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The Daily Tar Heel
Wednesday, May 12, 1971
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UNCNews Bureau
UNCs top journalism students were recognized
here Tuesday during the School of Journalism's
Awards Convocation.
Eighteen .scholarships totaling 511,000 were
awarded and students receiving leadership,
scholarship and service awards were announced
during the afternoon ceremonies in Howell Hall.
Journalism Dean John B. Adams presided.
Distinguished Journalism Foundation
Scholarships, valued at $1,000 each, were
presented to Jessica Hanchar of Charlotte, Robert
Arrington of Glen Alpine, Ken Ripley of
Coronado, Calif, and Dennis Rogers of Chapel Hill.
The distinguished scholarships program is funded
by the Knight Publishing Co. in Charlotte.
; The Sigma Delta Chi Award to the outstanding
senior journalism major went to Andrew James
Schorr of New York, N.Y., who was the 1970-71
president of the fraternity's UNC chapter.
tracks co
Pamela . Ann McMartin of Annandale, Va.
received both the Sigma Delta Chi Scholarship
Award, which goes to the member with the highest
average, and the Norval Neil Luxon Journalism
Senior Prize for Scholarship. The Luxon
Journalism Junior Prize for Scholarship was
awarded: to Ted Bruce. Hall of Forest City and
Bonita Anne Ross of Charlotte.
A new award, the Joseph L. Morrison Award
for Excellence in Journalism History, went to
Judith Layne Thomas of Olivia. The award is
named for the late Dr. Morrison, a member of the
journalism faculty who died last fall.
Prof. Kenneth R. Byerly, who retires from the
journalism faculty this spring, received a special
Certificate of Appreciation from the school. He
joined the faculty here in 1957.
Ken Ripley was announced as the new editor of
The Journalist, the montly newspaper published
by the Journalism School.
Scholarships valued at S500 each were
presented to 14 students. These included five new
honor scholarships, funded by the UNC
Journalism Foundation, to be named each year for
distinguished people in North Carolina who have .
made significant contributions to the" state press
and to the School of Journalism.
The Foundation's 1971-72 honor scholarships
and recipients are the L.C. Gifford Scholarship,
which went to Ted Bruce Hall of Forest City; the
Donald Chip man Scholarship to Karen Pusey of
Falls Church, Va.; the Brodie Griffith Scholarship
to Bonita Ross of Charlotte; the Holt McPherson
Scholarship to Corinne Anderson of Chattanooga,
Tenn.; and the Kenneth R. Byerly Scholarship to
Debbie Garren of Athens, Ga.
Gifford was the late publisher of the Hickory
Daily Record who, with Mrs. Gifford, gave the
Sara Lee Gifford Courtyard to the University.
Chipman, the distinguished Winston-Salem
journalist, served for many years as treasurer of
the School of Journalism Foundation. Griffith is
the associate publisher of the Charlotte
newspapers. McPherson, long-time editor of the
High Point Enterprise has served 21 years as
president of the School of journalism Foundation.
UNC Prof. Byerly has earned national
recognition for his contributions to journalism
education and journalism.-
Other scholarships, also valued at S500 each,
were awarded as follows: The American
Newspaper Publishers Association Foundation
Scholarship to Deborah L. Long of Durham; the E.
Clifton Daniel Scholarship to Mitzi Bond of
Ahoskie; the Quincy Sharpe Mills Scholarships to
Lawrence Huey of Waxhaw and Michael O'Neal of
Miami Springs, Fla.; the Carl C. Council
Scholarship to Ken Tilley of Raleigh; the OJ.
Coffin Scholarship to Eddie Williams of Faison;
the Beatrice Cobb Scholarship to Dixie Rollins of
Mofganton; the Gerald W. Johnson Scholarship to
Judith Thomas of Olivia; and the Loub Grives
Scholarship to Karen Tucker of Greensboro.
New members of Kappa Tau Alpha, the
national journalism scholastic fraternity, were also
announced at the Awards Convocation. Dtan
Adams, Byerly and Prof. Walter Spearman were
the faculty members inducted here.
New student initiates are Margaret Sun
Andrews of Farmviik; Robert Lane Arrington of
Waynesville; William Grady Benton of
Winston-Salem; Russell Muler Carter of Tib or
City; Linda Gean Didow of Monroe: Robert
Brevard GCleiand of Statesville; Paul Hacksl
Glickstein of Jacksonviile, Fla.; Ted Brace HaU of
Forest City; Mary Elizabeth Junck of Oii;i
Iowa; Pamela Ann McMartin of Annandale, Va,;
Rebecca Matkov of Chapel Hill; Karen Lyr.r.e
Pusey of Falls Church, Va.; Robert Kenyan Ripley
Jr., of Coronado, Calif.; And Alvin Donald Tii!!ey
of Virginia Beach, Va.
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dead.
A three-truck wreck Monday
afternoon about seven miles south of
Chapel Hill claimed six lives and injured
six others, one critically.
The wreck, involving a pickup, a
vaiwype, and a tractor-trailer truck,
occured about 5 p.m. Monday on U.S.
15-501 between Chapel Hill and
Pittsboro. .
The North Carolina Highway Patrol
identified the fatally injured victims of
the crash as Mrs. Sharon Nevin, 23, of
Pittsboro, driver of the Dodge van;
William Pierce Rayhor Sr., 54, of Oxford,
driver of the Chevrolet pickup truck;
James H. Irvin Jr, 56, of Oxford; Joe N.
. Williams, 25, of Oxford; Alexander Reed,
23, of Oxford; and Richard Harris, 58, of
Oxford. Irvin, Williams, Reed and Harris
were passengers in Raynor's pickup truck
V 1 h e time of the accident.
