Welcome Back Students Volume III Number One Elon College, North Carolina September 9,1976 Jl Intramural, baseball fields now underway on Elon campus by Kay Raskin Many students returning to Elon may think, with ail the red earth turned up around the campus, that Elon is infested with giant moles. Well, another creature is digging up the campus, the telephone company. After years of planning, Southern Bell lias this year placed the lines on the east part of the campus underground. Registration by mail made lines shorter, but some students still had to deal with schedule problems. (News Bureau Photo) Elon welcomes 22 new faculty and staff members this year by Kay Raskin Elon has employed 22 new faculty and staff members this year on both a full and a part-time basis and made changes in department chairmen. The English department is welcoming six new-comers, two full-time and four part-time instructors. Dr. Andrew Angyal, assistant professor of English, received his B.A. from Queens College, his M.A. from Yale, and his Ph.D. from Duke. Dr. Russell Gill, also assistant professor of English, received his A.B. and A.M. from Williams and Mary and his Ph.D. from Harvard. Making part-time appearances in the English department are four teachers: Mrs. Mary Brittain, Mrs. Helen Mackay, Dr. Ethel Taylor, and Dr. Mary W'imsatt. In the religion department. Dr. Carole Chase is now- employed full-time as assistant professor of religion. Dr. Chase received her B.A. from William and Mary, her M.A. from The Presbyterian School of Christian Education at Richmond, and her Ph.D. from Duke University. Two part-time instructors in religion are Dr. Richard Muller and Dr. Jesse Sell both of whom have their PkD.’s from Duke. New to the philosophy department is Dr. Anthony Coyne as stssistant professor of philosophy. Dr. Coyne attended W’ashington and Lee University to receive his B.A. and B.S. and UNC-CH where he obtained his Ph.D. In the math department Barbara Moser is instructing on a part-time basis. Miss Moser attended East Carolina University where she received her B.S. and M.A. Mrs. Lynn Moseley, also employed part-time, is now with the biology department. Mrs. Moseley received her B.S. from W'illiam and Mary. Four other newcomers joining the teaching staff are Metin Gurol, assistant professor of business administration; Mrs. Anne Hilliard, coordinator of the medical laboratory technology program; Dr. Lawrence Simon, associate professor of education; and Mrs. Jane Wellford, part-time instructor in P.E. The two new faces appearing in the academic skills lab are Mrs. Betty Maness, academic skills director, and Mrs. Nan Perkins, academic skills specialist. Kenneth Hammond is helping Kenneth Harper as assistant registrar. Mr. Hammond received his M.Ed. from N. C. State. Miss Julie Lackey from UNC-CH is assistant coordinator of student activities and assistant area coordinator. Lynne Adams, who received her B.A. from Elon College, is admissions counselor, and Pamela Frykholm, who received her M5. from Indiana University School of Education, is coordinator of career counseling and area coordinator. Department chairmen for the year are as follows: Ralph Anderson, economics; W'illiam Barbee, mathematics; Eloise Baynes, language; Robert Blake, English; Paul Cheek, physical science; Robert Delp, social science; Ralph Maggio, business administration, accounting, business education; Frances Marlette, community services and allied health; Voigt Morgan, biology; Arnold Strauch, educational psychology; John Sullivan, philosophy; Alan White, P.E. and health; and Christopher White, religion. I New Officers I SGA officers elected for I the 1976-77 academic year I are Sam Moore, president; I Bill Gortney, vice-president; Sand David Nichols, I treasurer. = Class officers for the year I are Rick Hancock, serving as senior class president, and Sherman Alfors as vice-president. For the junior class, Sam Burgess is president and Chris Gerringer vice-president. The sophomore class officers are John Holloway as | president, Kathy Butler as | vice-president, and Robin | Moser as secretary-| tieasurer. I D«iigiiinanni»iiniinni»innninniiiinB Prices are increased for town parking violations by Gary Spitler Anyone getting a ticket in the town of Elon College will note that it is not the regular fee of $1.00. Instead a $5.00 parking fine will be issued for ANY parking violation in Elon College. . The new $5 fine went mto effect August 1 and was adopted at a July meeting of the Elon College Town Board. There is a ten-day compliance regulation or else it will become a misdemeanor. The police department also has towmg Now when one looks at the sky, that's all one sees, unless of course a pigeon is flying by. Other plans being carried out this year are those concerning the development of the Caddell property, approximately 40 