Half of SOAN department leaving Matthew Geiger STArr WRITER The Sociol ogy/Anthropology (SOAN) depart ment appears to be in a state of flux. With ap proximately 100 hundred students in the SOAN de partment, it has become one of the most popular ma jors at the school and by the end of this year, of the four professors in the department (two sociologists and two anthro pologists), two will be gone. Even now, many SOAN majors say they are unable to get the classes that are necessary to major in the field. Professors are becoming in creasingly frustrated and stu dents are becoming equally frus trated. The problem underlying everything is that many people in the school community feel that the school itself has not done enough to support the SOAN department. In the spring of 1999, the SOAN department requested a third sociologist, and the same request was made in the spring of 2000. No new positions have been added. As sociology professor Laura O' Toole said, "How can you claim to be student centered when you don't support the students?" After this semester, O'Toole will Sociology professor Alejandro Cervantes-Carson will be leaving Guilford for a position at Mary Washington College in Virginia. BJ hS Sociology professor Laura O'Toole will be leaving Guilford for a position in the sociology depart ment at Roanoke College in Virginia. With the depature of both O'Toole and professor Alejando Cervantes-Carson, the size of the SOAN department will be temporarily halved. be leaving to head the sociology de partment at Roanoke College in Vir ginia. Also leaving is sociologist Alejandro Cervantes-Carson. He is taking a position at Mary Washing ton College in Virginia. However, Cervantes-Carson is on a leave of absence. He was going to turn in his resignation, but was convinced to take only a leave of absence after talking to the school administra tion. He expressed optimism about the possibility of returning to Guilford after next year. He says, though, that the only way he would come back is if he saw that the school was taking definite steps to make the SOAN department "a top priority." He points to the fact the Mary GUILFORDIAN Greensboro, NC wasnington nas almost the exact same number of sociology students that Guilford does but keeps six sociology pro fessors on the faculty. This is nothing new for this depart ment. Over the past years, it has become common that profes sors in the SOAN de partment leave after only staying for a short while. Anthropology professor Vernie Davis asks "Why is the turn over so high for SOAN compared to the some of the other departments in the school?" He also shared feelings of being unappreciated and of not being supported by the school. Whenever a professor leaves a department for whatever reason, the remaining members of the department must write the equivalent of a report to the school on why a replacement professor should be hired. Davis also wondered why they have to "defend" the hiring of an other teacher when "we should be talking about hiring more teach ers." "The college has been respon sive to what is going on. The fact that I am here shows that the col lege is doing something," said sec ond-year professor Laban Gwako. However, he pointed out that what satisfies him, might not satisfy ev erybody. "What other faculty members might think about how the college is handling the department is a dif ferent issue," said Gwako. "It's a highly subjective issue. Different people will want See SOAN, page 4 The Guilfordian c/o Student Activities 5800 W. Friendly Ave. Greensboro, NC 27410 April 20, 2001 Meal plan now required for Cadre workers James Hart STAXT WRITER Until this year the sum mer Cadre program has given students free meals in the package. But at a bud get meeting earlier this se mester, it was discovered that the college could no .longer afford to provide this service. For years, the summer Cadre program has pro vided students, of both Guilford and other local col leges, an opportunity for employment and college credit. In past years the college has provided select students with two courses and room and board, in ex change for 30 hours a week of work at secretarial, land scaping, and renovating jobs on campus, for which stu dents were paid minimum wage. It was further discov ered, more recently, that in order for the college to get affordable rates from their food service, Sodexho- Mariott, throughout the summer, they needed to have at least 100 "subscrib ers" on the meal plan. To preserve reasonable rates for the students and staff who wanted to be on the meal plan, the school de cided to make the meal plan mandatpry for all Cadre and summer school students during the first five weeks, See Cadr t, page 3 Phinini recycle thijS paper.