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'•'-.i*V H
Jm
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�Vol. *
117/ -7&
?/a y/7/,
?- / 2 - 7/
6 bounties To Pafficipate
In Safety Seminar Here
Six counties will participate
in a one-day s e m i n a r ,
"Implementation of the Occupational Safety & Health
Act of 1970" conducted by
state and federal officials
from the Department of Labor
Wednesday, Sept. 22, in the
Exposition Center of the
Downtowner Motor Inn.
Discussion topics include an
explanation of the Safety Act,
e n f 0 r cement procedures,
record-keeping, and state administration of this law.
Program speakers will include Frank Crane, N. C.
Commisioner of Labor, Billy
Creel, S a f e t y Coordinator,
N.C. Department of Labor,
and Quinton Haskin, Area
Safety and Compliance Officer, U. S. Department of Labor.
Sponsored by the Fayetteville Area of Commerce and
Fayetteville
Technical
Institute, enrollment fee is $4
per person, which includes the
luncheon
and s p e c i a l
materials. Checks should be
made payable to the "Fayetteville Area Chamber of Commerce."
M a nagement executives,
supervisory personnel from
business and industry in this
area are urged to attend.
A list of personnel from
each participating company
and a check covering the
registration fee should be
mailed to Warr&i H. Fischer,
Industrial S e r v i c e s Commitfcfe, Fayetteville A r e a
Chamber of Commerce, P.O.
Box 9, Fayetteville.
For further!... information,
contact Director- -of. E v a s i o n
at Fayetteville T | ck H-rea' 1
Institute at 484-412??^
Joel Andrews
(Photo by Corbin)
FT I Musician-ln-Residence
Harpist Joel Andrews, the
newly appointed musician-inresidence a t Fayetteville
Technical Institute was introduced to the faculty, staff
and students at an informal
concert in the Paul H.
Thompson lounge on Monday.
Sponsored by the N.C. Arts
Council and the Department
of Community Colleges, Joel
Andrews is also scheduled to
play at the formal library
dedication ceremony on. Sunday.
A gifted and personable
man, Andrews likes to play
for "real" situations where
people need music such as
weddings and funerals.
A master harpist a n d
former student of the great
Carlos Salzedo, A n d r e w s
assumes a unique position as
musician-in-residence among
United States institute, college
and university campuses.
Formerly at North Carolina
State University., he has
recently composed new music
for his performances. He sees
his position at FTI as a
"rare" opportunity to play for
young^.people who may not
have heard his kind of music.
"Jit's like a tour, already set
Jfor you,"'he said.
^Andrews, brings to the harp
dynamic "qualities and a vitality which is not usually
I associated"'with this delicate,
almost-feminine instrument^
He is well-known for the 30
new,effects, or sounds, he has
disco^r.ed for the harp. Fif-
w
teen of these appear in his
original "Sea Suite" which he
will perform at his first concert.
Andrews
Is also
an
organizer. In 1960, he directed
and conducted the first national harp festival at the
University of Texas with 50
h a r p i s t s participating, including his famous teacher,
Salzedo.
Andrews explained that his
•ability to play the harp in
such a vast number of different ways is attributable, to
the fact that he comes in
direct contact with the strings
of the instrument.
He noted that the harp is
one of the world's most ancient instruments, dating back
to about 6,000 B.C.
"But the interesting things is
that we can create new and
modern-Guilds on the harp.
Such as the sounds being used
by composers of electronic
music today," he said. "The
reason we can create so many
effects » that we still play
with our hands, and the instrument h a s n ' t
been
mechanized."
He continued, "We can
create sounds so complex that
it would take an electronics
studio a long time to synthesize them. In this area, I
feel that we humans are still
ahead of the computers."
The noted musician has
always been a student of
"psychic and s p i r i t u a l
things," and he is an amateur
palmist. He has lectured to
spiritual groups on t h e
spiritual meanings of music.
His uncle is the well-known
astrologer, Gavin Arthur, of
San Francisco,
Andrews-, and his wife Ann
have ...two ^children, Myra, 8
and Michael. 6. His hobbies
are $£w — photography and
chess"—: because, as He stated,
'•'I-df §§-many different things
wifh^hi'usie. that -I. don't need
many hobbies."
-&
THREE N£JV courses
have been added to the 182
other courses being offered
during the winter quarter at
Fayettevaie Technical Institute, i
For the first time, FTI will
offer creative writing, mythology and mc4^hk drama^
will be offered. J g |
Registratiqn-^fr'be "held
in LaEj^effe Hall on cam-.PHS^rflm 6 to 8 p;m. on
Wednesday and Thursday
land}: from 8:30 a.m. until
Inooh on Friday.
^ More- information can be
Rafted fram FTI.
i&SU&Z'
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�«§=»";?"*•*•:
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL jTSTITUTE
FTI Expects Record Enrollment
IFTI Has First Summer
fefhool Graduation
Fayetteville T e c h n i c a l
•titute's first s u m m e r
thool graduation ceremony
Jas held Friday in the Paul
Thompson Library. The 32
iates included twelveprogram students who
awarded diplomas in
leal nurse education and
Kg as well as those who
recwyed associate- degrees in
id science,
occasion also marked
Lpletion of the first coogram for F . T . I ,
students in civil engineering
ftogy. Under this curpupils attended FayTech for t h r e e
and spent o n e
Jjua<
in the field with an
qua'
al three quarters of
add
|m work following and
*lass
Ithree months on-theanc
job
v Gra king with h o n o r s
;with a' |de point average of
*3.5 o tetter, were Mrs.
Lugo, Mrs. Adrina
UValeri
M. Nicholson, Mrs. Betty Jean
Provost and Paul Sharpe.
Among those graduating
were: David Lee Brown, Dennis Ray Carter, Nell Lindsey
-Caldwell, Kathryn L u c i l l e
Canady, Diane Cox Carter,
Kristi Jo Carper, Donald
James Collier, Norma Ennever, Elaine Webb Ferrell,
Henry Wayne H a d d o c k ,
Catherine Grace Hubbard,
Neil Keith Raiding, Valeria
Ruth Lugo. Angus C a r l
Metzger, Henry M u l l e n ,
Marvin Wayne M e 1 v i n ,
Carolyn B u r k e McLaurin,
Mona Lisa McLaurin, Ervin
D. - Oakes, Julianne Parker,
Ac^iSa., Marie N i c h o l s o n ,
Henierf-Elaine Powers, Betty
Jean Provost, James Edgar
Peck, James Stephen Pone,
James B. Pittman, Johnny
Raynor, Phillip C r e n s h a w
Smith,' Philip Dean Stephan,
Paul Brantley Sharpe, Jr.,
Joene Martha Timmons and
Lenora Topp.
A record enrollment of 1,000 September 9th at 8:00 a.m.
students in the s daytime curA get-acquainted dance for
ricula is SdSpifcted at Fay- all students will be hiffl Tuesetteville Tachlfcal Institute day evening at the hew stuthis fall, according to FTI dent lounge sponsored by the
President, Howard Boudreau.
Student Government AssociaPre-registra&on and orien- tion.
tation for freshmen will be
Fayetteville T e c h n i c a l
held Tuesdai^pikJJollowed . Institute offers a variety of
by a cookdif A i t h e camjnis daytime programs including
for the ne\« Students. Wed- 14 separate associate degree
nesday marks the completion curricula and eight diploma
of freshmen registr'fKoaT^jg r, programs.
second^ear sj;u(tents win also ' Another first at FTI this fall
re^ortBihe campus that day. jpill be 10 evening courses carThe | | s t " class for the '"falf rying college credo:toward an
quav^y^iTIl be Thursday, associate degree in general
education. RegistiStJon oluthese evening cla"«&^wilFbe
held on Tuesday and1 Wednesday Sept. 7 and>#Horn 7 to
9 p.m. in the administration
building at F a y e t t e v i l l e
Technical Institute.
4)FF-CAMPUS E\^§4G%
CLASSES FOR ADIpFSp^
REGISTRATION:
Will be held September 9,1971 between the hours of
7:00 to 9:30 P.M. at the schools listed below _ NOT
Fayetteville Technical Institute. REGISTRATION WILL
BE ON A FIRST-COME JIRST-SERVE BASIS.
n M n
7-00PM ?oq.Sn p 1 ? dbeginningd September13,1971.Evenings froml
° oay a n d y W s d a y
7.00 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. h °
CAPE FEAR
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8)
70
High School Diploma PMlfam
(Grades 9-12)
*
70
Home Sewing
35
Typing
,
•
35
Bookkeeping
35
Small Gasoline Engines
35
W J. S. SPIVEY
•
JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOI
FEEDBACK
REGISTRATION for general education
^classes on the college level lor credit at
Fa\^teville Technical Institute will be held
Scpt.M from 7 to 9 p.m.' -
f %m
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8).... 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
.73L
70
Home Sewing
;||JL
35
Typing
^ ? .
35
Bookkeeping
Jf
35
MASSEY HILL
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOI
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8).... 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
;
35
Typing
35
Bookkeeping
1
35
^
REID ROSS
fl^SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject \ ^
Hours in Course
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-T2)
M,
70
Typing
Bookkeeping
Home Sewing
"tiuflfc-35
' ? . | g l f § | S t 35
. H
3 ^
SEVENTY-FII||T
p
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL /
Subject
Typing
Hours in Course
,.v.....
.kjjSS£
35
Bpp^kee^\',Wltp^| I&...35
Home Sewing.. / i f l ^ f f c ? ? ? " ? ^ ? . . . 35
Cake Decorating
20
HONOR STUDENTS: Three F.T:T.j
students with a grade point average of
or better, in the practical nurse
-jcation curriculum w e r F awarded
honors a t graduation Friday. Upon
successfully writing the State Board
Nursing" Examination, they
will
become licensed practical nurses.
F r o m left, to right ,they a r e : Mrs.
Valeria R. Lugo, Mrs. Betty Jean
Provost,
and Mrs.* ^ n n a
M.
Nicholson.
S«**t.X /? 7 '
3
Director,
General Adult Education
Telephone 484-4121 Ext. 29
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & S c W ) ^
• * -
NEW STUDENTS - A welcoming
tea was held in the Paul H. Thompson
Library Student Lounge S u n d a y
August 29th for the i n c o m i n g
freshmen in the Associate Degree
Nursing Curriculum a t F . T. I
Assisted by the members of the ADN
faculty and their second
year
classmates, the Executive Board of
the Student Nurses' A s s o c i a t i o n
For further details, contact:
received forty young women and two
^ T w h o W l 1 1 comprise the first year
ADN class. Officers of the Association
who make up the executive board a r e
pictured left to right: Linda Bell,
Reporter; Barbara Emery, S e c r e t a r y 3
Ken Ledford, Vice President; 'Kendall
Jamison, President and Dot Copas,
Treasurer.
/7/fV^ll
-
AUGUST in Fayetteville
was on the'cool and dry side
but only slightly.
Average temperature was
77.3 degrees and total rainfall
was 4.37 inches. These figures'
compare with l o n g - t e r m
averages of 78.2 degrees and
5.83 inches.
Highest temperature during
the month was 93 degrees on
the 15th and 16th. The lowest
was 63 on the 29th. The coolest
day had a high of 74 and the
warmest night 73.
There were only nine days
on which the thermometer
reached 90 degrees, compared
With an average of il days
during the month in which the
! temperature reached 90 or
better.
A FOUR DAY faculty
workshop is being held this
week at F a y e t t e v i l l e
Technical Institute. Seventy
instructors are participating
in the program.
Three new curricula—dental I
hygiene, general education, |
and electrical maintenance
and installation-^will b$ offered this fall, j
Registration for the general
education program wjft be
i Tuesday and Wetf
-~t week from 7-9
1 i> 10 separate _
1
" ]coUege credits
to high 3
FTrthis fall.
gnni
name and address of your
employers during the past 12
months.
If
su rv
you are filing for
, ivor's benefits, needed is
the deceased worker's social
security
number;
your
number; the deceased's birth
certificate; military discharge
papers; death certificate; and
a copy of your marriage
certificate if you are the
widow.
The above are not an all-inclusive list of proofs that may
be required. Additional information can be obtained at
the Social Security Office
here, telephone 483-2661.
�FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITitE
OFF-CAMPUS EVENING
CLASSES FOR ADULTS
REGISTRATION:
Am^mitmf^
Will be held September 9,1971 between the hours of
7:00 to 9:30 P.M. at the schools listed below
NOT
FayettevilleTechnical Institute. REGISTRATION WILL
BE ON A FIRST-COME, FIRST-SERVE BASIS.
Classes will be held on Monday and Thursday Evenings froml
7:00 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. beginning September 13, 1971.
CAPE FEAR
m SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic-Education (Grades 1-8) 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
35
Typing
•
35
Bookkeeping
35
Small Gasoline Engines
35
J. S. SPIVEY
I
JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8) 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
35
Typing
35
Bookkeeping
35
THE F A Y ETTEVILLE
Metropolitan Housing Authority met today to, among other
things, swear in one of its
commissioners to a new fiveyear term and to elect a new
chairman and vice-chairman.
Dr. W. T. Holland Sr. was
sworn in by Mayor Jack Lee
to a new term. The election of
new officers followed.
MASSEY HILL
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8) 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
;
35
Typing
35
Bookkeeping
35
THIRTEEN residents of
Cumberland County w i l l
participate in the 25th annual
convention of the N o r t h
Carolina State E m p l o y e s
Association i n Wilmington
Sept. 17-18.
The delegation representing
12 southeastern
North
Carolina counties will be led
by L. W. Ezzell of Fayetteville, chairman of Area 4 of
the association. Ezzell works
with the Motor V e h i c l e s
Department.
Vice-chairman of the 12county area is M. D. Varnedoe
of Fayetteville, an employe of
the Revenue Department.
An estimated 400 state
employes from throughout
North Carolina are expected
to attend the convention. Total
membership/of the association
is l?,200;p
Besid^&i^ I i | Cumberland
Coun^f^^&:femployes, Area 4
representation will include
REID ROSS
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Typing
35
Bookkeeping
35
Home Sewing
35
SEVENTY-FIRST
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Typing
Bookkeeping
Home Sewing
Cake Decorating
For further details, contact:
others from Lumberton and
Pembroke.
JAMES H. PERKINS, of
Perkins Motors Inc. of Fayetteville, has been reappointed
Cumberland County A r e a
Chairman for the N. C.
Automobile Dealers Association.
Perkins will act as liaisons
officer between new car and :
truck dealers in this area and
NCADA and the National
Automobile Dealers Association.
He will be responsible for.
promoting the various programs and activities 0 f
NCADA and NADA and will
conduct a c o u n t y w i d e
membership campaign for
both organisations this fall.
IN M A Y , Fayetteville
Technical Institute's h i g h
school adult
program
graduated the largest class of
men and women in North
Carolina receiving their high
school diplomas.
Registration for the new faU
off-campus evening classes
for adults will be held tonight
from 7-9:30 p.m. at Cape
Fear, Massey Hill, Reid Ross
and 71st high schools, and J.
S. Spivey Junior High School.
For further information,
contact FTI.
qjf/j/
'immli^mmmmmmmmmmmm
Hours in Course
35
•
.
35
35
20
Director,
General Adult Education
#&£
Telephone 484-4121 Ext. 29
FayettevilleTechnical Institute Night Schoo|
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools.
Registration to be held a t Fayetteville Technical Institute f r o m 7:00-9:00 P.M.
O n September 13
1
-J&i
Enrollment w i l l be on a first-come, first-served basis
EVENING EXTENSION CLASSES
EVENING EXTENSION CLASSES
HELD AT
HELD AT
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Tuesday & Thursday Evenings
Monday & Wednesday Evenings
(Starting Date . . . September 21,1971)
(Starting D a t e . . . September 20,1971)
V/K
SUBJECT
INSTRUCTOR
D r a f t i n g l (ARCH) .
N u r s e ' s A i d e '.
Bell
McDonald
75
75
Nurse's A i d e
Pluimer
Interior Decorating (Wed. Only) . . . Butler
P o w d e r Puff M e c h ( F e m a l e s o n l y ) . . S t o c k t o n
75
36
75
Machine Operators
Stone
75
Welding
J . Christie
Comb
A i r Conditioning I
N a t i o n a l Electric C o d e
A u t o m a t i c Transmissions
H a n d y m a n S k i l l s For F e m a l e s . . .
Sharpe
L. C a r r
F. M c D o n a l d
. Gravley
75
75
75
75
36
Jewelry Handcraft
ABC Shorthand
Hatchell
J . Jones
30
75
Shorthand I
Spelling & V o c a b u l a r y
S. E d w a r d s
L. S m i t h
75
75
Rapid Reading
Electrical H o m e W i r i n g I
Insurance A d j u s t i n g
C. S t a f f o r d
J . Barefoot
Cannon
75
75
75
Law for Laymen
Supervisory Development
Personality Development
Hall
Oldham
Crane
75
75
75
Real Estate
•
Drafting
INSTRUCTOR.
I (MECH)
Shorthand
E. S m i t h
Refresher
Whittington
Nurse's A i d e . . . . . . . . . . . .
Bremer
Nurse's A i d e
Currie
HOURS
75
75
75
7 5
M e d i c a l T e r m i n o l o g y (Tues. o n l y ) . . . H o g g
3 9
Early A m e r i c a n A r t
4 5
. . J . James
Small G a s Engines
Faircloth
7 5
Welding Comb
Butler
7 5
Oil
Hall
7 5
Britt
7 5
Burner Service
Shorthand
I
English f o r Foreign Born . . . . . . .
Leinhard
75
Hotel-Motel M a n a g e m e n t
Wallace
7 5
Blueprint T r e a d i n g (Bldg. Trades) . . Hancock
7 5
Art I & II
36
T. Moore
: Penmanship . . . • • ; , . . • • • • •
Cohrort
4 5
•Typing
Davidson
7.5
Cooper
7 5
I
• Typing I
Business M a c h i n e s
Bookkeeping
I
Wheeler
\
Brown
75
7 5
Perkins
. . . . . .
75
C o m p u t o r L a n g u a g e (Cobol) . . . . . . R. C h r i s t i e
Corby
Income Tax
Typing I . . . . .
Typing I .
Business M a c h i n e s
Bookkeeping I . . . . . .
K e y Punch O p e r a t o r
SUBJECT
HOURS
36
Engine Tune U p (Males)
75
75
75
75
60
Starting on Monday, November 1, 1971 a 30-hour
class in Christmas Indoor Decorative Art. — Instr:
Mrs. Hatchell
Simpson
Singletary
.Sinclair
.Jarvies
T. C h r i s t i e
Cake Decorating (Wed. only) . . . .Balch
J. Cade
75
7 5
20
W H O M A Y ATTEND: Any adult 18 years of age or older not enrolled in day school, or a high
school graduate of any age.
COST: AH extension classes are free. Text books may be purchased in the F.T.I, bookstore.
CANCELLATION OF CLASSES: T n e Institute reserves the right to cancel any class prior to
starting date if enrollment is not large1 enough to warrant such course, or if a qualified
instructor is not available.
CERTIFICATES: students-attending 80% of class hours will receive a certificate of participation
issued by FayettevilleTechnical Institute.
HOURS: classes will beheld from 7:00 to 10:00 P.M. on Mondays-and Wednesdays, and Tuesday
and Thursdays. Length of class depends on subject and type of course offered and will last
from two to three hours, two nights a week.
FOR FURTHER I N F O R M A T I O N DIAL 4 8 4 - 4 1 2 1
t u T S house 32 offices f U t t f a d S S v l ' S
t e uhn . C . 5 S S
hh i i g
& ' **•>•»* --^0
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•
�-*fc.. 4t-JlV»t
To Aid Community; Colleges
Musicians In Resftfence Named
SOUTHERN PINES ":jp?,
Devotees of classical music
and the program chairmen of
countless organizations who
seek talented performers for
cultural
entertainment,
church and school groups interested in music activities —
all will welcome the two
outstanding artists who will be
"Musicians in Residence" at
Sandhills Community College
this year.
Dr. Raymond A. Stone,
president of the college,and
Marion Rogers,chairman of
the department of music, have
announced that Joel Andrews,
nationally known harpist, and
Robert Guthrie,
famed
classical guitarist, are at
Sandhills under a new program sponsored by the North
Carolina Arts Council in
cooperation with the State
Department of Community
Colleges.
Sandhills will share the two
artists with two other schools
of the community college
system — guitarist Guthrie
with Richmond T e c h n i c a l
Institute in Hamlet, and
harpist Andrews with Fayetteville Technical Institute in
Fayetteville. The two musicians will not teach individuals or classes according
to Dr. Stone, but will be
available for concerts, lectures and demonstrations for
students of the college and
groups throughout the area
during the 1971-72 academic
year.- "For instance," Dr.
Stone-said, "if a history class
at "Sandhills is studying a
Special period, say t h e
pfaissance in Europe, Mr.
|£hrie or Mr. Andrews can
play music of that time."
•iJoel Andrews has been
musician in residence at N. C.
State University for the past
two years. The holder of three
degre^^SjKprize student of
the great Carolos Salzado and
Alice Chalifoux, he has been ,
praised by critics as a
"master h a r p i s t , ' ' "a
remarkable virtuoso" and for
his "superb technique and expressive playing". He is considered the most versatile
harpist in the country, having
composed, arranged a n d
performed music for solo
harp, harp e n s e m b l e s ,
dancers, poets, plays, radio
and television.
has combined study i n
California, Venezuela a n d
Canada, with a distinguished
-career on the concert stage,
radio and television. His
record album, ' ' R o b e r t
Guthrie — A guitar Recital"
has received rave reviews.
Mr. and Mrs. Guthrie have
one youngster.
Rogers says that the two
musicians in residence will
delight music lovers in the
area and will also emphasize
the importance of the departMrs. Andrews is t h e ment of music at the college.
daughter of philosopher Alan Sandhills provides two years
Watts and the couple has two of studies in voice and inchildren.
strumental music for men and
Guthrie is a graduate in women who desire to continue
music from the N o r t h at a senior institution for a
Carolina School of the Arts Bachelor of Music Degree.
and this past summer was Also, the college provides
with the School's summer music classes in the division
session in Siena, Italy. A of adult education, a n d
native of Texas, Guthrie welcomes the participation&rf
began playing the guitar when talented persons in the arasun
he was twelve years old and the Sandhills concert band and
for the past twelve years he chorus.
S^t^fthmCibl
MAJ. ROBERT L. Schroll,
Special Services Officer at Ft.
Bragg, was presented with a
special citation award by the
N. C. Recreation and Parks
Society during its annual conference at Asheville this week.
The award is the highest
professional recognition which
any recreation worker can
achieve based upon his. contributions to the field of
recreation.
Fayetteville
Institute.
Technica
Courses in effective communications, principles o f
supervision, c o n f e r e n c e
l e a d e r s h i p and work"
measurements will be offered
as a management development series.
Further details can be obtained by contacting the
director of extension education at FTI.
A NEW SECTION of the
North Carolina tax laws exempts $5,000 of valuation of
certain retired people frap ad
valoren taxes. The section
becomes effective Jan. 1.
t
The first $5,000 of the "appraised" value of a person's
residence is exempted from
taxes, provided the owner is
65 and retired, and his gross
disposable income does not exceed $3,500. If he is married,
the combined disposable income of both must not exceed
that figure.
*/'*/7,
County tax supervisor June
Goforth said the new law
becomes effective with the
listing of taxes next January.
It does not apply to the
present taxes now due for
1971.
A PROGRAM of continuing
education for supervisors and
managers will begin Oct. 4 at
14B
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER-.36HL9711
City Rose GarderT Work WProgressing After
In January of 19 7 1
groundbreaking took place at
the site of the Fayetteville
Rese Garden, located on the
notheast corner of the Fayetteville Technical Institute
campus.
This beautification endeavor
is a project of the Fayetteville
Beautiful Board and is cosponsored by the Fayetteville
Rose Society. Since its inception the Rose Garden has
become a community effort
with business and industry
donating some materials and
many volunteers d o n a t i n g
their time and talents to the
cause.
Mrs. Vance K. Knight Jr., a
member of the Fayetteville
Rose Society, designed the
garden which at its completion will feature approximately 35 varieties of
roses. All roses are being
donated by the Jackson and
Perkins Rose Company of"
Medford, Oregon.
The preparation of the site
began in January of 1971 with
the Street Department personnel, at the direction of Jimmy
Jones, s u p e r i n t e n d e n t
cultivating the soil to a depth
of three feet. One-hundred and
sixty loads of topsoil, all
donated by local building contractors, were brought .in to
raise the garden to the'desired
level for proper drainage.
Members of the Fayetteville
Rose Society, assisted by
personnel from the Recreation
"Id Parks Department, at the
ection of Bill Kendall,
director, volunteered t h e i r
Sef^ck
time and services in preparing
the beds and the actual planting of the first shipment of
240 roses in March of 1971.
The soil nutrients added were
p e a t moss superphosphate,
lime and fertilizers, some of
which were donated by local
businessmen. All fertilizer has
been donated by local industry.
Unfortunately, the Fayetteville Rose Garden has not
been without its problems. It
became apparent by mid-summer that problems existed in
the soil. The Rose Garden
Committee, working with Dr.
J. C. Wells, plant pathologist,
North Caaolina State University, A. L. H a t i f i e 1 d ,
agronomist, Soil T e s t i n g
Division, North Carolina State
Department of Agriculture,
and Bruce Woodard, county
extension agent, learned the
soil contained a high level of
zinc which was not revealed in
the testing which took place
prior to the planting. The only
solution was to remove the
roses in order to replace the
contaminated soil with fresh
soil. This was to be a t i m ^ - VISIT GARDEN — Mrs. Elliot Harris"
consuming process which in(left), president of the-fayetteville
volved bringing i n apRose Society, admires a blossom in the
proximately 70 more loads of FTI Rose Garden. Shown with her are
topsoil. Many hours of labor
were provided by the City,
"We will be readysfpr.that
Fayetteville
Technical
Institute s t u cfe n t s and second shipment of-foses in
maintenance staff and young the early spring," sa'id Mrs."
Harris, president of h e
men working on Saturdays. Fayetteville Rose Society,t and
When the grading of the new who with the help of Mrs.
soil is completed it will be Vance night and Mrs. Dan
treated for weed a n d Reaves, City BeKautiful coordinator, have Supervised all
nematode control.
the work in thf Fgfirden'area.
The evergreens /which will be
planted this .'fall will be
furnished by five local garden
clubs. The dogwaad trees will
be memorial gifts? as "are two
tree roses already planted in
the garden.
"Our Fayetteville R o s e
Garden will feature a fountain
in the center as its focal point
which will be surrounded by
beds of roses extending to the
corners where evargreens and
dogwood trees .v«ll[ltie planted." said Mrs.JWgliam C.
Miller Jr., chairman of -the
Fayetteville Beaufel Rjard.
"We expect to^wonr&Tfathis
gardei^)r severS^&M and
look^j^ward to efijoving the
fiuiiateour labor'^*-hiany
y e a ^ w come," she added.
Mrs. William Miller ( c e n t esj--) ,
chairman of • Fayetteville Beautiful
and Mrs. Vance Knight, whcpiesigned
the garden.
w^*."
�ii*3B@i€isPf
§P^>ff«fi£$€
MJUJJL
mi^idffthB CEfef
DEDICATION ceremonies
for the new Paul H.Thompson e
Library at F a y e t %$•%&} 1
Technical Institute'"1r ! ^ l l be
conducted Sunday at f'pjffi.
An open house wilF follow
the ceremony.
V
/-2.-V-
cu
7/
Paul H. Thompson Library
! Library
! Dedication
Set Sunday
Fayetteville Technical Institute's new Paul H. Thompson
Library will be dedicated Sunday at 2 p.m.
Terry Sanford, president of
Duke University and a former
North Carolina governor, will
deliver the dedication address.
A highlight of the ceremony
will be the unveiling of a
portrait of Thompson by his
daughters Ann, Cathy, Jane
and Louise. It' will be
presented by Mrs. Thompson.
Other dignitaries scheduled
to appear on the program are
State Sen. John T. Henley of
Hope Mills, FTI President
Howard Boudreau, Thornton
Rose, chairman of the FTI
board of trustees, the Rev.
Wayne Ham of S n y d e r
Memorial Baptist Church, and
harpist Joel Andrews, musiciaft-in-residence at FTI.
4i4awd/ tfoe>
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
™
Holds
I
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26th FROM 3 TO 6 P.Af
You are cordially invited to visit the classrooms, shops and labs in LaFayette Hall, Cumberland Hall and the new Paul H. Thompson Library
Following the ceremony, an
open house .will be held. The
public is invited.
4
CUMBERLAND COUNTY lunch and group pictures witn
RED CROSS will hold its 54t» . Lt. Gov. Pat Taylor.
annual meeting Tuesday, Oct.
Attending from the Fay19, at 8 p.m. at the chapter etteville Observer will be
headquarters, 807 C a r o l supervisors Grady Hales and
Street. -'
Bob Marsh and carriers Mike
Cain, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.
The meeting is being held to W. Cain of 3213 Boone Trail,
elect officers and b o a r d and Steven Cain, son of Mr.
m e t e r s for the coming year, and Mrs. Tom Cain of 114
taker for the meeting will Brookwood Ave.
[rles H. Lockwood Jr. of
Jville, national field
t e r for the Red Cross in / A REGISTERED NURSES
k North Carolina. The refresher course will b e
sponsored by Fayetteville
invited.
Technical Institute beginning
Oct. 18.
>}#WSPAPERBOYA D A3?
Classes will meet Monday
wilnllgcelebratedj^day in
through Friday at Cape Fear
RaleiffiV
This year s celebration will Valley Hospital from 9 a.m. to
include a tour of Raleigh,
Member, N. C. Department of Community Colleges
Accredited, Southern Association of Colleges & Schools.
? - * y- 7/
�The
Corfinn V
Fayetteville Observer
v c v n m i s\ Sunday Morning, Sept. 26, 1971
i v
IA
G^Z
W*&
ToTncDedication : ^J^Iv*7^f®i
Of The Paul H. ThompsonLibrary
At
" • • • ' : i :?-! 3 > . i .
M "
•#*-.**
*y i & . %-•.
£
FAYETTEVILLE
T^CHNICALM
tmmTUTEim
North Carolina lost one of her best and ablest citizens when
Paul H. Thompson died in May of 1968. More than a successful
businessman, he was truJy public-spirited and he made lasting
contributions to his community and his state.
Dedicated to education, he was chairman of the Board of
Trustees of Fayetteville Technical Institute and was president of
the State Association of Community Colleges.
Under his leadership, FTI became the first institute in North
Carolina to become accredited, making the school an even more
valuable asset to this city, region and state.
Thompson was a member of thS State Department of
Conservation and Development and the State Banking Commission. A longtime associate and friend of former Gov. Terry
Sanford, he served during the Sanford administration as National
Democratic Committeeman from North Carolina.
. A native of Anson County, he was educated in the Wadesboro
schools and graduated from the University of North Carolina.
Following service in the United States Navy in World War II, he
came to Fayetteville and entered the real estate business. He died
when he was 49 years old.
The Paul H. Thompson Library at Fayetteville Technical
Institute is a tribute to a man who was truly a friend of the school
and a distinguished citizen of the state.
PAUL H. THOMP80N
UMI.UJ.UHIV; i lan lutnt; new shelves.
�FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
4
MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
&
"CONTINUING EDUCASNIkFOR SUPERVlSSRS AND MANAGERS"
w/
V
Classes Begin . . . . . 7w>.
October 4 & Octobers, 1971
Classes Meet
Twice weekly at Fayetteville Technical Institute
Cost
No tuition. A $3.00 supply fee is due the first night of class.
COURSE SCHEDULE
Series A: 7:00-9:00 P.M., Monday & Wednesday,
48 Hours
Effective Communications
Effective Writing
Industrial Safety
Series C: 7:00-9:00 P.M., Tuesday & Thursday,
38 Hours
Conference Leadership
Instructor Training
Job Analysis
Series B: 8:30-10:30 A.M., Tuesday & Thursday,
Mornings, 42 Hours
Principles of Supervision
Series D: 7:00-9:00 P.M., Tuesday & Thursday,
48 Hours
Work MeasurementsJob Relations
Job Methods
GETTING READY — Brenda Brow
(left) an office nurse at the OB Gyn
Clinic, arid Marie Kelley, instructor in
the associate degree nursing program
at Fayetteville Technical Institute,
record some of the items that will be
To register and for additional information, phone Fayetteville
Technical institute. 484-4121, Extension 25
Member, N. C. Department of Community Colleges
Accredited, Southern Association of Colleges & Schools
offered at the 'Trash and Treasure'
sale to be held Saturday, October 16, at
Eutaw and Bordeaux Shopping Cenr'-£^
ters by the members of District fi4*-;%A
North Carolina State Nurses': ASSH*'' "*,
(Observer photo — Blount) / o/:,--
^ a m p J ^ j p k1$ | Q | ^ | f t i q n
Undoubtedly orie of the liifesf
examples of multiple' agency
cooperation in the Fayetteville
community in some time was the
recently completed project involving the training of 12 young
women in the field of day care.
Just listing the agencies which
participated in the training prog r a m tells a large part of the
s t o r y . Fayetteville Technical
Institute acted as coordinator for
the different groups, and provided an instructor for the
course; sponsors were
the
Division
of
Vocational
Rehabilitation, the Department
of Social Services, the Employment Security Commission and
the Association of Parents of the
Mentally Retarded; facilities for
practical, supervised experience
were provided by Mt. Sinai, John
Wesley, Fayetteville Day Care
and.the Retarded Children's day
care centers; and funding was
a r f a t j g a r U ^ j j ^ g h the Dormer
The program has at least
a ttra»W*y<, if not more. The
mimm/7/
children who a r e h e m g placed in
day care centers in growing
numbers need competent, loving
and well-trained supervisors, and
the evidence is that
the
graduates of the course have
these qualities. And the young
women themselves now have an
opportunity to b e ^ n meaningful
and productive /Careers which
would not have been available to
them otherwise.
An added benefit also was
pointed out by the sponsors of the
training. The day care course
graduates are qualified to care
for the elderly as well as the
young and thus also can be placed in nursing home positions.
All the agencies which made
the day care training program a
reality deserve to be commended. And if regard to Fayetteville Technical Institute's role
in the effort, it is hart another example of how the staters community college syatffifcft diversity is helping copewftjfbasic prorj
blems in North Carolina" a i r opposed to educational frills.
JEd
i -hoyI a /
New -Devices Increase Importance
Of C municating With Patieffs
Sophisticated new electronic
medical equipment
has
greatly increased the importance of a coordinated
therapeutic team to communicate with the patient and
his or her family.
That was the concensus of a
panel of five representatives
of various professional fields
during a three-hour discussion
Sunday at the Ft. Bragg Main
Post Officers Club.
An audience c o m p o s e d
primarily of area nurses attended the session on "The
Right To Pursue the Will To
Live and To Die" moderated
by Dr. Hubert Batten, director
of the Radiology Department
at Cape Fear Valley Hospital.
Panel participants were Dr.
