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America's Pre-Eminent College Weekly lor More than 50 Years
Vol. LV.
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1»4».
No. 7.
SUBWAY COMMANDOS—Ruth, Virginia Woodall, Athens, and Eileen
Sherwood, Betty .Murdock, Avondale Estates, play hostesses to a group
of Brazilian Naval officers in “My Sister Eileen,” which opens in Fine
Arts auditorium Monday at 8:80 p.m. John Hamlet, Atlanta; James
Stradling, Atlanta; A1 Jacobson, Waycross, and Carlos Chueca, Lima,
Peru, salute the two sisters. Tickets for the performance are 00 rents
for students and $1 for adults.—Photo by Martin.
'My Sister Eileen' Opens
Monday for Four-Day Run
By Ed Dunn
A touch of the Great White Way will be on campus Monday at
8:30 p.m. when the Broadway comedy hit “My Sister Eileen” opens
a four-day run in Fine Arts auditorium.
“Eileen”—a rollicking comedy which ran for 866 perfo'rmances in
New York—is the story of two sisters who come from Columbus, Ohio,
to begin a life of fame in Greenwich Village.
Adding to their hilarious misadventures are a sizable segment of
Panel Forums
Attract Editors
At Trade Meet
Federal Power, Rights
Of Man Must Balance.
Wise Declares in Chapel
Southern Industrial Editors as
sembled on campus yesterday for
the third annual Industrial Edi
tors Institute, hearing a series of
panel discussions and speeches.
Three panel discussions on trade
publications are in progress this
afternoon in C-J auditorium. “Em
ployee and Specialized Publica
tions in a Public Relations Pro
gram” is set at 2:30 p.m.; "Modern
Trends in Typography” at 3:30 p.m.,
and “How Radio Can Serve the In
dustrial Editor” at 4:30 p.m.
Today’s program will be rounded
out with an address by Don Seiwell,
editor of The Southern Fireside, at
7 p.m. in Georgian Hotel.
Foreign Students
Two University students, Arno
Kretschmer, Berlin, Germany, and
Reginald Mitchell. Brighton, Eng
land, will discuss "A Foreigner Looks
at American Journalism” Saturday
at 10 a.m. in C-J auditorium. John
E. Davis, editor of Shell Progress,
will speak at 11 a.m., and Elizabeth
Parker at noon.
Announcement of new association
officers will be made at a business
meeting beginning at 1:30 p.m. in
Georgian Hotel.
‘To keep our way of life, there
must be a balance between rights of
the individual and the proper func
tion of government,” Marlon J. Wise,
president of Central of Georgia Rail
way, told a Chapel audience of trade
publications, editors, students, and
visitors this morning.
the Brazilian Navy, an artistic land
lord, and a "rambling wreck from
Georgia Tech.”
The play was written by Joseph
Fields and Jerome Chodorov, co-au
thors of "Junior Miss.”
Leading Roles
Cast in leading roles are Virginia
Woodall, Athens, as Ruth—the brain
ier member of the sister team—and
Betty Murdock, Avondale Estates, as
the beautiful Eileen, who attracts
many male admirers and unsolvable
problems.
Setting of the play is a basement
apartment where traffic volume is
rivaled only by that of Grand Cen
tral Station.
With sand hogs blasting under
neath and elevated trains running
WSSF Collections
At Homecoming Tilt
Net Only $19.67
World Student Service Fund col
lected $19.67 in barrels placed at
Sanford Stadium entrances Saturday
at the Georgia-Alahama game as com
pared with $3,000 collected in the
stands last year at the Tech game.
Charles Fraser, general chairman
of the WSSF drive, said Wednesday
that Howell Hollis, business manager
of the Athletic Association, declined
to allow a row-by-row collection this
year because alumni had complained
of the procedure.
liarrel Collection Falls
Hollis claimed that as much mon
ey could be collected this year in bar
rels, according to Fraser. Comment
ing on Hollis’ refusal to allow a col
lection in the stands, Fraser said the
business manager declined to see a
student delegation last week because
he was "too busy.”
After an appeal was made by De-
lores Artau, administrative counselor,
and William Tate, dean of men. Hollis
agreed to allow barrels to be placed
at stadium entrances, Fraser explain
ed.
Georgia Tech collected $2,670 in
the stands at their Homecoming game
Saturday. Fraser pointed out. Half
of the collection made at the Tech-
Georgia game last year went to Tech.
