Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
Sandra Hearn Performs
In WGC Piano Recital
Miss Sandra Hearn was heard in a phno recital last night in the
Kathy Cashen Recital Hall of West Georgia College.
The Camerata Music Club, an
honorary music sorority
sponsored Miss Hearn’s recital as
one of a series of recitals they
are presenting this year. Miss
Hearn is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. E. H. Hearn, Jr., of
Carrollton and has been
iij performing groups at West
Georgia College for the past few
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Adamson Square Over The Bakery
Come to
Honeywell's
Open House.
It could open up
a whole new
career for you.
Its Saturday. May Ist at 10 30am There'll be free refresh
merits And a chance to learn all about Atlanta s most out
standing Data Processing Institute The Honeywell Institute
of Information Sciences
Honeywell has trained over 75.000 of its own computer
customers And now The Honeywell Institute makes the same
professional training available to you through a variety of
tuition courses
Learn how Honeywell can prepare you for a high-paying
computer career
See a computer in action
Talk to Honeywells computer pros
Arrange to take a test that can tell you your computer aptitude
All at Honeywell s Open House
Saturday, May Ist, 10:30 am.
Approved for veterans
Honeywell Institute of Information Sciences in Atlanta
Directions HIIS is in the Honeywell Building located at the
intersections of 1-85 and North Druid Hills Drive
I
| Admissions Officer (WG-D
■ Honeywell Institute of Information Sciences s
1 6 West Druid Hills Drive. NE . Atlanta. Georgia 30329 ’
I Phone (404)6310711 I
l will not be able to attend Honeywell s Open House 1 would
I like additional information on the Honeywell Institute of Infor- |
| mation Sciences |
' Name I
| Street |
J City State Zip J
| Telephone (Home) (Business) j
u_____—
The Other Computer Company:
Honeywell
summer sessions.
Miss Hearn will graduate in
June from Converse College with
a Bachelor of Music degree in
Piano Performance. She has been
granted a Fellowship at Florida
State University where she will
begin work on a Master’s
program in the Fall.
THE WEST GEORGIAN
ft
a m / \
' Ji
SANDRA HERN, a Converse music student, presented a piano
recital at West Georgia last night. The senior music major is a
native of Carrollton and plans to attend graduate school in the fall.
Student Golfer Hopes
ForCountryClub Career
If you see a college student playing golf at the Sunset Hills
Country Club you’d better think twice before challenging him to a
game. It might be J. Ross Willis, a student at West Georgia who has
been playing golf since he was 10 years old.
Willis traveled a great deal
because his father was in the Air
Force. He started golfing at
Loring Air Force Base in Maine,
and has played many different
courses, but his favorite is in
Augusta, site of the Masters’
tournament. At that course he
watched Arnold Palmer, Jack <
Nicklaus, Doug Sanders, and
Sam Sneed play.
Willis played his best game
while attending Goldsboro High
School in North Carolina, he
said. His golf score for 18 holes
was 76.
“The worse blunder I’ve ever
made,” says Willis, “was when I
had a chance for a birdie and I
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Two locations: On the square downtown & Maple St. - next to the campus.
four-putted.” He said the most
difficult shots for him are the
long iron shots because “they
are the hardes clubs to hit”
If you wish to begin golf,
Willis advises that you “take
lessons.” He says the most
important thing is “to keep your
eye on the ball.”
Willis is a sophomore at West
Georgia and hopes to make golf
his profession. By a “profession”
he means he would like to teach
golf at a small country club.
The student says his greatest
ambition is “to master the
game, but if I am not able to be
a professional in golf I would
like to go into journalism.”
APRIL 30, 1971
Fulbright
Applications
Being Taken
The Committee on Inter
national Exchange of Persons is
now accepting applications for
senior Fulbright-Hays awards for
university lecturing and ad
vanced research during 1972-73 in
over 75 countries. The booklet on
the program for this period lists
approximately 25 percent more
awards than the booklet for 1971-
72. It is available on request to
the committee of 2101 Con
stitution Avenue, Washington, D.
C., 20418, or may be consulted at
the office of Dr. Eugene R. Huck,
chairman of the Division of Social
Sciences and faculty Fulbright
advisor.
Application requirements
include U. S. citizenship; for
lectureships, college or
university teaching experience;
for research awards, a doctorate
or, in some fields, recognized
professional standing as
demonstrated by faculty rank,
publications, compositons,
exhibition record, etc. July 1, is
the deadline for applying for
research awards, and it is the
suggested date for filing for
lectureships.
Senior Fulbright-Hays awards
generally consist of a main
tenance allowance in local
currency to cover normal living
costs of the grantee and family
while in residence abroad, and
round-trip travel for the grantee
(transportation is not provided
for dependents). For lecturers
going to most non-European
countries, the award includes a
dollar supplement, subject to the
availability of funds, or carries a
stipend in dollars and foreign
currency, the amount depending
on the assignment, the lecturer’s
qualifications, salary, and other
factors.
Call 269 now for
reservations for
'Death of a Salesman'
opening Monday
night. Admission free
with ID card.