Lynn Johnsen, i n t e r n a l
medicine physician at Cape
Fear Valley H o s p i t a l ;
Chaplain (Maj.) Lynn Jones
of Ft.
Bragg; Dr. Hans
Lowenbach, professor o f
psychiatry at Duke University
Medical Center in Durham;
George R. Hicks, chairman of
the Social Science Department
at Fayetteville T e c h n i c a l
Institute; and Ervin I. Baer,
Fayetteville attorney.
Dr. Johnsen described the
"electronic age" devices that
can keep the patient's vital
signs operating in heart and
artery illnesses which she said
were the leading cause of
death, followed by auto accidents. "It is never easy to
deal with a dying patient,"
she said. Dr. Johnsen said,
however, she felt duty bound
to inform the person of a
terminal illness, especially if
*
Hicks cited social changes
in the last 20 years that
remove relatives
from
virtually any contact with the
body of the deceased person.
He said, "I think we all have
a right to ask to die with
dignity. . . it's really our only
choice." Hicks said h e
couldn't directly answer the
question of a patient's right to
live but in a changing role of
death m e d i c a l authorities
must seek the attitude of the
patient and the next-of-kin.
Baer said a patiea| who is
physically and m . j l r j t a l l y
capable has a legal right to
know from his doctor his condition. If his condition makes
him incapable, his next of kin
should be informed, Baer said.
The a t t o r n e y said that a
person has a legal right to be
left alone and not receive
medical treatment as long as
the health of others is not affected.
During a question period,
Chaplain Jones said he had no
objection to therapeutic abortion since he believes thatJtte
begins at the birth of a baby.
Miss M. D. Grinevich, director of Cape Fear Valley
Hospital Nursing Services, introduced panel members^. $
The director of the N.C.
Department of Community
Colleges, speaking
here
Wednesday night, said the industrial training offered in the
state's community colleges
and technical institutes is "a
powerful a n d constructive
stimulant to economic expansion" in North Carolina.
I He stressed t h e Miaterdependence between ' industries and the technical institutes and communis colleges which helped the state's
economy evolve from an agricultural base to an agriculturJaUndustrial base.
Dr. Lowenbach said the
psychiatrist rarely treats a
dying patient but often has to
deal with relatives or friends
of a person who has died. He
said these patients go through
stages of anger and often concealed grieving that must be
brought into the open. The
psychiatrist e n g a g e s in
dialogue in which the patient
"can face himself and his problems," he said.
Dr. Duncan Owen presented
a patient, Richard M. Holland,
who has recovered after an
emergency situation in which
his heart stopped five times.
Holland said he had confidence in the medical team
treating him and added, "I
don't
remember b e i n g
afraid." He said that "when I
awoke", he was informed he
had suffered a heart attack.
Economic
Stimwant
Is Cited
Dr. Ben E. Fountain Jr.
spoke to a meeting of th^-fayetteville Area I n d u s t r i%A
Development Corporation at
Green Valley Country Club.
he is the wage earner in the
family.
Chaplain Jones said in
resent terminal illnesses in
hospitals, "people seemingly
have lost their right as human
beings. Death has now been
given over to the machine
age." He said "the thing th%t
scares everybody is eternal
death" but Christians believe
that "death is a vehicle to a
new life". The chaplain concluded, "From my end, a man
has a right to die."
INDUSTRY APPRECIATION — D
Den x1 uuncain
J ^ n g h t ) , director of the Department of Community
Colleges, addressed the Fayetteville Area Industrial
Development Corp. Wednesday night as part of the
Industry Appreciation Week observance here. With
Hifte- -n Jfcis
'"IE
' <M"
Fountain are (from left) James Thornton, president
of FAIDC; J. R. Hefner of Burlington Industries;
and John Bisco Jr. of Purolator. (Observer photo —
Dick Blount)
{ *
etteville Techjgcal Institute,
system of .;$§i|imuntty and participation is the best insaid Fountain.
ttevJHft Technical Instiiute.'^iivstern n,f '"Schools m ) w ear^ surance that our community
if^mn
technical
e
"Mll96l^f|Jjie%ear jfay- estabjlishe^tifc''serve the in- college system w&$tniinue to
etteville Technical Institute' dustjjLof North Carolina" and
and
it "will
opened) there were only tm "refrain those deposed from mature servethat industry conthe
and
m a n u f acturing industries their farms in a skill saleable tinue to
people of North Carolina,"
which employed as many as in the industrial manpower
said Fountain.
"Nowhere is the parallel 25 people."
market."
"It is you who have created
between industry and in"As o| April 1971, there
' 'Industrial trainiflg, ocstitution more conspicuous were eight industries in this cupational education. . .is and. the jobs and provided the inthan right here in Fay- category in Fsryetteville which shall, continue to be the heart < centive for people to come to
gave p e r ufa n e n t and of our community college Our institutions," he said.
etteville,"^|aid Fountain.
Fountain
claimed
th^.:
honorable employment t o system," said Fountain.
technical institutes were one
"There is no institution in more than 5,000 people," he
He also stressed the role in- of the state's major drawing
our entire system that is more said.
dustries must play in the com- cards in attracting industry in-v-;
sensitive to the needs of inFountain told the industrial munity college system.
to the state.
dustry than your own Fay- representatives that
the
"Your involvement a n d
In the ten years since the
technical schools opened in
North Carolina, industrial investment in the state ha&ia*;
creased 268 per cent, from
$235 million in I960 to $631
million in 1970, according to
Fountain.
"I submit that our institutions' have been a potent
stimulant to North Carolina's
industrial growth," said FountaJPuliatamL
I am'quite certain that the
impact OfNindustrlal training
on our indiisti-ial^growth""will
be ' ' eveh' •' greater in the
future,'*™ concluded.
�[2D
THE FAYETTEVBLLE OBSERVER
SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, 1971
MultiplelftgencyfEffort Trains Young Women As Day Care Workers
By JOANN MacMILLAN
Through an unprecedented
program of multiple agency
cooperation, 12 young women
graduated from a course in
day care training Friday
morning at the Mt. Sinai Baptist Church Center.
Acting as a catalyst for the
participating g r o u p s , Fayetteville Technical Institute
agreed to provide an instructor for the course while
the Division of Vocational
Rehabilitation Offices, t h e
Department
of
Social
Services, the Employment
Security Commission and the
Association of Parents of the
Mentally Retarded initiated
the pilot program. Facilities
for practical, supervised experience in working with
children were arranged at Mt.
Sinai, John Wesley, Fayetteville Day Care and the
Retarded Children's Day Care
Centers.
Ten of the 12 girls are
graduates of vocational education programs of Fayetteville
and Cumberland C o u n t y
School Systems. Two traveled
daily, from Clinton to participate in the course.
In "addition to the unique
c o m b i n a t i o n of agency
cooperation in setting up the
CARING IS A LIVING THING — FTI student
program, a second milestone
Dorothy Goings holds Crystal Lewis during story
Was-;set by the manner in
hour at Mt. Sinai Day Care Center. (Photo by
whic«! it was funded. Last
McLendon).
January, noting an article on
thtejfifipner Foundation, Mrs.
R a | g & Crook and Mrs.
There are eight Southeastern different from the program
Ja$lp||arnett of the Parents' states participating in Donner which FTI and the other agenag^BMjI&ecided to investigate projects in day care work, but cies have carried out in the
th&SJBpbility of such a pro- the training offered in
Fayetteville area. Funds from
graapfiiifjhis area. They re--., Cumberland County is the on- the Donner Foundation are usqu^s^f^a^involyement of the ly program of its type in the ed for purchasing equipment
D\|e|§k#r Foundation; in in- -| OTttitgct States. Union County and for program guidance.
ttoiSn'-ahd^eVelopnie.nt of a | 'jdihecP Cumberland in the
As director of the North
day care project m Fay- Donner Grant work, but Demonstration Day Care projetteville.
again, their training is quite ect under the Donner grant,
GRADUATION EXERCISE
FOR
CHILD CARE
Mrs. Gertha G i b s o n administers these funds. "Our
interest," she explained, "is to
upgrade and improve day
care programs in this area in
the quality of care at non-profit, federally-approved centers. These graduates are a
valuable asset to our community and can render muchneeded services in assisting
day care leadership."
Womack Army Hospital at Ft.
Bragg. In addition to the day
care course, she teaches
nurse's aide classes two evenings a week at Fayetteville
Tech.
Assisting with instruction
also was Mrs. Shirley Gunn
from the Department of Social
Services who has had special
training in day care work.
Course Guide
"There was no c o u r s e
"For the future, we should
outline for a program such as
like to keep in mind the need
this," said Mrs. Bremer, "so
for a male figure in day care
we took a guide from the colwork and involve some young
lege level courses in day care
men in a similar program.
assistants' curriculum and
Many of the children atwith the help of Mrs. Gibson,
tending the centers are doing
the. local director of Donner
so through special assistance
project, adapted it to the goals
due to the absence of the
for our group."
father in the home. As North
Classroom work emphasized
Carolina day care centers
personal g r o o n. i n g and.
move toward licensing, a
h y g i e n e , conversational
higher ratio of adult to child
abilities, coordination of home
in these programs will be reand student responsibilities,
quired," concluded M r s .
and the observance of child
Gibson.
development, health and safety. Nutrition and creative acThrough the cooperative eftivities for young children are
fort of the five agencies,
also a part of the 75 hours
many new job opportunities
spent in class, and 363 hours
have been opened to the 12
were devoted to practical exgraduates. Each of the girls
periences in the
four
has her own counselor from
participating day care centhe Vocational Rehabilitation
ters. The most important
Office who will continue to act
aspects of the course, acas her advisor until she is
cording to Mrs. Bremer, were
employed. Two of the dozen
social adjustment and suchave been placed in positions
cess.
following Friday's graduation.
BUDDING ARTISTS - At the Mt. Sinai Day Care
The others are available for
Although instructional care
Center children show their art work to Carolyn
employment and may be concovers ages up to 12, at Mt.
:
Allen, one of the FTI Day Care Worker students. The
tacted through the Divis on of
re
youngsters are, top, Mary Lunsford, Tonya Portis Sinai w h e held,the classroom
Vocational Rehabilitation.
work was
the children
and Paul Haywood. Gerand McLaurin a n d
ranged in age from 18 monthsi
Multiple Duties
Samantha Cook look up from their play to approve
to six years of age. Pastor
"Emphasis on cnjjd care
the exhibit. (Photo by McLendon).
Aaron Johnson of the church
and development was an;, imand Mrs. Mary Lewis, direcportant part of the girls'
tor of
care center,
training," commented Charles nursing homes for the aged most ambitious of the group is proved the day in providing
helpful
Smith of the 'V o c a t i o irii 1^ and would be particularly ef- a 32-year-old mother of five space for the classes and the
R e h a b i l i t a t i o n office. fective in bieljflng look after from Sampson County who practical instruction.
"However, these day c are home-bound adults. We even "doesn't want to be on
"Children at Mt. Sinai's1
workers can also be placed in anticipate their a s s i s t i n g welfare." To further comfamilies who need someone to plicate her life, she has Center are from all parts of
come into the home and cook epilepsy which is successfully Fayetteville," observed Mrs.
the noonday meal and read to contained through medication. Lewis. "Some have parents)
a bed-ridden elderly charge."
She traveled daily from Clin- who teach school or work
"There has been a need for ton to Fayetteville to com- outside the home, some are
a day care facility which plete the day care program here through federal aid to
would offer training such as and now can become a con- dependent children. And some
this program has covered tributing member of our are here due to illness or
which ran from graduation in working population.
some other unsettling aspect
June for the high school girls
Instructor for the 438-hour of the home environment.
through the early fall allowing course was Mrs. Juanita Mrs. Lewis is a graduate of
the students to develop extra Floyd Bremer. A registered Fort Valley State College of
skills and added maturity. nurse, she is a graduate of the Georgia and is assisted by
They now can enter the world Medical College of South four teachers,^ four,aides .and
of work when the job market Carolina. She has had nursing a dietician^Kfeg.to .from 7
is not flooded." said Smith.
experience in h o s p i t a l s a.m. to 5:30 p,m-.; and follow
Each of the girls has a throughout the nation, Her the school year with the exspecial reason for embarking last assignment before johuftgV ception of summer vacation
on this unique program. The FTI was as staff nurse at period where hdtirs are sched-
"? T *
-
GAPS
NORTH CAROLINA COMMUNITY COLLEGF
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICERS
OCTOBER 21-22, 1971
HAUFAX COUNTY TECHN.CAL WST.TUTE - Wo.dc, N.C.
October 15. 1971
energeUc^yw pafiemHperson
to keep Qpwith them-!"
BRIDGING
COMMUNICATION
SEMI-ANNUAL MEETING
Mt Sinai Church
1217 Murchinson Road
Fayetteville, North Carolina
uled to meet the needs of their
clients.
Mt. Sinai Church, located on
the Murchison Road, has the
use of two small houses, one a
former parsonage, and there
the children are g u i d e d
through the day's activities in
a homelike atmosphere. There
are outdoor and indoor games
and toys. Meals are served in
the educational section of the
church building. Learning
matrial is used both in the
kindergarten area and the adjoining houses.
When asked if the students
had been helpful to her, Mrs.
Lewis promptly a g r e e d ,
"They have saved us many a
jjteo with ^.thejftj-^ete^JitUe
�x
<u
J
^pM|pf
A . F. T. I.
VJI&I
Leciire-Workskop Serles^fet
FayetteviMe Technical , In- In t h i s thought-provoking
stitute wiH ir-esent>a lecture- -series Mr. Andrews will atworkshop lerres '^with Joel tempt to answer the questions
Andrews conducting on five that most often embarrass
conseeutive Monday evenings music teachers. He w i l l
beginifflMJStk 8 p.m. in. the u n d e r t a k e a (penetrating
Paul « iSjffljMnpson Library r-jjalysis of the fundamental
StudenfcigyjteejpdnTthe campus:' nature of sound and music
of the Insraute. The lecture-"' from many standpoints:
workshop* will be held on a c 0 us tical, philosophical,
November 15-22-29 and on sensory, psychic and spiritual.
Sunday Concerts
December 6-13.
Mr. Andrews, musician in
Joel Andrews, harpist, com- residence, will present a
poser and lecturer, wil discuss series of Sunday afternoon
' Musical Sound: Its Nature, concerts with the assistance
Significance and Awareness." of three other artists, Robert
Guthrie, g u i t a ri s t , Don
Adcock, flutist, and Linda
Booth, harpist.
Complete mfottnatioj on opTHE NORTH Carolina State
Highway Commission will hold portunities avafiaffik and ina public hearing Dec. 9 on the structions fos^jiing may be
proposed design of the im- obtained at fWffipi4 of the
provement and extension of Federal B u i ^ n g p n Green
Grove Street from the U.S. 301 Street here.^5;
intersection to the NC 24, 53,
and 210 intersection.
MAYOR JACK LEE has
proclaimed the week of Nov.
The hearing will be held at 8-14 as "Youth Appreciation
1:30 {wm. in the Maintenance Week" in Fayetteville.
Office at the Davidson Office
In his proclamation, Mayor
of the highway commission on Lee urged everyone to "have
Gillespie Street.
faith in the ability of today's
The hearing will ponsist of youths as they a s s u m e
an explanation of the proposed responsible ijples in the future
design, the right of way re- of mankind."
quirements and procedures,
MORE THAN 16,000 proand relocation a d v i s o r y
fessional nursing students and
assistance.
3,193 p r a c t i c a l nursing
The proposed design con- students received the work exsists of widening Grove Street perience portion of their
to 68 feet face to face of curb training in V e t e r a n s
section which will transition Administration hospitals durinto a 56 feet curb to curb ing 1971; Homor T. Ford,
bridge over the Cape Fear director of the Fayetteville
River and transition back to a VA Hospital, said today.
68 feet section at the inFord said VA hospitals are
tersection with Dunn Road.
affiliated
From Dunn Road to Lock 304 of all for the training 'with
the schools
Trail the proposed section is fessional nursing in the of pronation.
two 24 feet roadways with a 16
In cooperation with the Offeet median. From Lock Trail
to the Atlantic C o a s t l i n e fice of Economic Opportunity,
Railroad crossing at NC 210 the Red Cross, and other
and 53,' the section will be 68 agencies, some 1,500 nurse's
feet face to face of curb. Ac- aids, assistants, or technicians
cess will be controlled from also trained in VA hospitals
North Broad Street to the NC during 1971, Ford said.
From 1968 to 1971 the local
24, 53 and 210 intersection.
VA hospital has afforded work
TEST DATES for com- experience training to 327 stupetitive summer jobs i n dent nurses from Highsmithfederal agencies were an- Rainey Memorial Hospital,
Technical/
nounced today by the U. S. Fayetteville
Institute and Sandhills ComCivil Service Commission.
The examination will be munity College and 10 student
given on three dates—Jan. 8, nurse aids from Reid Ross
. High School.
Feb. 12 and March 11.
Members of the Altrusa
Club of Fayetteville will register those who report for
examination at the oral detection clinic to be conducted
by Cumberland County Dental Society and American
Cancer Society Sunday, April
9.
The clinic will be held at
Fayetteville Technical Institute from 2 to 5 p.m.
One critic has said that "to
hear these fine artists in
person is a rare a nd
memorable experience."
An Oral Cancer Detection Clinic will be
held this afternoon from 2:00 to 5:00
o'clock at the Fayetteville Technical Institute Dental Clinic. All adults and
youth over 12 are urged to attend. It is
jointly sponsored by the Cumberland
County Dental Society and the American
Cancer Society. o- /c /-.
HUNDREDS of Fayetteville receipts,- expenses, inventory
residents were among the jandfc • depreciation of farm
2,196 persons who assem'hjJM -.buildings and machinery and
Sunday at the Cumberi^d Jan jg^veptory of feed, crops,
County Memorial AucStWHilBtt ^affldrsifppliSi. *
at the climax of the three-day! L,|p|e-.bookiSiBtaUable at any
convention of J e h o v a h 'M
Wachovia's '. 149 .offices
Witnesses from Southeastern*
ifed throughout the state,
North Carolina.
ffiHuding Fayetteville.
Sunday's feature was a
sermon by D. J. Thomas, Bible lecturer, who spoke on the
subject "Can You L i v e
Forever — Will You?"
Saturday's session w a s
highlighted by the baptism of
47 new Jehovah ministers.
^ndle-Makij*t Glass Scheduled At FTI
AalKoliday Candle-Making
C&ijr'will be held at Fayetteville Technical Institute on
Monday evenings from 7 to 9
beginning November 1 5 t h .
Instructor for the twenty-hour
course will be Kerwln Gillet.
Registration begins Monday
evening at 7:30 p.m., and
students will be accepted on a
first-come, first-served, basis
at Lafayette Hall on the F.T.I,
campus.
gpSr;
Robin Eleafior Wallace
FAYETTEVILLE
TECHNICAL
INSTITUTE
PRESENTS
r
\ £
Fayetteville Technical In
stitute won a three-team golf
match Thursday at Cypress
Lakes Golf Course The Trojans, with J R Bordeaux,
taking medalist honors with a^
78, finished with a low scorf
of 332
Richmond Technical
tute came in second ay
and Central Carolina T ^
cal Institllte tff Sanforoj
370. .-.k-,,FTjrtiSw 4-1 for the year
entetffite* Sandhills Cornmu
nity Ce|ege at (2ypressfj§g|p
Monday* y/^/^jggl*
Wf^Lnd/ tfc^ Clfcf
///f/y/
Robin Ele&or W a l l a c e
daughter eg Mr. and Mrs
James H. Wallace of Paisley
Avenue, was elected "Miss
F T.I." by vote of the Fayetteville Tfeeh students. A
graduate of 71st High School,
Kobin is enrolled in FTI's
Associate Degree G e n e r a l
Education program and plans
•to enter the field of primary
education. Her hobbies include
skiing, softball, swimmina,«md
camping.
Miss WaH|*ef«was*igrf)«wd
at Fayettevilte
ten'Mwrog
and received her bachelor's at
the University of Texas under
Joel Andrews. Going on for a
master's at Ohio State, she
has played with orchestras,
solo concerts and chamber
music in many parts of the
country. She also teaches
m u s i c and is the wife of
Ronald Booth, pianist.
All concerts will begin at 4
p.ii^'wlttSrStudent Lounge of
the*'Paul H. T h o m p s o n
Library. The following is the
schedule Novemb^p,,^, solo
Guthrie is musician in program; January 30,•- duoresidence j 0 i nt 1 y with program; March 19, Rjjrp and
Andrews at Sandhills Com- guitar program, and April 30,
munity College in Pinehurst
and is shared with Richmond duo program. The public is inTechnical Institute. F r o m vited to attend free of charge.
Texas, he is a graduate of the
Winston-Salem School of the
Arts under Jesus Silva, protege of Segovia.
Adcock is assistant director
of music at North Carolina
.State University in Raleigh
and Columbia University in
New York City. He and
Andrews played many con,*e^rts together while Andrews
-Wis musician in residence at
WESH in 1969-71.
Mfs. Booth is first harpist
with the Charlotte Symphony
Altrusans Will
Help At Cancer
Clinic Sunday
Miss l $ a c 0 Elected
FT/ Goffers
Get 4th Win
JOEL
ANDREWS ,
"W
NANCY MJSLVIN, Kenneth
Averitte and Don Williams,
second-year s t u d e n t s in
E nvironmental Engineering
Technology at Fayetteville
Technical Institute, are attending a three-day meeting
of the American Water Works
Association and Water Pollution Control Federation in
Durham.
Each has been awarded a
$250 scholarship to FTI from
the two organizations.
The two-year program in
e n v ironmental engineering
technology is the only one of
its kind in North Cawyina and
is directed by Gordon Dwiggins of the FTI faculty. , ,
///9/7(
HARPIST
MUSICIAN-IN-RESIDENCE, 1971-72
PAUL H. THOMPSON LIBRARY
8:00 P.M.*
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1971
PROGRAM
I
THE IRISH HARP
La Quinte Estampie Real
Come My Love
Hurdy Gurdy
Catalan Carol
Ball by the aw'M^&tfjJ*
Lenora'Toppi'FftialistesJflF tft«
contest were: CindynfewTs
first runrierup; Gloria"Shance
second; Susan Bulla, third and
Polly McNair, fourth runnerup.
///t%y 7
EN BATEAU
LA CATHEDRALE ENGLOUTIE
12th Century French
Gaelic
Carlos Salzedo
Traditional Spanish
II
III
DEMONSTRATION OF THE UNIQUENESS OF THE HARP
Chanson Dans La Nult
La Deslrade
Claude Debussy
Claude Debussy
Carlos Salzedo
Carlos Salzedo
INTERMISSION
DANSE SACREE ET PROFANE
with McKeller Israel, Pianist
Claude Debussy
V
SEA SUITE (1963)
a
TideS GUUS Clams and Ch w
S
^
1° ^ Ocean Floor - Tidepools - The
Casting Ashore of the Great Whale - Wake
USZ, ?T
"
"
° der -
CONCERT FANTASY ON AUTUMN IN NEW YORK
a ^ r ^ n ^
Joel Andrews
Joel Andrews
the "Sea Suite"
"La Cathedrale Engloutte" will S , n ^ SPECTRUM ("En Bateau" and
ngioutie ) will be available through the artist after the concert.
NEXT CONCERT: January 30, Duo with Linda Booth. Harpist
ss"
PS-
.*«?
.KK
A PROGRAM OF ADULT AND CONTINUING EDUCATION
•Please note change in time.
STUDENT NURSE WEEK — Governor Bob Scott
has proclaimed the week of November 8-13 as North
Carolina Student Nurse Week. Here, Miss Brenda
Jackson, second-year student in F a y e t t e v i l l e
Technical Institute's Associate Degree^Lursing Curriculum, is pictured holding 'Baby ChaM'', one of the
'Chase Family' of mannikins useogb'train FTI
students in nursing skills. Brenda. jpS3e§ldsnt of the
fe Carolina Student Nurse Assn^ representing 38
lifle nursing programs, was on han& for the
jiand.fo
bf the proclamation in Raleigh?
/ 2
7Y
�BIOGRAPHY
Joel Andrews brings extensive background to this challenging series.
Probably the most versatile harpist in America, he has composed and
performed many styles of music for solo harp, harp ensembles, poets,
dancers, plays, film scores, exhibitions, radio and television. He has
toured in solo concerts and with his chamber groups adding flute, cello,
and soprano. He has discovered many special effects on the harp and composed works incorporating them. He has appeared as soloist with orchestras
and organized and directed 5 Harp Festivals, once drawing 50 harpists
nationwide. He has given joint seminars with the noted authority on the
wisdom of the east, Alan Watts. The present seminar was first given as a
lecture for the College of San Matio in California and since then many times
for religious groups such as the Association for Research and Enlightenment
and also for Universities and Centers for Human Potential. Since his debut
in 1962, Joel Andrews has been captivating audiences all over the country.
He has just finished a 2-year appointment as Musician-in-Residence at North
Carolina State University where his concerts drew better than the chamber
music series with its top artist. He has been one of the pioneers in breaking
down the traditional barrier between performer and audience. He builds
rapport by talking to the audience instead of printing program notes. His
always including some of his own deeply moving compositions, has lifted
warm informal presentation, together with his richly-varied programming,
his audiences to musical heights. To hear this gifted artist is an unforgetable
experience.
WHAT THE CRITICS ARE SAYING
" . . . lived up to his reputation as a
master harpist." —Roseburg, Oregon
"The playing of Andrews with the
orchestra and the conducting of
Arthur Fiedler were superb-a sparkling performance." Robert Commanday, S- F. Chronicle
//'//z
/ 7 /
"Andrews' 'Sea Suite' is frighteningly realistic, .easily the most absorbing
on the program." Hertelendy, Oakland Tribune
"A unique facility to develop an immediate rapport with his audience; an
artist of the highest calibre." Perry Watson, Director of Music, N.C.S.U.
" •. an unqualified success..showed impeccable skill, a warm personality and
contagious enthusiasm." Warren Martin, College of the Pacific
"Attired in a white Nehru suit, he walked on stage and captured his audience; a completely enjoyable and memorable evening." Oroville, California
iiiiW
Fayetteville Technical Institute
1961
1971
NOW OFFERS
TRANSFER CREDIT I N GENERAL EDUCATION
Upon completion of F.T.I.'s Associate Degree in General
Education, students will be accepted as full-fledged juniors at
local colleges and universities. CAMPBELL COLLEGE, FAYETTEVILLE STATE UNIVERSITY, METHODIST COLLEGE AND PEMBROKE STATE UNIVERSITY have agreed to accept the Associate
Degree in General Education as partial fulfillment of Baccalaureate work.
EVENING CLASSES
COURSE DESCRIPTION
TUESDAY &
MONDAY &
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
7:00- 8:30 7:00
8:30
8:30 - 10:00 8:30 10:00
8:30 - 10:00
7:00 V 8:30
8:30 - 10:00
7:00
8:30
8:30 10:00
7:00
8:30
7:00 - 8:30 7:00
8:30
8:30 - 10:00
8:30 10:00
7:00
8:30
8:30
10:00
7:00
8:30
7:00 - 9:30
7:00
8:30
7:00 - 8:30
7:00
8:30
8:30 10:00
7:00 - 8:30
7:00- 9:30 7:00 - 9:30
7:00 - 9:30
English Usage & Composition I
English Usage & Composition II
World Literature I
American Literature I . . ,
CONCERT — Cumberland County's Friends of the
. Library will meet Sunday evening at Fayetteville
^'rfchnical Institute in the Paul Thompson Library
~H1j|ofcf a concert by Joel Andrews, musician-ingj-ngslsidence at FTI, and McKellar Israel, pianist. The
public is ktvited to attend the 8 p.m. performance.
There will be no charge for admission. Mr. Andrews
will conduct a lecture-workshop Monday evening at 8
p.m., first in a series at Fayetteville Tech. The lectures and concerts will be held in the lounge of the
Thompson library. (Photo — McLendon)
Manpower Grant
Approved For
' FTI Training
A $51,000, Manpower Development and Training Act grant
has been approved by the'
Department of Health, Education and Welfare to provide
classroom-type training for 20
unemployed persons here.
The 20 will receive traMng as
general office clerE|pior a
period of up to 3s ^fteks at
Fayetteville Technical fftstttute.
Actual federal cost of Jfe project is $51,703.
In addition, 500 persons in
Lumberton, Ahoskie, Forest
City, Asheville, Kinston and
New Bern will receive educational motivation and orientation at a cost of $160,000.
In Sanford, 15 persons will
receive training as sheet metal
workers at Central Carolina
Technical Institute at a cost of
$31,269.
American Literature II
Western Civilization I .
Western Civilization II
American History I . . ,
American History II
Biology I ..,.
Music Appreciation
Art Appreciation
Intro, to Philosophy
Intro, to Logic
IntHjlto College Math
College Algebra
REGISTRATION: Tuesday, November 30th from 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. at
Cumberland Hall (building adjacent to Library).
CLASSES: Scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays begin December
1st, those scheduled for Tuesdays and Thursdays begin December 2nd.
Wjntbr quarter terminates February 29,1972.
^ S T S : $2.50 per quarter hour. 1 quarter hour = 2/3 semester hour.
fiitary personnel may apply for tuition assistance if eligible at time of
fistratioti.
FTI Accredited
President Howard Boudreau is
representing F a y e 11 e.v i 11 e
Technical Institute at the 76th
annual convention of t h e
Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools and was notified
Wednesday that the Commission
on Colleges has re-affirjned accreditation of Fayetteville Tech
for a period of ten years.
This action is the result of a
year's study and self-evaluation
by the institute itself and the
report of a visiting committee of
the association.
Fayetteville
Technical
Institute is the only technical institute in the North Carolina
Community, College System to
be granted-* the decade- ot_ac-Ul. OL
creditation by " the So
Southern
Association. /-JL / ?
For further details, Contact:
Dean of Students
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P. O. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N.C., 28303
Telephone: 484-4121
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools
///<2 6/7/
"^<
V
�BENSON REVIEW
Thursday,
>V"-.
Novf(jg^j|fj£1
Benson Native Is
CounseloMAt FT£
£!9082
Helen Winstead, a graduate of
Benson High School and
daughter of the Rev. Mr. and
Mrs. J. David Capps of Coats, is
now a counselor at Fayetteville
Technical Institute.
She is described by another
Benson native, Niles E. Compton, as a "decided asset to the
counseling staff at FTI." Mr.
Compton is the institute's dean
of student affairs.
Mrs. Winstead leads a busy
life both professionally and as a
homemaker. She and her
husband, Clarence J. Winstead,
live in Glendale Acres,
Fayetteville, with their four
sons: Ronald, 13; Stephen, 12;
Helen Winstead
Richard, 5; and Gregory, 4
months. .
While at Pembroke State work at Fayetteville Technical
University in 1964, she was Institute.
She is a member of Peace
elected to Who's Who in
American
Colleges
and Presbyterian Church, the
Education
Universities. She received her N a t i o n a l
Association, the American
Master of Education degree in
guidance and personnel ser- Personnel and Guidance
vices from North Carolina State Association, and many other
professional organizations.
University in 1968.
"To be of help and to act as a
counselor is one of the most
rewarding experiences I can
ever ask for," she said of her
institute Is Deve^opkig:
An Intramural„nJirog-Eipa
bHjev^..-
THE BlOLOGaPBepattmeiit ./.interested parties shouiri
at Methodilfc Cdllege'%as air .contact the college's Biolgy
o v e r - a b.iP'fi d'a-?n c:e°6f";in- • ^Department, telephone 488vertebrate specimen 7110,. extension 247.
Phillip Crutchfield, assistant
FAYETTjflLLE Technical
professor of biology, said his Institute will receive $63,810 in
department will p r e p a r e federal money to train 140
labelled collections of some persons as station installers.
100 or so specimens each for The project is one of six Manany high school s c i e n c e power Development a n d
department thabgaa make use Training Act projects apof them—free orcnarge.
proved by the Departments of
Grutchfiefn H§1 f ^ & f l Labor and Health, Education
master collection is overstock- and Welfare.
ed. Rather than throw away
The training itself _ will _ be
the excess, weM like to donate
them tojptehools' who can use^ conducted by the State Vocational Education System.
them&lflK%
Fayetteville Technical
Institue's newly-appointed student activities coordinator,
Alvin R. Pierce, has scheduled
a variety of intramural sports
including women's basketball
during the winter quarter at
FTI.
Each curriculum will be
permitted two teams — a 15man team and an eight-player
team for the women. The
season will start Dec. 13.
Other activities to be offered
Fayetteville Tech students will
be bowling, table tennis,
b i l l i a r d s and c h e s s .
Participation will be from 4 to
6 daily. Karate classes will be
taught from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
daily.
Recreational cards,
checkers and Spanish checks
will be on the agenda.
gj
"One of the hardest Harrangements to make o l a
campus like ours," laid
Pierce, "is to provide r e l a tional activities and sports for
our students. Many of them
commute from nearby towns
and also hold down jobs so
they are limited as to the time
they can give. But these
students really need the excitement of competitive.sports, and the teams help
figrovide a closeness among
" students within a curriculum.
Although we have no guy at
FTI, the new Paul Thompson
Library building provides excellent facilities. We will also
use the Honeycutt Recreation
Building and gyms at several
churches"
Pierce holds a B.S. degree in
physical education from
Johnson C. Smith University
of Charlotte, a M a ^ H j r f ^Aif^Pb^-i%Fah^evine
Science in physical edIMfilBn * Tec* s t u d e n t affiShs^epart"
from A & T Universes fjuylsrif^SrV^ST^f? <^ic«f is in the
graduate degree in voeatilpal Library building; ,
guidance from N. C. Stated **Mfc>' ariA'ttfiiwf», Sophia live
University where he earned an on the Murohison Road with
additional certificate in educa- their chfidtSi, Gary, Angela
tion of the disadvantaged.
and Janet.
ALVIN R. PIERCE ... student acjfflties coorHtJfftor,.
J
/ / / x 4/7%
•THE BENSON'REVIEW, Benson, North Carolina —Thursday. October 14,1971
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
A2-/>/7/
MM&ud
Mm pf
Woard Exam
Mrs! Ada Leonard, R.N.,
chairman of the FTI Licensed
Practical Nursing Curriculum,
has been notified that all
Fayetteville Tech candidates
passed their State Board
Examination for licensure.
The nine LPN students who
graduated from FTI at tfie end
of their fourth quarter of study
in August were:
Mrs. Nel|'Caldwell, Kathryn
Canady, Jwrs. Diane Carter,
Mrs. M (pi Ennever, Mrs.
K,
Valeria,; J > Mrs. Carplyn
McLflp EV" Mrs. Adrina
NichoS IJHelen Powersj^nd
provost.
Mrs.
A si |£ 500 is considered
Jig" and severi'of the
"OUtfl
midates received
nine
graded? |b.ve 540 witli'^Irs.
Provop [ring 654. .
I Mrs. Leonard at
Assa
i s Claudia^Djricy
FTI
pt-time instructor.
RN,;«
J Barker, R#t The
Mrs!
current jrollment in licensed
arse education at
practict
Fayetteyl iTech totals 29
females afl , for the first time
in Fayetffeville Technical
Institute's>%itory, one male
LPN studijlferhe curriculum
runs four quarters, or one full
year with graduation for these
students held at the conclusion
of summer school.
