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A
UGA radio station
proposals adopted
By HAPPY SMITH
Proposals for the Univer
sity’s FM radio station and for
a change in the bylaws of the
Board of Student Communica
tions were adopted in a
meeting of the board last
Thursday.
Under the new manage
ment, the Board of Student
Communications has direct
authority over the Red and
Black, Pandora, and the new
student radio station. Other
campus publications will need
to set up their own advisory
boards for requesting alloca
tions and selecting their staffs.
According to Chairman
John Albright, the Board will
still be available to the other
student publications (Impress
ion, Pamoja, and the
Agriculturalist) for financial
and editorial advice.
Albright said the Board felt
it should limit its authority to
the publications that served the
entire campus rather than a
particular segment. He added,
however, that the Board is not
“endorsing any publication as a
failure or no failure to be
relevant to the campus." He
said that the Board “was not
dissatisfied with any of the
publications eliminated from
its control." Each, he said,
served as a “creative outlet for
expression to a different
public.”
THE PROPOSALS adopted
by the Board for the campus
radio station concerned
administrative staff policy and
job descriptions.
The radio station will have
the four salaried staff positions
of Station Manager ($700),
Program Director ($600),
Production Manager ($600),
Photo by RICK DTTWW
Johansen display
Stylized pigs and trees in pencil, watercolor and oil, line
the wall of the Gallery of the Visual Arts Building. The
trees, pigs and some other cubist paintings are the recent
work of William Johansen, assistant professor of art. His
work will be displayed until tomorrow. In addition to
the more typical drawings and paintings, Johansen has
an oval canvas, anda painting made up of three seperate
paintings.
Bulletin board
TUESDAY. APRIL 18
7:30 p.m. — In the Law
Auditorium the UGA chapter of
the American Avociation of
University Professors is sponsoring
a panel discussion. “Three Views of
SGA holds
last hearings
for senators
Final hearings for chairman
ships of senate committees will
be held today at 3:30 p.m. in
the student government
offices. Chairmanships of all
committees except judiciary
arc still open. Any interested
senator should contact either
Art Ryder or the SGA office.
Consultant says
Flanigan handed
him ITT report
WASHINGTON (UPI) A
Wall Street consultant testified
Monday that White House aide
Peter Flanigan gave him a
report prepared by ITT before
hiring him to make the study
that helped convince the
Justice Department to drop
antitrust action against the
corporation
Administrative Accountability"
Panel members will present
speeches and then lead a discussion.
The pub'ic is invited.
8 p.m. — A specialist in folklore
studies of Europe and South
Appalachia will be guest speaker of
the Anthropology dub. Subject will
be "Folk Cultures of the United
State*.’’ Room F. Law BuUding-
8 p.m. — Vietnam Veterans
Against the War. 40ti. Memorial
Hall.
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 19
7 p.m. - Kundalim Yoga at the
Art School on College Avenue.
Bring a blanket or rug to sit on.
8 p.m. — Baha’i Club meets in
411-412 in Memorial.
8 p.m. — Music in the Chapel
8 p.m. — Committee for a
Voluntary Student Fund. 405
Memorial.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The North American Mentor is
sponsoring its 9th annual poetry
contest. The deadline for entries is
Ju. 1, 1972. Persons interested in
entering their poems for this
contest may obtain rules by writing
to Poetry Contest Editor. Mentor.
Fennunore. Wisconsin 53809
The Fine Arts Division ol the
University Union will present the
Emory Theater in its production of
KEEP TIGHTLY CLOSED IN A
COOL DRY PLACE, on Apr. 19 at
8:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
Memorial Ballroom. Admission free
with student I.D.’s. general
admission tickets available for
8100
and News Director ($600).
Their terms of office will be a
full three-quarter academic
year.
Minimum requirements for
the four salaried positions are:
1. Have an accumulative
2.S0 grade point average.
2. Sophomore standing or
above.
3. Have a third class radio
license.
4. