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Show Page 4 COLLEGIATE WEEKLY LSJULSJ JUL2J 3 CAZENOVIA COLLEGE, it's a limited, exclusive enrollment. Only 480 women are allowed to attend this liberal arts college, which emphasizes high academic achievement and personal development. In the first week of college, the freshmen student goes through a battery of tests to determine her interests, vocational preferences and general intelligence. It is taken for granted by college officials that she has a good "intelligence quotient"--cut-off line for admission are those who do not score within the top 25 per cent of the Scholastic Aptitude Tests and are not in the upper 5 per cent of their high school graduating class. All students take four academic courses in their first year, and may add one or two courses in their special interest field such as merchandising, child care, medical-secretary, or art. Over half the Cazenovia students are in straight liberal arts, and the rest are evenly distributed to specialized fields. Seventy per cent of Cazenovia students transfer, on completing the two-year course, to four-year colleges. The school is located in New York City and costs $3,000 a semester. NOTRE DAME OF OHIO, it's secondary school teaching. Located near Cleveland, Ohio, with an enrollment of 538 students, students are channeled toward teaching interests. Prospective teachers concentrate on the subject matter they plan to teach rather than educational courses. The basic requirement for a teaching certificate is forty-two units of the teaching subject, seventeen in education courses. A cultural series is part of the school program and every Tuesday an outside speaker is brought onto the campus to lecture. The speaker then stays two or three days on the campus "to get to know the students." The sociology department is strong at Notre Dame and it offers, along with classes in social case work, group work and community organization, a field work program. Majors can go out in the field with a professional social worker.' Applicants to' Notre Dame rank in the upper half of their high school class and have at least an eight-five average. The school is particularly strong in language and science, and about six girls a year go abroad in a program run by another college (usually Rosary or Loyola.) At least 25 girls go to Europe in the summer for a non-credit program which costs $750 for a three-week term. 'ou'U lav you lltilU. laMtul&ied AT UTAH HAND LAUNDRY & CLEANING Alt fine laundry hand finished FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY Call 394-5031 2475 Lincoln Ave. Ogden WE SPECIALIZE IN Shirts Lace Curtains Lace Tablecloths Draperies ft AAA Why Not Go Real College Style? Ogden's Finest Pizza House 3214 Wash. Blvd. Phone 399-3723 ? J Under New Management J 4 J' J I J-Jr i j Come in now and see our vast selection. Long hair hard to manage? Short hair too boyish looking? THE ANSWER IS HERE! Wiglets All New 14.95 ' Mini-Wiglets ...9.95 Long, Long Falls 49.95 Wigs 47.95 S Quality human hair at the lowest prices ever! $ $ $ $ VIRGIL PAINTER'S HAIR STYLING Two convenient locations 2972 Jackson 740 - 27th St 392-0577 399-4965 I I 1 s 1 f I Dr. Quinn McKay, professor of business at Weber State College, is a graduate of Harvard, and a recognized expert in human relations. WSC Professor Leads Busy, Exhilarating Life All his life, Quinn McKay has been taking "one step ahead of himself.""When I was a boy living in Huntsville, I dreamed of traveling to Wyoming and Idaho," he said, "but today I can say I've traveled around the world twice, shuttled back and forth across the Atlantic Ocean and lived in three countries overseas - - Great Britain, Burma and Nigeria. The 40 year old professor of business administration at Weber State College has also lived in Boston, Mass., while attending Harvard University, and Provo, Utah, where he taught at Brigham Young University.He is the new dean of the WSC School of Business. I didn;t plan to do these things, he said, and I don't know what I'd be doing now if I had, but I've learned that everyone should set goals for himself. "Young men should dream impossible dreams because these dreams can become reality," McKay said. His first educational goals were graduation from Weber County High School in 1944. After serving four years in the Marine Corps, he attended Weber Junior College for a two year period. EMPIRE ROLLER RIHK Summer Schedule Afternoons 1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Saturday Evenings 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday "I just walked in the gymnasium and when asked what I wanted to study, I just shrugged my shoulders and said "I didn't know," McKay recalled. Encouraged by Weber College's President Henry Aldous Dixon to continue his . education, McKay attended Brigham Young University for two years, then went on to Harvard University where he received his master's and doctorate degrees.McKay accepted two fellowships, one to Burma and one to Nigeria, before coming to Weber State College in 1965. "I accepted my position at Weber State because it is a challenge," he said, "and gives me an opportunity to be both a teacher and an administrator. He is chairman of the Ogden Chamber of Commerce's Civic affairs committee; past member of the state legislative committee on "Goals for Human Rights" and executing board member of the Bonneville Boy Scout Council. "My dreams continue to grow," he said, "and when my family is grown, I would like to retire and accept another overseas position."He and his wife, Shirley have five children. July 7, 1967 Draft Revised Cont. from P. 2 been accepted for graduate study starting this fall are given a one-year "grace period" deferment. 5. Students currently enrolled T in graduate school who are working toward their master degrees also are deferred one year, allowing them a total of two years to obtain this graduate degree. 6. Students now working toward their doctorate degrees are given up to four years to complete that program. , 7. Occupational deferments may be granted to those preparing for so-called critical skills and other essential jobs as defined by the National Security Council. 8. The new law provides standby authority for state governors, in the case of the National Guard, and the President, in the case of the ready reserve, to permit men to enlist in these units in lieu of being drafted at any time prior to the date they are scheduled for induction. This authority, however, is to be used only when a governor or the president affirms it is not otherwise possible to maintain the statutory personnel strength of ' National Guard or ready Reserve units. 9. Ttfe President is given permanent authority -- without declaring a national emergency to order to active duty obligated reservists who have not yet completed a total of two years active duty and are not currently assigned to or participating satisfactorily in a National Guard or Reserve unit. 10. The new law eliminates the requirement of the previous Selective Service Act that the "religious training and belief" on which draft exemptions for conscientious objectors were based must be in belief in a "supreme being." In the area of draft law violations, the new law directs the Justice Department, upon request by the Selective Service System director, to proceed "as expeditiously as possible" to prosecute draft violations. Infractions of the law include draft evasion, counseling others to evade or obstruct the draft and, in the case of conscientious objectors, refusing to perform two years of "critical" civilian work in lieu of military service. Has the Lowest Prices in town. 3303 Grant Ave. -392-0851 A EMPLOY IAEIIT HEEDED HOW A No Registration Fee Excellent Secretarial Openings Stenographers sharp, attractive .... $325 Credit Receptionist many S250 Receptionist typist $300 (partial list only) Preferred Career Opportunities Sales Rep. Business Forms, degreed . . S550 Nat'l Firm - Sales Rep $650 Drugs & Cosmetics Sales $650 Progressive Personnel Placement 520 - 26th St. - Ogden - Phone 394-4538 No charge or obligation to register OSALT LAKE O DENVER OSAN FRANCISCO Hup V COOL CALL UR AIMERS' J 2636 Grant - 393-2394 FLO WERS FOR THE YOUNG AT HEART MARK 2955 Washington Blvd. PHONE 394-3474 |