WIGUILFORDIAN Greensboro, N.C. Next year's Bryan Series speakers announced Charlie McAlpin Staff Writer For the first time, Guilford is choosing 2005-2006 speakers around a prede termined theme. At the request of the Initiative on Faith and Practice, that theme will be The Year of Spirit and Spirituality (YSS). Karen Armstrong, Desmond Tutu and Bill Moyers will headline the theme in the Bryan Series. "We needed to figure out how to include in dialogues across the campus people who do not define themselves as religious," said Eric Mortensen, professor of religious stud ies and member of the YSS Guiding Committee. Spirit and spirituality will extend beyond specific religions. In the previous Year of the Arts, Guilford Sodexho and Follett employees gain benefits Caitlin Adams Staff Writer Sodexho and Follett full time employees at Guilford will gain tuition remission bene fits for themselves, dependents and spouses. President Kent Chabotar announced these ben efits, which will closely mirror those that Guilford employees currently receive. "This is my idea. Believe it or not I have an original idea," said Chabotar. Chabotar thought of this in early Nov., shortly after the strategic plan passed. Goal five in the strategic plan is community. Giving tuition remission benefits to Sodexho and Follett employees will, ideal ly, add a greater sense of com munity between them and the rest of the Guilford community. Additionally, out-source employees will receive access to the library and athletic facili ties. The President is trying to VWWV.BRIGHTLIGHTSFILM.COM Nobel Prize winner Desmond Tutu will headline next year's Bryan speakers President Kent Chabotar came up with a theme after he had seen the speakers. Next year Chabotar is choosing speakers, with the input of some faculty and staff, for weave the strategic plan into things that he could easily make happen here on campus," said Fred Devine, Director of Human Resources. "A dining services worker came up to me and she said her daughter was going to Guilford," said Chabotar. "She had to pay the last part of her tuition and she felt it was really too bad she had to do that because she felt as much as part of the commu nity as anyone else, but she worked for an outside contrac tor." "I did it for her," he continued. "She is such a nice person." The tuition remission is retroactive, allowing reimburse ment for the current semester for those that are eligible. Full-time Sodexho and Follett employees must be employed for 30 days to receive these benefits for themselves, and 12 months of continuous full-time employment is necessary before their college-age dependents or Volume 91, Issue 20 www.guilfordian.com spouse are eligible. New Guilford employees follow the same guidelines. Guilford is the only institution that provides this benefit to out sourced Sodexho employees. "I thought that plenty would be doing this and I wanted to copy any policies, but we couldn't find one," said Chabotar. The Sodexho and Follett employees that take advantage of this plan will pay taxes on it. The value of the reported tuition must be claimed as taxable income to the IRS. "According to the college's CPA (Certified Public Accountant) firm, the IRS con tends that the college can pro vide the tuition remission benefit to non-employees on a non-dis criminatory basis," said Devine. "But, non-employees cannot exclude it from their income as employees can." Michael Watts, General Manager of Dining Services said, "I was very excited to hear their abilities to contribute to a central theme. "Gorbachev is a really tough act to follow," Chabotar said, "so we knew we wanted at least one person who was very well known and who fit within the theme." That person was Desmond Tutu. Tutu is Archbishop Emeritus and Dean of the Anglican Church in Cape Town, South Africa. For battling apartheid, Tutu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984. Tutu was the first black dean of St. Mary's Anglican Cathedral in Johannesburg, the first black bishop in Johannesburg, and the first black archbishop of Cape Town. President Nelson Mandela appointed Tutu the chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The group investigates crimes of apartheid in South Africa. Continued on Page 3 that President Chabotar was going to do this. I think it does a great deal in building the rela tionship, partnership and build ing a community." "I have not been contacted by any bookstore or dining service employees yet about the pro gram," said Devine. "Even if it is just one or two people it is going to be successful." Pam Jones, six-year dining services employee, expressed interest in such benefits previ ous to the tuition remission announcement. In respect to her 23-year-old daughter, Jones said, "I would definitely look into that and want her to come here." "People that work for Sodexho and the bookstore, a lot of them don't make a lot of money. It helps those that are neediest in our community," said Chabotar. "If we gain two or three good students that would not come here otherwise, that to me is pay back for this."3€ February 25, 2005 Touring NYC's Central Park Gates Page 9 Celebrating women with The Vagina Monologues Page 10 Is Boston a sportsfan's paradise? Page 18 Women's Lacrosse Preview Page 20