University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX)

 - Class of 1980

Page 226 of 708

 

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 226 of 708
Page 226 of 708



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Page 226 text:

SCHOLARS HONORED Girl J. Eckhardt, professor emeritus of mechanical engineering and former director of the physical plant, was awarded the 1980 Presidential Citation at the University Honors Day cere- mony April 12. During the program, 1,830 juniors and seniors who had grade point aver- ages of 3.5 or higher were honored as College Scholars, and 84 students with 4.0 GPAs received certificates recogniz- ing their academic excellence. Dr. Walter K. Long, lecturer in the Department of Zoology, received the Amoco Foundation Outstanding Teacher Award and Dr. Richard A. Chcrwitz, assistant professor of speech communication, was presented that foundation ' s award for Outstanding New Teacher. Deans or representatives of each col- lege, dressed in traditional academic robes, recognized the top scholars. The College of Liberal Arts claimed 31 stu- dents with all A ' s; Natural Sciences, 15; Business Administration, 13; Engi- neering, 1 1 ; Education, 6; Communica- tion, 4; Nursing, 2; and Fine Arts and Pharmacy, 1 each. Eckhardt, 77, the second recipient of the citation, spent 47 years at the Uni- versity before retiring. Students keypunch computer cards to be run on the new Cyber 170 750 machines. Not all literature classes mean trudging through pages and pages of lengthy novels. One English class, giving 3 hours of credit for both its regular and summer sessions, required more adeptness at social ability and sex than it does at reading. Dr. Jim Ayers ' Shakespeare class learns the script and the authors ' in tentions through performing the material rather than reading it. Each summer, a small group of students travel down to a small community called Winedale to live and breathe Shakespeare for six weeks. During that time they work towards the understanding of characters and the final production of their plays. In the fresh air of the countryside, and in an old barn which sets the stage, students of Shakespeare learn not only the plots and rhymes of the pieces, but also, they learn how to convey Shakespeare ' s pervading theme of sex and violence through their actions and words. HLCOHD1 PDT HflD STUDIES? According to the research by such schools as the University of Oklahoma, Kentucky and California, studies and pot, alcohol and sex do not go together. Through a series of learning task tests, in which the universities instructed their subjects to memorize word tests, results concluded the fact that both alcohol and marijuana impede the process of forming new memories. Whereas five or six drinks of alcohol will severely impair the retrieval of old memories, high doses of marijuana do not have as serious an effect. The potency of marijuana increases greatly when it is smoked rather than eaten because of the variation in absorption in body chemistry. The research done on sex and memory have not been conclusive, but evidence has shown incidents of temporary memory loss after engaging in sex. 220 Short Takes

Page 225 text:

B OM Iron, T, Scholars Increase The number of National Merit Scholars .it the University rose- V percent in ir i )-so. moving the University from 26th to 15th place nationally XX ' ith I ' M) National Merit Scholars enrolled, the Univcr- ranked third behind Rice University, which had 498 Merit Scholars, and Texas A M University, which had 19-1 Also, for the second consecutive year, the University ranked first in Texas and 19th nationally in the number of students with scholar- ships from the National Achievement Scholarship Program for out- standing Negro Students. Deadline Extended The : Baking a class pass 1 mbcr mee: if they v. The proposal was submitted for appr- .ird of Regents to go into effect in 1V V A committee, organized to investigate the allegations, interviewed more than 40 n and Communication Center employees. It recommended that both Harvey Herbst, general manager, and Larry White, station manager, be fired. A Committee to Save KLRN U, organized in June, asked the FCC to exam- ine rhc relationship between the Univer- ,nd SWTPBC Herbst resigned August 10, and Ander- son was fired when the Council decided not to fund his position. Ronald Bassett, associate dean of communication, v.- sen acting general manager in September and SWTPBC and the University organ- ized a three-member committee to re- define the relationship between the two entities and to work with a second com- mittee appointed by President Flawn. David Anderson, professor of law and SWTPBC member who resigned from the Council in July, filed another complaint with the FCC alleging the station retali- ated against employees who voiced criti- cism of the station. Two other members TPBC resigned in the fall. In October, Neil Fcldman, a former member of the Committee to Save KI.RN requested air time to present the opposing viewpoint to the station ' s pro- gram KI.RN U Under Fire under the FCC ' s fairness doctrine and was refused. Bassett resigned as acting general man- ager in late November pending the SWTPBC and the UT System Board of Regents approval of a new contract between the Council and the University The contract, approved by the Regents December 7, put control of the stations in the hands of the council and authorized inter? i UT students. Professors Lose Lawsuit Three to Appeal Decision Three of eight professors appealed a lawsuit against former University President Lorene Rogers and the LIT System Board of Regents of 1975 after they lost the case in U.S. District Court in March of that year. Eight plaintiffs filed suit against Rogers and the board four and a half years ago claiming they were denied salary raises because of their political activism. Judge Jack Roberts ruled March 13 that the constitutional rights of the professors were not violated according to the evidence and testimony presented in a two-day trial The plaintiffs: Larry Shepley and David Gavcnda, physics; Philip White, Standish Meac ham, and Tom Philpott, history; David Edwards, government; Forest Hill, and Edwin Allaire, philosophy, said they came together after rcali ing their cuts were a patten those who were outspoken and a White, Gavcnda and Shepley plan to appeal to the th -causc statements by Rogers pertaining to i uning the professors ' salaries made during the case warranted a need for appeal, said David Richards, the plaintiffs ' attorney. orene R . Shan Tikn- 219



