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VOLUME LXXV
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, GA 30601 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1968
NUMBER 8
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1
Marshall Expounds
New Activism Need
Equality
Keynotes
Message
Collapse
Fatal !o
Student
Cavan Rolls Out, lliillilogs Roll
Georgia Quarterback Mike Cavan rolls out behind the block
ing of fullback Brad Johnson in Saturday's game against
Clemson. The combined passing of Cavan and Donnie
Hampton netted the Bulldogs 300 yards in the air and
riddled the Tiger defense for a 31-13 win over the defending
Atlantic Coast Conference champions. Complete game coverage
plus this week's top 20 are found on pages six and seven.
Playboy Official
To Spe ak 11 ere
On Sex Theory
Anson Mount, the public af
fairs manager for Playboy, Inc.,
will deliver a program on "Sex
and the New Morality" Wed
nesday October 2 at 7:30 p.m.
in the Memorial Hall lounge.
The program will be high-
lifted by a thirty minute film
entitled "Would you believe?"
which is the Ufe story of Hugh
Hefner, innovator of the Play
boy magazine, club and philo
sophy
Mount's discussion will relate
the new morality theory to Hef
ner's Playboy philosophy, which
according to Mount are mis
takenly considered the same
Following the planned program
there will be a question-answer
discussion period. _
SGA-U SGA Review Changes
In Regulationsat Joint Session
Rex Warren Harrison, 19, a
sophomore from Toccoa, died at
Athens General Hospital yester
day afternoon after collapsing
in a hallwav in Baldwin Hall
According to witnesses, Har
rison collapsed in the hallway
about 3:30 p.m yesterday where
he administered emergency
treatment by Dr Steve King
of the University Health Ser
vices. He was taken to the
emergency room of Athens
General Hospital where he ar
rived at 4:05 p.m and was
pronounced dead at 4:30 p.m
of an "apparent cardiopul
monary collapse "
Harrison was the son of Mr
and Mrs. Eugene 0. Harrison.
The father is associated with
soil conservation in Toccoa
while Mrs. Harrison is the
Stephens County Home De
monstration agent.
Mathews Mortuary of Toe-
caa has charge of the funeral
arrangements.
CitizenKane
Runs Twice
Citizens Kane will be shown
twice. 8 and 10 p.m.. on October
11 rather than the October 18
Fields’s Festival as indicated
in the University Union ad on
page 10 of the September 27
issue of the Red and Black.
By MIKE HOWELL
R&B News Editor
Student Government Associa
tion and the Women's Student
Government Association held a
joint meeting on September 21
to orient the women’s dorm and
sorority house presidents on the
rules revisions going into effect
this quarter
A panel led by Patsy McClecse.
WSGA president, and consisting
of Melissa Houseal. WSGA vice-
president, Betty Oliver, minister
to Women's affairs. A1 Dasher,
minister to student affairs, Ran
dall Seabolt, student body vice-
president, and Carol Spring, stu
dent body secretary, discussed
the newly inplemented regula
tions.
In regards to curfew, the panel
restated the 11:30 p.m and 12:30
a m. curfews for freshmen and
12 p m. and 1 a m. curfews for
sophomores and juniors not hav
ing parental permission for cur
few exemption. All women who
are seniors or are twenty-one
years old are exempt from cur
few, along with those who have
To Acce
pi Top
ICS
Free University
Plans Discussion
The first meeting of the Free
University will be Thursday,
October 3. at 7:30 in Westmins
ter House at which time topics
for discussion will be accepted
or altered as the members de-
LeConte, GUM
Opens Doors
To Students
The office of the vice-presi
dent for instruction has an
nounced the opening of
various rooms in LeConte
Hall and the GGM building for
the use of students as study
areas at night
In an announcement from the
vice-president s office. Ted L
Hammock, administrative as
sistant. staled, "There have
been numerous requests from
students that some class
rooms be opened for study at
night Arrangements have been
made to keep rooms in Le-
Conte Hall and the GGM build
mg open for this purpose until
midnight on Monday through
Friday of each week
"If effective use is made of
these rooms, they will be kept
for the duration of the Fall
quarter and arrangements will
be made for rooms to be made
available for each subsequent
quarter
The Free University spon
sored by the SSOC/SDS chap
ter of the University had en
rolled over 235 students by the
end of registration Wednesday
for their conception of a con
structive alternative to present
day colleges which are devoid
of all but rhetoric and hind
sight. according to Pat Nelson
The number far exceeded the
estimated student sign-up and
as a result of this overwhelm
ing interest on the part of the
students, there may possibly
be more courses offered The
discussions tentatively
planned for participants range
from "The New Theology to
"Contemporary Biology" with
emphasis on individual inv
olvement The direction of all
class discussions will be de
termined by the members them
selves. supplemented by pro
jects outside the groups
Nelson said that all ses
sions will emphasize reality
and involvement as the base
onto which all educational ex
periences should be founded
and noted that it is "quite pos
sible you will find your educa
tional experience at UGA re
sembling a four-year-long off
color anecdote the punch line
being your diploma and the
only thing you can do is grin
uncomfortably
curfew exemptions filed with |
the dean of women.
