Newspapers / St. Andrews University Student … / Sept. 12, 1975, edition 1 / Page 3
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Ithelan^ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1975 PAGE THREE Librarian Named Among the staff changes at St. Andrews this summer was the appointment of Mrs. EUzabeth Holmes as Librarian of the College. Mrs. Holmes succeeds Richard Lietze, who resigned to become Assistant Dean and an associate prtrfessw at the graduate school of lilffary science at the University of Denver in Cdorado. A Florida State graduate with B.A. and M A. degrees in library science, Mrs. Holmes’ previous experience cranes from work at such diverse libraries as those (rf Mexico aty College, the Univa^ity of Alabama and the University of Texas. She joined the SA faculty in 1966 as Acquisitions and Technical Services lilffarian, was tenured in 1968 and appointed as associate professor in 1971. A year later she was named associate librarian. “In addition to her official duties Mrs. Holmes has made substantial^ contributions to college governance and curriculum develooianent,” said Dean Victor Arnold in announcing the appdntment this summer, “as a member of several important faculty committees, including the Educational Policy Com mittee, the Faculty Executive Committee, and the St. An drews Studies Skill Com mittee.” For the past year and a half she has also served as an advisor to the college for governmental Affirmative Action employment programs. At The Movies “Klute”, Directed by Alan Paluka and starring Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland, Klute shows how culture shock sets in when the provincial detective (Sutherland) protects a cynica prostitute (Fonda) against a perversely psychopathie killer. Sort of like freshman C&C (R.I.P.) Poet To Read Ann Deagon, poet and Professor of Classics at Guilford College, will be at St. Andrews College in Laurin- burg on Tuesday, Sept. 16 at 7:30 pjn. for the third poetry reading in St. Andrews’ autumn Writers Reading series. A native of Bir mingham, Alabama, Ms. Deagon studied at Bir- mingham-Southem College, and received both her M.A. and Ph. D. degrees from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hil. She first began writing poetry in 1970 “in some kind of forty-year old renaissan ce.” Since then her poems have been published widely and have received about 35 prizes in various state and national contests. At present she has snne 150 poems in print in 45 different magazines. Ms. Deagon is the author of two collections of poetry, “Poetics South” and “Carbon 14,” and another collection, “Indian Sununer,” which is schedule dto be publi^ed soon by Unicom Press. Her poems have been referred to as “a counterp(wt of serious and ironic excavations into the mythic and personal ex cavations into the mythic and personal past of a middle- aged woman.” Ms. Deagan’s reading at St. Andrews will take place in the lounge of Granville Hall, a student dormitory. Forthcoming readings in the autumn series at St. An drews will feature Paul Baker Newman, Marion Cannon, James Laughlin, Rwi Bayes, Sam Ragan, Carolyn Kizer, E. Waverly Land and D.C. Berry. Budget (Coitinued Frran Page 1) The $1500 Farrago request, trimmed by the Cabinet to $1000, was not acted on by the Senate because of the con fusion and uncertainty surrounding who would be ttie coffeehouse’s director this; year. The Senate earmarked the Farrago funds and tran sferred them to the Senate ac- ' ''f}'it. moving out of one problem and into another, the Senate encountered a homet’s nest of opposition to the Cabinet’s decisioi to reduce the cheerleaders’ $672 request to $100. Thirty minutes of disorderly debate followed, with the general concensus of the group being that cheerleading, having recently been made a P£. course, should be the funding respon sibility of the Physical Education Department. The matter was resolved by ap proving a matching grant of IQ) to $200, the exact amount to be contingent upon the amount athletic director Julian Smith is willing to con tribute. Approval of the various publicatifflis’ budgets moved smoothly through the first few items-The Cairn ($1500), the Bum Memorial Chapbooks ($450), and the Lamp and Shield ($6000). Yearbook editor Susan Mann told the assembly she could “get by” on the reduced amount, but that it “will be cutting it close.” A heated debate then arose, though, over the $3200 recom mendation for THE LANCE. Editor Lin Thompson, also a senator from Granville, defended the amount, saying it would provide funds for more eight page issues, issues during Winter Term, and a cushion against the possibility of lower-than-expected ad vertising revenues. Mecklenburg’s Steve Chasson, calling THE LAN CE’S increase well above the ten to twenty per cent cost; increase projected by Thom pson for the coming year, moved that $600 be stricken from the appropriatirai and granted to the yearbook. A voice vote being indecisive, a show of hands w^ called for, revealing seven ayes and seven nays. Presiding Officer Elkins then cast the tiebreaker in favor of the full $3200 allowance. Bob Tauber’s Curveship Press got its full request of $450 as the last item on the agenda and the Senate ad journed after attending to some lesser items of business. Cinema 27MI60 • COi9> ShiwN CwNr STARTS FRIDAY DAILY 3-7-9 SAT. & SUN. 1-3-5-7-9 Gibson 27t-2244 • MnmrOWN UtHMMM STARTS FRIDAY! SUMMER SCHOOL TEACHERS I SHOWS DAILY 7-9 ISat.&Sun. 1-3-S-7-9, Trustee Dies Wright Tisdale, a newly elected Trustee of St. An drews and former Chairman of the Board of Visitors for the school, died last Wed nesday ni^t in his home in Birmingham. Michigan. The 61-year-old Tisdale is sur vived by his wife, Marian, and his son Wright, Jr., a 1965 graduate of St. Andrews. At the time of to death, Tisdale was an active mem ber of the New York, Massachusetts and Michigan Bar Associations. He retired last year as Vice-Pr^ident and General Counsel of Ford Motor Company and returned to a private law practire m the Detroit area of Michigan. The Harvard-educated Tisdale devoted many years of his life to actively su^ porting education and served on various boards at Harvard Law School, Duke Law School, Peace College, and Briarcliffe Jumor College before he was elected to toe Board of Trustees at St. An drews in June of 1974. A memorial service was held early Friday at toe F^u-st United Metoodist Church m Birmingham, Funeral services and in terment took place Saturday m^ng at 11:30 in Warren- ton. North Carolma. ST. ANWlfWS ^ mSBYTERy^ LAUtil4Mf«i, M. C. tmmum OAm, Registration is a real pain, especially wiien you’re just seven months old. Luckily, youngHiJlary Howard, daughter d Student Association Treasurer Rob Howard and his wife Jean, was just visiting and stopped thephoto booto with Mom. (Photoby Kim McRae). ‘‘Which Table Do I Go To Next?” the great MANN DRUG PRICE BREAK! This Advertisment Is Worth 10% Off On Any Purchase At Mann Drug Co. - College Plaza (Ad Must Be Presented To Cashier — Good Until September 18,1975) STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9 to 9 Sunday 1 to 7
St. Andrews University Student Newspaper
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Sept. 12, 1975, edition 1
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