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Charlie Black (52) combines with Dan Kuzma (22) for an easy two points. These
two boys have been making life very difficult for the opposition. Although there
is a height disadvantage, Black and Kuzma make lip for it with muscle and hustle.
Guilford College Bowl Team
Wins Victory at High Point
The newly organized Guilford
College Bowl team met with High
Point College, Wednesday night,
December 8, at High Point Col
lege. This was the first official
meet scheduled between the two
schools.
The meet was organized and car
ried out through the North State
Student Government Association
which has been working on the
College Bowl program for almost
a year. The member colleges of
the N.S.S.G.A., of which Guilford
is an active member, are scheduled
to meet one another through the
course of the year in competition
which will eliminate the losers of
a series of matches and finally pro
duce a winner of the elimination.
The Guilford College team was
picked over a period of three weeks
during which there was first, an
open competition enabling all in
terested students to compete for
selection among the "top ten." After
this preliminary elimination, the
ten who were chosen participated
in two coaching sessions, one held
by Mrs. Milner, the other by Dr.
Burrows. The purpose of these
sessions was to enable the profes
sors involved to pick the four regu
lar team members and the two al
ternates whom they thought would
answer the questions in the best
manner. The criteria for selection
were correctness in answering,
speed in responding, and display of
nervous emotion. Time hampered
the extended selection proposed and
the team was selected after only
two of the proposed coaching ses
sions.
The Guilford team won the first
official match with High Point with
an impressive 130-point differ
ence. The team members who par
ticipated in this first match were,
Rusty Edmunston, Gordon Comp
ton, Ted Buddine, and Dave Par
sons. The team selected for compe
tition is as follows: Dave Parsons,
Ted Buddine, Gordon Compton
and Karen Baldwin (regular mem
bers); Busty Edmunston and John
Frysinger (alternate members).
The procedure used in the
matches held by the N.S.S.G.A.
much resembles that used on the
televised G.E. College Bowl pro
gram. The moderator asks toss-up
questions compiled by the coordi
nator of the program and sub
mitted by professors from all the
participating colleges. Both teams
are allowed to try to answer these
questions. The team whose mem
ber first signifies that he wishes
to answer the question is allowed
a response. If that response is
deemed incorrect by the modera
tor, the members of the other team
are allowed to signify their desire
to answer the question. A bonus
question, usually consisting of sev
eral parts that are individually
weighted according to difficulty,
is then awarded to the team which
correctly answers any toss-up
question. A ten-second time limit
is allowed for the members of any
team on either type of question to
begin to answer. The match is di
vided into two twenty-minute
questioning periods with a ten
minute intermission between each
session. There are two attendants
for the light panel, one from each
school Two people keeping the
time on the questions are pro
vided, one from each school. The
scorekeepers are provided from
each school. A moderator is selected
from each school and the school
hosting the match provides its own
moderator for the evening. The
questions for each match are re
quested and sent out from the
central coordinator for the pro
gram. Two matches are scheduled
for each set of two schools. The
team with the highest total number
of points at the end of both matches
goes on to meet another school
for another set of matches and the
losing team is eliminated.
The Quilfortocw
Published by the Students of the South's Only Quaker College
VOLUME XLVIII
Sixteen Guilford Seniors Selected
For Who's Who Among Students
I—Angotti 2—Bailey
3—Bledsoe 4—Brown
s—Chase 6—Davidson
7—Harris B—Judd
"The Messiah" Aired
On Sunday, December 15, 1963,
at 4:00 p.m. in Dana Auditorium,
The Guilford College Community
Chorus and The Guilford College
Orchestra presented the Bth annual
production of selections from Han
del's Oratorio The Messiah.
The Chorus was directed by
Carl C. Baumbach and the orches
tra by Sheldon Morgenstern.
Claude Cook was the organist.
The soloists for the performance
were Grace Kilkelly, soprano; Polly
Medearis, alto; Jerry Smyre, tenor;
and William Head, baritone.
o
GC Faculty Dinner
The faculty and administrators
of Guilford College were enter
tained with a banquet in the school
cafeteria, Monday night, Decem
ber 9, 1963.