At the meeting the only men
tion of a drinking rule was that
the regulations of the University
o:'-Georgia concerning the sub
ject would conform to Geor
gia law
In regards to curfew im
plementation methods which
will be used, the panel said
that every woman student who
is exempt from curfew is re
quired to show a curfew ID
card along with her regular
student ID to be admitted to
her dorm after curfew.
A mghtwatchman will be on
duty in all the dorms to admit
girls returning after curfew.
The watchman will be on duty
from 12 p.m. to 7:30 a m on
Sinday through Thursday and
| from 1 a m. to 7:30 a m. on Fri
day and Saturday.
Any student who will be out
of the dorm later than 6 a m
must sign herself out for over-
mght The new rules also con
tain no restriction on visiting
men s apartments
Demerits will no longer be
used on an overall basis; how
ever. individual dorms can in
stitute a demerit system for en
forcement of its own rules.
The group suggested a sys
tem of spot bedeheck to be an
nounced beforehand for the
dorms to replace the standard
procedure of overall bedeheck
The WSGA Main Court will
be replaced by a staff chosen
probably trom the dorm presi
dents during the transitional
period to a new SGA judiciary
WSGA will continue in its
disciplinary functions until the
institution of the SGA judiciary
after which it will become pri
marily a body implementing pro
grams of interests to women
students
In an announcement from SGA
secretary, Carol Spring said,
"SGA would like to thank
WSGA, Miss Nelle Scholz, and
Dean Louise McBee for all
their cooperation and confi
dence in helping SGA incor
porate WSGAs disciplinary
branch into the framework of
an entirely new SGA judiciary.
Marshall Addresses Forum
In a speech concerning the history and "spirit of the four
teenth amendment, Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall of
the U S. Supreme Court, called for "A new activism in pursuit
of justice. "
The forum, sponsored bv the Student Bar Association, was
held in the auditorium of the Georgia Center for Continuing
Education.
Drive Starts Today
Alumni Society Sets
Loyalty Lund Goal
INSIDE
Phi Kappa Phi honorary soci-
etv announces its new members
in a story on page 2.
Interested in Karate? A new
class is beginning tonight
See the story on page 9.
Feature editor Cynthia Baugh
captures the feelings of Debbie
Williams as she experiences rush
for the first time. Her first time
through rush is a first in itself
The details are on page 5
Students reveal why they
came to college, this college
and what they expect to get
while they are here in a page
5 feature
The University's Alumni Soc
iety started its INI Loyalty
Fund drive today, with a $300-
000 goal set for the campaign.
This goal includes $200,000 in
unrestricted funds and $100,000
in special gifts.
The first phase of the drive,
aimed at reaching 20.000 of the
nearly 65,000 Georgia alumni,
will focus on a piogram of per
sonal contacts carried out by-
select committees in each of
the state's 10 Congressional
dirtricts.
ESC Ducats
Go On Sale
At Coliseum
Sales of student, dependent
and guest tickets for Satur
day night's South Carolina
football game in Columbia
will begin tonight, Tuesday,
at the Coliseum on a basis
of one ticket per student.
The Coliseum ticket win
dow will be open tonight,
Wednesday and Thursday
from 7-9 p m. for sales of i R lllf c*™ Krlda >' Tt “‘ st,,r y
Sports editor Pat Rogers cap
tures the bruising excitement
of the Clemson game in his
page 6 story.
A dream came true with the
opening of the new University
available tickets to students
bearinng their 1968-88 ID I
cards.
