Newspaper Page Text
VoIiiiih* LXVIII
Number 0
Efje l\eb anb placfe
America’s Pre-Eminent College Weekly for 68 years
THK l NIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, GEORGIA Till KSItAV. DECEMBER I. I<MM>
MIKK SCKI'IKiH, Kwtt I’oint, Is shown rcrcIvliiK tlx* lllstln(iilslinl
AFROTC Cadet Award from Colonel (o-orgc K. Crain, head of (lie
AFKOTO. The award is the highest honor an advanced AKROTC cadet
can receive. Scruggs, who is the first I'nlverslty cadet to receive
the award. Is a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences and Is
majoring in Psychology.
OUTSTANDING STUDENTS
Board Selects 36 Students
To Who’s Who In Colleges
By DEVARA FELSON
Thirty-six University juniors and seniors were chosen to appear in
the annual publication of Who’s Who in American Universities and
Colleges.
F reshman V ote Unofficial;
Latest Count Favors IFC
A III, A! PREPARES To Torn GEORGI A CENTER
Vnireroity officials and students talk with Stevenson
AT i.KOm.li CENTER
Stevenson Expresses
Opinion Of University
By BILL HOAGLAND and ALAN WEXLER
“It looks splendid to me -the facilities and the students,” said
former Illinois governor Adlai Stevenson after a tour of the Georgia
Center for Continuing Education recently.
NEWS If KIEFS
Talent Auditions
Set For Saturday
AUDITIONS FOR the annual
Freshman Talent Show will be held
Saturday morning from 9:30-12 in
the University Chapel. All freshmen
who are interested in appearing In
the show, Including those selected
from the various dormitories, should
attend.
• • •
AN EXHIBIT from the Moscow
Art Theatre will die shown at the
Georgia Museum Dec. 1-15. The ex
hibit includes programs, maps, and
140 production photographs.
• * •
RUDOLPH HKGGS was elected
president of the Agricultural Eco
nomics Club at their Nov. 22 meet
ing.
Other new officers are John
Lampp, vice president; Grover Cobb,
secretary: Robert Ellison, treasurer;
Fred Greer, reporter, and Thomas
Aaron, advisor.
• • •
THE DAIRY Science Club will
hold its annual banquet at the Geor
gia Center at 7 tomorrow night.
Dr. Ralph Hodgson, U. S. Department
of Agriculture, will speak.
Outstanding 4-H’ers
Receive Recognition
A University alumnus and a stu
dent have been awarded first place
In the 39th annual National 4-H
Club Congress being held In Chi
cago.
The national winners, Harold
Joiner, farm editor of The Atlanta
Journal, and graduate of the Henry
W. Grady School of Journalism, and
Charlene Rushton, presently enrolled
in the Home Economics School, won
the National Alumni Award and first
place in the Yeast Bread Division.
Mr. Joiner has served as president
of the Masters Club, an organization
composed of state winners of the
4-H clubs. He spent six months in
Germany under the International
Farm Youth Exchange program,
spectively.
The University Is also represented
by two sectional winners. The win
ters, Pete Peebles and Karen Sue
Fowler, are both freshmen. Miss Fow
ler was awarded sectional honors In
leadership, while Peebles won In the
torestry division.
The students selected were Janne
Butler, Corrille Morris, Elaine Mer-
rell, David Fletcher, Joseph Clarence
Harris, Randall Hicks, Frank An
thony James, Charlotte Jones, Eileen
Little, Lamar Fleming, John Vere
Risser, Billy Weeks, William Stanley
Hatcher, William Dunaway, James
Whelchel.
Roslyn Goldstein, Marie Shirley,
Peggy Bargeron, Tom Blalock,
Sandra Johnson, Hilda Hubbard,
Martha Evans, Marilyn DeLong, Billy
Jack Stone, George Edward Norman,
Thomas Emmett Maddox, Robert
Carpenter, Francis Willard Rushing,
Patrick Harold Casey, Cary Winkle,
Kollin McCommons. Elaine Horn-
huekle, William Weaver, Charlsey
Moon, Judith Lee Oudshoff, and
Bryant Hodgson.
A faculty committee to govern stu-
dent affairs decides on the policy
for the elections. The elections com
mittee is composed of a representative
from the Department of Student
Activities, the Dean of Women, the
Dean of Men, and student members
from each school and college ap
pointed by the Student Council chair
man and John Cox.
Criteria considered in electing the
students are outstanding scholarship,
participation In extra-curricular act
ivities, and promise of future service
to communty and country.
Rhodes Loses
Original Lead
By GEORGE WATTS
Red and Black Staff Writer
Results of the freshman elec
tions for class offices remain un
official after a recount Monday.
The original count of the ballots
showed that the Independents led
the President’s race by one vote while
the Greek’s won the vice presidency
by 86 votes, and the secretary-trea
surer’s race by 260 votes.
A recount was made for the presi
dent's race only. The totals after
the recount were: president—Mil
ner 620, Rhodes 565; vice-president
—Williams 637, McBride 661; sec.-
treas.—Prince 724, and Fowler 4 64.
