2 THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT., NOVEMBER 22, 1880 Emory University Hosting First Conference on Black South Literature and Art H.6. WALLACE NAMED VICE CHANCELLOR FOR UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS AT UNC-CH ATLANTA - Some 3,000 artists, writers, ac tors, critics, teachers and students who are involved with the black experience in the South, and the general public, are gather ing this week -ion the Emory University campus --aesthetic, for the first Conference on Black South Literature and Art. The keynote session on Thursday, November 20, at 7:30 p.m. in the Glenn Memorial Auditorium, will feature several noted speakers, including former U.N.. Ambassador Andrew '"Young, playwright Ossie Davis and Tyrone Wilkerson Gloria Mims. The ' conference . is designed to emphasize the important role of the black south artist in the development and sustain- ment of a national Diacn founded by those who work to pro duce literature and art as well as those who practice the arts, thus keeping the folklore tradition alive. The sponsors of the con ferccne are Emory Univer sity, the Southern Collec tive of African-American Writers (SCAAW), the Southern Black Cultural Alliance (SBCA) and the and Pulitzer sfcaAJriaj-rfsiCommittee on Black winning noteHstl Japm Soth Literature and Arts, Alan McPhersonljAllscOtt'.i in Literature, the con ference sessions are free to ference will be host to a the public. : i-C ? dittfj aHkuttibef-: of prominent i ne opening sesstPtr.wi-.Biafcic south writers, be followed by a public receDtion at 9:30 p.m. for the start of an exhibit of prints and drawings at the Woodruff Medical Center Administration Building. among them Margaret Walker, Ishamel Roed. Ernest Gains (at 'vr "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman"), Alice Walker, Toni Cade Also beginning Thu:sda'yBaMBara Sonia Sanchez, following registration at 1 Ethridgc .JKaight, Ruby p.m., are the Book Fair Dee (Ossie Da,vis and1 and exhibits of interna- A"irray. )tAmong tional art in the Aftimni fce) workshops, "The Memorial University -Necessity fr, 1 B,ack Center gallery and Black' Biography" and , "The South folklore in the Candler Library lobby. Every day of the conn, ference will feature panel discussions, workshops, readings - and' perfor mances of black theatre. Friday's events begin at the Neighborhood Arts Center at 252 Georgia Ave., with panel discus sions, workshops and ex perimental theatrewith dance and major leadings later on the anpuses of Atlanta I .'mvef sity and Emory University. The day concludes with a din ner theatre banquet at the Stadium Hotel downtown, followed by a dance. Saturday activities in-, elude the Artists-in-the-SchtKuV workshops, and panel discussions, to be held at Emory's White Hall, with such educators as Lorenzo Thomas, scripts, and impromptu performances of plays by conferees will give these aspiring playwrights a chance to see their works performed and critiqued. Writing for television is also the subject of workshops. Visual Arts will be shown in a large exhibit, and there will be discus sions of various aspects of Black South art. Many ar tists have submitted works for judging by a group of ar critics. Folklore will be em phasized as a thriving art form, and a panel of folklorists will discuss methods -of researching the traditional and con temporary rfolk expres sions of blacks. The Penn Conference $ Center, a repository of folk culture', will have a large exhibit, and its director, Emory Campbell, will moderate workshops on Sea Island culture. ;' the conference is fund ed by grants from the na tional Endowment for the arts, the Southern Arts Federation, the Commit tee for the Humanities, the Fulton County Arts Commission, The City of" Atlanta Department of Cultural Affairs, the Travelers Insurance Com panies and by Emory University, including the university's Afro American and- African Studies Program, the President's Commission on the Status of Minorities and the Department of English. Chapel Hill Harold G. Wallace, UNC CH assistant chancellor for student affairs, has been named vice chancellor for university affairs at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His appointment, ap proved by the UNC Board of Governors Friday, is ef fective December 1. In making the an nouncement Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham, III said an essential and key part of Wallace's duties will be assisting him in enhancing the presence and experience of minori ty students and staff at the University. Wallace will have ad ministrative responsibility for the offices of the registrar, student financial aid, records and registra tion, institution! . .arch and undergraduate admis sions. "The vice chancellor for university j affairs," Foru...m sa;d, "will fill the need for" a high level administrative officer whose responsibilities in clude a new focus on minority matters during a critical period in the life of the University. 1 am delighted in this appoint ment. Mr. Wallace is an excellent University ad ministrator and an outstanding human be ing." Wallace joined the University staff inJuly 1973 as associate dean of student affairs and direc tor of special programs. Previously he held several positions at Duke Univer sity including assistant to the dean of undergraduate education and student ad visor, director of the sum- South as Content,", deal ing with recurrent motifs of famj, church, music and folklore. There will be a special, conference led by some fifty editors of small black press journals, and other discussions will center on , bringing black south literature to the schools. With this will be presenta tions by George Reynolds of the "Foxfire'' group, Emory Campbell of the Penn Conference Center and Ed Cabbell of the John Henry Memorial Foundation. A, number of theatre companies will come to campus,, including the Congo! S9Bar?4fev ana , v .vug oi-,,,,cw Orleans, and the "Ml Ensemble Company of Miami. Several dramatists will be on hand to criticize i 1 m . V . V ill . Wallace mer transitional program, and assistant provost and dean of black student af fairs. He also was in se. t.in director of com munity and field work for An o--American majors and seminar instructor for a course on "Dimensions of Racism" at Duke. This year he was selected for Who's Who Among Black Americans. For the past seven years he has served as faculty advisor to the Black Stu dent movement and for five years he has served as secretary-treasurer of the Black FacultyStaff Caucus at UNC-CH. He also has beena member of the board of directors of the Wesley foundation at UNC-CH, the Institute of Desegration at North Carolina Central Universi ty and the National Com mission of United Ministers in Higher Education. He was a con sultant on minority stu dent programs for the University of South Carolina, and Furman and Wake Forest univer sities. Wallace', who lives in Durham, is a native of Gaffney, S. C. He "arned a B.S. in education from Claflin College in Orangeburg, S.C., where he was president of Alpha Kappa Mu National Honor Society. In 1971 he received a master of divinity ue ee from Duke University. Delta Receive Certificate Mrs. teonaWhichard, president of, the Durham Chapter ole American Cancer Sncwiiu, (second fromjeft) present a certificate of appreciation for wprjc done by members of the Durham Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. who distributed information on cancer at South Square Mall. Accepting the certificate of appreciation for the sorority are Sorors Sara Pettiford, Cynthia Pearson and Rosiland Wallace. The electric dishwasher a portable, countertop model was introduced at the Electric Show at Madison Square Garden, Oct. 1, 1907. .felt tfe nffimgy m yw fl O 'flo o fit! Starting today, you can put the money in your checking account to work earning interest . . , with Wachovia's InterestChecking"4 service. InterestChecking pays you 5Va annual interest . . . while you write checks as usual. 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