Symposium Schedule, Wayne Morse (page three) VOLUME L Plans Progress For April Symposium by Porter Dawson Guilfordian Staff Writer Plans are steadily progressing in preparation for what is hoped to be the first annual Guilford Sym posium, to be held here April 18- 20. The topic for the student-initi ated and organized program is "United States Foreign Policy in Southeast Asia. The first day's dis cussion will center on Viet Nam, and the second day's on China. An assessment of Southeast Asian problems will be the topic for dis cussion on the third day and speak ers from two non-aligned nations will take part. There will be major addresses by prominent speakers, mostly in the evenings. In addition, there will be speakers available for morning classes and afternoon forums. To complement these facets of the symposium, publications and other information on Southeast Asia will be made available. One of the main purposes of the symposium as conceived by its founders is to supplant the emo tionalism pervading discussions of our foreign policy on most cam puses with a clear and comprehen sive understanding brought about by real facts as it is hoped they will be presented at the symposium. Financial support for the sym posium is being sought from a number of possible sources. Vari ous clubs and organizations on campus are giving support, and the Student Affairs Board is consider ing the granting of a major contri bution. In order for interested persons to know what is being planned for the three-day period, a twelve-page program will be distributed prior to the symposium. Interest in the symposium has been widespread, and student par (Continued on page 4, col 5) Atwell Compiles First Semester Academic Report Alan Atwell, Dean of Men stu dents, has prepared a report con cerning the quality point averages compiled by the various men's dor mitory sections during the first se mester of this present academic year. The First North section of the New Men's Dormitory had the highest average with a 1.40 total. The First p'loor section of English had the dubious distinction of hold ing last place with a .76 average. The other sections were as follows: Third North (NMD) 1.377; Sec ond Center Front (NMD) 1.376; Center (Cox) 1.358; New North (Cox) 1.34; Third Center Front (NMD) 1.30; Old North (Cox) 1.28; Second North (NMD) 1.26; Third Center Back (NMD) 1.23; Third South (NMD) 2.21; Second Center Back (NMD) 1.18; Second South (NMD) 1.177; Second Floor (English) 1.169; First South (NMD) 1.158; Yankee Stadium (Cox) 1.030; Old South (Cox) .84. In addition to holding the highest quality average, First North also had the largest number of students with a "B" average or better (ten). The New North section of Cox had seven such students. The Old South section of Cox and the First Floor of English were the only sections in which nobody had a "B" average. The First Floor of English had the highest number of students with a below "C" average (four teen). The Yankee Stadium section (Continued on page 3, col. 5) The QuHforbian Published by the Students of the South's Only Quaker College Students Approve New Budget The student body has approved" next year's proposed student legis lature budget by a considerably large affirmative vote of 85 percent. Five hundred eighty-four students gave their okeys and 109 disap proved of the $25,500 budget which was presented to the students for their final consideration on a March 14 chapel. The budget was presented to the students by Bob Mackie after an introduction by Student Legislature President Tom Taylor. Mackie, the treasurer of the Student Legisla ture and chairman of the Student Affairs Board, answered all ques tions pertaining to the budget and then supervised the balloting. Mackie later expressed his thanks and appreciation to the members of the Student Affairs Board and the Student Legislature for their cooperation and help in construct ing the budget. He also stressed the importance of the role that the stu dent body played in the construc tion of next year's budget: "Thanks to some of the comments on the preliminary ballots, we realized that it is necessary to instruct stu dents on the function of several of (Continued on page 3, col. 4) Four Students Are Attending Harvard China Conference Four Guilford College students and Dr. Edward Burrows of the History Department are presently attending a three-day symposium at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachushetts. Bill Partin, Wil liam Benbow, Harold Clark and Arthur Washburn are representing Guilford at the Third Annual China Conference which began yesterday and will end tomorrow. The Conference is being spon sored by the Collegiate Council for the United Nations and is featuring such notable authorities as Profes sor John K. Fairbank and Professor Owen Lattimore. Fairbank, who will speak on "Highlights of Re cent Chinese History," has testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on United States for eign policy toward Red China. In addition to the usual amount of speeches and discussion groups, the five Guilfordians will partake of a tour of the Fogg Art Museum which specializes in Chinese art. They will return by jet tomorrow. JHhHM II SV Jr m x£m jit I LITTLE ANTHONY and the IMPERIALS will be here for a dance at Founders Hall on April 23. They are being presented by the Social Committee. A small admission fee will be charged. GREENSBORO, N. C., MARCH 26, 1966 DR. JACQUES HARDRE, Professor of French at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, visited Guil ford on March 18. He is an alumnus of Guilford College and taught French and German here from 1937 to 1939. Biophile Club Urges Passage of Conservation Bills A surprisingly large number of people at Guilford College have recently expressed their concern for some major conservation issues. Restoration of the water flow into Everglades National Park, estab lishment of a Cape Lookout Na tional Reserve, and prevention of further pollution of our lakes and rivers were the major objects of their attention. Bills concerning these issues have come or are des tined to come before the United States Senate, and the two Senators from North Carolina—Sam Ervin and Everett Jordan —have pledged their support. Expressing their approval of these and other conservation proj ects, the Biophile Club and ap proximately 300 other interested students and faculty members sent a petition to the two Senators urg ing them to give their full support to the