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Volum. LVII.
America's Pre-Eminent College Weekly for 57 Year*.
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1951.
Number 5
Rehearsals Marge Mandcrson (right) reads to Kelly Holt, Dell
K pec tor, and Ed Iverson in a scene from “Summer and Smoke," the Uni
versity Theatre's first production of the year. The play opens its tliree-
day stand Tuesday in Fine Arts Auditorium. See story on page 8.
WSSF Campaign
Turns Into Contest;
Forum Scheduled
The World Student Service Fund
drive, slated to begin Monday, has
been postponed until Nov. 11, Chair
man Ronald Green, Atlanta, said to
day.
The drive is being reorganized as
a contest, he said, with a trophy be
ing awarded the student organiza
tion with the best contribution per
member.
Letters have been sent to all or
ganizations and any students inter
ested are invited to attend a cam
paign forum, 10 a.m., Wednesday,
in the Chapel.
WSSF aids European and Asiatic
students with medical supplies and
assistance on self-help projects.
Western European universities
are giving assistance instead of re
ceiving it this year because of WSSF
help in the past.
Nevertheless, the United States
contributes 90 per cent of the organi
zation's funds. This year's goal is set
at |175,000 with $808,000 needed to
carry out the projects, Green said.
The primary objective of the or
ganization is to aid the college stu
dents of today, because they will be
the leaders of the world in a few
years, and will hold strategic posi
tions in the world struggle, Green
said.
Grid De-Emphasis Issue Returned
By Faculty’s Three-Point Program;
Butts Fails To Disclose Position
Industrial Editors Institute
To Attract Famous Newsmen
Editors from over the nation will gather on campus next week
tor the fifth annual session of the Industrial Editors Institute.
Sponsored by the School of Journalism in conjunction with the
Southern Industrial Editors Association, the three-day gathering will
feature the nation’s leading news
paper figures as speakers.
The institute will get underway
Thursday with registration and din
ner at the Georgian Hotel. Open ses
sions will begin Friday morning.
A tentative schedule of public ses
sions was released today by Journa
lism Dean John' E. Drewry. Public
sessions will be initiated Friday
morning In the Commerce-Journalism
Auditorium.
Friday Morning
Celestine Sibley, Atlanta Consti
tution columnist, will speak in the
auditorium at 10 a.m. She will be
followed at 11:05 a.m. by Daniel D.
Mich, editorial director of McCalls
magazine. Albert L. Furth, executive
editor of Fortune magazine, will
speak at 12:05 p.m.
Afternoon sessions will be held in
the Museum of Art. The initial speak
er will be Robert L. Nicholson, Lino
type News editor, at 2:30 p.m. E. J.
Triebe, vice president and general
superintendent, KingBport Press,
Kingsport, Tenn., will address the
group at 3 p.m.
Variety Show
A typographic variety show con
ducted by Richard N. McArthur,
president of Higgins-McArthur Com
pany, is scheduled for 4 p.m.
Saturday sessions will be held in
the Comerce-Journalism Auditorium.
Milton E. Mumblow, General Motors
Corporation director of employee
publications, will speak at 9 a.m.
Harllee Branch Jr., Georgia Pow
er Company president, will address
the gathering at 10 a.m. and Edison
Marshall, author of "Yankee Pasha”
and "Infinite Woman,” will deliver
the concluding address at 11:06 a.m.
Relations Committee
Will Meet Nov. 13
The Tech-Georgla Better Relations
Committee will hold Its regular fall
meeting at the University Nov. 13.
The group, organized in 1946 to
prevent vandalism and promote bet
ter relations between the two schools,
meets each fall prior to the annual
Tech-Georgla football game.
Officers elected at a meeting last
spring are "Bobo” Webb, Leary,
chairman; BUI Thompson, Mt. Ver
non, vice chairman, and "Teeter”
Umstead, of Georgia Tech, secretary.
Webb and Thompson are both Uni
versity students, the chairmanship
rotating between the two schools
each year.
New tribunal judges which try
students guilty of vandalism have
been elected by the University’s nine
members of the committee. They are
James Sheppard, Edison, Hassel
Parker, ElUjay, and Claude McBride,
Columbus. Webb and Thompson are
also members of the tribunal.
