THE GUILFORDIAN Greensboro, NC Since 1914, but never quite like this & \ August 20, 1997 Last year's freshmen class welcomes the class of 2001 with open arms. Welcome class of 2001 ♦Guilford's class of the next millenium arrives and CHAOS begins BY MARJORIE HALL News Editor Another year has rolled around at Guilford, and with it have come the students of the class of 2001, the true first class of the next millenium. Three hundred and twenty-five new students are arriving on the cam pus, including 290 freshmen and 35 transfer students. Many of the new students have already arrived for the vari ous Avanti programs. Orienta tion for all freshmen begins on Wednesday the twentieth. Chaos lasts until the twenty-fourth, the day before classes begin. "I have really positive feel ings about what this class can bring to Guilford and what Guil ford can give back to them," said A 1 Newell, Dean of Admissions. The median SAT score of this class is 582 verbal and 552 math, both up two points from last year. The average new stu dent graduated in the top 30 percent of their high school class, and the average GPA is about 3.1. This class is definitely geo graphically diverse. This class contains more international stu dents than previous classes. It includes eight international stu dents, including students from as far away as Bulgaria and Japan. Stateside, students hail from more than thirty different states, one student traveling here all the way from Oregon. Theologically, the class members belong to around 39 different denominations and re ligions. Ten percent of the new class is Quaker, making Guilford College one of the only Quaker schools in the country with an in creasing number of Quaker stu dents. The number of Jewish stu dents enrolled has increased con siderably. One unique quality of the class of 2001 is the number of them that indicated interest in more non-traditional religions on their applications —every- thing from Buddhism to Wicca. The firesides that Max Carter, director of campus ministries, has planned for the fall semes ter reflect this diversity, includ ing speakers on Buddhism, Jainism, Hinduism, and Juda ism. ( spend a lot of my time getting in the middle of things. —Dick Dyer The class has shown inclina tion to service activities. Many of the incoming freshmen have expressed an interest in the work trips planned over fall break (in cluding a trip to Cuba) and spring break. The class is 52 percent fe male, average for Guilford. The campus has become more di verse. "The number of students of color is up significantly," stated A 1 Newell, citing 20 per cent as a low estimate. The students chose to come to Guilford over the most selective group of other schools Guilford has seen in four or five years. Through looking at cross-application, we know that Guilford has drawn students away from schools like Brown, Earlham, Haverford, Tulane, Oberlin, Bard, Goucher, Lewis and Clark, and Sarah Lawrence. A 1 Newell and the rest of the faculty of Guilford are excited about the class of 'Ol. "We're very pleased, " he said. "I'm al ways pleased, but this class just really seems to show the spirit of Guilford." Loss of a gift ♦Start of school is bittersweet as Guilford loses Dick Dyer BY MARJORIE HALL, ADAM LUCAS, OLIVIA L. RIORDAN On August 19 around 3 p.m. the Assistant to the Dean of Stu dent Life, Dick Dyer, collapsed in the Moon Room while giving a speech to welcome parents. He died later that afternoon. Although Dyer,4B, was an ad ministrator, most students thought of him as a friend. "Most of what I do is listen seriously and help when I can," he told The Guilfordian in an interview last February. Dean of Student Life Mona Olds was a close colleague of Dyer's. "He was in the business of getting to know troubled students," said Olds late Tuesday night. In his ca pacity, Dyer also worked with the Judicial Board advising students brought up on charges. Dyer's speech Tuesday after noon addressed the separation process of first-year students and their parents. "He was giving an absolutely wonderful speech, the best I've seen him give," said Olds. "He said he had been here for 18 years and he made a point in his speech that he came here at the same time these first-years were born." President Don McNemar had a specific memory of the speech. "Dick said 'l've loved my 18 years here and hope you find the same joy. May it open your soul.' I hadn't heard him say that before. You don't often hear the word 'soul' mentioned in a welcome speech." As a Quaker minister, one of Dyer's favorite metaphors was that of a 150-year-old Shaker rocking chair. Max Carter, director of cam pus ministries, said "It symbolizes his integrity, his balance, his care for the kind of work you do." Dyer made many contribu tions to Guilford, which, as always, he summarized best: "We're all given certain gifts ... a lot of what I do here is to help people discover their gifts."