The ballots, which were locked up
in the office of the Director of Stu
dent Activities, John Cox, over the
Thanksgiving holidays were re
counted Monday. The Greeks showed
u 55 vote margin over the Indepen
dents In the race for president.
Cox stated that he has given In
dependent Party Campus Leader
Lowell Kirby until Thursday at 6
p.m. to turn in a written protest to
his office. If he does not receive
the protest, the results of the second
count will he announced as official
Friday morning, Dec. 2.
In the event that the election Is
contested It will be sent to a faculty
elections board composed of six mem
bers.
Campus Leader Kirby commenting
on the difference in the two counts
stated that "It appears that there
is a Houdini somewhere on campus.
Greek* Donnie $300
To Medical Association
The Interfraternity and Pan-
hellenic Councils raised $300
for the Muscular Dystrophy As
sociation last Tuesday evening.
This was another of the com
munity services rendered by
these organizations each year.
Mr. Lawrence Thompson, rep
resentative of the Muscular Dy
strophy Association, said he was
very pleased with the coopera
tion of the students and with
the results of the campaign.
The coordinators of the stu
dent drive were Corille Morris,
representing Panhellic, and
Rhett Tanner of the Interfra
ternity Council.
Stevenson, twice Democratic can
didate for president, with several mem
bers of the board of directors of thu
Marshall Field Foundation appeared
visibly Impressed by the facilities at
the center.
University officials Including Presi
dent O. C. Aderhold and Hugh Mas
ters, head of the Georgia Center,
were on hand to greet the statesman,
who Is considered by many ub a top
prospect for a high cabinet post In
Pres.-Elect John F. Kennedy's ad
ministration.
Asked by Red and IHack reporters
if lie would accept a cabinet position,
Stevenson replied, "It would depend
on what It was. I have never dis
cussed It with Sen. Kennedy, so It
would he impossible for me to an
swer.”
Gov. Stevenson said "Surely” when
asked If he felt that the college
campus were a good place to get
started In politics. In foreign coun
tries, he observed, reform movements
have often started with students, and
although he expressed regret "that
this is not always the case In the
United States, students here are more
Involved and committed than they
used to be.”
When asked If “science can save
us,” Stevenson redirected the ques
tion to law student Fred Clark who
was standing nearby. Clark replied,
"I don’t know; I'm a lawyer,” where
upon Stevenson quipped, "Even the
luwyers don’t know!”
Goldwater Speaks
To IFC Delegates
At L.A. < ’(invention
Sen. Barry Goldwater was the prin
cipal speaker at the National Inter
Fraternity Conference In Los Angeles,
Calif., Nov. 24-26. Bryant Hodgson,
Atlanta, junior, and Tommy Burn
side, Thomson, third year law stu
dent, attended the conference.
Movie star Jayne Mansfield at
tended a smoker at the first gather
ing of the conference.
Hodgson commented, "The trip
was very exciting and inspiring.”
Other distinguished guests In
cluded Rudy Vallt, Pete Newell, coach
of the Olympic basketball team this
year, Marilyn Horne, San Francisco
Opera, Dr. Franklin D. Murphy, Uni
versity of California, and Ulysses
Grant Dubach, former dean of men
at Oregon State University.
The conference featured discussion
groups and panels concerned with
problems on publications, alumni re
lations, and various phases of In-
terfraternlty relations.
Authorities Arrest SealpiTs
At Saturday Football Game
Athens police arrested two men on
charges of ticket "scalping" at the
Tech-Georgia game Saturday.
Joe R. Dunbar, Manassas, Va., was
arrested by Chief of Police E. E.
Hardy and policeman Hollis KInsby
cn Clayton Street Saturday morning.
Harold E. Langford, Atlanta, was ar
rested at Sanford Stadium by Lt.
W. E. McKinnon and policeman
Clarence Schultz.
I^augford was fined $105 in City
Recorders Court. Dunbar's case la
set for tomorrow (Friday).
Assistant Police Chief James Hans
ford said that this Is the first arrest
for "scalping" In several years.
Legislature Furnishes Grant
For New Pharmacy Building
By DON MURTHA
Red and Black Staff Writer
A new $1,600,000 Pharmacy building ix presently in the planning
stage for the University of Georgia.
The new building will include faci
lities for all phases of pharmacy. In
cluding industrial, manufacturing,
hospital, and retail. The building
will also include expanded facilities
for graduate students.
In the new four-story structure,
the pharmacy department will have
facilities for producing all drugs and
medicines for its own UBe and for the
University infirmary. This will In
clude a greenhouse for growing medi
cal plants. The building will also
feature a museum of pharmaceutical
antiques and model of an old apothe
cary.
Facilities for all students will be
greatly increased. The building is
planned for 500 students—the de
partment presently has 327.
The department will concentrate
on increasing Its graduate enroll
ment. Fifty graduate research labs
are planned Including a radio isotope
lab and a hospital pharmacy sequence
will be added to the department as
a result of the new structure.
Vi
iMJj, '
ARCHITEfTS DRAWING OF NEW PHARMACY BE
Proposed University addition to cost %t.600,000
tl ♦ «««••*
"■CASN—
ILDING