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Volume LX\III
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 11)04
Number A
Graduation Scheduled August 21
Greene to Deliver Valedictory Address
Godwin Addresses
Degree Receipients
DR. WINFRED L. GODWIN
Will Address More Than TIM) Summer GraduaL-s
Approximately 702 University of Georgia students will
don caps and gowns Friday, September 21, for the 1004
summer commencement exercises scheduled to be held in
the Coliseum.
Dr. Winfred L. Goodwin, di
rector of the Southern Region-
al Education Board will lie the
principal speaker. He will ad
dress approximately 437 under
graduates and 265 graduate
students.
Seniors will be inducted into
the Alumni Society by Philip H.
Alston, Jr., president of the So
ciety. Dean A. II. Biscoe, dean
of faculties, will give the invo
cation and benediction.
The Alumni Society has an
nounced that reserve seat tic
kets for the commencement
exercises are not needed for
the Coliseum.
William Tate, dean of men,
announced that if there were any
seniors who will be graduating
this summer, and have not yet
received their letters concern-
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■^
j Gowns Ready j
| On August 19 j
■
Caps and gowns for gradu- ■
■ ates will be available in the ■
■ hat check room of the Coli- •
■ ■
■scum during the following*
! times: ■
■
S 1 p.m.—Aug. 19
! 9 a.m.-5 p.m.—Aug. 20
S 8' a.m.-10:30 a.m.— Aug.*
21
All candidates for summer ■
• graduation are asked to pick J
■ up their caps and gowns as *
■ early as possible to avoid ■
the rush that has occurred ■
■ in the past.
■Progress Notes’
$9 Million Ok’d for Laboratory
The rapidly changing face of
the University of Georgia cam
pus is featured in the progress
notes for this week.
Congress, this week, ap
proved $9 million for the con
struction of a new Agricultural
Utilization Laboratory to be lo
cated in the University Re-1
search Park.
Scheduled to employ about
400 scientists, the laboratory
is designed to study uses of
existing farm products, and
explore the feasibility of new
farm commodities.
AGRICULTURAL
Five laboratories, a large
machine shop, a photoroom, and
Cadet Shooters
Win 4th Place
At Rifle Contest
a conference room are features
of the new Agricultural Engi
neering Building scheduled to
be built at the Camp William
site on Ag Drive.
Floor area of the new fa
cility will be approximately
100,000 square feet in a com
plex of three buildings, doubl
ing the floor space of the pres
ent building.
The five labs will include
a farm structure lab with a
sound reverberation chamber,
a fluid mechanics lab, a ma
terial handling lab, and a food
engineering lab. The electrical
engineering lab will be 50 per
cent larger than the existing
Barrow Hall lab.
Offices will be grouped
around a center courtyard.
LAW SCHOOL
nolia tree at the side of Harold
Hirsch will act as a break be
tween the two types of archi
tecture.
Athens Coed
Is Summer
Valedictorian
SARAH GREENE
Dr. Cosgrove
In New Post
Sarah Ruth Greene, a 21-
year-old English major from
Athens, has been named vale
dictorian for the 1964 summer
commencement exercises sched
uled to be held at the Coliseum
Aug. 21.
Miss Greene is a 1969 gradu
ate of Athens High School
where she was one of three
students with tho highest
graduating average.
Her parents are Dr. and Mrs.
Junios E. Greene, Sr. of Athens.
Dr. Greene is a professor of
Education at the University of
Georgia's School of Education.
On the dean's list for seven
quarters while at the Univer
sity of Georgia, Miss Greene
will be graduating with a 93.8
overall average. She will be
awarded the Bachelor of Arts
degree with a major In English
and will also receive a profes
sional teaching certificate.
At Georgia she has been ac-
Dr. William B. Cosgrove has
been appointed head of the
department of zoology at tho
University of Georgia, effective
Sept. 1.
According to Dean John O.
Eldson of the College of Arts tlve In the Pioneer Club (wom-
ing graduation, they should and Sciences, Dr. Cosgrove will e n's debate team), Phi Knppa
check by his office as soon as Bucceed Dr. R. Barclay Mcahoe. Ph l and Phi Beta Kappa hono-
Dr. McGhee was recently named
poss ) e. Foundation Professor, and will
The official list of graduates devote full time to research
was not avialable as of press and teaching.
** me ' Dr. Cosgrove came to the
Undergraduate degrees will Unlve rBity in 1956 from the
the^ following f acu jty of Iowa State Univer
sity. He holds degrees from
3: Bachelor of Arts, 60; Bache- CornelI nnd Now Y ork Univer-
(Continued on Page Three) sitles.
be awarded in
classifications: Bachelor of I>aw,
raray scholastic societies, the
Canterbury Club and Delta
Zeta social sorority.
After graduation, the Georgia
coed plans to teach for one
year in the Atlanta School
System. After teaching for a
year she said she would like
to enter graduate school "some
where on the West Coast.”
