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Aderliold Cites Low Salaries * ine Arts Museum
As Cause of Teacher Losses
An average annual raise in salary of over $2,000 has drawn 160
of the beat trained teachers from the 1’niversity for jobs in industry
and government during the last five years, Pres. 0. C. Aderhold said
Monday at West Georgia College
This situation will continue, Ader
hold predicted, unless Georgia Insti
tutions become better financially
equipped to compete with other
schools and colleges throughout the
nation.
"The tragedy of this situation is
thut, unless something is done, the
taught by the best trained people,"
Aderhold said.
In the next. 10 years, he estimated
the South will need 35,000 new pro
fessors. Of Mils number, Georgia and
other Southern states will have to
secure more than 25,000 professors
from outside the South.
Generally, neighboring states are
in a better position to meet these
young men and women entering Geor- needs than Georgia, Aderhold point-
gla institutions are not going to be ed out.
yoor eomisoii
m$ T&ES WITH THESE
RECORDS
ALBUMS
SHEET MUSIC
The Music Shop
125 N. Lumpkin
To Display Works
Of Two Professors
The works of two art department
faculty members will be exhibited
Monday through March 2 In Fine
Arts Art Gallery.
Howard Thomas, art professor,
will have a showing, composed most
ly of oil paintings, in the exhibit.
He has received many major awards
for his work and lias paintings in
museum collections at Milwaukee
Art Institute, High Museum, Georgia
Museum of Art and others. Thomas
has held many leading positions in
art departments and art associations.
Thnd Suits, assistant art profes
sor, recent winner of a Georgia As
sociation of Artists award, will show
a selection consisting mostly of his
drawings. Suits teaches drawing in
the art department.
ISatitmal lAtndsrapc Awards
H on by University Students
University landscape architecture
students have won three of the 11
awards in the National Landscape
Exchange Competition.
Hilbert B. Owens, division of land
scape architecture chairman, an
nounced last week that Mahlon B.
Perry, Woodbine; Shirley Cooper, St.
Simons Island, and Melvin E. Ker
sey, Thomaston, are the students who
received awards.
The project for the competition
was the drawing of plans for a city
park.
Winning plans are to tour col
leges and universities throughout the
United States.
A Campus-to-Career Case History
Dick Abraham of Bell Telephone Laboratories, here experimenting
with closing the loop on a transistor feedback amplifier.
“I’m working with top names and top talent"
That's one of Richard P. Abraham’s
comments about his career with Bell Tele
phone laboratories in Murray Hill, N. J.
“In 1954. after I’d received my M.S. from
Stanford,” Dick continues, “1 was inter
viewed by a number of companies. Of
these I liked the Bell Labs interview best
—the interviewer knew what he was talk
ing about, and the Labs seemed a high-
caliber place.
“The Labs have a professional atmos
phere. and I’m really impressed by my
working associates. As for my work. I've
been on rotating assignments—working
with transistor networks and their meas
urement techniques, studying magnetic
drum circuitry, and doing classified work
on Nike. This experience is tremendous.
“In addition to the job, I attend Lab-
conducted classes on a graduate level
several times a week. Besides that, the
Labs are helping me get a Ph.D. at
Columbia by giving me time off to get to
late afternoon classes. That’s the kind of
co-operation you really appreciate from
your company.
“What are important to me are the op
portunities offered by the job and the
work itself. My wife and I own a house
near Murray Hill, and we’ve found a lot
of friends through the Labs. All in all,
1 think I’m in the right kind of place.”
Dick Abruhaui is typical of the many young men
who are finding their careers in the Bell System.
Similar eareer opportunities exist in the Bell
Telephone Companies, Western Eleetrie and
Sandia Corporation. Your plaeement officer haa
more information about these companies.
■•n
Talephona
System
1
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1956
CHARTER PRESENTATION—President Allen C. Brock receives the
charter of Kappa Phi Kappa, the University’s first national professional
education fraternity for undergraduates, at the Charter Banquet in the
Georgian Hotel Saturday. Pictured from left to right are YYarren T.
Jackson, national first vice president; Brock, president of the Beta
Upsilon Chapter and I)r. Frank A. Peake, national executive secretary
and treasurer.
Clark’s List of Geniuses
Shown in Library Lobby
A new exhibit, entitled “What
display in the lobby of the Librar;
The exhibition is based on the
late Delbert Clark’s article of that
title which appeared in The Satur
day Review of Literature Nov. 12,
1955.
Clark was a long-time writer of
Washington dispatches for the
New York Times and at the time of
his death in 19 53 affiliated with the
"Fund for Adult Education.”
The exhibit contains several copies
of Clark’s definition of a genius and
also books, pictures and works of
33 persons the article classifies as
geniuses.
Clark’s definition states "Genius
is creative; it goes beyond talent and
| adds to the body of permanent knowl
edge ill any field something of value
j which was not there before.
"Genius presupposes a continuous
flow of creative thought and activity,
I even though the tangible results
Makes a Genius,” was placed on
r yesterday.
which can truly be classed as prod
ucts of genius may be very few.”
Among the better known of those
listed as fulfilling these require
ments are Marie Curie, Dante, Charles
Darwin, Albert Einstein, Benjamin
Franklin, Sigmund Freud, Guten
berg, Michelangelo, Napoleon Bona
parte, Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur,
Saint Paul. William Shakespeare,
Socrates, Vincent Van Gogh, Alex
ander the Great, Aristotle, Ludwig
Y’an Beethoven and Julius Caesar.
Hartsfield To Show Slides
John Hartsfield, agriculture stu
dent. will speak at the Veterans’
Cluti meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
in Baldwin Hall. Hartsfield, who
made an extensive trip through sev
eral European countries last sum
mer, studying agricultural methods,
will also show 'slides of his travels.
THE I.VIIVS I'liiiniiarv
Phone Liberty 3-3621
Across from Myers Hall
We Wrap for Mailing