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The Bed and Black. Wednesday. October 29, I9H«
Ag dean finalists announced
By ANGELA POPE SMITH
Staff writer
With the list of candidates
narrowed to five, a search
committee will start in
terviews this week with the
possible successor to Dean
Henry Garren, dean of the
College of Agriculture, who
was fired 10 months ago.
Dean of Arts and Sciences
Jack Payne named the five
finalists Monday He said
interviews will be held this
week and the first week in
December with the selection
announced in January
The local applicants in
clude Christian Smit, acting
dean of the College of
Agriculture. John V. Shutze,
head of the poultry science
department extension, and
William P. Flatt, the
director of experimental
stations.
Out-of-town candidates
are Carroll V. Hess, dean of
the College of Agriculture at
Kansas State University and
Robert Young, chairman of
the animal science depart
ment at Cornell University.
In addition to the interview,
the latter two will tour the
agricultural branch of the
college in Tifton.
The applicants (from an
original field of 27) will be
quizzed by the search
committee, which will pass
its recommendation to a
group of administrators and
faculty of the agriculture
college which will interview
the candidates.
Then, the college com
mittee will tender its
decision to University
President Fred Davison who
will then tukm over his
recommendation to the
Board of Regents for final
approval.
Smit. a 53-year-old im
migrant from South Africa,
earned his doctorate from
the University of California
at Berkeley. Trained m
;agricultural science and
experimentation, Smit has
served as acting dean since
Garren’s departure.
Hess, 57, has been dean of
Knasas Statre University’s
agricultural college since
1966 Reached by phone at
his office in Lawrence, Kan.,
Hess said he was lured to the
job here by "new and
broader responsibilities."
A graduate of Penn State
University with a doctorate
from Iowa State, Hess said
responsibilities which he
would handle by himself at
the University are generally
managed by a committee at
KSU.
Flatt, the 49-year-old
director of experimental
stations said, "If I’m the one
selected then I’ll be happy to
serve, if I'm not I will be
happy tohelp serve the one
who is selected.”
Young has been with the
agricultural department at
Cornell for 15 years, of
which the first 11 years were
spent as chairman of poultry
science before he became
chairman of the animal
science department. ‘Tve
always liked the College of
Agriculture at UGA. I know
several people there, and
would like to have the op
portunity to hold an ad
ministrative job there," he
said.
&.JOHNNJKLA
•mis Time weu seoftt, u&a im
• I've Finwitf fouioo me kev Tt
THE BtoPCR •SEDUCTION OF WOmEM.'
LOOK-!'
Many overflow students
relocated, reimbursed
DOWNTOWN STUDIO SPACE
Mi Rooms For l.ease--$35 to $60 per month. Just
across from the Arch at the corner of Broad Street
and College Avenue 'the old Varsity building).
Second and third floor space for lease on a yearly
basis. Each studio has electricity, heat, and a small
sink in the room. Details about rental at meeting to
he held It tfef OdyStty, 249 N. Lumpkin Street < 1 _•
block up I.umpkin past the C&S Hank Building), on
Thursday. October 3«. i«ixo at 5:00 pm. ( all Buhha
Head for more details 353-IK06.
By GREG CURRAN
All of the approximately
200 student who started fail
quarter living in study
rooms in University housing
have been moved into
dormitory rooms; however,
some students are still living
in cramped conditions,
according to Jerry Stud-
dard. University housing
assignments director.
The 89 students still in
overflow are housed in
expanded single and double
rooms in Hill, Church,
Boggs, Mell, Lipscomb,
Myers, Payne and Milledge
halls. In Payne and
Milledge, most of the ex
panded rooms are singles
turned into doubles.
In all other cases, double
rooms accommodate three
people, Studdard said.
Students living in the ex
panded rooms, as well as
those housed temporarily,
will receive a refund of 25
per cent of the fall quarter
cost of a room in their
dormitory.
As beds become open for
winter quarter due to
dropouts and dismissals,
students in expanded rooms
will be given the option of
moving or remaining in the
expanded room, Studdard
said. Often students have
adjusted to their room and
roommates and do not want
to move, he said.
There are no plans now to
build a new dormitory to
eliminate the shortage of
housing despite theproposed
addition of 300 freshmen
next fall, according to David
Lunde associate director of
Campus Planning.
Rising building costs and
falling enrollments
nationwide make the
building of a new dormitory
an unattractive remedy for
the shortage of housing,
Lunde said. But he added,
‘‘If the process were started
now, a new dorm could be
occupied by fall of 1983 oi by
the preceeding winter in an
emergency.” He said the
University wants all
freshmen on campus, so the
increased freshmen
enrollment would probably
drive more upperclassmen
of campus.
A new dormitory for
approximately 165 students
would cost about 53 million,
Lunde said. Dormitories are
funded half by state money
and half by bonds financed
by student housing fees, he
said.
