Page 8 Broncos' Voice September 29, 19H9 A nno unc eme nts FSU Hires New Business Faculty Fayeueville Slaie University has named four new faculty members to its School of Business and Economics, according to an FSU press release The new faculty members in clude: • Barbara A. Leuin, who has 11 years experience in industry and academia. For five years, she worked for a major electric utililty in the Southwest making long-range forecasts of energy demands and served as an adviser to the Electric Power Research Institute. She holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from New York University, a master’s in economics from the University of Arizona and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of New Mexico. In 1982, she began leaching courses on energy economics, regulated industries and manage- menL Leuin also visited the People’s Republic of China as part of the “PMple to People” delegation that studied trade relations between China and the United States. • Lawrence E. McLean, who has 20 years experience in financial and administrative management, cor porate planning and profit-center management He holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Duke University, a master’s from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in finance from Syracuse University. He has worked for companies such as Ford Motw Co. and General Signal Corp. and served as the chief executive officer for English and Mexican companies. He has taught finance, economics, quantitative dis ciplines, computer-assisted decision making and business ethics, and researched such topics as capital structure theory and business simulation games. • Barry Griffin, who has 17 years experience in industry and acadcmia. For five years he worked in manufacturing, operations research and statistical analysis. He is a certified member of the American Production and Inventory Control Society. Griffin is a graduate of AACSB Management Information Systems Spa Employees Permanent Spa Employees Since August 19H9 Crawford, Constance McNeil, Wanda Jones, Beverly Ring, Dawn Broadway, Gale Bonner, Brigitte Wingfield, Elois Whitfield, Barbara Blue, Lula Fawkes, Siu-Chu Counseling Post Office Acadcmic Affairs Chancellor’s Office School of Business Communications Center College of Arts and Sciences Chancellor’s Office School of Education College of Arts and Sciences FSU lieceives $4000 From Credit Union Fayetteville State University has received $4,000 from the College Heights Credit Union on Murchison Road in Fayetteville. The contribu tion will allow two (2) $2,000 scholarships to be awarded to selec ted high school graduates of the Cumberland County School System. Among the criteria set by the Col lege Heights Scholarship Committee is a request that the scholarships be awarded to a prospective Life Science major and a prospective Teacher Education major. Chancellor Lloyd V. Hackley ac cepted the award from Mr. J. L. Knuckles, Vice Chairman, Board of Directors and Chairman of the Su pervisory Committee and expressed appreciation to the Credit Union for “sharing our commitment to the suidents.” Dr. Hackley noted that scholar ships provide opportunities for many of our students that would otherwise not be available. He ad ded that a college education is much too valuable to be denied for finan cial reasons alone. “I know the scholarship recipients and their families will greatly appreciate your generosity,” said Dr. Hackley. In.stitute and is cxperiencctl with mainframe and micro-bascd com puter hardware and software. He has served as an associate professor of management at Val paraiso University in Indiana, Eastern Kentucky University and Western Kentucky University. For the past two years, he has worked with C.R. Industires in Elgin, III. where he was responsible for in creasing manufacturing productivity through participatory management. • Ellis M. Saums, who has more than 25 years of experience In in dustry. He has served as a consultant for developing strategic and busi ness plans for companies, installing inventory conut)l systems and start ing sales forecasting. He was vice president of enginer- ing and vice president of materials manage.Tient for the Thomas J. Lip- ton Co. He also has held managment positions with Bowater Paper, General Foods, Merck & Co., and Johnson & Johnson, and has been a management consultant with Remington Rand and McKinsey & Co. Kappa Delta Pi Membership Invitation to membership in Kappa Delta Pi - An International Honor Society in Education, usually comes after a computer search of student records to identify those who arc eligible to join. Those eligible to join are then mailed a personalized invitation. But for several good reasons this time a new gimmick is being added in the form of this more broadsided or universal announcement. Undergraduate eligibility is con tingent upon a GPA of 3.2 or better. For graduate students with a mini mum of twelve hours, the GPA rises slightly to 3.5. Neophyte scholars interested in joining the premier Honor Society on campus should present proof of their eligibility to Dr. C.I. Brown, Room 126 Butler Learning Center and pick up an Application for Membership Form. The Kappa Delta Pi Induction Ceremony for Fall 1989 will be held on Oct. 27, 1989. So applications must be pickcd up and processed by Oct. I, 1989. Five Part Series Examines the Civil War The drama, the devastation and the ultimate reconciliation of the Civil War come alive at the library this faU in REBIRTH OF A NAr TION: NATIONALISM AND THE CrVIL WAR. Co-sponsored by the library and the Cumberland County Board of Education, this free five- part series combines lecuires, readings and group discussion lo ex amine the issues, events and per sonalities that split a nation. Programs will be held every other Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Pate Room of the Headquarters Library on Maiden Lane. Registration is re quired. Participants may register for the entire series or for individual programs by calling series coordinator for any one program is one week before the program date. Copies of the topic books will be loaned lo registered participants in advance of program dau:s. Dates, speakers and discussion topics are: • September 12 - ‘TWO ROADS TO SUMTER” by William and Bruce Catton - Speyer: Dr. Melton McLaurin, UNC-Wilmington. • September 26 - “UNCLE TOM’S CABIN” by Harriet Beecher Stowe - Speaker Dr. Diane Sesson, Duke University. • October 10 - “ORDEAL BY RRE, VOL. 11: THE CIVIL WAR” by James McPherson - Speaker: Dr. Etavid Goldfield, UNC-Charlotte. • October 24 - “RECONSTRUC TION: AFTER THE CIVIL WAR” by John Hope Franklin - Speaker I>. Paul Escott, Wake Forest University. • November 14 - “THE PRIVATE MARY CHESNUT: THE UN PUBLISHED CIVIL WAR New Bookstore Policy BY DORIS BIHLMKYER For those of you who do rjot know why students are marking in textbooks, hang on to your hats! The bookstore has a new policy this semester which permits the marking of rental textbooks. This change was instituted due to the many com plaints of students who desired to highlight and underline in their books 10 make their studying simpler. The new policy has gained wide acceptance, and students are taking full advantage of the situa- Susi ujlnen nedd a cold ■aliotAjeK'. . *‘SPoMSoREt) BY the OCCtJPAMTS Of BRVAMT VAMCC HAtL © COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES New Full-Time and Part-Time Faculty Members Full-Time Name Department Phone Number Mr. Don Fawkes Department of Humanities 486-1763 Dr. Greg Rich Department of Humanities 486-1763 Dr. Elizabeth Murphrey Department of Humanities 486-1248 Mr. Terrence Corbin Department of Fine Arts 486-1457 Dr. Alexander Nakireru Department of Fine Arts 486-1457 Dr. Leonza Loflin Department of Mathematics and Computer Science 486-1799 Dr. Tenkasi Viswanathan Department of Mathematics and Computer Science 486-1500 Ms. Frances Allsbrook Department of English and Literature 486-1181 Dr. Dorothy Holmes Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences 486-1171 Ms. Vijaya V. Tangella Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences Part-Time 486-1575 Dr. Ponzhyil O. James Department of Hamanities 486-1573 Ms. Barbara Blevins Department of English and Literature 864-9470 Mr. Clinton Nordan Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences 488-2120 Ms. Regina Thompson Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences 486-1260 Harry S. Truman Scholarship Fayetteville State University sophomores interested in a career in government service at the federal, state, or local level are invited to apply for a 1990 Harry S. Truman Scholarship. Established by Con gress in 1975, the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation operates an ongoing educational scholarship program designed to provide oppor tunities for outstanding students in the United States with potential leadership ability to prepare for careers in government service. In April 1990, the Foundation will award 92 Scholarships nationally. The DEADLINE for all 1990 ap plications is December 1,1989. Fayetteville State University can nominate three students for the 1990 competition. The scholarship award covers eligible expenses up to $7000 for the junior year, senior year, and two years of graduate study. To be eligible, a student must be a full-time sophomore working toward or planning to pursue a bac calaureate degree, have a B average or higher, stand in the upper fourth of the class, and be a United States citizen or United States national heading toward a center in govem- menL Interested students should submit a statement of career plans, a list of past public-service activities or other leadership positions, a current transcript, and a 600-word essay discussing a public policy issue of their choice to Dr. V. Dwight House, Truman Scholarship Faculty Repre sentative, Room 307, Lyons Science Building, by Friday, OcL 27. Those students that Fayetteville Slate University nominate will have to secure three leuers of recommen dation from individuals knowledge able enough about the student to as sess the nominee’s personal charac teristics, potential for govemment service, and motivation. The evalua tion must include one from each of the following: 1. An individual who can discuss the nominee’s potential for a career in govemment service. 2. A faculty member in the nominee’s field of study. 3. Another individual who can at test to the nominee’s potential. In addition they must complete biographical questionnaires, see that a secondary school report is com pleted and sent to the Truman Scholarship Review Committee, and copy their essay onto a proper form for submission to the Truman Scholarship Review Committee. 1989-90 Elections By Dr. Betty M. Lovelace Director of Student Activities A number of students gathered in the Rudolph Jones Student Center Multi-purpose room on Wednesday, Sept. 14 lo listen to class candidates pledge to serve them this academic year. The spirit was high and the tone was one of competitiveness and sportsmanship. As a Fayeueville Stale University administrator, I was proud to be a part of this year’s election. The students were well prepared, well at tired and handled themselves with a degree of confidence and self as suredness that made it difficult for prospective voters to know who to cast his/her vole for. I was particularly impressed with the 1989 freshman class. These in dividuals exhibited strong leader ship, academic excellence and promise. Without question, the de gree of potential they possess is limitless. I’m certain this group will be insu^ental in