OCTOBER 21,1994 — THE DECREE — PAGE 3 COMING TO CAMPUS — Award-winning novelist Reynolds price will read from his latest works, including his newly pub- jished apocryphal gospel The Honest Account of a Memorial Life, bn Wednesday, Oct 26, at 4:30 p.m. in the SAC. Women Assembly to meet at Wesleyan 'By CECILIA LYNN CASEY > North Carolina Wesleyan Col lege will host the fifth bi-annual meeting of North Carolina Eq- jjity Women’s Assembly in the Student Activities Center on Monday. ‘ Local women’s groups will ^eet to talk about what the NC. state legislature should set as their priorities. ' > A handbill printed by N.C. ^quity explains that “Every two years,* N.C. Equity sponsors dounty-wide Assemblies for women to voice their concerns and learn about the concerns of other women. Each Assembly di-eates an Agenda which reflects its priorities.” ^ The Agenda that will be dis cussed Monday will include is- sbes of economic development, Ijousing, child care, violence, and health care. A press release issued by N.C. Equity states, “Over 1,600 North . Carolinians from over 80 organi zations are expected to meet this f&l in almost 40 events to idei): . Price to read his works next week on campus tify, discuss, and rank issues and public policy alternatives likely to affect women. Women in each local area will respond to a Draft Women’s Agenda generated by policy experts in many areas. “The Women’s Agenda Pro- granW^B8ft^iWWE»iity, a private, non-profit organization which develops public policy strategies and advocates for women on economic, social, and health issues,” it noted. N.C. Equity is funded by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, the Rockefeller Family Fund, and other foundations, as well as the contributions of individuals and corporations.” There will be a $5 registration fee and all those interested in at tending will need to register by Friday, Oct. 21. A light supper will be served before discussions are started. Both Betty Anne Whisnant and Carolyn >^tener will be able to provide mdre information and registration forms for all those whQ,^e,int«este{l. Award-winning novelist Reynolds Price will read from his latest works next Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. in the Student Activi ties Center, including a new “gos pel” account of the life of Jesus published today by North Caro lina Wesleyan College. In the spring of 1993, Price was teaching a seminar at Duke University on the gospels of Mark and John. At mid-term as they prepared to write final seminar papers — he and the students were each to write a new apocry phal gospel — a conmion set of sources had to be agreed upon. They were free to use the four canonical gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, the undisputed letters of Paul, and those other New Tes tament letters which may at least have originated in the first gen eration of men and women who knew Jesus of Nazareth. “A reader may wonder why I set such a task when we already have four impressive gospels, two of which stand a good chance of proceeding directly or at only sec ondhand from eye-witnesses,” Price wrote later. “The simplest answer — and one that has lain behind the thousands of attempts on Jesus that have crowded li braries for the past two millennia — is that the life and its effect on history are so magnetic in their mystery as to demand ceaseless watch and question.” Thus evolved Price’s apocry phal gospel. The Honest Account of Memorial Life. It retells the life of Jesus with the stories of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John set side-by-side in a single har monious account. In The Honest Account, Price tells the story of Jesus’ life as a 20th century novelist would, rec reating the “feel” of the experi ence in sensuous details. He de picts the sights, sounds, and smells of the scene, so that the reader experiences all of this as it happens. Price, recent winner of the Prairie Schooner Award for ex cellence in writing, has also re ceived superlative reviews for A Whole New Life (Atheneum 1994), the story of his war with cancer of the spine, diagnosed ten years ago. Since the diagnosis, he has ex perienced an outpouring of work. In addition to many celebrated novels, he’s written short stories, poems, plays, and screenplays. Price has been praised for his fiction since he won the William Faulkner Foundation Award for his first novel, A Long and Happy Life, in 1962. More than 30 pro lific years have followed (with a National Book Critics Circle Award for Kate Vaiden in 1986), but Pnce admits to writing as much in the past 10 years in his battle against time as he has writ ten in all the rest of the years put together. “I am deUghted that this rush of work has come,” he says, “but I can’t explain how it has hap pened. This inspiration comes mysteriously, rapidly... if I tried to explain or define this inspira tion I am afraid that it might van ish.” The Student Government Association Heeds YOU! There are still jobs to do that need en thusiastic people. If you are interested, please contact an SGA member at ext. 5225! The Student Services Center Oct. 24 - Nov. 4 Monday, Oct 24 10:20 a.m. Freshman Pre-Registration Workshop Room 105 10:30 a.m. Memory Tips Room 189 Tuesday,Oct 25 2:40 p.m. Freshman Pre-Registratin Workshop Room 105 Wednesday, Oct 26 4 p.m. Interviewing Skills Workshop Room 276 Monday, Oct 31 10:30 a.m. Studying Smarter Room 189 Tuesday, Nov. 1 JOB FAIR, Holiday Inn, Goldsboro Friday, Nov. 4 END OF SECOND INTERIM GRADING PERIOD All freshmen must attend ONE of the Freshmen Pre-Registration Workshops! If you are trying to decide upon a career or major, the Student Service Center can help. Call 985-5131 for more information. The Career Library has mformation about jobs, job searches, and graduate schools. Stop by Room 190 and “check it out”!