measures. Both Mr. Ervin and Mr. Jordan answered promptly and expressed their sincere grati tude for the interest and concern for conservation shown by the club and the Guilford College commu nity. They also assured the signers of the petition that they would continue to support measures de signed to conserve our natural re sources and national beauty. The Senators reported that the National Seashore Bill had success fully passed the House and the (Continued on page 3, col. 2) Student Government Elections Will Be Held on Wednesday Speeches Will Be Given on Monday General spring elections for 1966-67 will be held on Wednesday, March 30, in the Lounge of the Union-Bookstore-Post Office Building from 8:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Up for election will be such positions as the Executive Committee of the Student Legislature, presidencies of the M.S.C. and the W.S.C., and various class positions. For the first ANNUAL CHOIR TOUR BEGINS TODAY by Dave Parsons Guilfordian Staff Writer Today at about 1:00 p.m., a bus load of Guilford students will go forth to represent the college in towns as far north as Keene, New Hampshire. The likelihood of a crowd gathering to see them off is indeed slim; yet these students have trained long and hard for the eight days to follow. They must, night after night, be prepared to overcome the fatigue of long hours of travel and rise to an energetic, intelligent level of performance. How can these remarks apply to the A Cappella Choir which, ac cording to common knowledge, gets an annual vacation in Florida or New York paid for by the student body. Surely it is an insult to any one's intelligence to maintain that choir trips are anything but a lark. In reality, fun and fatigue arrive in almost equal doses for the students who decide to go. The choir prac tices five days a week and mem orizes all its music. Each piece of music must be sung repeatedly un til just the right sound comes out, and this is a tedious, sometimes im possible task. When the worn-out choir member arrives back on cam pus after the tour, a mountain of accumulated work awaits him. This enumeration of sacrifices cannot conceal the enjoyment which choir members find on these tours. Since most of the engage ments are at Quaker meetings, and choir members stay in the homes of the congregation members, they meet a number of new people. The travel aspect is very attractive —a chance both to get away and to see new places. This year, for instance, the choir will have almost a full day in New York City between con certs. The thrill of doing a profes sional job of singing, of producing a high quality level performance in which the individual members of the group react as one, is not the least pleasure of the trip. Several traditions will likely con tinue on this tour. The same bus driver is raring to go as usual. Women outnumber men in approxi mately the regular three-to-one ra tio. With long periods of standing on risers after sitting in a bus all day, someone will probably faint. Notes will be missed, belongings will be left, tempers will fray, and everyone will know his fellow trav elers only too well by the time the bus arrives back at Guilford on April 3. Several of the notorious choir tour romances wll doubtlessly be in full swing or at a low ebb by then, but before long, things wll be almost back to normal, and choir tour will be a dream to be remem bered nostalgically until the next time around. Here follows the schedule of the choir tour: March: 26, Waynesboro, Va.; 27, Riverside, N. J.; 28, Plainfield, N. J.; 29, New York City: 30, Keene, N. H.; 31, Cranston, R. I. April: 1, Lansdowne, Pa.; 2, Richmond, Va.; 3, Hampton, Va. REMEMBER TO VOTE! Maynard Expects Battle For CC Baseball Crown (page four) NUMBER 9 ' time in many years, three positions will be missing from the ballots. The editors of The Guilfordian and The Quaker and the managing edi tor of The Guilfordian will be ap pointed instead of elected. Running unopposed for the Exe cutive Committee of the Student Legislature is the ticket of Dave Stanfield, president; Topsy Floyd, vice-president; June Tuttle, secre tary, and John Van Etten, treasur er. A meeting of the Student Legis lature will be held to count the bal lots as soon as the polls close. The only results to be made public will be the names of the winning candi dates. The ballots will be kept by the Student Legislature for one year. In order to eliminate the ne cessity of a run-off election, ballots indicating first, second and third choices will be prepared. Speeches by candidates seeking important positions will be given in chapel on Monday, March 28. The amount of time allotted to each candidate will be determined by the Elections Committee and will depend upon the number of candi dates who will speak. These speech es usually play a large part in the outcome of many elections. Candi dates are therefore urged to make a skillful attempt at presenting their speeches. Any questions concerning elec tions should be presented to the Elections Committee. The mem bers of that committee are Alvis Campbell, chairman; Lee Milner, Cheryl Rippy, Rusty Maynard, Bill Neal, and Clarence Crouse. "Seminars Abroad" Open to Guilfordians The increase in travel and com munications is rapidly making the world into a community. A student, in order to be educated, must un derstand people of other cultures and how they think, live and gov ern themselves. This summer Guilford College students are engaging in a project that brings them to an understand ing of people of thirteen European nations. It is called "Seminars Abroad" and will enable Guilford students to visit and take part in cultural seminars in Germany, The Netherlands, France, Switzerland, Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia, East and West Germany, Denmark, and Eng land. The students will spend the full summer (seventy days) abroad and will travel by air. A week will be spent in Paris, Rome and Berlin; ten days in London and three to five days in other major European cul tural centers. The trip is being done at cost and will amount to a total of SI4OO. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Shotts will lead the group. Both have lived and traveled in Europe and she is a teacher of European history. Twenty-five students have al ready signed up and it will be pos sible to take about ten more. If you are interested, see Jane Benbow, president of the International Re lations Club, or Mr. Shotts.