Fund-Raising Carnival
Meanwhile, to make up for loss of
money that was expected to be raised
Saturday, WSSF solicitors are plan
ning a fund-raising carnival the first
week of February to launch an inten
sive one-week campuswide drive.
No drive will be made this quarter,
Fraser Indicated, and instead of a
long campaign, a well-organized one-
week drive will be made.
overhead, the apartment is a meeting
place for drunks and lewd women.—
much to the disappointment of the
two sisters.
Other leading roles are held by
John Kollock, Atlanta; J. C. Hulme,
Elberton; Baxter Webb, Atlanta;
Jack Marquardt, Augusta; Ed Keet-
er, Savannah, and Nan Lyon, Cave
Springs.
Painting Featured
A painting of the "perfect woman
by Mr. Appopolous, who operates the
village apartment, is one of the fea
tures of the play. For tile University
Theatre production, it was painted by
John Kollock, Atlanta, who plays Mr.
Appopolous—the man who thinks he
is the world’s greatest painter.
The play runs through Thursday
night. Admission is 60 cents for stu
dents and $1 for adults, tax included.
Balance Upset
"Today that balance is becoming
more and more upset as the power
of governmental restrictions and
taxations increase," Wise declared
"American people are being led down
the road to complete nationalization
and finally socialism.”
The danger of this country is not
(Continued on pagq eight)
4 Last Days of Pompeii'’
Scheduled at Fine Arts
“Last Days of Pompeii”—
chronicles of the Italian city de
stroyed by the Vesuvius volcano
—will be featured at Fine Arts
auditorium, Sunday at 2:15 and
4:15 p. m.
Two short subjects, "Drunk
Driving” and "Million Times a
Day,” the story of telephones,
will also be shown.
Students and faculty members
need only their ID cards to be
admitted.
James Melton
To Sing Friday
Native Georgian Opens
Fine Arts Coneert Series
James Melton, well-known ten
or of the Metropolitan Opera As
sociation, will open the year’s con
cert series in Fine Arts auditorium
next Friday at 8:30 p. m.
Melton Is a native Georgian and an
alumnus of the University. While on
campus he played saxophone with the
Bulldog Orchestra. He studied opera
under de Luca at Vanderbilt Univer
sity.
The program Includes "Dedica
tion,” by Franz; "Phillis Has Such
Charming Graces,” by Young-Wilson;
“Ombra mai fu” from "Xerxes,” by
Handel; “Oh, Cease Thy Singing,
Maiden Fair,” by Rachmaninoff;
"Serenade,” by Medtner; “In Time
of Roses,” by Grieg;
“O Liebliche Wungon,” by Brahms;
“E Lucevnn le Stelle” from “Tosca,”
by Pueeini; "Mandoline” and "Beau
Solr,” by Debussy; “Aubade" from
"Le Roi d’Ys," by Lalo; “Le l’rln-
temps,” by Hahn; "Kangaroo and
Dingo,” by Kipling-German; "Red
Rosey Bush,” by Young, and “Yar
mouth Fair.” by Warnock.
Tickets—now on sale at the music
department—are $2.50 plus tax for
orchestra Beats, and $1.50 plus tax
for the balcony. Reservations for sea
son tickets which are not picked up
before the Melton concert will be for
feited.
Dry Cleaners
Sue University;
Hearing Dec. 5
Webb Given Summons;
Petition Asks Injunction *
Against Ag Hill Laundry
Athens dry cleaners’ petition to
shut down the Athletic Associa
tion’s student dry cleaning and
laundry services, moved into the
second stage this week as a sum
mons was served on A. P. Webb,
general manager of the Ag Ilill
plant.
Webb, one of three defendants
in the case, will appear at a hear-
A petition seeking rampuswide
endorsement o) the University’s
stand in the legal battle with lo-
eal laundrymen was being circu-
lated today by “Students lor Unit
ed Action"—organized this week.
Addressed to the board of re
gents. the !H-word document favors
continuance of low-cost cleaning
services, either by the Athletic As
sociation or the University.
On Inside Pages
Homecoming Queen and court photo,
page six. Comments on Student gov
ern, see editorial page. Roddy Rat-
cliffe snoops, see page five.
Rally Set in Jacksonville
Nearly 500 students are expected to flock to Jacksonville this
weekend to view the annual clash of the Georgia Bulldogs and
the Florida Gators.
