The Ddy Tar H-i
11
Galloway is director
TDH n-
ervice hiinlts iofo
Tuesday. August 31. 1971
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Mary Nelson helps the father of Ben and
front of Old East Dormitory. Miss Nelson
(Staff photo by Leslie Todd)
9.
e
lOJD 1,
by Evans Witt
Staff Writer
'roviJirsg money for the education of
Lnts is the main concern of William
director of the Student Aid
1
liia n
t year, his office provided more
Ss. 100,000 to UNC students to
j!! w them to attend the University. This
yvar, t lie rise in out-of-state tuition and
tSse slown.-ss of the appropriation of
f ederal money has caused tremendous
ppiKioms tor the iarge aid office staff.
h: rise in the non-resident tuition has
created many difficult financial problems
lor individual students.
There is simply nothing we can do,"
(icer said i i a recent interview.
He explained that, although the N.C.
(ieneral Assembly raised the tuition, it
provided the aid office with no more
iunds for out-of-state scholarship
students. He also pointed out the
allocation from the Federal government
was made last year, as required by law. on
the basis of the former tuition rate.
"Ihey (the students) are apparently-
u
wen in
ent
0
For most of the students ?n the
Chapel Hill campus, the office of
Undergraduate Admissions was the source
of all the forms which had to be filled out
in applying to school, a task which could
be most happily forgotten.
Although the primary duty of the
cilice, headed by Richard G. Cashwell, is
to review the thousands of applications
tor each year's freshman class, it has
many other jobs.
One of the ways a UNC student might
have to work with this office again is if
the student withdraws from school and
applies tor readmission at a later date.
Such applications are decided by this
o! : ice.
I he other primary reason for contact
between a UNC student and Cashwell's
oil see would be inquiries concerning the
admission of a friend or relative. The
admissions office, now located in the
Monogram Building, is the place to go
Mth any such questions or requests tor
application forms.
I he evaluation of the transcripts of
transfer students is another responsibility
of the office, along with, of course, the
actual admission decision for transfer
udents.
1 he staff of the Undergraduate
Admissions Office included associate
directors Margaret R. Folger and Edward
G. French. There are also four assistant
directors in the office.
Visiting high schools around the state
in recruitment of students is one of the
most time-consuming jobs of the
admissions office staff.
Cashwell has been director of the
office since July, In 1S, he had
been named temporarily director of the
office following the death of the director.
A graduate of UNC here in IW,
Cashwell was a Morehead scholar and
ROTC scholar here. He took his masters
degree from Duke University and served
for several years in the U.S. Marine Corps.
ash
stud
Steve Hines unload a cartul of clothes in
and the Hines brothers are all students.
-n o
meeting the crisis; we have had very few
students come to us with expressions of
distress over this," Geer said.
Geer went on to praise today's
students and to point out that more
students today, both in absolute and
percentage terms, are working to put
themselves through college.
More than one-third of all the students
in the University last year were employed
by the University in jobs to provide
money for educational expenses, Geer
said.
The Student Aid Office has a job
opportunity bulletin board on the third
floor of Vance Hall, listing job
opportunities for students both on and
off campus.
This year, the U.S. Congress approved
the funds for scholarships late in the
summer, causing unavoidable delays in
the notificaiton of students of their
awards, Geer explained. The checks for
health science scholarhsips will be late
this year due to the Congressional
slowness.
The Student Aid Office tries to
provide those students who have a real
admissions
Richard Cashwell
FRIG
charge
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RE
Student Services Commission
Refrigerators
May be rented beginning at
10:a.m. on Wednesday, September 1.
See the Student Services representative
in the room where you receive your permit
12.2 cu. ft. units S 18.00 per semester
33.00 per year
plus a $5.00 refundable damage deposit
A service of Student Government
byPam Phillips
Stzff Writer
The Placrr.er.t Service strives to aid
Carolina students ir. obtainir the job of
their choice. More than 1,000 students
were placed in 1970-71 .
The offic is headed by J.M. Galloway,
who has been director since 1 948. Prior to
that time, he was assistant director of a
placement office at another university. He
inherited the office, the Bureau of Military
and Vocational Information.
Originally, the office operated out of
Eagles
b
usiness
by Evans Witt
Staff Writer
The responsibilities of Joseph C.
Eagles Jr., vice chancellor of business and
finance, are so varied that one can hardly
believe the extent of his duties.
The campus police, Carolina Inn,
Student Stores, the electric, water and
telephone utilities of Chapel Hill and all
the money of the University are some of
the responsdbilties of Eagles office.
To manage these and the many other
business and financial enterprises and
duties of the University, Eagles has a large
professional staff. Assistant vice
chancellor for finance is Morris Bass while
the equivalent post for the business
division of the office is handled by John
L. Temple.
need for money with the funds for their
education. Due to the auditing of the
office accounts by both state and Federal
agencies, the approval of such
scholarships involved a great deal of
information from the applicant and his
parents and a "hideous amount of
paperwork."
Geer pointed out that if a student has
a bona fide emergency and is in need of
funds to remain in the University, such
funds may be available from the Student
Aid Office. The student should come by
the office to request such funds in an
unforeseen emergency.
Geer has a wide range of teaching
experience in a number of universities,
including the Citadel and West Point. He
has been named the recipient of the
Tanner Award for undergraduate teaching
excellence twice and was featured on the
National Educational Television network
in 1968 in its "Great Teachers" series.
He joined the history department of
the University in 1947 and was named to
his present post in 1966.
