PAGE 4
Dana Challenge Boosted
Guilford College's campaign
to raise money to match
two-for-one a recent challenge
gift of $250,000 from the
Charles A. Dana Foundation Inc.
has been given its initial boost
by gift commitments totaling
$43,000 from five well-known
Greensboro firms.
They are the Carolina Steel
Corp., the Greensboro Daily
News, The Greensboro Record,
Home Federal Savings and Loan
Association and the
WFM Y -Television Corp.,
according to Dr. Hobbs.
The Carolina Steel Corp.,
through its chairman, N.P.
Hayes, has indicated it will give
the college $15,000.
The WFMY Television Corp.,
of which William A. Gietz is
president and general manager,
has pledged $12,500.
Another $12,500 was the
combined gift pledge of the
Greensboro Daily News and The
Greensboro Record through
Peter B. Bush, president of the
Greensboro News Company.
Home Federal Savings and
Loan donated $3,000 through
its president, Ralph P. Edwards.
Dr. Hobbs said the gift from
Home Federal was made
specifically to help Guilford
meet the Dana challenge gift.
Gifts from the four other firms
were unrestricted, and the
Guilford College Board of
Trustees voted to apply them to
the campaign, he explained.
Dr. Hobbs pointed out that
the $250,000 Dana challenge
gift and the $500,000 which
Guilford must raise additionally
Time to Reserve Dorm Space
The housing office issued
procedures for obtaining campus
housing for the 1972-73 term
this week. The $lOO tuition
deposit and the continuing
admissions request must be
returned by April 12 to
guarantee housing for next year.
After the 12th a five dollar late
fee will be charged.
Petitions requesting
permission to live off-campus
must be in by April 12. All
persons wishing to live
off-campus must fill out this
form, although approval is
automatic if the applicant is over
21, or is going to live at home.
Petitions for single rooms are
also due on the 12th. Housing
contracts are due to the housing
director by April 21.
The new members have been
added to the residence staff of
1968 Dormitory. Randy
Hopkins is the new first floor
intern, and Carla Pugh will be
the intern for the third floor.
The two replace Doug Minick
and Pam Henry who recently
resigned.
The housing office is still
Walk For Development
April 22
Contact Nancy Thomas
or Moul ton Avery
or come by the office in Founders
"Walking hurts, hut hunger kills."
by December 1, 1972, are
specifically for use in renovating
Founders Hall to make it into
the Guilford College Center.
Founders Hall was the first
building at New Garden
Boarding School, to become
Guilford College in 1888. It was
erected in 1837, and it was
constructed literally by
members of the boarding
school's first board of trustees
and other education-minded
citizens of the community.
The men used handmade
sun-dried bricks in the
construction until it became
apparent that the building would
not be ready for the announced
opening date.
Then a board member
purchased a kiln to hurry the
This is a story about people who run around
and beat each other with sticks
The first Grand Sloshwick
Championships since 1860 were
held recently at Sugarbush
Valley Ski Area in Warren, Vt.
But what's Sloshwicking?
Well, picture yourself with a
ski on your right foot, a
snowshoe on your left and a
broom clutched tightly in your
hand. Now, you're ready for
Sloshwicking, a 100-year-old
sport that has its heritage in a
19th century Schleswig-Holstein
border dispute in Europe.
A Schleswig army supply
officer mistakenly sent
snowshoes instead of skis, and
brooms instead of muskets to
the wintry front lines. Battle
accepting applications for the
positions ot dorm co-ordinators
and interns for next year.
Applications are being accepted
Contemporary Art
Contest Announced
The Gallery of Contemporary
Art, located in Winston-Salem,
North Carolina, announces its
semi-annual juried competition
for Prints and Drawings. All
artists residing in the
Southeastern United States, 18
years of age or older, are eligible
to enter a maximum of 4 entries.
Entries and entry fee must be
received between March 18th
and March 27th.
Mr. Thomas Leavitt, Director
of the Museum Program for the
National Endowment for the
Arts, will be the juror.
Awards will include a S4OO
N.C.N. B. Purchase Award, a
$2OO Cash Award, and five SIOO
Cash Awards.