establishing a new tone of excellence here at Fayeueville Slate - a tone in which I’m proud to have been a part of. 1989-90 Spring And Fall Elecuon Results STUDENT GOVERNMENT AS SOCIATION President Beverly Hicks Vice President Roger Pilgrim Business Manager TeneUa Wiggins Miss FSU Tammye Jenkins Miss 1st Runner Up Bernadette Lane SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS President Ruth Spearman Vice President Tanya P. Flores Secretary Audrey Suggs Treasurer Kirby Wallace Miss Senior Arlethea Wilson JUNIOR CLASS President Cheryl Washington Vice President Tanzania Cooley Secretary Felishia McPherson Miss Junior Donna Pressley SOPHOMORE CLASS President Michael Johnson Vice President Jimonique Simpson Miss Sophomore Nacole Gholston FRESHMAN CLASS President Donald Sumpter Vice F*resident Donald Moore Miss Freshman Myia McGill DIARIES” by C. Vann Woodward and Elisabeth Muhlenfeld - Speaker Dr. Kathleen Berkeley, UNC-Wil- mingion. This project is made possible by a grant from the North Carolina Humanities Council, a state-based program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. REBIRTH OF A NATION is coordinated by the Duke University Office of Continu ing Education and is partially fun ded with a grant from the Library Services and Construction Act Title I grant administered by the Division of Stale Library, NC Department of Cultural Resources. Teachers in the Cumberland County School system who attend all five sessions will be awarded in- service program credit. To register, or for more information, please con tact the library at 483-3745. Fort Bra^ ^g Events Oktoberfesi Internationale “Snow While Goes West” Oct 12-22 Fort Bragg Playhouse Fort Bragg Fairgrounds Seven-show run opening Sept. 23 Public Invited Public is invited. Gates open 5 p.m. weekdays/1 p.m. weekends Tickets are $5 for adults and Admission $5 Adults $3 for children under 12. Mon. - Thurs. $4 Children 9 & Under E-4’s and below and one guest Admission $6 Adults admitted for half price. Fri. - Sun. $5 Children 9 & Under For more information, cil 396-7555. Unlimited Rides-Shows-Live Entertainment Call 396-3919 or 396-5576. Students Against MS Program lion. It all goes to show that students are heard if they voice their opinions long and loud enough. So, all you students out there, gear up your highlighters, pens, and pencils and mark away! NEW YORK, NY-The National Multiple Sclerosis Society an nounced today that the Students Against Multiple Sclerosis (SAMSSM) Program is back again for the fifth su-aight year. You can get your school involved and pos sibly win a MTV: Music Television “victory” Bash Party for the students on your campus. Plus you will be helping the people who really need your support—the quarter of a mil lion Americans who have multiple sclerosis. “SAMS, a national collegiate fund raising and awareness program will take place on more than 200 campuses this year,” announced Admiral Thor Hanson, the Society’s president and chief executive officer “Across the counffy thousands of college students will be joining for ces to help fight MS, a disea.se that commonly affects their own age group. We’re proud to support their cfTorts on behalf of the Society’s worthwhile mission—the eradica tion of multiple sclerosis for future generations.” Throughout the 1989-90 school year, and especially in February - “BUST MS MONTH” - college students will be involved in a variety of educational and fund raising ac tivities geared toward increasing public awareness of multiple sclerosis, and establishing long-term fund raising support of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society’s efforts aimed at finding the cau.se and cure for MS. One of the major exciting events is ROCK ALIKE, a national lip synch competition in which students impersonate their favorite rock stars to raise money for MS. The Conte.st culminates in the Na tional Finals which are broadcast live from Spring Break at Daytona Beach on MTV: Music Television. Last year, the winning act came from the University of Alabama/- Tuscaloosa. Five members from Sigma Delta Tau Sorority performed Guns and Roses’ popular song, “Welcome to the Jungle.” While the real incentive of the SAMS Program is 10 help the 250,000 Americans who have multiple sclerosis, prizes and recognition aw;u"ds arc given to the top campuses and chairpeopie. This year, the top fund raising cam pus will receive an on-campus “Vic tory” Bash sponsored by MTV. Since 1985, SAMS has grown from 12 c;unpuscs to over 2(X), in volving thousands of .students across the counU’y. SAMS has also received the enthusiastic endorse ment of major corporations such as General Fotxl.s/Maxwell House Cof fee, The Games Gang, Maxell, and Hertz, well-known celebrities in cluding Cyndi Lauper and Brooke Shields, and many national student organizations, including Sigma Pi and Theta Xi fraternities. This year, popuUu NBC weatherman Willard Scou will once again serve as Honorary National Chairperson of SAMS. Leading SAMS on campus af fords students the opportunity to develop skills in leadership, or ganization, and management, while gaining valuable business ex periences in areas such as market ing, public relations, and event planning. In addition, on many cam puses .students can earn Intem.ship credit for participating in the program. Another component of the program is tlic “Corporate Can didates” program, which will offer the lop SAIVIS chairpeopie the op portunity to have tlieir resumes reviewed by major corporations with an eye low;ird creating sound business contact and referrals for fu ture employment. “We’re very proud that college students have adopted SAMS as their own per.sonal cause, and in doing so are helping our efforts to eradicate multiple sclerosis as a major di.sabler of young adults,” ad ded Admiral Hanson.