Since the first class in 1961,
157 girls have graduated from
the Practical Nurse Program.
About half of these graduates
are employed in the local area.
" S o m f , " observed Mrs.
Leonard, "have used our
trfaiBing as a stepping-stone to
theifeeareer goals arid have
eagwnuechtheir education %nd
h&tmte registered nurs&tf
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE '
.
offers the ASSOCIATE DEGREE in the
following curricula:
Thompson Library Dedicate^
*ACCOUNTING
*AIR CONDITIONING ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
*AGRICULTURE BUSINESS
*BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
*CIVIL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
*ELECTRIC DATA PROCESSING
*ELECTRIC ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
*GENERAL EDUCATION
INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT
^MARKETING AND RETAILING
^MECHANICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
^SECRETARIAL SCIENCE (TECHNICAL, MEDICAL, EXECUTIVE AND LEGAL)
*ASSOCIATE DEGREE CURRICULA CARRYING
FULL TRANSFER CREDIT
THE PAUL H. THOMPSON LIBRARY, dedicated recently at Fayetteville Technical
Institute, provides space for a learning resource center and also for the bookstore and
student unifcwFactivities. Cafeteria service lis also available in the building, which can be
converted into a large Student Union or into a separate library. The structure wag named
for the late Paul H. Thompson, the first chairman of the institute's board of truistges, who
provided leadership under which the Fayetteville institute became the first in ^ e t s t a t e to
be acct^JW^d.'Seating capacity in the library is 225, and the shelving capacity W%r 25,000
volumes. Carrels a r e provided for viewing and listening, ^ahd additional audiorfutorial
carrelsOwe available. Films, filmstrips, tapes, slides, and microfSm w i ] ^ « j | i s e d to
supplement instruction.
DIPLOMA CURRICULA:
I j ^ t U .OIJW""
Around The^Cilf
Sl - 9 - 7 /
Sandhills Belts
Fayetteville tech
SOUTHERN PINES —
Sandhills Community College
had three players with 20 or
more points and six in double
figures as J f\ % completely
demolished Fayetteville
Technical Institute here
Wednesday night, 132-65.
Joe Bridges led the winners
with '26 points ..while Darius
McLaughlirf
and Marvin
Thompson had 20 each
Philip Hancock added 18, Keith
Harris 13 and Manzell Spencer
11.
Brown topped Fayetteville
Tech. with 15, Greg Melton
added 13, Kelly Rogers 12 and
Kenny Tyson 10.
TECH (65) _ Tyson-10, HarRogers 12. Evans.5* Srj
13, Norman 2. jonpson J
J,LS(132) — McLauohll
». Hancock 18, J E ™ =
9. Johnson 2, Til
pencer 11. A . M O ]
ndhills 53-39.
WALTER
CROOM,
chairman /of Agri-Business
Technoldf*ifc'-n!at Fayetteville
TechniciMnSfl^&te. has been
initiatex*^nWJ*w!Kpsilon Pi
Tau Ffat£rWn$Art^el%tate
Univershty7w3n<;;'international
h o n o r a r y professional
fraternity for industrial-arts
and . industrial-vocational
education:
CroomJeft FTI fojygg first
eight months of thjsdyear for
research for trje.,. State
D e p a r t m e n t of..'.Public
Instruction. The .jjrojecti
included the study./,,qf. the
professional development
needs of educationa^jpprsonnel
involved in the j auction.
S U e vision
' £ if
' ^J 0 jfeac'hing
asp^tc t s o fr. Occupation a 1
Education programs in the
state school system.
/
2.J7/7/
Air Conditioning Mechanics
Architectural Drafting
Automotive Mechanics
Carpentry
Electrical Maintenance
Machine Shop
Masonry
Plumbing
Practical Nursing
Tool & Die
Welding
TUITION
Curriculum programs, full-time:
$32.00 per qua ter
Books - approximately $50.00 per
quarter
Activity fee - $20.00 annually for
full-time students
Extension and short courses in noncurricula area - NO CHARGE
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Around
The
Qfy ReqreatioQ
Following schedules have Friday, needed family dance.
been announced for city
WEST ROWAN STREET
recreation centers for this RECREATION CENTER —
week. Time schedule of Monday, duplicate bridge;
various >5®ftivities may be Tuesday, Senior Citizens;
obtained at the;Gity.Recreation Wednesday, play group,
Department.
duplicate bridge, Fun With
M A S S E Y>- H I L L •Friends: Thursday, play
RECREATION CEN^iE^. J 8 group, Senior Citizens, Youth
Monday. Hash-A-Ways,••Chiefei Council; Friday, play group,
Club; Tuesday, Girl Scbu^s, teen Club.
Hash-A-^ays; Wednesday,
'H O N E Y C U T T
Christmas party; Thursday, RECREATION CENTER —
baton; Fr^ay, Archery Club; Monday, drama, FTI girl's
Saturday, Girl Scouts, basketball; Tuesday, drama.
Christinas, party church; Midget basketball, metfi
Sunday, -.Christmas party volleyball; Wednesday, pjay
church.
school, drama, '^MM%et
CAPE FEAR COURT basketball; ThursdjiBSjIay
RECREATION CENTS||;;j^ .school. FTI giEj-sj^pcelball,
Monday, public reiatioiiig men's volleyba^r^irTscouts;
center and outside a c t ^ p p fiS'iday, play school; Saturday,
craft projects; Tues;da^.. baton.
beginner's sewing' ^JGJS'SS.
decorating, centfef^teSCTies.
church choir dinner, Men's
Club; Wednesday? older adult
meeting. GoQcfwiSfL^Club,
Christmas ban^#;|l|hiij%day.
public relations, center and
o ut si d.e^'^q^PSfltiJ^ -^raft
p r o j£${$; *£T&i d a f. iipli b 1 I c
relations, center and-outside
activities, banquet, • boyte
football.
/2-//VV/
CONCI§RTij ARTIST — Joel Andrews of Fayetteville
will m j | e a special guest appearance Tuesday night
when th|f Pembroke State University concert chorus
present^its* -annual Christmas concert. Andrews is
musiciaft'-ih-residence at Fayetteville Technical
Institute! '
s ?*
A STUDENT organization
affiliated with the Data Processing Management Association has been formed at Fayetteville Technical Institute,
according to Paul Moro, president of the local organization.
The organization will
function as an educational
group
to
promote
understanding
of
data?
processing as a profession. It
will serve as a means of
furthering the careers of data
processing students.
DPMA is the world's largest
professional organization, with
•over 27.000 mejjjjjers in 250
Chapters in the U*Tj|., Canada,
the Philippines, and Saigon.
F^I 10-Ye
Accreditation
Reaffirmed
President Howard Boudreau
representing Fayetteville
Technical Institute at the annual convention of the Southern
Association of Colleges and
Schools, was notified December
1 that jthe Commission on
Colleges has reaffirmed accreditation of Fayetteville Tech
for a period of ten years.
Anlpcws To Make Guest
Appearance At PSU
<Z. -•
*t- . «
V
PEMBROKE — The
Pembroke cState University
concert eatoirJ.twill present tis
annual .^rjrj'stmas concert
Tuesday ,* f^j&uring a guest
appearance • -:by harpist Joel
Andrews e'f Btavetteville.
Andrews'" is currently
music ia|j-j^r'esidence at
Fay et t'gvi*|e Technical
Instituted Fi®m 1969-71 he
served injth incapacity at N.C.
State University.
ConsiderejLone of the most
versatile harpists in America,
he has composed and
.performed many styles of
music for solor harp, harp
ensembles, poets, dancers,
plays, film scores, exhibitions,
radio and television.
A lecturer, he has toured
the nation, building rapport
with his audience by talking to
them while he performs.
Adnrews has also organized
and directed five "harp
festivals. Discoverer of many
speical effects on the harp, he
has camposed works
incorporating them.
Commejatifioni critics have
been lajj$h&> their praise of
him • * , s **
"Attif#*r iffjjte Siyhite Nehru
suit, he ^walked < f stage and
ot
capttifrijl'- 'rnV faudience, a
completely enjoyable and
memorable evening." —
%rovilwfcalif:. %
"'•'... lived up to Jlfs reputation
as a master 'harpist." —
Roseburg. Ore.
"... an artist of the highest
calibre." — Perry Watson,
director of music, N.C. State
University. *
Andrews will perform with
the concert choir in its'
rendition of "A Ceremony of
Carols." He will also play two
solos, "Catalan Carol" and "I
Wonder As I Wander."
Part three of the program
will include three 19th century
carols plus "0 Rejoice. Ye
Christians, Loudly." "Hodie"
and "0 Magnum Mysterium."
Members of the PSU cornlBjeft^
choir from the Fayettej|jHg'area include: Robert B'ell,
Fayetteville; Martha Blalock,
Fayetteville: Chris Boutselis,.
Maxton; Cindy Burney,
Fayetteville; Fay. Emanuel,
Godwin; Nellies'Kreiwirth,
P e m b r o k e ; T-e m F u 1 p.
LumbertoB; Mary Garner,
Red Springs; John Hancock.
Robbing; Robin Harroun,
Fayette^le*«JJnifne Jacobs.
Red Sprfwg5jt,k8j$a "King. St.
P a u 1 s^Sj j&r^ny L a m b ,
Bladenb^EKS %ida Lloyd,
Fayettevffle*fKa«ly Locklear,
Pembrokj?: £.frqsfe$, Martin.
FayettevlfieffjWeten, McLeod,
FayettevjMe; tBet&ea Moore,
Red Springs; Jftf'C* Moore,
Red Sprlfigs; C$$is|2Morgan.
Dunn; Da 1 e ">pf'endlne,
Pembroke; Miriam Oxendine,
Pembroke; Steve Pate,
Fayetteville; Vickie Ransom,
Pembroke: Gail Smallwood,
Fayetteville; Milton Smith,
Bladenboro; J;|MY- Syke,
Fayetteville; Shafenn»aldron,
Whiteville; ;&»$& rfVatkins.
Fayetteville; 'Alice"''. Wilson,
Fayetteville; Caroline Wilson,
Fayetteville-;. <Jim Wilson,
La ur in burg • a'nd 'Vincent
Winnies, Chadbourn.
This action is the result of a
year's study and self-evaluation
by the institute itself and the
report of a visiting committee of
the association.
Fayetteville Technical Institute is the only technical
institute in the North Carolina
Community College System to
be granted the decade of accreditation by the Soifctnern
Association.
**
n/y/7/
Practical
Students PI
Examinations
Mrs. Ad«^e6nard, R. N„
chairman efffhe FTI Licensed
Practical Nursing Curriculum,
has been notified that all
Fayetteville Tech candidates
passed their State Board
Examination for licensure. The
nine LPN students who
graduated from FTI at the end
of their fourth quarter of study
in August were:
Mrs. Nell Caldwell, Kathryn
Canady, Mrs. Diane Carter,
"Mrs. Norma Ennever, Mrs.
Valeria Lugo," Mrs. Carolyn
McLaurin, .* Mgs.
Adrina
Nicholson, jfwen Powers, and
Mrs. Betty Provost.
A score #f J>00 is considered
"outstandmg^and seven of the
nine carraidtates received
grades above 540 with Mrs.
Provost scoring 654.
Assisting Mrs. Leonard of
FTI are Miss Claudia Dancy,
RN, and part-time instructor,
Mrs. Edith Barker, RN. The
current enrollment in licensed
practical nurse education at
Fayetteville Tech totals 29
females and, for the first time in
Fayetteville Technical Institute's history, one male LPN
student. T^jLacurriculum runs
for four quarters, or one full
year with graduation for these
studentggpiPdt the conclusion
of sumrfl^fschool.
Since the first class in 1961,
157 girls have graduated from
the Practical Nurse Program.
About half of these graduates
are employed in the local area.
"Some,"
observed
Mrs.
Leonard, "have t*aed our
training as a steppiagigtone to
their career goals *$&& have
continued their education and
become Registered Nurses."
REAL COOL GREETING — Fayetteville Technical Institute President and
Mrs. Howard E. Boudreau found a real
cool greeting as they arrived at the Paul
Thompson Library and Student Union
for -the annual Fayettevillp /Tech
Ch$lk|jias dinner and dance Wednesday
evening. Despite the record-breaking
heat, FTI air conditioning
and
refrigerations students, under the director of instructor Pete Oakes, fashioned
the long-haired snowman. for the occasion. Because of the unseasonable
•warm.weather, the snowman los,t;$on:tj
sidera>biew weight ; during the evefljJigV
(Photo — Kim Smith)
THE DENTALjgl|ygiene
program'' at•-,'vFayel'teville
Technical Institute has been
granted- an- "accreditation
eligible" classification
/*,//*/7*
/ L
AT FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
THREE TECHNOLOGIES LEADING THE
TO THE SEVENTIES AND BEYOND . ,
THE C U M B E R L A N D
County Health Department
has asked that persons using
county garbage., landfill disposal areas durnp<|ihly^in the
designated place's as planted
out by signs.
Due to tnTSHnc'fPHSihg volume encountered at all sites,
health directd? * Dr. C a r l
Hammer said the public's
cooperation is n e e d e d in
placing refuse in the properly
designated areas at each of
the sites.
REGISTRATION for Fayetteville Technical Institute's
evening classes will be held
Friday night from 7-9 p.m.
These classes are open to
anyane 18 years or older on a
first-come, first served basis.
Off-cafflpfUs adult classes
will hokfrPegistration Monday
from g^ff* p.m. at Cape Fear,
Massi'v&Hill, Reid Ross, and
71st pffh sdfcfls and J.S.
Spivty Junior mgh School.
Agricultural Business - Technical training for a career in marketing,
^processing, and distribution of farm goods and management in farm
related businesses.
Air Conditioning Engineering Technology - Two years of intense
study designed to train the student in controlled environmental techniques essential to tomorrow's industries, businesses and housing.
t^lechanical Engineering Technology - A two-year curriculum concerned with design, procedures, analysis and testing of mechanical
components of industrial equipment.
Each curriculum offers trie Associate Degree and carries
transfer credit to four-year institutions.
For further details about these three and the 19 other programs offered at
Contact:
Director of Admissions
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P. O. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N.C. 28303
Tel. 484-4121
< Accrjejdited by The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
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Fayettel/inl tecfinlcal Institute Night School
I-'.'" 'i::
Registration to be held at Fayetteville Technical Institute from 7:00-9:00 P.M.
i Student Addi
Western Langulfis
By JOANN MAC MILLAN
A pretty Indian student at
F . T . I . Renu Kawatra
Nijhawan is adding the
language of the computer to
her repertory of linguistic
accomplishments. In addition
to her native tongue, Hindi, she
has a command of Punjabi and
English and is now learning
Cobol, Fortran and PL-1 as an
electronic data processing
major at Fayetteville Tech.
"And doing extremely well
in her subjects," observed
instructor Ronald Christie,
chairman of the EDP
department.
Fayetteville Tech now
houses a NCR Century 100
stand-alone computer which
enables the students to work
directly with the machine
rather than via telephone lines
to the Research Triangle's
Computation Center which was
the former procedure.
"Now," explained instructor
Christie, "when there are
errors, the student realizes
them immediately and is
responsible for the information
himself rather than going
through another person which
takes too much time. This also
avoids waiting for lines to
clear. We can work on our own
computer immediately and
conveniently."
Renu is married to Dr. Inder
P. Nijhawan, assistant
professor of economics at N.C.
State's Fort Bragg campus.
She and her husband came to
Cumberland County in 1970
with their young son, Ashish.
• She is a graduate of St. Mary's
Academy and Raghu Nath
College of India.
"In Chapel Hill where we
lived before cominc* tn t{>jg
area, I used to help my
husband some with his
economics research. When we
arrived in the Fayetteville
area, I decided to learn how to
use the computer myself,"
explained the student.
Renu's bright silk sari
proves a contrast in attire on a
campus" where the coeds are
generally found wearing
slacks or jeans. She speaks
English with a delightful touch
of Irish brogue. "That's
because so many of my
teachers at St. Mary's were
Irish priests," Renu said,
"They used to tell us to think in
English, think in English! And
soon we did. That's why
attending class at FTI is really
not difficult at all as far as the
language is concerned."
Life, she admits, is quite
different for her here
compared to the kind of life she
would live in India. "There I
would have many servants.
Here, I must clean, cook and
look after our three-year-old
son as well as study. It has
been something of an
adjustment. I also had to learn
to drive. At first, I was just
simply stuck because I could
not drive. Now I drive
everywhere."
The adjustment appears to
be quite successful. While they
were living in Chapel Hill,
Renu participated in many
activities including modeling.
She also appeared on Betty
Elliott's television show,
visited elementary schools and
attended civic programs. Her
hobbies are badminton,
netball, boating, sewing and
interior decorating.
The recent unrest in India
has given her some grave
l/a./%
On January 7,1972
Enrollment will be on a first-come, first-served basis
EVENING EXTENSION CLASSES HELD AT FAYETTEVILlS TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
MONDAY & WEDNESDAY EVENINGS
(Starting Date — January 17,1972)
SUBJECT
Hours in Course
Air Conditioning ||
75
ABC Shorthand
75
Blue Print Reading (Mech. T) . .
75
Bookkeeping II
;
75
Business Machines
. 75
Cake Decorating (Wed.)
20
Drafting l| (Arch.)
75
Electrician Apprentice
75
Front End Alignment
75
Handyman Skills for Females
36
Heating and A/C Code
75
Hotel-Motel Management
75
Insurance Adjusting
75
SUBJECT
Hours in Course
Interior Decorating (Mon.) . . *
wt .
36
Law for Laymen
' . ' 75
Machine Operators
75
National Electric Code
75
Nursing Home Aide
75
Personal Income Tax
35
Powder Puff Mechanics
75
Rapid Reading
' 75
Real Estate
75
Shorthand I
75
Spelling & Vocabulary . . . . . . . .
75
Typing I
' 75
TUESDAY & THURSDAY EVENINGS
(Starting Date — January 18,1972)
^•Mrs. Nijhawan
concern for her parents'
well-being.. "They live," she
said, "in the shadow of the Taj
Majhal, it is the most beautiful
sight I've ever seen — one of
the 7 wonders of the world. And
it shines in the moonlight like a
great beacon — , which
unfortunately would make it
an easy target for bombers.''
It will be another year or two
before they will return to
India. In the meantime, Renu
will have completed her
^associate degree in electronic
data processing at Fayetteville
Technical Institute and plans
to be a computer programmer.
SUBJECT
Art I & ||
Bookkeeping II . . . .
Business Machines .
Computer Language
Drafting l| (Mech.
Early American Art
Engine Tune Up
English for Foreian Bom
(Beginning & Advanced)
FCC License
Functional English
Hospital Ward Sec
W H 0
MAY
Hours in Course
. . . 75
. . . 75
. . . 75
. . 75
75
45
75
. . . . . . . .
'
gr A aL T ate N o° : aSy y age U l t " " " "
SUBJECT
Hours in Course
Management Development
Via Computer Simulation
75
Nursing Home Aide
75
Oil Burner Service
75
Personality Development .
75
Shorthand l|
7c
Shorthand Refresher
! . . . . . . . . . . 75
Small Gas Engines
75
Supervisory Development . . .
75
t y p i n g ||
•
' ' ' " 75
Welding Comb
' ' ' 75
75
75
75
75
°' ^
jf °'der f
e n r
°"ed | ^
SCho
°'' °r * I f
School
C O S T : All extension classes are free. Text books may be purchased in the F.T.I, bookstore.
C A N C E L L A T I O N O F C L A S S E S : The Institute reserves the right to cancel any classes prior to
starting date if enrollment is not large enough to warrant such course, or if a aualified instructor is not available.
C E R T I F I C A T E S : Students attending 80% of class hours will receive a certificate of Darticinstirm
issued by Fayetteville Technical Institute.
pamoipdiion
'A>
H O U R S : Classes will be held from 7:00 to 10 P.M. on Mondays
and Wednesdays, and Tuesdays and Thursdays. Length
of class depends on subject and type of course offered
and will last from two to three hours, two nights a week
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION DIAL 484-4131
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTEM
OFF-CAMPUS EVENING
CLASSES FOR ADULf S
REGISTRATION:
Around
Will be held Monday, January 10, 1972 between
the hours of 7:00 to 9:30 P.M. at the schools listed
below — NOT Fayetteville Technical Institute.
REGISTRATION WILL BE ON A FIRST-COME,
FIRST-SERVE BASIS.
Classes will be held on Monday and Thursday Evenings
7:00 P.M. to 9:30 P.M.
from
CAPE FEAR
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
MASSEY HILL
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Supject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8).. 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
70
TypinaM.
. 70
Bookkeeping
70
Small Gasoline Engines
70
Subject
Hours in Course
Adult Basic Education (Grades 1-8) 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
70
Typing
70
Bookkeeping
>?s#<' • 70
df
J. S. SPIVEY
5UNIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
A<$BFlt Basic Education (Grades 1-8).. 70
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Home Sewing
70
Typing
70
Bookkeeping
70
REID ROSS «&
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Hours in Course
High School Diploma Program
(Grades 9-12)
70
Typing
70
Bookkeeping
70
Home Sewing
70
RALEIGH - —•; Fayetteville
rechnicai' 'Institute is among
four institutions of higher
learning accredited by the
State Board of Education recently. •
FTI. Durham and Southwestern Technical Institutes
and Southeastern Community
College in Whitevil^were
accredited by the board.
The institutions were accredited after completing the
required procedures. Each
institution evaluated itself,
was evaluated by .a visiting
committee and was reviewed
by a committee of the state
board which screens applicant institutions;
G. Herman Porter, director
of the division of evaluation
foriahe Department of Corner
munity Colleges, said.'the" institutions.-'must undergo periodica ^revaluation to retain '
tfieir accredited status.
The
THE C U M B E R L A N D Service in organizing county
County B l i n d Association and statewide youth projects.
Approximately 100 persons
needs help in transporting
local blind persons to and attended the meeting to disfrom the Cumberland Center cuss the upcoming horsefor the Blind on S. Cool manship clinic scheduled in
March. Heird will conduct the
Spring Street.
The blind center, open on clinic.
Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays, provides a chance S THE TIMELY topic of
for the blind to engage in Fayetteville Technical Instiactivities which interest them tute's ' ' G r e a t Decisions"
but are not otherwise avail- series tonight will be "Our
able.
China Policy."
If you can help, telephone
The speaker will be Dr
488-0139.
Lawrence Kessler of the
University of North CaroFOR THE PAST 44 years, lina's history department.
the N.C. Forest Service has
Dr. Kessler's teaching spebeen growing forest tree ciality is East Asian history
seedlings which are sold to — particularly pre-modern,
landownamuin the state at and modern, China history. A
cost, .-asl
graduate of Chicago UniverThis year, the service's sity, Dr. Kessler held a Fornurseries are growing their eign Area Fellowship "fojfi
one l&Bionth seedling, ac- study in Taiwali from 1964-66.
cording to Frank Cain, CumThe public is invited to atberland C o u n t y Forest tend tonight's program at
7:30 at FTI.
Ranger.
SEVENTY-FIRST
SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Subject
Typing
Bookkeeping
Home Sewing
Cake Decorating
For further details, contact:
Hours in Course
70
70
70
20
Director,
General Adult Education
Telephone 484-4121 Ext. 29
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools.
'A/7.'2,
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7~
GOOD NEIGHBORS — Fayetteville Technical Institute's chapter of Data Processing Management Association was organized to promote better understanding
of data processing as a profession, However, recently
they promoted the cause of "good neighbors" by
volunteering to paint the gymnasium at St. Patrick's
Scrjool on* Ft. Bragg Road. The volunteers were Ron
Christie, Trox Poland, Paul Moro, H. D. Grantham,
Ken Arnold, Kathy Hall, Keith Hooker, D a v i d s ^ c k v6, Rob.ejpt Ofeer, Bobby Crossen, Linda MaAflbey,
Yoneko Addleton, Ray Bowles, Clint Nordan, Mike
Morris and Joan Mosher. (Observer Photo — Blount)
.
*
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I
�The American College'iof Life Under^ ^ writers ha? announced that 22 tocal insurance
life underwriters have successfully completed their fall semester stutfles'as. par,t of the Chartered Life Underwriter education
program;
M
- T h e stiidreil^Were condueled^aS-part of the Fayetteville
Technical Instifme. adult ecfiicalSorrcurnculum in cooperation
with the FayettevnTe Association of Life Underwriters.
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J
Karate >
Toumey^ifm
Here Sunday ™
Four FTI students will participate in the U.S.A. Karate
Championship
Tournament
sponsored by the KoreanAmerican Tae Kwon D a Association Sunday, March ^th at
the C u m b e r ka n d County
Memorial Auditorium.
M i c h a e l L. Haynes, a
business administration major at FTI, is also the institute's instructor in karate,
and will compete in the black
belt (2nd degree) divisia$. ijj
Nicky Vereen, electrical installation student, will participate in the blue and green
belt division wluie David
Walters, from the electronics
engineering technology curriculum; Bob Sandljn, industrial
management
and
Thomas Matlock, mlchinists,
will compete in the white and
yellow belt division. |
now
115 FTI
fStudents
On 'List'
One hundred, fifteen students enrolled at Fayetteville
Technical Institute w e r e
named to the President's List
for the fall quarter. Those
earning a grade of " B " or
better for the first session of
the 1971-72 academic year at
FTI were:
ACCOUNTING — Johnathan Rovir. Ronnie West and
Charles Wrenn.
AIR C O N D I T I O N I N G
MECHANICS — George P.
Averite. Clayjfon L. Burtrum.
Joseph Ed\#&tjfe; Jr.. Millard
Hartranft.. iwetrah Spencer,
Ronald Kldsttfer* Thomas K.
Hutchinson':' Mffffih S. Hudson.
Jr.. rtiarles' J S° Clapper. Harry J. AustilnPVd. William
Barrv Jones! : s
ARCHITECfuftAL DRAFTING - MicMfflPJ. Quarterman. Jam.-sj3bWke. Ratcliff.
JSnd Wilson
Car
A
EDEGREE
N I
p^ Marguerite
Bur
Cates.- Sandra
Hof man. Sarah Jenkins. Gay
M e , a d o r , Felicia Schafer,
Judy Siceloff, Donna Corbin,
Kendall Jamls > and Patricia
n
Warren.
AGRlCUi.Tr AL
BUSINESS-Ro:'
AUTOMOTIVE
:c HANICS — Steven Fa '
John
Hildcrbrand, Roi
Sixop
and Bob Perkins]
cisco
Pelaez. Richard Sirahin.
BUSINESS ADMINISTi ATION — Larry Fergus' in.
Michael Parker Vick. An I
Bass. Edgar Bennington. 1
Richard Gray and Kevin M.
Lynch.
CIVIL
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY - Gary Butler. Glen Elliott. James T.
Home. John D. Simons, Avelino Iorres Billoch. Jr.. Richard L. Halfast. Jr.. John
Dawson. Woodrow Dobsbn,
Joe Godwin, Walter Kolody,
John Smith and Ronald Vandais.
D E N T A L HYGIENE —
Carol Cogdell, Pam Pearsall.
J a c j i e Perkins. Sandra
Waren, Janet Vitolo. and
Brenda Wiseman.
E L E C T R I C A L INSTALLATION & MAINTENANCE
— John B u r k e 1 1 , Danny
Barns, Holt Cannady, Jim Deloach, David Dobson, Samuel
McGirt. Shelton Noles, and
Joseph Saxon.
E L E C T R O N I C DATA
PROCESSING - K e n n e t h
Ray Arnold. David L. Buckner, James Godwin and Paul
Moro. Also. Joan Mosher.
Clinton Nordan and William
Westbrook.
E L E C T R . O N V . I . C S ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
— Samuel Croons Steven
Gates. Jenny- -BuiJard. David
Shroals. Robert .Woods and
David Warner.
ENVIRONMENTAL ENG. INEERING TECHNOLOGY James Thomas Fisher, James
Harrell Jones. Russejfo J.
Kopti, Nancy Melvin and John
Reid.
MENT — William McDanjel.
MARKETING & RETAILING — Glen Keel. Danny
Lynn
Glover, and Ann
Leamon.
MACHINISTS — Mack Herring. Millard Lowry, . Loyd
B 1 a c k m a n and Thomas
Matlock.
MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
— William Daniels and Darryl Wolfe.
P R A C T I C A L NURSE
E D U C A T I O N — Kathryn
Carter. Doris C r e i g-h t o n .
Barbara Melvin. Judy Shea.
R o b e r t Stanley. Theresa
Stanley. Emily Sutherland,
Janice Uhruh.
SECRETARIAL SCIENCE
— Catherine Clark Wilt. Linda Morrison. Edna Williams..
TOOL & DIE - James
Beasley. J. E. Crabtree. Philip Hedrick, Broncho Naylor
and Charles Redwine.
' WELDING — R o b e r t
Beasley-and Scott Jernigan.
BILLY D. HAYES has returned to his home in Spring
Lake from Vietnam where he
was manager of the ( Post
Exchange for the pas§Lyear.
He is the son of Mr. amrMrs.
Willie D. Hayes oJL^Spring
Lake. He is at home with his
wife and two sons at i r a g g
EstatesV
MISS
JOAN DORSETT,
daughter of Mrs. Elenore
Dorsett. 1031 Stamperf Road,
has been^seleeted to play
Tuptim in the "King and I"
for the February 3, 43 5 productions at the Djaycroft
S c h o o l , Greenwich, Conn.
Joan is a sophomore at
Daycroft.
This is the first year Fayetteville Tech has offered
students the opportunity to
learn karate as one of the
several intramurjal student
activities initiated under the
direction of Al pferce, coordinating counselor^
FTI DEAN OF STUDENTS,
Niles E. Compton, has ret u r n e d from Washington,
D.C., where he and three
other representatives of the
Community College System of
North Carolina met with the
National Task Force on Education. Their prirflary concern was related to the Vietnam veteran and an increase
in the educational benefits
alotted
the-% j£jnilitarv
alotted the military separatees.*
"Tae~ Kwon Do" is the
technique of unarmed combat
for self-defense. Translated
from Korean, "Tae" means
to jump or kick. "Kwon" denotes j a fist—to punch or
destroy with the fist. "Do"
indicates the art or method.
Thus,#Tae Kwon Do" the art
of self defense through fists
and feet* It is, however, more
than |hat — it is a way of life
iriyjjiyirig strict, self-imposed
dis&mne and vigorous mentaTJSHB'physical conditioning.
//oZ//7Ji^
Tobler f Slat e s T Speech TAt f FTI
Dr. John 0. Tobler, chairman of the social science department at Methodist College, will speak at the Great
Decisions discussion at Fayetteville Technical Institute
Monday night. | | |
He will speak?" on. "Guns
And-Or Butter.,'J|
He holds th4;Matura Degree from State College, Appenzell, Switzigland. and Licence 'En Droit :frorii. the
University of Geneva. He re-
ceived his Ph.D. degree in
political science from Johns
Hopkins University.,<j|j5
'88W@$mmm&
A f ^ R J T I M j T ^ symposium
will be held at Methodist .College Saturday at 1:30 p.Jnrjg
the .lidrffi^lobby of the Fine
Arts Building. The topic is
"Writing in the High' School
English Program."
Participants will include
area high school teachers,
Methodist College students
and representatives f r o m
Fayetteville State University
and Fayetteville Technical
Institute. The two-hour conference is open to the public.
Raymond
Con Iey
of
Methodist is moderator of the
symposium. Speakers will be
Robert Christian of Methodist, Mrs.. Mason Sykes of
Pine Forest High School, and
Mrs. L. ft. Mason of Metho-
i/n/y^k
Fields Gives Program!
9?
Around The €
MRS. LURA TALLY will
serve as coordinator for
Fayetteville
Technical
Institute's "Great- Decisions,
1972" series which wijl begin
Jan. 31 at FTI
"Great Decisions' is an
annual
study-discussion
program on key foreign p©Hcy
topics organized by the
non-partisan Foreign Policy
For Woman s Club
w
'//3/j^
A BOOKLET
giving
information on how to fill out
federal tax returns is available
at all postal facilities irj the
area
_
The 160-page booklet sell§
J**
75 cents
_... . Fayetteville Postmas^eV
George Herndon ^ i d "By
selling this booklet,-'we are
offering a convenient service
to our customersSkWe are
participating in a nationajde
program to make the booklet
available to the public in 15,000
postal facilities."
Another tax publication.
Tax Guide for Small
Business '' is also on sale for 75
cents
kk
The program will be held in
the Paul Thompson Library
at 7:30 p.m.
Association and offered for the
third year at FTI.
The series will be marked as
one hour workshop, crfe^H-.for
. teachers renewal certification'
The series wiy,>iunrf6jr eight
i weeks beginnWg^fZiSfrp"-m- in
.the FTI librarffTEnefieNis"no
cost for the series:-
William C Fields, interna
tionally known artist, was
guest speaker for the January,
meeting of the FayettevHtep
Woman's Club held Friday
morning at the club house on
Dick St. Mr. Fields described
slides of portraits now hanging in the North Carolina
Museum of Art, with a few of
his own. The Fine Arts Department,
Mrs.
James
Masouras, chairman, Mrs.
John A. Stewman, co-chairman, and Mrs. R. F. Kelly,
presented the program.
The club members voted
unanimously to support the
Fayetteville city u t i l i t y ,
water and sewer bond issue
to be voted on February 15.
Mayor Jack Lee presented
slides and explained the objectives of the bond issue.
Announcement was made
concerning thes*^Great Decisions"
discission group
which will meet January 31 at
Fayetteville Technical Insti-
tute, and on each Monday
evening for two months. The
discussions will be held at
7:30 p.m. and led by outstanding speakers from Duke
University, R a l e i g h and
Fayetteville, it was a n •
nounced. World problems will
be discussed. There will be no
admission charge. Adults interested in attending may call
FTI to register
Tne International Affairs
Department reported Jfpre
than $500 sent to UNICEMor
the sale of Christmas Cards§
New members of the:flub
recognized were: Mesd'arhes
Furman Nunnamaker J | Nathan B. Rigby, C. C. Tefrell,
Robert D. Dubbs, HaVvey
Keaton, Gregg Sutton-^ and
Renus Maultsby.
Announcement was a l s o
made concerning Expo '72,
the annual trade fair, to be
held in March. Plans are underway and ads are being
sold for the fair directory
book and booth spaces are
being signed up.
Hostesses for the luncheon
were Mesdames James H.
Perkins, chairman, R.\ C.
B u t l e r , co-chairman, John
Farrell, Irvin L. Snyjder,
Edwin E. Montgomery, |Wi 1liam G. Nimocks, C.p-jjiM.
O'Neill, Haywood Stanley*W.
J. West, Wilbur J. Smith, V.
R. White and W. Vardell Williamson.
Routine reports were heard
from the various departments.
Mrs
Parker
Lynch,
p r e s i d e n t of the Junior
Woman's Club, presented the
club a silver bonbon dish and
serving tongs.
1Q<
Decorations were furnished j
by Owen's Florist and the
hostesses.
