Fuzzy Faces
The New Look
See page 2
VOLUME LI
Shakespeare's Three Tabards
E " r V KB.
■T\ f-jLf y~
The initial program of the Guil
ford College Arts-Entertainment
Series will be "The Three Tabards
of Shakespeare."
Philip Lawrence, distinguished
Shakespearean authority, director
and actor, will head a cast of five
performers in selections from the
great tragedies, comedies and his
tories in The Three Tabards of
Shakespeare, a theatre event to be
presented on the local campus in
Dana Auditorium on Friday, Oc
tober 7 at 8:00 p.m. The company,
touring under the auspices of the
Association of American Colleges'
Arts Program, will perform on
nearly twenty-five campuses in
several states. Mr. Lawrence's four
fellow actors are all experienced
players with many diversified roles
to their credit.
The production by Richard Herd
takes its name from the tabards
(tunics) worn by the heralds of
noble families on which were em
blazoned their lords' coats of arms.
In the performance to be present
ed here, these tabards are identi
fied with various human emotions
which Shakespeare so brilliantly
portrayed.
Scenes in The Three Tabards of
Shakespeare are selected from
Hamlet, Twelfth Night, Macbeth,
Friends World
Conference
The summer months of 1967 will
be certain to see an unusual
amount of activity here on campus.
From July 24th to August 3rd
over 1200 Quaker leaders through
out the world will gather here to
consider all aspects of Quakerism.
The Clerk, or presiding officer
of the conference, will be Lewis
E. Waddlilove of the London
Yearly Meeting of the Religious So
ciety of Friends. Mr. Waddilove,
an officer of the Order of the Brit
ish Empire, is a director of the Jo
seph Rowntree Memorial Trust,
an organization founded in 1947
to raise the standards of workers'
housing in England and Wales. He
received his degree in Public Ad
ministration from London Univer
sity. He is also a member of the
British Colonial Star Chamber Sec
retariat. During the blitz of 1940-
1941, Waddilove did evacuation
work in London and Plymouth.
Joining the Friends Ambulance
Unit in 1942, he served in Europe
and the Middle East. He is cur
rently involved in several programs
concerned with housing, immi
grants and education. In 1965, he
was honored by Queen Elizabeth.
Assisting Waddilove will be
Thomas Lung'ho Administrative
Secretary of the East Africa Year
ly Meeting of Friends, and Barrett
Hollister, Director of International
The Qui I for Son
Published by the Students of the South's Only Quaker College
Taming of the Shrew, Henry V
and Julius Caesar. The staging is
deliberately simple to permit con
centration on the players and tab
ards. Music is provided by a lu
tenist who sings appropriate mad
rigals and ballads. The narrative,
written by Mr. Lawrence, accentu
ates the emotional climate of each
scene.
Where Is WGCR?
During the school year 1964-
1965 a group of students became
interested in starting a radio sta
tion at Guilford College. After for
mulating the ideas for this station,
WGCR came on the air. The sta
tion had a power of one watt and
covered the first two floors of the
New Men's Dorm. As the idea of a
radio station was discussed further
by this group of students, it was
decided that WGCR should be li
censed by the Federal Communi
cations Commission, operated on
the high fidelity F.M. band, and
it should play popular, semi-classi
cal, and classical music throughout
its broadcast day.
During the school year 1965-66
a constitution was drawn up for
WGCR. The station was to operate
within the structure of the Fine
Music Broadcasting Society. This
organization was to be composed
of students who were interested in
presenting good music to Guilford
College students, and the Guilford
College community.
You probablv wonder why part
of this article has been written in
the past tense? (WHAT HAS HAP
PENED TO WGCR?) The final
step in getting WGCR on the air
lies with the Board of Trustees of
this college. We need their approv
al before WGCR can be licensed
(Continued on page 3, col. 1)
Studies at Antioch College, "Yellow
Springs, Ohio, and Secretary of the
Friends General Conference, to
which eight American Yearly Meet
ings of Friends belong.
Final details for the 1967 World
Conference will be worked out
when twenty American and Euro
pean members of the Conference
Executive Committee meet in
Greensboro this October. Edward
B. Bronner, profesror of history at
Haverford College, Pennslyvania,
will preside. Arrangements for this
meeting are being made by J.
Floyd Moore, professor of religion
and Biblical Literature at Guil
ford College and Executive Sec
retary of the World Conference.
The theme of the conference is
"Seek, Find, Share; The Time Is
the Present." For ten days, those
attending will engage in vigorous
and prayerful self-examination of
their roles in a world of profound
change.
GREENSBORO, N. C„ OCTOBER 3, 1966
Librarians Get Dynamic Duo
With the beginning of this
school year two new services are
being offered by the college li
brary. On September 15th the li
brary installed a new type copy
ing machine for the use of the fac
ulty and students of Guilford Col
lege.
The new copier, a Xerox 914, is
located in the entry alcove on the
north side of the library. The
copier is a self-service unit and is
coin-operated at a charge of 10c
per copy. Herbert Poole, the Di
rector of Libraries, indicated that
the new copier will be used on a
trial basis for about three months.
The decision to continue using the
Xerox 914 will depend upon the
volume of use made of it by fac-
1 c
\ J
Bryden Gets Grant
BY EMILY HEDRICK
Within the year, King Hall will
be taking on an entirely new per
sonality. It will have been reno
vated into primarily a science
building when completed. Inside
the building will be a new feature
to the science departments an
ultra-modern research laboratory
equipped by money granted by
two branches of the U.S. Govern
ment.
Dr. Robert R. Bryden, head of
Guilford's Biology Department,
announces that approval has been
made for a grant of approximately
$40,000 from the Health, Educa
tion, and Welfare Department.
