Newspaper Page Text
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CAMI'HS l*(M.l,
Student Opinions Vary On Campus Leadership
tiolwif ZZlrZ hliStSlSS'i t fiSXXP y '"‘ " ,ink
i*::r; as i j^jrs^ri.ar- ss
J" ken n 1 he,,,ful fttlludo hut .put. Some have encouraged demon-,
from ha d ve rM n^Ve*ned'ln a In» the ’ ,tr “ tl0n8 ' but 0,1 ,he Hther hand, ceIlent leadership by our fellow stu-
j.tsriss i,™. o. no
taken a posi
Tommy Moore, Waycross, Junior,
pre-law—“There has heen some ex
and I question their leadership from , t , a .... " ea demonstrations , »ut, I have heard of no at-
here '‘.adershlp from and Issued petitions favoring Integra- tempts by any of our 'leaders’ to
| disperse any of the so-called mobs.”
N M MAN
i’ltivt i:
Lanier ( hainbent, Cleveland, Jun
ior. husineiH "I feel that students
ere being led by outside Interference
Nan I la iron, Atlanta, Junior, arts
.. ... nnd "elences—“Yes, I feel that the
“' ,dh °m* t,,wn "pinion Instead of by">»Jority upheld their position by
calling for no violence.”
campus l< aders.”
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n i.ixim
Linda Ciillom, Albany, senior
Journalism—“I think campus leaders
did a good job as far as they could
especially WSOA.”
IMii Kappa Selects
Dunson President
Mnton Dunson, Athens, has been
named new president of Phi Kappa
I Iternry Society.
Other officers named were Tom
Haynes, Augusta, first vice president-
Joe Harris, Atlanta, chief Justlce :
nml Jay Cook, Savannah, secretary
Itbb rd Truitt. Warner Robins, was
named chancellor.
Dean of Men William Tate, guest
speaker at the January 11 meeting,
Mive Ins annual “State of the State”
address.
Patronize
THE
REI) ANI) BLACK
Advertisers
University Brings Believers
Of Various Faiths Together
of ihe Keli(jion-in-Life Committee at the University. e work
Like many of the college campuses in the United States the Uni
world' ^ a ' me tl,lg POt ” f ° r the different beliefs of man in today’s
There are, to name a few, Budd
hists, Jews, Christians, Moslems,
Unitarians,
etc
From the
minute the student
first comes to the
University's cam
pus he is impres
sed with the diver
sity of beliefs.
Some college
students keep their
full identity with
the church or synagogue of their
choice; others become more liberal;
still others become agnostics. Even
with this changing view the student,
no matter what he believes, has one
thing in common with his neighbor:
a belief in life and death. As long as
be has this belief he has a form of
religion.
Religion then further divides into
Iheistic and non-theistic. Theism is
Ihe belief in the existence of a God
o! gods. Nearly all religions of the
western world are monotheistic or
he belief in the existence of one
Cod
(Continued next week)
Board Picks New Member*
Five new members have been elect
ed to the Student Center Board of
Directors.
The students are Carol Buckley,
1 vid Hayes. Annette Rowell, Mary
Jim Higginbotham, and Gall Bow
den They were chosen at the last
meeting of the hoard. Nelda Pickern
was elected secretary to fill the va
cancy left by Mary Simmons who
graduated.
me complete information about
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Nam*. , ,
Addrom.
Citj....
Cox Releases
Permit Totals
There are a total of 6,14 6 cars
registered for parking at John Cox’s
office.
The total breaks down to 2,445
unrestricted spaces, 215 restricted,
25 off-campus, and 2,451 faculty cars
registered.
According to Bill Mathias of John
Cox’s office, there are no plans to
take over any new student lots for
faculty uses. There is at present a
parking lot being reconstructed near
Conner Hall on South Campus that
will be taken over for faculty park
ing, and according to Mathias, that
should relieve the student problem
in Dawson lot.
All of the money that has been
collected in fines and permits in the
last 15 months has gone into paving
the Stegeman Hall parking lot. “All
of the money that was collected in
fines and permits has been lumped
into one fund, and with some money
added by the state legislature, the
Stegeman lot was paved,” Mathias
said.
7.0M
Suit
lb«n -r Men William Tate bis b«, THE R K |> AND BLACK
lilitotographor ut (lie fir*t «r n le> »»i»l i.. *
from icrini to buoyant, Ueon Tate aimar . T "’* ° f ***** ran * ,n *
over,.me In good .piriu despite the school'crisis. “ MemP * ,nB t0 kpp '’
Refresh with
Milk!
Nature’s Lift!
BETTER MAID DAIRIES. INC.
Mark lo Normal . . .
Continued from page 1
changed to II. Regular hours may
result if everything | s normal until
then.
Doth Charlayne and Hamilton ap
peared more nervous when they re
turned to classes Monday under a
court order by Judge William Bootle
of Macon restraining officials from
obstruction their class attendance.
Holmes told one newsman he
“hopes everything will soon get back
to normal. I’ve got a lot of catching
up to do.”
As the two Negroes took their
places beside some 7,200 whites as
classmates at the University for a
second time, many campus groups
expressed hopes there would be no
reoccurrence of last Wednesday’s epi
sode.
A strongly-worded petition was
adopted and signed by almost three-
quarters of the faculty, deploring
any further riots and calling on state
officials to maintain order through-
out the issue.
The toachers indirectly criticized
urali-segregationist Roy Harris of
Augusta for his verbal attack on
University President O. C. Aderhold
and Dean of Men William Tate.
Harris, a member of the Board of
Regents, was quoted by one of the
Wednesday night rioters as “backing
us 100 per cent in everything we do
here.”
Another resolution signed by 28
University students read, in part, as
follows:
"We demand that the University
of Georgia no longer be used as a
political pawn and that decisive ac
tion on the part of the administra
tion and the students be taken to
prevent any further wanton disre
gard of order.”
Another petition, signed by 1200
Athens citizens, praised the actions
of Athens Mayor Ralph Snow, Police
Chief E. E. Hardy and his 40-man
force, President Aderhold, Dean Tate,
and University officials in handling
the integration problem.
Athens Mayor Ralph Snow and
Police Chief E. E. Hardy told one
newsman they hoped outside inter
vention in the racial crisis here would
stop.
Their statement apparently re
ferred to the arrest Wednesday night
i Eight Ku Klux Klansmen, un
robed but armed with six pistols. The
^ight, all listing home addresses In
the Atlanta area, included two who
were special deputy sheriffs in Ful
ton County. They all were bound
over to the Clarke County Superior
Court.