Old Records Tumble
Pharmacy School Enrollment to Soar
By PERRY SULLIVAN
Five old records will have
been ground up in the School
of Pharmacy’s spick and span
new mortar and pestle by fall,
according to Dean Kenneth L.
Waters.
Enrollment in the fall will
be a new high, there will be
more women students than ever
before, and a new record num
ber of graduating students will
The extension of the Law | )e established during the fall.
School Building will bring Already set were a new record
The University of Georgia some variation of architecture enrollment for summer school
Army AFROTC rifle team cap-! t0 Herty Drive - and the best showing of pa-
tured fourth place in the Na- Its architecture will be more pers yet before a national pro-
tional ROTC rifle championship modern than that of the present fessional meeting,
this past season. The competl- j building according to Lindsey i The record 300-plus students,
tion included the top 10 per Cowen, dean. He said the mag- an increase of 3 7 over last
cent of all the schools and col- ' spring, wil study in the new
leges that have a military de- w*tj l tj . $2 million, 96,000 square foot
partment. \\ 1*0CK. XTlll'lS (larger than a football field).
Rifle team coach Sgt. John- glass walled building opened
ny Kirby said, however, that IVTa I la8t 8 * )ldng ' Twenty-seven worn-
Irnin cr nnloao on will )io utuHvincr nhtirntaov
it will be tough going unless
replacements are found for four
of the shooters who are leaving
the team. These boys, A1 Tate,
Bill Tuck, Peter Ropshaw and
Steve Foster are among the
seven top shooters on the team.
"The big question is what we
get in. We must replace the
boys we lost. If this is done we
will have a good team," Sgt.
Kirby said.
The ROTC team won fourth
place firing the Model 52 Win
en will be studying pharmacy,
an increase of 10. The fresh-
Two University coeds were man c i agg w ju t 0 tal 125, high-
injured Thursday afternoon in est in history. Summer enroll-
a one-car accident on Simonton ment hit 226 for the first ses-
Bridge Road. The automobile 8ion and 100 for the 8econd -
. , . ... At this week’s American Phar-
in which they were riding was ; maceutlcal Association meetlng
demolished. j n New York, five scientific
Brenda Head, Macon, driver papers and one historic presen-
of the car, suffered head and tation were to be delivered.
nose Injuries. She was released ' To top thi8 - the Pharmacy
„ . . School, ninth largest in the
from A hens General Hospital natlonj had a g radua tlng class grammed a graduating class.
Chester .22 caliber rifle in an ^ la now back in school. this spring and summer, even However, 42 finished in the
prone, kneeling and standing Pat Bartrell, the other occu- though none had been pro- spring, and 10 will finish by the
positions at targets 50 feet pant of the car, also from Ma- grammed. end of summer, under straight
away. Each target has 12 bulls- con, received a broken neck. "Pharmacy students must or modified five-year pro-
eyes which are about one and She was transferred from Ath- now attend five years," said grams.”
one-half inches in diameter. A ens General to a hospital in Dr. Waters. "In the process of Dr. Waters said. "We will
perfect score results when all Macon, and will be unable to converting to the five-year pro- face a shortage of pharma-
12 are hit dead center. complete this session of school, gram, we had not actually pro-'cists, nonetheless, next year,
DEAN WATERS CRUSHES ENROLLMENT RECORDS
More Than IKK) Students Expected For Fall (Quarter
between Inner compartments.
“It's a new concept, reully, in
u lab science building," said
Dr. Waters. "This follows the
pattern of construction used by
major research laboratories and
pharmaceutical firms. Abbott
Laboratories, Chicago, was a
major influence. All of the
building’s laboratories are more
or less on display. They are
designed for cross observations
between faculty, graduate stu
dents and undergraduates."
One observer calls the pro
fessor's labs adjacent to
screened-off private offices
"fishbowls,” into which the cu
rious and genuinely interested
alike can peer while standing
on the broad, air-conditioned,
glassed-in portico which sur
rounds the building.
Former Virginian Dean Wat
ers admits that the vistas of
glass in each office facing the
rolling hills are relaxing and
conducive for work. However,
there is a drawback to the
communication. With a desk
loaded with pre-fall administra
tive work, he maintains a
closed-drape policy, until he can
clear off the desk top.
Few out-of-state students at
tend the school and Dean Wat
ers views the primary mission
of the institution as filling the
due to the small graduating state’s needs for pharmacists,
class. However, the large Most of the out-of-staters are
graduating class next spring from nearby. “One could hard-
will offset that shortage.” ly call Anderson, 3. C., or North
Architects Welles, Toombs Augusta. 8. C., out-of-state,”
and Amisano of Atlanta de- he said.
signed the building with "com- Where does the new pharma-
munlcatlon” in mind, not only cist go? “A certain percentage
between outside and in, but (Continued on Page Three)