexation of n ki.chenette. GUILFORD COLLEGE, N. C., SEPTEMBER 26, 1936 G.C. HAS ADDITION OF SIX MEMBERS TO 1936-37 STAFF Four Newcomers to He Added to Faculty, Two to Administration. MISS CHEN AULT DIETITIAN Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hodges to Head Departments of Physical Education; S. Smith Teaches English, Six new members have been added to the Guilford College staff for the Cen tennial year. Of the six, four have been added to the faculty and two to the administrative branch of the col lege organization. Among the new comers are the following: Mr. and Mrs. Ilarry Ilodges, who will I>\ re spectively the heads of men's and wom en's physical education; Miss Dovie Clienault, succeeding Mrs. Kloise Pos tlethwaite as assistant professor of Home Economics and dietitian; Mr. Sanira Smith, ".'A, ins'.uctor in English and assistant to the librarian; Miss Julia Cannon, '3O, assistant to the treasurer: and Mr. David Parsons, secretary to the Centennial committee. New Coach Is Ex-Tar Heel Hodges is a graduate of the Uni versity of North Carolina, where he starred In football and track, attaining the rank of All-State tackle. After his graduation lie was added to the coach ing staff at Oak Ridge Military Insti tute. Mrs. Hodges is a graduate of the Woman's College, University of North Carolina. During her undergraduate career she was prominent among the school athletes as well as the campus socialites. She is understudying Mrs. Jolin I'. Anderson at Guilford this year. Miss Clienault is a graduate of the University of Alabama, and holds a Master's degree from Columbia, where she was assistant dietitian of the Uni versity Commons for two years. In ad dition to hr work at Columbia, she lias had considerable experience in ele mentary and secondary school cafe terias in Alabama. Parsons Smith, and Miss Cauiun are all graduates of Guilfod College. The two men were both recipients of the Ilaverford scholarship, and both hold Master's degrees from that col lege. Miss Cannon is one of last June's graduates who was a student assistant in the Treasurer's office (lur ing her undergraduate career. This Year's Freshmen Furnish Abundant Proof of Evolution One hundred and twenty-three fresh men from as far away as Japan and as near as Guilford College entered the class of 19-10. Famous' FreshmenV Guilford has some who already have had notations placed by their names for such varied abilities as singing, wooing, knowledge of musical instru ments. public speaking, and aptitude for applying cosmetics in a becoming fashion. Right sates and (hree foreign nations are represented by this cosmopolitan group, there being one student each from Japan, Maryland, and lowa ; two from Connecticut and Massachusetts: three from Virginia and New York; nine from New Jersey; and PS from North Carolina. Naturally Guilford County leads all North Carolina conn Fine to Be Charged On Overdue Books Beginning September 20 a fine of two cents a day will he charged on overdue hooks. Twenty - five cents for the first hour and ten cents for each hour thereafter will be charged on all late reserve books. Any stu dent having a fine, either for re serve or overdue books, will not be allowed to check out hooks until his account is settled. JAMES C. CORNETTE ATTENDS MUNICH U. Guilford Student to Spend Junior Year in Study in Germany. WINS A SCHOLARSHIP James Clark Cornette, Jr., '3B, sailed September 13 for Germany, prepara tory to enrolling .at the University of Munich on October 1. Cornette, who attended Guilford College last year, was one of tlu winning competitors for a scholarship entitling him to spend his Junior year in Munich. The scholarship was organized on a nation-wide basis, and Guilford's prodigy stood high in a field of some 30 winners. The record made by Cornette during his two years at Guilford was charac terized by uniform scholastic brilliance. He made the honor roll consistently, and had one of the best quality aver ages in the student body. SENIORS SELECT HEPLER AS CLASS PRESIDENT Beatrice Rohr, President, and Keitt Sawyer, Vice-President, Are Chosen to Lead Juniors. Officers for the eomtng year were chosen by the junior and senior classes nt their first regular meetings of