Page 227 text:

Cite iv ' COMPUTER flGE ' flRRJUES Attending the University in the computer age of the 1980s, students required comput- ers as much as they did pens and paper. A new $5 million computer system for exclusive use in research and teaching added in the fall helped meet their needs. Two Control Data Cyber 170 750 computers were installed at the University Computa- tion Center in the first phase of a five-year, $15 million program to upgrade the Universi- ty ' s academic computer facilities during the next 10 years. The new units have three times the capacity of the systems they replaced, said Dr. Charles Warlick, director of the Compu- tation Center. Computer facilities are operated 24-hours, seven-days-a-wcek at 20 locations on campus and are used by more than 100 departments and research units throughout the University. More than 1,000 courses use the facilities. A study by the National Science Foundation in 1977 cited the University as first among 106 institutions nationwide for computer use in teaching. TOP EXES The Hx-Studer- cntcd I stinuishcd Alumnus Awards for Frank C. lirwm Ji , former ihairmar; University of Texas Hoard of Renews. Wales H M.iil lrn Jr., tl ! Regents. Riilx-n I. I ' jrl. mcr chairm.i --ard for the Ur of Tulsa. and J. J. JAr Pi. Mr. I : s Repre- sentative. I) Austin Past rciipients of that award include Mr ami Mrs John Connally. Sam Raybum. Tom k. VX ' altrr ronkitc, Tom Landrv I.udv Bird Johnson, U Carpenter and Catheri ne Crosby rin Taming of ihc check this out . . . It was Friday night your friends were out of town, the television set was busted and, to top it off, you were broke. Nothing to do, you said as you prepared for bed. Little did you know that a world of love, adventure, fact and fiction awaited you and it was all free, with a current University of Texas I.D. card, in the UT library system. The General Library System is made up of the Perry-Castaneda Library, the Undergraduate Library and fourteen branch libraries devoted to specific subject fields. These include architecture, an, biology, business, chemistry, classics, education, engineering, geology, library school, music, pharmacy, physics-math-astronomy and social work. In 1979, the General Libraries provided students with access to 4,244,101 books in addition to millions of letters, documents and periodicals. And, if that wasn ' t enough, you could watch television on the third floor of the Academic Center. You and a friend were engaged in a friendly qucstion-and-answcr trivia game. Things began to get hot and finally the game ended when you could not agree with each other over how Theodore Roosevelt was related to Franklin Roosevelt. A quick call to the General Libraries Reference Ser- vices (471-3813) would have cleared things up. Library reference workers answered approximately 350 questions per day in 1979 and 1980, but there were limits they did not do research papers. However, a service was available to aid students with time-consuming index searching, an initial researching stage. The General Libraries Special Services Department offered several computer-based information services that eliminated the time-consuming process of searching through the peri- odical guides by hand. For a small fee, searches could be made of approxi- mately 100 data bases covering the social sciences, humanities, science, gov- ernment publications, psychology, business, economics and the applied sci- ences. By the way, Theodore Roosevelt ' s uncle was Franklin ' s grandfather. Short Takn-221

Suggestions in the University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) collection:

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1982 Edition, Page 1

1982

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983


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