College Increases Drive Against Public

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College Increases Drive Against Public William and Mary NEWSA WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Non-Profit Organization Volume VIII, Number 30 PUBLISHED for and about the FACULTY. STUDENTS U S Postage PAID at Williamsburg. Va Tuesday, April 22, 1980 and STAFF of the COLLEGE of WILLIAM and MARY Permit No 26 College Increases Drive Against Public Drinking fVffiGINI/V To help assure greater compliance matter what the contents, how labeled, with State regulations on campus, the or of what shape. Athletic fans will be College will begin this fall to increase advised of the program through the enforcement of laws which prohibit mailings and by posters at the Stadium the public consumption of alcoholic entrances. beverages. The College Police Department, The enforcement program will under the laws of Virginia, has the include all activities and events held at same authority and responsibility to Cary Field Stadium, under a plan enforce State laws as does any other developed in consultation with the police agency. It has long cooperated A Birthday Party Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control closely with police in the City of Board's enforcement division. The Williamsburg and neighboring jurisdic¬ increased enforcement activity was tions, and with the State Police and approved by the President following the similar authorities. It is the primary The campus community and area This is the third year of the Festival recommendation of a special internal enforcement agency in matters con¬ residents are invited to participate in which will run July 10 to August 16 task force early this year. cerning any violations of law occurring William Shakespeare's 416th birthday with perfomnances of "The Merchant of This spring, in consultation with the on College property. at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday. April 23. in Venice." "As You Like It" and "A College's Student Affairs Office, several The special College task force was Phi Beta Kappa Memorial Hall which Comedy of Errors." new procedures were inaugurated to appointed last October by William J. will be the setting for this summer's insure that ABC laws were being Carter. Vice President for Business plays. observed at social events sponsored by Affairs, in consultation with President student organizations. The Student Thomas A. Graves. Jr. Its recom¬ Association also developed new regula¬ mendations were reviewed and ap¬ tions to insure that campus events were proved by both Carter and Graves in open only to students and their invited March. Faculty Party Friday at VIMS guests if alcoholic beverages were being Members included Ben Carnevale. The Faculty Club will hold its final Roy Pearson, treasurer, faculty club. served. Director of Men's Athletics; Edmund Derringe. Assistant Director of Men's social event of the year on Friday. April School of Business Administration. The Beginning this fall, beverage con¬ Athletics: Harvey Gunson. Director of 25. beginning at 6 p.m. at the Virginia usual rates will apply: members-$2.50 tainers of any kind may not be carried the Campus Police Department: W Institute of Marine Science at Glou¬ per person ($1.50 for non-drinkers), into Cary Field Stadium, according to Samuel Sadler. Dean of Students: cester Point. The function will be held and non-members-$4.50 per person the new policy In addition, pre-game Kenneth E. Smith. Associate Dean of outside on the grounds, weather ($3.00 for non-drinkers). and post-game social activities will be Students; Gordon C Vliet. Executive permitting; otherwise, the conference "Our friends at VIMS are expending monitored to insure that alcoholic Vice President of the Society of the room of the Institute will be used. The considerable effort on our behalf to beverage control laws are being Alumni: David G. Healy. Director of fare will include roasted oysters and make this party a success. We hope observed by visitors and students alike. other delicacies of the sea. All the usual that many members of the faculty will Auxiliary Enterprises: Dr. Jay For several years, the College has beverages, including beer, will be avail¬ perceive this event as a special Chambers. Director of the Psycholo¬ attempted to restrict consumption of able. opportunity to become better gical Counseling Center: John N alcoholic beverages in Cary Field All members of the faculty and acquainted with VIMS and its staff." Donaldson: Professor of Law: James S. Stadium by prohibiting spectators from administration are invited to attend and said Ward Jones, club secretary, in Kelly. Assistant to the President; and. carrying bottles and cans which clearly may pay at the party or in advance to extending the invitation. as chairman. Ross Weeks. Jr. Director contain alcoholic beverages. The new of University Communications and provision will restrict all containers, no Assistant to the President. W&M/NASA Lectures End With Archaeologist Ivor Noel Hume, resident archaeo¬ quarters in Washington. DC. and