PUBLISHING DATE FOR
THE DAILY TAR HEEL '7V72
Aug. 31 Orientation Issue
Sept. 2 - Nov. 23
Nov. 23 Nov. 29 Thanksgiving Break
Nov. 30 -Dec. 10
Dec. 1 1 Jan 1 1 Exams and Christmas Break
Jan 12 - March 21
March 12 April 2 Spring Break
April 3 - April 27
April 28 - May 10 - Exams and Graduation
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l Editorial & Staff Numbers
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1 I
South Building. When more space was
needed, the service moved ir.to the School
of Business, where it now uses most of the
second floor of O. Max Gardner Hall.
There is a staff of 10, including f out
placement counselors who help Carolina,
students and graduates in obtaining career
information.
According to Galloway, the Placement
Service prides itself on the contacts and
connections it has established with various
businesses. The service aims to serve both
the employers and the students.
responsibility:
and finance
Both Temple and Bass are certified
Public Accountants, as are four out of the
five members of Eagles' staff who report
directly to him.
"I'm business-oriented," Eagles
explained, "I need these professionals to
provide the necessary expertise."
He himself does not make the
everyday decisions involved in the
operations of the many enterprises under
him, Eagles explained.
"Decisions are reached by me when
the issues are funneled back up the
channels, when they reach the policy
level," Eagles said.
The decision in which Eagles plays an
important role include the financial
relationship of the University to the town
of Chapel Hill and the many decisions on
the planning and development of the
money
I Ml
William Geer
these periods every day of the week
Business Off ices
933-1163
TEEEEEF mindtellin yer fien& 7
I NCT TO STAND SO CLOSER I
To insure gd service for on-campus
recruiters, the Placement Office sets up
.tv
ons and appointments
::al err.p'.eyees.
The Placement Service
variety of functions for the
helps the student to develop
per! o
a
It
a personnel
record, counsels the selection of a
field of
interest, notifies of job leads and sets up
appointments with on-campus recruiters.
In addition, the Placement Service
possesses a rummer job placement and a:ds
in alumni placement, especially for those
ho are co:
:pleting military service.
facilities on campus. The budget of the
Student Health Service and the UNC
Press as well as the problem of bad checks
on campus are also areas under the
scrutiny and responsibility of the vice
chancellor's office.
One point which the vice chancellor
makes about his office is that it is now
much better prepared and trained to
handle the problems of the University in
business and finance than it ever has been
before. Eagles praised the support given
him by the University and the N.C.
General Assembly in developing his staff.
A graduate of Chapel Hill and the UNC
Law School in the early 1930
Eagles was tapped into the Golden Fleece
and Phi Beta Kappa while here.
Eagles was both a highly successful
businessman and politician before he
came to his present post in 1968. A
lawyer and businessman from Wilson,
N.C, he was elected several times to the
N.C. Senate and served as special assistant
to L.H. Jughes when he was governor of
the state.
Academic affairs
are Morrow's job
The effects of the N.C. General
Assembly's action to raise the
student-teacher ratio essentially means
fewer professorial positions for the
Chapel Hill campus.
Dr. J.C. Morrow, provost of the
campus, is the man who has overall
responsibility for implementing the
necessary changes in the faculty and staff.
"My dut;es involve the overall charge
of the academic affairs of the campus,"
Moitow said recently.
He pointed out that he reports directly
to the Chancellor along with the vice
chancellor in charge of health affairs
division of the University's operations.
Morrow does have general
responsibility for such areas as course
selection and innovation, but not direct
control. Such matters are the province of
the Faculty Council, he explained.
Budget planning and implementation
is the area which demands most of the
provost's time, especially following this
see IT first Y 0
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EXCITING
3 FALL FASHIONS
FOR CAMPUS
FUN
potpourri'
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Ga
enter
:oay
the
reccm:
service
:er.ds students to
register with the
Placement Office five months prior to their
discharge, in order to b insured more
readily of a job upon their release.
Galloway advu students 5&ouki
register at the Placement Semce it the
beginning of their last year in school in
order to attend the on-campus recruiting,
much of which occurs in October.
November. February , and March.
The present job market has hindered
many job seekers, and Galloway admits
the last two years were the most difficult
we have experienced in the last 15 to TO
years." He commented they were not "as
favorable as S or 69," but expressed
hope for a gradual upsmg in the spring of
this year.
Galloway notes thai: recruiters this year
have shown a partiality toward business
administration major. He said they feel
these graduates are more readily able to
adjunct to a business environment and ire
already familiar with business
terminology-.
Even so. he said, many management
positions are filled with able liberal arts
majors. Before the present job slump.
Galloway added, liberal arts majors had
experienced a steadily rising availability of
jobs.
Also experiencing difficulty in finding
jobs are those with Ph.D.'s in history.
English, and chemistry desiring teaching
jobs on the college level. Previously there
w as a demand for these people, but the job
market has caught up with them.
Galloway emphasized, 'There is a
buyer's market. Students should begin to
think about what they w ant to do, register
with the Placement Service early, use the
aids available in the Placement Office and
interview early."
To familiarize students with the
Placement Service, an assembly for all
seniors and graduate students who desire
work will be held on Sept. 16 in Memorial
Hall, at 7:30p.m.
summer's actions by the General
Assembly.
"We have received what amounts to a
budget cut and also have a slightly higher
enrollment," he said.
The drop in the number of faculty
positions for which money has been
appropriated will cause some changes in
the class load for some professors and in
class size by the date of the final
implementation of the cuts, July I, 1972.
"It will have many different effects in
different places in the University,"
Morrow said in warning against
generalizations on the effects of the cuts.
Morrow earned his bachelor of science
degree in chemistry from Chapel Hill in
1944 and his doctoral degree from M.I.T.
in 1947. He joined the faculty here in
1949 as an assistant professor.
He served as the dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences from 1966 until 1968
when he was named to his present
position.
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UNIVERSITY SQUARE
CHAPEL MILL
-YOU'O BETTER TELL 'ER.
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KNOW THE LITTLE 'USSY,
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