Newspaper Page Text
(Photo By Dan Keever)
CANDIDATES for the Imle|H'n(lent Party are, (L to R) first row,
Waylon (lienpy, Loy Jarrett, Olivia Poe; sprond row, Mary Helen
MeGinty, Emily Byrd, Tom Stripling; third row, Jarrett, Not
pietured. Hilly Ross.
W t:i\l)l DATES
Student Council Elects 14
To Cheerleading Positions
By ALAN WEXLER
Fourteen cheerleaders for the 1960-61 athletic season were chosen
Wednesday night before an audience of over 400 students at Wood
ruff Ilall.
The nine veterans include Nancy
Peterson, Atlanta; Jayne Malcom,
Monroe; Lee Ann Riinstidt, Decatur;
Hannah Jones, Atlanta; Nan Barron,
Atlanta; Bill Dunaway, Marietta;
Johnny Parrish, Portal, and Bill
Bagwell, Atlanta.
Nine cheerleaders from last sea
son and five new members were
selected to form what Coach B. T.
Clemence called "a tremendous
group.”
!\EWS HRIEFS
Annual Festival
Starts Thursday
The Antiqua Players, making
their first Athens visit, will perform
on the University campus during the
23rd annual Chamber Music Festival,
April 21-22.
The Players, performing on an
cient instruments, will present re
citals in the Chapel at 11 a.m. and
8 p.m. Friday, April 22.
The Festival will also include a
Georgia Composers recital Thursday,
and a music department alumni ban
quet Friday.
• • •
FIVE UNIVERSITY students have
been accepted to do staff work in
psychology at Milledgeville State
Hospital this summer. The students
are Jerome A. Gratingny, Spurgeon
N. Cole, Judy Ann Carswell, Margaret
Wall Overby, and Mary Piercy.
• • •
TED RIDLEHUBER, Athens, has
been elected president of Pi Kappa
Alpha fraternity for the coming
year.
Others elected to serve with Ridle-
huber are Jerry Yancey, Atlanta,
vice president; Lawton Johnson, Al
ma, treasurer; Bill Dunaway, Ma
rietta, secretary, and Bob McEntyre,
Marietta, pledgemaster.
THE NEWLY-ELECTED group in
cludes Lynda Bradbury, Atlanta;
Bonnie Jernigan, Atlanta; Jack
Candler, Atlanta; Dick Epstein, Nor
walk, Conn., and Alan Fialkow, Sa
vannah.
Forty candidates tried out in the
two and a half-hour sessions which
were concluded with the new group
leading the crowd In a cheer of
"Wreck Tech.”
Of the members, only Dunaway
and Bates will be seniors in the fall;
the rest will be juniors. The new
group lists all sophomores except
Fialkow, who will be a junior.
The tryouts concluded two weeks
of a practice clinic held for the can
didates under the direction of Clem
ence.
Students Select
18 Candidates
By CAROL UTO
and
TERRY HAZELWOOD
Charlie Christian, Independent,
[and David Fletcher, l’hi Delta
Theta, will oppose each other in
Wednesday’s class officer elec
tions for senior class president.
They were selected in Tuesday
and Wednesday’s primaries.
Other senior class candidates chos
en this week nre Linda Treadway.
Kappa Delta, and Mary Helen Mc-
Ginity, Augusta, vice president, and
Wayian Cheney, Morgan, and Bill
Dunaway, Pi Kappa Alpha, secretary-
treasurer.
Junior candidates who won in the
primaries are Pete Vig, Kappa Stg,
and Lee Jarrett, Rome, president;
Emily Byrd, Kingstree, S. C., and
Marilyn Delong, Alpha Delta PI, vice
president, and Kay Copeland, Zeta
Tau Alpha, and Loy Jarrett, Rome,
secretary-treasurer.
Those selected to run for sopho
more officers are Tommy Stripling,
Cordele, and Ed Garland, Kappa
Alpha, president;
Frances Hitch
cock, Kappa Del
ta, and Olivia Coe,
Winston - Salem,
N. C. t vice presi
dent, and Billy » w
Ross, Lincolnton,
and Charlie David- ^
son, Sigma Nu, fjffl V
secretary - treasu-
rer. Fletcher
Fletcher, Atlanta, Is majoring In
social studies and has been president
of hiB freshman, sophomore, and
junior classes. He
I I Key and Is on the
ness ma J°r. He is
flub,
inn, and Delta Slg-
rna Pi. He is a
Christian
committee chair
man for the Business Day. May 4.
Jarrett Is an agricultural engineer
ing major. He is a member of the
College 4-H Club, Pyramid, and is
scribe for the Ag Engineers.
Boxes used in the primaries will
be used for the election.
CANDIDATES for the Greek Party are, (L to It), first row, Linda
Treadway, Hill Dunaway: second row, Pete Vig, Marilyn Delong,
Kay Copeland; third row, Ed Garland, Francis Hitchcock, and Charlie
Davidson,
i l ' TF\XI tl EOMMESTS
Anti-Slavery Move Grows
Gradually In New England
By JOHN LaROHCH
The Abolishment of African Servitude movement had begun and
by earefill |diimiing on behalf of the originators, the majority of the
North was slowly turned against its Southern brothers.
