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| TNI WIST GKXGUN NOVEMMt I. 1*74
19
Seniors Can Benefit
From Intern Program
NANCY BADERTSCHER
Students who are in the
second or third quarter of their
junior year or the first or second
quarter of their senior year may
receive 15 hours academic
credit and receive a stipend of
SIOOO working in the Business
Internship program.
The program originated for
the purpose of assisting the
ousiness student in choosing a
career in line with his desires
and abilities.
The internship covers a
period of one quarter Students
will be expected to work from
the first day of the quarter to
the last. The participant is
expected to work a normal work
week. The hours will differ from
company to company.
The intern will maintain
student status, and therefore,
he should pay applicable
registeration and other quar
terly fees.
The stipend will be given to
help students pay for the cost of
necessary re-locating and
additional costs which they may
EMPIRE 5-10-25 STORES
SHOP OUR STORE OFTEN!
W* are always glad to sa* you.
Carrollton - Bremen - Tallapoosa
Phn 832 6323
411 Adarmon Square CarroOtnn, Goof*a
Quality Jewelry
For All Your Fraternity
& Sorority Needs
, Photo Batteries!
I photo A,bums I
Ky 4ft® Slide Viewers
Camera Bags!
Projection j
I Kodacolor film J Lamps
I DEVELOPING AMD PtIHTIMG DonairU
Camera Repairsi
I W& W Drug |
I Shop, Inc. |
I Clinic Ave. Below Village Theatre
I 832-8261
encounter. The stipend is
provided by the West Georgia
College Foundation from funds
donated by the participating
firm.
Some of the companies that
have participated in the
program are Southwire. The
Peoples Bank of Carrollton.
Carroll Realty and Insurance
and Six Flags Over Georgia.
Jean Fields, a senior
majoring in business ad
ministration and management,
interned this summer at Six
Flags Over Georgia. She was
placed in a supervisory
position. As manager of one of
the souvenir shops, she was in
charge of personnel ad
ministration, merchandise
requisition and inventory and
merchandise display.
Further information can be
obtained from Robert J. Stone,
assistant professor of
marketing and management, in
room nine of the Old Education
building.
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Student Gallery
This week s Student Gallery is a shot of the AUanta GasHght
Towers and a weather-beaten tree. The special effects photo was
made by Fred Hoger, a junior from Atlanta.
news notes news
GOSPEL
FELLOWSHIP
The Carrollton chapter of the
Full Gospel Business Men s
Fellowship International will
meet in the V.I.P. room of the
First Federal Savings and Loan
Association on Saturday, at 7:30
p.m. Fred Musser, an account
executive of station WHAE-TV
in Atlanta, will be the speaker.
SOCIOLOGY
Students who have taken the
social work course, Sociology
313, and are interested in
participating in a field ex
perience, Sociology 494, winter
quarter should contact Pick
Conner in the sociology
department by Nov. 4.
GEORGIA VOTER
The League of Women Voters
is making available an in
formation sheet on candidates
and amendments to be voted on
during the Nov. 5 election. It is
the latest issue of the Georgia
Voter, and it may be purchased
for 10 cents in a number of local
outlets, including the campus
WAREHOUSE GROCERIES
Guaranteed Lowest
Total Food Bill In Georgia
Delicatessen and Bakery
FOR YOUR PARTY AND PICNIC NEEDS
canne/goods THE MEAT STORE
for college students
7:00 A.M. Til Midnight
bookstore and the Braves Book
Center.
ERA
A statewide educational
conference on the Equal Rights
Amendment will be held
November 8 and 9 in Sparks
Assembly Hall on the Georgia
State University campus. The
conference, entitled “To Build
the March and Rally,” will be
sponsored by Georgians for the
Equal Rights Amendment
(GERA). Admission to the
conference is $3 and child care
will be provided free of charge.
For further information contact
GERA officials at 525-1193.
BAHAI
FIRESIDE
The Ba’hai Fireside meets
Wednesday evenings at 8:30
p.m. at 152 Cunningham Drive.
MEDITATION
Discussions on meditation
and the knowledge of perfection
are held every Thursday night
in conference room two of the
student center. The discussions
begin at 7:30 p.m.
GERMAN COURSE
The department of foreign
language will offer anew course
beginning Winter quarter. The
course will be entitled “German
Literature in Translation,” and
will be listed as German 450
G./ according to Dr. Warner
Blumenthal, chairman of the
foreign languages department.
The main substance of the
course will be studying three
German Nobel prize winners’
works, according to Dr.
Blumenthal. The authors
studied will be Mann, Hess, and
8011.
The course has been proposed
as a humanities elective for
undergraduates. Texts, lec
tures, and class discussion will
be entirely in English. There is
no prerequisite for the course
which will carry five hours
credit.
Production
Continued From Page 1
initial reaction to the can
cellation was surprise , but he
was pleased with the latest
development because it will not
mean an out and out can
cellation.
Dr. Link said that the
materials purchased for the
performance of Macbeth will be
used, “if not in the recital, they
will be returned to storage.”
Selections to be performed
will range from sonnets by
Shakespeare to selections from
Shakespearean plays. There
will be other works performed
than those of Shakespeare
though, the theme of the
overall performance will be
Shakespearean.