Students Must Obtain
Pandora Photos Soon
Students who failed to meet
their Pandora photo appoint
ments can have pictures taken at
Collegiate Studio on Lumpkin
street, Business Manager Boyce
Portwood, announced today.
Only students holding ap
pointments can have photos
made. The cards must be turn
ed in to the studio when the
picture is taken.
The studio will take the Pan
dora pictures for a limited time
only, and students are urged to
have photos taken at Once.
No additional appointment
cards will be sold, Portwood
said.
Elections Set
For Freshmen;
Slates Drawn
Campus campaigning begins this
week with freshman candidates com
peting for class officer positions.
Freshman girls vote Thursday and
freshman men on Nov. 15.
Striving for male campus posts
will be nominees from Inter-Fra
ternity Council and Grand Old Par
ty. Candidates selected by IFC were
Allan Tavor, Chi Psi, president;
R. H. Drlftmier, Kappa Alpha, vice
president, and Richard Trotter, Chi
Phi, secretary-treasurer.
GOP Primary
GOP wil nominate candidates at
a primary on Wednesday. Offered for
presidential nomination are Bill Hel
ton, Gainesville; Tom Mobley, Whig-
ham; Bill Green, Ball Ground, and
Mike Amalfltano, Stamford, Conn.,
and for vice president, Rollin Jack-
son Jr., Tignall, and Guy Waldron,
College Park. Candidates for secre
tary-treasurer nomination are Ron
nie Cox, Bainbridge, and Frank Pel-
ly, Brunswick, N. J.
Ballot Boxes
Ballot boxes will be placed in the
Chapel, Conner Hall, Ag Cafeteria,
and Commerce-Journalism Building.
A board of representatives from
each of the freshman girl dormi
tories has selected the nominees for
Coordinate offices. The people chos
en are Priscilla Arnold and Mary
Weaver for president; Nancy Cooney
and Shirley Andrews for vice presi
dent; Shirley David and Ann Kolp
for secretary, and Sue Davis and
Harriet Friedman for treasurer.
West’s Plan Passed
In Close Balloting
As Aderhold Nods
By Mort Kampf
The faculty’s three-point foot
ball de-emphasis program is “con
tingent on action that may or may
not be taken by the Southeastern
Conference,” said Athletic Direc
tor Wally Butts in an exclusive
interview with The Red and Black
today.
The plan, proposed by Robert H.
West, professor of English, passed
by the narrow margin of 84-72, and
brought the controversial de-empha
sis issue back into the limelight.
The resolution requested: (1)
abolishing spring practice; (2) short
ening the season,
in reference to
bowl games; (3)
reducing the num
ber of athletic
scholarships.
"Integral Part'
"Inter-collegiate
athletics are an
Integral part of
. college life, and
"SA I’m doing my part
Butts to keep It repre
sentative,” Butts said.
Abolishing the two-platoon system,
thereby cutting down the number of
grants-in-ald, appear to bo Included
in other college de-empliasis pro-
grams.
Varied Stands
However, coaches are taking va
rious stands on the issue. Some say
that it makes for a more exacting
game, and increases the caliber of
play.
The University of
grid mentor George Munger, who
previously was a
staunch disprover
of the system, used
it for the first time
last week. Munger
said, it helps form
a more exacting
game, adding that
"it aids in cutting
down on the num
ber of injuries."
Pres. O. C. Ad
erhold said the
University has no plans of taking
action itself, but will try to work
out a general plan through the con
ference and the National Collegiate
Athletic Association.
The Board of Regents dropped the
issue early in October after referring
the matter to a special committee.
Pennsylvania
Homecoming Celebration Begins Tonight
With Formal Dance at Stegeman Hall
Campus Red Feather Drive
Expected To Break Records
The annual Community Chest
drive at the University is virtually
complete, and indications are that
contributions from faculty, staff, and
students will exceed $6,000, officials
said today.
Rollins Chambliss, chairman of the
University committee on campus
drives, said this amount is larger
than previous years.
‘It is recognized, however, that
the number of participating agencies
Is larger than before,'
said.
