E * . - ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS HOMEWORKERS WANTED! TOP PA\ ! C.I. $9.45 to start; part-time now and work full-time 121 24th Ave., N.W. Suite 222 during the summer. Call 292-6070 between 1:30 Norman, OK 73069 and 3:00 P]Vl r*-, OK' i Sports Women's lacrosse begins season By Fiona Clem The women's lacrosse team, in their only pre season scrimmage, crush ed the N.C. State lacrosse club, 17-7. The team could not keep the winning momentum in their opening regular season games. The Quakers tied Randolph-Macon 7-7 in their opening home game. Their record dropped to 0-1-2 when the Quakers went on the road to Next Issue: Spring Season Wrap-ups!!! challenge Longwood and Lynchburg. Pam Howe, first-year head coach, has had three years of lacrosse coaching experience. Howe was the assistant coach at Spr ingfield College for two years and the assistant at Dartmouth "last year before coming to Guilford. The next home game for the womens lacrosse team is on April sat 4:30 against Randolph-Macon Womens College. ' I ~~ I 1 - - -^ - "4- •■ \ ••> •-, *> Wfi, '""' .••••"•' ?l|"" ,>": ". . -Wk.l • - ** - -m Look for Men's Lacrosse In Next Issue Honorable... (con't from p. 6) Frances Waters received the Ernestine Milner. Scholarship for her com bination of family and academia. Nancy Cable—Wells awarded Jeffrey Blackmun with the Eugene S. Hire Achieve ment Award for overall achievement, and Rachael Solomon received the Alan Walter Hull Scholarship for her contributions to Guilford as a CCE student. Grome Fulton, Jr. named the Sesquicentennial Scholarship recipients, each receiving a sixty dollar credit in the bookstore. (Sixty dollars was the price of tuition in 12 1837.) President Bill Rogers closed the program by stressing that while Guilford is honoring select individuals, it is important that proper consideration be given to the "network of support" these individuals have received: friends, professors, and family. Rogers also reflected on the human mind and its virtually untapped poten tial. The challenge lies in how each person utilizes this potential. Comparing the occasion to spring, Rogers con veyed a sense of celebra tion as Guilford recogniz ed its leaders. Also, he summed up by saying, "the exuberance of mind is to be celebrated in itself."