THE GUILFORDIAN
job, and Founders was ready on
time to welcome its First 25 boys
and 25 girls into the first
coeducational institution in the
southeast.
In the early years, Founders
Hall was "it" dormitories for
the boys and girls, living quarters
for the faculty and staff, and
classrooms.
Later, a third floor and
mansard roof were added. The
two upper floors were used to
house students, while the lower
floor became lounges and
reception areas.
Dr. Hobbs said the Founders
renovation will be delayed until
June of 1973 in order to allow
for the relocation of the 50
students who room there.
was imminent, so an imaginative
officer took advantage of the
error. It proved to be a boon
since the soldiers could
outmaneuver the enemy
going uphill while matching their
speed downhill, and the freezing
rain turned their brooms into
lethal clubs.
Today's competition is
friendly, though. Competitors,
usually five at a time, race up
the snow covered S shaped
course to a point where they
turn and ski down, maintaining
the S course thrashing at each
other with their brooms all the
while.
for all residence hall positions.
Applicants have until the 30th
of March to file with Ken
Schwab, director of housing.
For further information,
write or call:
The Gallery of Contemporary
Art, 500 South Main Street,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
27101. Phone: 919-725-9662.
PEra^OLA
OF GREENSBORO
299-1341
At Goddard'College
Doing What
Comes Naturally
PLAINFIELD, Vt. (CPS) -
Long considered a maverick
among institutions of higher
education, Goddard College, a
small, private school in the
woodlands of north-central
Vermont, has given notice that it
still has no intention of
submitting to the branding iron
of conventionality. Effective
September, 1972, the entire
faculty will resign their roles as
"teachers" for the new positions
of "master learners" or
"professional craftsmen." The
emphasis for everyone on
campus will be one of simply
learning.
The move rests upon the
assumption that learning is
essentially a self-oriented
activity and forms the core for a
three year college-wide
experiment upon this issue.
Correspondingly, the experiment
questions the assumptions that
teaching is either possible or
desirable, necessary or useful.
Faculty members, it has long
been observed, find that they
learn from students as often as
vice versa. The experiment seeks
to capitalize upon this common
ability to learn by replacing
traditional "learning from"
situations with those oriented
Scholarships
Two Mary Morrow $500.00
scholarships are available for
students who are in their junior
year and who are majoring in
Education. The only restriction
is that the recipient be willing to
teach for two years in North
Carolina.
Selection of two nominees
from Guilford are based on
scholastic achievement,
character, personality, promise
as a teacher and financial need.
Please submit your name to
Don Woodside in the Financial
Aid Office before March 24th.
TOM BOONE
Formal Wear Rentals â– PRjPjj
112 V. SycMM* PkM 273-^612
Guilford's Own
M
c
C
Food
Cold Beverages M
and Fun
Muirs Chapel Curb Market
203 Muirs Chapel Road
Greensboro, N.C.
FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1972
towards "learning with."
Consequently, those now termed
"students" will be recogized as
"amateur learners" or
"apprentice craftsmen."
The idea for the experiment
is contained, in part, in these
words of Carl Rogers: "I have
come to feel that the only
learning which significantly
influences behavior is
self-discovered, self-appropriated
learning. Such self-discovered
learning, truth that has been
personally appropriated and
assimilated in experience, cannot
be directly communicated to
another."
Traditional teaching, Rogers
argues, "seems to cause the
individual to distrust his own
experience, and to stifle
significant learning." Describing
the outcome of teaching as
either "unimportant" or
"hurtful", Rogers concludes, "1
realize that I am only interested
in being a learner, preferably
learning things that matter, that
have some significant influence
on my behavior."
Every form of activity in the
Goddard community, be it class
course, independent study or
field project, is to have a portion
of time reserved and specifically
devoted to discussion, analysis
and evaluation of what is being
learned, how and why. Weekly,
monthly and yearly evaluations
will develop out of these smaller
sessions in order to clarify a
larger perspective on the
experiment.
Finally, in 1975, a
"culminating study" will be
prepared for publication. By
that time the college should be
in a position to answer, with
documentary evidence of three
year's experience, the question
of whether the role of "teacher"
is necessary for such learning as
occurs at the college level.