By Barbara Hogan
The University’s 1951 Homecom
ing celebration, honoring alumni,
presenting "Miss Homecoming,” and
featuring the Georgla-Alabama game,
plus the music of Elliot Lawrence
and his orchestra, will get under
way tonight at 9 with a formal dance
in Stegeman Hall.
Tomorrow’s initial event will be
the Lawrence concert, slated for Fine
Arts Auditorium from 10-12 a.m.
Saturday classes are excused, and
administrative offices will close at
10 a.m.
Tomorrow afternoon, transferring
from the musical agenda, the lime
light will fall on Sanford Stadium
where the Bulldogs meet the Ala
bama Crimson Tide.
Revenge Game
Approximately 44,000 fans are ex
pected to witness the Bulldogs' at
tempt to gain revenge on the same
team that upset the Homecoming
victory celebration two years ago.
During halftime of the annual
classic, “Miss Homecoming” and her
court will be presented by the Inter
Fraternity Council, sponsor of the.
the traditional senior parade, with
the seniors Bportlng Southern Plant
er hats and red canes, around the
gridiron. The planter hats are re
placing the usual derbies.
Chambliss I danc
I The queen and her court will lead
BANDLEADER LAWRENCE
The Boy Wonder
Sorority and fraternity Homecom
ing decorations, welcoming alumni
and boosting the Bulldogs, will add
color to the weekend activities. The
winner will be presented a trophy
by Blftad, contest sponsors. Runner-
ups will receive honorable mention
pennants.
Faculty members must present
identification cards with faculty
tickets tor admission to the game to
morrow. Faculty tickets are not
transferable.
Tomorrow's Dance
An informal dance, set for Stege
man Hall tomorrow night at 8 will
be the concluding event of the week
end. Tickets for all Homecoming
functions are on sale at Dick Fer
guson's and Gunn’s.
Block tickets are priced at $5
Single tickets for Friday and Satur
day dances are $2.50 and $3, respec
tively. Concert tickets sell for $1.60
Among the prominent alumni re
turning for homecoming festivities
this weekend will be Lamar Trotti
the University's first journalism
graduate. He will sit in the presi
dent’s box as a guest during the
game.
SECRETARY SAWYER
Slates Talk
Cabinet Member
Talks Thursday
Secretary Suwyer To Vigil
C Aim pus on Plune Tour
Charles Sawyer, secretary of
commerce, has been scheduled, to
lecture on campus Thursday.
Sawyer will speak in connection
with the annual pharmacy semi
nar at 9 a. in. Thursday in the
Chapel, according to announce
ment today by Dean John E.
Drewry, faculty convocations com
mittee chairman.
Sawyer will fly to Atlanta Thurs
day for a special address at the At
lanta division and will stop over
briefly in Athens tor the engagement.
Cabinet Meeting
He will leave immediately after
the campus talk to attend an after
noon cabinet meeting in Washington,
D. C.
The secretary has been under fir*
in Washington In recent weeks for
allegedly non-support of the Truman
administration. Washington column
ists Drew Pearson and Eric Johnson
have made special reference to these
charges.
A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Saw
yer has served aB ambassador to Bel
gium and minister to Luxembourg.
Governor Candidate
He was democratic candidate for
governor of Ohio in 1938. A former
member of the Democratic National
Committee, he was appointed to his
present position in 1948.
The secretary received an A.B. de
gree from Overland College in 1908
and his LL.B at the University of
Cincinnati In 1911.
Settlement Reached
For Sigma Nu, Fain
The fracas involving members of
Sigma Nu fraternity and Fain Hall
residents has been satisfactorily set
tled, Dean William Tate said today.
In a statement to The Red and
Black, Dean Tate said, "I am proud
that as University students they
honestly acknowledged their Involve
ment by reporting to the office and
freely admitting what happened.
The incident occurred following
the LSU football game and appar
ently was started by an exchange of
words between Sigma Nu and Fain
Hail students. Dean Tate said. Re
sultant fighting made hospitalization
for three persons necessary.
Following extensive investigation,
Dean Tate announced that the fra
ternity will be fined and "several”
members be required to move from
the house.
Each case was judged on its in
dividual merits, he said. The fines
will go to the Inter-Fraternity Coun
cil’s scholarship fund.