Newspaper Page Text
^Page 2
The Red and Black, Tuesday, May 12, 1970
BY STUDENT LEADERS
v Police limits sought
Georgia student leaders
have submitted a proposal to
the state legislature which
tceeps state police agents off
■ college campuses during civil
disorders unless an act of viol
ence has been committed
The proposal, co-sponsored
b\ students from the I 'Diversity
and (ieorgia Tech, was passed
at the second annual lieutenant
Gpvernor s Student Workshop
on State Government The
workshop was conducted for
student leaders from colleges
and universities throughout
Georgia at the state capitol last
Friday and Saturday
BOB HLRLKY. Handy Shin
gler Molly Bellinger. Patty
Bruce. Carol Clark Joel Woo
ten and Tom Hamby were the
students attending from the
University.
Students discussed issues of
importance on national, state,
and college levels with the par
ticipation of state legislators
The groups discussed student
dissent, the Board of Regents,
drug abuse, institutionalized
racism, and pollution
Several student proposals
were submitted to the* legisla
ture for its consideration, in
cluding the one concerning
campus disorders
The proposal states that
state police agents are to be
kept off campuses unless an act
of violence ha?- been commit
ted It further states that if an
act of violence is committed
and the presence of state police
agents is warranted that these
agents have special riot-control
training
ONE PROPOSAL asked for
student representation on the
Board of Regents and another
asked that it be mandatory for
the* Regents to meet alternately
at different schools in the uni
versity system rather than in
Atlanta
Another proposal concerning
the Board of Regents asked
that student governments at
various institutions within the
university system be* given the*
right to appeal student regula
tions proposals directly to the
board if they are turned down
by the administration of their
institution
Hardin cites impact
of Russell Center
Open Every Day For Your
- Convenience
9 to 11
Pttotobv ROB NOVIT
RUSSELL (l), HARDIN AT CENTER DEDICATION
Hardin says center will have world impact
Bulletin Board
There Is One Near You
Tof Ida y. May 12
/ M p.m - Homeccn meetj, Da*»cn
M*n auditorium Officers *n' pc in
stalled
I: tt p m. - Or S William Penetie' a
Study of RempranOM Etchings
117 Visua *
I p.m. - Film Nottvng But a Van
steps of Memorial Han
10 p.m - Second snowing Nothing But a
va-
Wednesday. May IJ
4 30 pm - Vmctnt Haromg director
Of institute Of the Black World sc*a« j
atvemora «a q^ad'ang e
/: JO p m. - a representative from the
Army Corps of Eng -ee-s tip a nj
future Curry Cree« and Sandy Shoa's
Reservoir protects which nave Pee*-
appproved for Clarke and jacksen
counties ntfte Forestry auditor urn
• pm- Singer s na Simo«e speaks at
Vemoria Ha'i Ouadrang e
• • II p.m. - Body Pd'nt>ng party Dante s
Domain
Thursday. May 4
4 10 p.m - Dorothy P **man o* the
8 ac« Panther oe'*. spent a* Me~»
r>al Mai Ouadrang.e
iJOpm - Dra—a •*apc» Eno-ng c.