The wreck, which scattered debris for
more than 1 00 yards along the roadway,
.cured when the Nevin van apparently
u rifted into the southbound lane
sideways due to brake malfunction and
was struck broadside by a tractor-trailer
truck.
The tractor-trailer, driven by Willie
Johnson of Milledgeville, Ga., apparently
slid head-on into the pickup truck driven
by Ray nor, which was heading North.
ierared.
The six injured persons were taken to
the N.C. Memorial Hospital, where one
was listed in critical condition.
John Steward, 48, of Oxford, a rider
in . the pickup was listed in critical
condition.!
In satisfactory condition at the
hospital were Willie Marrow, 41 and
Willie Henderson, 40, both of Oxford,
and both passengers in the pickup.
William Raynor, of Oxford, was listed
in fair condition at the hospital.
Johnson, the driver of the
tractor trailer, truck, and Herman
Bradsher, 41, of Creedmore, were both,
treated for minor injuries at the hospital
and released.
The 10 passengers of the pickup truck
were members of a work crew
returning from the construction site of
the Northwood High School in Pittsboro.
All three of the vehicles involved in
the wreck were damaged extensively.
According to sources at the hospital,
extra personnel were called in to take
care of the 12 injured victims of the
wreck.
A member of the state highway patrol -said
only one of the victims, Mrs. Nevin,
was killed instantly. He reported the
other fatally injured victims died either
en route to or at the hospital.
ents help inmates 'to
Twenty-five youth offenders at
Umstead Youth Center at Butner are
better prepared to "talk their way back
into society" as a result of a speech
course offered by seven UNC students.
During the 10-week short course in
communication, the students worked
with the men at Umstead, an honor
prison with no fences or armed guards,
"to increase their abilities to
communicate and possibly, to increase
their potential for talking their way back
into v society , rather than fighting or
stealing their back in." -
Lee Bounds of the Commissioner of
the Department of Correction, approved
the project and recommended it to Joe L.
Bryant Jr., commander of Region "K" of
the Department of Correction. A.W.
Dryden, assistant superintendent of the
Umstead Youth Center at Butner agreed
to host the program.
After the program was explained to
the 135 inmates at Umstead, more than
40 volunteered to. take the course. Some
were released from the Center, some
dropped out of the class, but 25
completed the work.
Because the men are required to work
during the daylight hours, the
opportunities for education are limited to
evenings or weekends, said Dr. Paul
Brandes of the UNC Speech Division,
advisor to the group.
The students who met with the men at
Umstead every Sunday from 8-9 p.m. are
Connie Baucom of Concord; Richard J.
Epps Jr. of Wilmington; Victoria Gordon
of Zebulon; Christine Ewing of Chapel
Hill; Irwin "Chip" Vinson of
Autryville; Dennis Crawford of Falls
Church, Va.; and Stephanie Mayor of
Camp Springs, Md. Charles Bailey of
Durham, Bradford Weisinger of
Goldsboro, James Flynt of Stokesdale
and Ashley Davis of Wilson also helped
with the classes.
The course consisted of three projects:
a personal experience speech and two
interpersonal communications
UNC
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by Jin Minor ,
Staff Writer
The student ...spui....
commissioner expressed pleasure Tuesday
with the University bus service.
"Increased patronage and good service
from the Raleigh City Coach Lines have
made it possible to decrease subsidies
from the Student Government and the
University," Bailey Cobbs said. Subsidies
for this year amounted to approximately
$4,000 less than last year. '
Cobbs added the campus buses will
cease operations Thursday night and will
not run during the exam period.
The service's 2,400 daily patronage
average is about 250 more than last year,
he continued. '
system praised
'The increase in students on South
Campus has helped the service," Cobbs
'The -girls in James have also
improved patronage.
'The only month in which patronage
was down from last year was January.
This was probably due to the bus strike in
December."
"I. have been extremely pleased with
the service we have received from the
Raleigh City - Coach Lines and I am
looking forward to more of the same,"
Cobbs said. He called the work of drivers
Earl Singletary, Bpbby Pleasants., and
Thomas Mattisori, "co-operative and
commendable." -
Cobbs claimed some students had
asked him to vary routes to include stops
at such places as Eastgate.
"Since the 'service is not 100 per cent
subsidized we have to make routes
around the most crowded areas," he said.
"We cannot go where we are hot able to
get enough patronage to make - it
worthwhile."-' :
Cobbs expressed hope in obtaining
free bus service sometime in the future.
"As the University gets more and more
students, the need for transportation
becomes greater," he said. "It is possible
that we might be able to get free service."
experiences, a mock job interview and a
panel discussion.
"For their personal experience
speeches," said Brandes, "the men talked
for the most part on how they got into
difficulties and what they intend to do to
remedy the situation."
Music, job opportunities and
communications were the topics most
examined during the panel discussions.
Representatives from N.C. Manpower
Development Corporation, the Durham
branch of the Employment Security
Commission and Durham Technical
Institute visited the Center before the
practice job interviews to discuss with the
men the best way to go about getting a
job.
Doling the mock interviews, UNC
students pretended to be hostile
employers and hostile secretaries to give
the men an idea of the worst receptions
they might receive. The inmates were
given advice on how to deal with such
situations, Brandes explained.
By lowering their speech "threshold,"
and increasing the likelihood that the
men would talk about their problems
after discharge instead of clamming up
and growing bitter, the student group
hoped to help in rehabilitation.
Friendship with the college students
during the period was also a factor which
the students hoped would make the
inmates feel they had buddies and friends
out in the "civvy" society, said Brandes.
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