Newspapers / The Guilfordian (Greensboro, N.C.) / Sept. 14, 1983, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page two Guilfordian, September 14, 1983 Arts Fo on Japan By Ann Shea The Art Department is proud to announce the following exhibits and lectures. All shows will be displayed in the upstairs Founders Gallery, open daily from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Guilford College community is cordially invited to opening receptions for each show and refreshments will be served. Oct. 9-31: Jane Sugarman, "Inner Journeys: Meditation Carpets." A display of vibrantly colored, woven wool rugs design ed for use in meditation. Opening Oct. 9,1-3 p.m. Nov. 11-Dec. 2: Beth Moffitt, "Transfigurations 11--Paintings, Drawings, Collages." Beth Mof fitt is a color field abstractionist who studied at Yale University with the late Joseph Albers, noted author and authority on color relationship. Ms. Moffitt will be on campus Nov. 17 and 18th and will be available to critique students' work in the art studios. Thursday, Nov. 17, at 8 p.m., she will present a slide lecture entitl ed "The Pleasures of Percep tion," demonstrating color in teraction. Open reception to follow. Dec. 11-20: Senior Thesis Ex hibition, Founders Gallery & Commons. Work by graduating students in a variety of media. Opening Sunday, Dec. 11, 2-5 p.m. The following lectures on Japanese art and culture are presented in conjunction with Adele Wayman's course in Japanese Art History and the public is welcome. Friday, October 7, 3 p.m., Mor ton Huber, the photographer artist author of Villages of the Tedori River Gorge, will present a lecture on the crafts and customs of this area of Japan. A superior selection of slides by the in of Hege-Cox Hall. (In case of rain, the Convocation will be held in Sternberger . . Auditorium.) The theme for the N Convocation will be "A.S. 2000: Ourselves, Our Nation, and Our Planet," and several speakers \ vyff * address this subject, in eluding President Bill Rogers, l Academic Dean Sam Schuman, JK jC* fjj and Community Senate President \\ f MTK Dennis Blue. President Rogers >S •1 ' will introduce new faculty and ,y (Li staff members, and Sam w Schuman will address the future i T as a general topic. Music and Ic\ / / refreshments will be included, so A iJ, J, be sure to make plans to attend! fa \ \ j /TJf VL/' Fall Convocation is a fun event rK jjr / V for the entire Guilford College k j. * community, and it's a great way - M *° mee * know people S jQPJji 'Pff f rom a " aspects of life ah j Guilford. See you there! f author will be shown. Leak Room, Duke Memorial. Thursday, November 3, 7:30 p.m., Angelo Abbate will lecture on "Impressions of Japanese Gardens." Abbate is Professor of Landscape Architecture at N.C. State University and winner of a 1-year grant to Japan last year from the North Carolina Japan Center. The lecture will feature slides of Japanese gardens in Kyoto. Founders Gallery. Thursday, Nov. 22, 7:30 p.m., Sherman Lee, former Director of the Cleveland Museum of Art, will lecture on realism in the history of Japanese art. Lee is an author and world-renowned authority on Far Eastern art and the lecture will include slides covering an exhibition held in his honor at the Cleveland Museum of Art last spring. Leak Room, Duke Memorial. The Art Department selects shows and speakers with an em phasis on interaction between ar tists and their public. The ex hibits bring nationally famous ar tists and their work to the cam pus, in addition to providing ex posure for local artists as well as student and faculty artists. Art work featured is generally available for sale; for more infor mation, inquire at the informa tion desk in Founders Hall. Guilford Welcomes Faculty By Tracey Clark Guilford College thrives on its small size. Despite the student's tendency to see as little of the campus as possible, he in variably rubs shoulders with the school's faculty and ad ministrators. Faces that are in itially only familiar assume names and entire personalities. The resulting rapport is a large part of the unique educational ex perience offered at Guilford. Fall 1983 marks the arrival of several new faces on campus. New full-time faculty are pro bably the most readily evident of the new faces. Students in the respective fields have undoubted ly bade welcome to Garland Granger (Accounting), Arnon Hurwitz (Management), Charles Smith (Biology) and the new Choir Director, Carol Burnett. There have been numerous ad ditions in full-time staff. James Jonathan fills the newly created position of Retention Counselor and Co-ordinators of Milner dor mitory, relieving Dan Fredricks and Dick Dyer of extra respon sibilities. Elizabeth Place-Beary is the new face in the library. She replaces Joe Rosenblum as the Reference/ Bibliographic In struction librarian. Stephanie Walker, who taught part-time in the Administration of Justice pro gram and served on the Board of Visitors, now replaces Andrew Bell as the Director of Annual Giving. Andrew Bell has since pllllllllllllllllllllllilll I I I lUKETMCKSFORTtM | 1 BEST EAWALL AROUND! 1 The next time you stop by for the Best Eatin',™ bring along this money-savin' coupon. I I STEM J EBB~ITSCUJTMD I I ■ ORAHBE JUICE I Please present this coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer, per I visit, please. Customer must pay any sales tax due. This coupon not good in ■ combination with any other offers. Offer good during regular breakfast hours _ I only at participating Hardee's Restaurants ■ ■ a p ■ through May 31. 1984. U>|| ■ c 1983. Hardees Food Systems. Inc I \ KBUUM~\ | FHIESi MEDIUM SOFT MNHK $1.79 | Please present this coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer, per I visit, please. Customer must pay any sales tax due. This coupon not good in I ssss I combination with any other offers. Offer good after 10:30 AM, only at I ■ participating Hardee's Restaurants through m | May 31 984 VfafclPPC " ■ 1983. Hardees Food Systems. Inc m ..JS VlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllM been appointed Director of Capital Programs. Perhaps not new to some, Denise Nugent, Director of the Job Location and Development Program, now oc cupies an office on campus upstairs in Founders Hall. In the Admissions Department two new Assistant Directors of Admis Meet Charles G. Smith Photo by Kitty Hubbard sions, Anona Smith and Franklin Zirkle, Jr., replace Charlie Hen dricks and Peter Reichard, respectively. Students who have not yet had the opportunity to meet the new faces at Guilford this year are en couraged to do so. Profile: Charles G. Smith Just inside the front entrance to King Hall there are four offices belonging to various faculty members of the Science Depart- ment. The second office on the left houses Guilford's newest Pro fessor of Biology, Charles Smith. Professor Smith (will he go by Charlie in months ahead?) comes to Guilford from a teaching post at Lake Erie College in Nor theastern Ohio. Ohio was also the site of his formal education. He received his Ph.D. in Zoology at Ohio State University, specializ ing in Ichthyology (the zoological study of fish). At Guilford this year Professor Smith will con duct classes in Anatomy and Physiology. He hopes later, however, to offer courses in his own specialty, Ecology, and Aquatic Biology. Coming to Greensboro has tru ly been a large-scale transition for Professor Smith. He had not set foot inside North Carolina before last April. Prior to his schooling in Ohio, he grew up in Central New York. Smith does, however, find the Southern Hospitality agreeable, terming his new life here "pleasantly dif ferent." He is confident Greensboro will accomodate his passions for gardening and wood working. He hopes that it can also develop his, as yet dormant, in terest in hot air ballooning. Professor Smith is married. He and his wife find that the "atmosphere and people (here) are very friendly." The Smiths expect their first child in three weeks time.
The Guilfordian (Greensboro, N.C.)
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Sept. 14, 1983, edition 1
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