Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1957
(Ebt fcfb anb Slack
PAGE THREE
NEWS BRIEFS
ADS Names Seven New Members
Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, initiated seven new members during winter
quarter eeremonies last week. Undergraduate members initiated were Inman Mays, Augusta; Charlie
May, Washington; Rutledge Carpenter, Augusta; and Wayne Shaw, Maeon. Professional members init
iated were 11. Randolph Holder, Athens; Charles A. Rawson. Jr., Atlanta; and Al Hollis. Deeatur. Ala.
Charles A. Rawson, Atlanta agency
executive, was guest speaker at a
banquet which followed at Continu-
in Education.
• * *
Ray Remley, Savannah, was elect
ed president of newly-organized Nu
Rho Psi, psychology club, at a meet
ing last week. Other officers named
were Ann Holliday, vice president;
Molly Brown, secretary; Edie Hes
ton, treasurer; Jim Kehoe, social
chairman and Stan Gittelman, pub
licity chairman.
Dr. John Hammes is faculty
advisor of the group. Membership is
open to all students who have a sin
cere interest in the field of psy
chology.
* * •
The 21st annual meeting of the
Georgia Entomological Society will
be held March 19-20 at Eatonton. ,
The group will discuss various agri
cultural crop pests, insecticides and
insect controls in relation to public
health.
* • •
The American Federation of Arts
has announced the itineraries of two
'art exhibitions which include works
| by students of the University Art De-
1 partment.
These exhibitions, entitled “Stu-
| dent Work from College and Univer-
j sity Art Departments,” are now trav
eling in Latin America and the Near
East.
• * *
The two groups of paintings in
clude works by Joe Testuccecca, Tam
pa, Fla.; Jean McWhorter, Chatta-
nooga, Tenn.; John Hill, Atlanta,
and Charles Morey, Cumntington,
Mass.
On Campus MaxShukan
(Author of “Barefoot Boy With Cheek,” etc.)
ADVICE ON ADVISORS
Recently I made an extensive tour of American cam
puses, interviewing students and selling mechanical dogs,
anji one of the most frequent complaints I heard from
undergraduates was, “My faculty advisor doesn’t really
care about me.”
Everywhere I went I heard this same cry. (Indeed,
at one university I found 15,000 students jammed in the
field house chanting it a cappella.) But I am bound to
say, dear friends, that you are wrong. Your faculty
advisor does care about you. The trouble is, he doesn’t
know you. And no wonder! How do you expect him to
know you when you see him once or so a semester?
Get to be friends with your faculty advisor—like, for
example, Alpine R. Sigafoos, a sophomore in timothy and
silage at Texas A. & M.
Alpine R. Sigafoos appeared one night in the living
quarters of his faculty advisor (whose name, by a curious
coincidence, was also Alpine R. Sigafoos).
“Good evening, sir,” said Student Sigafoos. “I am
come so that you may get to know me better and thus
help me solve the vexing problems that trouble me.”
Examination Dates
For Vi inter Quarter
All Five-Hour Courses and Spe
cial Gr<yipings:
Tuesday, March 12
4:00- r>:00— Military
:«ot>. rut
Science
la-b-c.
2b.
7:00-t0:00—Physical
Sc. 1;
Phynicn
20.
Wrilnrndnjr,
Mnrcli
IS
8:00-ll :00—3rd Period Clasnes
11:00 1 :00—Kiifrlluli 101. 10*2
1:00- 3:00—Kiiff 11*h 121. 122
3:00- 0:00 -8th Period ('lamuck
7:00-10:00—Chenilntry, 21. 22, 340a. 340b
Thursday. March 14
8 :ir»-11 :1 r»—It li Period ('Ihhkcm
11:30- 2:00— Botany 21. 22: Social Science 4
3:00- 6:00— St h Period Clause*
7:00 10:00—Ire mb 101. 102. 103. 104 : tier
mail 102; Spanish 101. 102, 101;
Home Ec. 20
Friday. Marrli IA
8:15-11:1»— 1st Period Claw*
11:30 2:00—History loo, m. HJ
3:00- 0:00-7th Period Classes
7:00-10:00—Political Science 1
Saturday. March lfl
8:15-11:15—2nd Period Clanneii
11 :30- 2:00—Botany 10, 11; Human Biolo
gy 1. 2
3:00 - 0:00—Oth Period Classes
7:00-10:00—Oth, 10th Period Classes
Conflicts and Make-up Exam
lnatlons
All 1, 2 and 3-hour courses ex
cept those scheduled for special
examinations:
Wednesday, March 13
8:00 0:30—3rd Period classes MWF
0:30-11:00 3rd Period Classes TT
3:00- 4:30 Mil. Period Classes MWF
4:30 6:00—8th Period Classes TT
Thursday, Mareh 14
8:15- 0:45—4th Period Classes MWF
0:45-11:!.-, ft It Period Classes TT
3:00- 4 .30—51 h Period Classes MWF
4:30- 6:00—5th Period Classes TT
Friday, March IA
8:15- 0:45— 1st Period Classes MWF
0:45-11.15—1st Period Classes TT
3:00- 4:30 7ili Period Classes MWF
4:30- 0:00—7th Period Classes TT
Saturday, March III
8:15- 0:45—2nd Period Classes MWF
0:45-11:15—2nd Period Classes TT
3:00- 4:30— 61 li Period Classes MWF
4:30- 6:00 6th Period Classes TT
That Goal Post Stans, or You Walk
Encourage Pedestrians—
Speaker Urges Colleges
Future college campus facilities should be multi-purpose and should
encourage pedestrian traffic, Sydney Selnireliff, vice president of
the International Federation of l.audseape Architects, told students
and faculty Wednesday.
