Poll On
Pcper
Inside
VOLUME Lilt
Chapman Nam
Craig Chapman has recnetly
been appointed by the
Publications Board to the
position of Editor of The
Guilfordian. The vacancy was
created by the January
graduation of Jim Garvin,
presdent editor.
Chapman, a sophomore from
Wilmington, Delaware, is a Dana
Scholar, and has been active in
student activities. He has been a
member of The Guilfordian staff
and last year served as
Circulation Manager. As a
freshman. Chapman was elected
Chairman of the Guilford
Human Concerns Committee.
This year, he has been active in
the Community Action
Committee of the S.F.A.
In accepting the editorship,
Chapman said that his prime
interest is "to continue the
upgrading of its coverage to
include more issues of
communitv-wide interest."
Semester
Subscriptions
Subscriptions for second
semester's (luilfordian may
now be made by contacting
Pete Ballance, business
manager; Emily Hedrick,
associate editor, or any other
likely enemy of yours on the
staff.
Great belated Christmas
gift for parents! Only $2 (two
dollars, check or cash) for 14
issues (Don't let the sales
pitch throw you.)
Write name and address on
a piece of paper, clean or
otherwise—a dirty paper bag
will do—and drop it in person
or by carrier pigeon into the
Guilfordian's pseudo-office.
Satisfaction is not
guaranteed, but prompt
delivery of our product is.
Let the Old Folks at Home
know what's happening.
They'll never forgive you.
P.S. We need the money.
APO President
Board Member
Bart Lippincott, a senior from
Moorestown, N.J., has been
named to the Red Cross Youth
Advisory Board by the Board of
Directors of the local chapter.
Lippincott is president of
Alpha Phi Omega, a campus
service fraternity which sponsors
the Red Cross Bloodmobile's
visit here twice annually.
The newly-created Advisory
Board intends "to explore and
develop volunteer service
opportunities for students
through Red Cross and other
agencies and organizations in
and beyond the community. . . "
Students from Greensboro
College, Bennett College, A&T
University, UNC-G, Grimsley
and Dudley High Schools were
also named to the board, of
which William H. Craft is
chairman.
Tf)e QuilfbnScm
CRAIG CHAPMAN
Guts at Guilford
Linda Rogers Coordinator
Guilford students will have
one chance to participate in the
Greensboro United Tutoring
Service second semester.
Gilbreaths
Blue Fish
Presented
A Song is a Blue Fish an
original children's musical by
Guilford drama instructor Pat
Kelley Gilbreath, is being
presented tonight and Saturday
at 7:30 p.m. in UNC-G's Taylor
Theater.
The play, for which music was
written by Greensboro
composer-in-residence M.
Thomas Cousins, directed by
Mrs. Gilbreath as her thesis
production for a Master of Fine
Arts degree in drama from the
university.
According to the author, who
also wrote the lyrics for the
music, A Song is a Blue Fisli is
not just a children's play, but
one which will appeal to
"children of all ages."
This will be the second time
in less than a month that a
children's play by Gilbreath and
Cousins has been presented in
the area. A Christmas play
entitled On a Snowy Day,
formerly His Name is Santa
Claus was given on the Guilford
College campus in December.
"Blue Fish" was also
produced this past summer at
"The Lost Colony" in Manteo,
where Mrs. Gilbreath appeared
in the leading role of Eleanor
Dare.
The current presentation of
the play is the second of the
newly-instituted series of thesis
productions at UNC-G. The first
one was A Funny Thing
Happened on the Way to the
Forum last summer.
Admission is $1 per person.
Friday, January 10, 1969
Linda Rogers, coordinator of
the program for Guilford, has
announced that applications for
tutors will be available in the
cafeteria and urges anyone
interested to apply as soon as
possible.
GUTS is a function of the
Community Action Committee
of the SFA, which recently
merged with the Human
Concerns Committee. The
tutoring program is available to
all schools in the Greensboro
area and includes children of all
ages. The tutors can pick the
number of students they wish to
work with, their age, and the
hour and amount of time they
wish to work.
Linda became interested in
tutoring when her brother set up
' RALEIGH If WEDNESDAY JC*
MEMORIAL li JANUARY 1°)
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artists
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\ M 111
LINDA ROGERS
Concerned Friends
Plan Draft Counsel
To Be Operational Next Semester
Before Christmas, the Peace
and Social Concerns Committee
of the Friendship Meeting,
formerly the unprogrammed 11
o'clock worship service, decided
to instigate a draft counseling
service for Guilford College and
surrounding area students.
To assist in setting up the
service and in training
counselors, two men from the
High Point branch of American
Friends Service Committee have
met with approximately fifteen
persons interested in being
counseled. These two men have
held one of a series of four
meetings with the group, headed
by Nick Marshall, to begin the
a tutoring program eight years
ago in the East White Oak
section of Greensboro. She
worked with that program for
three years and became further
interested when she read Muck
Like Me. by John Howard
Griffin. Linda took a group of
five girls to various places in
Greensboro and would like to
see more groups like this or
other groups, such as athletic
teams and music clubs formed.
Linda feels that "Besides
being a very needed project,
GUTS also helps the student
learn more about himself. This
type of worthwhile experience
will broaden the outlook of
anybody who's willing to give
his time and effort to a fellow
human being."
Good Luck
On Your
EXAMS!
Number 14
teaching procedure.
In the second meeting, to be
held tonight, the trainees will be
tested on their reading
assignments to be sure they have
mastered the draft information.
It should be stressed that the
counselors intend to be as
objective as possible. Their main
motive is to explain laws and
give information and courses of
action on all phases on the
Selective Service System
procedure.
Beginning with mainly
Guilford students, the
counselors hope soon to be able
to branch out to other colleges
in the area and eventually to
counsel high school students,
where the most help is actually
needed.
The counseling service hopes
to be fully operational at the
beginning of the coming
semester. Men or women
interested in becoming
counselors, manning the office,
raising funds, or helping with
publicity, etc., are urged to
attend tonight's meeting.
All persons with questions or
problems about the draft are
urged by the new committee to
take advantage of the service.
Bob S
Sworn
Governor
On Friday, January 3, Robert
Scott, son of North Carolina's
popular late Gov. Kerr Scott,
was inaugurated for a four-year
term as governor of the Tar Heel
State.
The ceremonies were held in
Raleigh amid traditional pomp
and floury, including the formal
ball on the eve of the
Inauguration.
As is the custom for the
social proceedings, each
newly-elected Representative
and Senator in the state
Legislature chooses a girl to
sponsor him in the figure dance
at Thursday evening's ball. This
year Barbara Anne Steegmuller,
a freshman student at Guilford
College, represented Marcus
Short of High Point in the
dance, which was led by
Governor-elect and Mrs. Scott.
Scott, a Democrat, defeated
Republican contender Jim
Gardner in a comfortable victory
last November to uphold his
party's record of continued
control of the state.
Others attending the
Inauguration from Guilford
College were Dr. William Carroll
of the Political Science
Department, who advises the
Young Democrats Club on
campus; and club members
Maureen Mulhern, Bob Milan,
Kit Powell, Chris Folger, Larry
Turner and Linda Turner.