Page Eight Looking Bacwards or Raise Your Pressure By JEANNE VAN LEER One of the most exclusive organi nations oil campus holds meeting! twice n week in the Kiology Ijab ii Mem under the leadership of I)r Campbell. The password is "How': Your Hue 7" and the coded reply ii "Oh my aching Bac" followed by £ groan. The select few who belong t this organization will teil you thai though they work hard, very hard followed by more groans, thej wouldn't give it. up for anything They are bacteriology students. The other officers are as follows .T. D. Garner, Chief Cook and pofcatc peeler; Ina Rollins, Court, .lester; and Dorry Loesges and Dot Hersey, controller of the Auto-clave. Chest Drive Needs SSOO For lis Quota The Campus Chest Drive with a $1,500 goal in view has more than half of this amount already col lected. To date a total of $050.15 has been pledged by 300 people. This means that about 200 students have not yet made any donation to the fund. The drive is missing its goal by more than SSOO and the success or failure of the campaign depends upon those people who have not yet made any contribution. "Many pledges already made have been gracious and many have been .small. The overall average of pledges has been slightly more than $3. I realize the position most of the students, especially vets, are in, but whether or not they can pay at the present time, pledges should lie signed, and the donations made whenever possible," stated Joe I/asley, chairman of the drive. For those who have not contrib uted or who wish to add to their pledges, the representatives that may be contacted are: Founders Hail, Eldora Hawortli; . Mary Ilobbs Hall, Rachel Thomas; The Pines, Eleanor Corneilson; Cox Hall, Jack White; Archdale Hall, John Charles Hush; day students, Jim Roueche; prefabs, Griuisley Hobbs. "Your cooperation and interest is greatly appreciated by myself and others who are trying to make the drive a success. We can meet our goal if you will double your efforts. In behalf of those who need our support, I thank you for your gen erosity so far, and urge you to do your best to carry the drive through to a successful completion," Lasley concluded. Palestine and UNO Discussed by Club (Continued from Page One) The next meeting of the club will be held in the Hut on Sunday eve ning, November 3, at 7 :45, and the topic for discussion will be the progress of the United Nations. Wesley Collins will be the modera tor, while Alice Yamaguchi will take up the organization of the 11. N., John Charles Rush will dis cuss what has already been accom plished, and Julie White will report on the problems confronting the U. N. The purpose of the club is to bring forth discussion on events and to take the place of history seminar. Everyone who is inter ested in world affairs has been urged to attend. j Sweet 'n Saucy j are the HATS at {Brooks-Wilson (o. | j also DRESSES j I for the j Miss and Matron j | 119 South Greene Street f j \ To them belongs the pleasure and . thrill of squinting nearsightedly for hours into a microscope adjusting and readjusting levers, etc., until finally the not-so-hopeful student decides that his culture is ultra microscopic. Or imagine his pleasure and surprise after spending the afternoon squinting first with one eye and then the other as a staphy lococcus syogenes aureas swims into view. Or picture his h'appy face when he is rewarded by seeing a clump of meningococcus (encapsuied diplococei). The lab is always busy. Delicate pippettes and test tubes must be washed and sterilized. The auto clave, i fancy name for a pressure cooker with a thyroid, is always surrounded by admiring and wonder- I ing bac students. Those who believe in living dangerously, in adding zest and excitement to the routine of school life, have become fairly in timate with the machine. They go right up and caress the levers and stopcock. The less adventurous and therefore wiser members of the class stand on the outside fringe of the circle and stop their ears and close their eyes—in wild anticipa tion. They haven't been disappointed too often. Aside from their valuable scienti fic contributions, the members of the bac lab have furnished the school with many amusing legends. They still talk about the embryonic scientist who was sucking (why this writer will never know) his typhoid baccilli into a pipette and swallowed them. And the time J. D. Garner was two minutes late to dinner and Mrs. Robeson refused to let bim in. Our ingenious hero retired to the lab and cooked his dinner with the aid of his arch friend, the Bunsen burner. The light burns late in the lab. Long after most of us have for gotten the hours spent in the class room, the bac's are still working in I their lab. But it has its advantages. Satisfaction in life can be found in more ways than one. The work is hard, the hours are long, but its worth it—say these ardent disciples of Leeuwenhoek. Faculty Holds Dinner Af Guilford Dairy Club A faculty dinner was held at Hie Guilford