Heterogeneous Group Makes]
Up Guilford Student Body
The South has long been noted
for its hospitality, and Guilford College seems to carry out that tradition. A look at a .cross-section of
Guilford's enrollment will confirm
that statement if a heterogeneous
school population is a true indication.
There are in the student body
twenty-one students from foreign
lands. Five of these are from Cuba;
one each from England, France,
India, Iraq, Jordan, Japan, Sweden,
Viet-Nam, and Guatamala; two
from Mexico and five from Korea.
As for out-of-state students, Guilford boasts the presence of seven
students from Connecticut, four
from Delaware, three from the
District of Columbia, seven from
Florida, two frpm Georgia, one
each from Illinois, Indiana, and
Kentucky, three from Louisiana,
one from Maine, four each from
Maryland and Massachusetts, one
from Michigan, two from New
Hampshire, twenty from New Jersey, twenty-three from New York,
four from Ohio, eighteen from
Pennsylvania, two from Rhode Island, two from South Carolina,
five from Tennessee, twenty-nine
from Virginia, and one from Wisconsin—all of these and five hundred seven from North Carolina.
From the standpoint of religious
affiliations, Guilford has as wide a
variety of faith represented as it
has hometowns; Baptist, Brethren,
Buddhist, Catholic, Episcopalian,
Greek Orthodox, Holiness, Latter
Day Saints, Lutheran, Methodist,
Presbyterian, Nazarene, Union
Church, Christian, Christian Sci
ence, Church of God, Dutch Reformed, Jewish, Moravian, Moslem,
Mormon, Reformed, Unitarian,
United Church of God, United |
Christian, and Friends.
This year Guilford has one hundred thirty-eight seniors, one hundred seventy-three juniors, one
hundred forty-eight sophomores,
and one hundred ninety-three
freshmen. There are eight special)
students and four graduate students; sixty-one made the change
from elsewhere to Guilford.
Men students, did you know
there are four hundred eighty-two
of you as compared to the one hundred ninety-four members of the|
opposite sex on this campus?