'Die cost will be $6 00 per j
ticket.
Tickets for adjoining seats j
will be available only if stu- j
dents wishing to sit together I
appear at the ticket window .
together. If the outside win !
dow is closed, tickets may ]
be purchased at the ticket j
office on the second fluor of j
the Cohseuijl
Kickoff time is 7:30 p.m |
as Georgia faces the Game
cocks, 32-27 victors over
North Carolina this past week
end It will be the second
straight game against an
Atlantic Cost Conference foe
for the Bulldogs South C?ro-
lina lost its first game of
tin- season to Duke
is on page 7 along with details
about the new tennis courts.
Editorials
News Briefs
Sports
Women's . .
4
3
6-7
Marrieds
To Meet
There will be a meeting of
all married students interested
in the Independent party Wed
nesday. October 2 at 7:30 p.m.
in the Forestry Audit A pro
gram with discussions centered
on married student problems at
the University is planned
New Editor
Names Staff
Of Pandora
Nicky Nichols, editor of the
1969 Pandora, has announced th
members of her staff.
Students selected from ap
plications made last spring
include Stelle (-’handler. Manag
ing editor; Karen Ward, assist
ant managing editor; John Al
bright, business manager;
Carol Head. Greek editor; Bet
ty Johnson and Merry Tyler,
assistant Greek editors; Su
san Brown, organizations edi
tor; Lee Lovvran, assistant
organizations editor
Janies Jones, classes edi
tor; Amy Mosely, assistant
classes editor; Richard Linde-
mann. sports editor. Terry
Sullivan, assistant sports edi
tor; Carol Wesson, assistant
art editor. Dee Dee Baggs. mil
itary editor; Mary Olson, as
sistant military editor. Beryle
Paschal, index editor; Lora
Paschal, assistant index edi
tor. and Martha Moultrie and
Susan Stafford, editorial as
sistants.
The first general staff meet
ing will be held at 7 p.m. Thurs
day in Room 414 of Memorial
Hall Anyone interested in
working on the Pandora is
urged to get in touch with a
staff member or call the Pan
dora office anv afternoon
Funds raised by the Alumni
Society in its annual effort are
used to supplement state money
in such areas as scholarships
and faculty salaries, and to pay
for operation of various alum
ni programs.
‘•'nie University is mostly
supported by tax revenue,
said Alumni Relations Director
Tyus Butler, "so it does not
have to concern itself with men*
survival because the basics of
academic life are provided.
"However, the basics are not
enough to provide the Uni
versity with the added capacity
needed to maintain a foun
dation of excellence. The* Uni
versity is emerging as an in
stitution where quality and ex
cellence are the watchwords,
and as it moves forward, the
support of loyal and dedicated
alumni is needed more than
ever before. "
Robert G. Edge, an honor
graduate of 1960 and a former
Rhodes Scholar, is general chair
man for the 1969 campaign
Mr Edge, an attorney, prac
tices with the firm of Alston
Miller & Gaines in Atlanta
Lawrence H McDaniel, associ
ate director of alumni re
lations, heads the fund or
ganization planning for the
Society.
Photo Days Set
Class pictures for independ
ent students are being taken
through Friday of this week
and Monday through Friday of
next week
Photographers will be on the
fourth floor of Memorial Hall
from 9 a m till 12 noon. 1 p.m
till 5:30 p m and 7 p.m till •
p.m. with the exception of Fri
day evening
Students who did not pur
chase an appointment slip at
registration may do so in the
Student Activities office on the
second floor of Memorial
Hall. Photographic cost is
SI 50
rws&ms&v:
By REBECCA IJCET
Citing the "need for a new
activism, an activism in pur
suit of justice." Supreme Court
Associate Justice Thurgood Mar
shall last night charged a cam
pus audience with the duty of
maintaining "constant vigi
lance to keep justice and free
dom" and guard against the
•complex and pervading cancer
of inequality and injustice."
Speaking at the Georgia Center
under the sponsorship of the l.aw
School Forum. Marshall cau
tioned people about being "fri
ghtened" by widespread mani
festations of discontent in Ameri
ca. Noting that this country
"was settled by discontent," he
cited the Declaration of In
dependence and the Consti
tution as examples of progress
prompted by discontent.