Moreover, another federal agency,
the National Science Foundation,
has made a grant of $3,700, which
is to be matched by the college.
These sums are to be utilized to
improve and to update the existing
facilities of the Biology, Physics,
and Chemistry Departments of
Guilford College. It is hoped that
the laboratories will give about 15
students yearly an opportunity to
do undergraduate research here.
Also, materials such as high-power
microscopes, instruments for meta
bolism study, and visual aids will
be available for use by individual
students.
The two monetary grants will
enable the Guilford science depart
ment to do what was before impos
sible. The equipment, which is
now on order, will be housed prop
erly in the to-be-remodeled Kine
Hall.
BEAT
SAMFORD
OCTOBER
BTH
ulty and students. There are no re
strictions on types of materials
that may be copied.
In announcing the new copying
service, the Director of Libraries
pointed out that the quality of re
production made on the Xerox 914
is vastly superior to that of the 3M
copier in use in the library since
1965. The Xerox 914 is also simpler
than the 3M copier to operate, be
cause it requires only one opera
tion per copy versus the multiple
steps required on the 3M machine.
Faculty and students requiring
initial assistance in operating the
Xerox copier will be given aid
upon request at the circulation
desk.
The library has also announced
the opening of a typing room for
faculty and student use. This new
facility is provided without cost by
the library which was able to
acquire two used, but serviceable,
typewriters during the summer.
The new typing room is on the
second floor of the library build
ing, in seminar room No. 3. Be
cause the room will be locked ex
cept when in use, arrangements for
a key to the room and for use of
a typewriter may be made at the
circulation desk. The typewriters
may be used in the typing room
only. Care and maintenance costs
for normal use of the equipment
will be borne by the library.
Hopeful
In commenting on the new ser
vice, Herbert Poole expressed the
hope that the anticipated need for
such service will be borne out by
use of the typing room. Mr. Poole
said also that Guilford College
was fortunate to be able to pro
vide a typing room, as many col
leges and universities do not. "It
has been my experience," he
said, "that free typing facilities are
a great aid to those preparing pa
pers and reports." Should demands
become great enough in the future,
the number of typewriters might
be increased.
New Program
The Guilford College Depart
ment of Admissions is interested in
the addition of a new program
which would solicit the help of the
present student body. The plan
calls for recommendation, by the
Guilford students, of a person or
persons from their high schools or
hometowns who are the leaders of
their class and would benefit by
the Guilford College experience.
Upon recommendation, the depart
ment will send your choice an ap
plication for Guilford, as well as
other pertinent information.
If you have a friend who is in
the senior class of his high school,
and is outstanding in his academic
and leadership abilties, then drop
by the admissions office and put in
a recommendation for him.
This is part of the expanded ad
missions program which hopes to
not only raise the academic stand
ards of Guilford, but also give the
superior student a chance to learn
formally about your school.
ANNOUNCEMENT
On Saturday, October Bth, there
will be a dance featuring The
Monzas. The dance has been ar
ranged by the Social Committee of
the Student Legislature. The ad
mission to the Founder's Basement
dance will be 50c per person, stag
or drag. The dance begins at 8:00
and lasts until 12:00. We urge each
and everyone of you to attend.
Quakes Strike
Big in Football
See page 3
Guilford Tour
Guide
Students interested in going to
Europe will have a chance to do
so this summer. For ten years a
Seminar Abroad program has been
in effect at Guilford College. The
man responsible for this is Mr.
Claude Shotts, Director of Counsel
ing and faculty advisor for the In
ternational Relations Club. Mr.
Shotts feels that intercultural expe
rience is dynamic for everyone in
volved.
Mr. Shotts first went to Europe
in 1946 on postwar - relief work in
Germany. There he helped the
American Friends in the feeding
and general rehabilitation of war
victims. He returned in 1948 to
plan and administrate a Seminar
for forty students from nine coun
tries, noting how much the stu
dents enjoyed and benefitted from
their group discussions on their
own cultures.
In 1953, when again returning
from a trip abroad, Mr. Shotts was
surprised to hear unfavorable com
ments from American tourists on
their way home. These tourists
complained of being "robbed and
exploited" by American tourist
agencies which charged expensive
rates for uninteresting and unor
ganized tours of Europe. During
discussions with some students at
the University of North Carolina
who had also been on these Euro
pean tours, Mr. Shotts decided to
take a trip to Europe by himself.
He spent several years perfecting
his project. He and his first group
left for Europe in 1958.
This first group used a bus for
its touring and traveling, but this
was found to be too time-consum
ing. Travel by plane has been em
ployed for the last four or five
years. While this is a bit more ex
pensive, it gives the students
more time to see all the things they
want to see.
The tour, which lasts from the
middle of June imtil the middle
of August, includes such places as
Brussels, Cologne, Amsterdam, Par
is, Switzerland, Florence, Rome,
Athens, Belgrade, Budapest, Vien
na, Prague, Berlin, Copenhagen,
and London. A week is spent in
four of the more important cities,
with stops in the other varying
from three to five days.
Mr. Shotts stresses the value of
such a serious, important, and edu
cational experience. "Education is
learning to live successfully in the
world. The best way to do this is
through exposure to other cultures.
This has become increasingly im
portant with die improved transit
facilities. Now we live in a world
society; we hope to make it a world
community."
Interested students are encour
aged to see Mr. Shotts. He is ac
cepting applications now for this
summer's trip. More information
will be available at an assembly on
October 24. At this program, some
of the Guilford students who went
last year will speak to the student
body. Mr. Shotts will also be pres
ent to answer any questions.
NUMBER 2