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PAOK BIGHT
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THURSDAY, MAY 26, lOOO
Slorey (>ive«« Dorm Plan*
Director of Men'* Housing John
D. Storey announce* the closing and
opening date* of men'* dormitories
for summer and fall quarters.
Ail men's dorms will close at
10 a m. on June 6, and all men will I
be expected to be out by that time.
They will reopen for those attend
ing summer school at 4 p.m. on Sun-]
day, June 12.
The dormitories will open again
for students occupying a room fall !
quarter at 4 p.m., Sept. 16.
AO HILL NEWS
Ag Council Selects Officers;
Names London As President
By HIM, BKIiAND
llio A|t Hill Council has elected Mavlnn London, junior, Cornelia,
president for the next school year.
Other officer* elected Include j Hamil, secretary-treasurer; and
(jeorge Norman, vice president; Ned | James Harris, reporter
GO GREYHOUND
(for out-of-this-worid savings!)
No, there's no Greyhound
Scenicruiser* Service to
outer space—yet. But if
you're rocketing home for
the holidays, there’s no
better way to go! It costs
less than driving your own
ialopy, too. With this exclu
sive Greyhound Service,
you get more—pay less.
Get in orbit...goGreyhound.
BAGGAGE PROBLEMS? You can take more with you on a
Greyhound. Or. send your belongings by Greyhound Package
Express. They arrive in hours and cost you less!
If* tuch a comfort to 1*1rs tt>* bu*... *nd t**vm lh» driving to u* I
COMPARE THESE LOW,
LOW FARES:
Athens to: Atlanta $1.80
.Augusta $2.70
Macon $2.40
Chattanooga $3,015
Columbus $4.80
•plus tax
THERE'S A
GREYHOUND AGENT
NEAR YOU
London is an aittve member of
the American Society of Ag En
gineers. Ag club. Independent Men,
X club, and Sphinx. He will bo a
student council representative from
Ag school next year.
• • •
NED HA.MIL, sophomore. Temple,
has been elected president of the
Ag club for Fall quarter. Ned is major
ing In Poultry Science. Other offi
cers elected to serve with Hamil are
Tom Blalock, vice president; Chester
Thomas, secretary; James Harris,
treasurer; and Billy Ross, critic.
• • «
THE GAFFAU Cl,I'll has named
Richard Coleman, junior, Hartsfield,
president for fall quarter.
Elected to serve with him are the
following officers; Frank Powell,
vice president; Charles Davis, secre
tary; Harold Hall, treasurer; Carrls
Newby, reporter; Wayne Dollar, stu
dent advisor; Donald Register, sen
tinel; Sidney I^inier, parllmentarlan;
and Dr. O.L. O'Kelly, faculty ad
visor.
• • »
SADDLE AND HIRLOIN members
held their annual awards banquet at
the Georgia Center May 20.
The following students were hon
ored:
Gus Johnson, outstanding senior;
Rill Brown, outstanding junior; and
Glen Williams, winner of the junior
intramural judging contest.
Johnson also received the National
Block and Bridle trophy, presented
to the outstanding student In animal
husbandry.
• • •
THE ANNUAL Forestry club ban
quet was held at the Georgian Hotel
on May 20.
Honored were Franklin Hitchcock,
freshman award; Terrell Hope, junior
award; Bill Beland, senior award;
Leonard Woodward, Southeastern
Society of American Foresters award;
Bob Bolton and Klaua Steinbeck,
Homelite scholarship; and Steve
Harp, Rayonier scholarship.
KQDL KROSSWORD
No. 16
ACROSS
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prira »(wiry
footwear
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a lyra
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28 Cal'# friendly
last name
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no enftnnl
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a Trojan
90. Kina-moving
animal
32 IMtberalaly
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84. Kafir'a pud
41. Author of
"A l>eath in
the Family"
42 A Picaaao
44. The dfarvtta
to come up to
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46 While's
first name
47. Garlic
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DOWN
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with teeth
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mate
19. Makea
to Kool'a
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21. Thta ain't
money
24. Taro words that
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long sentence
26. %i of the
school year
26. Short years
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carton of Kool
29. What speak ere
have a lot of
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period
82. Boat folloarar
83. Stravinaky
84. Near comers
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alt. apellinf
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de Janeiro, etc.
89. hlatrta’ uncles
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YOU NEED THE
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Wheh your throat tells
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you need
a real
MRS. JEAN BREWER
AT0 Housemother
Mrs. Jean Brewer
Enjoys First Year
As ATOs’ Mother
RY BECKY NASH
Mrs. Jean C. Brewer la spending
her first year in Athens as the Alpha
Tau Omega housemother.
She came to the University from
her home in Kershaw, S. C. She at
tended Converse College In Spartan
burg, S. C.
