Newspaper Page Text
APRIL 23. 1971
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SALLY PEIL, a junior from Duluth, has been selected as
the SGA Ambassador Abroad. Miss Peil will spend the summer
living in Holland and traveling in Europe.
Sally Pell Chosen
SGA Ambassador
Sally Peil, a junior from Duluth, has been selected as the Student
Government Association Ambassador Abroad. This means a summer
visit for Miss Peil to Holland. She also plans to travel to Germany,
England, and Switzerland.
The student first heard about
the Ambassador Abroad
program through THE WEST
GEORGIAN last year, she said.
She was chairman of the
Ambassador Abroad committee
this year and resigned when she
realized that she herself was
interested in applying for the
trip.
“I think it’s a fantastic idea,”
she said. ‘‘lt is a good way to
promote better relations
between the U. S. and Europe.”
Miss Peil will fly to Holland
on June 20 and will write a
weekly newspaper column on
her experiences in Europe for
the WEST GEORGIAN.
She feels that the program
will “broaden her educational
experience” and she hopes to
“learn why people have a poor
opinion of Americans.”
The student will live with a
Pot favpti
SATURDAY, APRIL 24 - GRE, SS 201 and SS lecture hall, 8
a.m. 5:30 p.m.; Ga. Academy of Science, recital hall, 1 p.m.; County
Fair, New Education Center, 1-4 p.m.; Special Olympics, Carrollton
Recreation Dept., 9 a.m.
MONDAY, APRIL 26 - Baseball, WGC vs. Shorter, 3 p.m.;
Young Republicans, conference room 1, 9 p.m.
TUESDAY, APRIL 27 - “Instrumental Literature,” lecture by
James R. Collins and Dr. John T. Mac Clean, recital hall, 1 p.m.; Jane
Ingram, senior recital, recital hall, 8 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28 - Movie, “2001: A Space Odyssey, SS
auditorium, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m.; Baseball, WGC vs. Piedmont, 3
p.m.; Mercer University Concert Choir, recital hall, 8 p.m.
THURSDAY, APRIL 29 - Student Art Association, Hu. 203,
7:30 p.m, Hari Krishna Group, 402 Maple St., 4 p.m.
FRIDAY, APRIL 30 Delbert Clark Award Dinner, dining hall,
7 p.m. *****
Students interested in running for an SGA senate post should
irake sure their names have been submitted by April 28 so that they
can be placed on the ballot.
*****
Discussion sessions to prepare for history 100 exemptions will be
April 27 and 29, May 4, and May 6, SS 209, 6:45-8:45 p.m.
*****
Students who wish to work during summer and fall orientation
can sign up in the SGA office any time during the day.
*****
Students or faculty members who are interested in working with
the cooperative child-care center opening next month may contact
Dunya Hecht at 834-2402.
family in Holland for a month.
Another student, Debra
Pouncey, a sophomore from
Ellenwood, will be recipient of
an SGA grant that will cover one
half of her expenses this summer
in a similar program. She will
visit in Denmark.
Art Work Due
Any art students who have
work that they would like to
submit to the Student Art Exhibit
for Fine Arts Week, please turn
the work in to any art professor,
on the third floor, Humanities
building, by Tuesday, April 27.
Work submitted may be
drawings, paintings, sculpture,
prints, ceramics, or any other
form of art.
Work must be in by Tuesday,
and no work will be accepted
after Tuesday.
THE WEST GEORGIAN
Fraternity Sponsors
City Street Clean-Up
Members of Tau Kappa Ep
silon fraternity will join the fight
against pollution of the en
vironment this weekend in
Carrollton.
The “Tekes” are mustering
their manpower and muscle in
concern for community welfare,
as the local part of the frater
nity’s sixth annual Public Service
Weekend.
Tekes and their little sisters,
“Tekis,” will stage a citywide
campaign to clean the city’s
streets of trash and litter.
Randy Broome, PSW chair-
Play Site
Selected
West Georgia College is being
considered as a possible site for
an amphitheater proposed by the
local Chamber of Commerce,
says Stephen McCutcheon,
director of public affairs. The
amphitheater will be built to hold
the Mclntosh Pageant, according
to McCutcheon.
Mclntosh
The pageant will be a historical
account of Chief William
Mclntosh, a Creek Indian chief
who made available to the state
of Georgia large tracts of land in
the Western part of the state.
According to Dr. McCutcheon,
another site in Whitesburg is also
being considered and the
feasibility of both sites are under
study.
The amphitheater would be
used during each summer, and
the pageant would be produced
under the sponsorship of the local
Chamber of Commerce.
The tentative site selected is on
the west side of the campus
beyond the ecology area.
Fishing Gear
Stolen Thurs.
Last week approximately $l9O
worth of fly reels and rods were
stolen from a storage building by
the side of the HPE building,
according to Richard L. Johnston
Jr., chief of police.
The equipment was taken last
Thursday between 12 a.m. and 7
a.m., he said. The fly reels and
rods were used for P.E. bait and
fly casting classes held at the
lake.
The building was padlocked,
but Chief Johnston said, “I can’t
understand why the PE depart
ment even considers storing the
things outside the gym where
they can’t be properly secured.”
West Georgia students,
who are eligible to work
under the College Work
Study Program and who
plan to attend college here
during fall quarter, may
obtain full-time summer
employment in the Urban
Corps of Atlanta, New
York City, Dayton, Ohio,
or Cleveland, Ohio.
Applications for these
jobs may be obtained from
the financial aid office,
105 Administration
building.
man. said the fraternity will
cover at least all the paved
streets in Carrollton, picking up
trash and litter along the road
side.
“We hope individual
homeowners and tenants will
cooperate in the effort by
cleaning their own yards,” he
said.
The Tekes will use plastic bags
supplied by the Lions Club. Litter
will be taken to a location behind
city hall, and then removed to the
landfill by city trucks.
Mayor John Robinson has
signed a proclamation
recognizing Public Service
Weekend and urging community
support of the clean-up cam
paign.
The clean-up will be in progress
Saturday and Sunday.
The 50 men from TKE will be
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David Perry and Lisa Hughes display the new
supply of Health Food and Natural Vitamins at
Perry’s Westside Pharmacy
Maple St.
SEW YOUR OWN!
From
Polyester Double Knits
60 Inch Widths On Bolts
$l9B
Only A YD.
WEST GEORGIA
SEWING CENTER
10 Harris SI Carrollton
PAGE THREE
joining nearly 20,000 other
brothers from 300 chapters
throughout the United States and
Canada, who will undertake
similar projects in their own
communities.
“Public Service Weekend
focuses on the personal in
volvement of each of our chap
ters for the communities in which
they reside and demonstrates our
fraternity’s awareness of and
concern for our ecology and the
fight against pollution,” said
Robert H. Nelson, National PSC
chairman.
“Asa spring climax to year
round service activities, Public
Service Weekend observances
have made outstanding con
tributions in the past five years to
the communities where our
chapters are located,” Nelson
adds.