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Show Facilities Good ! i For Veterans At Jr. Colleges Veterans planning to attend schools this fall should not overlook over-look the possibilities of Utah's fine junior colleges which offer fully accredited courses in areas where housing facilities are readily available, avail-able, and living conditions are generally gen-erally cheaper than in larger cities. Dr. Calvin S. Smith, head of the Veteran Administration's educational educat-ional program in Utah today ann- ounced that all junior colleges in the State still have room for new fall enrollments to round out the size stijdent bodies they are staffed staf-fed to handle. These schools report re-port housing vacancies both for single and married veterans at low cost, a point not to be overlooked by veterans wholly dependent upon G. I. subsistence allowances for support. Dr. Smith also announced that the junior colleges plan to restrict individual classes to the" ideal of 30 students or under, thus insuring close relationships between students stud-ents and professors. This is a point certainly worth considering at a time when major J. S. colleges and .universities are admittedly over crowded. Concerned with the responsibility responsibil-ity of seeing that veterans get the highest possible standards of framing fram-ing under the G. I. Bill. Dr. Smith states that the VA is this year es pecially calling attention to the Nation's small colleges where individual in-dividual teaching is still possible. Utah veterans interested in obtaining ob-taining information on curricula and housing accomodations at Utah's Ut-ah's junior colleges should address inquiries to Weber College, Ogden; Snow College, Ephraim; Carbon College, Price; Branch A. C. Cedar City; and Dixie College, "St. George. The VA official also stressed the point that on the activity side all Utah junior colleges offered a full range of athletics, dramatics, music, mus-ic, and the Like. |