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PAGE SIXTEEN
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Tn-RSDAT, JANUARY 0, 1986
You will fiml n friendly
welcome, pood service
and excellent workman-
skip at
Martin Bros.
SHOE SHOP
151 E. Clayton 8t.
(Next to Kreei)
To Be Given Away
FREE
The Biggest Box of
('.umly in ATHENS
Headquarters for the
World's Finest Candies—
WHITMAN, NORRIS.
HOLLINGSWORTH
Horton’s
Athens' Most Convenient
Corner
• TAPEREI) SHAPE
• BELT-IN BACK
• PLAIN FRONT
Just Received
jSeiv Shipment
Public relations In an excellent way
to make people aware of your pro
fession, Paul C. Wleaman, chief phar
macist of the Norwich Pharinacal
Company, explained to School of
Pharmacy students Tuesday.
He urged students to work towurd
raising professional standards and to
tell people about pharmacy. "We
muBt let them know the story of our
background training." he pointed ;
out.
Weinman, a graduate of Pliila-
dephla College of Pharmacy and Sci
ence, has been with the Norwich
Pharinacal Company since 1933. As 1
chief pharmacist for the company,
he is In charge of new product de
velopment.
KEEP YOUR
SHOES
LOOKING WELL!
BEAUTIFUL HEARTS
from 10« »o *15°°
The VASIITV Sox
ClmolotM
and Confection*
only
$A)Ot
I Mm<:t
00
poet
■ ON SON SAllIT
bon bon* ond
cbocofefe*
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Cltiy I •» poet
All CKIAMS
flying towm of
good faito
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only I •» p»t
;'f Del ^ ate * A “ end New Art Museum Exhibit
Inree-IJay Meeting;
Headed by Murray Features Print Collection
STUDENTS BROWSE THROUGH COLLECTION OF THESES
Dissertations Catalogued From. 1918 to the Present
Library Rare Book Room
Includes Thesis Morgue
By Beth Mobley
If you’d like to learn more about “The Osculating Cylinders to the
General Analytic Space Curve," “The Keyboard Themes of .lohann
Jacob Froberger” or “Blood Volume in Birds,’” the Rare Book room
of the Library is tin* place to go.
Dr. C. C. Murray, College of Ag
riculture director, headed the Uni
versity delegation to the three-day
meeting of the Association of
Southern Agricultural Workers
which was held in Atlanta Mon
day through Wednesday.
The purpose of the association's
53rd annual session was for the work
ers to coordinate results of research
and experiments so as to point up
opportunities rather than pitfalls in
farming.
This is the nation's largest agricul
tural organization and is divided in
to 15 divisions consisting of agri
cultural economics and rural sociolo
gy, agricultural editors, agricultural
engineers, agronomy, animal produc
tion, dairy science, entomology, for
estry. home economics, horticulture,
marketing, phytopathology. plant
physiology, poultry and soil con
servation.
For that is final resting plnce for
1,553 theses which have been writ
ten since they became a requirement
for the master’s degree In 1913.
The index lists papers by O. C.
Aderhold, Delores Artau, John E.
Drewry, Sidney W. Martin, Horace
Montgomery, Merritt B. Pound, Al
bert B. Suye, William Tate and many
other names familiar in University
circles.
Dr. George Boyd. Graduate School
dean, points out "the number of
theses would lie larger, but all people
who get masters' degrees are not re
quired to prepare them—in busi
ness administration, education, home j
economics und forestry, for instance, j
And the largest group of grndunte ■
students we have is in education."
When his brain child Is complete,!
the grndunte student types four cop-1
les which must lie hound and signed j
by his major professor, chairman of j
the three-man committee which reads
his paper and Dr. Boyd. The original
Pharmacy School Students
Hear Public Relations Talk
and first carbon must he deposited
in the library.
John W. Bonner, special collec
tions librarian, said. "Theses are used
extensively by graduate students for
secondary sources and by other stu
dents In the writing of term papers.”
Theses are also borrowed by stu
dents and faculty throughout the
country, according to Ellen Sumner,
inter-library loans librarian. Re
quests have come from Georgia Tech,
Vanderbilt, Oregon State College,
Duke, Cornell, and the Universities
of Texas, Wisconsin, Maryland, Ken
tucky and California.
An exhibition entitled “The Sacred and the Myitie” will go on dis
play Monday in the Georgia Art Museum. The exhibit consists of ma
terial from the George Benet Print Collection.
The display is comprised of selec- contemporary Fremh, American apd
tions from five centuries of religious Italian artists.
prints including outstanding works All works of the exhibition are ori-
jhy such masters as Durer, "The Ad- gina ' etc *? ing8 ' engravings.
. , graphs and wood cuts,
oration of the Magi;” Rembrandt,!
“The Tribute Money” and "The Pre
sentation at the Temple;" Redon,
["The Buddha;” Leyden, “The Vir-
Igin on the Crescent;” Lorrain, "The
[Flight Into Egypt;” Tardieu, “The j
Vision of Emperor Constantine; ” |
jchadall, "Jacob and the Angles,” and j
jSpruance, “Hast Thou Observed My
Servant Job" and “Centaur and]
Saint.”
These are only a few of the great- j
est on a roster of more than 40 ar
tists represented in the exhibit. Also
[there will be on exhibition works of I
litho-
The collection will remain at the
museum through the end of the
month.
REWEAVING
Tears, Moth Holes and Burns
Reasonable
MRS. WALTER WRIGHTSON
Phone 10492
Buena Vista Ave.
Winder, Ga.
Penney’s
THERE’S ALWAYS SOMETHING
NEW AT PENNEY’S
ALWAYS FIRST Q
Practical Campus Favorite
Completely Washable
"BELT-IN-BACK”
TWILL PANTS