University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL)

 - Class of 2005

Page 26 of 248

 

University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2005 Edition, Page 26 of 248
Page 26 of 248



University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2005 Edition, Page 25
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Page 26 text:

Three in one year flriiy( ' iirinllielil ()[llier l|)resiilen(i 111 mil- L.ili ' iuljr o.ir, iIk ' LniMT il nl North Aliibam.1 went through threo presidents. Former President Robert L. Potts announced to the campus commu- nity during a hoard meeting in late March 2004 that he would be leaving the school after 14 vears of service. Potts had been cleared by the Board of Trustees to pursue other offers in late 2003. In early March of 2004, he was cho- sen to become the new chancellor of the North Dakota University System where he is responsible for more than 42,000 studi ' nts .It 11 iiniMTsitii-. and colleges. I ' liliss Kisl day was June M). Dr. Garry Warren took over July 1, 2004, to serve as the interim president during the searching process for a new president. Warren, who had been at the university for 17 years, temporarily extended his absence from his permanent position of dean of Information Technologies. During the 2003-04 school year he had held the position of interim vice presi- dent for academic affairs provost. It was something I ' d never really aspired to become — a president of an institution or an interim president, but it was an honor, he said. The Board of Trustees announciil on Friday, November 12, 2004, that tin next president of UNA would be Dr. William G. Cale. Cale, the CEO and dean at Penn State Altoona, was one of four finalists. Cale tries to maintain an imme- diate contact with students. He said, 1 teach a course each year. I avail myself of every opportunity to speak to student groups. Cale would serve as the IHth presi dent of the institution since UNA began operation in January 1S30. WHO KNEW? (aboiv) Former President Robert L. Potts meets in a U.S. Senate committee hearing to discuss accreditation, an area in which he is regarded as an expert. STILL IN CHARGE: (right) Potts talks over univerM policies the week he resigned.

Page 25 text:

■ - ft r Hi p — ' Quilting Robots The Department of Communications and Theatre featured two very different works, plays about quiltiiig and robots, for its fall productions the first two weeks in November. The first production was Quitters by Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek with music and lyrics by Barbara Damashek. The director and choreographer of this all-female musical production was assistant professor of theatre Angela Green. A native of Enterprise, Green earned a bachelor of science degree from Troy State University and completed her MFA in acting at the University of North Carolina. This production begins with Sarah Bonham (played by Sarah Rhodes, of Florence) on her deathbed. She is instructing her six daughters to complete and pass on a family quilt. The quilt and all of its pieces represent not only the story of their family, but the lives of all pioneer women facing the chal- lenges and rewards of the frontier life. The stories contained in each of the patches are presented through music, dance and drama to illuminate girlhood, mar- riage, childbirth, love and humor in the face of great hardship. Newman was nominated for a Tony Award and a Helen Hayes Award for the production. The second production was R.U.R. (Rossum ' s Universal Robots) by Karel Capek. Dr. David Ruebhausen, a Leavenworth, Kansas, native who completed his bachelor of arts degree at William Jewell College in Kansas City, his MA at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis and his Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, directed the science fiction production. When the deceased Rossums had discovered the secrets of creating artificial life, they gave no thought to the moral dilemma of such a creation and its eventual effects on the human race. Capek wrote the play in 1920 and it prenuered the following year in Prague. Years ahead of its time, this landmark work of early science fiction introduced the word robot (which Capek ' s broth- er Josef had coined) to society, along with the con- cept of artificial humans, and serves as the major inspiration for modem science fiction writers, including Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry. (QUILTING CIRCLE. I - (in Rossum ' s Island. Quitters cast smgs, mimes quilting and rests.



Page 27 text:

I! 1 1 II I INSPIRATION: In the photo above. Interim President Garry Warren gi es the UNA Lions a presidential pep talk out on the practice field before the opening game of the 2004 football season. Evidently it worked. On the road, the Lions defeated 12th-ranked Tusculum 28-7. Warren is shown, above right, in his temporary Bibb Graves office. As new President William Gale prepared to take office, Warren looked for- ward to returning to his Collier Library home, where he serves UNA as d ,1 of Information Technologies. liMVERSIT N©RT1 ALABAM WELCOME HOME: Dr. William eaie jr. .ind ni- iMte Bftt lean speak tor the first time to the university- faculty, staff and students at a reception held -November 19, 2004 in the GUC Banquet Halls.

Suggestions in the University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) collection:

University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2001 Edition, Page 1

2001

University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2002 Edition, Page 1

2002

University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2003 Edition, Page 1

2003

University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2004 Edition, Page 1

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University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2006 Edition, Page 1

2006

University of North Alabama - Diorama Yearbook (Florence, AL) online collection, 2007 Edition, Page 1

2007


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