Mr. Charles Hendricks presided
over the evening's program with
some opening comments and the
introduction of the faculty speakers
for the evening.
The speakers, Dr. E. Garness
Purdom, Miss Mildred Marlette,
and Dr. Algie Newlin, each hu
morously and uniquely discussed
his personal experiences here on
the campus.
Greensboro, N. C., December 19, 1963
The following sixteen seniors
have been selected by the senior
class and the faculty to represent
Guilford College in the annual
edition of Who's Who Among Stu
dents in American Colleges and
Universities," for 1964.
(1) Nancy Jo Angotti, a psy
chology major from East Orange,
New Jersey.
(2) John Crooks Bailey 111, a
physical education major, from
Davidson, N. C.
(3) Joseph Patrick Bledsoe, an
economics major, from Winston-
Salem, N. C.
(4) Sandra Lillian Brown, a
physics major, from Unionville,
Connecticut.
(5) Lois Ethel Chase, a mathe
matics major, from Lynn, Massa
chusetts.
(6) Robert O'neil Davidson, an
economics major, from Statesville,
N. C.
(7) Leah Maie Harris, an ele
mentary education major, from
High Point, N. C.
(8) Nancy Lee Judd, a history
major, from Asheboro, N. C.
(9) Daniel Franklin Kuzma, a
mathematics major, from Matawan,
New Jersey.
(10) Patrick William Larracey,
a religion major, from Keene, New
Hampshire.
(11) David Ralph Miller, an
economics major, from Salem, New
Jersey.
(12) Elwood Gilliam Parker, a
mathematics major, from George,
N. C.
(13) William E. Seabrook, an
English major, from Greensboro,
N. C.
(14) Jane Walker Simpson, a
sociology major, from Charlotte,
N. C.
(15) Phyllis Jeanine Voss, a psy
chology major, from Laurinburg,
N. C.
(16) Virginia Woodhull White,
a sociology major, from Cumber
land, Rhode Island.
o
First Hootenamiy
Termed \ Success
On Friday, December 6th, the
Social Committee sponsored a
Hootenanny in the basement of
Founder's Hall. The audience sat
on the floor before the performers
and occasionally joined in to sing
along with the artists.
The group featured that evening
was the Early Time Singers, a local
trio composed of Bookie Binkley,
Ike Wrenn, and Randv Thrift.
Other performers included Nancy
Steele, Jerry Simmons, and Bar
bara Ilagv. Guilford also discov
ered a hidden talent at the Hoot
enanny who is none other than
John (Saltv Dog) Bailey. John
persuaded the Early Time Singers
to switch from folk songs to coun
try music so that he might display
his ability as a banjo-picker.
The Hootenanny provided sev
eral types of music including not
only older folk songs, but also
country and Western songs, more
(Continued on page 4, column 1)
9—Ku/ma 10—Larracey
Ai
11—Miller 12—Parker
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13—Seabrook 14—Simpson
Si
15—Voss 16—White
Peace Corps Aims
Clarified in Chapel
By Dr. S. D. Proctor
Guilford College students heard
Dr. Samuel D. Proctor, President
of A&T College speak during con
vocation on Friday, December 6,
about his work with the Peace
Corps.
Dr. Proctor, who for eighteen
months was the associate director
of the Peace Corps, visiting Nigeria
to coordinate the activities of the
Corps there. He explained the way
in which the Corps tries to give
foreign countries a true perspective
of the United States. He said he
found it very difficult to explain
the inaction of the United States
in the riots in places like Birming
ham to the African natives.
Basing his beliefs on these ex
periences, he extolled the virtues
of the Corps and refuted the state
ment that the Corps was not worth
its expense. He emphasized the
fact that the greatest value of the
Peace Corps lies in its "personal
contact element." He said that the
fact that a foreigner gets to know
an American as a real person rather
than just a picture or a tourist is
the true value of the Corps. Fin
ally, he said that the establishment
of the Peace Corps is a "point of
no return" in our international re
lations.
NUMBER 5