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The Rural Voice, 1986-10, Page 32Give it your best shot with TYLAN® 200 Tylan 200 Injection works fast to control the three major hog diseases: • Pneumonia • Swine Dysentery • Erysipelas Get effective. economical results because Tylan 200 Injection moves quickly to the source of the disease and starts to work immediately. See your animal health supplier and get your Tylan 200 Super 7 Pack today. Your best shot Tylan is a registered trademark of Eh Lary and Company Elanco Drv,S.on Eh Lily Canada Inc ,s a reg.stered use, 2839 30 THE RURAL VOICE NEWS UNIVERSITY LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN FOR FUNDS The University of Guelph has launched a fund-raising campaign that aims to raise $31.5 million from the private sector and $28.5 million from government. The campaign will contribute to a variety of building projects as well as to academic, research, and scholarship programs. According to Edmund Bovey, chairman of the Board of Directors, the univer- sity needs $54 million for physical facilities, $2 million for research programs, $1 million for scholar- ship funds, and $3 million for academic enrichment funds. The university already has $22.6 million of its goal pledged, in- cluding $13.5 million in federal and provincial grants toward the modernization of laboratories and Targe animal clinics at the Ontario Veterinary College. The university has also applied for provincial funds to help build an environmen- tal biology/horticulture complex. Private donors and the Ontario Racing Commission have pledged $2.5 million to fund the construc- tion of the Guelph Centre for Equine Research. Although capital campaigns are now routine for most Canadian universities, this is the first major fund-raising effort at Guelph since its facilities were expanded in the late 1960s to accommodate the col- leges of Arts, Biological Science, Physical Science, and Social Science. These disciplines joined the Ontario Agricultural College, the Ontario Veterinary College, and the Macdonald Institute (which later evolved into the Col- lege of Family and Consumer Studies). The University of Guelph has 11,000 undergraduate and 1,200 graduate students, and each year more than 10,000 people enrol in its continuing education courses. Most of Ontario's agricultural research is conducted by Guelph scientists through a contract with the Ontario Ministry of Agricul- ture and Food. Recent major research projects have included a million -dollar project to study the effects of oil spills on whales and dolphins, and a project funded by the Kellogg Foundation that studied the needs and problems of rural communities. At I� We have all the requirements for elevating, drying and storing your CORN, WHEAT, BARLEY & SOYBEANS We are also agents for Canola Seed • Fast, efficient unloading • Two unloading pits • Wagon dumpers • New pit for Soybeans • Open 24 hours • Trucking available ALLBORO ELEVATORS LTD. Londesboro 519-523-4470 30 THE RURAL VOICE NEWS UNIVERSITY LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN FOR FUNDS The University of Guelph has launched a fund-raising campaign that aims to raise $31.5 million from the private sector and $28.5 million from government. The campaign will contribute to a variety of building projects as well as to academic, research, and scholarship programs. According to Edmund Bovey, chairman of the Board of Directors, the univer- sity needs $54 million for physical facilities, $2 million for research programs, $1 million for scholar- ship funds, and $3 million for academic enrichment funds. The university already has $22.6 million of its goal pledged, in- cluding $13.5 million in federal and provincial grants toward the modernization of laboratories and Targe animal clinics at the Ontario Veterinary College. The university has also applied for provincial funds to help build an environmen- tal biology/horticulture complex. Private donors and the Ontario Racing Commission have pledged $2.5 million to fund the construc- tion of the Guelph Centre for Equine Research. Although capital campaigns are now routine for most Canadian universities, this is the first major fund-raising effort at Guelph since its facilities were expanded in the late 1960s to accommodate the col- leges of Arts, Biological Science, Physical Science, and Social Science. These disciplines joined the Ontario Agricultural College, the Ontario Veterinary College, and the Macdonald Institute (which later evolved into the Col- lege of Family and Consumer Studies). The University of Guelph has 11,000 undergraduate and 1,200 graduate students, and each year more than 10,000 people enrol in its continuing education courses. Most of Ontario's agricultural research is conducted by Guelph scientists through a contract with the Ontario Ministry of Agricul- ture and Food. Recent major research projects have included a million -dollar project to study the effects of oil spills on whales and dolphins, and a project funded by the Kellogg Foundation that studied the needs and problems of rural communities.