will participate in a question and answer logist and director of the department of remain there until March 1981. period. archaeology for the Colonial Williams¬ Noel Hume first came to Williams¬ burg Foundation, will talk about "New Wolstenholme Towne at Carter's burg in 1956 on leave of absence from Discoveries in Old Virginia" at 8 p.m.. Grove Plantation, which is owned and Guildhall Museum in London to act as April 28. in the Hampton Coliseum. His exhibited by the Colonial Williamsburg archaeological consultant to the Co¬ talk is the final segment of this year's Foundation, was the unexpected find of lonial Williamsburg Foundation and to "Our Future in the Cosmos" lecture a lost township and its fort, as well as gather material for a book on beverage series, which is sponsored jointly by the homesteads and a complete plantation. bottles. In 1957 he resigned from the College and the National Aeronautics These discoveries have not only Guildhall Museum to accept the and Space Administration. Langley opened a new door to understanding appointment as chief archaeologist at Research Center. life and death in early Virginia but have Colonial Williamsburg. He was named Free tickets are available by phon¬ contributed important facts to a wide resident archaeologist in 1973. ing the William and Mary Office of variety of subjects ranging from the He is the author of numerous articles Special Programs. 877-9231. ext. 200 evolution of armor and ladies' hair and several books, including Archaeo¬ or 296. After April 21. tickets will be styles to shoemaking and the" logy in Britain, Treasure in the Thames, available at the Coliseum box office. mechanics of English colonization both Great Moments in Archaeology, and Noel Hume's talk coincides with an in America and in Ireland. Here Lies Virginia, published in 1975. exhibition of discoveries at newly-found Noel Hume also has a serious interest Wolstenholme Towne. a settlement Noel Hume will use color slides to in natural history and is a co-author dating from the first half of the 17th illustrate his lecture and. at the con¬ with his wife. Audrey Noel Hume, of A century. The exhibition opens at the clusion of his presentation, the Handbook on Tortoises, Terrapins and National Geographic Society's head- luor Noel Hume audience will have an opportunity to Turtles. William and Mary Netos, Tuesday, April 22, 1980 Newsmakers Martin Garrett and Len Schifrin of At the recent meeting of the Associa¬ C. Richard Terman, professor of Vickie Woodbury, lecturer, depart¬ the economics department attended the tion fdr Asian Studies in Washington. biology, has authored a chapter entitled ment of modem languages, participated annual meetings of the Virginia Associa¬ DC, Donald Baxter, associate pro¬ "Behavior and Regulation of Growth in in the Meeting of Foreign Languages tion of Economists, held March 20 and fessor of government, participated in a Laboratory Populations of Prairie Association of Virginia in Fredericks¬ 21 in Richmond. Garret served as a panel on "India in the 1980s." Deermice" which was recently pub¬ burg, April 11-12. She was elected discussant of the paper "Evaluation of lished as part of a book entitled secretary of FLAVA's "Women in the Use of Diverse Instructional Dale Hoak, associate professor of Biosocial Mechanisms of Population Literature Section" for the next year. Methods for the Instruction of Business history, attended a meeting of the Regulation, edited by M. N. Cohen, R. Her review of Gordon McVay's book. Statistics'^ nd Schifrin served as chair¬ Mid-Atlantic Renaissance and Reforma¬ S. Malpass and H. G. Klein, by Yale Isadora and Esenin, will appear shortly man in the section on Economic tion Seminar at Duke University. April University Press. in World Literature Today. Education. 11-12. Schifrin recently presented two Professor Hoak and six colleagues at lectures on health care economics at colleges and universities in Virginia. Mary Ann Sagaria, assistant pro¬ Wayne Kemodle and Ruth Kemodle the University of Virginia School of Maryland. North Carolina and the fessor of education, presented a paper have been named lecturers and Medicine. The lectures, given on March District of Columbia established the entitled "Accord and Discord: Gender consultants for the Seminar on Social 25 and April 3, were to doctoral Mid-Atlantic Renaissance and Reforma¬ Appropriate Behavior and Activities of Ger6ntology in International and Cross students in the Health Services tion Seminar at William and Mary in Freshman College Students" at the Cultural Perspectives to be held at the Research program. April 1978. This conference group, now annual meeting of the National Associa¬ Inter-University Centre of Post two years old, brings together scholars tion of Women Deans, Administrators Graduate Studies in Dubrovnik. Robert Maccubbiri, associate pro¬ and graduate students interested in any and Counselors, April 9-12 in Yugoslavia, from June 2-13. fessor of English, recently read a paper aspect of European society and culture Cincinnati, Ohio.
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