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10,1972
^-^^n^wP^M^pWr
'Great Decisions, 1972'
Begins Jan. 31 at FTI
nil"
Mrs. Lura Self Tallv will the Salgo Award for distinguished teaching. An addiact as coordinator for Fay
etteville Technical Institute's tional talent is poetry. Dr.
"Great D e c i s i o n s , 1972" Lipsitz's b o o k of poems,
series which will begin Mon- "Cold Water", was recently
published, and he is now
day, January 31.
working on translations of the
Great Decisions is an anChilean poet,Pablo Neruda.
n u a 1 study-discussion proMrs. Tally.Tfioordinator for
gram on key foreign policy
the series, is a counselor at
topics organized by the nonWashington D r i v e Junior
partisan Foreign Policy AsHigh School and received her
sociation and offered for the
A.B. degree from Duke Unithird year on the campus at
versity and her Master's
FTI.
from North Carolina State
Thousands of c i t i z e n s University. An outstanding
throughout the United States civic leader, Mrs. Tally is
consider the weekly topic in a president of the Cumberland
variety of settings. The Na- C o u n t y Historical Society,
tional Educational Network past-president of the Womf e a t u r e s a distinguished an's Club, Fayetteville Art
speaker on each subject, and League and the North Carothe local groups consider the lina Society for the Presersame question at their weekly vation of Antiquities.
meeting.
The Great Decisions series
The Fayetteville
T e c h will run for eight weeks beseries will be marked as one- ginning Monday, January 31,
how workshop credit for at 7:30 p.m. igtjFayetteville
teachers' renewal certificaf Technical Institute's Library,
tion. Each of the Monday and run through March 20.
evenings will bring an out- There is no tuition for this
• standing authority on the course offered through the
discussion subject to the Continuing Education procampus of FTI. January 31, gram of FTI. A booklet conDr. Lewis Lipsitz, associate taing concise information on
professor of political science each of the discussion topics
at UNC, will conduct the dis- is available at Fayettevilla,
cussion of "Vietnam and Af- Tech's bookstore.
ter—What Lessons Have We
F u r t h e r informatijj
Learned?" Dr. Lipsitz is a
member of the Executive available by contacting*!
Committee of the Caucu#-for director of extension a t '
A New Political Science^Ffie etteville Technical Institute.
author of journal. articles' on
national.. polit.idJa'^isjuS^'he
holds a PnX)^from*Yare and
lient of
was the 1968-69
FAYETTEVILLE
State
University's Music and Fine
Arts Department has scheduled a concert of chamber
music next Tuesday.
The concert will feature
musicians from the FSU
music department, members
of the Methodist C o l l e g e
music
department, and
members of the Fayetteville
Symphony. It will be held in
the Rosenthal Building beginning at 8 p.nt The public
is invited.
A similar concert will be
held at Methodist College
March 1.
"THE SOVIET Union and
the U.S." will be the third
topic of X a y e 11 e v i 11 e
Technical Institute's "Great
Decisions" series next Monday night.
Dr. Joel Swartz of the University of North Carolina
political science department,
will be the featured speaker.
He attended the University of
M o s c o w as a Fulbright
Scholar and is considered an
expert on Russian affairs.
The session begins at 7:30
o'clock in the Paul Thompson
Library.
TO HELP FILL the area's
need for registered nurses,
Fayetteville Technical I n stitute will offer a refresher
course for nurses during
March. It will be sponsored
by the Cumberland County
Hospital System Inc. and
clinical experience will be
provided at Cape Fear Valley
and Highsmith-Rainey hospitals.
The course consists of 135
hours
of
clinical
and
classroom -instruction and
classes will meet daily Monday through Friday from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. for six weeks.
There is no tuition, but students are expected to purchase selected text materials
and participate in the institute's insurance plan..' The
course will run from March
13 to April 24.
Registered nurses interested in enrolling should rjtelj
ephone 484-4121, extension 25.
�3»_L:JK£^£
^t^Mi^ags
/ / ^ />^2/
Capping
By ftf£!*flB»HASTY
Today is an important occasion in file lives of the
twenty young women in the
first dental hygiene class at
Fayetteville Technical Insti-
Fayetteville police reported
this-. mwoijLng that two movie
projectors, have' teen stolen
from n Rajcetteyille Technical
InstitqteVaorll i-.
flsiq .boO i.
TnWht#«hd*scovered
Wednesday - after police received a(,'repbrt one of the
projectors had been pawned.
Service Set For Dental |Hygiene Students
tute and another step forward
for growing FTI.
This afternoon in a ceremony at FTI (closed to the
public), they will receive
their caps, signifying the ac-
CLINIC PRACTICE — P a m Pearsall, president of the
dental hygiene class, at work in the clinic under the
supervisioipfe Mrs. Eileen Hoehn, instructor. Carol
jCogdelMs the stitdentjjatient.
complishment of an assigned
amount of work and the beginning of the school experience of seeing patients
under the supervision of instructors.
Students receiving t h e i r
caps will be Susan Barnes,
Carolyn B 1 e e k e r , Lynda
Faircloth, C a r o l Cogdell,
Vickie French, Debbie Giles,
Donna Harris, Carolyn Hemingway, Sandy Hennessee,
C a r o l y n Hoffman, Helga
King, Debora Norris, Gladys
Reynolds, Brenda Wiseman, .
P a m e l a Pearsall, Sandra
Russell, Janet Vitola, Sandra ,
Warren, Karen Putham, and
Martha Bock.
Miss Pearsall, president of
the group, will preside at the
event. Others appearing on
the program include FTI
President
Howard
E.
B o u d r e a u , Hg^.-. David
Dunham, chaipjjian of the
Den^a1 I^sgiene Department,
and-:. Dr. "Robert T a y 1 '%&'*#
president of the 5th DistJ^f'
Dental Society. Followingi^g'
program, a reception w8i«&?i
given for the families ami" X-RAYS —Dr. David Dunham, head of
the dental hygiene department at FTI,
guests of the students.
According to Mrs. Tena
watches as Brenda Wiseman exposes
McQueen, clinic director, the
students have completed their
basic academic work and are
ready to apply their knowledge under supervision.
Their services will be extended to the public on Tuesdays and Thursdays. However, Tuesdays are already
"booked". The superintendent
of city schools has agreed to
arrange for children to be
seen on Tuesday mornings,
and in the afternoon children
in foster homes will be seen.
However, Thursdays will be
open to adults only, at 9 a.m.
and 2 p.m. Interested persons
should call in advance, Mrs.
McQueen advises.
This v i s i t will include
scaling and polishing the
teeth, applying fluoride topically, exposing radiographs,
and taking study casts of the
teeth.
Next jjj||f, in the second
year of •Sjfllning, the clinic
will be openS&ch afternoon to
children and a®lts.
The dental.hygienist is recognized as an auxiliary
member of the dental profession which includes the dentist, dental assistant, and
dental technician. The role of
the dental hygienist is to
function as a member of the
dental health team with the
primary purposes (^providing preventive care and oral
hygiene education under the
direction <and supervision of a
TOOTHSOME" TRAINING AID — Mre. "Tena McQueen dentist. Oflre the dental hygi(leftl^elinic director, observes Jg||||||£itolo scaling on enist and the dentist are lethe^\D^|ntoform. Janet is p r e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ f the^Junior , gaily allowed to perform direct preventive procedures
A^er^m Dental Hygienis^p
within the patient's mouth.
Mrs. Knight
dSives Club
Rrojectors Stolen
'JUL.
Program
The Lafayette Garden Club
met Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Rudolph Singleton. Also
serving as hostesses were
Mrs. Henry Hutaff. Mrs. M.
W. Wallace and Mrs. Jim
Hall.
The business meeting was
conducted by Mrs. Reginald
Barton, president, who welcomed new member, Mrs. C.
G. Pantelakos.
Garden Center chairman,
Mrs. Alex McBryde, reminded members" the club is
responsible* for the flower
show at the Garden Center on
February 24.
K was decided toi donate $15
to Fayel lepsilje beautiful to
help with the cost of planting
Carolina Ja-smine -along the
brick wallsjq&ay^t.
Plans for* ^Flower Show
School to be held-(.September
26. 27 and 28 at ine-McNairy
Building were* relajiedc to the
group by MrsV4Jaj4oji"fend the
club voted to pledge support
to this projecOO " .,? pf!
^" It was reported that the
yaupons purchased' for the
Rose Garden at Fayetteville
Technical Institute w e r e
planted in December.^
Mrs. Larry Price, program
chairman, introduced Mrs.
Vance Knight, a member of
the club, who presented a
program on planting a garden
for continual bloom through
all seasons. After going over
some basic landscaping rules.
Mrs. Knight suggested spring bulbs, iris, day lillies. summer phlox and c h r y s a n them urns as five-easy-lo-grow:
plants for this area that
would provide color from
Spring through Fall. Slides of
areas.an1 her yardUat different
season's of the Aifitegi were
shown .to i 11ustratc +ow. by
overplanting-, Vac^W?a was
"' Jed with. color ' Throughout
lyear.
In their two-year program,
, dental hygiene students take
a college curriculum along
with their | dental hygiene
courses. Subjects included
are composition, literature,
speech, psychology, sociology, chemistry, first aid, anatomy and physiology, * b i ochemistry, nutrition, microbiology Dental hygiene courses
include histology, embryology, head-neck anatomy, radiology, community dental
h e a l t h , general and oral
pathology, dental health education, periodontology, dental
materials, pharm a c o 1 ogy,
a n e s thesiology,.
o f nee
management, ethics antf'jurisprudence. In a d d i t.i o n ,
there are electives. Irf all,
there are 105 hours in six
quarters.
The duties and functions
assigned to the dental hygienist profession are viewed as
essentially professional in
, nature. According to Mrs.
McQueen, the practicing dental hygienist must be licensed
by the State Board of Dental
Examiners. She must be a
graduate of an accredited
school and passed state and
national board examinations.
A state board examination is
required in each state.
FTI's school of dental hygiene has proWsJoUal accreditation. Full accreditation is
expected during, the second
year of the program when an
accreditation c o m m i t t e e
composed of one member of
the American Dental Hygifnists Assn. and two members
of the A m e r i c a n Dental
Assn., Council on Dental
Education, visits the school to
evaluate the program.
The field of dental hygiene
is fairly open, especially in
s m a l l e r communities, and
w a g e s are good, Mrs.
McQueen said. Men, too, are
wanted in the p r o g r a m ,
pointed out Dr. Dunham, who
noted that most of the dental
hygienists within the military
are men. They are particularly needed in institutional
and education posts. The
work of the dental hygienist
isn't competitive with a dentist, it was noted. Rather, the
hygienist makes it possible
for a dentist to be able to
treat more patients. Recent
figures show that only twenty
per cent of the public has any
dental work done.
The dental hygiene department occupies a spacious
and attractive suite of rooms
in .Cumberland Hall. Plans
are being irSde to train denta^assistanls,. injthe near fu-
=5// 7/7 2-,
Scoff
Local
dental radiographs. The student patient is Sandy Henessee.
To
Address
Gathering
Howard E. Boudreau, President of Fayetteville Technical
Institute,* and John H. Swope, Executive Director of the
Fayetteville Area Industrial Development Corporation, will act
as co-hosts for 150 members of the North Carolina Association
of Public Community College Presidents and the North Carolina Industrial Developers Association here next week at
Green Valley Country Club.
Purpose of the conference is an exchange of ideas involved
uin the education and training of personnel for industry.
Highlight of the Wednesday and Thursday session will be an
address by Gov. Bob Scott Thursday night. Gov. Scott will be
introduced by Dr. W. Dallas Herring, chairman of the State
Board of Education.
Each of North Carolina's 56 community colleges will be
represented as well as the leading industries, old and new, and
delegates from the Tar Heel State's Department of Natural and
Economic Resources.
'/j.
As President of Fayetteville Technical Institute, and as a
member of FAIDC, Boudreau will preside at the daytime
sessions scheduled on the campus of FTI. Swope will emcee the
Thursday night meeting.
z / 4 jjf-7 —
-7/ 7A
Zto&tife
DIAL 485-3440
^ ^ ^ ^ -
The Observer's Live Wire cuts red tape to answer
questions and solve problems of general interest. For
action dial Live Wire direct at any hour or write Live
Wjre, Box 849, Fayetteville 28302. We'll print your initials
but you must include name, address and phone number.
Q. Can you tell me whether Fayetteville Technical Institute
is considered an accredited junior college, or is it just an
accredited school? — M. W.
A..JPTI is accredited by the Southern Association of Schools
and^olleges as a special purpose school, Howard Boudreau,
president, said. This accredition is equal to that given a college
or junior college, he said.
People You Know
MRS. JOHN O ' B A L E ,
chairman, Health Occupation
D i v i s i o n , *:FgyetteviIle
Technical Institute, recently
attended the Univerjfi$y ° ^
North Carolina -Schjol of ">
Nursing one-day-- • workshop^
"Problems of Patients oif|
Long-term Medication," ins
Chapel Hill. She was one of 30*
registered nurses learninffl|
how to better handle thesiH
problems.
«*- //3 '7 i<
Community Calefy**
MONDAY
Women In Construction;
7:30 p.m., Home's Restaurant.
Alcoholics Anonymous. Ft.
Bragg Group; 8 p.m.. Building HTJ050, Smoke Bomb
HiiuasaL
lille Optimist Club;
EHeel Restaurant,
lie Rotary Club;
ans Civic Center.
Bile Chapter, Society^Pffi|Pe Preservation and
Encouragement of B a r b e r
S h o p Quartet Singing In
America; 8 p.m.. Haymount
United Methodist Church.
TUESDAY
Cape Fear Optimist Club; 1
p.m., Empire Steak House.
Haymount Lions Club; 1
p.m., Barbecue Lodge.
FTI's Annual Great Decisions Series will begin tonight
at 7j30 p.m. in the Paul
Thgfcapson Library. Topic of
tonfpK's discussion: "Vietnam "and After" — with Dr.
Lewis Lipsitz, Associate Professor, of Political - Science,
U m ^ S featured speaker.
Ptgblanb |Jr£0irgtetan (ftijurcfy
^ayetiefnlle, ^arih Carolina
Organized 1911
�*^-j»-T?r-
Q@yernorr ChaSr$>&r C/|kf
To Speak Here
£*ea£ Becct
Observer Staff Writer
Industry Ties Examined
North Carolina in general and Fayettevilleand its
technical institute in particular were included in an
eigM-part series on industry in a New York newspaper
recently.
The series,'which appeared in the Times-Union
newspaper in Rochester, N.Y., dealt with what comp a n i S from the North encounter when they either
expand or relocate in the South.
Harp Concert Set At FTI
r e s i d e n c e a t Fayetteville
A two-harp concert will be
heldiSt Fayetteville Technical Technical Institute and preInstitute S u n d a y , January viously held that position at
30th at 4:00 p.m. Featured on N.C. State University.
the' program will be Mrs.,
Using the theme, "Musical
Linda Booth, first harpist Sound — its nature, signifiwith the Charlotte Symphony. cance and awareness," the
Mrs. Booth received her ; artists will offer a rare duo"Bachelor's degree at the concert for their audience in*
;
•-' University pf*Texas where the Paul H. Thompson U-%
she studied with Joel An- brary on FTI's campus Sun?-'
" drews, ,also performing at the day at 4:00 p.m. Admission is
\ Sunday afternoon presenta- free of charge.
/ A-£^2
tion. Andrews is musician-in-
Fafcco Industries here has its home base in Rochester.
John Swope, executive director of the FayettevUle
Area Industrial Development Corp., was quoted in the
article as saying "Eastern Carolina is
^ySre^Se
U P to six y£ars ago, the only plants we had here were
Burlington Mills and Fasco.
"Since thenV^uPont, Black & Decker, Rohm &
Haas Purolator, 'Kelly-Springfield and three t e g
plants have ame to Fayetteville.
Swope saidihis and other growth across the M
is partly attributable to the technical institutes wh*
train workers, especially young ones, for work,
industry.
^ipjjli
"Industry doesn't want community c o l l e g e s ^
w a n t s X S w o r k e r s , " said Swope. And, Faye tevd e
^technical I n s t i t u t e s hard at work turning out those
lied workers.
A
f|
Swope said She best thing c o r f i p a m e s p r o n i j h !
I&rth find X n l K e y consider expanding ftVe i£*he
r i d i n e s s of ] & p l e willing and able to learn n e w £ * s
arid to adapt ^.-industrial life.
i | s with the technical institutes will ;be
further e x a S at a two-day midwinter
c o «
next wee*'of the N.C. Industrial Developers As*g3aS
and the N C Association of Public CommfiMy
c l i ^ r e s i d e n t s at F a y e | e v i l l e T e t f u ^ I n « e .
/
I HE technical institute-community college system has gotten into
the act of fighting pollution statewide with the initiation of a course
to train mechanics in servicing
emission control devices installed
on motor vehicles.
Ninety percent of the funds for
the one-year project are from the
Manpower Development and Training Act with the remaining money
coming from state funds. The
total funding amounts to nearly
$50,000.
Robert G. Smith, MDTA supervisor, Department of Community
Colleges, estimates that 2,500
mechanics will be trained through
the 56 technical institutes and
community colleges in this special
project. "The independent garage
owners are primarily the ones we
are trying to reach," said Mr.
Smith. And he added, "There is
no charge for taking the course."
The four-hour-long course is being taught by two instructors who
are based at Wayne Community
College and Richmond Technical
Institute. One instructs classes at
technical institutes and community colleges located in the eastern
half of the state while the other
teaches in the western half.
10
Wednesday. Hosts for the
conference will be Howard E.
Boudreau. president of Fayetteville Technical . Institute,
and John H. Swope. .executive
director of -.the:-Fayetteville
Area Industrial Development
Crop.
Purpose of the conference
is an exchange of ideas in
educating and training personnel for industry. Dr. W.
Dallas Herring, chairman of
the State Board of Education,
will introduce Gov. Scott.
About 150 representatives
of the state's 56 community
colleges and leading industry
will attend.
Davis, who wp
the chamber dig
44th president o f i
organization, wi
serving its 60tb4|
in W a s h i n g t o n , ^
Tff short course for the
"home"gardener" interested
in growing plants from seeds
and cuttings will be given at
Fayetteville Technical Institute starting Tuesday, Feb.
8th at 7 p.m., running two
hours e a c h Tuesday and
Thursday evenings through
Feb. 22.
Instructor for the ten-hour
course will be Stanley Owen
of N. C. State University.
Class activities include discussions on soils and various
means of propagating plants.
For furth^ti information,
contact the director of extension, Fayetteville Technical
Institute, telephone 484-4121.
,956
-
ing education and adult education,
says, "You have probably seen
some of these trucks with a roll
of black smoke coming from them
as they travel; this is illegal. What
the seminar was supposed to do
was to teach the people'involved
in the trucking industry exactly
how to control the exhaust emissions from trucks."
Forsyth Technical Institute recently hosted a training session
in Visible Emissions Evaluation for
the North Carolina Motor Carriers
Association. The training session
was held at the request of the
Office of Water and Air Resources.
• Technical institutes and community colleges are offering fulltime curriculums and regular
credit courses which deal with
modern-day ecology. For example,
Fayetteville Technical Institute's
Environmental Engineering Technology curriculum is recognized
nationally. It is the only one of
its kind in the state and the curriculum has been repeated in over
two dozen schools, colleges and
institutes in the country, according to Mrs. Joann MacMillan, public relations director for Fayetteville Tech. /
Western Piedmont Community
College has recently added two
THE OPEN DOOR
Martin T e c h n i c a l I n s t i t u t e
teaches a course in pollution as
a part of the institute's Fish and
Wildlife Management Program.
The students study in detail air,
water and chemical pollution.
Several curriculums related to
ecology are offered by Haywood
Technical Institute and are proving to be particularly popular with
the college-age generation. Among
the programs are Fish and Wildlife Management, Forest Management, Forest Recreation and Wood
Products Technology.
Robert M. Howard, public information officer at Gaston College, reports that the college is
offering a course in Environmental
Science in cooperation with the
staff development/in-service offerings of the Gaston County Schools.
"While this course is broader than
the single topic of pollution, enWINTER 1972
prersary
^/^Zz-J-f
Under the sponsorship of the Alan Smallwood will play
Friends of the Library and piano and Randy Powell will
Fayetteville Technical Insti- be on drums. The basic style
tute, a program of words, of the music is jazz. Smallmusic and dance will be pre- wood and Powell have apsented Sunday, Feb. 6, in the peared on ntjrrtferous televiauditorium of the FTI Li- sion shows ire the WinstonSalem area erwtth Buzbee.
brary beginning at 4 o'clock.
They have alsSabpeared with
The words: the poetry of him at Reynolds House on
Alton Buzbee, member of the several occasions. Both are
department of student affairs students at the North Caroat the North Carolina School lina School of the Arts.
The dancers, who will imof the Arts at Winston-Salem.
Readings will be from the provise to the words and
recently published volume music, are Liz Brotman and
'•Words by Buzbee" and.from Larry Ward. The y also are
pewer works not included in students at NCSA.
The public is invited to at; that volume.
tend.
q- A 7=2
j-jjje music;, will be improvisation based on the poetry.
vironmental pollution is an integral subject of discussion during
the course," said Mr. Howard.
At the Technical Institute of
Alamance the students in the
Chemical Technology Department
took on an ambitious project designed to show what is happening
to one of North Carolina's major
river systems—the Cape Fear and
its major tributaries. According to
Paul C. Davis, administrative assistant at the Alamance County
technical institute, the project was
highly successful with students'
experimental work detecting the
presence of specific pollutants.
Across the state technical institutes and community colleges observe Earth Day, hold "Clean-up
Days" and have organized clubs
that have as their purpose an attack on pollution.
Marjorie Talton, of the Public
Relations Department at Caldwell
Community College, reports that
the students there in one day's
time collected 100 bags of litter
j § the
lational
is ob-
He has been •ehairJlHr ol
the board at WachovraFSlhre
Program of Words.
Music, Dance Set
new courses which are related to
ecology and pollution, according
to H. D. Moretz, dean of the college. The courses are Environmental Science and Environmental
Science Laboratory. According to
the college catalogue, Environmental Science is a study of ecological principles and present-day
environmental problems with special emphasis on populations and
various types of pollution.
A report from Davidson County
Community College reveals that
the school is offering a course
during the winter quarter called
Fundamentals of Earth Environmental Studies and a continuation
of the course will be offered in
the spring quarter.
The Davidson County Community College also reports that a
small grant has been received to
support a two-week workshop for
public school teachers during the
summer of 1972. The workshop
will be concerned with providing
the teachers with up-to-date information on the problems of pollution. Although it will be aimed
primarily at the junior high school
level, it will also be appropriate
for other public school personnel.
ipeak at
Davis is a -pasl fesident of
the American Bankers Association, a formed;director of
the Charlotte branch of the
Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond and is at present a
trustee of the Committee for
Economic Development and
the joint Council on Economic
Education.
d a r d | n Course
/ibZ/?^
Emission control devices have
been standard equipment on new
vehicles for the past few years,
and there is a nationwide demand
for training mechanics to service
these parts.
In the past, in another attempt
to attack pollution, the Department of Community Colleges, the
Office of Water and Air Resources
and the Employment Security
Commission have sponsored training for wastewater treatment plant
operators. The project was financed with Manpower Development
and Training Act funds.
The training emphasized the
practical aspects of proper plant
operation and maintenance. It
added to the operator's knowledge
and skills so that he can now do
a better job of operating and maintaining his plant, obtaining maximum efficiency and reducing the
pollution in the state's streams.
On the local scene, Central
Piedmont C o m m u n i t y College
sponsored a two-day seminar for
the trucking industry to inform
those people as to the exact
amount of exhaust emissions that
are allowed from diesel trucks as
they travel up and down the highways. Otto Lockee, Central Piedmont's vice president for continu-
Gov. Bob Scott and Archie
K. Davis, president of the
Chamber of Commerce of the
United States .~?wi 11 make
separate speaking appearances here Thursday night.
Gov Scotttwill speak at a
joint meeting of the North
Carolina Association of Public
Community Colleges and the
North C a r o l ir|a Industrial
Developers Association at
Green Valley Country Club.
Davis, who is chairman of
the board of Wachovia Bank
and Trust -Company, will
speak at the 73rd annual dinner oi\: the Fayetteville Area
Chamber of Commerce at the
Cumberland County Memorial Exhibit Hall.
Gov. S c o t.t' s Appearance
will .climax a^tSvojdEfy conference oPcomfrfunity'College
presidents 'arhd 'industrial
developers group beginning
on a rural road near the college.
"Ironically, found in the ditch
with the litter was a sign warning
citizens of the fine for littering,"
said Mrs. Talton.
Clean-up day at Southeastern
Community College is getting bigger and bigger. With the assistance of faculty and local businesses, the students recently
cleaned up the highway that runs
in front of the college campus.
They traveled a distance of approximately four miles in their
clean-up campaign.
Among the schools that have
clubs organized specifically to
fight pollution are College of the
Albemarle and Wilkes Community
College. According to Wilkes' student newspaper, the students this
year formed a club called STOP
(Society Troubled Over Pollution).
STOP plans to invite people to give
talks at a seminar on pollution to
be held in the spring. And too,
they are presenting a "Polluter of
the Week" award.
Mike Shifts (second from left) conducts an emission control devices class at Richmond
Technical Institute. His classes cover the western half of the state.
11
�Kmurns
For Degree
FAYETTEVILLE
State
University will appoint a
board of visitors shortly.
Creation of a board of visitors was approved by the
board of trustees recently "to
assist the .institution in enhancing its image and status
before? the many publics it
serves and to-aid in ways in
strengthening'and increasing
the services of the institution
to the people."
To be represented on the
board will be all facets of the
university — administration,
alumni, faculty, students and
citizens?
The board of trustees also
approved the beginning of an
Air Force ROTC program
during the 1972-73 academic
year.
m,
nb
WO C I A ' i .
SECURITY
manager W; W. Thomas announced today the start of
Teleservice, a t e l e p h o n e
service by -which many people can handle their social
security matters.
The number is 483-2661. On
this line a person can file a
claim,'- ask a question, determine if he has all needed
proofs to claim social security benefits or take-care of
other matters. The call saves
a trip to" the office."'
Thomas s a i - d , ; "All information is taken over the
telephone to complete the
clainvfbrm and then mailed to
you for, signature. The necessary documents^ with the
signed claim for benefits
wouldjr/ihen be returned by
Former Fayetteville Tech
student David Wayne Adcock
has returned to FTI to intern
for his bachelor's degree in
technology. Two years ago.
he was one of 20 selected for
Appalachian State University's pilot program leading
to a "B.T." An environmental
engineering technology major
at FTI, he is now conducting
labs in applied microbiology
before men twice his age.
Purpose of the internship
program is to provide supervised teaching experience for
men and women wno have
earned their associate degrees in applied science at
t e c h n i c a l institutes and
community colleges and are
preparing to instruct in their
elected fields. They receive
the usual genera! education
courses at Appalachian in
addition to the quarter assigned to interning.
A second FTI graduate, Liz
Hernandez, is in the' same
program and majored in
secretarial science prior to
entering the Boone campus.
Her internship is being spent
at Western Piedmont Community College in Morganton.
The technology degree is of
major interest to educators
not only in North Carolina, .
but throughout the South. It is
hoped that these men and
women will help fill the instructional vacancies in postsecondary institutions primarily concerned with vocational education. As more and
more industries come to the
area, the need for skilled
technicians increases.
Adcock is a graduate of
Terry Sanford High School
and earned a 3.5 scholastic
average at FTI. He is a
member of Sigma Tau Epsilon fraternity, and is taking a
minor in Industrial Arts at
Appalachian.
When asked how the J^wo
campuses compared, Adcock
said FTI was the more demanding in its program.
"Especially the time spent jgu
labs and class. I have more
free time at Appalachian."
1971, volunteer chairman I. B.
Julian announced today.
The sales represented 128.4
per cent of the county's goal
for the year of $2,035,200.
In North Carolina, the Savings Bonds program had its
most successful peace-time
year. Julian said.
DR. CHARLES A Lyons
Jr., president of Fayetteville
State University, has been
named director of Management Information Systems. ^ .
As director, he will be m v
charge of collecting data rfe-*
lated to colleges using Che*
system for use in management of the schools. .
MIS is a part of the. Institute for Services 'to5'^Education, one of many ^agencies
helping developing colleges
and universities.
Reagan Brown chats with Fayetteville Technical
Institute's Director of Extension, William L. Bryant.
BROWN SPEAKS AT BUSINESS AND
INDUSTRY BANQUET
Joann MacMillan
Public Relations Director
Fayetteville Technical Institute
Noted sociologist, Reagan V. Brown of
Texas A & M University, was the featured
speaker at Fayetteville Technical Institute's
Second Annual Business and Industry Banquet, September 1st at Green Valley Country Club.
The following day eighteen separate seminars were held on the Fayetteville Tech
campus. Moderators for each discussion
group were chosen for their skill and experience in the topic subjects.
Brown is a widely known educator and a
sought-after public speaker. Selected as the
1968 "Texan of the Year in Agriculture,"
Brown is often called "Mr. Community
Improvement." A member of the summer
faculty at Colorado State University, his
classes in human relations attract students
from all over the United States and many
foreign countries.
One hundred-fifty men and women attended this year's Business and Industry
Symposium sponsored by the Director of
Extension at Fayetteville Technical Institute.
rPRE^fflEfjITS,
| business
m a n a:g•% r.s and librarians
from 15^technical institutes
and community - col leges will
meet in the .Education Building of the' Department of
C o m m u n f l y Colleges in
-Raleigh Wednesday.'-;
Participating will be ' officials from Fayetteville, Anson, Bladen, Central Carolina,
Durham, W. W. Holding,
J o h n s t o n , Montgomery,
Piedmont, Sampson. Richmond, Robeson and Stanley
T e c h n i c a l institutes, and
Sandhills and Southeastern
Community colleges.
Dr. J. Reid Parrott, vicepresident for administrative
services, and Mrs. Vera Melton, d i r e c t o r of library
services, will preside. ^
(XduAZ&J
C3~<KI
CJ
&^JU~
-ez-t. "?(
Scott ISays
vbimtional
Aid Pushed
FAYETTEVILLE (UPI) Gov. Bob Scott said Thursday
financial support of vocational
education in North Carolina
has increased well over 100
per cent in the last four
years.
Scott, in remarks prepared
for a conference of industrial
developers and community
college presidents, said this
"illustrates in rather dramatic
terms the determination of my
administration' . . . to keep
pace in this very vital field
of education."
Scott said appropriations for
the community college system
for the current biennium show
an increase of 135.2 per ceat
over the past biennium. Ap
propriations for vocational
education in the public schools
showed a 101.8 per cent increase.
The governor said occupational education must be
emphasized
because
the
preoccupation with the baccalaureate degree has become
almost a fetish in our society."
,
Scott said t h e r e ^ were
"mistaken notion*" tfwfc the
community colleges wefli "a
system of academic' ifcia)
climbers — institutioijjjs--JjEnl
on becoming fpm--yea%3coL
leges and universities."
can ZtoFMte:
Q. I vJuSsSi'terested in taking a vocational cou.
ft home
"but how cwnL lind whether a particular school is ieSredited.^
^^^^^
Can you help? — D. K. C.
•JI/P/TS
Dental
a A. You can obtain a directory of accredited private home
study schools from the National Home Study Council by writing
160118th Street N.W., Washington, D.C. 20009.
Q. How can a person become a nurses's aide? What
training is required and where can you get this? — M. S.
^^^^
CUMBERLAND C o u n t y
sales of U.S. Savings Bonds
reached-, $2,612,294 d u r i n g
A. Nurses, aides are not licensed but Cumberland County
hospitals look to Fayetteville Technical Institute to provide
training foe-them. The- institute will offer another 75-hour
course beginning next September to help applicant's obtain
needed1 fentry skills. Classes are held on Monday and Wednesday or Tuesday and Thursday.
ftii
2_
,.,,• L uz2>
»9W0ll'
•AmU kite
Hunt Examines Rotary, V-8 Eimin
Eh
—fifing c h a m b e r L , ^ .
1
The- material for Ifhe discs
-
The engine's patent
has
been licensed to a German.
and a Japanese, automotive
firm. In the .U.S.. General
Motors has purchased rights
for research purposes. A
model airplane manufacturer
is using the Wankel rotary
engine which w e i g h t s 14
ounces and p r o d u c e s \'z
horsepower
Hunt forsees a great future
for the use of the-Wankel in
chain saws, srrraff'aftc^aft.
lawn mowers anaj Sfthps,
0/71*
William L. Bryant Will
JEcldress Woman's Club
William L. Bryant, director
of the Extension Program at
Fayetteville Technical I n stitute, will be the guest
speaker for the luncheon
m e e t i n g of Fayetteville
Woman's Club Friday at 10:30
a.m. in the club house on
Heritage Square.
Mr. Bryant .will discuss
current t r e n d s in adult
education, sponsored by the
Education Department of the
Woman's Club. Mrs. James
H. Perkins, chairman.
Born in Andalusia, Ala.,
Mr. Bryant attended Stedman'.
High School and received his
B. S. degree in agricultural
education from N.C. State
College. He attended NCSU
on a graduate fellowship and
in 1954 received his Masters
of Education Degree. He did
further graduate studies a t
Colorado State University. He
came to Fayetteville in 1963.
Prior to coming here, he
taught agriculture for" 14
years in Wayne and Bladen
Counties, was coordinator of
Agriculture-Technology
at
FTI in 1963-64, and became
director of Extension in 1964.
He is past president of the
Lions Club in Seven Springs,
Rotary Club in Bladenboro
and formei-president of N.C.
Adult Education Association.
He is a 'fi§ejnber of the board
of direetorarof N.C. Adult
Education Association, and i s ;
serving on the Administrative
Board of Haymount Meth-'
odist Church. He is a charter
member of the College Lakes
Recreation Association.
He served in the Navy,
1944-46. He and his wife,
Catherine, have three children, Mary, a senior at East
Carolina University, Brenda,
f r e s h m a n at Appalachian
State University, and Bill, 12
of the home.
Hostesses will be Mrs.
James Webster, chairman,
and Mrs. Thurman Nunamaker, co-cnairman. Members desiring to bring guests are
requested to c a w ' Mrs.
Webster
1W "
es
FTI Studies Rotary, V-8 Engines
M n J . I , „ c il
, .Models of the revolutionary presented a major challenge.
Wankel rotary engine and the They had to withstand high
traditional V-8 have been temperaturesyw i t fro u t ' the
built by Joseph Hunt, chair- u s u a l , incidenti-cofi easy
man of FTI's mechnical en- breakage-; of • (bei^trtangular
gineer ing
technology shaped discs. • In- -.1954 Felix
department. Hunt built the Wankel designed the engine
replicas for the students in and developed oil seals. It
his thermodynamics class.
was ultimately built in' 1957
These models are 1-5 scale
and are activated by pressing
"Because: the principle is
a small button which switches comparable to the V-8." reon the battery-driven me- marked Hunt, "maintenance
chanicism.
of this engine should prove
A small, light-weight en- easy to learn for the tradgine, the Wankel bears the itionally trained mechanic "
name of the consulting engineer who perfected the
principle first used in 1588 as
a part of a water pump In
the eighteenth
century,,
James Walt tried, but failed.'
to use the same principle in the
steam engine. <
[.Wankel rolarv_engine
jr
tP-//
V—'
emergency generators and
tractors. He also predicts the
.Wankel as the favorite engine
of the future for racing enthusiasts because it runs at
high speed with better balance than the V-8.
