Page 4 Volunteering Can Be A Rewarding Experience Spring into volunteering! We’ve got the volunteer opportunity for you!! Don t delay, give the Voluntary Action Center a cail TO DAY! (724-7474). American Cancer Society will need volunteers to work in residential areas dur ing the week of April 26 - May 1. Volunteers will go door to door promoting community awareness of breast cancer. The hours will be between 12-6 p.m. Boy Scouts of America will be opening a uniform collection and distribution center in the Experiment in Self-Reliance office. Two volunteers are needed to staff the center on Saturdays from 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Forsyth County Health Department is looking for adult male volunteers to serve as group facilitators with teenage males dealing with topics such as decision making, self-esteem, sexual responsibility and related matters. The program is called MANTALK. The group meets on Mondays and Fridays from 4;30 to 6:50. A one year committment is asked. Nature Science Center would like one volunteer to be a teaching assistant for the weekly “Discovery Hour” for grades K-2. The class is held every Wednesday from 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. This is an excellent oppor tunity for high school students and retired persons. North Carolina Baptist Retirement Homes is in need of five volunteers to transport nursing care residents to dining room. The days are Monday-Friday, 11:45 a.m. -1:30 p.m. United Negro College Fund is in need of an Office Clerk. You will be making phone calls to update corporate listing. This posi tion will last one week or until it is com pleted. Veterans Administration Outpatient Clinic is in need of full or part time help to answer telephones in the Pharmacy and also as patient escorts in the Medical Ad ministration Service. The hours are from 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. Lunch will be provided for volunteers. Rural Hall/Stanleyville Branch Library wants to provide square or round dancing classes for retired persons in the communi ty. A teacher is needed. The hours needed are early afternoon and the day is negotiable. The classes should last four to six sessions. Housing Needed For WSSU Students Winston-Salem State University has established an Off-Campus Housing Pro gram to coordinate listings for its students. Landlords, agencies or families can list their accommodations — rooms, apart ments or houses — and students can choose the type of accommodations that will meet their needs. The program stems from a continuing in crease in requests for campus housing, re quests that now far exceed the number of beds available. Pesons interested in listing available space should contact the Housing Office at 761-2237 or 761-2239 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays. There is no listing fee. SGA Holds Spring Leadership Seminar By Shelton Bullard The 1987 Spring Leadership Seminar, sponsored by the Student Government Association was held March 7, 1987. The seminar was geared toward those who wished to run for an office next semeter, but anyone was welcome to at tend. The seminar was composed of counselors that spoke on leadership, time manage ment, how to utilize one’s time, student apathy, student motivation and campus in volvement. The counselors inspired the students to meet and face all of their challenges with a positive aspect. They also encourged our future leaders to stand for what they feel is right and to be the best that they could by getting more involved in activities on cam pus. Issac Hayes Makes a Comeback By Shelia Rucker This Issac Hayes was not dressed in his well-known furs or chains speaking at A&T State University at Merrick Hall, March 4, at 1:30 p.m. Instead he was clad in blue jeans, a Columbia Jazz T-shirt, red boots and a red leather and blue jean jacket. Hayes, a recording artist, producer and actor, was speaking to A&T students about opportunities in the music field. He spoke about the field of business and how the students could use this field in areas such as marketing, sales and accounting. He emphasized that it is extremely impor tant that they be knowledgable in different areas. “No one is going to give you anything, you must earn it,” he said. He also stated that the music industry is a very stressful, glamorous and high-profiled business, but warned students of using drugs to help relieve that stress. Hayes, a native of Memphis, Tennessee, started as a signed musician who sang “everything from blues to gospel and rock n’ roll to jazz.” He was dubbed the “Black Moses” at a performance in the late 60’s, which he explained was “not a self-ordained concept.” For this reason he was hesitant of the name because he felt it was sacrilegious. Nevertheless the name stuck and he believes that black people felt that he was a voice for the black life-style. Hayes biggest hits came from the album “Hot But tered Soul,” which included “Walk On By,” “I Stand Accused,” “Phoenix” and “One Woman.” “My songs have helped put quarreling lovers back together, helped the Vietnam Vets and helped some people get through lonely nights,” stated Hayes. Hayes who received an Academy Award for the music score of “Shaft.” has perform ed in movies such as “Three Tough Guys” and “Truck Turner.” His latest effort is the upcoming movie “Counterforce,” in which he plays a commando team member who is protecting an Arab leader in exile. He has written the music score for the action- adventure movie. Hayes' advice to students pursuing a career in the entertainment field is to “have tenacity" and not to lose sight of their goals. Poet’s Corner Meditation It attacks not only losers, but winners — Not only saints, but sinners. Although you can’t see How tall it can be, And though you can't touch. You sure can wonder how wide and how much. It could be real big or small And terribly bad for us all. Your mind it could take Your heart it may break. Your soul it may enter Like a cold breeze in winter. — Muriel Peed “Temptation” Indiana Limestone size 15” X 10” (This poem is a response to an English 1300 assignment to describe one of the pieces of art observed while on a visit to The Salem Burke Art Gallery). % Hanes Upper