Trustees approve budget, set student charges • -.A;, V*' ' l# 1 fc- H ■ A J| Hk ■v ■• Jr ■■■■ Hflß ikfe*. JB ' Bk JSH SRB^btofe_.. ■ ■BMgpPIH Mr S Bjp HI Hb i www - • ■* : |^"* k *^| | . „ _.. ■ 1 : . sg : ■" ■ ■ .;; ■Bmp' WBHnpPW Board of Trustees Vice Chair Charlotte Roberts and Chair Bruce Stewart with President Don McNemar (L-R) Nancy Houston STATT WRITER The Guilford College Board of Trustees concluded their two-day January session last week expressing confi dence in three areas: finances, facilities, and faculty. Referring to Vice Presi dent and Chief Financial Of ficer Phil Manz, and Jim Vroom, who serves as a budget ing and management consult ant, trustee chair Bruce Stewart said, "We have tre mendous confidence in the new business leadership and the consensus emerging in the bud get process." The board approved the budget for the current year and set student charges for 2001- 2002. The rates represent an overall increase of 3.7 percent, or SB3O, for a full-time student selecting a double room and full meal plan. The charges for a single room increased 6.3 percent, or S6BO. "We are raising the single room price so that it more accu rately reflects the cost of provid ing that resource," Manz said. THE GUJLFORDIAN Greensboro, NC February 2, 2001 Stewart praised Associate CFO for Facilities John Jenkins for his work in buildings and grounds. "We were thrilled to see the improvements in the dor mitories." He added that the board was pleased to see the nearly complete Bryan Audito rium in the Frank Family Sci ence Center and the 23 recently planted trees. The board awarded tenure to five outstanding teacher scholars on the Guilford faculty. Faculty members receiving ten ure are: Nancy Daukas, philoso phy; James Hood, English; Catherine Kannenberg, psychol ogy; Steven Shapiro, physics; and Jill Wiesner, mathematics. The trustees enjoyed several meetings with students. Senior Mary Johnson sang a song from her CD, Says the Water, at the Satur day session. Sixteen trustees bought copies of the CD as a result of her command performance. On Friday, the board had lunch with students involved in commu nity service groups. Sophomore Warner Graham, site coordinator for the reading discussion group at the McLeansville Prison, attended the lunch. He said the trustees showed great interest in the students' work and related their own com munity service experiences. "I used to view trustees as just delegating what they thought should be done according to their own opinions," Graham said. "Af ter this meeting, I saw them in a new light. They're pretty cool people -- concerned and involved." TheGuilfordian c/o Student Activities 5800 W. Friendly Ave. Greensboro, NC 27410 Guilford to offer two computer majors Donion Moore STAIT WRITER %. . y ■ 1 / v. V: r Guilford College will begin a new era of learning next se mester, as two new computer majors, Computer Information Systems and Computer Informa tion Technology, were swiftly ap proved by the faculty. Rob Whitnell, director of Information Technology and Ser vices, the person who proposed the majors said, "Students will be able to pursue a stand-alone major in" Computer Information Systems that is housed in the Management Department, or an interdisciplinary major in Com ogy that requires a double ma jor," The popularity of existing classes in information technol ogy and the results of various surveys of other collets and Guilford students helped the majors pass easily through the various stages of approval. There are approximately 200 Guilford students taking computer related classes. Junior Brian Oplinger said, "These majors are definitely needed. It will make it a lot easier for people who are inter ested in computers to take the major and courses they want." The two majors are the lat est move by the college in a se ries involving information tech nology education that included a revision of the Computing and Information Technology concen tration in 1998. Please see Computer ma jors, page 2.