Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Sept. 26, 1985, edition 1 / Page 12
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y n* ? '***: V'- >+ ' ? An % v Instructors publish manual to help Sandhills students There are potential respiratory therapists in Hoke County, perhaps some are already enrolled in classes on the Hoke County campus of Sandhills Community College. "The respiratory therapy stu dent," notes Dan Grady, Director of Clinical Education in the Sand hills Community College Respiratory Therapy Program, "wants to serve people who are at tracted to the medical field, and want to move into a profession that promises employment and in come." In order to help the respiratory therapy student more easily gain proficiency in the techniques of their field, Grady and Program Coordinator Bill Byrtus have recently written and had accepted for publication a lab manual for first-year students. Unlike existing lab manuals, the Grady/Byrtus text deals with 50 different topics and over 230 pro cedures with inovative sections on safety and recommended laboratory techniques. The material in Laboratory Ex ercise In Respiratory Care was evolved over several years as Grady and Byrtus have worked with students in the Program. Individuals entering the Respiratory Therapy Program range from the new high school graduate looking for a first career to the older, returning student working toward a first or new career. The Program is demanding but rewarding thanks to the wide Reviewing text Bill Byrtus, Coordinator of the Respiratory Therapy program at Sandhills Community College and Dan Grady, Program Director of Clinical Educa tion, review the manuscript of their soon-to-be published lab manual. Laboratory Exercises in Respiratory Care. ranging experience and training of Byrtus and Grady. Byrtus, a graduate of the School of Respiratory Therapy at Duke Medical Center, ws supervisor and clinical instructor at the center from 1966-76; after a year as Chief of the Department of Respiratory Therapy at the Veterans' Hospital in Durham, he joined the faculty at Sandhills Community College. Grady, who has done the major portion of the writing in this cur rent project, has been a member of the S.C.C. faculty since 1980. Prior to that time he served as Neonatal and Pediatric Supervisor at Duke University Medical Center and Staff Therapist in the Respiratory Therapy Department of Duke University. Individuals interested in the pro gram may call the College, 692-6185, extensions 601 or 608. Barnhart sworn in at Sandhills The Sandhills Community Col lege Board of Trustees held its in itial meeting for 1985-86 on September 9. The meeting, preceded by din ner, opened with the swearing in of new board members Evelyn Monroe of Moore County and Elizabeth Barnhart of Hoke Coun ty. Mrs. Monroe, appointed by the Moore County Board of Educa tion, and Mrs. Barnhart, ap pointed by Governor Martin, join ed the Board members in hearing opening remarks by Board Chair man J.E. Causey. S.C.C. President Raymond Stone nominated Barnhart to serve on the College Foundation through December 31, 1987 and Larry Caddell to serve through December 31, 1989. Dr. Stone introduced to the Board the new Public Information Officer Sharon Shaw and reveiwed names of new faculty and staff members. The Board reviewed and ac cepted a revised Personnel Hand book and discussed proposed new buildings for the S.C.C. campus Swearing in Notary Public Inza Abernathy swears in new Sandhills Community Col lege Board of Trustee members Elizabeth Barnhart and Evelyn Monroe (I to r) while Board Chairman J.E. Causey and President Raymond Stone look on. and the ramifications of several proposed bond issue dates. Finally, members of the Board heard brief reports from College Administrators summarizing the achievements of the past academic year and outlining goals for the coming year. ! Bratcher appointed to Center board Sandhills Center for Mental Health, Mental Retardation, and Substance Abuse Services an nounced the appointment of Hoke County Commissioner Cleo Brat cher of Raeford to its Area Board. Bratcher, a native of Hoke County, is a local businessman. He is also a member of the Hoke County Health Board, a board member of the Hoke County Emergency Medical Services and a member of the Sandhills Youth ?Center Board. Bratcher is the Chairman of the Board of Trustees for McLaughlin Chapel A.M.E. Zion Church, where he is also the Sunday School Superintendent. Bratcher is married and has three children. Sandhills Center provides men tal health, mental retardation, and substance abuse services to the Counties of Anson, Hoke, Mont gomery, Moore, and Richmond. The Area Board, a 16-member volunteer citizen board, is the governing agent of the Center with the responsibility of setting policy and procedures for staff and for service