"Although the Wankel is
still in the experimental
stage," commente]
FTI instructor, v Ed
of
the ^
MS*
Department, "FJri.cghi
it is soon to repla€BTK
The- Wankel is a beautiful
engine'"
Afcs. Puckett Named
FTI Nurse OfilYear
Fayetteville Tech's Ruth
Puckett was chosen "Student
Nurse of the Year" by the
students of the Associate Degree Nursing Program of
FTI. She represented the institute at the District 9 competition where she won first
runner-up for the contest.
She is the wife of Lt. Wayne
Puckett and a graduate of the
University of Seattle where
she received her Bachelor of
Arts jDegree. A first year
student in Fayetteville Techn i c a}l Institute's Associate
Degree N u r s i n g Program,
Mrs. Puckett competed in the
finals with representatives
from Hamlet School of Nursing, Southeastern Community College and the UNC
School of Nursing at Wilmington.
Last year's nominee from
FTI was Brenda Jackson who
was also elected President of
the North Carolina Student
Nurse Association which inclj[cfed*-vl 44 schools of nursingSftd jplpresents Associate
DegreeT ^Diploma and Bac-
&m 9"
Scheduled
Dental hygiene students at
Fayetteville Technical Institute are visiting city elementary schools this week to give
toothbrushing demonstrations
in observance of National
Children's D e,nfp a, 1 Health
Week.
V *
The students arej also urging the students"; and their
parents to practice, regular
home and professional dental
care.
The dental hygiene service
at FTI is concerned primarily
with preventive techniques.
H y g i e n i s t s-jare the only
members of the .profession's
auxiliary who are, Dermitted
to work directly onthe patient,
and they help,'; relieve .'the
dentist's croweded.schedule.
The service is available to
the public on an'appointrnent
basis on Thursdays. TheTstudents are closely supervised
by the department^ faculty.
Area dentists have said the
FTI program is a g r e a t asset
to their profession because of
the need for preventive procedures.- Less -than 30 per
cent of the population seek a
dentist on a regular- basis, the
profession said. • iae
The county health department also has a - ;dental program, aimed itpnntarily at
restoration wocjemsm
Dental Health Week, being
observed this "weeK. has also
been noted bV rrwlifcry and
civilian authofi^s.sA resolution was endorsed by county
commission chairman Hector
Ray,- Mayor Jack Lee, Spring
Lake Mayor W. A. Holland,
Lt. Gen. John H. Hay of Ft.
Bragg and Maj. Gen. John H.
Herring of Pope AFB, saying,
"Whereas the future is dependent on the good health of
our children and .youth, the
citizens of tomorrow, and
good health, physical andmental, can be achieved
through good health habits,
learned early."
'oZ>
FTI Holds £
Seminar ¥
Mrs. Ruth Lahde Puckett
c a l a u r e a t e programs, in
North C a r o 1 i n a preparing
students to qualify for writing
the licensing examination tq»
become registered ~
~
Mrs. Puckett
ter of the R.N. Lall
•Lns
Altos, California.
J I
J-l^Ux.
An educational seminar en
titled "review of respiratory
problems, their recognition
and management" will be
conducted
at
Fayetteville
Technical Institute on Wednes
day afternoon, March 15
from 1:30p.m -4 30p.m.
The seminar is designed for
the medical 'professionals in
the Fayetteville area and is
presented as a community
service activity by the Adult
and • Continuing Education
Department of Fayetteville
Technical Institute, .
�"•f*
Public Meeting
Cumberland County candidates fori* .public office will
appear atir"Meet and Know
Your Candidates" session in
Paul Thompson Library at
Fayetteville Technical Institute Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
The session will be sponsored by the Governmental
Affairs Committee of the
Fayetteville Area Chamber of
Commerce.
Eighteen of the 25 candidates entered in the May 6
primary are scheduled for
appeal to state their positions
on major issues. Candidates
appearing will include those
for Seventh District Congressional seat, N.C. House
and Senate and Board of
County Commissioners.
The session is open to the
Public.
&/L//f~
'Mom
f
Sonata in F, Marcello; The
Coincidental'
By BOB WILSON
Observer Staff Writer
Gov. Bob Scott Thursday
night tied North Carolina's
economic growth over the
past decade directly to the
development of the state's
community college-technical
institute system, and pointed
to Fayetteville as "an example of the success of the program."
The governor was the featured speaker at a banquet at
Green Valley Country Club
here which closed a two-day
joint conference of the North
Carolina Industrial Developers Association and the
North Carolina Association of
Community College Presidents.
"Many factors have been
involved in the economic
gains chalked up over the last
10-15 years," said Scott, "but
it is more than coincidental
that this growth has paralleled both the development of
our community college-technical institute system and the
expansion of our industrial
promotion efforts. Since the
f i r s t industrial education
center opened in Burlington
in 1957, the system has grown
to 56 institutions with enrollments of 358.000 . . . 171
different v o c a t i o n a l and
technical programs a r c being
o f f e r e d today and many
thousands of workers are
being trained for new industries locating in our state."
P o i n t i n g specifically to
Fayetteville, Scott said that
when the Fayetteville Industrial Education Center began
operations in 1961, it had 109
students housed in a 35,000
square foot building. "Today," Scott said, "its buildings totaling 132,000 square
feet are filled beyond capacity with 1,000 fulltime students, and a n o t h e r 5,000
citizens of this area are served by extension offerings."
j "Now we must consider,"
he continued, "the industrial
growth whichjias come to the
community " 1 3 ' . In the last
f $ v e yearf* the annual
average work" force in direct
production jobs has more
than doubled. Figures for 1971
''show eight major industries
in the area with a total em-
ployment of 5,000. And across
the state, the story is similar."
Scott said that as he approached the end of his term
as governor, "I am pleased
that the advancement of vocational education will be a
part' of the legacy I leave.
During the last four years,
appropriations to the community college system have
increased more than 135 per
cent, and during this same
period of time, appropriations
for vocational education in
G O V E R N O R VISITS—Gov. Bob Scott w p a i g f a l e t t e ville T h u r s d a y n i g h t to a d d r e s s m e m b e r s ctf^e-N^SL
Association of P u b l i c C o m m u n i t y College Presidertra.
H e r e , h e ' s shown with H o w a r d B o u d r e a u (left),
L i t t l e Shepherd, Debussy;
Girl with the Flaxen Hair,
Debussy; Arioso, Bach; Adagio, Bach; Sicilliene, Faure;
Berceuse, Ravel; Tambourin,
Gossec; Entracte, Ibert; (fiitermission) Improvisation TR
the Parygian Mode; Night
Soliloquy, Kennan; and Sonat
ta, Houhaness.
//t>3/^z.
the public school system have
increased more than 101 per
cent."
The governor said he also
wanted to "dispel a couple of
mistaken notions about our
community college system . .
. one that we have a system
fhoWto?
Ceremonies are set for next
Wednesday, April 26, at whiaS
259 ^dults will receive high
school diplomas from Fayette^
vilie Technical Institute, jni J
The" program will begul alr,8
p.m. a t /Cumberland County
Auditorium. The Rev": Dr C.
R. Edwards, pastor of First
Baptist Church, will give the
commencement address, y / , .
FTI Golfers Bow
* KINSTON - — J'ayetj^ville
'technical Injstittjte dropped
fts trret g'olT *matctr o r the
year Monday, losing to Lenoir
Community College, 304-324.
FTI plays host to Central
Carolina on April 6 at Cypress Lakes.
the exception of Pitt, all of'
the institutes are offering the
program- in cooperation with
the county school boards.
Project Transition
On a limited basis, North
Carolina is offering occupational training courses to servicemen before they are
discharged.
• TMs training, called Project
Transition, is funded through
the Manpower Development
and Training Act.
North Carolina's programs
are
appropriately
offered
through
Coastal
Carolina
Community
College
near
Camp Lejeune and £aye>
fgvillft Tfyhnif al Institute near
Fort Bragg.
The 'TOO programs are
cooperative projects involving
the schools, the marine and
army bases and the Employment Security Commission,
according to Odell Fairclotb,
MDTA supervisor, Department of Conimunity Colleges.
The courses that make op
Project Transition are strictly
job oriented even though some
of the men further their
education
after
their
discharges.
Among the areas of training
are welding, coin machine servicing, auto mechanics, radio
and television repair, basic
drafting and surveying, and
plumbing.
The national employment
picture is
thoroughly
investigated by the Employment Security Commission
prior to course selection. The
need for the training must
be nationwide in that when
the men are discharged they
will settle all over the
country.
According to follow-up surveys and letters the men have
written to the schools, Project
Transition has been a bang-up
success in North Carolina. The
discharged servicemen are
finding employment and adjusting to their roles as
civilians.
As one man wrote: '"Because of the training I had
at your school, I am going
to be up for promotion long
before the guys who started
work at the same time I did,
but who had not been trained."
Twain Meet
Typical of what is being
done in the technical institutecommunity college system
for veterans is a project recently conducted by AshevilleBuncombe Technical Institute.
The technical institute held
a Veterans Job Day where
the twain did meet. Attending
were
approximately
200
veterans who recently returned to western North Carolina
from Vietnamj There to greet
them and to supply them with
information on jobs, training
and special programs for
veterans were representatives
from businesses, industries,
U. S. Service, local and state
governmental a g e n c i e s ,
schools and colleges.
Twenty-one students frL__
Fayetteville T e c h n i ^ t ^ ItW
stitute have been selected ajf «
outstanding campus leaSer^J
and will iJg included in th'Sf
1971-72 edition of "Who'sifJaiol
Among Students i|
Junior Colleges." d^f*?|(F^
Students were | j t o s # ] *' liji'.
the c a m p u s V>m"rtiating
committee and thePe'dflfirs "of
the annual diredlofy ;oh< the
b a # i s of their..academic
achievement, service' to the
community, leadership in extra curricular activities and
future potential.
Six h u n d r e d institutions
from the United States and
other countries of North and
South America'Sparticipafifaii
honoring ^^tending*- ybu«£
men and%bmen in their junior colleges^.' :'"'-'
Chosen from FTI w |
Kenneth R. Arnold, Lfij
B l a c k m a n ; Donald Byrd,"{.\
Charles C l a p p e r , Williarn|hDaniels, Richard Gray,-..Roger'
Houston, Miss Brenda i 3|§kson. Miss Pickett Jarmron.
W111 i a m Jones, James
Koepke, Walter Kolody, Miss
Anne Learflons, Miss Nancy
Melvin, Robert Moore. Paul
Moro^fiohbjfc-Perkins. JohnagJ
than' RovTrf.'Jbhn Reid, Djj
id Walters and Mrs. Cathe
neWfiU* 0 - /£> - 7-2-
the system was established in
1963, "not a single community
college or technical institute
has become a four-yeaf-iristitution, a n d ' ^ k n o w of none
with a consuming desire in
that direction.
• ;
'' R e g a l i n g
' i^Bfflbijal
t r a i h f t f i r f e s than*'five 'pefr
c e n t i ^ p S f c t a l enrollment ipr
the'fy^Sm'Js college parallel
work: •i&j|eed, even in-the' -15
communil$ ^colleges, the college tr'a^gfer enrollment" is
far b e 1 bay— enrollment, in
technical fields. To illustrate
further, during the MffO-71
fiscal yeanrVf the $44 million
spent for operation of the
system, only $4 million went
to support college transfer
students and the remaining
$40 million was spent for occupational and related instructional programs."
Scott wasrintroduced by Dr.
Dallas Herring, chairman of
the State Board of Education.
Herring called the industrial
developers and community
c o l l e g e presidents "two
groups which form the state's
greatest-' pool for leadership
and economic development."
Presiding over the banquet
activities was John Swope,
executive director ^ { . . S n e
Fayetteville Area Industrial
i Development
Corporation
'(19^ 1 and
The industrial
1
p r e s i d e n t of F a y e t t e v i l l e T e c h n i c a l I n s t i t u t e , - f r n M n
aK-fnstiFayetteville J U
Hor the
tute servedyaJl
Swope, e x e c u t i v e d i r e c t o r of t h e F a y e t t e v i l l e \ ^ f f e a
conference. S
I n d u s t r i a l D e v e l o p m e n t Corp. ( O b s e r v e r photo — Bill
Shaw)
FTI Holds3/
Nursing 7~Z
Classes
F T | Graduates Employed
In Varied Technical Jobs
The week of Feb. 22 has
traditionally marked National
Engineers' Week in order to
commemorate the birth of
the first President of the
United States who was also
the foremos*P9American engi«eer. w M&
qo >ine j
Thisffljr e at-T , Fayetteville
T e c hvn f t a 1 Institute's mechanical engineering technology instructors decided to
mark the occasion by learning what kinds of jobs some
of their alumni are doing. The
results were gratifying to the
faculty. Their graduates have
high paying and varied technical engineering careers.
John Simmons, class of '70,
is with the North Carolina
Natural Gas Co. There. his
duties consist of maintaining
and updating more than 1,000
maps and associated records
covering the company's vast
n e t w o r k of underground
pipeline facilities. He also
assists in the preparation of
detailed construction applications required to install
these undergrtJahdfacilities.
His afes&iJt&pfr remarked
that o n ^ S y giv&r%ork day,
John nf% * e ^ l e d upon to
read, ^nTerpreT or change
numerous mans from the
company's
42 distribution
systems in North Carolina's
eastern communities. Over
900 miles of high pressure gas
transmission lines make up
the network feeding the individual community systems
as well as 75 major industrial
plants throughout the eastern
part of the Tar Heel State.
"I feel," said Simmons,
"the training I received during my two years in mechanical engineering technology at
FTI prepared me to handle
these day-to-day duties. The
associate degree program at
Fayetteville Tech is a good
one, and I highly recommend
it."
Other graduates in the
Fayetteville area include Jay
Nichols at Putt-Putt planning
their minature golf course
layouts. Belinda Davis and
Justin Brehm in Fasco's des i g n department. Dwaine
Wilkes and Mary Swick prepare engineering drawings of
plant facilities and new machine designs as well as correcting drawings of existing
installations at Rohm and
Haas.
William Murray was employed by Western Electric in
|ete Will FindlFrienVi
Jh Community Colleges
equivalency certificate for a
period of up to 12 months
N. C. Depf. Community Colleges
without the time being chargWhen Johnny comes march- ed against their entitlements,
ing home again he will find a according to Gibnore Johnson
friend in the state's technical of the Division of Veterans
institute-community
college Education, Department of
system.
•Public Instruction.
More and more veterans are
Special Courses
enrolling in the 56 institutions
In addition to the great
within the system as they find variety of occupational procurriculums that suit t h e i r grams in the community coltalents and tuitions that fit leges and technical institutes
their pocketbooks. Presently and the freshman and somore than 7,000 veterans are. phomore years of college work
taking credit courses in these in the community colleges that
institutions.
are attractive to veterans,
In that veterans' educa- several schools in the system
tional allowances are based have a special course for
on their enrollment status (full veterans called Agricultural
time or part time) and the Science and Mechanization. In
number of dependents and not this 36-monrh-lOng curriculum,
on- a school's tuition, this farmers who.are veterans are
makes the technical institutes learning to become more proand community colleges par- ficient on the farm and at
ticularly attractive to them. the same time they are
For a technical or vocational receiving veteran ibeneifts.
program, the tuition fee is
'For the convenience of the
$2.60 per credit hour, with farmers, the classes begin in
a maximum tuition charge of late afternoon, after the men
$32 per quarter. The college have completed a day's work.
transfer tuition fee is $3.00 They receive both classroom
per credit hour, with a maxi- and on-the-f arm instruction.
mum tuition charge of $42
•When they have completed
per quarter.
the 36 months of training, if
they choose, they may take
Technical institutes
and a few additional courses and
community
colleges
have receive an associate degree
courses for the veterans who from the technical institute
have not completed high which sponsored the special
school as well as the ones veterans' training.
who are ready to enter a
The technical institutes prepost-secondary
program.
sently offering the training for
Those who have not finished farmers are Johnston, Pitt,
high school may study in the
Sprunt,
Sampson,
adult high school program or James
work toward their high school Robeson and Piedmont. With
of academic social climbers
bent on becoming four-year
colleges and universities, and
the other that the system is
oriented to college parallel
work rather than occupational programs."
Scott pointed out that since
Graduation
For Adults
Is Planned
3/3*/7Z.
By NANCY DUCKETT
Mffi~
As Example
Stott Cites
Of Industry—Education Ties
Duo Concert Program
The following is the prcsam for today's duo concert.
y Joel Andrews, harpist, and
Donald Adcock, flutist, begffining at 4 p.m. in the Paul
VB££ Thompson Library at
'J&yetteville Technical Insulate:
Than
nty-One
tudentSgi
Greensboro after graduating
from Fayetteville Tech but
has now been given a leave of
absence by that company in
order to fearn his B.S. Degree
at NC State University.
Senior engineering a i d e ,
Leonard Symntek, was a
member of the class of '68.
He is in the nuclear equipment department of Babcock
& Wilcox's Power Generation
Division at Barberton, Ohio.
Currently involved with the
engineering of components
for nuclear power plants for
U.S. Navy vessels, Smyntek
commented, "I find, what I
learned in the technical program is in valuable,. Xo what
I'm doing now. The practical
training is quite applicable to
a product-oriented industry."
Two mechanical engineering technicians have left the
Tar Heel State for Virginia
shipyards. Roy Lee is a junior designer for the piping
systems and aircraft carriers
w h i l e J i m m y Carrington
works as a junior designer in
the atomic power division for
nuclqpfttvessiej* a|nt£Jewport
News^asi^sg^T^.''
Two-iyeffrs r'of technical
training"'Bf'FTI have led engineering technicians i n t o
fields undreamed of in Washington's day.
^L/y.a/7^,
Nine more persons signed
up this week for the "refresher
course for registered nurses
at Fayetteville Technical Institute.
Renewed interest in the
course came as a result of a
public appeal by Director
John Moulton of the Cumberland Hospital System.
Until Moulton spoke out,
only seven persons had enrolled. Sixteen nurses have
now signed up, and the Institute has been flooded with
inquiries.
Today, Moulton also appealed for women to get into
FTI's course for licensed
practical nurses. He called
LPN an important part of the
nursing team''and said their
help was vital to filling the
gaps created by the shortage
of registered* nurses at the
two hospitals here.
The refresher course for
RN's was designed for nurses
who have been out of the field
for some time and have some
reluctance to getting back in
view of the advances that
have been made in recent
years.
Moulton r e p o r t e d
a
shortage of about 50 nurses at
Cape
F e M i ^ Valley r Jjld
Hignsmith-RSmyj" ..Memorial
Hospital, ami urged f a%e
nurses to take
titefefresher
course and apply for w o r k F %
The course begins March IS,
. and will meet five days a
' week for six weeks
Begun
Community
To Get Nurses On Jobs
By BILL WRIGHT
Moulton, who said the nursing shortage is "critical",
A community effort is being
urged nurses to get into the
started to get inactive regiscourse and apply for work.
tered nurses back into the
The 51 nursing vacancies
field to alleviate a nursing
are part of a total of 216
shortage at the county's two
budgeted nursing positions at
hospitals. .
the two hospitals, almost a 20
John Moulton, director of
per cent vacancy rate.
the Cumberland County HosThe refresher course is the
pital System, said there are
best hope of filling the
approximately 120 RN's in
vacancies, he said.
Cumberland County who are
D e s p i t e the shortage,
not working.
Moulton said the level of
This is more than enough to
nursing service in the two
fill the 51 nursing vacancies
hospitals has not suffered. He
at the two hospitals, 42 at
has stretched the working
Cape Fear Valley, nine at
hours of the nurses who are
Highsmith-Rainey.
working to overcome the
Moulton said many of these
deficiency.
nurses fear coming back to
The nursing staff works
work, because they have been
overtime, many working as
out of the field for some time
many as 80 to 90 hours a
and the rapid advances that
week, Moulton said.
have been made in nursing in
"The nurses we do have are
recent years.
dedicated," M o u l t o n said.
O t h e r w i s e , the situation
To help them, Fayetteville
would be more critical.
Technical Institute has startThe hospital also makes up
ed offering a refresher course
for the shortage by using
for registered nurses who
nurses' aides and orderlies to
have been inactive.
do many of the nursing tasks
A new course will begin
which they are qualified to
March 13. It calls for 70 hours
do.
of classroom work, w i t h
Nursing shortages, .are a
c l a s s e s meeting Monday
through Friday. It will end . familiar situation all over the
April 24.
nation, Moulton said.
It will'-be the second class / rFayetteville h a s ^ l n j r h o r e
fortunate than man'yS places.
offered by FTI. The first
class was completed in Nohowever, b e c a u s e Of Ft.
vember?
Bragg. Military wives "have
Observer Staff Writer
Poetry
^/Reading
7
J- Tonight
Richard Vela, of the Department of English at Pembroke
State University,
Campbell Reeves, Raleigh
poet and book reviewer, and
Maj. Herb Metoyer, composer and guitarist, of Ft.
Bragg, will be presented
tonight at 8 o'clock in Paul
Thompson Library at Fayetteville
Technical
Institute
under the auspices of the
Fayetteville Museum of Art.
The "Evening with Three
Poets" program is made
possible by a grant from the
North Carolina Arts Council to
the' Fayetteville Museum of
Art. There will be no admission charge. All interested
persons are invited to attend.
brought vast experience and j
knowledge" in the nursing
field into the community, and
the two hospitals have used
them widely, he said.
It does, however*gnake the
nursing staff more 'transient
than in other communities.
r
Recent cutbacks'-in military
personnel haverreduced the
number of nurses available
from this source, Moulton
said.
"We have the lowest number of military wives working
now than we have had in the
last six years," Moulton said.
There is one drawback to
the military being here,
Moulton said. While military
men bring in wives to work in
the hospitals, the single ones
also marry nurses and take
them away, and tins has
shown up in his statistics.
In North Carolina, there are
about 7,800 RN positions unfilled, Moulton said.
But there are also about
3,100 RNs who are not practicing. And it is this source
from which hospitals here
and elsewhere hope to fill
some of the vacancies.
FTI offers another source
through its associate* degr •
program in nursnSpA* similar
course is offered af Sandhills
Community College in South-.
em Pines. Jj/^y
^
y
�V'j-
J»
I S S W •£•'.*-
"•---:-•—, ..»!
Coming Events
In Auditorium
•ENTER COLLEGE*
SPRING QUARTER
i
The following events have been scheduled at Memorial j
Auditorium for the next several weeks. Information oh tickets
is available in newspaper advertisements and at the Auditorium box office.
March 30 — David Cassidy in concert in the arena at 7:30
p.m.
March 31 — Easter Soul Review in the arena at 8:30 p.m. i
Appearing will be Clarence Carter, Candi Staton, The Niteliters, Jean Knight, with special guest stars Junior Walker and
the AUstars and the J & M Funkhouse Show and Band.
April 3 — Wrestling at 8:30 p.m. in the arena.
April 12—The Carpenters in concert in the arena at 8
p.m., featuring Randy Edelman.
April 12—Cathedral of Tommorow with the Rev. Rex
Humbard in the auditorium at 7:30 p.m.
I
April 13—North Carolina Symphony in the auditorium at
' 9:30 a.m., in concert for city schools attendance only.
April 14 — North Carolina Symphony in concert in the
auditorium at 10:15 a.m. for Cumberland County schools
j attendance only.
April 17 — Wrestling at 8:30 p.m. in the arena.
April 19 — Jethro Tull in the arena at 8 p.m.
April 22 — Gospel Sing in the auditorium at 7:30 p.m.,
featuring The Florida Boys, Kenny Parker Trio, The Prophets,
The Harvesters and The Centurions. Sponsored by the Stedman
Jaycees.
* FTI adult education graduation in the auditorium
I at 8 p.m. ,r
April 27—South River Electric Membership Corporation
annual meeting in the auditorium at 7:30 p.m.
I
AT
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Registration will be held Thursday, March 2nd, at 6:30 PM in the Student Lounge,
second floor of the Paul H. Thompson Library. Tuition for the FTI Evening Courses
in Liberal Arts is $2.50 per quarter hour.
Upon completion of FTI's Associate Degree in General Education, students will be
accepted as full-fledged juniors at several local colleges and universities. CAMPBELL COLLEGE, FAWTTEVILLE STATE UNIVERSITY, METHODIST COLLEGE
and PEMBROKE STATE UNIVERSITY have agreed to accept the Associate Degree
in General Education as the freshman and sophomore requirements for fulfillment
of their baccalaureate work.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
ENG. 93,
ENG. 104,
ENG. 105,
HIS.
HIS.
HIS.
HIS.
HIS.
104,
105,
106,
201,
202,
BIO. 202,
TUESDAY & THURSDAY
EVENINGS
MONDAY & WEDNESDAY
EVENINGS
Developmental Grammar
English Usage & Composition I
English Usage & Composition II
QUARTER
HOUR CREDIT
7:00- 9:30
7:00- 8:30
3
3
8:30-10:00
. 8:30-10:00
WJJ0&^
An Evening aWilli
Three PcMs
By Richard Vela
A thorn
is a leaf
curled
from the sun,
. 7:00- 8:30
8:30-10:00
8:30-10:00
Biology II
PHI. 101, Introduction to Philosophy
MAT. 108, introduction to College Math
MAT. 109, College Algebra
5
your hands
3
7:00- 8:30
3
3
3
3
3
7:00- 9:30
Western Civilization I
Western Civilization II
Western Civilization III
American History I
American History II
in a crowded room,
8:30-10:00
,
7:0
°-
5
5
9:30
7:00- 9:30
or you
closing
tightening
FTI Golfers
your lips
after each word.
For further details, contact:
Director of Admissions
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P.O. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N.C 28303
Telephone: 484-4121
L
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools.
IWIJII'II' I W W — • « I I — I " IW I wnkB-MmwiwitJmiMiyillWILi
" WI
SANFORD ^JgjyettevMe j
Tech opened itsjgolf season
Tuesday with a^victpry over
the Central ' Carolina. Tech
Centaurs.
Thorns
catch,
The Trojans compiled a 380
total while the Centaurs had
389. 'Jfljrry Dean of FTI was*'medalist with an 89 over the
SsnterdiMunicipal layout.
tear
without cruelty,
all flesh,
but nothing remains
<3j/3-f/7<&
without shadow.
Richard Vela; newly arrived to
North Carolina and professor
in the Department of English
at Pembroke State University,
will be one «f the poets presented at the Fayetteville
Technical Institute Thursday.
March 16, at 8 p.m. in a program made possible b a a grant
from the North Carolina Arts
Council to the Fayetteville
Museum of Art.
Of himself he says: "I am
Mexican-American.^born in Los
Angeles ; and!
bred inV. Dell
Rio, Texas •
at the edge ofl
the hill coun-|
try, the desert,
/
the v a l l e y ,
Mexico and the I
U.S., but really |
not a part of
any.-I went to
Catholic schools with Mexicans,
MexioemAmericans, and Americans where we were all taught
by Irish nuns. From there I '
scholarshipped to the University
of Dallas where I gathered up
philosophy, and literature. Before cominl*£to Pembroke, I
taught Englisn and Spanish at
the Cistercian
Preparatory
School to the'super-smart and
super-rich and then, literature at
Westark Junior college" J
He has had poetry, criticism,
reviewsy- and fiction published
jn' EPOS, BITTER ROOT,
fOUTHERN POETRY REVIEW,
PEMBROKE MAGAZINE, ST
ANDREWS REVIEW, SOUTH
• AND. WEST, AND VOICES INTERNATIONAL. He currently
has ai'hovel in progress. If Richard V/ela appeared alone on the
program one should not miss the
opportunity provided to hear
Mm,"But he will not be alone
Alcjng with him will appear
By CAMPBELL REEVES
ENTER
I was not strong at all
(she said)
COLLEGE SPRING QUARTER
at
Concert Is Set
A concert featuring harp
and guitar will be presented
at Fayetteville Technical
Institute Sunday at 4 p.m.
: Joel Andrews, harpist, is
musician-in-residence at FTI
and will have as his guest,
Robert Guthrie, guitarist and
musician-in-residence
at
Sandhills Community College.
The public is invited to at
tend the concert in the Paul
Thompson Library at Fayetteville Technical Institute
Admission is free. J ' / ' ? / $ ' r
FAYETTEVILLE
TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Registration will be held Thursday, March 2nd, at 6:30 p.m. in the Student Lounge, second floor
of the Paul H. Thompson Library. Tuition for the FTI Evening Courses in Liberal Arts is $2.50 per
quarter hour.
Upon completion of FTI's Associate Degree in General Education, students will be accepted as
full - fledged juniors at several local colleges and universities. CAMPBELL COLLEGE,
FAYETTEVILLE STATE UNIVERSITY, METHODIST COLLEGE and PEMBROKE STATE
UNIVERSITY have agreed to accept the Associate Degree in General Education as the ffehsman
and sophomore requirements for fulfillment of their baccalaureate work.
MON.&
WED.
EVE.
COURSE
DESCRIPTION
ENG. 93, Developmental Grammar
ENG. 104, English Usage & Composition I
ENG. 105, English Usage & Pomposition II
HIS.
HIS.
HIS.
HIS.
HIS.
TUE. &
THURS.
EVE.
QTR. HR
CREDIT
By HERB METOYER
7:00-9:30
7:00-8:30
3
3
8:30-10:00
7:00-8:30
8:30-10:00
V*t30-10:00
3
3
3
3
3
7:00-9:30
104, Western Civilization I
105, Western Civilization II
106, Western Civilization III
201, American History I
202, American History II
5
8:30-10:00
7:00-8:30
BIO. 202, Biology II
PHI. 101, Introduction to Philosophy
8:30-10:00
MAT. 108, Introduction to College Math
MAT. 109, College Algebra
7:00-9:30
5
5
Love is like a picture book,
Wisdom for the one who
looks
i i%
-
asanas**
Around Hie fM&.
7:00-9:30
For further details, contact:
Director of Admissions
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P. O.
Box 5236
Fayetteville, N. C , 28303
Telephone: 484-4121
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools.'
c2,/&*/As,
My love's like a missing
page
The more I love the
more I age.
Oh, the wind blows
North from Idaho
3
&a^fA±£j
*4 Campbell Reeves, Once met
t h o u g h her
| poetry, she can j
merely competent
not be easily [
nor quickly for-1
you never knew the
gotten. A Ra-i
difference
leigh poet who I
pushing me out .
was born in
New Zealand,
away into the never
s h e reviews!
amiable night
books for theg
News and Obwhere animals yapped
server, and recently published a
from strange places
collection of poetry, BANE OF
and I never knewIf they
JEWELS. She has also been
were wolves or not
published in RED CLAY READER, SOUTHERN POETRY REI went and grew
VIEW, NORTH CAROLINA DECADE OF POETS, LONGVIEW
as strong as twenty horses
JOURNAL, SPIRIT, GOLDEN
twenty horses strong
QUILL ANTHOLOGY AND INand cunning
TERNATIONAL ANTHOLOGY
OF POETS. SHe is currently in
and surefooted as the
the process of publishing a new
. white unicorn
book. If the chance to delight in'
her readings won't cause you to
in the mythical wood , <
break your most rigid engageI change my skin
often
ment, there will also be the
talented music man
and can stand alone for
hours listening.
SMOKERS who want to
kick the habit can attend a
special clinic conducted by a
physician-clergyman team at
the Downtowner Inn next
week
The session, called the
Five-Day Plan, consists of
r e g u l a r evening groups
therapy sessions, films and a
daily personal control program
The program will be eonducted locally by Dr. G. S.
Schoepflim and the Rev L
D. Groger of Fayetteville
Group therapy sessions will
be held from 7:30-9 p.m. at
the Downtowner beginning
Monday
The program is sponsored
by the Seventh-Day Adventist
Church.
the Courthouse Annex will be
open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Saturday, March 18, and
Saturday, March 25.
RETAIL SALES in Cumberland County exceeded $40
million in December for a
record monthly high and
moved above the $400 million
mark for the first time in
1971, according to the Fayetteville Area Chamber of
Commerce.
The December
sales
showed an increase of more
than 18 per cent above sales
in December, 1970 The
yearly total marked an increase of almost 10 per cent
above the previous year.
George
W Vossler,
president of the chamber,
said gains were recorded in
each month of 1971 except
January
FRIDAY, April 7, is the last
day for registration to vote in
the May 6 primary, G. E. / THE FINAL program in the
Edgertpn, chairman of the
1972 "great decisions" series
Cumberland County Board of
will be held Monday at FayElections, has announced.
etteville Technical Institut§.
That date is also the last
Dr. James A. Allen of the
day for transferring, Edger- department of health adminton said. It is illegal to return istration of the University of
to an old precinct to vote if
North Carolina will speak on
you h a w moved 30 days prior "our crowded world.
to the election.
The program will be held at
To assist new voters or 7:30 p.m. Monday in' the
transfers, the board offices in school library
•
*3//tA
7£-
Love is like a summer
breeze,
a gently rustle in the
trees.
My Love's like a
hurricane,
That rips my heart
across the grain
Oh, the Wind blows,
North from Idaho
Love is like a pretty song,
Once its sung, it lingers
on
My Love's like a
Chinese gong,
That chills my soul to
the very bone.
Oh, the Wind blows,
North from Idaho.
Herb Metoyer. And his guitar.
A Major in the U. S. army now
stationed at Fort Bragg, he was
born in Oak-[~
dale, Louisiana J
He received al
B. S. degree in I
Liberal Arts!
from Southern!
University, and!
became act'tve-l
ly involved iniS
songwriting inHj
1964 which re-SSI!!
suited in the release of an album
on a MGM label in 1965. This received a four star rating by Billboard Magazine. One of his compositions, "Mother, Fools Are a
Long Line Coming", was recorded by Fred Neil on a Capitol
Album, and this album was later
selected by the Astronauts to be
placed in the time capsule which
was left on the moon. He was a
first place winner in the 1970
all army composers-arrangers
contest. His winning song was
entitled, "Two Lost Children of
Cumberland County"
The Fayetteville Museum of Art
and the Fayetteville Technical
Institute issue a cordial invitation to all to attend "An Evening with Three Poets" in the Paul
Thompson library. Immediately
following the program, coffee
will be served. Norman Sturdivant is chairman, of the event
• and will serve as master of
ceremonies.
There will be no charge for .
admission.