A designer of college campuses
should consider pedestrtun circula
tion, walking distances, traffic pat
terns, parking, distances from a cen
tral heating plant, and the location
of athletic fields and buildings, he
said.
Shurcliff told the landscape archi
tect Students and faculty that de
partment needs should be determined
through discussions with the faculty.
Then these needs should bo organ
ized. with economic and other limita
tions, into a creation not only "func
tion hut beautiful."
Shurdiff's Boston firm of Shur
cliff. Shurcliff and Merril recently
finished n master plan for future
college development which is on dis
play at the University of Massa
chusetts.
In an afternoon session Shurcliff
answered students’ questions relat
ing to the professional practice of
landscape architecture.
lie is a fellow of the American
Society of Landscape Architects and
a former vice president of that or
ganization. In tlie lftJO’s he worked
witli his father on the restoration
of tlie gardens at Williamsburg.
They Serve Your Needs best!
Who . . ?
TL\)C &cb anb JBlack Advertisers!
“And what are those three packages you are carry
ing?” asked Advisor Sigafoos.
“This,” said Student Sigafoos, holding up the first of
the three packages, “is a carton of Philip Morris Ciga
rettes, which come in long size or regular, and without
which I never stir. It is, sir, a smoke beyond compare-
full of fresh, natural, unfiltered flavor that delights the
taste, salves the soul, and turns the whole world into
one long vista of peace and greenery. Try one, sir.”
“Thank you,” said Advisor Sigafoos, lighting a Philip
Morris Cigarette. He puffed appreciatively for an hour
or two and then said, “And what is in the other packages
you are carrying?”
What a man uses on his face
is important
CHOOSE QUALITY
SHAVE WITH
Rich, creamy quality for
shaving comfort and »«ln
health. New formula Old
Spice Shaving Creams in
giant tubes:
Brushless .60 lather .65
Old Spice aerosol
Smooth Shave 1.00
8 H U L T O N
NIW 10i> ' tOIOHtO
‘‘I am rather a complex fellow,” said Student
Sigafoos, “and I don’t expect that you will get to know
me in a hurry. So,” he said, holding up his second pack
age, “I have brought my bed-roll.”
“I see,” said Advisor Sigafoos, not entirely pleased.
“And what is this third package?”
“Well sir, I know that occasionally you will be busy
with other matters and will therefore be unable to spend
time with me. So I have brought along my gin rummy
partner, Walter M. Handzlik.”
In the next two years Advisor Sigafoos, living check-
by-jowl with Student Sigafoos, got to know all of the
lad’s personality traits, his hopes, his fears, his drives,
his quirks, his aspirations. At the end of that time,
armed with true understanding. Advisor Sigafoos con
cluded that Student Sigafoos's basic trouble was that he
was not really college material.
So Advisor Sigafoos got Student Sigafoos a job with
the North Star Hockey Puck Corporation where today he
is head of the puck-packing department and a happy man.
Advisor Sigafoos is happy too. He has time again to
pursue his studies of Trichobatrachus robustus, the hairy
frog. At night he plays gin rummy with Walter M.
Handzlik.
®Max Shulman. 1957
Our adrire to students —and to fatuity loo and to anybody else
srho's looking for a sseeetheart of a smoke —is to try nest
natural Philip Morris, made by the sponsors of this column.