delivery. The Board, which includes a county commissioner from each county, is composed of several citizens from each of the five coun ties the center serves. The Hoke County unit of Sand hills Center is located at 132 West Elwood Avenue. The phone number is 875-8156. Deaths & Funerals Marrtd Matkooa : Mrs. Murriei Sutton Matheson, 81, died September 11. Funeral services were conducted at 11 a.m. September 12 at Raeford United Methodist Church by the Rev. Frank Lloyd and Dr. John Ropp, directed by Crumpler Funeral Home. Burial was in Raeford Cemetery. Surviving are a daughter, Alice Matheson St an back of Salisbury; and three grandchildren. Christine C. McPkul Miss Christine Conoly McPhaul, died last Wednesday at Moore Manorial Hospital in Pinehurst. Graveside services were held at U^^jPrid^fr^^ic^ndoch ? Imfwon Made three sisters, ?Mrs. Lflhan M. Coates, and Mrs. Jessie M. Sinclair, both of -? T-. u Sugg, of Eden. Arrangements were by Powell Funeral Home. Memorials may be made to the Heart Fund, 1 Heart Circle, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. Miss McPhaul was a native of the Antioch Community of Hoke County. She was a retired teacher having retired from the Maryland Schools System. She has been a resident of Southern Pines since 1980. She was a member of Brownson Memorial Presbyterian Church. CUnsu Webb Clarence A. Webb, 67, died Monday. Funeral services will be con ducted at 11 a.m. Thursday at Ashley Heights Baptist Church. Burial will be in the church Surviving are his wife, Rachel Jonas Webb; a son, Mkhad Webb of Raeford; a daughter, Jane Barefoot of San Antonio, Texas; four brothers, Franklin Webb of Wallace, John Allen Webb of Long Beach and Otis and Reuben Webb of Raeford; three sisters, Ida Lee Vanhaun of Lorraine, Ohio, Irma Saunders of Reidsville and Mary Harris of Fayetteville; and two grandchildren. Cedl Stephens Cecil B. Stephens of 615 North Stewart St. died Tuesday. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Crumpler Funeral Home. Habert Harris Graveside services for Hubert Harris were to be conducted at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Mount Grove Cemetery by the Rev. James L. Glenn, directed by Buie Funeral Home. Mr. Harris, 65, died Sunday. ^ New supervisor Carrie Carter Heffney coordinating ABE/CED activities. New ABE/GED supervisor appointed at Sandhills Carrie Carter Heffney, named by the State Department of Com munity Colleges as Outstanding Adult Basic Instructor from Sand hills Community College, has recently assumed the position of Coordinator of the S.C.C. ABE-7GED programs for Moore and Hoke Counties. Mrs. Heffney has served Sand hills Community College for the past 10 years as instructor and supervisor of ABE/GED classes. "I am pleased that these years of experience can be more fully used to promote adult education, an area I take very seriously." A member of the Marketing Committee at Sandhills Communi ty College and Southern Regional Representative for the state in the Adult Basic Education curriculum, Mrs. Heffney outlines two priorities in her new role: "We must provide strong leadership in curriculum and instruction for our part-time instructors, many of whom have had no previous teaching experience. Little receives 2nd service medal CPT Bobby A. Little, son of Ernest and Mary Little of Raeford, received his second Meritorious Service Medal for his performance while instructing in the Army Reserved Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program at the University of Wisconsin-LaCrosse (UW-L). As a freshman class ROTC in structor, Little was also reponsible for recruitment, enrollment and retention of qualified college students training to become U.S. Army officers. Little's classroom skills and personal counseling techiques, as well as his genuine concern for the ROTC students, contributed to a record breaking year for the ROTC program at UW-L. Capt. Little will be attending Syracuse University in the fall, ob taining a Master's Degree in Jour nalism. Black completes ROTC basic camp Mark E. Black, son of John A. Black.of Rural Route 3 and Brenda F. Money of Covington Street, both of Raeford, has completed training in fundamental military skills of the Army ROTC basic camp at Fort Knox, Kentucky. During the encampment, cadets received training in basic rifle marksmanship, military drill and ceremonies, communications and individual and small unit tactics. J & L^CIover Farm RKfcfbti Rd. STORE HOURS I Ri?fofi NC Mon.-Stf. 7:00 fl.ni.-9KK) p.m. Sam lay 8:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. FJM. ^ " . ? & I ONESS - ONE DAY ONLY - ~ Thursday, Sept. 26 - 7 A.M. - 12 MIDNIGHT 9 | 0U..U.,*7* S FfFJllUmM MARKET SIYIE SUCEO BACON 89' OROCERV
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Sept. 26, 1985, edition 1
12
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