August 30, 2000 Meredith Herald Campus News Every time a company makes a product, they also use energy and natural resources. Every time you make a purchase, you could save some of that energy and those resources. 'Cause when you buy durakile and reusable products, there's less to throw away. And less to replace. For a free shopping guide, iHease call 1«x>2.ReCYaE. BUY SMART. WASTE LESS. SAVE MORES' eMviRONweNTAL DeFSNse Jump start your semseter with Learning Center Stephanig Jordan Copy Edtior The Learning Center is now officially open and ready to assist Meredith students in achieving their academic goals! Nan Miller, director of the Learning Center, said, “After 14 years experience with this service. I see that tutoring can make an appreciable difference in a student’s progress." The staff is comprised of Meredith students who have been trained to tutor their peers in different subject areas. Jennie Davis, a senior Eng lish major who tutors writing and grammar, said “I actually learn a lot from tutoring. It helps me work on my English skilts-’’ Students can be tutored indi vidually in writing, grammar, math. French or Spanish- There are also several options for group help sessions. A Math Lab is available each week on Tuesdays from 7-9 p.m. in 113 Joyner. The Lab will be staffed by two math tutors who can help students with problems they encounter in their homework. Beginning Sept. 24. the Writing Center will offer Grammar Review sessions to help students prepare for the Competency Test, which all English 111 students must take on Tuesday, Nov. 7. One of the Learning Cen ter’s first customers of the year, freshman Elizabeth Malta, is already preparing. Her profes sor, Suzanne Britt suggested that her students utilize the Learning Center. Matta said, “My teacher thinks it is such a good idea. I want to do well on the Compe tency Test and get a head start.” The Learning Center is free to all Meredith students. To make an appointment, students should go to the sign-up sheet outside of 122 Jones or call 760-2800. Trained tutors in the Learning Center can help Meredith students with math, writ ing, English, grammar and foreign languages. Hekald file photo Speaker: Anna Kate Ellerman, Associate Campus Minister 10:00 A.M. Wednesday, September 6, 2000 Jones Chapel Opera to premiere at Meredith in October Officr of Marketing and Communications The Meredith College Opera Theatre will present the world premier of its second commis sioned opera, Felice, from Oct. - 5 - 8, 2000, in Jones Auditori um on Meredith’s campus. Benton Hess composed this music to a libretto by Roy Dicks. The opera is based on the novel Felice, by Angela Davis-Gardner. 1-isbeth Carter, director of Meredith's Opera Theatre, will stage the produc tion, which is being supported by grants from the Fletcher Foundation,, the Kenan Foun dation and the A.E. Finley Foundation. This will be the second time in two years that the Meredith College Opera Theatre has commissioned a new operatic work based on a living North Carolina writer’s work. Carter established the goal of commissioning new operas based on the work of North Carolina writers, both to give credit to the rich literary tradi tion of the state, as well as to create works to focus on the talents of Meredith students and faculty. The story of Felice takes place in a convent school in Nova Scotia in the 1920s. The title character is a young girl who yearns to take holy orders and dedicate her life to saintly acts, but she finds that earthly passions keep intruding as she deals with her attraction to a sailor who has been taken in to recover from being ship wrecked. The New York Times called Felice “a fine first novel. The author gives her readers the rewards of both the realistic novel and the romance. It is Davis-Gardner’s triumph to have shown us at once the allure of the convent life and its limitations." For more information, con tact Lisbeth Carter at 760-8609 or by email, carierl@mered- ith.edu.