« • *
MRS. BREWER spends her time
doing club work, playing bridge,
reading (especially philosophy), and
she has a rut glass collection of which
she Is very proud. She is an excellent
hostess, according to one fraternity
member, and enjoys giving recep
tions.
“When we had a reception for
Robert Sherrod, the managing edi
tor of the Saturday Evening Post,
she made the house look like the
president’s mansion,” he said.
• * •
VET SCHOOL
'Flip’, the Dingo,
Serves Science
Flip the dingo, bears real evi
dence of the power of love and af
fection.
Happy In her kennel at the Univer
sity of Georgia's School of Veterinary
Medicine, Flip doesn’t act like a
dingo should.
Dingoes are not supposed to be
happy. They are supposed to snap
and growl and snarl and bite, at all
times being unpleasant. At least
wild dingoes act that way. In
Australia, from whence all dingoes
come, they are so surly and SDappish
that they have been classified as
vicious and are severely hunted.
• * *
FLII* DOESN’T realize she Is sup
posed to act tnat way, however. Born
in captivity and lavished with affec
tion all her life, she is as friendly
as the friendliest dog, and will nuzzle
anybody who gives her a chance.
Flip and four dingo puppies have
been added to the kennels at the Uni
versity s veterinary school for a more
serious purpose than to prove that
love and affection will pay off In
kind. They are there to serve the
cause of science.
The dingoes, gifts of Dr. James
F. Wright, chief veterinarian at the
National Zoological Park in Wash
ington, D. C., will be used to study
a certain type of hereditary bone
disease which one of the puppies has
been discovered to have.
• • •
BUT WHILE they serve the serious
purposes of science, Flip and the
puppies also keep the veterinary stu
dents entertained. Flip is so agile
that she can flip herself from the
ground to the roof of her house in
one swfit move, hence her name.
She is a good looking animal, too.
about the size of a small collie with
short fawn-colored hair. Like all
dingoes, she can’t bark, but she can
yelp and howl.
ANOTHER A TO commented that
he thinks Mrs. Brewer is one of the
nicest dressed ladies he has seen.
She has introduced a new dish
during her stay with the fraternity
called “South Carolina Hoppin’
John.” The ATOs were shocked one
day at lunch when they found five
bowls on the table. One contained
ground beef, another rice, a third
cole slaw, onions, and blackeyed peas.
She told them to put the rice on
their plates first, then the beef,
peas, cole slaw, and onions and mix
it all together. Everyone enjoyed the
new dish immensely.
Mrs. Brewer likes young people and
enjoys being around them. She has
a daughter and a son, who graduated
from the University last quarter.
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125 N. Lumpkin St.
Phone LI 6-1544
Athens' Newest
and Most Modern
Record Shop
In Australia Flip’s fellow dingoes
have a heavy price on their heads, for
they kill sheep for the pleasure of
killing, destroy flocks of poultry for
the fun of It, and attack man vici
ously.
Flip doesn’t realize her own be
havior is unnatural. She seems to
think that a dingo Is man’s best
friend.
Three Professors Receive
Grants Totaling £57,300
Three grants totaling $57,300 have
been made to University of Georgia
professors by the National Science
Foundation for research.
The largest grant, one for $31,100,
has been made to Dr. Milton J. Cor
mier, assistant proessor of chemistry,
for a two-year study of the mechanisms
of bioluminescent reactions.
A grant of $21,000 has been made
to Dr. M. K. Fort, Jr., head of the
department of mathematics, for re
search on point set topology, a study
which will require two years.
The third grant of $5,200 has been
made to Dr. Julian H. Miller, Regents’
professor emoritus of plant pathology,
for the publication of a world mono-
graphy on the genus Hypoxylon, a type
of fungus.
Three Zoologists to Study
Eniwetok Atoll Coral Reejs
Three zoologists trom the Untveraity
of Georgia—a faculty member, a stu
dent and a former student have re
ceived a grant from the Atomic Energy
Commission to study coral reefs on
Eniwetok Atoll this summer.
They are Dr. Edward J. Kuenzler.
Jr., who reecived his Ph.D. degree
here last year, Dr. Lawrence R.
Pomeroy, associate professor of
zoology, and Wyatt Anderson, of
Brunswick, a member of the 1960
graduating class.
The three will leave May 27 for
Eniwetok.
Three Receive Fellowships
Three young members of the Uni
versity faculty have been awarded
Sarah H. Moss Fellowships for ad
vanced study next year.
They are Donald E. Barnett, who
will work toward a Ph.D. degree In
English at the University of Wiscon
sin; John Giiiis Pate Jr., who will do
Ph D. work in accounting at Colum-
oia University; and Robert Perry
Sentell, who will do graduate work
at Harvard Law School.