March 28.1979 iLJbtol | ■tv**V - fc Jim Cutsell's English class takes advantage of spring weather. Guilford benefits from international experience Continued from page one foreign students next year In other areas, Herb Poole is meeting with members of the consortium in seeking solutions to foreign student problems, Rebecca DeHaven is working teaching English as a second language to some foreign stu dents, and the Admissions Of fice is sending letters to all International alumni to estab lish contacts for admissions from other nations. But perhaps the most impor tant real contact with foreign students is our relationships with the students themselves. We have the opportunity to Announcing. .. Announcing... Announcing.. Positions are now being filled for committee chairman for the 1979-1980 College Union. All interested persons please con tact Eric Johnson or Ed Thomas. Fall London Program: Selec tions have been made for the 1979 fall London Program. There is room for a few more students. Should you be interes ted in applying, contact Bill Ful cher or Dick Coe. Washington Semester: Ap plications for the fall 1979 Washington Center for Learn ing Alternatives can be picked up in the Placement Office. Applications are due April 1. Recruiting Schedule: March 28, Administration of Justice Career Day (Sternburger Audi torium); April 4, Fidesta Com pany (Firestone); April 9, Ken dal-Crosslands (Society of Friends retirement community). THE ANNUAL INTER NATIONAL DINNER sponsored by the International Relations Club, is scheduled for Sunday, April 1, at 8:00 p.m. in the Cafeteria. Tickets will be on sale from 3-26 to 3-29 in the Lobby of Founders. If you will bring a dish serving eight (8), please call Rosemarie at 855-8817. This would entitled you to two free tickets. Adult Tickets $3.00 Student Tickets $2.50 Children under 12 $1.50 learn from our friendships and growing together much about a world in which international contact is growing. wf Tentative Commencement Schedule. . . Friday evening, May 4 - Dinner for Seniors, parents, and faculty. Saturday, May 5, 9:15-10:15 am - Coffee - Lawn. 12:30 am Commence ment Exercises - outside, Spea ker James F. Childress 1962 Cuilford Craduate, The Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., Professor of Christian Ethics. Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. ••••••••••• Cercle Francais will be serv ing samples of French cuisine April 4, 11:00-1:15 pm on Founders Terrace. Tickets may be purchased from French House members for $1.75. The Cuilford College book store has on hand 5 copies of So You Want To Co To Law School. Anyone planning to gO to law school should find this a valu able book to have. James Steele, pulitzer Prize winning investigative reporter and co-author of a forthcoming book on Howard Hughes, who will speak to the Friends of the Guilford's College Library, will be on the same show April 20. At this time he is scheduled to be the only guest that day for telephone call-ins. He will also be interviewed at approximately 7:15 am the same day on the GOOD MORNING SHOW, WFMY- TV, channel 2. THE QUAKER WOMEN SYMPOSIUM last weekend in volved 244 persons. CAROL STONEBURNER says thanks to all in the community who helped make this such a suc cessful venture. Guilfordian Senate matches By Jane Allen During the regular Senate meeting held Wednesday, March 21 the Senate approved the Executive Council's sugges tion that the Senate Vice-Pre sident be an alternate for the student member of the search committee for a replacement for President Hobbs. Ken Schwab requested that Senate match the money allot ted to compensate those people working on the student hand book revision this summer. Senate approved $250 for this purpose. Spence Hamrick and Jan Earl will be working on the revision project. East Asia expert leads discussion Continued from page five on China's horizon, despite abberations in its national poli cy. The last ten months have been witness to the tendering of new relationships between the United States and China. The question now, stated Dr. Bailey, that The Great Leap. . . was an educational process. Currently, China is operating Lynn Mosely will offer a weekly Bird Identification walk every Wednesday morning from March 21 through the end of this semester. The group will meet at the College lake at 8:00 am. Bring your binoculars, or contact Lynn if you would like to borrow a pair. Deadline to sign up for the Union's "Thursday Night Live" is April 2. Come out and show Guilford your Talent!! ••••••••••• THE SPRINC GUILFORD REVIEW is now out. College employees who have not re ceived a copy please drop a note to ANN DEACON in Duke. Extra copies are available for $2.00, $2.50 by mail. The Editorial Board would like to have your response to the magazine for our future gui dance. Please speak or write to BILL BURRIS, ANN