Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1055
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PAGE THIRTEEN'
CAMPUS F4ITHS-
• Presbyterians Obtain
South Lumpkin Center
By Gene Carroll
i Westminster Fellowship recently obtained a student center. It is
located at 1250 South Lumpkin. Fellowship members will meet at the
center Sunday at 6 p.in. for supper and a program.
BSU State Convention will be held
Oct. 28-30 at Milledgeville First Bap
tist Church. Those attending the con
vention will journey to Milledgeville
on "Percy,” student bus. The theme
of this year’s program is "God’s Will
. . My Life Now.” Reservations may
be made at the Baptist Student
Center.
Ecumenical Student Conference re
presentatives are holding study
groups on Thursday at 7 p.m. to pre
pare for the conference which will be
held in Athens, Ohio, during the
Christmas holidays. Twelve foreign
students will attend the meeting and
the Georgia delegation hopes to
match that number with 12 Ameri
cans.
BSU will hold choir practice Sun
day at 5 p.m. at the Student Center.
Joanne Burns is the director of the
group. BSU singers are currently
preparing to sing for debutations and
a monthly radio program.
Wesley Foundation Student Revi
val is planned for Nov. 13-18. The
Rev. Gordon Thompson, Martha
Brown Memorial Church, Atlanta,
will be the speaker for the week.
Services will be held at the First
Methodist Church at 8 p.m. A place
and time for services on campus has
not been announced at this time.
UGRA will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
in Dawson Hall. Dr. Robert Ayers,
University chaplain, will speak on
“What Can We Believe About the
Bible?”
Wesley Foundation members will
be visiting the land of hobgoblins and
jack-o-lanterns when they celebrate
Halloween with a hayride and ’pos
sum hunt. The party will probably
be held on Thursday because of con
flict with homecoming weekend.
University Enrollment Rises
To 5,465 for Fall Quarter
Approximately 5,465 regular and
Saturday class students are enrolled
at the University this quarter, incom
plete figures from Registrar Walter
N. Danner’s office reveal.
Total enrollment for the Univer
sity and its divisions is 9,217 by lat
est count, Danner said. The figure
will rise aB more students register
for weekly glasses, he said.
Final figures show a total of 3,548
students enrolled in extension courses
and 301 students in the University’s
Atlanta Area Teacher Education Ser
vice.
Of the 3,548 extension students,
1,977 are registered in the seven off-
campus centers. All are studying un
der auspices of the University's Cen
ter for Continuing Education.
Canterbury Club has a spaghetti
supper scheduled for Oct. 25 at Em
manuel Episcopal Church. Tickets
may be bought from Canterbury Club
members for $1.
Newman (Tub will meet Sunday at
6 p.m. at the student center on South
Lumpkin. Supper will be served and
a program will follow.
Hillel Foundation will meet Sun
day at 6 p.m. for its regular meeting.
Baptist married students will meet
tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. at the Student
Center for a supper meeting.
Wesley Singers will meet in the
First Methodist Church parlor for
choir practice. The group sings every
Sunday at the morning worship ser
vices.
Koinonia Ministerial Fraternity
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. Dr. Ayers
will continue his discussion "What
I Present Day Theologians Are Think
ing.”
Pharmacy Students
To \ isit Two States
During Annual Trip
More than (>() junior and senior
pharmacy students will make a
tour of the Abbott Laboratories in
Chicago and Eli Lilly Company in
Indianapolis beginning Nov. 5.
The annual tour is taken to famil
iarize pharmacy students with the
manufacture of medicine. The trip is
co-sponsored by the School of Phar
macy and the pharmaceutical con
cerns.
Dr. Seldon D. Feurt and Clyde W.
Whitworth, pharmacy professors, will
accompany the students to Indianapo
lis where they will be the guests of
Eli Lilly Company. After staying
three days in Indianapolis, they will
go to Chicago and tour Abbott Lab
oratories. During the tour they will
see Salk vaccine being manufactured.
The pharmacentical concerns pay
expenses of this trip except for the
railroad fare which the students pay.
On alternating years pharmacy stu
dents go to Detroit and visit the
Parke Davis Company and the Upjohn
Company in Kalamazoo, Mich.
Students and faculty members will
return to Athens Nov. 11.
STUDENTS!
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(MAIN PLANT ONLY)
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Dally—8 A.M. to 4 P.M.
Daily—
8 A.M. to 4 P.M.
Saturday — 8 A.M. to
12 Noon
Convenient Branches To Serve You at
• Across from Campus
• Five Points
• Normal Town
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DRY CLEANING
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WE PREDICT: 1955's most infuriating magazine article will be
“THE NATURAL SUPERIORITY
OF IVY LEAGUE MEN”
in November HOLIDAY magazine
... and that its noted author, Henry Morton Robinson (Columbia ’23) will be man most
burned in eQigy on non-Ivy campuses this fall! It's guaranteed to enrage the letter men
of "Moline Subnormal" and "Turpentine Tech” ... redden the faces of state universities’
“professorlings” (that’s what Robinson calls ’em) ... wound the tender feelings of every
drum majorette in America.
You 11 smoulder at Robinson’s gibes at courses in chain-store management and em
balming! Burn at his references to state universities as "educational rabbit warrens.”
Explode at his views on mass education for the “der Tens of Outer Mediocrity.” It’s one
of a trio of provocative articles on Ivy League men, social life, sports. Don't miss itl
November HOLIDAY —now on your newsstand!
National Dairymen Convention
To Feature Henderson Talk
II. B. Henderson, dairy department head, will he among the fea
tured speakers at a joint session ol
fiat ion. International Association
Milk Industry Foundation in St. I
The convention, which is expected
to include over 3,000 persons, will
open Wednesday morning and will
last three days.
Henderson's talk to the general
session Wednesday afternoon,
"Reaching. Teaching and Using the
Dairy Graduate," will be In connec
tion with a study conducted during
the past year on causes for the de
crease in dairy education enrollment
throughout the country. Robert E.
the Dairy Industry Supply Asso-
of lee Cream Manufacturers and
jonis. Mo. next week.
Cleary, MIF College Relations Com
mittee head. Long Valley, N. J., will
also speak on that topic.
Friday morning, Henderson will
speak to a segment of the convention
studying accounting, discussing sal
vation of small milk plants through
knowledge of cost.
Other segments of the convention
are plant, laboratory, milk supplies,
motor vehicle and sales and adver
tising.
Davison’s
ID or Dixie
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