Dairy Country Club October 17. With Dr. Eva Campbell in charge of the event. The clubhouse was decorated with autumn leaves and mag nolia tree berries. Following a turkey dinner, the faculty mem bers and their wives executed the Virginia Reel. Stories were told around the fireplace and Mr. Maehall led the singing. Please patronize our advertisers. We Specialize ! In Watch Repair and Feature Shaeffer And Eversharps • also i Art Carved Diamond Rings By J. T{. Wood and Sons Official Railway Watch Inspectors Neese Jewelers i 325 South Elm Htrect i !: Phone 2-1944 COLLEGE CLEANERS We Specialize In Quality GLEANING and PRESSING ★ Phone 3211 Guilford College THE GUILFORDIAN . Greensboro Judge AddressesVelerans Veteran of two world wars, Judge 10. Earle Reeves of the Municipal Court in Greensboro, appeared on 1 October 17 before the Veterans' Club as guest speaker. The Judge ' spoke on the obligations of the vet- I erans in present day world affairs. The judge stressed the fact that the ex-service man must come back to serve America, and not expect to have the government support him. One of the methods by which the returning military man can suc ' cessfully meet this challenge is through utilizing bis brain power by acquiring an adequate education. This, he pointed out, will enable him to confront and intelligently ! cope with the great new problems which are going to rise before the world and in order to successfully penetrate and solve these difficul ties, the former lighting men must learn to work together with one common goal in mind, and not be come entangled in cross purposes. Mr. Reeves then proceeded to comment on some of the sources of possible world conflict in the fu ture. He suggested that the selfish ness, greed, and envy, which certain foreign nations feel toward the United States are among the many forces dangerous to global peace, and which are being nurtured by jealous alien powers. The judge continued his warning by noting that Kurope is swiftly moving toward Russian domination. "Two ideologies which are so con trasting in nature as that employed by the Soviet regime and our own, cannot possibly exist side by side in this small world of today. Since civilization could never stand the impact of another major war, a peaceful solution to all these prob lems must be derived," he stated. "In attempting to arrive at an an swer to these turbuant questions, the veteran must not forget his re ligious ideals which he has had in doctrinated into his background, and he must never forget that the his tory of our country is steeped with religious tradition," he declared. In conclusion. Judge Reeves ex pressed the hope that veterans would be among the leaders to grasp the reins, and lead the way to world peace, national prosperity, and happiness for all. For Quick, Courteous Taxi Service DIAL 4185 SERVICE TAXI Felicia Studio 222 Vi South Greene Phone 6836 !ln Stock Portable Radios j Combinations Record Players ! * 1 Kiser Radio | AND APPLIANCE CO. I t 321 South Elm Street ) I t Calendar (Continued from Page One) 11:00 A.M.—New Garden Meeting House: Morning Wor ship. 7:00 P.M.—Memorial Hall: Vespers. 7:45 P.M.—Hut: Internation al Relations Club; Subject, United Nations. NOVEMBER 4 7:00 P.M.—(ianies ami Danc ing. 7:30 P.M.—Hut: S. C. A. Cabinet Meeting. 11:15 A.M.—Chapel. 7:00 P.M. —Gym: Games and Dancing. 7:30 P.M. Hut: Young Friends. NOVEMBER 5 11:15 A.M.—Chapel. 7:00 P.M.—Gym: Games and Dancing. 7:30 P. M.—Memorial Hall: Messiah Practice-. NOVEMBER 6 7:00 P.M.—Gym: Garner and Dancing. 7:30 P.M. Cultural Re soorces Room: Economics Semi nar. 7:30 P.M.—Home of Miss Gilbert: English Seminar. *(n 8 Chatelaines ... 1 |§f Elegance In Modern ' $$ Q Jewelry 3 UWs Ms /> £f % Wear an exquisitely / Bf£ lesi ff nel CHATELAINE posed against the shoulder I Jft \ of your new suit. Sterling JJ II la silver or gold-plated—sport or multi-colored, rhinestone SL9S to sl4 95 Street Floor For Immediate Delivery Table Models: Hot Plates: Stromberb-Carlson Single and Double Madison Echophone $3.35 to $10.95 (Made by Haiiicrafter) Heaters- Sentinel iCdLers. Farnsworth Wittie $30.15 and up Air-Flow T Markel r ° nS G. E. Spot Heating Pads Dominion Pin-Up Lamps Coffee Brewers Thermador 6 to 12 Cups $5.30 to $48.30 Exclusive Nu-Enamel Dealer RITZ APPLIANCE & EQUIPMENT COMPANY GUS RUOF, Manager 210 S. Greene St. Plione 2-2782 —— October 26,1946 7:30 P.M.—Home of Mrs. Milner: Psychology Seminar. NOVEMBER 8 7:00 P. M.—Gym: Games and Dancing. 8:00 P.M.—Memorial Hall: Friday Evening Lecture. NOVEMBER 10 9:30 AJVI. Hut: Silent Meeting. 11:00 A.M.—New Garden Meeting House: Morning Wor ' ship. NOVEMBER 11 7:00 PJVI.—Gym: Games and Dancing. 7:30 PJVl.—Memorial Hail: S. C. A. Meeting Entire Mem bership. NOVEMBER 12 11:15 A.M.—Chapel. 7:00 PJVI.—Gym: Games and Dancing. 7:30 P.M.—Memorial Hall: Messiah Practice. Please patronize our advertisers, Sfraughans' Book Shop 110 West Market Street Hooks of all Publishers LENDING LIBRARY GREETING* CARDS STATIONERY