DEACON, ROSE or SHERIDAN SIMON. A CRIMINAL JUSTICE CAREER DAY will be spon sored by Guilford College on Wednesday, March 28th, in Sternberger Auditorium from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. and 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. The public is invited. Fifteen agencies will be repre sented. Additional information may be obtained from ANN JOHNSON. TED AND RACHEL BENFEY are very happy to announce the marriage of their eldest son Stephen to Kikue Kotani. They live in Tokyo. Senate approved the request by Alpha Kappa Alpha, a national women's society, to induct Guilford students into their organization. Senate also approved the increase from 10 to 15 minutes in the intervals between night classes, effective in fall 1979. Regarding budget, the Sena tors approved SIOOO for the Union in anticipation of Seren dipity and other expenses. The request by the Biophile Club for Senate funds as reimbursement for expenses incurred when the group became snowbound on a trip to the Outward Bound on past remembrances of for eign imperialism, and her ac tions as a nation in the future will be influenced by this. Dr. Bailey sees China as needing to show her independence from all the other powers and establish ing and maintaining a separate identity. The question of deve lopment looms foremost is "how do we respond?" When asked of his impression of Guilford, Dr. Bailey respon THERE ARE OPENINGS un der the Tuition Exchange Pro gram at Aurora College (Illi nois). Please contact Christel Lee for further information. SCATTERCOOD SCHOOL West Branch, lowa, is offering a SIMPLY LIVING SANELY workshop dedicated to helping individuals become self-suffi cient with resource-sensitive means. Up to 50 people will come together July 16-29, 1979, to examine ways which can assist them in living more simply in this consumer society. Please contact Dick Coe for further information. Herbert Poole co-editor of The Southern Friend: Journal of the North Carolina Friends Histori cal Society, announces the pu blication of its first issue. The journal, which is co-edited by Lindley S. Butler of the History Department at Rockingham Community College, will be published twice a year and sent free to N.C.F.H.S. members. The first issue contains three articles, including, "Origins of the North Carolina Friends His torical Society" by Herbert Poole. Memberships in the Society ($10) of wingle issues of the journal ($3) are available through the Quaker Collection of the Library. LICIA D. HUNT has an exhibition of Arts and Crafts from Mexico at the Library near the reading room. It will be open during the month of April. Come to see the interesting hand work of your neighbors to the South. page eight Center will be reviewed at the March 28 Senate meeting. The Philologists Chowder and Marching Society and the Music Ensemble presented their Con stitutions for Senate approval. Senate approved PCMS and will discuss the Ensemble con stitution on March 28. Members for the Residential Life and Publicity and Contact Committees are needed. Applications will be accepted for Student Advisory Commit tee until March 30. Applications can be obtained in the Senate Offices. ded "I am impressed by the number of students who ask questions in the classes I've visited and the quality of the questions they ask." For this appraisal Guilford can be proud. Still, it takes more than just intelligent stu dents to respond to a speaker. It takes a dynamic speaker who lends himself to an audience for inquiry. Jackson Bailey was just that. ROY NYDORF had his paint ing "Seated Man, Green Back ground" accepted to exhibit in the North Carolina Museum of Art for the 41st Annual North Carolina Artists Exhibition. Less than 90 works were accep ted out of approximately 1,600 entries. The painting was also selected to circulate to two North Carolina Art Centers from June 1979 through May 1980. Dates for the exhibit: April 1, 1979 - May 6, 1979. CONGRATULATIONS, ROY! ••••••••••• DR. ROBERT LAND social psychologist, currently T.L. Bolton Professor and Chairman of the Department of Psycho logy at Temple University, will speak Thursday, March 29th, at 3:30 p.m. in Boren Lounge on the topic "Psychology and the Law." All are cordially invited to attend. POET JAMES RIVERS from King School in Stamford, CT, will be on campus Wednesday, March 28th. He will meet with the Poetry Workshop for a craft interview at 6:00 p.m. in the Library Fine Arts Room, and will present a reading on his work in the same room at 7:30 p.m. Rivers began writing only about three years ago, and has already nearly 100 poems in print, in such magazines as SPOON RIVER QUARTERLY, SOUTH CAROLINA REVIEW, TEXAS QUARTERLY. PIKE STAFF REVIEW recently did a special feature on his work, much of which portrays his childhood in Chicago.

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