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The Red and Black
Tuesday, February 2, 1982
Journalism school may install Ph.d degree this month
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K«1 and Black I onlrilMlinK Hntrr
Anticipation is building within the journalism school The
w ait just may be over
For two years the Ph 13 Development Committee has been
working to install a journalism doctoral program When the
February meeting of the Board of Regents closes, that
program may be a reality.
Dean Scott Cutlip of the journalism school said he expects
complete approval of the proposal by the regents
The objective of the program is not to produc e reporters
with Ph D’s, but to fulfill the demand of journalism schools,
public relations and advertising firms and media companies
in the Southeast. Cutlip said According to the proposal only
56% of the available jobs for such PhD's were filled in 1979
The trend continued in 1980.
Regents Vice Chancellor H Dean Propst has already
reviewed the proposal and said he intends to recommend it to
the board for approval Propst said if for some reason the
proposal did not pass, then it would not be appropriate to
bring it back up for at least two years
Joseph Dominick, chairman of the Ph D Development
Committee, said. “Everything indicates approval "
However. Dominick did stress that the proposal is still a
proposal “We re not breaking out the champagne just yet;
we re going to wait a few weeks." he said
Requirements for the degree will follow those set by the
University for doctoral degrees
Cutlip said the school is well prepared for a doctoral
program Ph D’s in the school now total 25 out of a “highly
diversified faculty '' of 40
Facilities are also prepared for the research a doctoral
program requires. Cutlip said The school boasts five radio
studios, three color-equipped TV studios, a graphics lab. a
photographic lab and an advanced electronic editing lab
As in any new program, the costs add up The proposal lists
the first year’s net cost at $8,200. the second s at $63,700 and
the third's at $121,450
Additional research facilities for the program include a
mass communication research center requiring an en
dowment of at least $1 million, according to the Journalism
Alumni News, published by the journalism school
If the proposal is indeed approved, then the rest of 1982 will
be used to complete the program The first candidates,
probably no more than three, will be accepted in September
of 1983 The number of candidates will slowly increase,
reaching a plateau of nine-12 doctoral students at any given
time.
Geologist says deposits are result of ‘smokestacks *
By GEORGE DFMAS
Kr<l ami HU« k I iMilritMilinx Wrilrr
Smokestacks at the bottom of the ocean?
According to Donald Sangstor. a mineral
deposits geologist with the Geological Survey
of Canada, these smokestacks over
thousands of years have caused the forma
tion of huge deposits of zinc, lead and copper
on the ocean floor
Sangster. who came to the University
through the Thayer Lindsley Distinguished
Lecturer Program sponsored by the Society
of Economic Geologists, explained the
smokestacks and his theory about the
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mineral deposits they leave behind to a
meeting of the Geology Journal Club late last
month.
The smokestacks are caused by heat under
the earth's crust which raises the
temperature of the ground water under the
sea floor to around 300 degrees centigrade,
enough to cause a convection current of
ground water to flow up through the sea floor
and into the water above like a black plume
The blackness is caused by minerals carried
in the ground water The minerals solidify
when they meet the cold ocean water and
drop to the floor The heat needed to start
one of these undersea chimneys can come
from either volcanic activity or other
sources geologists have yet to identify
"My theory of the ore deposits is that their
quality and size have more to do with the
physical conditions surrounding the plume,
rather than chemical conditions as many
geologists think.” Sangster said.
Sangster explained the two kinds of flume-
created ore deposits: sedimentary and
volcanogenic (caused by volcanic action).
The sedimentary deposits such as those
found in Maine, Wisconsin and California are
larger and of a higher grade than the
volcanogenic deposits for two reasons.
Because the sedimentary deposits are form
ed slowly and without volcanic action, the
topography around the flume stays fairly
stable so the mineral deposits can collect in
ocean basins without being disturbed by
upheavals in the ocean floor. In addition,
since they are at lower temperatures, the
flumes that create sedimentary deposits
come up more slowly so that more minerals
can concentrate together instead of being
carried off by the currents.
“Flume-created ore deposits are seen even
in the oldest rock formations, and there are
still live flumes today creating new deposits
on the ocean floor,” Sangster said.
The theory that the old mineral deposits
were created by flumes has existed for many
years, but it was not until 1977 that the theory
was confirmed when live volcanic flumes
were sighted and studied off the Galapagos
Islands off the coast of Ecuador.
Sangster received a bachelor s degree in
chemistry from Bishops University in
Quebec in 1955. bachelor’s and master's
degrees in geology from McGill University in
Montreal and a doctorate in geology from the
University of British Columbia in 1964.
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From Page 1
Cutlip foresees doctorates
Instructor’s wife’s
funeral set for today
Funeral services will be this morning at 11:30 at the
Evergreen Memorial Cemetery for Lottie Hawkins, wife of
University journalism instructor Frank Hawkins.
Mrs. Hawkins, 70. died Monday morning after a lengthy
bout with cancer. Bernstein Funeral Home is handling the
arrangements.
She is survived by her husband, three sons, Frank Jr., in
corporate relations with Knight-Ridder newspapers; Bill,
city editor of the Baltimore Sun; and John, in public relations
with Gulf Oil in Pittsburgh; and five grandchildren
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be sent to the Frank
Hawkins Scholarship Service in care of the journalism
school
Hawkins, a member of The Red and Black board of
directors, retired in 1977 after 33 years as editor of The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He and his wife returned to Athens
the same year.
—Jack Threadgill
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546-PERM
Tardy said he sees no
reason for parking problems
with dorm residents. "There
are enough H-Zone parking
spaces for every dorm resi
dent who has a car.” he said.
‘Many dorm
residents insist
on driving 200
yards to class
and parking
anywhere their
car will fit.’
— James Tardy
This does not necessarily
mean a dorm resident will
always get a space in front of
his dorm, but he should be
able to get a space
somewhere in an H-Zone lot.
Tardy said.
“If dorm residents would
walk to class rather than
drive as many are known to
do, the parking problems
would be lessened," Tardy
said. “However many dorm
residents insist on driving
200 yards to class and park
ing anywhere their car will
fit.”
The majority of the park
ing violations are for park
ing out of zone or for failure
to display a parking permit
The University Traffic
Committee raised the fine
for parking out of zone and
for failure to display parking
permit from $5 to $10. This
was done to enforce the
parking rules. Tardy said.
The payments from the
tickets are sent the the Aux
iliary and Administrative
Services Department, which
is in charge of the University
bookstore, food services,
transportation and other ser
vices.
PARIS ADULT THEATER
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Sun. 1 p.m. 9 p.m.
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STUDENT AFFAIRS
STUDENT FINANCIAL AID
Financial Aid applications for the 1982-83
academic year are now available in the office
of Student Financial Aid, 220 Academic Bldg ,
Monday - Friday, 8:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m.
This information has been submitted and
prepared by the office of Student Affairs
ISRAELI DINNER & MOVIE
at Hillel
Sunday Feb. 7, 5:30
$2.00 mem. $3.00 non-mem.
1155 South Milledge Ave.
Reservations Requested