The Quill -- September 21, 1970 Roger Williams University

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The Quill -- September 21, 1970 Roger Williams University Roger Williams University DOCS@RWU The Quill Student Publications 9-21-1970 The Quill -- September 21, 1970 Roger Williams University Follow this and additional works at: http://docs.rwu.edu/the_quill Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Roger Williams University, "The Quill -- September 21, 1970" (1970). The Quill. Paper 138. http://docs.rwu.edu/the_quill/138 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Publications at DOCS@RWU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Quill by an authorized administrator of DOCS@RWU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BRISTOL PROVIDENCE uf - W'thout the press . • • what ia rpeech; without wpeec h . • what ia freedom,; without freedom •• . what ia life' VOL. 9, No. 1 THE QUILL Monday, September 21, 1970 A t Providence Evening Division Adopts College Begins Slst Year; New Experimental Program Expected Enrollment 3,300 Taking an entirely new exper­ some other major area in the imental direction, the Division of college or become a candidate Roger Williams College will new programs from which to ision of Continuing Education, Continuing Education will offer for a BA degree. begin its 51st academic year choose at the college this year. the evening college. Roger Wil­ a program leading to an Associ­ Some of the courses being con­ Monday, with an _expected enroll­ The Pr:ovidence campus is offer­ liams is offering for the first ate in !Arts degree in General sidered are: Earth Ecology, Pop­ ment of some 3,300 undergrad­ ing this fall for the first time the time an evening degree called Studies. ular Fiction in America, The uate students studying in daytime majors of accounting, marketing the Associate in Arts in General Sixty credit hours will be need­ Credibility of the Press, Human and evening programs in both and management in its four-year Studies. Students in this pro­ ed to receive t he degree but only Relations with Discontents and liberal arts and professional stud­ business administration pro­ gram may take courses in Prov­ a minimum of 30 must be taken Minority Groups, Sociology of ies on its campuses in Providence, gram. Students who choose to idence, Bristol, or Pawtucket, in at RWC. What really encour­ Gambling, Black Artists and Bristol, and Pawtucket. major in accounting will also whatever subjects interest them, ages experimenting is that there Black Pride, Organized Crime in The college, whose student have a special option: they may in order to earn the 60 credit/ will be no required courses! Rhode Island, Culture in Rhode body has increased faster than become interns in local account­ hours required for the degree. Course offerings include -any Island, Rhode Island Writers, that of any other college in the ing firms for a semester. They may choose from the busi­ courses offered on any campus Graffiti: Past and Present; the state in the past seven years, Engineering technology stu­ ness and engineering courses of­ of RWC, day or evening division. Libertaion of Women. actually opened its doors last dents may also participate in a fered in the 1970 evening division Many have been introduced spe­ This program aims to provide Monday to both freshmen and cooperative education plan under brochure, or from many new lib­ returning students, who partic­ cifically for this program. Fac­ a variety of significant educa­ which they work part-time in eral arts courses being offered ulty members are being urged' to ipated in a week-long orienta­ jobs related to their fields of now on the Bristol campus and tional encounters to many people submit plans for any courses they tion and registration program. speciaiizalion and attend .classes in Pawtucket. Clases will be held would like to teach, no matter who might not otherwise contem­ Providence students met with as well. daily from 6:45 to 9:45 p.m. how esoteric! plate, or who might be turned faculty advisors to discuss their At Bristol, students are offer­ Roger Williams has also in­ A student may, with some ad­ off, by a rigid college curric­ academic programs, while stu­ ed this year such courses as itiated new associate degree pro­ justments, later transfer into ulum. dents on the Bristol campus saw History of F ilm or Jazz Work­ grams in Hospital Administra­ and discussed some contemporary shop. New "interdivisional" ma­ tion and in the Administration of movies, met in seminar groups jors allow the student to make Justice. Another new element at A Message from the Presiden1 on such topics as women's lib­ up his own program of concen­ the college this year is its Urban eration and student political ac­ tration from whatever courses Studies