The anti-slavery movement was at New England; Us most important
first merely one of many. It rose
to dominance only gradually. Fortu
nate from the beginning til leader
ship, It was always fortunate In ap
peal. Almost from the beginning of
the movement, two distinct and Indi
vidual centers of action appeared,
each with Its distinct and individual
approach to the problem.
Arnold Air Society Names
Itroadnax New Commander
Ibsen Drama Begins Tuesday
By STUART CULPEPPER
’ilcdda Gabler, a drama-charged play about an ill-fated woman
driven to destruction by the reality of 1 ife, opens in Fine Arts Audi
torium Tuesday night, April 26.
Being produced for arena produc
tion, the four-act play is under the
direction of Dr. James A. Popovich.
The drama was written by Henrik
Ibsen.
Susan Barrett stars as Hedda, a
willful, bored woman who is mar
ried to a man she does not love.
Graham Woodruff is featured as
George Tesman, the husband, a
boorish scholar who loves his wife
with the same affection he holds
for his history books.
Others in the cast are Cary By
num as Judge Brack; Geraldine
30, is 8:15 p.m. Reserved seats are
on sale at the drama department of
fice for $1.50.
THE FIRST AREA of develop
ment was In the industrial areas of
★ ★ ★
Tutors lltuiil flitlldofis
Seventh League Lotts
The Georgia baseball team
suffered its 11th defeat in 15
outings Tuesday at the hands
of the Florida Gators, 10-6.
For three innings. Mike Tully
and Florida’s Jim Young were
locked in a scoreless pitching
duel, hut the Gators got to
Tully for three runs in the
fourth Inning and continued
ther onslaught against Max
Staples and John Nuckolls, who
came on In relief of Tully.
Tommy Vandiver, with two
hits, and Art Patchin, with
three runs hutted in, were the
leading Bulldog batsmen.
Georgia’s next home game is
April 23 against Clemson.
member was William Lloyd Garri
son, founder and editor of the Boston
abolition pupor, the Liberator. Gar
rison pointed slnvery out as an evil
to be done away with very gradually,
hut by 1835, he hud denounced slav
ery as a crime.
The second urea of the develop
ment was in upper New York State
and in the Northwest. The Influences
from this center included rural New
England, the Middle States, and New
York City.
• • *
THIS AREA was headed by Theo
dore Weld, the ahleHt temperance
orator In the Northwest. Weld made
the anti-slavery cause Identical with
religion and impressed men with the
idea that slavery was a sin In the
eyes of God.
The new growth and importance
of the movement left the way open
for propaganda which now reached
new efficiency.
The North had many accusations
to make against the South; the
South, however, had a very strong
case for the defense of slavery.
John E. Broadnax, junior, Athens,
has been elected commander of the
Arnold Air Society for the coming Harper, Mrs. Elvstead; Lena Moore
year - I Auntie Tesman; Peggy Brown, Ber-
Other officers are Ronald 0.1 an( j Dick Bowden, Eilert Lov-
Bond, junior, Athens, executive of-!j, orK
ficer; Joseph T. Davis, junior, Mar-1 Curtain time for the production,
shallville, adjutant-recorder; Mike | which runs through Saturday, April
Scruggs, junior, East Point, comp
troller, and Robert L. Wade, junior.
Department of Kntoinoloi(y
Hank* Fourtli in Knrollment
The University of Georgia en
tomology department has been rank
ed fourth largest in the United
States In terms of the number of
undergraduate majors.
Established at the University in
1954, and headed hy Dr. Horace C.
^ Lund, the Georgia entomology de
partment is the only such college
department in the state of Georgia.
The largest department In the na-
Athens, operations
The Arnold Air Society
is an
(j)iini-il Plans Spring Dance
The Reed-Milledge Halls Council
honorary society for advanced Air' will hold its annual spring dance in
Force students. The society is com-! Memorial Hall, Saturday, May 21. i
posed of the elite members of the
AFROTC cadet corps who show out
standing ability and interest in the
Air Science program at the Univer
sity.
Music for the occasion will be
provided by the Celestials, a six-
piece band from Augusta. This dance
is open only to freshmen and their DRESS REHERSAL “HEDDA GABLER”
dates. Pictured above IL to ft) are Cary Bynum, Bunin Barrett, and Graham Woodruff
i tIon is at the University of Callfor-
j nla, where 52 students are enrolled.
The University of Florida ranks sec-
‘ond with 35. Texas A&M has 30 for
{third place, and Georgia Is fourth
with 26.
<-all Receives History Grant
Thelma Jean Call, graduate stu
dent from Athens, has received a
$1,200 fellowship to work on a
Ph.D. in history at the University of
Indiana.
She will receive her M.A. in his
tory in August and begin her gradu
ate studies next tall.
®f)e Eeb anb IHacfe
America'* Pre-Eminent College Weekly for 87 Years
Volume LXVII
THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, GEORGIA,Till USD AY, APRIL HI, 11*00
Number 2.1
Christian, Fletcher Vie For Senior President