:e. Si I at others may eat... AST FOR A WORLD HARVEST o IV) no 00 oi NOV. 16! nee com- ne moon, 'ant is de- Y service, get when ig Distance a lot less m expect s, 24-hour ^rcon- te credit nd the ^ all of igh the nius of itelligent :hoose, dmake r&T wmore ervioes, ?and t PHE HILLTOP jme 63, Issue 4 Mars Hill, North Carolina Thursday, November 2,1989 h Xav Pea5 Tn la... Hungry and You Fed Me” ' I Jennifer Enrich nmy Condrey editor Reading - so many people take it for nted. There are many visual im- 'ed, blind and shut-ins in the Mars Hill a who cannot read and need some- } to read to them. Last year, the program Radio Read- Service, was established through MHC radio station, WVMH, provid- readers for the handicapped of Mars Each weekday from 9 to 10 in the irning, news from the Asheville izen and News Recorder (Marshall per) was read. This year, Evonda Edwards and Ruth iley, two MHC juniors, are co-direc- ’s for the program. Both of them were rolved in the program last year. They are excited about the program. It they have one major problem: NO DLUNTEERS! The program currently has not been )le to run every morning as planned. Iwards is disappointed that no one is Munteering: “Students don’t realize people from this area really listen to the program. Madison Manor, the rest home in town, has listeners. I wish we could get volunteers because it would be a good program.” Volunteers would report to the radio station at 8:00 on the day they are read ing. From 8:00 until 9:00, the volunteers mark the articles they want to read and practice reading so they will be able to pronounce all the words correctly. It takes two people every day, so each can read for 30 minutes. All Madison-Mitchell-Yancey (MMY) students and scholars who need to do community service can use the reading program to fulfill the requirement. Edwards says she loves to read, and that is why she is doing this. She is not a professional reader, and no one has to be to do the program. Although she started off reading too fast, she has im proved with time. To get involved, call Evonda Ed wards at 689-5457 or Ruth Bailey at 689- 3149 and VOLUNTEER! Vellness Program Unveiled achelle Cathey taff Writer Mars Hill College is introducing a illness program for all employees. The ogram includes physical develop- ent, medical support, nutrition and Jbstance abuse prevention, nployees will be given up to two hours ir month of college-paid time for par- Jipation in the program. The physical development aspect of e program encourages the use of the sllege’s recreational and fitness cilities. Participants are encouraged to lake use of Meares Field, Harrell Pool, nd the Chambers Gymnasium Corn- lex. Participants are especially en- ouraged to use the Nautilus equipment icently added to the fitness room. Medical support already provided to mployees by the infirmary will be ex- 'anded for the program. Additional ser- ices to be offered include cholesterol creening, blood pressure screening, ■'PR courses, breast self-examination iducation for women, colon-rectal can- :er information for men and vaccina- ions for flu, pneumonia and tetanus. Marriott Dining Services will serve well-balanced, healthy meals at low cost to college employees. There will be spe cial menus available for wellness program participants. The college infirmary will provide a substance-abuse prevention program to address alcohol, drug and tobacco abuse. The wellness program committee is chaired by Dr. Donald Schmeltekopf, Member of the committee are Winona Bierbaum, Tom Coates, Ellen Coomer, Deana Dillingham, Otis Duck, Nancy Harmon, Tom Perry and Bill Walker. The committee will meet monthly to plan ac tivities for the fitness program. A wellness newsletter will be published at the beginning of every month except January and July. The newsletters will include activity and facility schedules and health and fitness information. The wellness committee hopes to ex pand the program and urges the par ticipation of all college employees. Jennifer Enrich Staff Writer When was the last time you were really starving? Have you ever had hunger that just would not quit? For a vast number of people in our country, as well as abroad, this occurs on a day-to- day basis. How often have you heard someone else (or even yourself) say, “I’m about to starve!" How picky are you and the people you know when it comes to food? People who are really starving usualiy do not have a choice of what to eat or whether or not to eat it. Hunger is a serious problem in our world. Twenty-eight people die every minute as a result of hunger, according to the Church World Service. Along with the physical suffering it entails, poverty and hunger cause other problems for an individual as well. Nathan Porter in “Poverty and Hunger in the U.S.: Southern Baptists’ Response” says, “poverty causes human suffering, insecurity, discomfort, embarrassment, despair, hopeless ness, and fear.” Most of us can not begin to feel or know what it would be like to not know where our next meal was coming from, or if it was even coming. What a horrible thing it must be to rely on a stranger, perhaps even from a foreign country, to provide you with enough nourishment to sustain you through one more day, only to wake up the next morning and hope that you will be provided for again. A Christian organization established in May 1974 to combat world hunger. Bread for the World (BFW), places spe cial emphasis on women and their role in providing food. In the most needy of foreign countries, approximately 75 per cent of field work is done by women. The role of these women has been over looked in the past. They are now being recognized and more properly trained. Through their work. Bread for the World has caused the formation of U.S. policies to aid the needy. One of the things being currently done to provide for our feliow human beings in need is the establishment of the International Fund for Agricultural Development. This is an assistance program which teaches farmers how to produce food for them selves. Thus, these Individuals will not become solely reliant on someone providing them with food. They are made capable of providing for themsel ves. There is an increased amount of money being sent to foreign countries for military and security assistance. This cuts into the amount our government sends for the relief of poverty. What can we do individually to assist those in need? All contributions given through the North Carolina Baptist State Conventions are divided in the following manner: 80 percent goes through the Foreign Mission Board, 13 percent goes through the Home Mission Board, and 7 percent goes to aid in hunger relief in North Carolina. You might say that your contribution would not amount to anything. The op posite is quite the truth. According to “A Hungry World: Helping Southern Bap tists Respond” by Robert Parham: One dollar will purchase three balanced plates of food at the Clovis A. Brantley Baptist Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. Ten dollars will provide 10 bags of groceries for a church in Panama. Twenty-five dollars will feed one family of five for two weeks through the Miami Baptist Association. As you can see, it does not have to take a lot of money. Christian Student Movement (CSM) of MHC is currently organizing a dinner, the proceeds of which will go straight to World Hunger. Be looking for posters and other publicity telling ways you can get involved. A lot of participation is re quired on the students’ part to help this dinner to be a success. Deuteronomy 15:11 says. For the poor will never cease to be in the land; therefore I command you saying, “You shall freely open your hand to your brother, to your needy and poor in your land. ” Also, Matthew 25:35 and 40 say, “For I was hungry, and you gave Me some thing to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger, and you took me in.. .Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to me.”