the 103fi-10:!7 school year, held Thursday. September 17. The class of '.'i? selected Claude llep'er, Betsy I (til In, Elinor Webster, and Kendriek Vest a I to serve respectively as president, vice-presi dent, secretary and treasurer of (Juil ford's must dignified group of under graduates. Anting file juniors, Beatrice Bohr, elected vice-president of the class at a meeting held late last spring, be anie president 011 the resignation of Lyndon Wilson. Iveitt Sawyer was named to take Miss Bohr's place as viee-presi- I dent of the class of '3B. tics with SO recruits; Alamance follows? with eight: I'orsyth and Wa.vne, four each; Randolph, three; Hockinghatn, two; :i 11 others together, IS. Approxi mately .1(1 day students ride to the cam pus from Greensboro and si>eud a por tion of the day here sleeping and read ing and wishing they had something more to eat. Among Guilford's !)0 odd dormitory freshmen Kenneth Morris deserves practically as much as notice as the i :,"{(i breakfast hell for ills statement, "I d n't like to do something without any purpose in it!" IJnts also furnish mystery in the ever present Herthn Fitzgerald, a future medico, who chaf fers with everyone in general, and Phyllis Weinberg, who gargles every (Continued on Page Four) Landon Leads Us NUMBER 1 CAMPUS EMBROILED IN CONTROVERSY OVER ELECTIONS Republican, Democrat and So cialist Factions Formed at Guilford—Meetings Held. HLAIR, PERIAN LEADERS Student Straw Vote is Planned as Cli max of Campaign; Partisan Croups Seek Converts. The f! uilford cam pus is involved tliis full in out' of the hottest political cam paigns in the history of the college, by courtesy of the joint Y's. As tlie re sult of an inspiration which originated with V. M. A. President John Brad sliaw, the joint organization lias set in motion a system by which the campus is divided, according to inclination, into Republican, Democrat, and Social ist parties. These political groups will devote the time between now and No vember •'! to the task of attempting to j enroll the inert majority in one organi ; zation or another. I The scheme was Inaugurated at a meeting liekl Thursday evening, Sep tember 17, in Memorial Mali. At this time Charlie Blair was chosen by the Republicans to act as their leader in the forthcoming campaign. John I'erian was selected to head the Democratic party organization, and Kalph Spill man is Comrade No. I of tile Socialists. The meeting held the following Thursday evening was turned over to the campus New Dealers, who presented as the mainstay of their program Law yer .1. 'l'. Carruthers. Young Democratic candidate for the state legislature from the Greensboro area. Similar meetings will be held from week to week by other campus political clubs. A poll of campus opinion through the medium of a straw vote shortly preceding tile national elections is planned as the culminating feature of the project, which many feel is likely to be the most successful of any launched by the Y's in recent years. LIBRARY ACKNOWLEDGES PAST SUMMER'S GIFTS IndividualH and Organizations Donate Books, Periodicals, and Pictures to Library Collection. BOOKS ADDED TO FICTION GROUP The Library wishes to acknowledge the following gifts which were sent to the college this summer: Dr. William Wolff, of Philadelphia, Pa., contributed | magazines for the chemistry depart ment. Dr. Anna Gove, retired physi cian of Woman's College, gave 24 hooks and -4 periodicals. Miss Jean Lever ing, of Guilford College, donated art books and pictures, five books, and 258 periodicals. The Library now has "Honey in tho Horn," by H. L. Davis, which won tho Harper prize-; "The South Looks at Its Post," by B. R. Kendrick and O. M. Arnett; "Sparkenbroke," by Charles Morgan; "The Nazi Dictatorship," by Frederick Schumann; two books by D. C. Peattie, "Almanac for Moderns," and "Singing in the Wilderness" (Audo bon); "How to Live," by Arnold Ben nett, and "The Power of Non-violence/' by Richard B. Gregg. College Given German Books The Modern Language Department an nounces tlie gift of three German books, to be awarded as prizes for excellence in German. The gift was made by the German Consulate ia New Orleans, through the courtesy of Dr. Wendler and | Dr. Stahlberg.