4The Daily Tar HeelThursday, January 31, 1985
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5
DTH Charles Ledford
Professor John Adams of the UNC School of Journalism, who will retire from teaching in June.
Adams to retire with fond memories
:.i
By LORI THOMAS
Staff Writer i ll
With a warm nostalgic smile,-' he
pulled from his top desk drawer the
yellowed, stapled pages of the grade
reports of his first class at UNC in fall
1958. Going down the roll, almost every
name evoked a memory: "I saw him
last summer. She was a foreign
exchange student, and he's at National
Geographic now."
After 27 years in the UNC School
of Journalism, Professor John B.
"Jack" Adams will soon add to the
drawer the grade reports of his last UNC
class.
"He could make the issues come
alive," said former student Stephanie
Bass. "I always enjoyed and learned, but
he wouldn't just give a good grade."
Adams will retire on June 30 at age
65. A dinner will be given in his honor
at the Carolina Inn on March 30.
Adams came to the Journalism
School in 1958 as an associate professor
with special interests in international
communication and media research
methods, and was dean of the school
from 1969 to 1979. Although mass
communication law now is his specialty
field, he admitted he never took a course
in press law before coming to the school.
In 1984, Adams received the coveted
Tanner Award for teaching excellence;
colleagues and students were not
surprised.
Dr. William Chamberlin, who also
specializes in mass communication-law
in theschootjsaid
that were important to every teacher.
"When you see a model, you tend
to emulate it," he said. "In Jack Adams'
CLASS -GIFT
19 8 4
IVV OUR-SPIR1T
lS-SHOWINfl.NOW
"This year's '85 Senior Class Gift
is a record-setting pledge, the
largest class gift in North Carol
ina's history. I'm glad to be a part
of the Senior Class Gift
Campaign."
Thomas Carpenter
University Partv
case, his concern for students' welfare
and interests and his being fair are
obvious. That can't help but rub off."
Bass, executive director of the N.C.
Center on Crime and Punishment, said
Adams' firm but gentle manner, was
effective, since graduates of the school
rarely run into problems with libel suits.
Kathy McAdams,' another former
student and present part-time faculty
member of the school, said Adams
"demands excellence, but he's not
cranky about it." Adams merely would
take his familiar stork stance, standing
with one foot pulled up on the table,
then softly clear his throat, and class
would begin, she said.
Adams said he maintained stability
through troubled times and guided the
gradual growth and development of the
school during his 10 years as dean; a
time, he said, in which many changes
occurred in education and the way
education was perceived.
He cited the shootings at Kent State
and the general unrest on college
campuses around the country while he
was dean, saying he felt it was important
that the school did not get distracted
from what had been a successful
approach to journalism education.
"The students felt proud of the tough
curriculum," Adams said. One student
in an advisory position to the faculty
wanted to raise the passing score from
70 to 80 on the school's then-new
spelling and grammar test.
Mildred Stout, administrative man-ager-whUe-Adamswas
lean,worked-
closely with him and understood his
gentle respect.
"You knew that he assumed you
would do your best," Stout said, "and
he was the kind of man you wanted
to do your best for."
Adams has had an almost inspira
tional influence on the entire school,
said Dean Richard R. Cole. "Jack
Adams will leave a legacy of fairness
and compassion and true excellence in
teaching."
Despite his talent and devotion to
teaching, Adams originally never
intended to teach.
A New Jersey native, Adams was the
European sales manager for a New
Jersey glass company following his
service in World War II. In 1947, he
married Polly-Betts Goslin.
In 1951, they moved to California,
where he convinced professors to let him
enroll at the University of California
at Berkeley, although it was three weeks
into the semester. He earned his
bachelor's degree in communication
and public policy and graduated with
highest honors and membership in Phi
Beta Kappa in 1953.
By 1957, Adams had obtained his
master's and doctoral degrees at the
University of Wisconsin.
Only after being rejected for a job
with the U.S. Information Agency, for
whom he later would be asked to
consult, did Adams take a teaching
position at Michigan State University.
The next year he came to Chapel Hill,
strengthening his interest in teaching
and press law.
Adams has held executive positions
with the Association for Education in
Journalism and has been a member of
the editorial boards of Journalism
Quarterly and the International Com
munication Bulletin. In 1975, he served
as president of the American Associ
ation of Schools and Departments of
Journalism.
Adams also is a member of the Order
of the Golden Fleece, the University's
highest service honorary, and one of the
few honorary members of the N.C.
Press Association.
Adams' publications include some 20
journal articles, 21 papers, six mono
graphs, a book chapter and 25 book
Adams and his wife have two child
ren: Mark, 22, who is studying toward
his doctoral degree in biochemistry at
the University of Michigan; and Jane,
20, a junior at Guilford College near
Greensboro.
Adams said he was looking forward
to traveling and spending more time
with his family after retiring. He said
he wanted more flexibility in his life by
not having to plan around school
breaks.
What he will miss most, he said, is
the interaction with students, interac
tion that stands as a tribute to his
success as a teacher and that, indeed,
takes him back to students in the fall
of 1958.
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