Dougat Turner wa-s tetneatreot
Fme Arts Buiid'hg
/pm.-The Re* Mosea Aiihams, tne
Re» Samue Annams and the Rev r
y Rogers discuss Relevancy of the
Christian Re^gion to the Black Man
atvemora nai Ballroom
• p.m.-Dr Roper* G McLean research
ecologist n tne U S communicable
d sease center speais at a f<sh and
wiid'ite seminar on The Ecology of
Wiid'ife Rabiet m the United States
■n 40a Bioiogica' Sciences Building
Fnday.May IS
« p m - Fanme lou Hamer of the
Visuss pp Freedom Democratic par
ty speais a» Memorial Man quadran-
S; J p m.- Second presentation of dra
ma Happy E"d ng
7 p.m. — Poe’s Don Lee Hoyt Fuller and
Ebon Dooiey discuss The Black
Ae”<est c La <t auditorium
• p.m.-Film t He Subiec’Was Roses
south P-J auditor um
10 p.m - Second showing. The Subiect
Was Roses
Safurday.May la
• pm—Fim TheGood tne Bad and
the Ugly south P-J ayditorium
• p m. - Sou Ba a’ Memor.a' Man ben-
11 p.m - Second snowing ThtGoodthe
. Bad and tne ugiy '
Announcements
vSTA representat .es * be at the
s'udent a a and placement office
Wednesday through Friday to inter-
» e* appi cants and give out informa
tion
; > Louis Devorsey associate professor
o’ geography nas Dean named acting
-ea: ot tne university Department of
Georgrapny He w. i succeed Dr Merle
P'.-ty ju y t Dr Prunty has headed
•-e 3epar*m*n vnee 1*44
'he L-'versify Union <S sponsoring two
^••s *o S * Flags over Georgia Satur
:ay One Dus w eave at 10 a m and
'••um at 0P m
’** :*ne' « ea.e a* 2 30 p m and r*-
a’ " 3C Reservations must oe made
reve 1 30 Friday by calling S42-3II4
! Application forms for UGA Dialogue 70
a*a ace at the University Leadership
Board office. 207 Memorial Man. for inter
ested student* faculty and administra
tors The *or ms must be completed and
returnedby Friday
TO THE WOODS
Get there quick & quiet
on a Honda 175 Cl on
Special 'til May 15
$610.00 ss
FREE DEMONSTRATION
Athens Imports
21J Tallassee-Rd.
By STEVE STEWART
Managing editor
US. agriculture Secretary
Clifford M Hardin Saturday
said the Richard B Russell
Agricultural Research Center
will have international, not just
local, impact and praised the
man for whom the center is
named
Speaking at the center's ded
ication ceremonies in Athens.
Hardin had little comment on
the issues which have stirred
current campus turmoil
His only allusion to the dis
sent was a statement that per
sons close to President Nixon
are impressed with his "in
tense desire to bring this war to
a close, his sincerity, his cour
age in doing what he feels has
to be done for the good of the
nation."
Nixon had planned to speak
for the center dedication but
he cancelled his trip last week
to remain in Washington and
keep in touch with develop
ments concerning U S troops
in Cambodia
HARDIN SAID the center,
operated under the federal
government's Agricultural
Research Service, will produce
research findings with impact
across the nation and through
out the world " The research
will be concentrated, however,
on crops, poultry and livestock
products of the Southeast, he
noted.
The center, he said, will be
"a lasting tribute" to Richard
Russell's "long concern for
agriculture in this country
Russell, senior U S senator
from Georgia and ex-governor,
first proposed the center to
Congress in 1963 He later sup-
CAUCUS LEADER SAYS
ported funding and other mea
sures necessarv to get con
struction started in 1966
Other dedication speakers,
including University President
Fred C. Davison and undersec
retary of agriculture J Phil
Campbell, expressed senti
ments similar to Hardin's
DAVISON NOTED that this
is the fourth federal laboratory
located on campus and said the
University's relationships with
it will be similar to those with
the other labs: some of the lab's
scientists will receive faculty
appointments and deliver lec
tures to classes graduate stu
dents will do research work in
the center and University per
sonnel will have office space
there
Russell, responding to the
othor speakers, said he is proud
to claim the center as his
brain child He praised the
rapport between the University
and the federal government in
agriculture
The center, a multistoried
building located on College Sta
tion Road southeast of the main
campus, houses laboratories,
administrative offices, a 400-
seat auditorium and several
pilot-plant areas
It eventually will be occupied
by about 500 full-time employ
ees. of whom about 100 are now-
on the job About a third of the
500 will be senior research sci
entists. including organic and
biochemists, food scientists,
physical chemists, physicists,
microbiologists, engineers,
economists. pharmacologists,
toxicologists and nutritionists
Royal Society taps
University art prof
Lamar Dodd, regents profes
sor of art at the University, has
been named a fellow in Lon
don's Royal Society of Arts.
Dodd, considered one of the
foremost artisLs in the United
States, is head of the Universi
ty's department of art and
chairman of the division of fine
arts. His works are included in
many private and museum
collections including the Metro
politan Museum in New York.