Center in Pawtucket, Last spring I was shocked at that the present is a time of tion, and attended a folk con­ are germane to his chosen theme which will supervise and develop the blood shed on the campus of great opportunity, an exciting cert and an informal dance. or interest. Some students will a program of courses primarily Kent State University. This sum­ challenge. But our excitement Nearly 1,000 of the Roger Wil­ participate this year in a sem­ for residents of the city's two mer I was also shocked at the cannot be the luxury of an emo­ liams students attending their ester-abroad program of inde­ Model Cities neighborhoods. This death and destruction at t he tional binge at the expense of first classes today will be fresh­ pendent study in Sicily, learning experimental campus is financed University of Wisconsin. The hor­ civilization itself. men, approximately 400 of them about its language, history, cul­ through a $107,000 grant to Paw­ ror of seeing four young stu­ To avoid the waste and futility pursuing business administration ture, economy. tucket from the Office of Hous­ dents lying dead in a pool of of an emotional confrontation or engineering programs in Students will have two useful ing and Urban Development. blood was as frightening as view­ we must come to an understand­ Providence, and about 575 taking guides to aid them. The first is The Dean of the Providence ing the corpse of a graduate stu­ ing of the meaning of a college. the liberal arts courses offered a student handbook prepared by campus is Frank Zannini, and the dent amidst the rubble of re­ It is in these classrooms, in these at the Bristol campus. This new students themselves, telling how Acting Dean of the Bristol cam­ search records. What hurt me corridors, on this campus that 7.5-million dollar campus, opened to get along at the college with­ pus is Harold Payson. Dr. Ralph the most was the realization that you will forge the ideas that last fall, is expected to have an out "hassles." The second is a E. Gauvey is President of Roger in both of these confrontations will make the changes. It is with enrollment of 1,600 students, of guide to the college's library and Williams College, a private, co­ youth were both the victim and your f~llow students and teach­ whom 300 will be residents of the multi-media learning center pre­ educational institution granting the aggressor. ers through exchange and con­ first-built of three dormitories pared by director Richard Moses. both two-year and baccalaureate College campuses have always frontation that these ideas will planned for the campus. A major development at the degrees in professional studies been the arena for confrontations become convictions which will in­ The students have a variety of college this year is in the Div- and the liberal arts and sciences. and not a few revolutions have cite you to positive action. begun in ivy-covered halls. But College life is a new challenge. it is good for us to recall that The expectations of your genera­ Prov. Campus R.W.C. Faculty Has the lasting revolutions were not tion can over-burden you. and O~ E. Grant bathed in blood, they were fought life can become grim. A realiza­ 28 New Members in the arena of ideas. The true tion and acceptance of your own Expands Program revolutionaries of both the limitations will give you the A total of 28 new instructors Awarded College French and Russian revolts were unique ability to laugh at your­ \vill join the faculty of Roger not those of screaming slogans self and to avoid the pitfall of Offers Majors In Williams College this fall, teach­ or carrying torches of destruc­ taking yourself too seriously. ing in subject areas ranging $30,000 To Research tion. Those who moved in after Take others seriously, feel deep­ Accounting, Marketing from electrical engineering to the devastation with ideas and ly the needs of all mankind, but theater at the college's two cam­ Metropolitan Campus organization were the men who you will be wiser men and wom­ puses. changed history. An idea, an en if you retain the ability to And Management New at the Providence cam­ Roger Williams College has re­ idea which evokes commitment smile at yourself. pus, 266 Pine St., are accounting ceived a gragt of $30,000 from and sacrifice, . is still the most Another year in the history of Roger Williams College, ex­ instructors Richard Donnell, who the U.S. Office of Education to powerful weapon in civilization. Roger Williams College begins panding the number of options is ·a CPA and holds an M.B.A. finance a preliminary 'study for We see this principle exemplified and I welcome each one of you open to students of Business Ad­ from Babson College, and Nor­ a proposed new metropolitan in our American Revolution.
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