acres adjacent to Staley and Moffett dorms. Phase 1, which concerns a baseball field, three intramural fields and a parking lot, is getting underway. The grading has already begun, and waterlines are being laid underground for future fountains and a field house with dressing facilities. The only change from previous plans is the addition of the parking lot for Staley and Moffett and student parking during intramural events. Melvin Shreves, director of Public Information, .says the facilities will probably not be ready for this spring but much depends on the weather this winter. London tour, winter term, is ‘‘bargain of lifetime The Study Abroad Program in England for the winter term is shaping up bigger and better than ever this year. Mrs. Marjorie Long, tour coordinator, has announced that students should sign up for the January course abroad and pay the $25 deposit as soon as possible to hold a place. Interest areas this year include business administration, English literature, English history, the humanities, music, political science, and college programs. Upon completion, all will offer three semester hours credit except for college programs which offers two. Emphiisizing the liberal arts core of this college, the program abroad centers about a humanities core of historical, literary, architectural and artistic interest. All participants will take tours to , the historic sites such as Windsor Castle, the largest in Europe, to Shakespeare's Stratford, Canterbury Cathedral, Dover Castle, Winchester with its Saxon burials and King Arthur's Round Table, ancient Stonehenge. In London students will visit the major monuments, galleries, museums, cathedrals and churches. All will see plays and attend concerts, and each group will have its own .specialty for in-depth study. All will have free time for sightseeing, shopping, eating at pubs, making their discoveries. The cost for the month has been called "the bargain of a lifetime," for the college has chartered a plane and worked • out package deals for the first class hotels in Russell Square, London's West End, full English breakfasts, jet travel from Greensboro and back, several tours, and tuition for up to three (Continued on page 3) NC-PIRGfiles complaint against Duke Power Co. Students may have changed, but moving into the dorms hasn’t. The beanies are gone but the baggage is still there. (News Bureau Photo) authority for any vehicles which are in violation of laws and ordinances. The main purpose of the new fine is to try to move student parking on Elon College streets into parking lots on and around campus, especially the lot behind the Texaco station. Students are reminded that a $5 minimum fine will be imposed for all violations This includes overtimes, parking in prohibited areas, and parking on the left side of curb. All other traffic and parking laws must also be obeyed. Duke Power Company customers have been getting more than their electric bills in their billing envelopes over the last several months. Duke Power has included pamphlets on the safety and wisdom of nuclear power and offered free booklets on the American economic system and government ownership of power companies, and is passing the cost of these publications along to the consumers. 'This policy forces all Elon College students, faculty and administration to pay for Duke's propaganda," said PIRG director Peter W'. Brown, "whether they receive a bill from Duke Power directly (as do most who live off-campus) or indirectly. Off-campus students will pay directly, in the monthly bill they receive from Duke Power. On-campus students will pay indirectly through their tuition which, of course, must pay Elon College's light bills. Beyond monetary loss we are all losers because the positions Duke Power advocates ;ire totally self-.serving or in the words of a Duke spokesman "self-protection.” North Carolina PIRG has filed a complaint with the State Utilities (Commission alleging that Duke Power is violating customers' rights under state and constitutional law and is engaging in an "unjust and unreasonable" practice by taking advantage of its monopoly status to propagandize customers at their own expense. Although Duke Power calls these costs "operating expenses," PIRG claims that they serve only to promote the political opinions of Duke Power which in no way serve the best interests of its customers. "The basic question, continued Brown, "is whether Duke Power can charge us to promote its political views on key issues. We say their free ride must stop." Duke Power will ask the State Utilities Commission to dismiss PIRG’s complaint at a hearing before the commission, W'ednesday, September 15, at 9:30 a.m. in the Ruffin Building, Raleigh, N.C. For more information, contact the PIRG State Office, P.O. Box 2901 West Station, Durham, N.C. 27705; (919>-286-2275.