VOLUME LIII Student Legislature Proposal Campus Phones By PAT ANDREW The Student Legislature's proposal calling for installation of telephones in every room on campus was approved Wednesday by the Administrative Council. The action provides for the installation of at least fifty of the new phones by June and the remainder by the beginning of the fall semester of '7O. The Student Legislature has an agreement with the Southern Bell Telephone Company to waive deposit costs. The firtf year the phones are in operation, the legislature will pay all the installation costs. After then the costs will be only one half the regular amount and will be paid by students desiring the use of a phone in their rooms. Guilford Gets 5100,000 Grant Guilford College has been awarded a SIOO,OOO grant by the Charles A. Dana Foundation for the expansion of science facilities. President Grimsley T. Hobbs announced receipt of the gift January 6. Hobbs, interviewed by The Greensboro Daily News, said "We are truly grateful to the Dana Foundation for providing us the opportunity to expand our science facilities, thus advancing Guilford's educational program. "The addition of a new wing to King Hall, our present science building, is one of the major capital needs of the college. Though construction is expected to cost in excess of $600,000, we anticipate future sources of support from other corporations and foundations, enabling us to proceed with the project." Hobbs said a 27,000-square foot addition to King Hall was planned That, he said, would almost triple the present space now being used for science study on the campus. The addition, a three-story structure, would house laboratories, classrooms and faculty offices. Guilford College has received previous grants from the Charles A. Dana Foundation for capital improvements, scholarships and endowed professorships. The latest gift increases the total received by Guilford from the foundation to $1,850,000. NOTICE Due to exams, The Guilfordian will not be published on Thursday January 24, 1969. Publications will resume the following Friday, January 31. An open meeting for all persons interested in joining The Guilfordian staff will be held Thursday January 30 at 7:30 p.m. Several positions are available. The Quiffor&cm The legislature has an agreement with SBC to suspend all monthly rent charged during the summer months without removing the phones. Students will be responsible for paying the monthly rent of $6, and are encouraged to take the service, but by no means are required to do so. The apparatus now being installed to accommodate the new phone system will eventually lead to the installation in a few years of the s * o^m> w^mam ONE OF THE JUNIOR CITIZENS of "Veterans' Village" on the campus of Guilford College during the latter years of the 1940's was Grimsley Hobbs-Junior, that is. In the background are the makeshift apartments the college bought from Uncle Sam to house married students and their families. Grimsley Jr.'s parents were two of the first occupants. Now the family has moved a few hundred yards away to the President's home. (Photo courtesy of the llohbs family.) From Veteran's Village To Fertile Flats By EMILY HEDRICK 'Way back in the forties, when a number of our parents were college age themselves, Guilford College pioneered the establishment of married students' housing. The result now stands in the form of Frazier Apartments, the site of some of the country's original buildings used to accommodate the new and growing class of students-the married undergraduate. Originally known as "Veterans' Village," the first Guilford student apartment consisted of surplus Army barracks brought from Ft. Jackson, S.C. This was in the post-World War II days when many of the somewhat older male students were returning to campus with their wives. "It was a nationally recognized innovation on the part of the college," recalls veteran Administration member David Parsons. "They had an unofficial 'mayor' and quite an organized little community over there." One of the first couples to Thursday, January 16, 1969 PBX (an intercampus communications system). In making the proposal the legislature listed decreasing phone congestion and noise in the halls as prime reasons for instigating the new service. Also in the case of emergencies (an example is the Shore Dorm burglary when girls had to find a dime for the phone in order to call the police) the new phones will add extra protection. Tom Simek is chairman of the telephone committee. occupy the "Village," which consisted of three subdivided buildings, was then Mr. and Mrs. Grimsley T. Hobbs, who lived there a year. "We could look down at the cracks in the floor and see light coming up! We had quite a time of it," Mrs. Hobbs remembers fondly. Among the present students here whose parents also lived there are Lani Lentz, Sally (Continued on page 3) Singers Swing South The Guilford College A Cappella Choir, in its fifth decade of existence, leaves Wednesday on its biennial tour of the Southern states. Eldon Moen, in his second year as director, has announced that 42 students of the 80- member group have been selected by audition to go on tour. The choir, which on alternate years travels to the North and New England states, will give concerts in Gaffney, S. C.; Off Campus Seminars Dec. Group Lauds Success "I can truly say I have gained more from this week than from any other semester on campus. This is true education! This must be increased and expanded at Guilford!" This was one of many glowing comments from students who participated in Guilford's initial "Off-Campus Seminar" held last month in New York. The dual topic was "The Social and Political Problems of the City" and the United Nations. A total of 22 students, accompanied by coordinator Claude Shotts and faculty member Dr. Cyrus Johnson, had met for four weeks in preparation prior to the week-long seminar. Seventeen (Continued on page 2) Umon to open Sundays Sun. Night Meal Spurs Leg. Action By PAT ANDREW Beef stew, beef stew, more beef stew ... fish sandwich, broiled fish .. . waffles for Sunday night dinner? Thank goodness for peanut butter and jelly sandwiches! The above describes the food situation in the cafeteria last week. The pre-exam menu was anything but stimulating or conducive to study. Students were forced to seek sustenance elsewhere. The week started off with a bang when students were served cold sandwiches on one of the coldest days of the year and concluded when students were served waffles for their Sunday night meal. There was no alternative. Immediately after the Sunday night meal, Zack Lowe called a special meeting of the Student Legislature cafeteria committee to act on the cafeteria situation. Jessup, Ga.; St. Petersburg, Fla.; Dade City, Fla.; Melbourne, Fla.; Jacksonville, Fla.; and Frogmore, S.C. The concert itinerary includes Baptist, Unitarian and Methodist churches; Melbourne College; a Rotary Club; and an experimental living community (in Frogmore), a traditional concert site for the choir. Possible side trips for the chartered busload will be to Ringling Museum and Cape Kennedy. Number 15 Second Group Leaves Wed. The second "Off-Campus Seminar" will get under way Wednesday when approximately twenty Guilford students go to New York to examine "The Arts in Contemporary Society." The new dimension to the traditional classroom-lecture mode of learning has been introduced here so students can study art forms "in action." I'he areas of drama, music, and art will be studied. Fritz Lyon of the William Sloane House, where the group will stay, has been co-ordinating the program. Events on the agenda include an evening at the New York Ballet; walking tours of the Guggenheim and Frick Museums, and the Museum of Modern'-Art; (Continued on page 2) Lowe met with David Parsons, Business Manager, and Ramon Burguillos, Cafeteria manager, early Monday, and reported to the afternoon committee meeting attended by Bouguillos, Barbara Ilau, Associate Dean of students, Jim Newlin, Assistant Business Manager, and committee members Daphne Helms, Susan McCrery, Mike MacMillian, and Steve Bowles. Burguillos was reportedly very receptive to the ideas advanced by the Committee. He explained the Sunday night meal as "an experiment", and stated he was surprised at the cold reception given it by students. At the meeting Burguillos heard complaints most often reported to the committee. They were concerned about having better-than average food during exams, and always having hot food on cold days. Burguillos was also asked to have the (Continued on page 2) The group, to be chaperoned by Moen and his wife, plans to return Wednesday, Jan. 29, in time for classes. On Sunday night they will travel back to another traditional concert spot, Monroe. It was decided to schedule this year's tour early in the year at Semester Break, rather than waiting until Spring Vacation, during which Easter falls this year. Moen explained that few churches have time to schedule outside choirs during their already busy Easter week.