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March 31, 1989
The House Scholarship
Applications are now being received for the Helen Badham House and Henry Charles
House, Jr., Scholarship, to be awarded for the academic year 1989-90, administered by the
Chapel of the Cross.
The Scholarship was established in 1975 by the will of the late Helen Badham House, and is
named in memory of Mrs. house and her husband, the last Henry Charles House, Jr.
Recipients must be able, needy students who attend or will attend the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill and must be Ejpiscopalians.
The amount of the Scholarship for the 1989-90 school year is about $1,000.
Applicants should address a letter to House Scholarship, University Ministry Committee,
Chapel of the Cross, 304 East Franklin Street. Deadline for applications is April 1, 1989.
Scholarship recipients will be notified on or about may 10, 1989. You may write or call (929-
2193) for an application.
Names of all applicants will be forwarded to the Student Aid Office of UNC-CH for
determination of financial need. In addition to church affiliation, selection will be based on
need and ability.
Chapel of the Cross
304 East Franklin Street
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Race Relations Week: A Group Effort
By Vaness Howard
On April 11-14, 1989, various campus groups will sponsor Race Relations Week.
Those groups include the Students for the Advancement of Race Relations, the
Carolina Indian Circle, the Prejudice Reduction Group and members of the Bahai.
The idea was formulated by two students, Lee Latimer, a junior, and Chris Mum-
ford, a senior, in order to promote social interaction and discussions on the issue of
race relations.
Race Relations Week will feature different events of high-quality experience each
night. The first evening will feature a speaker, which is unknown at this time. The se
cond evening will include a series of workshops, and the third will feature social
events sponsored by Greek organizations. To finish off the week, a jazz festival will
be held along with activities in the Pit.
The groups hope to bring a diversity of students together to address the issue of
race relations as a unified effort. They want to find out how students stand, and they
feel their efforts will be enhanced through publicity. There will be a joint effort on
the part of all the groups. Latimer and Mumford will report progress to the Ad
ministration and make recommendations of other courses of action toward race rela
tions. This effort will allow student feedback also. Mumford says, “The effort
shows that race relations groups are working together on this.” He also expressed his
approval of Administration support. “The Administration is giving us a lot of
backing.”
New Associate Dean for Counseling
By Gerda Gallop
A new associate dean has been chosen
to replace former Associate Dean
Hayden P. Renwick in the Office for
Student Counseling.
Rosalind Fuse-Hall of St. Lawrence
University will join UNC in June to
begin her duties as associate dean for the
Office for Student Counseling, said
Gillian T. Cell, dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences.
Fuse-Hall holds similar duties at St.
Lawrence, and because of prior com
mitments, she is not able to join UNC
until June, Cell said.
The search committee for the associate
dean was notified early this semester of
Fuse-Hall’s appointment to the Office
for Student Counseling, Cell added.
In addition. Cell wrote letters to BSM
President Kenneth Perry, Carolina In
dian Circle and Donald A. Boulton, vice
chancellor and dean of student affairs,
notifying them of her appointment.
“I think she’ll do a good job,” said
Kenneth Perry, president of the Black
Student Movement. “I’m impressed
with her, and I’m glad that she got it.”
Fuse-Hall attended UNC as an
undergraduate student and worked in
the Office for Student Counseling. She
earned a law degree from Rutgers
University, and after working with the
law for a short time, she came to St.
Lawrence, Cell said.
“She is excciting and extremely
dynamic and energetic,” Cell said. “I
feel very good about her coming.”
There were 108 applications in the na
tional search for the associate dean posi
tion, Cell said.
RESEARCH PAPERS
16,278 to choose from—all subjects
Order Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD
800-351-0222
in Calif (213)477.8226
Chapel of the Cross
G. Edward French Scholarship
Policies and Procedures
Scholarship criteria. The G. Edward French Scholarship will be awarded annaully by the
Vestry of the Chapel of the Cross to one or more regularly enrolled full-time students in the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The recipient must be a communicant of the
Episcopal Church* or a church within the Anglican Communion. Primary consideration will
be given to evidence of financial need. Secondary consideration will be given to evidence of
past and/or present active involvement in the mission of the Church whether at the parish or
diocesan level or through outreach to the community or to the world at large. Each scholarship
recipient must maintain a grade point average of at least 2.0. Failure to maintain a 2.0 average
shall constitute grounds for revocation of the award.
Application procedure. Applications shall be submitted in writing to the Episcopal Chaplain
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Chaplain’s office is at the Chapel of
the Cross, 304 E. Franklin St. Application forms and additional information are available
from the Chaplain.
Administration. Applications will be solicited annually through the Episcopal Campus
News, Cross Roads, and other means. Applications will be reviewed by a three member panel
of the University Ministry Committee, appointed by the chairman. The panel will submit its
recommendations to the Vestry.
Review. This policy will be reviewed and evaluated after two years (1989) by the UMC.
*Consdtution and Canons of the Episcopal Church, 1985
Title I, Canon 17, Sect. 1(a) and Sect. 2(a).
Definitions
A member of this Church is a person who has been baptized with water in the Name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and whose baptism has been duly recorded in
this Church.
A communicant is a member who has received the Holy Communion in this Church at least
three times duting the preceding year.
in Calif (213)477.8226
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Adveitising Managei
Kim Maxv^ell
Contributors
Cedric Ricks
La'Tonya Rease
Peter Henry
Dana Clinton Lumsden
Theresa Jefferson
Editor
Ganaud Etienne
Mcmaging Editor
Timika Shafeek
Assistcait Editor
Victor Blue
Sports Editor
Charles Mills
News Editor
Gerda Gallop
THE BLACK INK is a bi-weekly publication by the students of
the University ol North Carolina at Chapel Hill. THE BLACK INK is
the ottlcial newspaper ot the Black Student Movement. Its pur
pose is to link and unify the black student community through
awareness and information.
Comments and editorials written in THE BLACK INK reflect the
views ot the writers and are not necessarily shared by THE
BLACK INK.
THE BLACK INK office is located in 108D ot the Carolina Union.
The mailing address is Box 42, Carolina Union, Chapel Hill, NC
27514.
The telephone number is (919) 962-4336, Office hours: 9-2Tues.,
Thurs., and Fri. 11-1.