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Show Wednesday, Chronicle - Page Three June 29, 1988 Ptaraacy Award 'richly gams recognition commencemGnt deami -- from page one Rosenblatt also delivered the commencement deserved' address. For the fifth consecutive year, commencement exercices included a student speaker who competed among summa cum laude and magna cum laude graduates for the honor role he likes best-h- as been bestowed upon Harold Wolf, dean of the University of Utah College of Pharmacy. Wolf was selected by the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy board of directors to receive the organization's Distinguished Pharmacy Educator Award. The award, sponsored by Marion Laboratories, honors an AACP member for excellence in teaching, educationally related research and service activities. It consists of an engraved Steuben glass owl and a $2,500 cash prize and will be presented Aug. 2 at the AACP's annual meeting in Chicago. "Wolfs award is richly deserved; he is an outstanding teacher, researcher and administrator. I am delighted with this honor for him and for the College of Pharmacy," Cecil Samuelson, vice president for health sciences at the U., said. 'The award represents the high point of my career to date. It is very satisfying and gratifying recognition, primarily because it represents distinction for being an educator, and I've always considered myself an educator," Recognition for excellence as an educator-t- he This year's speaker was Angela Black, a biology major. She was chosen from ten finalists. She received a $300 cash award for her essay "What The University Has Done For Me." I remember how enormous and foreign the universiseemed when I first entered," Black said. "I marvel ty that since then it has become a haven full of friendship, support and encouragement." U. President Chase Peterson delivered a salute to the graduates of 1988. "All of you share a diploma today and also something larger-t- he discovery that you have a mind that is susto a broad education as well as specific trainceptible said. "Continue your journey, it's imporPeterson ing," tant to you." Rosenblatt spoke on "How to Make a Superior Baby." He told graduates they should work to bring life into the world. He said they should work to obtain a good "I position in relation to their work by watching for moments when they can make a difference and by becoming "partners" with the world. "Compromise too much too often and soon you will Wolf said. The AACP Board cited Wolf for his strong commitment to excellence in pharmaceutical education at the institutional, national and international level. Wolf credited the U. College of Pharmacy and its faculty as major contributors to his selection. 'The success of any individual and the recognition received is very much intertwined with the success of the institution. The excellence of this particular college, and the talented faculty and their success, have made my award possible." The need for the U. College of Pharmacy to produce excellent practicing pharmacists and also to maintain its prestige as a renowned research center is "a major chal- redirect your own work," Rosenblatt said. 'To make certain decisions would be tantamount to losing your being." Harold Wolf, dean of the University of Utah College of Pharmacy, has received an award from the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy for his abilities in teaching, research and service. campus I'm always aware that the sign says 'College of Pharmacy'not 'Intermountain West's Finest Pharmaceutical Research Institute,"' Wolf said. Wolf believes practicing pharmacists are the link lenge," Wolf said. The school's immediate reputation largely depends on between residents in distant communitieswho may be the success of its faculty in competitive research funding, unlikely to grasp how research expertise can better their the research itself, which provides medicawinning research prizes and being on the cutting edge of lives-a- nd tions that make lives more productive in the face of science, the dean noted. "All of that is important and necessary, but as I come to illnes or chronic disease. B M I N T R 0 D U C E -- sociology from page one Arizona's administration allowed the department to recruit top scholars and provided the resources needed to perform quality research. "A sociology department will go nowhere if the administration is not willing to pay the bills," Enderle added. On the question of whether the U.'s sociology department has the administrative support it needs to be successful, Kick said, "From what I have seen so far, the administration is committed to us. The U. as a whole is committed to us." S MODEL ASUU has provided $12,380 for an alternative student publication. The U. Publications Council is calling for applications for editor in chief and proposals on the form, size and substance of the publication. IBM Personal System 21 Model 70 386 Model 70 includes 80386 processor, 1 MB RAM (expandable to 6 MB on system board), 16 MHz, 60 MB Hard Disk, 1.44 MB, 3.5" Diskette, Serial, Parallel, VGA, 3 Full Micro Channel Expansion Slots, Enhanced keyboard., DOS 3.3 and Monochrome Monitor. Available only to U of U departments, faculty. orstafl(7S Ml time status) and current matriculated students minimum 9 credit hours). Valid UotU identification card is required. (graduate student minimum 3 credit hours, undergraduate UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE INFORMATION Prices: Subject to change (add applicable sales tax). . . Payment:: IBM will accept money orders, cashier's or certified checks made payable to IBM for the exact amount of the sale. Visa. MasterCard, Diner's Club, American Express or IBM credit cards are accepted without a surcharge. . . Departments: Present a campus order with authorized signature(s). Add 4 (handling fee). UNIVERSITY PURCHASING INFORMA TION Departments may submit purchase requisitions using regular university procedures at no additional cost. UNIVERSITY POLICY Restrictions: gMm, The Bigger Picture mm mm mm 1 So Ji More information available in Union 245 (Next to the Chronicle Office) Deadline - August 1, 1988 |