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M J Volume LXII, No. 17 B Guilford College, Greensboro, N.C. February 14,1978
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Judicial Boards May Consolidate
By GREG GREEN
Last Sunday night, a
Student Affairs Committee
meeting was held "to gather
information and receive input"
about the issue as to whether
the Urban Center Judicial
Board and the Main Campus
Judicial Board should consoli
date.
Frank Keegan, non-voting
mediator of the SAC, stressed
the importance of the issue.
He also said he sent written
invitations to all Faculty
members on the both Judicial
boards yet none were present. 1
Rex Adelberger, a member
of the Main Campus Judiciary
Board was present as was the
student chairperson, Jim
Hoyng, President of the Urban
Center Student Government
and the only Urban Center
person at the Meeting.
Basically, Hoyng was
opposed to the proposal, which
argues that everyone should
have one code of justice and
that the existing system of
having two boards is not fair.
Hoyng said that there should
be two boards because "Adult
students are different and
have different needs than 18
to 20 year olds."
The two boards operate
differently and under differ
ent procedures. The strict
trial method employed by the
Urban Center students tends
to intimidate Main Campus
students, as in a case about
two years ago. According to
Adelberger there is "a reluc
tance to use the Urban Center
Judicial Board."
The proposed change
suggests:
1. The Campus Judicial
Board should consist of a
student chairperson, six regular
student members, four alter
nate student members, three
regular faculty members, and
one alternate faculty member.
A selection committee will
select eleven student members
at least two of whom will be
Urban Center students. One
will serve as an alternate, the
other may serve as a regular
member, and will serve as a
regular member in cases where
an Urban Center student is a
Complaintant or defendant.
The chairperson is selected
by the selected Campus
Judicial Board.
2. The Student Affairs
Committee Trial Board should
consist of three students and
three faculty members chosen
from the larger Student Affairs
Committee by the chairperson.
The Student Affairs Committee
is appointed by the President
of the college. The student
members would be chosen by
a selection committee consist
ing of the executive committee
of the main campus student
government, the president of
the Urban Center student
WQFS Revives Jazz Heritage
By BRIAN CAREY
Thanks to the devoted
work of many members of
WQFS, the Guilford College
-Greensboro community will
be treated to a jazz feast
"fit for a king." February
17 through February 27 mark
the dates of an inundation of
the airwaves with jazz, a flood
of Biblical dimensions.
This ten day, twenty-hour
a-day masterpiece has been
created largely through the
efforts of one Ken Harris,
who is currently Music
Director of WQFS-FM 90.7
stereo. A man who has been
involved with the station for
five years, Ken felt it was time
for an undertaking of this scale.
"In addition to increasing
our campus listening, this
Jazz Marathon will serve to
educate both our disc-jockeys
and the listening public."
The structure of the Mara
thon will attempt to assimilate
all facets of jazz; classical,
jazz-vocal, jazz-politico,
modt>rn funk, and fusion are
several areas that will be
covered. In order to properly
survey the jazz world, musical
biographies and instrumental
shows (a reed show is schedul
ed every day) will be integrated
into the marathon's format.
Tentative interviews with
musicians like Pete Crawford,
Al Doctor, Ted Mc Daniels,
and Billy Bright are scheduled,
along with a feature album
each show.
The climax of the marathon
will occur on the night of
February 24 at 8:00 p.m. in
Founders Gallery, when Mary
Lou Williams will perform and
government, the Dean ot
Students, and the chairperson
of the Student Affairs Com
mittee. The main campus
student government will
choose ten applicants from
which the selection committee
will choose five members
The secretary of the main
campus student government
is a member by virtue of the
office. The Urban Center
student government will
choose three applicants from
which the selection committee
will choose one board member.
lecture. A pianist who builds
a stunning and pensive style
on the firm foundations of
Jazz's past, Ms. Williams
is the only major jazz artist
to have participated in all
the major stages and develop
ments of jazz. Having worked
with greats like Andy Kirk
and Benny Goodman, she is
truly a phenomenon, and, in
the words of Duke Ellington,
"perpetually contemporary."
In attempting something
which has never been tried
in WQFS's ten years of exis
tence, Ken hopes to accomplish
quite a few things. Foremost
on his mind is a resurrection
of jazz itself. "Jazz is extremely
important art form that is
being ignored, and could
possibly die. It is so rich and
complex; no one individual is
an expert on jazz, yet jazz is
one of the most individualized
of art forms. Since the mass
production of today's society
seeks to copy and simplify, it
is killing off all complex art
forms, and jazz could be next
in line."
Since the jazz marathon is a
concerted effort on the part
of many people, it should also
serve to pull the station back
together. Due to equipment
failure and other problems,
WQFS's reputation has
plunged from it's high of a few
years ago. But things are
looking brighter; coupled with
the jazz marathon, the current
shows, which include blues,
soul, jazz, country, rhythm
and blues, blue grass, classical,
old time, and rock music, give
every facet of the listening
continued on page 6
Winners of the Nereus English Athletic Leadership
Awards for 1978, to be presented on Tuesday. Feb. 14,
in Founders Hall, (l-r) Johnny Stewart, football. High
Point, N.C.; Marty Block, soccer and baseball. Silver
Spring, Md.; Cyd Atkins, basketball and tennis, Asheboro,
N.C.; Elton Gross, basketball, Virginia Beach, Va.; Mark
Guenther, baseball, Greensboro, N.C.; and Robert Linville,
golf. Oak Ridge, N.C.
Guilford to Honor Six
Six Guilford College
students four of them from
Piedmont North Carolina
are to be honored February
14 as recipients of the Nereus
English Athletic Leadership
Awards for 1978.
Awards will be presented at
a 7 p.m. banquet in Founders
Hall with families of winners
as special guests.
The winners are Cyd Atkins,
Asheboro, basketball and
tennis, the first woman to
receive an English award; Marty
Block, Silver Spring, Md.,
soccer and baseball; Mark
Guenther, Greensboro, base
ball; Elton Gross, Virginia
Beach, basketball; Robert
Linville, Oak Ridge, golf; and
Johnny Stewart, High Point,
football and track.
The awards are presented
annually in the memory of the
late Nereus English of
Thomasville, a Guilford
alumnus who was widely
known and highly respected
as a businessman and indus
trialist and as a church and
civic leader.
In addition to being the first
woman winner, Atkins also is
the first woman to receive an
athletic grant-in-aid for all four
of her years at Guilford
College. She is a Dana Scholar
and a member of the Athletic
Advisory Council.
Block has been a starter
for most of two seasons on
the Guilford soccer team, and
during his freshman year he
had a .300 batting average in
baseball.
Guenther, a product of
Western Guilford High School
where he was quarterback for
the football team as well as
excelling in baseball, is a
transfer from Appalachian
State University. He played
shortstop on the Quaker base
ball team and leading scorer
this season with a game aver
age of 17.7 points. He is
averaging 9.0 rebounds. Last
year he was All-Carolinas
Conference and All-District 26,
NAIA. Gross serves on the
Athletic Advisory Council.
As a freshman, Linville
played the No. 1 position on
Guilford's golf team and
helped take the Quakers to
their first appearance in a
national golf tournament
(NAIA). The sophomore math
major serves as statistician
for the basketball team and
is a member of the Athletic
Advisory Council.
Stewart, like Gross, is a
repeat recipient of the English
awards. One of the top offen
sive players in District 26 for
the past two seasons, he is a
member of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes and the
Athletic Advisory Council.
His prep football was played
at Ledford High School.