A
&
�+'~&jFm--ig;*<K
^j>£
P^
f-
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Page 18
Fayetteville Tech Gifes Associate Degree Program^
Director of the general
evenings for the convenience of
the students. An accumulation education program at FTI is
of 96 quarter hours in general Arthur Cavano. "An advantage
education and relevant elec- of our general education
tives will lead to an associate curriculum program is its
degree from Fayetteville appeal to men and women in
Technical Institute in a middle management, wives
whose families are semi"This program, which leads minimum of two years. FTI is
accredited by the Southern independent, and those who
to an associate degree, is
crave to understand and aph
designed to meet the needs of Association of Colleges and
preciate the intellectual,
Schools. _^.Xy
the area adults who wish to
The
general
education political and rational world in
pursue
post-secondary
graduates can transfer to which we find ourselves. This
education systematically and
affords a means toward
unrestricted
by
specific Methodist College, Fayetteville
acquiring
an
orderly,
professional or technical State University, Campbell
goals," explained President College and Pembroke State
Boudreau.
"In
addition, University from FTI. All four
students selecting general institutions have agreed to
education courses may take as accept core curriculum and
few as three, or as many as elective courses toward the
nine, quarter hours a session." fulfillment of their bacClasses are held daytime and calaureate requirements.
In July of 1971, President
Howard E. Boudreau of
Fayetteville Technical Institute
announced a new curriculum in
general education to be offered
at FTI.
progressive awareness of the
enriching factors contributing
to our present and the determining factors of our future as
individuals and as a people."
Requirements for admission
are under the jurisdiction of
the Dean of Students and an
applicant must have a certificate of graduation from an
accredited high school or from
the high school equivalency
program.
"The general education
curriculum is particularly
appropriate to men and women
who have completed their high
school diploma through FTI's
off-campus, adult education
division and to the veteran,"
explained Cavano. "Students
wishing to transfer to Fayetteville Tech*s general education
program from other institutions
and those wishing to begin
college now rather than waiting
for fall are encouraged to
contact the Dean of Students.
An advisor is assigned each
individual during registration.
ECOLOGY
COURSE—Students
at
Fayetteville
Technical Institute check samples in the only two year
associate degree course in ecology in North Carolina.
Around The CUy
1
•r
THE METHODIST College
Stage Band will present a
popular music contest May 2
at 8 p.m. in Reeves Auditorium on campus.
The concert is an informal
program of popular and rock
music, planned and coordinated by students.
V o c a l , instrumental and
modern dance arrangements
will be featured.
The concert is free to the
public.
•
FAYETTEVILLE Technical
Institute will hold its adult
high school graduation program Wednesday.
The graduation exercises
will be held at 8 p.m. at
Memorial Auditorium.
A total of 259 men art®
women will receive high
school diplomas from FTI.
TWO
FAYETTEVILLE
students have been selected
to serve on the campus judicial board at North Carolina
State University.'
DENTAL CLINIC—The most recent members of
FTI's faculty are shown in their department of dental
hygiene clinic. Instructors Mrs. Tena McQueen and
Mrs. Eileen Hoehn and Dr. David Dunham,
chairman
of the curriculum, try out their new equipment.
Seminar Slated
MJPH Mar. 15
They are David N. Sinodis
of 310 Hawthorne Road and
Robert K. Hoy, 3036 Wedgewood Drive.
An educational seminar
entitled "Review of Respiratory
Problems, their Recognition
and Management" will be
conducted Vat Fayetteville
Technical Institute on Wednesday afternoon, March 15,
from 1:30 psuAiSO p m .
The seminar * is designed for
the medical professionals in the
Fayetteville area and is
presented as a community
service activity by the Adult
and Continuing Education
Department of Fayetteville
Technical Institute
Dr..•> William
DeMaria,
Director I M t f i 1 Continuing
Education at Duke University
Medical Center is coordinating
the seminar. Dr.. Sam McMahon, Assistant Medical
Professor, and Mrs. Katherine
Chalek, Registered Nurse of the
Duke University Medical Staff
are participating
as a
physician-nurse teaching team.
A cordial invitation to participate in the seminar is extended to physicians and nurses
in the community. For additional information, contact
the Director of Extension at
Fayetteville "^Technical Institute, 484-4121, extension 25.
THE OBSERVANCE of
"Textile Week" here is in its
third day. Mayor Jack Lee
set aside the week of April
23-29 for the occasion through
proclamation;
The observance is sponsored by Phi Psi, national
textile fraternity, to highlight
the role of textile industry in
the Aineteican economy.
J. R. Hefner, division vicepresident I-jof; Burlington Industriesfjsgjifjj.he U.S. textile
industr.y-j^^nploys. almost 1
million persons/
He said m North Carolina,
textiles is by far the largest
single manufacturing em ployer, with More thah*273,000 e i&p 1 o y s 4 > i 8 t4«&tile
plants. ,i =..i;
'S^u^ M^
Burling^h has- beeffe fcrpart
of the Fayetteville community since 1929 and jfojk employes 765 persons here
^H^
NEW LIBRARY—The
Paul H. Thompson Library on Fayetteville Tech's campus
houses the student union, bookstore, cafeteria and student activities
offices.
Designed by MacMillan, MacMillan & Shawcroft, Architects, it was officially
dedicated Sunday, September 26, in ceremonies featuring Governor
Terry
Sanford, President of Duke University, as the main speaker. Over three hundred
guests attended the reception and open house hosted by FTI's Board of Trustees,
Fayetteville Technical Institute
Offering
TRANSFER CREDIT (Associate Degree) in
Liberal Arts
Accounting
Air Conditioning Engineering Technology
Agriculture Business
Associate Degree Nursing (RN)
Business Administration
Civil Engineering Technology
MK
Dental Hygiene
Electronic Data Processing
Electronics Engineering Technology
Environmental Engineering Technology
Industrial Management
Marketing and Retailing.
Mechanical Engineering Technology
Secretarial Science (Technical, Medical, Executive and Legal)
and
CAREER TRAINING (Diploma) in
Air Conditioning Mechanics
Architectural Drafting
Automotive Mechanics
Carpentry "
Electrical Maintenance
Machine Shop
Masonry (Brick Laying)
Practical Nursing
Tool & Die
Welding
7jz<?JMt M i
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
-THURSDAY, MARCH 16,1972
Area Club News
Groups
The mid-Atlantic regional
conference of Alpha Kappa
Alpha sorority, to be held at
the Downtowner Motor Inn
Friday through Sunday, will
feature a keynqjflLtalk by
Mrs. Florence Davis Creque
of |winston-Salenv%ho will
discuss the sorority's responsibility as an agent for
change. She is deputy director of the Model Cities commission in-Winston-Salem.
Also taking a leading role in
the regional gathering will be
Mrs. Barbara Kenard Phillips
of Winston-Salem, director of
the Mid-Atlantic region, who
is model cities coordinator for
the
Winston-Salem-Forsyth
County Schools.
About 400 college women
from North Carolina and
Virginia are expected to attend the gathering.
The A z a l e a
Festival
Ceramic Show to be held at
Wilmington April 14, 15, and
16th is making a special effort this year to attract entries from throughout the
southeastern part of the state,
as part of the festival's 25th
anniversary observance.
A special course in local
plants and their environments
will be offered in Fayetteville
beginning today.
Offered by a joint arrangement between Fayetteville Beautiful, F.T.I, and
the University of North Carolina, the course will be taught
by Kenneth Moore, supervisor of the N.C. Botanical
Garden. a |
The sessions, which are to
be heldgeach Thursday for
five wd
pake place from 9
to 12
"|he Science building at]
list College. AlttyMglvti
irst session was
W this „ning, there i s '
l md in tthejjjcourse for new
l u ~$' f i; - Information is
j i l a h M p t o the.director of
e x t ehs^ai at Fayetteville
Technical Institute.
Schedule
Ceramics prizes will be
awarded for professionals,
hobbyists, senior citizens and
children 16 and under. In
each division ribbons will be
awarded for glaze, under-
ture, lusters, stains, potters
wheel and hand kolded. Two
entries may be made in eacn
category. Broken or mended
m
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools
W.
Course,
f laze, glaze and stain cominations, sgraffito, and tex-
twos?'
For further details, contact:
Director of Admissions
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P. O. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N. C , 283tt,-'
Shoift
pieces will not be accepted.
Mrs. Marion Rogers,"Special activities supervmorj; of
the parks and recreation department, P.O. 18lO,;Wilmington, has entry blanks.
I
FTI Holds 'Charrette
Fayetteville Technical Institute is currently holding a four-day "charrette" with
eight students from N.C. State University and
sixteen from FTI Area architects are acting
as advisors to the students, who have been
formed into three teams, as they compete in
proposing a "creative, arts center" for Fayetteville.
.-J^i
Starting Wednesday at 1 p.m., the project
ended Saturday at 6 p.m.
Models and plans will be presented this
afternoon at 2 p.m. in the Paul Thompson
Library, and the public is invited to attend the
discussion of the various student solutions.
Ronald Mace, FTI's instructor in architectural drafting, conceived the idea of
inviting State's fifth-year students to participate in the program with Fayetteville Tech's
second year students. - v ^ ^ g s s R s ^
The seventy-seven hour charrette is tht
first one to be held at theTnstitufeT
"Charrette" comes from the Beaux Arts
[school of Paris when architectural students
rode to class1 iri horse-drawn wooden.wagons,
or charrette^, is? they frantically completed
their assignments?ln route to class. •
r/?M 'a.
FAYETTEVILLE BEAUTIFUL J2
"If
and
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Invite you to attend an afternoon concert
featuring Joel Andrews, harpist
and
Don Adcoch, flutist
Sunday, the twenty third of April
at four o'clock
Paul H. Thompson Library
\ iRayetteville/Technwal
Institure
gfrCSj.0
t
/?73-
�:
-4r^l?
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES**
AWAIT OUR GRADUATES*!
Plan now to qualify for these jobs by enrobing at
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
IN
BACK TO SCHOOL — Ten registered nurses are going
to school for six weeks to catch up on new trends in
nursing. All have stayed home with families for periods ranging from four to 17 years. Shown are, in last
row, Marion Spell, Gloria Buccholz, Harriet Treece,
School Bells
Ringing For
10 Nurses
Ft. Bragg Firemen Eye
High fScfioo/ Graduation
On April 26, a dozen Ft.
Bragg firemen will trade
their uniforms and asbestos
suits for the traditional cap
and gown of graduation.
The firemen will join 259
adults receiving high school
diplomas at Memorial Auditorium after completing educ a t i o n a 1 requirements at
Fayetteville Technical Institute.
Ft. B r a g g Fire Chief
Harold Engle said the 12
firemen "showed a special
form of courage" in completing their education "after so
many years away from the
studying routine."
Last fall, Chief Engle decided to have his men take a
special advanced course in
fire fighting, but found several of them had not finished
high school — a requirement
for enrolling in the advanced
program.
With the approval of Military Facilities Director Col.
James 0. Baker, Engle contacted Fayetteville Tech and
requested a class be offered
for his men at Fire Station
No. One in Mallonee Village.
Instruction was under the
supervision of C. M. Carraway who had retired from
public school work in June
with more than 40 years' experience as a c l a s s r o o m
teacher and principal.
The firemen ranged in age
from 37 to 58. Each man
progressed at his own rate
and since S e p t e m b e r all
completed the required objectives for every grade level
of high school.Some of the firefighters had
dropped out of school in the
eighth grade. A couple had
quit in their junior year to
join the' Army during World
War II while others simply
had stopped school in order to
go to work.
Classes met from 6 to 9
p.m. on Mondays and Tuesday evenings. Unlike many
For her new uniform Mrs.
Buccholz made the latest
thing, a pantsuit; for her
skills she enrolled in a tailormade course for registered
nurses facing the skills gap
after a long layoff.
She and nine others are
s t u d e n t s at Fayetteville
T e c h n i c a l Institute's refresher course for RN's. The
course isn't required, though
class instructor Mrs. "David
Gatewood believes it should
be.
"The course is planned to
avoid that moment of terror
that we've all heard some
nurse friend describe: alone
on a ward or with a sick
patient and expected to run a
machine you've never seen
befor$ And frantic that you
didn't quite understand, that
you might do it wrong."
The skills gap is serious for
the nurse who tries to re-enter the field without catching
up; many states, including
California, won't allow a
nurse who cannot show recent
working experience to go to
work without retraining.
The ten enrollees at FTI
would seem to be facing
b r i g h t employment prospects; registered nurses are
a scarce commodity.
But the ten students said in
a group interview that there
may not be a "shhortage" so
much as a mismatching of
job and job-hunte. All of them
have home obligations and
would prefer daytime work;
few believe they'll find hours
that won't disrupt their home
life to some extent.
But in spite of the adjustments they expect to
make to become working
nurses again, all ten students
are excited about going back
to work at last. One says her
small daughter is thrilled at
"my mommy the nurse" and
has insisted Mom call for her
at school in uniform "s6 my
friends can see."
?
Air Conditioning Engineering Technology
Environmental Engineering Technology
Agricultural Business Technology
Mechanical Engineering Technology
97. Technicians W a n t e d
Mrs. Gloria Buccholz hasn't
worked as a nurse for 17
years, but when she returns
to paid employment in a few
weeks she'll be up to date in
more ways than one
VOUCLV-NO. 221
®
®
®
©
Joyce Lutz; in first row, Frances Gilchrist, Jessie
Kennedy, Wanetia Carroll Susan Hopkins, Bobbie
Paul, Rosanne Gardella, and Mrs. David Gatewood,
course instructor Observer photo — Blount)
high school teenagers, these
students averaged 95 per cent
attendance for the year.
Fifty-eight year old David
H. Vinson, assistant chief in
the Fort Bragg Fire Department, arid, grandfather of
10, was somewhat reluctant
to enroll and -.uncertain of
success in the .program. But
Carraway maintained he had
done "outstanding work".
CHEMICAL laboratory technicianwork with municipal and industrial
air and water pollution control.
From 77,000, up. Immediate, openings.
^Tr^nJUNIOR design consultant - background in mechanical engineering
technology required. Salary open
f r o m $9000.
AIR Conditioning engineering tech'
ntcian needed immediately. Must |
have associate degree with back-.'
ground in heating and refrigeration"
systems design. Earn from S9500,
LARGE Eastern Carolina f a r m products
company
wants
trail
business*graduate for district
manager. Salary from $9000.
f£0]
Tuition — $3$?uD per quarter.
m
Free placement service offered all FTI g r a l
. Safe.
Twice' classes had to be set
aside due to major fires on
the post. Often the class was
stopped while the men answered a fire alarm. Alarms
are frequently the result of a
malfunction in the signal's
electrical s y s t esm Each
a l a r m , howeVjer, coming
through the Mallonee Village
Fire Station Switchboard requires the men-to dress out
and answer the call.
3
For further details, contact:
]H
Director of Admissions
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P. O. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N. C. 28303
Telephone: 484-41 21
Accredited by the Southern Association o f Colleges & Schools.
7*Z>
7
/
HITTING THE BOOKS - - Ft. Bragg fireman R. P.
.Winstead catches up on some studying. He and eleven
other firemeirjvill receive high school degrees April
26.
KATHY HARDEE LASSITER at her
mission.
drawing "board in the Highway Com-
She 'Chose Drawing Board
144 PAGES
J//f/7JL. FAYEnE\Q!LLe^^ii4DAY MORNING,
:_
Pt
y/*
Boating Course
Julius Nelson, commander
of the Fayetteville Power
Squadron and Robert Rice,
education officer, have ann q'u p,P,e d that 102 area
residents have completed a
basic.bpaUng course.
• 9ftJ '
Th.glietw.elve week course
t a u^g'h.t by local Power
Squadron members covered
safety afloat, seamanship,
aids -to navigation, trailering,
navigation charts, river and
lake p i l o t i n g , mariner's
compass, rules of the road,
government
regulations,
small boat handling, towing
water skier, and course -plotting.
••-••- '»* %
IBhe'~ next Basi^iitltoMlng
;
Course open to the' flublic will
begin September 5th.at Fayetteville Technical Institute: 1
WEATHER PRECAUTIONS — Jimmy Jones, superintenderit of Fayetteville's street and sanitation dep a r t m e n t , lights a heater to try to protect rose bushes
at Fayetteville Technical Institute. Possible freezing
temperatures were predicted by the weatherman for
Saturday night. (Observer Photo — Dick Blount)
By N ANC* DUCKETT
RALEIGH ;— If it hadn't
been for the advice of a
guidance counselor at Fayetteville Technical Institute,
Kathy Hardee Lassiter would
probably be sitting behind a
typewriter instead of a
drawing board.
Kathy, like so many girls
her age, thought the only
courses for the distaff side to
take at a technical institute
were in the secretarial field,
but she found out different
when she went for an interview prior to entering Fayetteville Tech. The dean of
student affairs, Niles Comptoa, immediately saw Kathy's
aptitude for math and
realized .she would be a natural in ,an. engineering technology '^ut^fcurum, specifically cj#tf engineering ''technology
sSfcL;
Mr. Comptoif \ says that
morg^and more he is guiding
girlSrmto the engineering
technology programs at the
institute.
"There
is a
tremendous m a r k e t for
women in the engineering
technologies," s a y s Mr.
Compton.
Kathy has found out for
herself that the curriculum
she chose was the right one
for her. With a broad smile
on her face, she said, "My
father thought it was the
worst thing in the world, but
he has come around now.
Way back he wanted me to be
a school teacher."
Kathy now holds a responsible, well-paying job as an
engineering technician with
the North Carolian Highway
Commission, where she and
one other young woman, also
a graduate of Fayetteville
Tech, are surrounded by a
room full of men. But neither
woman is daunted by this
unbalanced ratio.
The young Mrs. Lassiter
says, "I prefer working with
men to women." And she
added, "There is no other
field in the world I would be
happier in; however, I don't
think all girls would be
suited, but many are."
Kathy, who is a petite
young women with shining
auburn hair, has been emp l o y e d by the Highway
Commission ever since her
graduation from Fayetteville
Tech in 1968. •
The commission's assistant
state design engineer, Henry
Clegg, is well pleased with
the w o m e n engineering
graduates that have worked
in his division. "We know if a
girl has come through the
civil engineering technology
program, she has made a
special effort and is 'good' in
math," said Mr. Clegg.
Mr. Clegg, who would hire
a woman as quickly as he
would a man, sees the major
drawback in hiring women
with children are the trips to
doctors and dentists. But he
admitted, "They are mother
first and they should be."
Kathy and her husband are
the parents of a year-old son
named Marty. The Lassiters
live in Four Oaks with her
commuting to Raleigh each
weekday and her husband
traveling to his job at Burlington Mills in Erwin.
She is a native of Benson
and the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Weldon Hardee.
�S^MteSakPsSyTSjK 5
R H
• 3«
"W
7"
#
- - The * - " ™ ^ W ^ P a t c h - M o n d a y , April 10, 1972-A-l
" Dunn (N. C.) Dispatch-Monday, April 10, 1 9 7 2 -
Varied Courses
As higher education, adult education
or technical skills become more
important to a successful future, young
people completing high school in the
Dunn area are especially fortunate to
have almost any type of further
instruction they may wish, and close at
hand.
Within a 25 to 40 mile radius are
four-year colleges, junior colleges,
community colleges, and many of these
institutions also conduct adult classes
even closer to the students' homes,
working with local education authorities
and interested citizens or organizations.
The Dunn Dispatch, in this annual
college section, salutes these fine
learning institutions.
JOHNSTON TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
KTVETT HALL, CAMPBELL COLLEGE LANDMARK
SAMPSON
TECttMlCAt JJIST1TUTE
%•:,- " *«r.-v-"" rrs^':::.
\ \
PAUL H. THOMPSON LIBRARY, FAYETTEVILLE TECH
SAMPSON TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
PWIP1L2S
On the pages inside this section will
be found partial information about
colleges serving this area. It would be
impossible to carry the complete story,
but this information will be helpful to
the student interested in attending a
college and the schools themselves will
be happy to furnish any additional
information desired.
The advertisements and news features
should be of interest to all students
nearing completion of their high school
years and parents of such students.
It is recommended, however, that
interested persons contact the schools as
early as possible to most nearly be sure
of enrolling in the school and the courses
wanted with the least delay.
";K'-.~*-^. ",^-JKy
•m
-.-.-
HANK HANNA COLLEGE OF BEAUTY CULTURE
METHODIST COLLEGE, FAYETTEVILLE
CENTRAL CAROLINA TECHNICAL INSTITUTE, SANFORD
�Cultural
w-t/p
The Fayetteville Museum of Art will
present the portraits of local artist, William
Nursm
Graduates
Sought
Joel Andrews
Are Listed
Local and area graduates
and honor roll students continue to be reported to The
Observer;
Rosemary V. Ford, 2340
Ramsey.St., has received a
master <St arts degree from
the Univeffity of Colorado.
Douglas S. Shafer, son of
Lt. Col. and Mrs. Philip S.
Shafer, 1532 Parsley Ave.,
has been named to the dean's
list at Carson-Newman College.
Two local students were
among 600 receiving degrees
at Wake Forest University.
They are Gerald T. McKoy,
son of Mrs. Marian McKoy, •
1505 Murchison Road, and
John W. Smith, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Julian C. Smith,
Spring Lake.
/ William Marshall Butler* a
graduate of electrqnfe engineering at FTI, wajswiitte^l t
frorrtf"mp list published fojp
cenl^f. ?*
*w5| mhi
Lynrfri. Chandlerf^i| omitted from the list of* graduates of the University of
North Carolina. 6/*y/y -%.
'Y/ft/vJ-
Week's Cultural Events
Continued from P-1B
The Junior Service League of Fayetteville will present Part
I of "North Carolina Artist 1972" at the Frances Brooks Stein
Memorial Library continuing through April 27.
This show will feature the winners of the 1972 competition
from the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh. The public
is invited.
In Cooperation with Fayetteville Technical Institute Fayettevfflie Beautiful will present as a special feature of the week a
duo-program of music featuring Joel Andrews, harpist, and
DofflfSdcock, flutist, Sunday afternoon, April 23, at 4 p.m. in the
Student Lounge of the Paul H. Thompson Library on the
campus of Fayetteville Technical Institute.
Mr. Andrews has composed and performed many styles of
music for solo harp, harp ensembles, poets, dancers, plays,
film scores, exhibitions, radio and television. He has toured in
solo concerts with his chamber groups adding flute, cello and
soprano.
Mr. Adcock is Assistant Director of Music at North
Carolina State University in Raleigh. He directs the Marching
Band from East Carolina University and Columbia University
in New York City.
Wf
Qualified n j tw$n n g school
graduates of Sandhills Community College and Fayetteville Technical Institute are
now eligible for commissions
as officers in the U.S. Air
Force.
According to Capt. Barbara
A. Shaver, Air Force Nurse
Coordinator for eastern North
Carolina, the Air Force will
a c c e p t applications from
graduates of the two nhrsing
schools because of a policy
change by the Air Force
Nurse Corps.
The new policy enables
nurse graduates of all schools
accredited by the National
League of Nursing to apply
for Air Force commissions,
Capt. Shaver said.
She added that Sandhills
rfio m m u n i t y College and
Fayetteville Technical Institute are. the only North Caro'^nna associate degree schools
which have NationaLLeague
of,Nursing accreditation.,
^qFrior to the changeful policy, nurse gradua|ipsj|$: twoyear schools coulaJnot apply.
she said.
y/zc/73-
LocqL Area*]
C. Fields, in a one m a n show at the Market
House, today through Sunday, April 23.
The internationally known Mr. F i e l d s j e turned to his native Fayelj^yille in 1962 after
seventeen years of maintaining studios, in
New York and in Italy. ' ^ ^
The public is cordially 1 Jnvited to meet^Mr.
Fields at the formal opening of his "one man
show" today between 2 and 5 p.m. The
show will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
(Continued on Page 2)
The fayetteville Art Guild is sponsoring
its first annual "On tb.e, Green" Art Show,
t p d j y ^ J f t y vtoss
Creek P a r k '0$ \ Green
SMeet as a special' event of Fayetteville
Beaumtil Week.
"This competition will bring the work of
artists form the entire state and present it in a
natural out-door setting," said Mrs. Monroe
Evans, chairman of th« show. Co-Chairmen
of this event are Mrs. Bobbie Bennett and
Mrs. Charles Jamison.
"Entries will be judged for Awards which
will be presented at 3:30 p.m. by Mayor
'Jackson F . Lee, and will include purchase
and cash awards in various categories and
appropriate ribbons," added Mrs. Evans. The
cash Awards will be given by First Union
j§ National Bank, Sears Roebuck and Company
and Bordeaux Shopping Center.
j>» * "Following the Awards presentation by
^Jk|ayor Lee, special entertainment will be
j^§£sented4»y t|ie 82nd Airborne Chorus and
fnfted vocalisfTJanet Watkins, with piano ac| companiment.
In t h e ' ^ ^ e n t of inclement weather the
Show and alt activities will be moved tor"the
First Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall.
imergency Medicine Topic
or fDistrict 14 Nurses
Miss Virginia Winslow, di"The World of Emergency gency medical care. These rector of nursing. He anregulations cover equipment nounced that May is desigMedicine" was the topic when carried on ambulances and
Thomas Little, educational rescue trucks, inspections of nated as District 14 Memberand training specialist in the this equipment by county ship Month when each memTiraffic Safety Section of the health departments, and the ber will be asked to recruit
Nerth Carolina State Board of requirement of certification one new member
He<h, spoke at the April for ambulance workers. "For
In closing the meeting,
djaner meeting of District 14 example," he pointed out, Capt. Caldwell stated that the
of the North Carolina State "every worker who rides an next meeting would be a
Hjorses Association at the ambulance in North Carolina covered-dish supper at the
Coneord House in Clinton must have completed at least Red Cross Chapter House in
Tuesday evening.
one standard Red Cross First Fayetteville when the AssoIn his present position, Lit- Aid Course. However, of the ciate Degree Nursing Stutle* is primarily involved with 3,392 ambulance attendants in dents at Fayetteville Techniambulance and rescue train- North Carolina, over 2,000 cal Institute will present a
ing. He is a graduate of have completed 56 hours of
skit .based on the reasons why
Lenoir-Rhyne C o l l e g e and training, or all of the training a new graduate nurse should
Lutheran Theological South- offered." He added that there join her professional organiern Seminar!* The speaker are now 117 volunteer rescue zation. The date for this
ha.s been arjpublic school squads in North Carolina that meeting is May 9 at 7:00 p.m.
teacher artd^an ambulance provide full-time emergency
attendant. As a Red Cross rescue service.
volunteer, he taught First Aid
In closing his talk, the
and Water Safety courses
oyer a ten-year period. Little speaker described the nurse's
is "also a Certified Emergency role in emergency medical
services. He advised the
Medical Techsi^ian.
*5First aid jsjthe immediate nurses present to get involved
and temporary ca/e given to with the teaching of emervictims of an accident or ill- gency and first aid courses.
ness until further medical "Also, one of the most imassistance can be rendered," portant things that the nurse
stated the speaker in opening can do is to help keep the
his talk. He went on to trace lines of communication open
the ; history of % emergency b e t w e e n the emergency
medical care from,*the .early services and the hospital
Egyptian era to the %ears of staff." he emphasized,
World Wars I an$3l;,iwhen '^introducing the s p e a k e r
advanced technique&<4Abthis gwas Mrs. Marie Kelley, first
lice- president. Capt. Joe
area.;: were developed bM&hl
«i a 1 d w e l l , president, welmilitari' services.
„_,
comed guests from Sampson
Lnljlf- cited North Carolina] Memorial Hospital, M r s .
asJ being foremost or*th^ Ann Grant. Mrs. ;s£ynthia
"states in the adoption of re- Kirkman. staff nurses, and
l a t i o n s governing emer-
Events
FTI Golfers Win
W H I T E V I L L E-Fayetteville Tech defeated Southeastern Community College
in a golf match here Monday,
342 to 366.
Ron Christopher and Jerry
Dean both fired 81s for wFi,
now 6-3. The winners meet
Southeastern again n e x t
Monday at Cypress Lakes.
W^Fh^
/i
BACK TO SCHOOL - Ten registered
nurses are going to school for six weeks
to catch up on new trends in-nursing. All
have stayed home with families for
periods ranging from four to 17 years.
Shown are, in last row, Marion Spell,
Gloria Buccholz, Harriet Treece, Joyce
Lutz; in first row, Frances Gilchrist,
Jessie Kennedy, Wanetia Carroll, Susan
Hopkins, Bobbie Paul, Rosanne Gardella,
and Mrs. David Gatewood, course
instructor. (Observer photo — Blount)
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
SUNDAYMORNING, MAY 7, 1972
&,
Guf-^"l7i& Rough
(Continued from Page 2D)
16 Nurses
Answer Ca
For the past few months, the
Fayetteville
Observer has focused
attention on the need for inactive
registered nurses to return to work in
Cumberland County.
As a result of the newspaper's articles,
and an appeal by hospital system director
John Moulton, nine inactive nurses signed
up with seven other students for a
refresher course for registered nurses at
Fayetteville Technical Institute.
As Moulton explained, many inactive
registered nurses fear coming back to
work because during their absence from
the field, rapid advances have been made
in nursing.
The new refresher course at FTI can
alleviate problems in this area. It calls for
70 hours of classroom work with classes
meeting Monday through Friday.
In pointing out the critical nursing
shortage, Moulton also noted that the
nursing staff of the Cumberland County
Hospital System often works overtime,
many up to 80 or 90 hours a week.
"The
nurses we do have are
dedicated," Moulton said. Otherwise the
situation would be more critical.
Fayetteville has been more fortunate
than many other places because of F t
Bragg. Military wives have "brought vast
experience and knowledge" in the nursing
field into the community, anc* the
community has used them widely, he
said.
The military situation does make the
nursing staff more transient than in other
communities. And recent cutbacks in
military personnel have reduced the
number of nurses available.
The lowest number of military wives
are working now in Cumberland's
hospitals than has been the case in the
last six years, Moulton said.
Another drawback of the military is
that while military men bring in wives to
work in the hospitals, the single ones also
marry nurses and take them away.
In March, Cape Fear Valley and
Highsmith - Rainey hospitals had a total
of 51 nursing vacancies. In North
Carolina, there are about 7,800 RN
positions unfilled, Moulton said. But
there are also about 3,100 RNs who are
not practicing.
This is the source frwi which hospitals
here and elsewhere hope tc54ffR\ome of
the vacancies.
FTI offers another source of hope with
its associate degree program in nursing
and a similar course is offered at Sandhills
Community College in Southern Pines.
Witnessing the event were J W Boyce, J. A. Purdue and L. J.
Hildebrand.
Bill Bice and Steve Simmons notched eagles at OC, both
coming on No. IS. Simmons' eagle was the third of his
illustrious career — all on the same hole.
G. E. Peterson had his best ever, an 81, highlighted at the
15th by a tap-in birdie after reaching in two and missing a
"short" eagle putt of 10 feet.
Robert .and Teresa Stanley in LPN
Classroom at Fayetteville Technical
Eleanor Betts won the Ladies Spring Handicap low net
honors and had her best ever with an 87. Marge Snowden won
first-flight competition, Kitty Schwartzstein the second, Eleanor Jackson the third and Lucille Lyons the fourth.:.
FTI Couple Planning
For Career Togetherness
Eagles by Bruce Gibson at No. 10 and Cindy Garner at No.
3 highlighted Cypress Lakes action this past weekQSj
Gibson got his eagle on a 7-iron which took two bounces
into the hole and it helped him to a 44-40—84. Miss Garner hit a
3-wood second shot and dropped an eightrfoot putt for the
eagle, then sank a 15-foot birdie on No. 6.
Major (ret.) Robert and
Teresa Stanley are enrolled
in Fayetteville Tech's Lic e n s e d Practical Nursing
curriculum and will graduate
this summer. ShoWn above in
the FTI classroom, the Stanleys anticipate working together at a local hospital after completing the four-quarter course of study at Fayetteville Tech.
Eleanor Murph had her best ever with a 96 and Mike
Kinlaw turned the trick with a 37-36—73.
The Grays Creek Invitational is coming up with a qualifying round to be played May 14-20 and the final 18 May 21.
Entries are picking up in the two-man event, but there's room
for more.
' Jesse Waters, golf coach at Fayetteville ^Technical - Instivi
tute, visaed-Carolina Trace- near Sanford last;week and shot art]
uhus'ffM 77. Waters-had'two eagles in the rourM, both on par
fourTBHeV, No. 8-a'ndKa'
* Fofe^rii riext'week
For District Nurses
FTI Students
*|K*
Organizational Meet
Set"By P r a c t i c a l
N u r s e Class A t F T I
The. Practical Nurse Educatiori Class at Fayetteville
Technical Institute is spons o r Ln g_an organizational
mejEuTBrrkirsdav, June 8, at
7:30^.fn,' «$. the upstairs
1 o u n g e of the Paul H.
Thorhrjsori LftWil^-an the FTI
campus. MrS-. 4)4r&SflEroWder,
secretary forHBgepfeflih Carolina Licensed P't a&t i c a 1
Nurses ASSif.$»wiM*eipresent.
District 14 of the North
Carolina State Nurses Association will feature a covereddish supper at it s May meeting, Tuesday evening, May 9
at 7:00 p.m., at the Red Cross
Chapter House of Carol St.
The program will be given by •
the Fayetteville Technical'*
Institute Associate Degree
Nursing students as a project
of District 9 of the North
Carolina Student Nurse Association which is their professional organization. The
students will present a skit
entitled, "Why I Should Belong to the American Nurses
Associatipri When I Graduate."
/'&? novejt:Iapproach fthrbugh
the us'dr"; of experimental
theatre techniques • & which
the audience is expectediand
To Present
encouraged to participate will
be used in the skit. Through
this approach, the nursing
students hope to gain answers
to such questions as: What
doe's* the ANA expect of its
members? What can a professional nurse expect of the
ANA? Can a member of the
ANA participate in solving
vital social problems through
her professional organization?
Institute.
Program
As well as obtaining answers to these questions, the
students hope to present a
c h a l l e n g e to District 14
niembers that will inspire
them to work toward the improvement of their organization.
Presiding will be Capt. Joe
Caldwell, D i s t r i c t
14
president. Each member is
encouraged to bring a nurse
guest to this meeting.
S~-S- 7 *-
A native of Normandy,
France, Mrs. Stanley admitted she "felt the urge to
do something. To be an
American'-ipitizen one must
contribute, not just receive
these benefits. I feel I can
best help others by becoming
an LPN."
Fayetteville Tech's 1st
male LPN student was assigned to duty at Pope Air
Base's dispensary as a doctor's assistant for five years
prior to his retirement from
the Air Force.
"I like working in the
h e a l t h occupations field,"
said Stanley, "and I have
really enjoyed my training at
FTI.- We have had clinical
experiences at a local
nursery and at Cape Fear
Valley Hospital. Everyone
has been most helpful, patient
and encouraging...the doctors, nurses, instructors, everyone."
H e a d i n g up Fayetteville
Tech's practical nurse education curriculum is Mrs.
Ada Leonard assisted by Miss
Claudia Dancy, R.N. The
program is four quarters in
length, beginning in September and continuing to August.
Graduates of the LPN curriculum then take the State
Board Examination for Licensure. After successfully
writing this examination, licensed practical nurses are
eligible to work in any health
occupation under the direction of a physician, dentist or
registered nurse.
The 26 students
Fayetteville. TechJ
tute's Practical
cation program arpTj
working toward establishing a
student-oriented LPN association in North Carolina.
