Newspapers / Elon University Student Newspaper / Sept. 17, 1981, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page 8 The Pendnltun Thursday, Sept. 17,19j Lambert hospitalized Elon’s head librarian Guy Lambert is listed in critical but stable condition in Wesley Long Hospital in Greensboro following a heart attack on Sept. 3. Lambert has been uncon scious since then. But Paul Aiello, a friend who has spent time with the family, said doctors consider his vital signs to be good, and that there is no immediate threat of another attack. Mr. Lambert was appointed as the head librarian last year. He has worked at Elon since 1963. England is calling By Dr. David Crowe England. For Americans, it’s a name that conjures up images fed by years of James Bond movies and rock music. Sophisticated London that blends a rich past with a sophisticated present. Royalty, with its colorful splendor and majes tic bearing. A deep green countryside of rolling hills, thatched roofs, and quaint, distant villages. But is this England? Yes, this is England, but it is much, much more. It is a country with an ancient past kept alive by such splendid monuments as Stonehenge and the Roman ruins in Bath, London, St. Albans, and other aged cities visited by the Elon College group. It is a country with a keen sense of history, a nation that blends its tra ditional heritage with a sense of the present and the future. It is a slow-paced country that welcomes the traveler into its quiet, friendly pubs for conver sation and friendship. The countryside is still green and checkered with neatly trimmed hedgerows in winter months. London and other British cities are still adorned with the tasteful decorations of ,tiie Christmas and New Year’s holidays. The weather is moderate and fit for brisk walks through the heaths of Hampstead or the lush grass of Hyde Park. The shops and bakeries in the towns and villages to be visited by Elon College stu dents are filled with modem and traditional European Hnery and deUcacies. Edin burgh with the distant mountains and sea is aglow in a late afternoon sunset, while, atop a peak in the Lake District, one can watch the clouds dance wistfully through the hills and valleys. This is England in Jan uary; a land of romance, of color, of tradition. A woiid of many peoples and lan guages, a place to escape, to relax, to enjoy. Join us for January, 1982, in England. Gifts cont. from p. 1 Steenken of Falls Church, Va., have established a fund to provide an annual prize of $25 for Colonnades, the college literary magazine. The Steenken Prize will be given each year for the best poem, short story, or draw ing, submitted by an Elon student, which best depicts the patriotic aspects of American life. Criteria for judging and selecting the winning entry will be determined by the staff of Colonnades. The flrst award will be made during the 1981-82 academic year. The Steenkens’ daugh ter, Kim Steffen, served as editor of Colonnades during (919) 449 6112 T^atyeea FINE JEWELRY i GIFTS JOHN 0 HARPER SR Owner Colonnades staff invites ne^ members ; entries needed by Charlotte Alford Colonnades Editor Colonnades, the literary magazine of Elon College, invites any interested student to join its 1981-82 staff. The first meeting will be held Tuesday, Sept. 22, at 3:30 p.m. in Carlton 215. This year the staff will again have the opportunity to read and consider for publication entries in the areas of poetry, short stories, essays, reviews, crit ical articles, fine arts, graphics, and photography. The staff of Colonnades is also looking for additional entries. All submissions must be typed and clearly labeled with the writer’s name and address. If the submissions are accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed en velope, they will be re turned. Contest submissions must be typed in triplicate on 8x11 paper, with one m' signed copy for the judg«, Entries should be sent tt Colonnades, Campus Boil 5246, Elon College. I If anyone should hav; further questions or sug gestions, he may contact th faculty adviser, Dr. Andm Angyal, Ext. 258, or studea editor, Charlotte Alford. 1980-81. Ralph Harris, president of Century 21 Ralph Harris, • Burlington real estate and building firm, has donated a pipe organ to the Fine Arts Department of Elon College. The organ is currently in use in the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church in Bur lington, but will be installed in Whitley when a replace ment organ for the chapd arrives. The donation is made in the name of Harris, along with his wife, Ann and his son, Craig. Mr. and Mrs. Harris are alumni of the college, and their son is currently attending Elon. 200 W, MAIN ST GI8S0NVILLE, NC 27249 Luxury Two Bedroom Townhouses in a Beautiful Residential Location that’s so Convenient. Spacious townhouses with bath-and-a-half. Modern kitchen features disposal and washer/ dryer connections. Individually controlled air con ditioning, carpeting, drapes and swimming pool. All just minutes from downtown, shopping centers and restaurants. It’s all waiting for you at Knollwood. Phone 226-4202 Today! 321-C Atwood Drive Model Open Mon. Thru Fri. 10-6, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5. cT RENTS FROM $275 short term leases available Cable television and HBO available. Rental furniture available from Metrolease.
Elon University Student Newspaper
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Sept. 17, 1981, edition 1
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