Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 23, 1981, edition 1 / Page 3
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I eele& -0t gift ' fa n tf i f F"ir v f J A n o b n n 0 lOOfOtCf ft; ifii WQUIU fUOi .11 Dean Cole .elected president of J Dy LUCY HOOD . and LOU ANN JONES Edith Elliot, Campus Y director, has been chosen as the assistant vice chancellor of student affairs, replacing Harold Wallace, Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Donald Boulton announced Monday. Wallace left the position open when he was chosen to fill the recently created post of vice chancellor for University affairs. "I'm very excited about my new responsibilities with the .; University," Elliot said. Elliot said she would be working with minority affairs, staff development and other tasks delegated by Boulton. 1 "As the job was outlined in the job description, it looked like an opportunity to be challenged personally and pro fessionally." Elliot was chosen for the position from a field of 190 appli cations that were narrowed down to six final candidates, Boulton said. "I was looking for a 'people' kind of person," Boulton said. "J was looking for soneone to carry a program and people load someone who could relate well with students and understand student affairs and its diversity. "I felt Edith (Elliot) had the kind of abilities that would best fill our needs for the campus and community," Boulton said. . Elliot has worked at the University as Campus Y difector for eight years, and will assume her new post August 1 ; Dr. Richard Cole, Dean of the Journalism School, was elected president of the Association of Education in Jour nalism for the 1982-83 year. The national organization, which has 1,800 members, is the largest professional society in America for professors of journalism and mass communication. "I want AEJ (Association for Education in Journalism) to become a more active organization in working with profes sional journalists," Cole said. Increasing the cooperation between journalism educators " and professionals will be another primary goal. Cole said. ' Cole will begin serving as president-elect when he is inn tiated at the association's national convention in August at Michigan State University. His term as president will begin in 1932 and will expire in 1933 when he will serve as president pro tern for another year. Cole said this arrangement would allow him to vote on the executive committee for three years instead of one year, which is typical for such a presidential term. ' Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III, 1931 recipient of the North Carolina Hospital Association Distinguished Ser vice Award, said recently he had high regard for the work hospital and University administrators were doing. "I have a strong feeling for community hospitals, which are public institutions (including ours) which do things effi ciently and extremely well. ; "Medicine is an area of life thafs so important Thafs what makes a humane society," he said. "We have a lot of good people here (at UNQ," Fordham said. "Performance is marvelous and the spirit is good." Fordham, former dean of the UNC School of Medicine, was cited by the Hospital Association for his "valuable con tribution over a period of many years to the hospitals of North Carolina (and for) his qualities of friendship and leadership and his deep concern for the well-being of his fellow men." Fordham has been a member of the N.C Memorial Hospital Board of Directors for eight years and has worked closely with the Area Health Education Center program to develop teaching projects with community hospitals in North Carolina. Although both jobs have been demanding ones, Fordham said there were extra duties for hifit as Medical School Dean. "The Dean has the added burden of worrying about the patients. Every one that comes through that door is seated and sick " - '' - Fordham noted an advantage to his former position. "There was more contact with faculty and students. You're closer to the teaching part," he said. "I am glad to have a fair amount of contact with students and faculty now. That's one of the happier parts of my job." Joseph F. Aponte, Director of the Clinical Psychological Training Program and Professor at the University of Louisville, has received a year-long postdoctoral fellowship to study at UNC "I will be working on mental health services for minority and disadvantaged groups," Aponte said. "This is not a new area, but it is one in which research has been f ragmented. I will work on a more comprehensive model (of mental health services)" The Postdoctoral Fellowships for Minorities Program is sponsored by the Ford Foundation with additional support from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Aponte and 34 others were selected to engage in advanced study or research at 27 universities or nonprofit organizations, "I will be involved with classes and ongoing research," Aponte said. "In addition, I will