Newspaper Page Text
^WWWUUIIUlllllWf///////>
(Continued from Page 1)
ceived the University status
today.”
Dr. McBee was an outstand
ing student in her own right.
She was president of the
dormitory council, manager of
intramural sports, president of
her sophomore class, vice presi
dent of her sorority, second
honor graduate of her class,
selected for "Who’s Who in
American Colleges and Univer
sities,” and a member of Pi
Lambda Theta and Kappa
Delta Pi.
She also won the faculty
award for the “Best All-Around
Student” and the senior de
partment award.
AAUP...
(Continued from Page 1)
cars on campus and effective
academic practices.
7. The use of shuttlebuses
within the campus.
8. The need, or otherwise,
for more corrective action and
stringent traffic law enforce
ment to counteract bad driving
practices.
DIAL <1-1211
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
It has all the chill and
intensity of ‘High Noon’."
— Hillywood Neporttr
in COLOR
with Perspecta Stereophonic Sound
CiNemaScoPE
M-G-M presents
SPENCER TRACY
ROBERT RYAN
BAD DAY AT
BLACK ROCK
Just the Woy it Happened
SU N DA Y-MON DA Y-TU E8.
TROY DOROTHY
DONAHUE McGuire
CONNIE LLOYD
STEVENS NOLAN
IHlIftOMr’tXK'Ct
>4 3/oro t ctcic _
• - TECHNICOLOR* HtOM WARNER BROS EE
Margaret IStitherford
Arthur Kennedy
% Walt Disney^ ^
mm
EMKOtOf
PJ1PY
Tom Tryon
Dany Karat
9. The responsibility, juris
diction and relationship of va
rious law enforcement bodies
to campus traffic.
10. Past, present and future
plans and practices for campus
traffic.
11. Traffic control practices
on other campuses.
There is also a space for
other subjects and suggestions.
Dr. Walker says, “Some pa
pers have begun to come in
but it will be about a month
before we can gain any practi
cal information from the sur
vey. This information will be
presented at the next AAUP
meeting, probably during
spring quarter.”
He added, “It should be em
phasized that we are not any
sort of pressure group or ad
ministrative body. Our func
tion is to discover any good
solution to the campus-parking
problem. These finds will be
offered to the Department of
Traffic and Security for Its
consideration.”
Bill Mathias, Director of
Traffic and Security, feels that
one solution to the parking
problem may lie in perimeter
parking, or the ringing of the
campus with parking lots. Stu
dents would leave their cars in
these lots, walking to classes
Experiment ...
(Continued from Page 1)
is relatively new. The first ex
periments were begun in 1953
at the University of Michigan
Scientists have known for
some time that sensory and
motor neurons could be arti
ficially stimulated in the brain’
cortex, but the idea of higher
sensations such as pleasure
and pain having exact centers
was harder to confirm because
they are located deeper in the
brain and are more difficult
to locate and measure.
The pleasure stimulators on
the rats at Camp Wilkins are
so arranged that the rat has to
press a bar in order to receive
each tiny stimulus. Rats have
been known to press the bar
until they drop with exhaus
tion. On awakening, they will
return to the stimulus. Records
show that rats have continued
to do this for as long os 24
hours continuously foregoing
food and drink.
The hypothesis is that the
electrical charges satisfy the
sensations of hunger, thirst,
sex and the like. Often, the rat
prefers the electrical stimula
tion to the natural satisfac
tion.
The implication when re
ferred to human behavior is
highly dangerous. If humans
could be so attached to a cen
tral source so that the pleasure
and pain centers of the brain
could be regulated, a race of
human robots might result.
(The current experiment does
not deal with pain centers, al
though they lie close by In the
brain).
According to Dr. Peacock,
the defense department has
been concerned with these Im
plications and has experiment
ed with burros. Human experi
ment, he says, is very risky
because the centers lie as close
to vital areas within the brain.
At Camp Wilkins the doctors
drill a hole in the rat’s skull
which has been precisely cal
culated by a stereotaxic instru
ment. Next, they place the tiny
electrodes into the desired spot
and secure them with a dental
compound and small screws.
When the hole has healed,
minute charges of electricity
are sent through the wires,
stimulating the pleasure cen-
tens.
H the experiment is suc
cessful. Dr. Peacock says that
they have had about one out
of 10 successful placings be
cause of the size of the rat's
brain.
The two men are assisted by
Mr. Jack Rollins and Mr. Ray
Reraley, graduate students.
Mr. Remley is working toward
his doctorate in psychology.