�Rose Gem
FTI Post
The board of trustees^!
Fayetteville Technical Institute has elected Thornton
Rose to his third term as
chairman.
Also returned to office were
W. J. West, vice chairman,
and Howard L. Hall, secretary.
Other board members of
the institute are William C.
Beard Jr.. Roscoe Blue, Marion C. George, Mrs. Dan S.
C u r r ^ F. C. Franklin, John
T. ,Htenley, John C. Mitchell
andjfcfcirry F. Shaw.
•FTF-has grown from an enrollment of 58 to l,2^&|students in less than a decade.
D
Open House At FTI
Fayetteville Technical Institute will hold an open
house next Sunday from 3 to 5
p.m.
Thepe will be "planning^.
better J$morrow $"h r o u g h
technology."
The event will open with a
concert featuring harpist Joel
Andrews.
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
THURSDAY, APRIL 27,1972
mlomas In Hand, They Plan A Rest
ByiLEERIDENOUR
ville Technical Institute's anObserver Staff Writer
nual adult high-isenool gradJameJoundj Annie Peterson uation. Ceremonies were held
will have some s p a r e at C u m b e r l a n d County
evenings beginning today for Memorial Auditorium.
the first titne in seven years,
The Petersons have atbut they think they'll find tended classes twice a week,
winter and summer, for seSM
things to fill up the time.
For Mr. and Mrs. Peterson en years and have completed
are among the 200-plus Fay- work from about the third of
etteville area residents who fourth grade level to the
were graduated from high twelfth. Both were awarded
school last night in Fayette- diplomas just one year ahead
of their son's college graduation from Lincoln University
in Pennsylvania.
A builder who has completely renovated his home
from a dilapidated wooden
building to a trim dwelling
with an all-modern interior,
Peterson says he "had always dreamed of some way
finishing school" He quit
school after three grades as a
youth to support his family
after his father's death.
The couple began their
studies in the Gillespie Street
library under a volunteer-run
literacy program which has
s i n c e been merged into
F.T.I.'S adult school, which
graduated over 300 adults last
year in addition to last night's
class.
Both thje 7Petersons have
high praise 0r the teachers
and staff afpF.T.L, particularly the patience exhibited
Classrooms, labs and shops
will be open to the public for
demonstrations of new techniques and skills in applied
sciences, health occupations,
vocational trades and engineering-technologies.
Open to the public will be
LaFayette Hall,. Cumberland
Hall and the Paul H. Thompson Library.
STry/fO*
13B
JJtplotna f rograttt
"when we got there late from
being tired."
Mrs. Peterson, who was a
laundry worker when she
began studying, has since
quit outside work to be a
housewife. She thinks she'll
spend the spare evenings
resting up.
Commencement exercise*
"Some nights I'd be so tired
I just couldn't face going to
class. But he kept pushing
me, and we'd get there
somehow "
Both the Petersons hope
their success in finishing will
encourage others. Mrs. Peterson describes her worries
in the beginning as "not scared of the work, but embarrassed" at being an adult .
third grader
Are the Petersons .planniBgrt
I
v
"Oh no; we still have to
finish paying for our son's
education!"
NEW GRADUATES—Mr. and Mrs. James" fterson
are among Fayetteville Technical Institute's *tdult
high school graduates, after seven years gfTjoing to
school, during which time they completed *eaggr.ades
each. (Observer photo by Dick Blount)
April the twenty-sixth
nineteen hundred and seventy-two
at
eight o'clock
Cumberland County Memorial Auditorium
yetteville Rose Garden ^Ablaze With
Blossoni
In a Garden"beauty abides
we see God's marvelous
hand at work
Rose Garden, advises that the
garden now features 658 roses
all of which were donated by
Jackson & Perkins. The tree
These well chosen words roses and dogwood trees were
are the sentiments of the donated as memorial gifts by
Fayetteville R o s e Garden i n t e r e s t e d Fayetteville
Committee w h o s e applied citizens.
knowledge and hard work in
In announcing future plans
conjunction with the miracle for the Garden, Mrs. Elliott
of nature have produced the Harris, past president of the
first blooms of spring in the Fayetteville Rose Society!
Fayetteville Rose Garden.
states that additional roses
In cooperation with Fayette- will be added to the corner
ville Beautiful the Fayette- beds over the next two years.
ville Rose. Society is a co- The Garden w i l l feature
sponsor of the Garden. Since statuary and wide trellises
the groundbreaking in Jan- which will be mounted on
uary of 1971, the Garden has concrete columns. "These
steadily taken shape under items will be added as funds
the guiding hands of Mrs. El- permit," she stated. At the
liott H a r r i s . Mrs. Vance present time the proceeds
Knight and Mrs. Julia Reaves, from the Fayetteville Beauticity coordinator.
ful Paper Drive are being
"We are so pleased to have used on the Rose Garden
the cooperation of the Garden Project. Should any civic
Clubs and businessmen in groups or private citizen wish
Fayetteville who are taking to donate needed items at the
such an active interest in Garden, they are requested to
creating the Rose Garden," contact Mrs. Reaves, who
stated Mrs. William C. Miller, will work with any group in
chairman of the Fayetteville deciding on a project which
B e a u t i f u l program. "The would be suitable to its
p u r p o s e of Fayetteville means.
Beautiful is to guide the efSince the inception of the
forts of civic groups in a well
planned beautification and Fayetteville Beautiful proarea improvement program gram many civic, profesfor the City of Fayetteville," sional and garden club groups
as well as local businessmen
she added.
"Because of the beauty of have decided to either take a
the Rose Garden we are re- project of civic improvement
ceiving many requests for or to donate to a Fayetteville
roses for civic purposes, but Beautiful project such as the
due to the fact that the roses Market House corner beautiwere donated by Jackson and fication effort. In this way
Perkins Rose Company to be c i v i c clubs and private
used in a "show" garden, we c i t i z e n s are making a
are establishing a policy that tremendous contribution to
these roses cannot be cut for the improvement of Fayetteeither civic or private use," ville, it was pointed out.
continued Mrs. Miller.
It has been said that the
Through the efforts of Julia people of a city can be judged
Reaves, a total of six garden by the appearance of that
Clubs; Dig and Dream, city. "I have found this work
Lafayette, Scotch, Friendly in our community to be a
A c r e s , Greenwood and very heartwarming experiGreenlawn have taken por- ence," stated Mrs. Reaves. "I
t i o n s of the Garden as find that private citizens and
city officials are eager to
HANDS site projects.
cooperate in every way to
At the present time another
our city more
beautification oriented group m a k e
is considering th$ donation of beautiful." she added.
Fayetteville Beautiful, the
the fountain for. p e center of
the Garden. A|*Pe time of Fayetteville Rose Society and
the install ation.,iilpne fountain Fayetteville Technical Instithe b'ficjc wafkjpjlround the t u t e cordially invite the
. fountafjijwill ajajj^bfe laid. The citizens of Fayetteville to
maintenance ogthe Garden is come by the Fayetteville
pro vi'd'ed % Fayetteville Tech- Rose Garden to ,enjpy4..-the
roses at the peak ofJping
nical Institute personnel.
bloom. The Garden is*"k)cated
Mrs. Vance Knight, who at the corner mDesers Street
"de s i g n e d the Fayetteville and Hull Road. J
FFA Pally Winners Picked
Some 300 Future Farmers
of America and advisors attended the District Four
Federation »tally Saturday at
Fayetteville technical Institute.
Parkton and Sanford Central.
Public speaking — Marty
Tadlock of Rockingham
In FFA Cjpntests, winners
were chosenSfn dairy judging,
public speaking, parliamentary procedure, forestry and
beef and swine judging.
District Four consists of
federations from B l a d e n ,
Cumberland, Sandhills, North
R o b e s o n , Pineland, South
Robeson, Harnett and Waccamaw regions.
Winners were.
Dairy judging Lafayette,
FIRST BLOOMS: Mrs. Julia Reaves (left),city coordinator and director of Fayetteville Beautiful, and
Mrs. T. B. Tyson, awards' chairman for Fayetteville
Beautiful, are shown admiring the first blooms in
Fayetteville Rose Gardeii, sponfored
etteviUe Beautiful and the •/Fayetteville Rose Society
(Observer photo—Blount)
SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS
Mrs. Ellen li%gaUjihey, president; congratu-'
lates 19'rS-^holarship winners fleft to
right' Miss J a n e Gayle Holmes, Cape
Parliamentary procedure a|
East Montgomery.
Forestry—West Columbus,,
Beef and Swine — Cape
Fear High School.
The highest scores for individuals in the beef and swine
judging were recorded by
John Blackman of Cape Fear,
Tracey Gardner of Cape
Fear, Mike Pait of Bladenboro, Bruce McLaurin of
Cape Fear and Ed Tom Hollowell of CaDe Fear.
The team winners will represent District Four at the
stall finals in Raleigh June 8
at theState FFA Convention.
F e a r Higb.^St&bei^iMass Donna J e a n
Harris, F a ^ ^ v l H f e ^ T e c h n i c a l Institute; and MifP^ruarellitta Edwina
Wilkerson, E. E. Smith High School.
�I' M
YOU'RE I N V I T E D t d ^ k
;
^ ^
FiOTTTEVILLE TECIfllCAL WjSTITllTE'S
mm
M I S S CLAUDIA DANCY,
R.N., has received her B.S.
Degree from Limestone College in Gaffney, South Carolina. A native of Laurinburg,
N.C. Miss Dancy is an instructor in practical nurse
e d u c a t i o n at Fayetteville
Technical Institute and received her diploma in nursing
from
Highsmith-Rainey
School of Nursing.
SUNDAY, MAY 2 1 , 1972 FROM 3 TO 5 P.M.
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE OFFERS...
O P E N ; HOUSE
a
MRS. LAURA PETERS 627
Greenland Dr., is a patient in
Highsmith-Rainey
Memorial Hospital.
MR. AND MRS. QUINCY A.
HUTSON, Friendly Rd., have
returned after attending the
57t&„.annual convention of
Kiwanis International in AtlantiC'City, N.J.
MR. AND MRS. PIERRE W.
DELABY, Miss Betsy Delaby
and Miss Billie Crocker have
returned from Myrtle Beach,
S.C. where Mr. Delaby attended the joint meeting of
the N o r t h Carolina-South
Carolina Societies of Orthotists and Prosthetists. Mr.
Delaby was e l e c t e d vice
president of the North Carolina Society of Orthotists and
Prosthetists for 1972-1973.
THE STATE BOARD of
Examiners of Electrical Contractors has notified instructor E. D. "Pete" Oakes Jr. of
Fayetteville Technical Institute that he has successfully
written the q u a l i f y i n g
examination for electrical
contractors' license. He if .
department chairman of the
electrical installation and
maintenance curriculum at
FTI and a licensed contractor
in refrigeration. Oakes has
done undergraduate work at
NC State fijniversity in addition to teaching at Fayetteville Tech since 1964. A ^ r C ^
TRANSFER CREDIT (Associate Degree) in
Liberal Arts
Accounting
Air Conditioning Engineering Technology
Agriculture Business Technology
Associate Degree Nursing (RN)
Business Administration
Civil Engineering Technology
Dental Hygiene
Electronic Data Processing
Electronics Engineering Technology
Environmental Engineering Technology
Industrial Management
Marketing and Retailing
Mechanical Engineering Technology
Secretarial Science (Technical, Medical. Executive and Legal)
and
CAREER TRAINING (Diploma) in
Air Conditioning Mechanics
Architectural Drafting
Automotive Mechanics
Carpentry
-Electrical Maintenance
Machine Shop
Masonry (Brick Laying)
Practical Nursing
Tool & Die
Welding
For Further details, contact:
Director of Admissions
Fayetteville Technical Institute
P. O. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N. C. 28303
FAYETTEVILLE
|TECHNICAL
NSTITUTE
People
Wou Knoid
DEMONSTRATIONS
SUNDAY
MAY 21, 1972
3 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 PM
I) 1
Tel. 484-4121
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools.
7^
REMEMBERS
dT/£z?/?,£>
Outstanding
TODAY from 3 to 5 PM
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
&f
Dean of Instruction William
E. S e a s e ; William O.
Cameron, director of Technical and Vocation Education;
and Eli Anderson Jr., director of Adult Basic Education
at Fayetteville Tech, have
b e e n chosen Outstanding
Educators of America for
1972, according to Fayetteville Technical nstitute. Nominated earlier this year,
they^; were selected for the
hoggrsbn • the basis of their
ciwc' and professional ac
Ijjj^andjng Educators of
"*^T#^-annual awards
r a m honoring distin~Weh and women for
Educators
their exceptional s e r v i c e ,
achievements, and leadership
in the field of education.
Each .year those chosen
outstanding educators are
featured in a national awards
volume, Outstanding Educators of America.
Nominations for the program are made by officials of
colleges and universities ine l u d i n g presidents, deans,
and department chairmen.
^SSfeMEE^WESS' J ? : $ a s t meets
fe^ye^l^lle^Techriical
Institute
a s ^ ^ p a r d JfJ£!r V i e s , department
chairman in accounting, and Eddy
Cheng, parttime instructor in engineering, both work on a problem
Guidelines for selection include an educator's talents in
the classroom, contributions
to research, administrative
abilities, civic service^ and
professional recognition*
'3*§P
O
given them .by student C i n a g Force
During Sunday's open h o u s i W t F T I ,
an experiment will be conJScted to
see if t h e hand (using t a K o r i e n t a l
abacus) is faster than the eleStric eye
of the calculator
-
/Z//7JZ.
Mechanical Engineering Technology
Will feature:
Materials testing (Room 322).
Loading to failure on typical
materials.
engineering
Also:
Electrical weighing scale
Heat treatment of steel
Hardness tests on metals
Student designed projects
(Room 315)
FTI O F F I C E R S - N e w l y elected.-Stu-^Cprnpton, secretary: Ernest A n d r e w ^
dent Government Association officers treasurer; E d Borst vice p f e l d e f ? '
at Fayetteville Technical Institute a r e and Mike Haynes president fFTT
pictured on the steps of Cumberland photo)
president. ( F T I
Hall. F r o m left to right a r e Martha
Fayetteville Technical Institute
Hull & Devers Streets, Honeycutt Area
Fayetteville, North Carolina
"•**,
EVar-lA MONKEY NEEDS LOVING - Fayetteville Tech's
Social Science Instructor, George Hicks, of Dunn, (right) is
shown, here with "Cisco," subject a t a psychology experiment
scheduled tor Sunday's Open House at FTI. "Cisccp*" response
to a surrogate mother wHl be demonstrated. JjjPTI PHQTO)
Telephone: 484-4121 •
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & School
—————^—
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C_ < - < ? - £ - * - '
A<uM; ^M*/?^
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1
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL Institute will hold its
registration for the summer
quarter Monday anid Tuesday,
June 5 and 6, from 8 a.m. to 3
p.m.
HIGHLIGHTS OF
FHHTEVULE
TECHNICAL INSTHUf E$
Classes will begin Wednesday, June 7.
Late registration will be
permitted through Monday,
June 12, officials said.
Courses to-ibe offered will
range from epllege Preparatory subjects jtp nursiiig.-and
engineerip;g.lg|5pjlog.y
The courses-*are open • to
•
anyone 18 or older. Tuition is
$2.50 per credith'our. $'/%e/7^
SUNDAY, MAY 21, 1972 FROM 3 TO 5 P.M.
7
7
§
BUSINESS DIVISION:
The electronic dat§, processing department will use
the computer to find monthly payment schedules for
mortgage amorrfizmfehl^'Let's Talk Business" a slide
presentation prc$Jje$d by the business administration
department.
.-MMHV
' '•> bob
Day Care Assistants
Complete FTI Course
EXPO 72 FUNDS Mrs. E . M. Postlethwait, projects chairman of Fayetteville Woman's Club, and Mrs. George
Levi, co-chairman, presented checks to
several community projects at the club
meeting Friday. F r o m left (front row)
Mrs. Levi and'Mrs. Postlethwait, presenting* check to Howard Boudreau,
Fajjefievffle Technical Institute. Others
receiving checks were from
left:
(s^ofed row) Mrs. Stella McGowan,
Co%dihating Council on Older Adults;
Mrf. 'Monroe Evans, Fayetteville Art
Museum; Mrs. William C. Mffler,
F a y e t t e v i l l e Beautiful; Mrs. Joe
McLeod, Fayetteville Day Nursery;
(third row) P e r r y Leazer, Fayetteville
State Scholarship Fund; R. B ; , S m i t h , Fuller School; Ronnie Ross, unit director Boys Club; David E ^ n s f ^ J n i t e d '
Fund; John Clark, vic«L dgairmaiv
Friendship House, Chip C%p%>s,..dii";
rector Friendship House; ? M r | - : C- C.
Duell, People's Clinic, accepje$»;;for :
Mental Health. (Observer fpofoig-'
Blount)
Miss Barbara Farris was
chosen "Most Outstanding
Student" among the eight
young girls completing a
training program as child
care assistants on June 23.
The presentation was made
at an informal ceremony
marking the completion of a
348-hour course at College
H e i g h t s Kindergarten on
Friday morning.
This is the second time
such a program has been offered in Cumberland County,
and once again, Fayetteville
Technical Institute has acted
as catalyst in forming a
graining class with multiple
agency support. Those participating were: The Cumberland County Department of
Social Services, the Mental
Health Association, the Association for the Retarded,
Vocational Rehabilitation and
FTI. AIT twelve of last year's
graduates have been employed.
Under the direction of Mrs.
Juanita Bremer, RN, the
students were given both
classroom and practical experiences in child care. They
'CONCERT:
visited Mt. Sinai Day Care
Center, John Wesley, College
Heights and the Day Care
C e n t e r for the Retarded
where the workers particularly enjoyed their training.
"Our students especially
liked working with children at
the Day Care Center for the
Retarded," observed M r s
Bremer. "They seemed to
feel they were needed there
and that what they were
doing was meaningful."
The facility, located on the
Raleigh Rd., is owned by the
Civitan Club.
Classroom work was per
formed at the College Heights
Kindergarten. Mrs. Bremer
was assisted by Mrs. Ginger
Howardrswho holds as Associte of A^ts Degree from the
University of-Southern Florida
where she moored in special
education.
Completing the course as
day care assistants were
Gwedolyn Evans, Barbara
F a r r i s , Denise Grooms,
G1enda
Lee,
Andrea
M c D o u g l a d , Margaret
McLean, Brenda Scales and
Linda Lee Scott. &/£# / 7 1
Harpist Joel Andrews, musician-in-residence at FTI
will be featured in a solo recital from 3 to 3:45 P.M. in
the Student Lounge of the Paul H. Thompson Library.
fe£INEERING
TS&pNOLOGY:
Testing procedures for water Jg|lution, field density
lefts-Rising nuclear moisture v ^ t e r , and electronic
swffchlBg'with solid state deviSif.
GENERAL EDUCATION
Demonstration of machine used t ^ n c r e a s e speed and
comprehension in reading. Physiess department will
present static electricity and waye motion demonstrations. Live animals will baptised in showing a
monkey's response to artificiarmother and several
types of maze setups for white mice.
GREENHOUSE^
Agricultural business technology studeias will show
proper method of potting plants.
HEALTH OCCUPATIONS
Planning activities for sick children; live demonstrations of oxygen therapy, surgical dressings and intravenous therapy as well as dental hygiene procedures.
a & O C A ^ I O N A L EDUCATION
6A
,*|aB<Aj?eiutectural drafting .students will present their
• Ipipoetfeliosj autmotivffciepartment will demonstrate
the use of engine analysis and the tool and die shop
will produe©ij»etal parts from blanking dies.
f H E FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 28, 1972
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Hull & Devers Streets
Fayetteville, North Carolina
Telephone: 484-4121
Swope Addresses FTI| Graduates
John Swope, director of the
Fayetteville Area Industrial
Development C o r p . . was
s p e a k e r at Fayetteville
Technical Institute's 1 0 t h
graduation exercise Saturday
at Memorial Auditorium.
President
Howard
Boudreau introduced Swope.
Diplomas and degrees were
conferred by Thornton W.
Rose, chairman of the board
of trustees. Special awards to
outstanding graduates were
preseSLed by William E.
Sease, clean of instruction.
M a r s h a l s were Clayton
Burtrum, Patricia Blackmon.
W i l s o n Carter, Samuel
Croom, David Dodson, James
Fisher, Susan Gravley, Glen
. Keel, Joseph Ratcliff, Janet
V i t 0 1 0 . Brenda Wiseman,
Charles Wrenn and alternates
Stephen Gates and Ronnie
Wise.
The f o l l o w i n g students
graduated in these areas:
Accounting: Jerome Alfano,
Robert Mitchell Hunt, William Joseph McPhatter Jr.
Cherry B u l l a r d Naylor,
Rickey Clifton Roller and
Jonathan Paul Rovira.
Air conditioning engineer
ing ,fethnology: Percy Benjamin Ammons, Earl Lofton
Hall, D e x t e r
Dallas
Jones.William Barry Jones
and Howard Lee Noris.
Agricultural business technology: Leon David Bridgers,
William Bucciarelli, Roger
Dale Houston, Darium Allen
Moore, John Edward Newton,
B o b b y Hugh Norris and
Harold Michael Smith.
Associate degree nursing:
Dorothy Joanne Barnes, Linda Sue Bell, Dorothy Jane
Copas, Donna Marie Corbin,
D i a n e Marie Coulbourne,
Barbara Eileen Emery, Olympia S. Harrell, Kay Wagar
Hill, Betty Anne Hyde. Brenda Kaye Jackson, Pickett
Kendall Jamison, Kenneth
Rodgers Ledford Jr.. Mary
Lee Jackson Norton, Patricia
Cox Warren.
Business
administration:
Edgar Charles Bennington
jr., James William Bordeaux,
William Ernest Caulder, Paul
C h r i s t i a n Curlee, James
Ronald Fraser, Richard Ray
Gray, Donnie Ray Jackson,
Dennis Allen Kemp, Dennis
Paul Lee. Thomas Jay Lee,
Joseph Anthony Norton, John
Davis Palmer, William Arthur Patterson Jr.. Daniel
Joseph Pfeffer, Robert Larry
Weddings
Electronic^
prde easing:
KennethJHaH
olttsriaron
Lynn > T ^ D a v i d
Lee
Buckhef' ^J'a/m-Je s Austin
Godwin, Howard Douglass
Grantham, J a n i e Kathryn
Hall, Walter Keith Hooker,
James Randy Ivey and Paul
Frederick Moro.
Electronics
engineering
technology: Henry Lee Autry,
Charles Gregory Bass, Michael Glenn Bradley, James
Calton Buie Jr.. Jerry Allen
Bullard, William Bryan Byrd,
Charles Edward Conoly, Ellis
Max G u y , Ernest Lee
Johnson, DeLeon McLamb
Jr., Douglas Lee Meares Jr..
Robert Charles Moore, Linda
Jo Parker, David Bynum
Walters and Nast T r e n t
Woods.
Environmental engineering
technology: Kenneth Lemar
Averitte, Kitty Anna Ka
therina Kramer, William Lacy McQueen, Henry Massey,
Nancy Lou Melvin, Kent
Edwin Penny, John William
, Reid, Jospeh Albert Stanish,
Michael Allen Strickland and
Donald Wayne Williams.
Industrial
management:
Julian Ray Andreade, Donald
A. Byrd, William Elton Carter, Ressie Aden Creech Jr.,
Robert Lee Hilburn, Lovette
•<}rady Holland Jr., Rufus
L i n w 0 o d House, Kenneth
Franklin Jones, Bradley Warren McKenzie, Michael David
Nepstad, RobeAjK e n n e dy
Sandlin, James^Lacry Tingen,
William Alan fend. Michael
j Lee Whitley. . zaJgx
Marketing and- retailing:
Charles Alston Archbell, Arthur Doug Bass, Brenda C
Bedsole, Anne Ruth Leamons,
Barbara Jean Thompkins.
Mechanical
engineering
technology: Richard Ernest
B r u c k e r . William Council
Daniels Jr., Frederick Eugene Holland, Danny Mac
ITHEIE'S STILL TIME j
I
••
A
TO R GS E F R
E ITR O
McGuire, William Alton Milliken Jr., Michael R. Walker,.
Malcolm Earl Williams Jr.,
Darryl Glenn Wolfe.
Air conditioning and refrigeration mechanics: David
Alfred Altaian, Harry Junius
Auten, Alton Leroy Bynum
III, Charles Chester Clapper,
J. Billy Ford, Milton Sebastion Hudson Jr., Thomas
Kenneth Hutchinson Timothy
Warren Liles, Rodney Phillip
Lloyd, A n t h o n y Francis
Makolajczyk, Richard Irvan
Payne.
Architectural mechanics:
WiHrarflTDave Dudlev, Steven
Dale FafrclotrfWpbto.JSUHjldebrand; Don GPKelly Lloyd,
Robert D. Nixon. Bobby W.
Perkins.
M a c h i n i s t : Loyd T.
Blackman, Johnnie Buxton
Jr., William Oliver Currie,
M a r v i n Elliott; Fletcher
Wardell Fort, Thomas Lea
Matlock III, Daniel Rufus
M a t t h e w s , ' L a r r y Robert
Mercer, Russell Washington
Townsend Jr.
T o o l and die making:*
James Allen Beasley, Michael
Alan. Bethea, James •jlv.eretfl
Crabtree, Jer-ry^Wayne DUM"
ning, Jeffery Wolfe DuRant,
Furman Lemuel .Evans, Philip Thaddeus,Hedrick, Sherwood Allen Morgaifll, Broncho C l a r e n - I V n Naylor,
Charles Robert Redwine.
%
• • ^M,..
F.T.I.'S SUMMER SESSION
Formal registration will be heldJ§$Dugh Juesday, jJ||6tiS>,at Favetteville
Technical Institute, but late regi«tfon w i { | ^ ^ r m W % g ? M o nv,unus
daV
June 12 final date for enrolling at Fayetteville^^ this surfle?^
Y>
Courses to be offered include secretariaftnd college preparatory subjects as well as engineering technologies #0" ^ealrf^cOprtion coupes.
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Scho'
* .
jr/zf/^L
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
FRIDAY, MAY 19,1972
RECEIVE PINS—Members of Fayetteville Technical
Institute's 1972 Associate Degree Nursing class are
shown after receiving their pins. Seated, left to right,
are Brenda Jackson, Patricia Warren, Diane Coul-
ADA A Class Includes First! Male
The 1972 AsySSaar-begree
Nursing StsaSft&%taFayetteville Techrrfefel.aBMStute includes its fifegfSJnSfe student.
Ken Ledfo'gflA v\6& president
of the StSfllntrWrses' : Asso-1
ciation ;wffi9inK/ia;'i;-riat ive: of-|
Asheville." Ledford serveeP'kithe Air Force as a sergeant
prior to entering FTI and is
representative of the growing
trend toward young men entering the field of nursing.
The
a n'n'u a 1 pinning
•%>M
m
For further details, contact
A
Fayetteville Technical Institute:
P. 0. Box 5236
Fayetteville, N. C, 28303
Telephone 4814-4121, Extension 44
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges & Schools
Lk
4gfi$gtitS"
WBM
bourne, Donna Corbin, Dorothy Copas, Mary Norton,
and Linda Bell. Standing a r e , left to right, Betty Hyde,
Joanne Barnes, Barbara E m e r y , Ken Ledford, Kaye
Hill, Kendall Jamison, and Olympia Harrell.
FTI To Offer
Adult Courses
Fayetteville. Technical Institute will goffer summer
school courses for adults in
grades 1 through 12 from July
10 through August 21. . . .
Registration for these adult
basic education and^hiijik
school diploma subject&rjfc'iil
be held in Lafayette ijafi at
FTI on Thursday, JiBa'y:;6-at:'-7
p.m.
^ur1k">
wJPVlpf
.For further detail8,*c6ntact
the .director of General- Adult
Education of FTI. $ -js '**>
luncheon for graduating nursing sUid^nts. was held on
Saturda^JEtfeji 13, at the Fort
B r a g g r Noncommissioned
Offker»mtt*
P r e s i d e n t Howard E.
Boudreau opened the prog r a m with a welcoming
speech. Miss Judy Siceloff,
president-elect of the Student
Nurses' Association, gave the
invocation.
After repeating the pledge
of the International Council of
Nurses, the graduating students received their pins
from Student to Graduate
ADN program at Fayetteville
Tech, Mrs. John O'Hale.
d.r Grady Davis; psychology professor at Fayetteville
State University, was the
guest speaker. He addressed
the group on "The Transition
from S Student to Graduate
Nurse."
The 1972 Class closed the
program with the presentation of special awards to Mrs.
Shirley Cox, secretary for the
ADN curriculum, and to Leo
Corbin, husband of one of the
graduating students. The two
were named "Honorary Student Nurses of the Year." A plaque was presented to the
ADN faculty in token of the
students' - appreciation for
their support and ggMance.
Representatives Worn Fayetteville'sjiyeterans Administ r a t i oJjjf-Hospital and the
AmericaffNurses' Association
attended the luncheon.
After graduating on May
27, members of the class will
write their licensing examinations which, when successfully completed, will entitle
them to Registered Nurse
status.
�•
J&5W
Sre]
FA1OTTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTIT
jjf
SUMMER SESSION SCHEDULE I
Fayetteville Technical Institute w+ll offer college preparatory, vocational, technical and health
occupation courses as part of the summer program.
MP
THE STATE Forest Service
has identified the 60-year-old
tree cut down in Haymount
last week as a chestnut oak,
rather than a chestnut tree.
George Strange of the N. C
Forest Service examined the
tree at lihe request of the
Fayettevifte chapter of the
Sierra Club.
The city has not decided
what action it will take
against Hubert Downing, 605
Oakridge Ave., who allegedly
cut down the tree without city
permission.
City officials were to meet
this morning to discuss the
matter
FAYETTEVILLE Technical
Institute has received approval from the State Board of
Education to teach a course
in banking and finance.
FTI will offer the course
beginning in the fall.
The school has also awarded the general contract for its
new administration building.
FTI's board of trustees
a w a r d e d the contract to
Player Construction Co 'The
building will cost almost
$200,000 andfWs sched!lJe#for
c o m p i e mo riS Within ^hine
months
Skills, techniques, and knowledge needed to keep up with changing technology, and preparing
for the demanding college years qjjead, or improving on-the-job performance can be learned
through the summer months at F T I . ^ a n y courses are scheduled to carry credit toward diploma or
associate degree curricula for FayetteSglle Tech students, but are open to anyone 18 years of age
crease in recruiters visiting
the campus from business
and industry during the 197172 academic year.
1st Session June 7 through July 13 2nd Session July 3 1 through August 3 1
REGISTRATION DATE:June 5 and 6 from 8 : 0 0 AM to 3 : 0 0 PM in Lafayette Hall.
TUITION: »2.50 per quarter h o u r . ^ courses, for example, which carry 3 quarter hours'
credit cost the student *7.50 plus text, personal instruments and tools).
Milton J. Yarboro. director
of career counseling and
placement, said more than
1,400 job interviews were
conducted on campus during
the year and seniors visited
over 30 prospective employers.
COLLEGE PREPARATORY STUDIES
Over 120 students have firm
job offers, Yarboro said, and
the average salary of those
reporting was $7,800.
NET PROFITS for the first
nine months of the fiscal year
on sales from local ABC
stores totaled $419,779.31. according to a report filed with
the Board of County Commissioners Monday.
The report said total sales
amounted to over $3.6 million.
The ABC board has paid
the state over $700,000 in
taxes, the report said.
The ABC board's control
•division has made 397 arrests
t^iiring that period, seized 716
* gallons. of non-tax paid
FAYETTEVILLE/*|prATE whiskey and destroyed 57
&_ c - 7A
University reported an m- " stills.
Richard Lutz At New Career
Graduate Of FTI
In 'Unique' Job
To the traditional question, "what are you going to be?"
this year's graduate may very well reply, "something that
doesn't yet exist."
Educational research indicates that 40 percent of the
jobs now held in the 1970's were unknown 10 years ago.
Fayetteville Tech graduate, Richard Lutz, is an example of
the young man employed in a field unknown a decade ago.
Assigned to UNC's Memorial Hospital, he is now a medical
electronics technician doing research in biological measurement. Lutz finished high school in 1962 and enrolled in the
Fayetteville Industrial Education C,enter - predecessor to F.T.I.
After graduating in. electronics engineering technology, he
joined a company.
.'SK^'
Doing biological research, Lutz's job is unlike the possible
employment he and hisjcfassmates anticipated in the mid-sixties. At Memorial Hospital, he is a member of the team doing
research in psychiatry and physiology.
Working closely with Dr. Paul Obrist, a psychiatrist, Lutz
and electronics engineer J. S. Hutcheson have produced
innovative research equipment for biological measurement.
Lutz was previously assigned to produce a capsule-size
instrument called an endoradiosonde to measure internal
gastric pressure of postoperative patients and serve as a
warning against shock.
Other precise instruments on display is his offices include a
cardiotachometer coupler to use in measuring heart rate,
indicating the stimulus effect and other parimeters of subject
response.
To accent the newness of his field, Lutz noted that he and
Hutcheson had recently attended the Fourth Annual National
Conference for Electronics in Medicine. Just in the past four
years engineers and doctors have met annually to determine
how they-could best use today's technology for the. benefit of
Board Eyes Computers
By RICK GRAY
Computers, recreation and
a tax exemption led the list of
topics taken up by the Cumberland Board of County
Commissioners Monday.
The commissioners are
going to study a proDosal
from Fayetteville Technical
Institute that computers at
the school be used -by the
county to expedite billing
procedures at the county's
hospitals, the Public Works
Commission and the county
tax office.
They heard a brief report
from the newly appointed
County Recreation Director
Elmer Arnett and chairman
Hector Ray accepted a check
for $500 to be used to purchase a baHfield. The Fayetteville Optimist Club made
the donation.
A tax exemption, requested
last month by the Quaker
House of Fayetteville Inc,
again brought a motion to
delay action, this time pending a recommendation from
the county attorney.
The commissioners asked
attorney Heman Clark for a
recommendation when they
could not decide if the Quaker
House would qualify for the
religious tax exemption under
current state law.
The proposal from FTI
calls for the county to provide
funds to the school for some
additions to the c u r r e n t
computer facilities to bring
those facilities up to the
quality needed by the county
for a data processing center.
Although the commissioners took action, nearly every
member said the proposal
was "a good idea," and
Chairman Ray said, "We'll
consider it and let you know
in time to get it into the
budget."
That would indicate action
at the next meeting, since
budget hearings will begin in
the middle of the month, and
the budget for the 1972-73 fiscal year will go into effect
July 1.
The initial cost of the system would be $175,419.21 for
the first year. Some $23,495 of
that would be in one-time
charges.
Most .of the cost Of the
proposed system^ ;-* -which
would eventually.- tie used by
nearly all of the county Agencies — wduld be in equipment
purchases and leases. Most
CREDIT HOURS
4
4
4
4
4
1-3 M-F
1-3 M-F
8-10 M-F
10-12 M-F
1-3 M-F
COURSE TITLE
Basic Math
Advanced Math
Elem. Algebra
Advanced Algebra
TIME
CREDIT HOURS
10-12 M-F "
5
1-3 M-F
5
8-10 M-F
5
8-10 M-F
5
BUSINESS EDUCATION STUDIES
Other Jtaties at Memorial have required TMt£ to' be responsible fer fife video tapes and closed circuit televised instruction
for niedicgi students in psychiatry.
