Newspaper Page Text
J— " . ‘
pakistan Studend &
yis 'l\H.'nu..cnafi.
. ;
10 Enroll Here
, student from Kasur, West
o vistan, will be among the stu
ig in the University of Geor
'g Henry W. Grady School of
] jurnalism next fall,
SAVINGS DAYS
for SUMMER PLAY
@ PEDDAL PUSHERS
@ JACKETS P! 300
® SHORTS Price i
3.50 - SLACKS - 4.00 @ HALTERS 50¢
Sk ALL FABRICS |
1.00 AND ALL COLORS
SHIRTS ON ALL ITEMS
SPRING 1/, or;
SUETS
BRADLEY’S DRESS SHOP
265 N. Jackson Athens, Georgia
«f W o e R
Qe ?"M A 8 ¢
B i TROPICAL WOLLS and RAYON
0w " )
:( .: L _’: .
Regularly Priced 36.50 to 42.50
k L W
ot &g YOUR CHOICE OF 1.50
; ‘ FREE NECKTIE WITH EACH
' .
W OF THESE SUITS.
B h & E".Ott In
oot i C.
227 E. Clayton Athens, Ga.
The student, Na@ci Illahi, has
_.Alr%f;\g}y Xegistered .for a. year’s
‘stally YA*Hts cbbhiry. His* Sducas |
tion will be sponsored by the
Georgia Rotary Clubs,
Ilahi had planned to begin his
studies here during the spring
quarter, but was unable to get
passage to this country,
I At the University Ilahi will
compare American journalism
R L ————
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEOBGIA
with the British journalism which
vails w‘m&sfifi as been:
'g{:tiyihk”th biect athsanjab
University under Abdul Quyyum
who became interested in Ameri
can newspaper techniques when
he toured the United States last
summer, \
Europe got its first clocks dur
ing the 13th Century. l
ei i 00l
oy b 3 ;\fiu : " ~“ ST B i ~,‘\ 1
!7" oet n g Rt ok FUSREs N
i O G A ¢ e s o e .
| A R R R WM o
HER R AT Ly B e L
AR pereE n SR
LR B ' QR
ot VIR . & S RN TR LR
W LR W VR R
T N L SRR % e
Rl $ \ A SRR R
- A B % g CRRRRE L BT “W
A .. L e ko ‘“'&.
*\“ 3 \\‘( 5 \ k. s‘s L R ; ji»;:x R ¥
3 % ::«} " | ¥ 3 O B SR .
i T ali Yi > €Y &
i L ‘} o R ¥ g ~ ’::.E:" N* \
¢PSBAe3 S R S AW ¢
oS3S. 6 ® S 3
¥ B LR e R R Fop .
LbyßO R ; S |
k | 3 el L Q R r O
! S S R Ll L R £ R
: : E%fi A %%\ N 3
g ie B R i
i 3 i PRE L RTR ¥ 1 4
B " s - 8
P e T ” e R ol
b " R R N pa 3 ‘Ry N N
PURR-TY CONFUSING—Samson and Delilah, Siamese cats win=
tering in Miami Beach, Fla,, don’t know where all the crowd came
from, but they think it’s done with mirrors. In case you, too, are
lost in this crystal maze, the two real cats are the ones neareast
the camera,
ATLANTA—According to Paul
H. Fraser, executive director of
the Georgia Commission on Al-
I coholism, “North Carolina’s
pioneer Summer Studies on Facts
about Alcohol in Chapel Hill June
9-13 is a grand study opportunity
for Georgia . citizens—teachers,
ministers, health and social work
ers—whose work or interests bring
them into contact with problems of
alcoholism.” ’
The Studies will be co-sponsor
ed by the N. C. Alcoholic Rehapi
litation Program, directed by S. K.
Proctor, and The University of
North Carolina Extension Division,
directed by Russell Grumman.
The week’s curriculum will be di
rected by Raymond G. McCarthy,
executive director of the Yale Plan
Clinic.
Staff lecturers include Proctor,
Grumman, and McCarthy; Dr. Lee
Brooks, associate chairman UNC
l Department of Sociology and
Anthropology; Dr. Leon Greenberg
associate director, Yale University
Laboratory of Applied Physiology;
Dr. Lorant Forizs, medical direc
tor of the N. C. Alcoholic Center
| at Butner; Dr. Richard C. Proctor,
| assistant director of Graylyn, Win
ston -Salem, N. C., and instructor
at Bowman Gray School of Medi
| cine,
| Dr. Olin T. Binkley, director,
| Department of Ethics and Sociolo
gy at the Southern Baptist Theolo
“ gical Seminary; Judgf;JA. R. Wil
son, Recorder’s Court Judge, Dur-
ham, N. C.; the Rev. Mr. Leon
Couch, pastor of First Methodist
Church, Morehead City, N. C.; Dr.
Thomas T. Jones, M. D., Durham;
Mrs. Annie Ray Moore, health ed
ucation supervisor of the school=
health coordinating service, Ra
leigh, N. C.; Miss Jane Latham,
social worker for the Mecklenburg
County Welfare Department, Char
lotte; Peter P. Cooper, Rowan
County alcohol educator, Salisbury
N. C.; Miss Beatrice H. Coe, phy=
chiatric social worker of Graylyn,
Winston-Salem; Norbert Kelly, In
stitute of Research~ in Social
Science, UNC; and Mr. X, Alcho
lics Anonymous, from North Caro
lina.
Complete admission and curri
culum information is available
through the ARP, Box 9118, Ra
leigh, N. C. or the UNC Extension,
Division, Chapel Hill, N. C.
CROWE—KNOWLES
| ® @
Combining our 13th Anniversary and Athens’ Trade |
Days to give Athens and trade territory values unheard
of and unbelievable. You will have to see to believe. This
is a store wide sale at both our main stores and our an- ‘
nex store at 160 W. Clayton Street.
This is the first sale in our histeryand we intend to
make it a historic event if Athens ever had one.
® ©
SHOP OUR STORE FIRST!
&
Then Buy! On Convenient Terms
® ©
CROWE — KNOWLES
“
Furniture Company
189 N. Lumpkin Athens, Georgia Phone 81
et eet e e e A
French Professor t
Dr. Jules C. Alciatore, professor |
of French at the University of;
Georgia, is the author of a volume l
to be published by a French pub
lishing concern May 1 on the |
sourcés of the philosophy of the
WASHER SALE
99°* NOW 99°°
® [|FETIME GUARANTEE
® STANDARD BRAND
® EASY TERMS
ATHENS AUTO ACCESSORIES '
& APPLIANCE 0.
B IIIIIRRUR ARSI ==
French novelist, Stendhal.
The book, mmuamma%g
enfitled “Stendhal atVFéfvdtius:
Les Sources de la Philosophie de
' Stendhal,” (Stendhal and Helve=
l tiug; The Sources of the Philoso
phy of Stendlal.)
{ It is the latest contribution to
the Stendhal studies and stresses
| the importance of the ideas bor
rowed by Stendhal from Helve-
tius, an 18th eentury osopher
and writer.%r. Mu&u thaved §
yaterial for the boek I&l'fldb
was in France last summer. The
appendix includes some hitherto
unpublished fragments of Stend
hal's work.
This book is one of a series of
studies published by Dr. Alciatore
on the influence of the sensation
alists and ideologists om -the
philosophy of Stendhal. g
T Tt ——