Page 2 - CROSSROADS - October, 1974 Six Staffers Chosen For Abbey Faculty New faculty members at Belmont Abbey, left to right, are Dr. Anselm Min, George Windstrup, Frank Ardalolo, and Dr. Paul Snyder. Not present for the picture were Ms. Mary Schrelber and Dr. Bill Kirk. Education Brings Cash More education still means more household income, according to a 1973 Census Bureau survey. Reported in Finance .Facts, a monthly report on consumer behavior published by the National Consumer Finance Association, the survey reveals that the American household’s income was an average $12,157 in 1973. For those households headed by a breadwinner with four or more years of college, the mean income was $19,042, almost 57 percent more than that of all households. At the other end of the spectrum, the 12.4 per cent of the household heads with less than eight years of school completed has a mean income of $6,885 or 43 percent less than that of all households. The largest group of household heads was the 32.7 per cent who com pleted their high school educations. Their mean income was 2.9 percent above that of all households. CROSSROADS Acting Editor: Theresa Poteet Contributors: Rev. James Solari, Joe Coffey, Jr., Mrs. Mary Cook. Published bi-monthly by Belmont Abbey College, Belmont, North Carolina. Second class postage paid at Belmont, N.C. 28012. Revenue Up For '75 A 10 percent boost in total enrollment at Belmont Abbey College is primarily responsible for an estimated 24 percent increase in total revenue for the 1974-75 academic year, compared to 1973-74. J.P. Smith, Treasurer and Business Manager, sup plemented this very brief analysis of the Abbey’s new operating budget with the comment that the great majority of this additional revenue is already being expended to improve and expand the curriculum. Here are the budget figures for the 1974-75 school year: RECEIPTS Educational & General Tuition $891,625.00 Fees 65,427.50 Endowment Income 20,000.00 Contributions: So. Benedictine Soc. 150,000.00 Other 277,500.00 Gov’t Appropriations: N.C. State 45,000.00 Federal 4,235.00 Other Sources 122.560.00 Total Educational & General $1,576,347.50 Auxiliaries Residence Halls Food Service Book Store Total Auxiliaries Total Receipts DISBURSEMENTS Educational & General Instructional Library Student Services Plant Operation General Administration Staff Benefits General Institutional Student Aid Athletics Total Educational & General Auxiliaries Residence Halls Food Service Book Store Total Auxiliaries Total Disbursements $181,680.00 288,000.00 68,000.00 $537.680.00 $2,114,027.50 $436,807.38 94.085.00 208.255.50 228,970.80 118.998.50 92,117.82 174.554.00 134.516.00 77.158.00 $1,565,463.00 $246,172.76 234,841.88 65,322.28 $546,336.92 $2,111,799.92 Belmont Abbey welcomed six new faculty members to its staff for the fall semester. Dr. Bill M. Kirk, currently an associate professor in the depart ment of economics and business, came to Belmont Abbey from Texas A&M University, where he was an assistant professor in industrial engineering. Prior to this position. Dr. Kirk had been a research assistant and associate in the engineering depart ment of the university. The Oklahoma native earned his doctorate in industrial engineering at Texas A&M, following six years as plant manager for C.A. Armco Venezolana in Valencia, Venezuela. Dr. Kirk and his wife, the former Alta Faye Moehlman, have two children. Dr. Paul Snyder has assumed the chair of the sociology department at the Abbey, after ex tensive professional experience on the faculties of numerous colleges and universities, several with programs abroad. He was born in the coal mining area of Penn sylvania and after ser ving in the U.S. Air Force, received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in social science at Florida State University. After earning his doctorate at the University of Florida, Dr. Snyder lectured in sociology, for the University of Maryland, at U.S. military bases in Asia. He also took part in similar programs on military installations in Europe for California Educational Services, which combined the extension programs of several small colleges in Southern California. Dr. Snyder has published a number of articles in educational journals and is listed in American Men of Science. Serving as assistant professor of philosophy is Dr. Anselm Min, a native of Seoul, Korea, who earned his doctorate in philosophy earlier this year at Fordham University, where he was a teaching fellow. Dr. Min was awarded his bachelor’s degree in philosophy and his master’s degree in classic philosophy from St. Louis University, before becoming an in structor at Sogang University in Seoul, Korea for three years. He has contributed several articles to in ternational philosophical journals and is co-author of a book on Korean Catholicism. Dr. Min and his wife, Soonja Lee, have two children, Paul, three, and Sophia, one month. Ms. Mary Schreiber of Mobile, Ala. has joined the Abbey faculty as a guest lecturer in biology, while completing work on her doctorate in zoology from Auburn University. She earned her bachelor’s degree magna cum laude in biology from St. Bernard College in St. Bernard, Ala. Ms. Schreiber spent the summer of 1972 as a high school biology teacher for Project Opportunity in Mobile, Ala. before at tending Auburn, where she was a graduate teacher’s assistant. George Winstrup, a native of Chicago, 111., is the newest member of the political science department. He was an instructor of political science at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. after graduating from Princeton with a master’s degree in political science. He received his B.A. from the University of Chicago. Frank Ardaiolo holds the position of lecturer in the political science department, in addition to serving as director of residence life under the dean of students. In the latter capacity, he is responsible for the newly organized Learning- Living Program for resident students. Prior to his position at the Abbey, Ardaiolo was an assistant residence hall coordinator at In diana University, where he earned a M.S. in college student personnel administration. He expects to obtain his master’s degree in political science and African studies from Indiana this year. Ardaiolo was born in Brooklyn, N.Y. He lived in Europe for six years and in Africa for eight years before attending Assumption College in Worcester, Mass., where he earned his B.A. in foreign affairs. He was the recipient of a national defense foreign language and area study graduate fellowship in 1970.