H#is presently working with white noJseee^erinrentaition. .
.a sound that-screens out all other disconcerting-sounds'so the
subject can concentrate on stimulus at hand. jT~/(3e/7 y
Observer Staff Writer
TIME
COURSE TITLE
Chemistry I
Chemistry II
Vocabulary & Rdg.
Practical English
Comp. & Grammar
computer equipment used in,
the nation is leased since
equipment is rapidly outdated
as new machinery is designed.
Under the proposal some
$109,515 would go for equipment. All of the one-time
charges listed in the proposal
ana, foj^^ie outright purchase
of some equipment and shipping charges for that equipment.
The major single expenditure proposed is $86,600 for
leasing a NCR 200 computer,
a third generation model
which leases for $7,225 per
month.
The commissioners a l s o
agreed to purchase the program devised for processing
the tax data by Howze and
Associates for some $90,000,
to be paid over three years.
Included in that purchase
would be some additional
services from the data processing company which would
include making the county's
own computer system operational for the tax system.
Arnett told the commissioners his newly-formed Rec-
ftH&M
reation Department has already scheduled a 30-team
Little League baseball tournament and is in the process
of organizing' a county-wide
golf tournament. Both will be
held in August.
The commissioners a l s o
opened bids, but accepted
none pending furt&er study,
for a car for the planning
department and for gas, oil
and tires for sheriff's department cars. <£ - c . 73-
COURSE TITLE
Typewriting
Shorthand
Shorthand
Office Machines
Business Law I
Business Law II
Accounting I
Accounting II
Business Finance I
Business Finance II
Business Organization
Credit Proc. & Prob.
Accounting
Income Taxes
Personnel & Bus.
Management
TIME
CREDIT HOURS
10-12 M-F
8-10 M-F
8-10 M-F
10-12 M-F
8-10 M-TH
8-10 M-TH
8-11 M-F
8-11 M-F
10-12 M-TH
1-3 M-TH
10-12 M,W,F
1-3 M-TH
8-11 M-F
1-3 M-F
3-4 M-TH
CREDIT HOURS
TIME
Bus. Insurance I
Business Law
Elem. Statistics
3
4
4
3
3
3
6
6
3
3
3
3
6
5
COURSE TITLE
1-3 M.W.F
10-12 M-TH
12-1 T&TH
1-3 M-F
10-12 M-F
10-12 M-F
8-10 M-TH
10-12 M-TH
8-10 M-F
8-10 M-F
10-12 M-F
12-1 T&TH
1-4' M&W
1-3 F
2-4 T&TH
10-12 M-F
Salesmanship
Real Estate
Economics
Economics
Intro. To Data Proc.
Intro. TO Comp. Sci.
' Intro, to Prog./
t Fortran I
' Assemb. Lng./
U NEAT)
Business Math.
1-3 M-F
3
3
4
5
4
3
3
4
4
4
DRAFTING
CREDIT HOURS
TIME
2
10-12 M-F
12-1 T&TH
10-12 M-F
12-1 T&TH
1-3 M,W,F
COURSE TITLE
Technical Drafting
Technical Drafting
Specif. & Contracts
COURSE TITLE
History of Architect.
Bldg. Mech. Equip.
Dft. I
Bldg. Mech. Equip.
Dft. II
CREDIT HOURS
TIME
9-10 M-TH
2
10-12 M-F
4
12-1 T&TH
10-12 M-F
12-1 T&TH
ENGLISH
CREDIT HOURS
3
-10 M,W,F
3
1-3 M,W,F
,3
8-10 M,W,F
3
1-3 M,W,F
3
10-12 M,W,F
3
10-12 M,T,TH
COURSE TITLE
Grammar
Grammar
Report Writing
Eng. Usage & Comp.
Eng. Usage & Comp.
World Lit. I
COURSE TITLE
Oral Communications
Oral Communications
American Lit. I
Comm. Skills: Gram.
Ind. Comm.
Report Writing
£
HOURS
TIME
Cp
1-3 M,W,F
A 3
8-10 M.W.TH
10-12 M,W,F « 3
10-12 T,TH,F
3
8-10 M.W.F
3
1-3 M.W.TH
3
MATH & SCIENCE
COURSE TITLE
Hum. Anatomy &
Physiology I
8-1 f
8-11
8-10
8-11
v40-12
Hum. Anatomy &
Physiology II
Physics: Prop\f0$
Matter
CREDIT HOURS
5
T&W
M&TH
F
T&W
M-F
COURSE TITLE
Physics:Work, Eng.
Power
Prop, of Matter
TIME
CREDIT HOURS
8-10 M-F
1-3 M-F
4
Technical Math.
Intro, to Coll. Math.
Trigonometry
TIME
8-10 M-F
10-12 M-F
10-12 M.W.F
5
5
3
SOCIAL SCIENCES
COURSE TITLE?^ r | j r | M E
CREDIT HOURS
WesternCiv.il
' ' * 8-10 M , W , F "
3
Intro, to Philosophy
3-5 M,W,F
3
Intro, to Psychology
10-12 M,W,F
3
COURSBTITLE
Applied P s y c h o l o g y *
Intro, to Sociology
Am. Institutions
TIME
CREDIT HOURS
9-10:30 T&Th
8-10 M,W,F
3
1-3 M-Th
3
NURSING
CREDIT HOURS
c
COURSE TITLE
TIME
June 12 through June 16
Nursing V 1-3
M,T,F
COURSE TITLE
June 5 through June 9
Nursing X(Elective)
June 19 through July 13
Nursing V 9-12 M&T
9-12 M&T
9-11 F
8-3 W&Th
TIME
CREDIT HOURS
FTO"M
4
8-11 T&Th
10-12 M
8-11 W&F
, 4
1-3 M-F
Surveying IV
Constr. Methods &
Equipment
CREDIT HOURS
10-12 M
1-3 M
9-11 T&W
12-2 T&W
9-12 Th&F
June 12 through June 16
Nursing X(Elective)
9-12 M-F
CIVIL ENGINEERING*
COURSE TITLE
Surveying
TIME
COURSE TITLE
Constr. Estimates &
Costs
Municipal Engr.
Roads & Pavements
Civil Co-Op
Applied Electricity
CREDIT HOURS
TIME
1-2 M-F
2-4 T&Th
4
2-5 M&W
3
11-12 T,W,F
5
»
10-12 M.W.F
4
ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION & MAINTENANCE*
COURSE TITLE
Bldg. Codes & Laws
Area LPNs Form
Association'
A meeting of Fayetteville
area licensed practical nurses
and student LPNs, was held
T h u r s d a y at Fayetteville
Technical Institute for the
purpose of uniting all area
licensed practical nurses into
a Fayettevijjte L i c e n s e d
Practical Nurses Association.
Mrs.
Mary
Adams,
president of the North Carolina Licensed P r a c t i c a l
Nurses Association, was guest
speaker.
"This Association .will have
the responsibility of establishing better working conditions where applicable, improved salaries, status, dignity, personal growth, education, registration and a better
understanding of the role of
the LPN between nursing,
homes, hospitals and other
medical facilities and organizations in the area, and for
fellowship," Mrs. A d a m s
said.
Selected as temporary officers were ; James H.
Fetherson, chairman; Mrs.
Joan Mercer, secretary; MJTJL
Willie Campbell, treasurer. I
It was announced the next
meeting would be held June
20, 7:30 p.m., in the Paul
Thompson Library, FTI. All
LPNs in the area are encouraged to attend. ^
y
130 Make
FTI List I
Fayetteville Technical Institute has listed 130 students
on the President's List for the.
spring quartec^v
The students' from areas
other than,fayetteville making a gradeiof "B" or better
were:
A utry ville? ^Broncho Naylor; BensonT ,%herwood Morgan and $pf JfcG o d w i n ;
Broadway, Clayton Burtrum;
Chocoqinity; K e n n e t h M.
Fuller; Clarktan: William C.
D a n i e l s ,-^lmton: Mercer
Jones, Fred Holland and
Cherry Naylor.
D u n n : Shelton Noles.
Deborah
Hoi lings worth,
Donald A. Byrd, Milton S.
Hudson and James Ivey.
Erwin: Debbie Giles, Michael Strickland, Kay Autry;
Fuquay; Michael Bradley;
High Point, Pljiflip Hedrick;
Lexington, Jerry Dunning and
Charles Redwine: Lillington,
Lynwood McDonald.
M a x t o n : David Dodson,
Sam McGirt and N a s h
W o o d s ; -fiaeford: Metrah
Spencer, William McQueen;
Red S p r i n g s , William
McPhatter; Sanford, Holt J.
Cannady and Patricia Warren; Shallotte, William A.
MHIiken Jr; S m i t h f i e 1 d ,
Ressie A. Creech; Stedman,
Thomas H. Young; Wagram,
Percy Ammons; and Wilmington, John D. Simon.
Commercial & Ind.
TIME
CREDIT HOURS
11-12 M-F
.4
12-1 T&Th
^» j
- 8
Wiring'
COURSE TITLE
TIME
Industrial Electronics
1-4 M&W
2-3 T&Th
LlkJll M-F •
CREDIT H O L T R S
1-2 F
IRACTICAL NURSE EDUCATION*
COURSE TITLE
Med, & Surg. Nsg.
(Sprfgtrics:,
TTME
TTT.WJh
'fi-i2n*i
10-t2&f
CREDIT HOURS
7
4
r n i J R S E TITLE
Mental Health
Voc. Adjust. II
TjME
8-10 M
8-9 F
10-11 M
9-lfl F
r.RFDIT HOURS
3
WELDING*
bissQ aailvl
CREDIT HOURS
2
TITLE
ShopTrac
Sflte'eftPTest. & Insp.
:'4oiid an: •
COURSE TITLE
Comm. & Ind. Prac.
Certification Prac.
CREDIT HOURS
TIME
6
8-9 M.W^F
9-12 M*W;F
8-9 T&Th
9-1 f
9-12 Th
: TECHNICAL*
T9V.'
COURSE TITLE
App. of Spec. Act.
Devices
TIME
10-11 M-F
CREDIT HOURS
P
These courses will be run continuously first and second session.
For further information contact:
Director of Admissions, Summer Session
Fayetteville Technical Institute
Hull & Devers Streets
Fayetteville, N. C.
28303
Telephone: 484-4121 Extension 44
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
yfei
4/3
£2~s
6/cS..
7.2,
�THE SANDHILLS Firemen
Association will hold their
46th annual convention here
Saturday.
Several hundred firemen
from throughout the southeastern section of the state
are expected to attend the
convention at Memorial Au-*
ditorium here.
Registration will be held
from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. A
parade and lunch wil be held
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. After
the afternoon business f session, the firemen willTiold
water fights, hose races and
demonstrations beginning at
2:30p.m.
The evening banquet will be
held at 5:30 p.m., and the
beauty pageant will begin at
7:30p.m.
Economic Growth Linked To Education Here
By BOB WILSON
Observer Staff Writer
Cooperation between education and industry was cited
Wednesday by Fayetteville
Technical Institute President
Howard Boudreau as "the
key to the economic growth
in the Fayetteville community during the past decade."
Boudreau was the featured
speaker at the annual meeting of the Fayetteville Area
Industrial Development Corporation, held at Green Valley Country Club.
Boudreau said that FTI,
which opened here in 1961
with an enrollment of 58, anticipated a student body of
1,200 fulltime students in the
fall of this year.
"We at FTI are extremely
happy to have played a part
in the industrial growth which
has t a k e n place here,"
FAIDC DIRECTORS—Newly elected directors of
the fFayetteville Area Indttf&Kal Development Corporation a r e show here with Howard Boudreau
(sefiond from left')?, Fayetteville Technical Institute
Boudreau said, "and we look
forward to its continued expansion in the years ahead.
"There is no question but
t h a t industrial growth is
closely related to the availability of skilled labor . . .The
community c o l l e g e s and
technical institutes of this
state have the flexibility to
provide the training to meet
these labor needs. If you in
industry will let us know what
by FAIDC Executive Director
John Swope, who paralleled
the growth of industry in the
Fayetteville a r e a to the
growth of Fayetteville Tech.
your needs are, we will know
in what direction to move
with training programs."
Boudreau also praised the
industrial e d u c a t i o n programs which have been instituted at the high school level
and said they "enabled students to come to us better
prepared for advanced training in whatever vocation they
have chosen."
Boudreau was introduced
president who was guest speaker at the FAIDC s
annua;! meeting Wednesday. They are John D. Ashford, J a m e s M. Thornton, Wilbur Breece and Dr.
Charles Speegle.
James M. Thornton, FAIDC
president, said in his annual
report that "despite the fact
that we have had no new
plant announcements during
the past year, we still have
experienced an i m p r o v e d
economy. S e v e r a l existing
industries have added several
hundred workers to their
payrolls, and unlike some
other areas, we have had no
plant shutdowns."
''The
industry-hunting
game doesn't produce a
plant a year," Thornton said.
"We've had some good prospects, and some of them are
still hot. We're optimistic
about the future . . We are
going to get others."
Thornton and John D. Ashford were re-elected to
FAIDC's board of directors,
along with Dr. Charles M.
Speegle. Earlier this year,
the board , named Wilbur
Breece to fill out the unexpired term of the late William
A. Dickinson. A resolution in
memory of Dickinson was
adopted at the meeting.'
At a meeting Wednesday
night, the FAIDC board of
directors named Walter C.
Moorman as president for the
1972-73 year. O t h e r officers chosen were David L.
Godwin, vice president; William H. Johnson, secretary;
and Ashford, treasurer
FAYETTEVILLE MAYOR
Jackson F. Lee has declared
t h i s week "national flag
week" in the city.
In his proclamation, Mayor
Lee said the flag "serves to
remind us of our precious
heritage and the courageous
determination of our forefathers to be free men under a
democratic form of government."
RETAIL SALES in Cumberland C o u n t y increased
over 16 per cent during the
first three months of 1972 as.
compared to the same period
in 1971, the Fayetteville Area
Chamber of Commerce reports.
Sales in March totaled over
$39 million, bringing the first
quarter's total to almost $108
million.
If the t r e n d continues
throughout the year, retail
sales should exceed $500 million, chamber officials said.
METHODIST
COLLEGE
Foundation has surpassed its
community fund-raising goal
for this year.
Contributions total o v e r
$123,000, with cash received
as of May 31 listed at almost
$103,000: ••Thjs is an increase
of $23,000«jwer£ifts received
on the samadatein 1971.
•
"fai'Q&k
FAYETTJ^yJipE Technical
Institute has- 'enrolled a record-breaking 635 students for
its summer session.
The total e x c e e d s last
year's enrollment by 133 students.
Twelve per cent of the students are 1972 high school
graduates.
The first summer sessions
ends July 13, with the .second
session scheduled to be held
from July 31 to Aueust 31
£//jrA JZ>
7
8—IV The News and Observer, Sunday. June 25.1972
4/?/7a~>
Around The €1%
>«wo**
A LIVE WIRE question has
been answered by Democratic presidential frontrunner
George McGovern.
An Observer reader submitted a question dealing
with the founding of the town
of Mitchell, S.D. The reader
asked if McGovern's ancestors had founded the town.
an increase of Bparly $100
million over 1971 sates:
TOURING PLANT—Taking a tour of lab at
Gregory Poole Equipment Co.'s manufacturing
Headquarters in Peoria, III., are, from left,
S o u r c e s director Rober,£|&s*£adwaller, new
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL Institute has announced three administrative
changes.
E f f e c t i v e immediately,
Charles Koonce will become
assistant to FTI President
In reply, McGovern wrote: H o w a r d Boudreau. Jack
"my family was not involved Fernald will become director
in the early days of Mitchell. of admissions and William
We moved there in 1928 when Bryant will be director of
I was 6 years old from Avon, adult education.
S.D."
FTI is planning a three-day
The question was probably course on visible emissions
the least controversial one evaluation July 18-20. The
McGovern has been asked in program will make available
recent weeks.
training to business, industry
and governmental agencies to
RETAIL SALES in Cum- assist them in complying with
b e r 1 a n d County showed visible emissions regulations.
another healthy increase in
April.
THE C O L L E G E Level
According to the Fayette- E x a m i n a t i o n Program
ville Area Chamber of Com- (CLEP) has been rescheduled
merce, sales increased over by Fayetteville State Univer14 per cent over April, 1971, sity.
Previously, the university
Sales topped $39 million.
has given CLEP tests on the
Sales lor- the first four second Saturday of each
months of 1972 are almost 16 month. Now, those examinaper cent ahead of those for tions will be held on the third
the sams fierioijin 1971. Total Saturday.
sales •thWf3r ii are' over $147
CLEP is designed to give
million? WH "®
persons entering school colChamoer^^Ricials are con- lege credit in certain areas,
tinuing to^-jtyfHfet that 19ft p i they may advance at a
^s&les will exceed ^SM'BrntliM,''' Bster rate?"
Gregory roole Utilizing!
Tech Schools' Graduates
The Gregory Poole Equipment Company of Raleigh,
wijh branches in Washington
and Wilmington is tapping the
human resources of North
Carolina's technical institutes
an4«ommunity colleges. Their
service specialists make up
morettftan half the firms
employes.
Kenneth Sawyer, Poole's
Raleigh training director, said
about 12 per cent of their service specialists are graduates
of ,auto mechanics, diesel
mechanics, or heavy equipment ^gpograms of technical
institutes and community
collegessi;
Sawder said that, while
Poo}e;6fe'i(rains each person to
sepBJceggboYari.ety of heavy
equipment, tech school
graduates have a basic interest
and knowledge .that give them
a Valuable advantage over a'
"wfelk-in" employe.
*&**&.,
?//<&/fy&
Poole's Raleigh center,
located across from the
fairgrounds, houses the
regular facilities of a large
business, plus a service department for regular repairs, a
specialization department for
electrical rebuilding, power
shift transmissions and engine
r e b u i l d i n g . An engine
dynamometer is used in
testing all machines that are
repaired. Sawyer has his own
training department at the
Raleigh branch, where he combines on-the-job training,
audio-tutorial instruction and
personalized instruction.
Students recruited from the
technical institutes and community colleges by Poole, all
receive further specialized
training,: Robert CaiSwaiiader
^irectoi^;«fslittr«janlfl8eaMiiEes
for- the compasg. agddau Sttarborough",-diiregtoijn6|8»fl8fetiDn
and advertising! •fferetttthinew
employe to Peoriauflid ttf twur
THE FAYETTEVILLE OBSERVER
"'.J*V"H?G!l*«»'.-.
r
THURSDAY, JUNE 8,1972
5?
FTI Students Make President's t List
One hundrea-thirty students
e f r o l i e d at Fayetteville
Technica4jk.Institute w e r e
namedJo|tfe President's List
^quarter. Those
^•ade of "B or
,-alrwork taken in
J d quarter at FTI
M
jtd&l Education: Aileen
'^Isan Gravley, PatricicfP'K&enan, Lyle R. Spidle,
and Karen Zimmermann.
Air Conditioning Mechanics
I:. Clayton Burtrum, Charles
Fisher, Jr. and M e t r a h
Spencer.
Architectural Drafting I.
Wilson Carter, Jimmy Keitt,
Joe R a t c 1 i f f and David
Walker.
Associate Degree Nursing
I: Sandra Hoffman and Felicia Schafer.
Business
Administration:
Larry Ferguson.
Civil Engineering I: Glenn
B. Elliott, Kenneth M. Fuller,
James T. Home and John D.
Simon.
Dental Hygiene I: Carolyn
Bleeker, Debbie Giles, Helga
King, Janet Vitolo, Sandra
Waren and Brenda Wiseman.
Electronic Data Processing
I: Pat B 1 a c k m a n , Joan
Mosher and Renu Ni jhawan.
Electrical Installation &
Maintenance: Albert D. Atkinson, Holt J. Cannady, John
W. B u r k e t t , David D
Dodsson, Ronald Klosener,
Sam A. McGirt, Shelton D
Noles and Joseph B. Saxton.
Electronics Engineering I;
Samuel E. Croom, Mercer C.
Jones, John J. Woodyard and
Thomas H. Young.
Environmental Engineering
fk James T. Fisher and Rusrsell J. Kopti.
General. .Office ..Education:
[Eva Kirkwood afcd Lrihe
Turner.
Industrial Management I:
Carlton F. Schafford.
. Machinist I: Gary L. Smith.
Practical Nurse Education:
Brenda Best, Anne Ross,
R o b e r t Stanley, Therese
Stanley, Emily Sutherland,
and Janice Unkuh.
Secretarial S c i e n c e I:
Deborah K. Hollingsworth.
Tool & Die Making I:
James A. Beasley, Michael
Bethea, James E. Crabtree,
Jerry
Dunning, Philip
Hedrick, Sherwood Morgan,
Broncho Naylor, and Charles.
Redwine.
Welding: Scott Jernigan.
A c c o u n t i n g . William
McPhatter, Cherry Naylor
Rickey Roller, Jonathan Ro-
employes, Benny Britt, Barry T h o m $ , Vvi J.
Kincade, Bob Allen, an unidentified.fjniV gulae,
and Gregory Poole promotion director W / T .
Scarborough.
vira Marilyn Duke, Rena Elliott, David Gilchrist, Ronnie
West, and Charles Wrenn.
Air Conditioning Technology II: Percy B. Ammons.
Air Conditioning Mechanics
II: Richard I. Payne, Milton
S. Hudson, Charles Clapper
andHarryJ.Auten.
Architectural Drafting II.
Jim K o e p k e
Lynwood
McDonald, M i c h a e l Quart e r m a n . Hosea Ray and
Harold Blauser.
Associate Degree Nursing
II: Dorothy Copas, Donna
C o r b i ^ Barbara Emery,
B r e nfi&a . Jackson, .Kendall
Jamison ' and" Patricia War"-''
ren.
Automotive II John Hildebrand, Robert Nixon and
Bobby Perkins.
Business Administration II.
James R. Fraser, Richard R.
G r a y . Kevin Lynch and
Thomas McNicholas, Jr.
Civil Engineering Technology II. John A. Dawson,"*Joe
Godwin, Walter J. Kbtody
Avelino Torres Billochf^ft-,,
R a n d a l l S. Williams and
Ronald Steven Williams^?
Electronic Data Processing
II: Kenneth Arnold, James
Ivey, Paul Moro and Robert
Oliver.^
Electronics
Engineering
Technology' II: David Wal(See STUDENTS, Page 9B)
the company's manufacturing
headquarters. Scarborough,
who is also the company's
chief pilot, flies the young
recruits.
Institutions now supplying
employes* for Gregory* Poole
are Central Carolina Technical
Instittyje, F a y e t t e v i l l e
Technical Institute, Wilson
Technical Institute and
Durham Technical i'lBtitute.
Sawyer plans soon to«xpand
his recruitment program to
other institutions in the community college system.
5B
ters. Nash Woods, Robert
Moore, Douglas Meares, Ernest Johnson, Jerry Bullard
and Michael Bradley.
Environmental Engineering
Technology II: Wil 1 i a m
McQueen, John Reid and Michael Strickland.
Marketing. & Retailing^ IP
Ann Leamons". ;
Secretarial Science; Lynda
Amos, Kay Autry. Linda
Jones and Cathy Wilt. ;*
Mechanical
Engineering
Technology II: William C.
Daniels. F r e d E. Hollis,
Nancy J. Holland, William A.
Milliken and Malcolm E. Williams.
Industrial Management II:
Donald ByriV Bessie Creech
and WilliamJE^McDanigl. Marisetihg^ Retailing"!;.'.
Gten^A.AKeel, Sue M. Brewer"
and'Wiftiam F. Smith
�•4,t
as, solU
FOR ADULTS ONLY *
SUMMER SCHOOL
Elizabeth Hernandez is interning at Western Piedmont Community College. She is a
graduate of Fayetteville Technical Institute's secretarial science program.
at
FAYETTEVILLE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE
Registration for courses in grades 1 through 12 will be held on Thursday, July 6th at
Fayetteville Technical Institute in Lafayette Hall at 7:00 P.M. Classes in adult basic ©due**
tion and high school diploma programs are scheduled for each Monday, Tuesday arfjj*
Thursday evenings from 7 to 10 P.M. beginning Monday, July 10 and ending August 21.i#$
classes will meet on the Fayetteville Tech campus this summer.
For further details, contact:
Eli Anderson, Jr.
Director of General Adult Education
Fayetteville Technical Institute
Hull Road & Devers Street
Fayetteville, N. C , 28303
Telephone: 484-4121, Ex. 29
[.'-
-:- -;.
ii.«w^Jcs
Accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
'<2^
6A 7/7<
7/S-/7*
Q. According to English and secretarial books, the title
"Mr." should not be written before a man's signature. I
received several letters with this title used before the signature. Is this correct? — Mrs. H.W.
A. This is incorrect, according to instructors at the
Secretarial Science Department at Fayetteville Technical Institute. They quote from the Reference Manual for Stenographers and Typists, Fourth Edition: "Never type 'Miss' or 'Mr.'
in the signature line unless the writer's given name might be
that of either a man or a woman."
/ w /fr— y%l>
THE REV. Grady McKeith a n and a party of
students and adults have returned from a 22-day educational tour of Europe.
The group visited Holland,
G e r m a n y , Austria, Italy,
Switzerland, France and England.
Some of the highlights of
the t r i p including seeing
Rembrandt's work and a
diamond-cutting factory in
Amsterdam, a boat ride down
the § Rhine River and the
Sistine Chapel.
cently-separated veterans.
They may choose training
in auto service station mechanics, welding, v e n d i n g
machine service and repair,
radio and television repair,
a r c h i t e c t u r a l drafting,
plumbing, electrical wiring
and heavy truck driving.
For f u r t lue r information
contact the MDTA coordinator at the Employment Security Commission, 414 Ray
Ave.,orFTI.
THE WILDLIFE Resources
TWO BOY SCOUTS are Commission will sponsor a
earning a merit badge by giv- courtesy boat inspection Saturday.
ing thjgjcity a helping hand.
William Hollerung,. 14, and
The inspection will be held
Thomas Carrier, 15, spent from 9 a.m. until noon at
two days c l e a n $ | debris Hope Mills Lake.
from around railroad tracks
between Hay and£irranklin
A DRIVER refresher course
streets.
for licensed drivers who
The youths fiJioaV.-JO trash
have some doubts about pasbags in the cfea^hp cam- sing the tests for renewal of
paign.
' | | e i r licenses is being sponThe parents0"'©?' the youths sored by the North Carolina
are Mr. and;Mrs;. •£ W. Hol- Department of Motor Velerung, 103. jg*ftw«>d Court, hicles.
and Mr. andJdrs. William D.
The courses will be offered
Carrier, 602 & & e A ve.
from 7 to 9 p.m. at the
Highway Patrol Station Aug.
FAYETTEVMlSfeTfechni^fll
M and 18.
Institute is plafjgnig to proFor information, contact E.
vide ' p r o ^c*4»transitioriv If. {Taylor, driver education
training for civiJilnl?.
representative, at 488-2826 afThe civilians' must be re- ter 5 p.m.
7//^^
Joel Andrews chats w i t h Fayetteville
Tech students Becky Whightsil and Linda Howard.
Q. What facilities are there in thU *-»= i
practical nurses'training?-G.J
••
licensed
A. Fayetteville Technical Institute will offW I P M ,
this fall. Coatacrthe Student Affairs wflcTfordSaUs
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1
6B
f H E E A t E ' i i&V i L L E OfiSEKV
SUNTJAY MORNING, J U L Y 2,1972
Formeri^Medics IBecome ^ FTI's^ FirstXADN * Men
The word "nurse" traditionally conjures up a picture
of a lovely feminine vision in
white, but this image — as so
many of our stereotypes — is
changing. Each year more
men are working in hospitals
as registered nurses, particularly in aceas of critical care.
FayetteviHe Technical Institute's first young men to
complete the associate degree
in nursing are Ken Ledford
and B ill Stewart.
I "I was" majoring in history
At what is now UNC-Ashe&ille," explained Ken, "when I
joined the Air Force. I took a
battery of tests and to my
surprise, scored highest in
the sciences. I joined the
medics and was stationed at
Pope Hospital for boot training."
Ledford flew as a medical
technician during his tour of
duty in Europe and was discharged at Pope. "I got out in
August of '70, and enrolled
the next week at Fayetteville
Tech. I've been in school ever
since. Even last summer I
took a couple of electives to
lighten my course load for
the fall."
Bill Stewart, the other FTI
male nurse graduate, is a
native of Rockingham. He,
too, was tested when he
joined the Army and advised
to go into the medics. "I'd
never even thought of doing
that," Bill confessed, "but I
became an aide, attended
jump school and joined the
82nd Airborne^'
During his six years in
service, Bill went to the
Dominican Republic and was
on active duty in Vietnam^!
"Bill outranks me by one
stripe," said Ken, "I Was
discharged a sergeant, rffe*
made staff sergeant!
to pa^jSSBre fo'ltfieir wives
w&O-s^i^rtedffJhern; figuca-J
t MfGWA-jmmi:
"during
their prograni ;.at FIT: The,
a s^tvS»% ! n^TCenursing
curriculum^ "It Fayetteville
Technical Institute is accre-
dited by the National Leag
for Nursing and covers s
quarters or two years*^ i
struction prior to writing^!
State Boards.
Bill is married to the
former Joan Hancock, beautician, and Ken, to Brenda
Tincher, public school teach"We had 18 and 19 class??
room contact hours in addition
to clinical work, plus studying, so our wives just had to
take over an extra amount of
duties at home," said Ken,
"as well as earning our living
while we were in school."
After successfully writing
the State Board Examination
for Licensure, the duo will
become registered nurses.
Each plans to work in an
emergency room — Bill at
Richmond Memorial Hospital
in Rockingham, and Ken at
Asheville H o s p i t a l while
awaiting acceptance in a ,
school for nurse anesthetists.
Unfortunately, the young men
explained, N o r t h Carolina
does not have adequate facilities for educating nurses
in this field. It is a highly
competitive program and the
[graduates cannot fill the deMALE NURSES — Bill Steward (left)
riS&Jjfid for their services. It and Ken Ledford with their patient, FayettevilteTechnical Instituit (Observer photo-^Johnny Home)
p r o " d f t - a career with sev"Mr. Chase', in the ADN classroom at
eral options. The nurse anesthetist can become a member
of a hospital or private sur-, Quires two years' instruction about this plan ?
all right with her, .bat she is
gicaFclinic'team, join an oral I beyond the RN status?.^- '"'
"Joan says if that's what I really looking forward to resurgeon, veterinary nlm
H o w ^ o their' wives feel want," commented Bill, "it's tirement in 1974 or'751"
or enter me tamrreoSfSerVices-1
medical corps as an officer. •
This advanced training re-
�ifz^mi
^SalFS£* * i H
•
••
.
a
Willi The
Fayetteville Observer
SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 23,1972
Women
BECTISNB
Photos by Dick
Blount
Wild geraniums get a close-up look.
Uncovering
Beauty In
Spring
Fayetteville
By JOANN MacMILLAN
"I wish all my classes could see this slope of spring beauty in
Fayetteville," remarked Kenneth Moore, instructor for FTI's continuing education course "Local Plants and Their Environment."
"Unless you have a good eye, you miss them. But once you start
looking at these woodland plants, you spot them all around you," he
continued as he guided his group through Clark Park located behind
the Veterans' Hospital.
As supervisor of the N.C. Botanical Gardens, Moore is often called
on to teach throughout the state. Clark Park in Fayetteville is one of
his favorite sites. A graduate of Davidson, Moore took a M.A. degree in
English at UNC before embarking on his Master's Degree in botany.
During the past year and a half, he has taught courses in six Tar Heel
cities.
At the request of Fayetteville Beautiful, William Bryant, of FTI,
arranged for the five-week course to be offered in this area. Dr. Philip
Crutchfield provided classroom space for lectures at Methodist College. Classes met from 9 to 12:30 on five consecutive Thursdays from
March 16 to April 13.. Each session included a lecture hour followed by
a field trip to Clark Park or Texas Lake. Plants were observed in open
fields, by the roadside and in waste places and marshes, and in
different woodlands.
At Clark Park, wildflowers bloom in profusion. Tiny heralds of
spring are strewn along the pathways. Instructor Moore led his group
pointing right and left and up and down to spots of unusual beauty.
The response was enthusiastic. "What's this?" "Can this be a
blackberry blooming before May?" "Here's a wild ginger plant! A
partridge berry,!" "Here's poison ivy!"
As they moved along the trail, the teacher gave the common name,
the botanical classification, and frequently a brief history of the
species — in vibrant tones.
Along the path beside the. Cape Fear River in Clark Park,
woodland plants were yellow violets, bluets, spring beauty, wild garlic
and ginger. As the class crossed to the northern side of the park,
vegetation changed. Stopping beside a small waterfall, Moore commented, "Look at this yellow jasmine blooming on a shad tree. It's
symbolic of this area . the mountains meeting the shore here in the
sandhills."
A gorge cut by a small creek meandering on the northern side
showed many plants indigenous to colder areas. This was the result of
the glacier age which brought plants, roots, and seeds from the
mountains toward the shore. In the Fayetteville area they found
compatible soil and cliapate and'have flourished.
"People of Fayetteville should be proud of this remarkably beautiful area and take better care of it,"'Moore noted. "It would make a
great project for Scouts or some organization to clean up the litter
here."
Trash was not the only pollution noticed, however. Minibikes and
Hondas were screaming through the trails adding noise to the other
forms of contamination. Felled trees and other tornado damage from
last year's storm were also evident.
Members of the class agreed, when asked why they had taken this
eourse, they love flowers, shrubs and trees. "Besides," commented
one, "it's more fun if you, know the real name of a plant and something
about the species and its;use."
Although the class was careful to leave plants for those who would
follow them on the trail, the use of plants
particularly in Colonial
times was ^ r t of the instruction given them.
One mother had brought her third grader to class taking advantage
of the Easter holiday. The child happily ran from plant to shrub,
looking for "treasures." "Oh," she exclaimed, "school like this would
be such fun."
:
Identifying a plant
A
A tiny wildflower is a big discovery.
•*»*•_-
-r^—-
Instructor Kenneth Moore discusses discovery with class members.
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BUPUCA1E-ORDER
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Scrapbooks
Subject
The topic of the resource
Fayetteville Technical Community Scrapbook
Description
An account of the resource
News clippings and other ephemera associated with Fayetteville Technical Community College. These items were digitized by Digital NC.
Creator
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Fayetteville Technical Community College
Format
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pdf
Language
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English
Identifier
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ftcc.sb
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Scrapbook (1971-1972)
Subject
The topic of the resource
Fayetteville Technical Community College Scrapbook
Description
An account of the resource
News clippings and other ephemera associated with Fayetteville Technical Community College. These items were digitized by Digital NC.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Fayetteville Technical Community College
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ftcc.sb.1971-1972