Page 6 Endnotes collegiate crossword 1 2 3 4 5 6 ni r 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 ■ .6 17 ■ 19 20 21 23 24 H 1 ■ jir" 27 28 ■ 29 mpo 31 32 33 34 ^■35 36^H 38 39 40 41 ■ 1 43 44 45 46 48 ■ 49 50 ■ 51 53 54 ^■55^ ■ 57 58 59 ■ 60 61 62 ■ 63 64 65 ©Edward Julius Collegiate CW8829 ACROSS 1 Lists of names 8 Tells 15 Level of authority 16 Scholarly 17 Capac'ity to endure 18 Gruesome 19 Male cat 20 Fatty 22 Continent (abbr.) 23 Shortened form (abbr.) 25 Popeye's girlfriend 26 To be: Fr. 27 Type of race 29 jump 30 The (Mt. range) 31 Mine-boring tool 33 Belonging to The Hoosier State 35 Cultivate 37 Precious stones 38 Apportioned 42 Slow down 46 Comedienne Ann 47 Out of: Ger. 49 Olympics entrant 50 Mr. Maverick 51 French states 53 Vena 54 Mr. Gershwin 55 City in Kentucky 57 Letters engraved on a tombstone 58 All together (2 wds. 60 Carpentry joint 62 Not one nor the other 63 Famous reindeer 64 Delirium 65 Bird dogs DOWN 1 Begin again 2 Black Tuesday's month 3 Shuffling gait 4 Egyptian god 5 Charles Lamb's pen name 6 Musical piece 7 pace 8 Taking away 9 Expunge 10 Publisher Henry R. 11 Society of dentists 12 Native of Lhasa 13 Part of ancient Italy 14 Female prophet 21 Maize bread 24 Harmony of ) relation 26 Rubber band 28 Site of 1945 conference 30 Directed toward 32 Prefix for withstanding 34 German article 36 Endures 38 Completely surrounding 39 Student, e.g. 40 City in Wyoming 41 Double 43 Greed 44 Editor 45 Dealers in cloth 48 Mailing necessities 51 City in Germany 52 Nighttime noise 55 Tennis great Arthur 56 "Darn it!" 59 Prefix: air 61 Dynamite Solution in next issue. Arabs continued from page 5 their culture anci learn to respect each other. Kristin Rabai shared from the insight of a young teenager growing up in a foreign land about how the culture af fects one growing up. The first thing one notices is that when going through cus toms the agents can confiscate any thing that may offend the Saudis. There is censorship of magazines to prevent offense as well. She remembers things like Prayer Intermission during television shows and the strictness of Rahamadan. But also there is the im ages of the colorful clothing that the women wear under their shawls and veils and the extravagance of parties and weddings. Majid Bakhtiari gives us the best con trast that most Americans miss. Majid, an Iranian, has noticed that most Americans have the misconception that the Gulf region is all camels and sand. In fact, snow and freezing temperatures during winter are all too common, and we should not be fooled by the pictures on TV and remember that region is diverse and beautiful. With these glimpses of Arabic culture and life we can say we have some idea of what this region and its peoples are all about. COMMITTED ID SERVE Golden Cate • Midwestern • New Orleans Southeastern • Southern • Soutinvestern Friday, February ^ MHC Selected for Teaching Leadership Award Program From Staff Reports Dr. Fred Bentley has announced that the MHC has been selected to par ticipate in the Sears-Roebuck Foundation’s 1990-91 Teaching Excel lence and Campus Leadership Award Program. “At Mars Hill, our primary emphasis is on quality teaching with the student as our central focus,” Bentley said. “We are especially pleased that the Sears- Roebuck Foundation has maintained its long-standing partnership with inde pendent higher education by continuing this teacher recognition program.” This is the second year MHC has been selected for the program. The awards are presented to top educators at near ly 700 of the nation’s leading inde pendent liberal arts colleges as a means of recognizing their outstanding resour cefulness and leadership. Each winning faculty member will receive $1,000 and the institution will receive a grant rang ing from $500 to $1,500 based on stu dent enrollment. Mars Hill’s award in 1989-90 was $1,000. The institution grants are to be used to encourage campus leadership, facul ty development and enrich teaching. Winners will be selected by independent committees on each campus. The Excellence and Campi Learning about War tions of just cause, proper authority and a peaceful intention where war is a “last resort.” Justice in conducting a war deals with issues of quantifiable good and evil, relative worth of life and whom is killed and suffers on both sides. Other concepts raised by this war include dis tortion by media coverage, a sense of connectedness with the soldier, anti- Poet’s Corner Deep Knowledge Within Auburn as the sunset reflecting off red leaves of fall, her hair caresses her shoulders. Sea blue eyes lock with my chocolate browns. Deep within we share one soul, we are one being. Peals of laughter flutter from our lips as we share escapades. Pain of hers also is mine for...we share one heart, one life. Her name: Friend, Her meaning: Soulmate. -Tericia Sox English major award will be made on Honors i April. The 1989-90 winner was Jme 64, Groom, assistant professor of who used the money to continui-i ^ on her Ph.D. in biomedical sci||Vj “Being selected for this award couragementformyworkineducMcCoy she said, “even though I havst Writ teaching for over 20 years, I sti you h? teaching as an exciting challengl memt this award inspires me to work h4ast few The program is administered ( subjec ally by the Stamford, CT-based FOn Frida tion for Independent Higher Edud byap and regionally by Hilburn Wh Carol president of the Independent 0 band Fund of North Carolina. auditic “We salute Sears in recognizin this cl of society’s most fundamental (' year c excellence in teaching,” said Jeuring tl Blessington, FIHE president. "rdayth( awards will honor some of our nJfour di best educators and encourage otIThese s emulate them.” need tf “In the second year of this proj/eekeni said Paula A. Banks, president he mair Sears-Roebuck Foundation, “wee cone the opportunity to demonstraWy even commitment to recognize care Audi! leadership and outstanding teacteert Bai the undergraduate level.” :ert for; last six continued from p literall war protests and their meaning, at until th wide range of emotions whiclenging brought out by war. college As we listen to the stories of waited in there are many), there are partied that make the war both a distant affair ahe colle at-home concern. Let us never sep'ere th the two and neverdeny what our men and women do, and the jot Little c they volunteered to do for their cot LaRuE !mble c ip IS a Q) has a Ic w iperforr II J |ole will v" bst tunt ZI o ^tern siorld mda C f Writei /lars Hil ortunity Is, mus itries. 1 will be le Blue 'he eve Center I lent-ori( ortunity >r coun to heai

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