be doing some reading and thinking things I don't usually have time for during the regular school year." Terry Miller, associate professor of psychiatry at UNC, will be working with Aponte. "The department of psychiatry will be his home base, but the people he calls on depends on how the program seems to develop," Miller said. "He will be working with the School of Public Health, psychology department, Population Center, and the Research Triangle." This will not be Aponte's first stay in Chapel Hill. He was Assistant Professor of Community Psychiatry at UNC between 1970and1975. , Aponte recently came to Chapel Hill to find an apartment. : "I was expecting a lot of changes. There weren't thai many," he 'said. am very much looking forward to coming to Chapel Hill." Wilson Library to receive facelift By ANN PETERS When the new central library is completed, renovations enabling Wilson Library to house the University's special collections are sched uled to begin, said Cordon Rutherford, direc tor of facilities planning. The new library should be completed by next summer and renovations will start after the completion, he said. The renovations will cost $5.6 million. The money is part of a package that included another $22.4 million for the construction of the new library and $3.8 million for renova tions to the Health Sciences Library and con struction of three additional floors. Total ex penditures for the changes amount to $31 .8 million. Until the middle of the1970s the University owned its water, sewer and telephone utilities, but subsequently sold them. The money al located was from the sale. More than 20 years ago an effort to obtain private donations for a building for the col lections began, James Govan, University librarian, said. When the utilities money was allocated, it was decided that Wilson Library could serve in this capacity. "The special collections are the most dis tinguished collections that the University owns. They have never had adequate quar ters," Covan said. The special collections include the North Carolina Collection, the rare books collection and the manuscript and Southern historical collections. The new stacks will be cut off from the renovated library and will house little used materials or overflow from the new library. The new library will hold 1.8 million books while Wilson's capacity is 2 million, half of which will be the stacks and half will be the collections. ' WHY -DO THE HEATH Efl RAGS?' Psalm 2:1 and Act3 4:25 It Is the testimony of this column and writer that there ba many who call themselves Christian, claiming great spiritual experiences and that they have been "born esain," yet don't hesiieta to run rough shod over soma of tha Ten Commandments which reveal tha very character of tho Almighty making the Law void, and thon -pass tha buck" to the Lord Jesus Christ, saying Ha kept tha Law for them and paid their penalty for sin, end mada them frea with the liberty to do as theypteasal . My answer to folks with such a faith can best ba mada by quoting a few verses from tha 1 1 SUi Psalm: 53, 70 and 1 1 5: "Horror hath taken hold upon ma bacausa cf tha wicked that forsaka Thy Law , . . Their heart la 3 fat as greasa: but I delight In Thy Law . . . Depart from ma, ya evildoers; for I win keep tha commandments cf my God." God grant mat my heart in Its afjtuda towards God's Ten Commandments might ba In pert set accord with every statement cf tha 170 verses of tha 11 h Psalm. , -. Near the very class cf tha Citia wa read: "CLESCED ARE THZY THAT DO HIS COM MANDMENTS, THAT THEY MAY HAVE A RIGHTTOTHSTRIE CF LIFE, AT ID MAY ENTER IN THP.CUCH THE GATES INTO THE CITY." RcvciatJon 2:14. Primarily wfet tha AposSa Paul was specking about concerning tha Law in H Eps-ss had io do with circumcision in tha flash thera wcra thesa v,ho taught a man could net ba saved unless ha kept tha law cf circumcision cjven Abraham and his offspring. Am wining to lasva tha matter cf cny man's tircumdslon In tha fash up to tha physician cf his chclea. However, unless you rece.Va "drcurndelon cf tha heart" at tha tend cf tha Great Physician, tha Lord Jesus Christ, you era t-3 In your sins end a lest sou!! Co I testify fc-seausa I don't want "your bJood to ba on my hands." DoutSass an cvidanca cf "circumcision cf tha hcarf la i! ' 0 ) ' A ! U i 1 Vj L-J l.. l . L. ....,. HI ' . s ,L ,,., . bil 1 - f f ( 'VN You know PTA delivers great hot pizza. But did you know that with every pizza PTA delivers cold Cokes too? Pre o 14-our.ccro. It's the Meal Deal. Savings for real. VJhen it comas topizza, r i wuitisa vu yuu. Pizza- Authoritv FREE DELIVERY UIVWHRH U OUR SERVICE ZOHE .... i 1 ' I . - .., 1.4 11 I J i . . , ' - A :.J .1 rx c:i A?IY'FIZZA. C2 ZVJ.ll j r;.Irti ff 21, 131 GocuSortfwm rm exxpon Ont dtxrt p &mm : it' tit .2 :Iir.a In Ifa end conduct P.O. COX 4j CwriTUn, d. tw!A wt.J
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 23, 1981, edition 1
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