The audience gets to
review the Jackson
Browne concert...
...Page 5
Litter on dorm patios
may lead to tighter
party restrictions ...
...Page 2
Local bands enter
tain students while
local pub picks up the
tab ...
...Page 4
The Student Newspaper of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Volume XIV, Number 9
Charlotte, North Carolina
TUesday, September 2, 1980
Search On For Administrators
By Frank Cox
Carolina Journal Staff Writer
A search is being conducted to find
applicants to fill two vacant positions
of Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs
and Vice Chancellor of Acadenic Af
fairs.
The positions were vacated when
Dr. Douglas M. Orr, formerly Vice-
Chancellor for Student Affairs was
named Vice Chancellor of the new
division of Research and Public Ser
vice, and Dr. Phillip E. Hildreth,
former Vice Chancellor of Academic
Affairs was returned to a teaching
position as Professor of Biology.
The search to fill these positions is
being conducted by committees made
up of faculty, staff and students ap
pointed by the Chancellor.
The search committee for the Vice
Chancellor for Student Affairs posi
tion is headed by Dr. Harvey Mur
phy, Chairman of Health and P.E. Dr.
Murphy says that the committee is
just now getting started on its search
for applicants. At the present they
are awaiting applications responding
to ads place in the Chronicle of
Higher Education.
The applications will be reviewed
and the committee will make their
reccomendations to the Chancellors
Office. The Chancellor will then make
his recomendatons to the Board of
Govenors of the University of North
Carolina, who have the final word in
the hiring process.
Dr. Murphy said it will probably be
July 1 before a replacement would be
able to take office after one has been
selected. This is due to both the long
application and hiring process and
the fact that most professional people
will be under contract to their present
employers until the end of the fiscal
year.
Until the replacement is found and
able to take office, Chuck Lynch, dean
of students, will be serving as acting
V1 ce chancellor for student affairs.
The search for a new Vice
Chancellor of Academic Affairs is be-
carried out in the same way as the
one for student affairs. Dr. Joseph
. Pence, chairman of the creative arts
18 chairperson of the committee.
Continued on Page 3
Staff Photo By Rick Monroe
Student Legislator, Linda Russell sips on a cold one during last Thursday’s “Happy Hour.”
The Miner’s Daughter and the Student Association sponsored the event which featured three
bands and 14 kegs.
UNCC CPA’s Best
In UNC System
By Teresa Skipper
Carolina Journal News Editor
The College of Business Ad
ministration received news this
month that UNCC students scored
higher on last May’s Certified Public
Accounting (CPA) exam than any of
the other schools in the UNC system.
“It’s a very fine record for the
students. The students have done
well before but this is the best yet,”
said Accounting Department Chair
Thomas Turner.
The students passed 52% of the
parts attempted on the exam, the na
tional average is reported to be 15%.
Besides scoring high as a group on
the examination, UNCC students
David Scott Wilkerson and Michael
H. Lippman scored one and two
respectively in individual scoring.
Although UNCC scored higher
than , any other school in the UNC
system, Wake Forest scored the
highest of all of the schools in the
state with 65.3%.
Business
Offers
Uptown
Courses
UNCC is expanding its educational
opportunities in the uptown
Charlotte area by offering 12 short
courses and seminars during the fall
semester.
Taught by faculty from the College
of Business Administration, the
courses offered this fall are scheduled
during the noon hour or just after
work for the convenience of
employees in the uptown area.
Courses are scheduled at three dif
ferent locations, the Mutal Savings
and Loan Building, the Southern Na
tional Bank Building and the Char
lotte-Mecklenburg Staff Develop
ment Center.
Heading the course offerings is a
series on organizational behavior
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Room 514 of
the Mutual Savings and Loan Build
ing at 300 S. Tryon St. The courses
are $75 each or $250 for all four.
Course titles and dates are: Leader
ship Style and Decision-Making
(Mondays, Sept. 8-22), Developing
Your Management Career (Mondays,
Sept. 29 to Oct. 13), Conflict Manage
ment in Organizations (Tuesdays,
Oct. 21 to Nov. 4) and Effective
Management of Group and In
tergroup Relations (Tuesdays, Nov.
11-25).
Other courses offered at the Mutual
Building are: Use of Marketing
Research in the Small Business
(Tuesdays, Sept. 9 to Oct. 14), Market
Strategy for the Small Business Man
ager (Mondays, Oct. 20 to Nov. 24),
Financial Management for the Non
Financial Manager (Wednesdays,
Sept. 10 to Dec. 3), and Strategic
Planning (Thursdays, Sept. 11 to Dec.
Continued on Page 3