Indian Museum Sponsors Collector's Day Senate Update The Interdonniatory Senate has been investigating several issues of importance. The possibility of once again acquiring suite phones has been discussed and is being acted upon by the Campus Affairs Committee. Dean Crossley recently expressed a desire to form an informal group of students who would meet with him on a regular basis to discuss the topics and concerns that students care about. Dean Crossley enlisted the help of Student Association President Jeff Walker, and now the Dean’s Advisory Group has been formed. The eight students on the Adivsory Group are: Sandy Baldwin, Pam Pohl, Jan Donnell, Greg Piccola, Roy Lander, Austin Seagrave, Bobby McWhorter, and Proctor Freeman. The first meeting of this group will take place tomorrow in the President’s Dining Room during dinner. Any student who has an opinion or concern that they wish to be discussed should contact one of the eight Also involved in this action is the Senate’s request of the business office to print campus phone books for students as well as faculty. The Senate has acted to support the Graduation Comnuttee’s efforts to revise the St. Andrews diploma. It has been charged that the present diploma needs a revision to include new type and a higher quality paper. Both the Administration and the Graduation Committee students listed above so that they may be passed along to the Dean. are working cooperatively on this issue. An amendment to the Constitution was introduced by Senator Kunkle (Gran ville) which calls for a new process of choosing the six student seats on the Student Life Committee. The Senate voted unanimously to support the amendment. The student body will vote on the amen dment in the near future. The Budget Committee decided to approve a $100 request for the College Christian Council’s Fast for a World Harvest on November 16. A request for $450 to aid the Blue Coot Press was disapproved; The Senate accepted and voted unamimously on the Budget Committee’s report. The Indian Museum of the Carolinas in Laurinburg is hosting a Collectors Day on October 28. This program is one of a series of Saturday seminars funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Space will be provided for local collectors of Indian artifacts to display their collections. A number of North Carolina Ar chaeological Society mem bers are expected to be present. Collectors Day will begin at 9:00 a.m. and coffee will be available during Uie setting up period. At 9:45 there will be a film on the manufacture of stone tools. Dr. David McLean, Director of the Indian Museum, and Mr. Michael Sellon, Associate Director, will speak at 10:15 on record keeping procedures for The Writer’s Forum at St. Andrews continues this week with a student reading hosted by Steve Allgood. As usual, it will take place in Granville at 6:30 tonight. Allgood, who is editor of the Cairn this year, has been described as “one of the most insightful and sensitive young poets presently writing at St. amateur archaeologists and collectors. Both speakers have taught college ar chaeology classes and Dr. McLean is a former president of the North Carolina Ar chaeological Society. A second film will follow, illustrating how information gathered during excavation of a Late Woodland village is used to interpret and reconstruct prehistoric Indian life. The rest of the morning will be devoted to the various artifact collections. This program is designed to provide collectors a chance to compare notes with each other and to view the Indian Museum displays and reference collections. It is an opportunity to talk with one of the professional ar chaeologists on the museum staff and learn what ar chaeological activities are going on in the state. Andrews” by Professor Ron Bayes, St. Andrews’ writer-in- residence. Student readings have proved very popular in the past and a large turnout is expected. Any student who wishes to read on some future date should contact Jon Johnson, student director off the Forum. It is not necessary to be a collector to attend. The public is invited to all of the events. If you have found something out in the field that you think might be an Indian artifact, bring it along on October 28 and see what the experts say about it! For further information on Collectors Day, call Ruth Y. Wetmore, Curator, or Michael Sellon, Associate Director, at the Indian Museum (919/276- 5880). The Indian Museum is open on Tuesday mornings and every afternoon (except Monday) from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. There is no admission charge. Judicial Board Hears Case The Judicial Board met just before break to try an honor code offense. Specifically, two persons were charged with stealing furniture from Pate Hall. The following is the sen tence that the Judicil Board has decided would be ap propriate; 1) $10 per person to go to Pate Hall 2) Split fee for the damage of a table 3) Both people must go on a work program for 4 weeks at 2 hours a week 4) Not charged with theft of sculpture, bookend, or brass ashtray because of lack of evidence. Crossley Gets Help From Walker; Deanes Advisory Group Formed Allgood Featured In Writer’s Reading Program Convocation Invests Blackburn With McGaw Chair Quicker than a photo, THE LANCE has provided these immediate reaction sketches of convocation. (Sketches by Steve Newton) Eight Students Included In Who’s Who The 1978-79 editon of “Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges will carry the names of 8 students from St. Andrews who have been selected as being among the country’s most outstanding camps leaders. Campus nominating committees and editors of the annual directory have in cluded the names of these students based on their academic achievement, service to the community, leadership in extracurricular activites and future potential. They join an elite group of students selected from more than 1,000 institutions of higher learning in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and several foreign nationas. Outstanding students have been honored in the annual directory since it was first published in 1934. Students named this year from St. Andrews Presbyterian College are: Caity Davidson, Richard Durham, Robin Green, Sheppard Harden, Nancy Jackson, Samuel (Butch) Keller, Pam Pohl, and Cheryl Shapiro. By Jon Johnson Early this morning (10:30) the St. Andrews community was treated to its second convocation of the year. At Avinger auditorium among the colorful display of academic gowns. Dr. Thomas Blackburn was vested with the McGaw Professorship of Chemistry, St. Andrews’ first named academic chair. Dr. Blackburn’s ap pointment is an important step in the school s continuing interest in the development of its faculty. As Dr. Ronald Crossley, Dean of the College, pointed out, “Many colleges have an impressive array of ‘named chairs’. It is frequenUy a way of giving recognition both to the donor of a considerable sum of money and to a professor who has demon strated special skills in teaching. “We would like to think that as the opportunity presents itself... we might appoint to such posts outstanding members of our own faculty, or attract to our faculty people of very special talents.” Dr. Blackburn’s own credentials are quite im pressive. He graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Carleton College and followed his studies there to Harvard University where he earned his MA degree in 1959 and his doctorate in 1962. Dr. Blackburn has received a Danforth graduate fellowship, a National Science Foundation gradfuate fellowship, and research grants from Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, again the National Science Foundation, and the National Aeronautics and Space Agency. Professor Blackburn has also authored one textbook, co-authored another, had essays published by “Science” magazine and the “North American Review” and had research papers published in a variety of journals. In choosing their ap pointment to the Mcgaw professorship, the college weighed many factors. The most important of these were distinguished teaching, distinguished research and publication, and the ap pearance of a genuine com mitment to the coUlege and the college conununity. Dr. Blackburn was picked from over 40 qualified ap plicants. This group was reduced to a group of three by a serening committee which was composed of faculty and students. From this group. Dr. Blackburn was finally chosen after even more interviews. With his qualifications and background, it is felt by most that Dr. Blackburn will be an important addition to St. Andrews. Help Wanted - Business Office needs student help for filing, key punching, etc. Workshop Student preferred - See Kay or call ext. 223 and ask for Kay.