Marshall’s speech focused on
the 14th amendment to the Con
stitution which has usually
been the basis for recent civil
rights decisions. He traced the
history of the amendment from
its origin in the post-Civil War
years through the decline in its
enforcement from the 1870 s
through the early 1950’s He
noted that recent changes ef
fected largely through a resur
gence in the amendment's import
ance have been the result of law
yers and private citizens who
"never gave up the fight to
secure the rights grained under
it.
The Justice stated that the
ideals which originally prompted
the amendment are yet to be
fulfilled. It is a task left to the
citizens of the future to build
institutions which will allow its
promise to be fulfilled, he charged.
Mars, la11 reminded the predo
minantly legally-minded audience
that the law profession demands
more from its members than
the mere duties of citizenship
Quoting Elihu Root, he noted
that a lawyer "is the advocate
of all men present and future "
In closing, he said that his
faith in the American system
rests in that fact that "no mat
ter what happens, this is still a
government of laws, not of
men.
During Marshall's manv years
of experience as a legal coun
selor for the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACPt he argued
numerous civil rights cases, in
cluding the landmark Brown vs
the Board of Education case
wherein the Supreme Court
outlawed the policy off "sepa
rate but equal" facilities. He
was named to a Circuit Court
of Appeals in 1962 before being
lapptsl by President Lyndon John
son for the post of Solicitor
General of the United States
Two years later, in 1967 John
son again called on Marshall,
this lime to fill a vancy on
the Supreme Court caused by
the retirement of Associate
Justice Tom Clark
*Red and Rlack Presidential Survey
Students State Election Preferences
Bv STEPHEN GLASSER
This election year which has
seen the rise and fall of num
erous candidates has also
marked the beginning of a ne w
era of participation of young
people in politics
Considering the involvement
of many University students and
the range of political opinion
from far left to extreme right,
the Red and Black surveyed a
number of students to determine
the political climate on campus
The students were asked for
their candidate preferences,
guess as to who would win and
other questions related to the
election
Cathie Bradley, a psychology
major from Athens, wants Rich
ard Nixon . because he
w? its to change things from
the way they are. and Humph-
hrey would stay with Johnson
Anything’s better than now I'm
not against the war in Viet
nam I just don't think its
being conducted right When
asked if George Wallace could
force the election into the House
of Representatives she replied
that his chances were ex
cellent. because he's earning
so manv states in the South.
and carrying a!ol of support
in the North and he* said
he'd give his votes to whoever
made him Attorney General
Jim Srarbary. a music edu
cation major from Macon, re
plied I'm for Nixon because
I feel he’s the best of the
three I’m not for Humphrey be
cause of the Democrats’ Great
Sonetv' I'm not for Wallace
because of the way he gains his
popularity I feel that Nixon is
nut seeking votes from his sup
porters by idealistic promises to
end the war and to offer some
thing for nothing for those who
don't deserve it." To the ques
tion of Wallace and the* House of
Representatives. Jim replied
Wallace could definitely
do it. because Maddox or
should I say Ellis Amall
showed that it can be done "
FAVORS HUMPHREY WAR
STAND
Mike Bennett, an accounting
major from Macon, wants Hub
ert Himphrey . ‘ because I
think he's in favor of ending the
war m Vietnam I don't think
he'll bomb them out. because
no one man can decide that on
his own I think that he'll sup
port the Vietnam peace talks.
and that he’ll get some more
Vietnamese to fight instead of
just Americans.’’
Bob Lindsay, an economics
major from Saratosa. Fla., stated
his preference for Nelson Rocke
feller because . . "he would
have been better than Nixon
he’s less of a profes
sional politician When asked
who will be elected. Bob re-
pM tat it is difficult
to answer, because it depends
on Wallace It appears now that
Nixon has the* popular vote How
ever. Wallace could throw it to
the House of Representatives,
which is presently highly Demo
cratic." On the recent contro
versy of the Democratic Con
vention. he stated ‘The
blame lies on both sides, in that
Mayor Daley had a problem
in a city that has had riots
after a riot starts, there is no
way of controlling emotions.
He may have used measures too
strong for the circumstances. but
the unfortunate thing is that
they (police) harrassed some
TV and news reporters, and
their reports were blast'd against
Mayor Daley "
"I think that it (election*
will go to the House of Repre
sentatives. and the democrats
(See STUDENTS, Page Si