Newspapers / University of North Carolina … / March 17, 1980, edition 1 / Page 6
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Cadle Publishing Pangle And Rash Head SGA Brett Pangle, a sophomore major from Brevard, has been elected Presi dent of the Student Government Association. The son of Mrs. Shirley Pangle of Rt. 2, Brevard, he is a 1978 graduate of Rosman High School. Elected Vice-President was James Rash, a Junior Economics major from Lenoir. The son of Mr. and Mrs Jeff M. Rash of Portwood Circle, Lenoir, Rash was a 1977 graduate of Hibriten High School. Six candidates ran for President and five for Vice-President. Pangle and Rash take office March 17, succeeding Lynn Smith and Mike Ochsenreiter, president and vice president for the past year. Pangle said one of his administra tion's first goals will be getting more students involved in the activities of Student Government. Past indifference toward this official activity of the student body, Pangle said, is probably because “many students feel Student Government J. Owen Zurhellen, Jr., former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian Affairs and later Am bassador to the Republic of Surinam, will teach American Foreign Policy this spring in a Political Science course at the University of North Carolina at Asheville. He will be at the university as this year's Breman Profesor. The Sara and Joseph Breman Professorship of Social Relations was endowed in 1974 by the Sara and Joseph Breman Foundation and the Helen and Coleman Zageir Foundation. Zurhellen is now vice president for programs of the Foreign Policy Association, an independent organiza tion devoted to informing the American public on questions of foreign policy and international con cern. His career as a Foreign Service of ficer covered more than 30 years. He served as a Marine Corps officer dur ing World War II and during the early occupation of Japan. His stations in the Foreign Service took him to East represents only a couple of hundred students. Many of the students feel their money is spent on those few and they resent it." He also listed poor communication between students and Student Government as a problem he wants to correct. "During this last term we will be planning the schedule of events for the 1980 Fall Semester," said Pangle. "We are not only asking for student input; we plan to go out and get it. Jim and I and other members of Student Government want to meet with clubs and other organizations on campus to find out what the students want. I would like to see student Government work with clubs, organizations and academic departments to plan events jointly. "I realize that until Student Govern ment demonstrates that they are doing things for the students I can't expect to see a boost in student enthusiasm, but I hope to see that change." Asia, Europe and the Middle East. He has served as Deputy Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarma ment Agency and chairman of the U.S. delegation reviewing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. He assumed the East Asian post for the State Department in 1975 and was named first American Ambassador to the Republic of Surinam in 1975 by President Gerald Ford. He served in that post from 1976-78, when he retired to join the Foreign Policy Association. At UNC-A Zurhellen will teach Political Science 280, Amercian Foreign Policy, during the second term of the spring semester. Classes will be Monday through Friday, 9:10-10:10 a.m., March 18-May 13. The course may be taken for credit or audited. During his stay in Asheville, Zurhellen will address the North Carolina Political Science Association at UNC-A on April 18. Other com munity talks are also scheduled. Dean Cadle, associate librarian and associate professor of bibliography at UNC-A, is a contributer to a pair of recently-published works representing Southern writers. His artistic and biographical sketch of Kentucky writer James Still is includ ed in "Southern Writers, A Biographical Dictionary," published in the fall by Louisiana State University Press. Cadle's short story, "The Wedding Warriors" is in the current issue of "Appalachian Heritage," a literary magazine published in Hindman and Lexington, Ky. Cadle has been a member of the university faculty since 1966. His first nationally published work was in 1947, when he won a national fiction contest sponsored by "Tomorrow" magazine and Creative Age Press. Since then he has published fiction and criticism in numerous magazines and anthologies, including "Yale Review," "New Mexico Quarterly," "Southwest Review," "Carolina Quarterly," "Appalachian Heritage," "Current Biography," and "Stanford Short Stories." Cadle has held the Wallace Stegner Creative Writing Fellowship at Stan ford University, and one of his stories has been listed on the "Honor Roll" in "Best American Short Stories" and another on its "Distinctive" list. He has served on the editorial board of "Western Review," as assistant editor of "Wilson Library Bulletin" in New York City, and is now an advisory and contributing editor of "Ap palachian Heritage." From 1970 to 1973 Cadle taught a class in creative writing at UNC-A. A collection of the better work of his students was published under the title of "Gambit." A reviewer of the collec tion in the Raleigh "News and Observer" commented that "the work of these young poets and story tellers is projected with a certain dash and honesty that is irresistible .... 'Gam bit' is out and running." Pace Employment Applications for employment under the PACE Program are available in the Financial Aid Office. Those students who have applied for aid for the 1980-81 academic year will be con sidered. Students qualifying are usual ly placed in their home-area and work 40 hours per week during the summer. Ex-Envoy Teaches Course
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