Declining enrollment has
left many schools with
empty or partially empty
dormitories built to meet the
temporary shortage of
housing in the 1960s and
early 1970s, Lunde said. It
would be "foolish" to build
new dormitories now that
would be empty later in the
decade, he said.
"The rdbect redtoroY read it/
GUIDE It) WOrWf7/5 IT'S F00L-
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Follow these sotpoe directions 1 *
f "LESSON ONE- DQ ‘
NOT BE YOURSELF
M QL*
REAGAN
from p. 1
PREDICTIONS
The race between Reagan
and Carter is too close to call
on the national level, and
Reagan officials express
hope that it might be that
close in Carter’s home state
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of Georgia. "It certainly
looks like President Carter
is ahead. No incumbent has
ever lost his home state,"
said Lynn McCants.
Reagan s campaign director
in Georgia. "But we’ve
made gains down here. We
decided we’re going to take
him on in the South and
we’re plugging away at it.”
McCants said he expects
neither Independent can
didate John Anderson or
Libertarian Ed Clark to
have much effect on the race
in Georgia. "They have very
little appeal to people in the
South.”
McCants also predicted
that Reagan will do well
among student voters. "He’s
been getting good reception
everywhere. I really think
Reagan will do well among
students."
PKo». Y46KH1
Shirley MacLaine
James Coburn
&
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in
LOVING COUPLES
PG
Tonight 7:JO. 0:27
How to stretch your
college dollars.
You don t have to be a math genius to figure it out Basic money
management and careful budgeting are two very effective ways to
keep from feeling the pinch when money gets tight And we II tell n
you how to do |ust that and more in our next issue of v
Insider the free supplement to your college
newspaper from Ford
We n explain how to meet the high cost of tuition
through scholarships and student loans We II set
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personal finance system like custom
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First shoxx daily-All seats
Fifth condition for hostage release rumored
(UPII-IRAN ADDKD A FIFTH CONDITION Tuesday for (he release of (he 52
American hostages • three hours on American television to present the Iranian
pisilion. West German television said The Slate Department said the report was
“100 percent rumor.”
The new condition was reported as the French newspaper Le Monde in a dispatch
trom Tehran said a majority of parliment and Iran's leaders favored the hostages
release, but that a hardline group of 87 of the 200-odd parlimentary deputies was still
lighting efforts to set them free
The West German national television, in its dispatch from Tehran on Iran's
parlimentary hostage commission, said a first group of Americans would be
released as soon as Iran's parliment had been granted three hours of American
television air time to "present its position on the problem to the American people '
A second group would be freed when Washington met Iran's four other conditions:
return of the shah’s fortune, unfreezing of Iran's assets in U S banks, a
non intervention guarantee and a promise that Washington would make no demands
on Iran as a consequence of the hostage taking
The United States said Monday that piecemeal release of the 52 Americans would
be "unacceptable" and warned Iran of "grave consequences" if any of the captives
were tried as spies.
State Department spokesman John Trattner dismissed the West German television
report, saying. "That is a bona-fide. 100 percent rumor "
Iran and Iraq continue to fight
BAGHDAD. Iraq 'DPI'--Iran said today its forces shot down two Iraqi helicopters
;wd hailed Iraqi forces in a battle at a bridge between Abadan and Khurramshahr in
intensified fighting in the 37-day-old Persian Gulf war
Jordan's King Hussein returned today from a 24-hour visit to Baghdad ready to
use his country's "energies and resources to help Iraq in its struggle At the same
time. Saudi Arabia broke diplomatic relations with Libya in a dispute over U S.
radar planes operating out of Saudi Arabia since soon after the war broke out
A statement on Jordan radio commenting on the king’s previously unannounced
visit to Baghdad said:
"His majesty stressed that the least Jordan can do is stand by the side of its
brethren with all of its energies and resources, pointing out that these feelings abide
in the hearts of millions of Arabs and when given a chance to be expressed, they will
form an unlimited force.”
Tehran radio said Iranian "popular forces." Revolutionary Guards, navy rangers,
gendarmerie and army cadets had halted the advance of Iraqi troops in a battle at
the eastern end of the bridge linking embattled Khurramshahr with Abadan
More boat people found in the Pacific
MANILLA, Philippines (UPI)-A U S Navy ship picked up » Vietnamese bn.it
people who had drifted in the Pacific Ocean for eight days without food or water, a
Navy report said Monday
The rescue Monday was the Navy's biggest single rescue mission of boat people
The report said the ship Sealift Arctic found the refugees drifting in Ihe Pacific-
Ocean in their bout approximately 2-tlt nautical miles southeast ol Ho Chi Minh 1'ilv
formerly SAIGON.
"The refugees had been without food and water for eight days and many arc in
need of medical assistance." the report said.
A Navy spokesman said then- were no other details available on Ihe rescue He
declined to say where the ship was headed, saying ihe Navy forbids disclosure of
ship movements.
The Navy has rescued more than 4.Kim refugees so far More than linn of Ihem
including the :IU> rescued Monday, were picked up this month, indicating an
apparent new surge of boat people
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