Bulldog supporters will congregate in the lobby of the George
Washington Hotel in downtown Jacksonville at 11 :30 a.m. Sat
urday for a giant pep rally sponsored by Bulldog Club.
Georgia’s cheerleaders will be on hand to stir up pre-game spirit,
and the University band—which will give a half-time performance in
the Gator Bowl—Is expected to be at the rally. In addition, representa
tives of the team and coaches are expected to be on hand.
A motorcade will get underway immediately following the rally,
about noon, and will have a police
escort as It wends its way through
midtown.
All students driving cars to Jack
sonville are requested to decorate
Pounding Drills Sound Advent
Of Modern Telephone System
By Julian Clark
The staccato pounding of pneumatic drills on campus this week
heralded the coming installation of a modern telephone system for the
University.
The 2-foot-deep ditch which is snaking its way across campus from
Broad'Street to Ag Hill cafeteria will be the resting place for a cable
connecting 150 University telephones with the new exchange in Me
morial Hall. The cable—containing 100 wires—is being laid by the
Bell Telephone Company. »
Changeover to the new centrally-located switchboard will be made
them with Georgia colors, pennants,
and appropriate placards. Drivers are
advised to park as near as possible
to the hotel to facilitate formation
of the motorcade.
itig scheduled by Judge Henry H.
West for Dec. 5 in Clarke county
superior rourt at 10:30 a.m. At that
time, the court will determine wheth
er a temporary injunction will be
granted.
The suit had Its dramatic begin
ning late last Friday afternoon when
the petition, signed by 18 laundries
and dry cleaners, was filed with clerk
of Clarke county superior court and
publicized that night in an extra edi
tion of The Red and Black.
Services Endangered
Meanwhile, University officials
were speculating this week over cam
pus services that may be endangered
if cleaners win the present suit. A
precedent-making decision might en
courage suits against the Co-Op,
Bookstore, and University Creamery,
It was revealed.
Commenting on the suit. Dr. J.
Thomas Askew, dean of student af
fairs, said that "as long as Athens
merchants are hostile to low-price
services that the University is now
offering and proposes to offer, we can
never have any progress on the cam
pus.”
Products Required
On Ag Hill, Dean Harry J. Brown,
College of Agriculture, explained that
teaching of several agricultural
courses require manufacture of pro
ducts such as those produced by Uni
versity Creamery. "If we can’t sell
the milk, cheese, and butter we pro
duce, it will cost the state thousands
of dollars,” Dean Brown said.
The petition, which names as de
fendants the Athletic Association,
board of regents, and University sys
tem, calls for Injunction proceedings
against the Ag Hill laundry and dry
cleaning plant, and seeks $100,000
in damages. Notice of the petition
will be served on the board of re-
(Contlnued on page eight)
later this month on a weekend.
Students and faculty will encoun
ter fewer busy signals when the new
Muwit* Appreciation Hour
Offers Classics Thursday
A varied program of popular clas
sics will be given at the Music Appre
ciation Hour Thursday at 8 p.m. in
Chapel, Hugh Hodgson, music de
partment head, announced this week.
The program will be composed of
selections requested by students, in
cluding such favorites as “Claire de
Lune” by Debussy. There will be sev
eral piano duet numbers by Hodgson
and Despy Karlas, instructor of mu
sic.
Music majors, students and facul
ty members are invited to attend.
switchboard is installed, since more
tie-in lines with the city are included
in the cable.
The University exchange number
will be changed to 4 600, and the new
switchboard will remain open until
6 p.m.
Most telephone numbers will re
main the same, but those under 200
will have 3 added in front of the old
number. A new directory will be is
sued at the time of the change.
“We hope to install the new sys
tem in one day, but some difficulty
Is always experienced In operating
new equipment,” B. C. Kinney, plant
operations head, said this week.
Service on many telephones waB
disrupted this week when a ditchdig
ging machine accidentally cut a cable
on Main Campus.
INDUSTRIAL EDITORS LEADERS—Speaker* of annual Industrial
Editors Institute an* Eugeni* Black Jr., International Bank president;
Marion W ise, Central of Georgia Railway pn*sident; It. J. Marilcnbrook.
Union Bag and l*aper t'or|H>ration director; Jolin liavin, Shell I'rogrcma
editor, top new. and t 'larenee Itolen. Southern Telephone News editor;
Mary Singleton, Georgia Power magazine editor; Elizabeth Parker,
Georgia Power Home Service director, and C. G. Stewart, Tennessee
Eastman ( orporation News editor, bottom row.