An animal caretaker is also
employed.
Marriages . . .
Continued From Page 1
lege students in the age brac
ket from 20 to 34—were mar
ried. The figure was 1,782,000
married students in that age
bracket.
According to John B. Storey,
director of men’s housing!
there are 1,500 married stu
dents living on or off campus.
Compared to around 9,600 stu
dents enrolled at the Univer
sity, about 15.7 per cent of
these students are married.
Of these 1,500 married stu
dents, only 520 live on campus,
since there are Just 260 hous
ing units available at this time.
The remaining 980 married
students live off-campus in
small houses or apartments. By
January, 1964, 105 new perma
nent housing units will be com
pleted, making room for 210
married students. Because of
the new Coliseum, however, 32
housing units now in use must
be torn down after June of this
year.
There are at present on the
PAGE FIVE
University campus 260 housing
units for married students—
207 two-bedroom units, 26 one-
bedroom units, and 11 effi
ciency units. If a couple tins no
children, they will be assigned
to an efficiency apartment or
a one-bedroom apartment. The
efficiency units rent for *25
per month and the one-bedroom
units rent for *28 per month
If the couple has one child
or is expecting a child, they
are assigned to a two-bedroom
unit, which rents for *30 per
month. If they have two or
more children, they are also
assigned to a two-bedroom
unit but they are put on a
watting list for a three-bed
room unit. The three-bedroom
apartments rent for *32 per
month.
At the present time students
with children or expecting
a child must watt for approxi
mately 10 months before being
assigned. However, the period
of waiting varies considerably
and some couples may be as
signed to a unit at the time
they apply, while others may
have to wait a year or so be
fore a vacancy occurs.
Off-campus apartments are
usually much higher in rent,
furnished or unfurnished and
are found by checking the
newspaper or by asking differ
ent sources of information.
1960 THUNDKKBIRI)
MUST SELL!
2 door lull'd top, while. In.
iimeuliile condition, |>ower
brakes, power steering, au
tomatic transmission. Will
consider trade. Owner on
I niverslty staff, fall Evans
at Id fl-MIHIO after 0:80 p.m.
PALACE + Starts Friday
VFEATUItE STARTS
BEECHWOOO CINEMA
ATHIMS most luxurious
MIRISCH PICTURES & ROBERT WISE PRESENT
ROBES SH1RIEY
MiTClWI MMiNE
TWO FOR THE SEESAW
PLUS
A HALF-HOUR MOTION PICTURE OF THE
FIRST LADY’S VISIT TO INDIA AND PAKISTAN
"Jacqueline Jfenneby's t
Jounidj” _ ^ ij j|jj||B:
EASTMANCOLOR RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS 3* /
NOW SHOWING
it hp a mighty motion picture
WlirarMo experience...touch it
iri/ft&TV. ..sense it...fee! it...
VwU you can’t forget it
1»200 FREE PARKING SPACES
6
SUNDAY EVENING
ONLY — 9:00 P.M.
A Preview of what will probably
lie the year’s beat eomedy hit.
HOLLYWOOD
PReview
ENGAGeNieNT
ahead of its normal release date.
\*«* art ii l allowcil | 0 jfive the title—lint if you
really want to know,
CALL EDDIE'S FATHER!
• ome at n-.:u and nee both Ido. for 1 udmiM.lon:
. IA
A GEORGIA INSTITUTION OPERATED BY GEORGIANS
LAST DAY:
Melina Mercouri /Anthony Perkins
R2ff Yallone
in Jules Dassin’s production of
phaeclra
• vloitnt drama ol profane love
WITWauTCD tY LOfUT f tCTVMUS COMMAUM
FK11 JAY—I IIROUGII—THURSDAY
A STRANGE AND COMPELLING STORY
2
' Iro Goldwyn ■ Mayei
Pustnls
Douglas HofiK ir
ATHENS
, w
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
PLUS
HIS NAME AND FAME RAGE OVER THE SEAS OF THE WORE
JOSEPH ElEWE,.
■ CttTNM
Color
■ CINEMASCOPE
SU NI J A Y—M ON DAY—TU ESI JAY
DO!RLE FEATURE
^ HONORED m tho picture to inaugurate the
Wf HOLLYWOOD PREVIEW ENGAGEMENT
SEVEN ARTS ream m
ASSOCIATES ANO ALDRICH PRODUCTION
iette DavisJoan Crawford
mm
HiMDTo
BMW
WARNER BROS
YWOMFJV
FROM
ZfFZZ