TABLE OF CONTENTS |
FRONT PAGE
| NEXT ARTICLE |
PREVIOUS ARTICLE |
UNC HOMEPAGE
fl
Two sets of awards have been established to honor longtime members of Carolina's English faculty.
Three May 2000 Carolina graduates recently won the first Kimball King Undergraduate English Honors Thesis Awards for writing the top honors theses in the English department. Also in English, three students have been chosen for the first Laurence G. Avery Awards for Outstanding Teaching in Literature by a Graduate Student.
Each of the King winners received a cash prize of $325. The students and their hometowns, thesis subjects and faculty advisers were:
* David Jerome Twombly, Pfafftown; "Imagery of Chaos in Pope's Dunciad," Thomas Stumpf.
* Benjamin Clay Parris, Hazelwood; "Fashioning Renaissance Hierarchies," Reid Barbour.
* Matthew David Mutter, Lookout Mountain, Tenn.; "Hallowed by Sacrament: Corporeality, Particularity, and Gnosticism in Walker Percy's Novels," Joseph Flora.
The Avery awards, also with a cash prize of $325 each, will be presented at a department reception this fall to Todd Butler of Bethlehem, Penn.; Michael Claxton, Lithonia, Georgia; and Rob Spirko, Morristown, Tenn.
The King awards are named for Kimball King, an English professor at the University since 1964. An anonymous donor couple established the award in 1999 after their daughter, a student of King's, praised his teaching methods. Through his 36-year career, King has influenced several generations of students. Bill Schmidt, a 1966 alumnus and advertising agency executive in Jacksonville, Fla., said King made his 20th century drama course "fascinating."
"Kimball loves the classroom and takes interest in his students. His approach to teaching sparked my love for the liberal arts, which helps me work `outside the box,'" said Schmidt, who writes copy for television commercials.
King earned a doctorate at the University of Wisconsin, a master's degree from Wesleyan University and a bachelor's degree from Johns Hopkins University. Since 1984, King has taught nearly 1,000 students in a theatre course offered in London each summer. He has won a Tanner Faculty Teaching Award and other teaching honors.
William Jordan of Fayetteville, vice chair of Carolina's Board of Trustees, established the Avery awards in honor of Laurence Avery, an English professor at the University since 1966.
English department chair William Andrews said Avery has been a department leader. "His teaching is marked by extraordinary breadth, intellectual curiosity and adaptability to changing student interests," Andrews said. "Generations of graduate students are grateful to him for his informative introductory course in bibliography and methodology, and for his ongoing teaching and scholarship in 20th-century American drama."
Avery earned his doctorate in English from the University of Texas in 1966, his master's degree from the University of Michigan in 1958 and a bachelor's degree from Baylor University in 1957. His areas of research include modern and American drama and Southern literature.
TABLE OF CONTENTS |
FRONT PAGE
| NEXT ARTICLE |
PREVIOUS ARTICLE |
UNC HOMEPAGE