Will Exam Cramming Show Results?
Librarians Are Rushed
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Library rush flays will soon slacken pace.
Exams Beg s r
Tomorrow
Volume XLIII
Aldean Pitts Accepts
New Garden
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Aldean Pitts arrived in the Guil
ford College community shortly be
fore the clock struck twelve on the
last night of 1958, New Year's Eve.
Mr. Pitts has accepted the position
of minister at New Garden Friends
Meeting. Originally hailing from
Texas, he obtained degrees from
Friends University in Wichita,
COMBINE VACAT
Potential historians, sociologists,
poets and other liberal arts stu
dents can combine summer study
with vacation travel abroad by en
rolling in a British or Austrian sum
mer school program. Applications
of American students are now be
ing accepted by the Institute of
International Education.
The Summer School fees, includ
ing full board, residence and tui
tion, range between LBO-LB4 (ap
proximately $226-238). A few
scholarships are available which
partially cover university fees.
The QuilfonScm
Published by the Students of the South's Only Quaker College
Kansas, and from Asbury Seminary
in Kentucky. Before coming to
New Garden Friends Meeting Mr.
Pitts served meetings in Zinnia,
Ohio, and Plainfield, Indiana.
He has worked with youth
groups both in and out of summer
camps. Mr. Pitts and his wife
Marilyn, have a one-year-old son,
Mark.
ON WITH STUDY
In Austria there are two sum
mer schools of interest to Ameri
cans. The University of Vienna will
give courses at its St. Wolfgang
Campus near Salzburg. Students
can study interntaional relations,
European economic and social
problems, European history, music,
art, psychology and German lan
guage. All courses, except German
language, are taught in English.
Students who have completed at
least two years of college work are
eligible to apply for either a three
or six week program.
Now that the plague of exami
nations has hit the student body,
more and more studious scholars
are spending more and more time
in the library—a place which most
of them haven't frequented for the
past semester. The final draft of a
term paper, a hurried semester pro
ject, a last book report—these are
reasons for the huge flock which
has begun a library vigil.
But the most important reason
for the filled study rooms and the
crowded stacks is the activity
planned for the coming week and a
half—exams! Students who haven't
opened a book all year have finally
nerved themselves to crack one and
have begun that age-old custom of
exam cramming. Even at Guilford
the habit's not unheard of. For the
next few days the midnight oil will
burn; coffee pots will be kept
warm; pencils will stay sharpened;
and presumably minds will stay
bright and alert. Only time and
the final test scores will tell.
GUILFORD COLLEGE, N. C., JANUARY 16, 1959
Registration To Be
In Library Rooms
All Day January 27
Freshmen, sophomores, and
juniors will be registered in the
library Tuesday, January 27th, be
ginning at 9:00 a.m. Registration
will continue until the lunch hour
at 12:15 and from 1:30 until com
pleted.
Appointment cards for registra
tion are being issued by the Regis
trar's Office, and each student be
low the Senior Class should come
by the office for his card during
examination week.
On registration day students will
enter the library through the North
door. Inside, each will receive the
necessary card, have a conference
with his faculty advisor in the
reading room at which time he will
select his courses, will have his
selection of courses checked by Dr.
Ljung or Dr. Kent, and procede
to the magazine room for the sec
tioning of his classes. He will leave
his card with the person who
checks the sectioning and go im
mediately to the Business Office
for the payment of fees.
It is very necessary that Vet
erans, as well as others, complete
their registration in the Business
Office promptly. A student is not
eligible to partcipate in major stu
dent activities until his card is
signed by the Assistant Treasurer.
Classes will begin at 8:30,
Wednesday, January 28th.
NEWS BRIEFS ...
The examination schedule is
posted on all bulletin boards. Be
sure you get to the right room,
right class, right hour, and right
day!
O O
Thursday and Friday, February
5 and 6, Dr. John Baillie, of Edin
burgh, Scotland, a world-renowned
theologian and Vice-President of
the World Council of Churches,
will be on campus. He will speak
in chapel on Friday, the 6th, and
will make an address at 8:00 p.m.
in the College Union.
0 0 0
Congratulations to all the coeds
who received diamonds during the
Christmas holidays. Condolences to
the ones who gave them.
Library Is Crowded
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Get it learned before finals begin.
Becke Blackwell To Be
Guilford's Queen Entrant
Becke Blackwell, a senior from
High Point, North Carolina, will
represent Guilford in the North
State Tournament Queen Contest.
She was chosen in a majority vote
in both freshman chapel and up
perclassman chapel. The other two
contestants were Louise Beasley
and Wilma Lou Snipes, each one
of the three girls representing one
Charles Little Is
Injured In Holiday
Auto Accident
People travel at Christmas time
—travel perhaps more than at any
other holiday season during the
year. Now, back in the horse and
buggy days, traveling wasn't quite
so dangerous, but with modern
day horsepowered engines and our
new triple-lane highways, traffic
fatalites and injuries have become
one of our nation's greatest prob
lems. And we are sad to have to
say that all of the Guilford College
student body did not escape the
Christmas holiday traffic safely.
Charles Little, a sophomore here
at Guilford, went home for the
Christmas holidays, home to
Moorestown, New Jersey. And a
few days before the New Year's
holiday, Charles was out riding
with his mother and his grand
mother, when a car, with the driver
asleep at the wheel, came practi
cally out of nowhere, and side
swiped his car, overturning it. His
grandmother was killed, and Char
lie and his mother both went to the
hospital. His mother is still in seri
ous condition, and although Char
lie had many internal chest in
juries and several gashes, he hopes
to be back on campus not too long
after the start of the second semes
ter, January 27.
We all sympathize with the
Little family, and both the mem
bers of the student body and the
faculty of Guilford College want
to express their sincere hope that
Mrs. Little will soon be better and
that Charlie will soon be back with
us, and as good as new!
Registration Set
For January 27
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of the three girls' dormitories on
campus. They were nominated by
the members of the basketball
team
Becke is an education major, and
president of the Future Teachers of
America group on campus. She did
her practice teaching at Braxton-
Craven School this past fall. She
lives in Mary Hobbs Hall, was
maid of honor in the Homecoming
Court last October, and is presently
a member of the 1959 May Court.
Becke was "very happy and very
surprised" at being elected.
Guilford Library
Receives Gift
Through the courtesy of Bob
Stanger and his family, the library
has received a set of all the tele
phone directories put out by the
New York Telephone System. They
include five large books and are
now in the library. Anyone wish
ing a New York telephone number
may use one of these directories.
Just ask the librarian on duty for it.
Few people know that January
13 was the 125 th birthday of Guil
ford College. And coincidentally
enough Gene Key, alumni secre
tary, celebrated his birthday on
the same day.
Number 7