Page two
>—Guilfordian, February 1, ISC
A Free Ride
Job Fair Provides Opportunity
A summer job fair co
sponsored by the UNC-G JLD of
fice and the Bennett, Greensboro,
and Guilford Consortium JLD of
fice will take place on Tuesday,
Feb. 7 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in
the Cone Ballroom of Elliot
Center, UNC-G.
Representatives from summer
camps, paid and non-paid intern
ships, including spokepersons
from the Washington Center, and
Funding Facilitates
Unique Concentration
M.
GREENSBORO—The Mary
Reynolds Babcock Foundation
has made a $34,200 grant to
Guilford College for implementa
tion of the College's unique
democratic management pro
gram.
Under the grant, the College
will offer four new courses in
democratic management (also
known as worker ownership or
participatory management); will
provide on-site educational
workshops in worker-owned
businesses; and will hold a na
tional conference on democratic
management for college
educators.
The Babcock Foundation pro
vided $40,000 in 1983 for
preliminary work in designing a
democratic mangement cur
riculum, creating a library, and
research.
"Guilford College has taken
leadership in developing an in-
Pizza Inn Presents
ALL YOU CAN EAT
MON.-FRI. LUNCH SPECIAL
Pizza, Soup and our Super
Salad Bar Q 1Q
MON. NITE TUES. NITE
Lasagna, French pjna &
•sssr 3.95 Jsa 3.69
WED. NITE SUN. LUNCH
. . Pizza or Lasagna
, Of Spaghetti
French Bread & . CAlin ,
Salad Bar O (L Q 9
WE FEATURE:
NEW Deep Dish Pan Pizza •Famous Steak & Cheese Sandwiches
and Other Subs* Cheesecake
Children Under 12 Dine at Reduced Prices
5 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU:
294-1425 1207 High point Road
852-2020 1800 West Market Street
852-0140 2517 Battleground Avenue
273-3625 1015 Summit Avenue
110 West Fairfield Road, High Point
local business and industry will
be available to discuss summer
employment opportunities.
Denise Nugent, JLD Director
for Bennett, Greensboro, and
Guilford Colleges, said that in ad
dition to talking with represen
tatives, materials will be
available at various tables.
"Students should plan to spend
some time at the resource tables.
novative management cur
riculum," said Guilford Presi
dent William R. Rogers in an
nouncing the grant. "The most
recent feature of this work has
been a commitment to the
democratic management pro
gram.
"The Mary Reynolds Babcock
Foundation, through its continu
ing support, has insured the suc
cess of this important effort, one
that has far-reaching potential in
the field of business education."
Guilford is the first college in
the nation to offer an
undergraduate concentration in
democratic management of
business and industry. Courses
designed for the program, in ad
dition to the required core
management courses, include
"Employee Ownership Alter
natives," "Workplace Educa
tion," "Participatory Organiza
tion in the Public Sector," and
"Conflict and Cooperation."
Notebooks with various summer
employment opportunities will be
available for students to review,"
Nugent said.
Nugent also encourages
students to allot themselves at
least one hour at the fair and that
they take notes from the resource
materials.
A summer job van will
transport students to and from
UNC-G, free of charge. The van
will run on an hourly schedule
starting at 9:30 a.m. Students
may board the summer job van
at the back of Founders Hall.
Who's Who
In CCE
Fifteen of Guilford's Continu
ing Education students were
nominated to Who's Who Among
Students in American Univer
sities and Colleges. They were
chosen for their scholastic abili
ty, participation and leadership
in academic and extracurricular
activities, citizenship and service
to the school, and potential for
future achievement. The honored
students are: Carole Elaine
Dabbs, Carol Ann D'Agostino
Fama, William Harry Foster,
Carolyn Berry Gordon, Glenn
Thomas Hyatt, Harold Leroy
Long, Francine Ann Maness,
Richard Ronald Mangieri, Gail
Gray Motsinger, Thomas Lee
Noffsinger, Deborah Lynn
Greeson Poole, Peggy Swift
Tatum, Janel Beth Toff, David
Wade Willard, and Sheila Hamric
Wilson.
Laura Collins delves through the pages of her 1983 'Quaker.'
Quotables
What is your opinion of the 1983
Quaker?
aEHB
mBT
HHP
Alex Kish: I wish it never came
out. My friends keep telling me
they liked me better with curly
hair. They say I look like a
criminal now. I think I looked like
a sheepdog back then. It's confus
ing—perhaps you can make it the
topic of your next series of silly
questions?
mm
Scott Nixon: "It's alright, I
guess."
'' ' " '' " -;' • !
, •
■Mypyi ***
Cindy Dieges: I know nothing
about it because I've never seen
one.
Photos by Tom Riser
and Brittany Plaut
WKpmmm; f %
jjjH
"J> \ -"
w j.
Jamie Hudec: "It was good for
the price."
v
\
Br
HI
Robert C. Clark and John Mot
ta: "It's more worser."
||gp| &%>, I .
Tom Smith: It was unorganiz
ed. There were no distinct sec
tions either. Was this a yearbook
for the students or the alumni?
Homecoming weekend got more
attention than Serendipity or any
of the sports. When did Cathy
Gaddy graduate? Guess what,
she was not a Sophomore last
year. Let's hope this year's is bet
ter.
Photo by Tom Risser