Whitney Museum and Smith
sonian Institute
He has painted and lectured
internationally and his works
have been reproduced in art
publications as well as mass
media periodicals including
Life. Time. Newsweek. For
tune and the New York Times
As a guest of the National
Aeronautics and Space Admin
istration. he has painty] his
impressions of space shots in
the Mercury. Gemini and Apol
lo series.
The Royal Society, estab
lished in 1753. was granted a
royal charter in 1847 by Queen
Victoria It was established for
encouragement of the arts in
the British Empire but its
membership includes distin
guished international figures
By BARBARA RIVERS
Staff writer
Dr. T J Anderson, black
power advocate from Atlanta,
sees freedom as the major goal
of the black man in this country
today.
Speaking at the Sunday
morning Unitarian Universalist
Fellowship. Anderson said the
American Negro needs to be
free to choose between main
taining his own identity and
being absorbed into the white
community.
Black people in the United
States are colonized people and
completelv controlled by a rac
ist society ' he said
For this reason. Anderson
views the black movement as
The Latest
f ^
•. -
The Newest
AND SHIFT INTO BOUNDLESS COMFORT Newly or
rived hot weother shipment of lithe little softies (hot
impose no restraints, look terrific. 100% cotton. 6 to
14 Sportswear Street Floor.
lieftl A lme mock turtle navy with red white gold
border striping 13.00
right' White with red brown blue or navy piping 12.00
I),V
Blacks' main goal freedom
Black
and
White
S22 95
a fight against colonialist ex
ploitation as a people." which
began from "the lack of effec
tiveness of Martin Luther
King's marches when they
moved North. "
ANDERSON, who heads the
Unitarian-based black caucus
steering committee, defined
the caucus as "an attempt to
make the black power move
ment vitalize the needs of the
black community.''
In working for the liberation
of the black people. Anderson
thinks blacks and whites should
work together, but each within
his own community
"I don't think blacks object
to whites working with them I
think it's the attitudes It's
harder to work with whites and
change their attitudes
"We live in the ghetto, and
we think we know more than
the white people who don't live
there
“IN TERMS of time, we
have to move very rapidly The
form of escalation is in propor
tion to what is successful, he
said
Anderson stressed the need
to develop pluralistic values
"We must realize other behav
iors and accept them and en
courage their development
"When a black man moves to
an integrated base, he ebonizes
it by bringing his culture to it.
Discussing the dispropor
tionate poverty for black Amer
icans. Anderson quoted statis
tics on the small number of
blacks in colleges or profes
sions todav
"Only 4 per cent of the
wealth returns to the black
community. If we were a na
tion. we would be bankrupt."
DR T. J. ANDERSON
Speaks Sunday
Anderson said
HE Hl.AMEt) this condition
on the "lack of distribution of
skills and services in the black
community "
Anderson said poverty is
evident m the status, expecta
tion of change and the songs of
the Negro community
Popcorn" by James Brown,
whom Anderson describes as
"our number one institution."
was said to be indicative of the
black community because of its
references to dancing, new
clothes and loneliness
"Friendship Train" contains
the goals of integration and an
evaluation of the world situa
tion. while “Sitting on the Dock
of the Bav is simpiv a song of
despair. Anderson said
ANDERSON SAID that al
though church-based, his cau
cus is not controlled by the
Unitarians This fact enables
them to solicit funds from other
sources
Shop every hiday night till 9 p.m.
dovisons open 10 o.m.— phone 543-141?
Lamar Lewis Co.
ATHENS LARGEST SHOE STOKE
Smcr 1129
m K\ST(H.\Vr<>\ DOW MOW \ \tiik\s
FREE DOLLARS
EVERY MON., TUES.
& WED.
Dry Cleaning Only
For every S3 worth of dry cleaning
you bring in receive I free dollar.
W hen Picked-Up
Not a coupon, hut a erisp. new dollar hill
NO LIMIT
Bring in S6 worth - Gel back S2
Bring in $9 worth - Gel back Sli'* 1 ’" up
ONE HOUR
CLEANING CENTER
I Oil Baxter
Ask \b4>ut 20 r < Di-niunl
For UGA Students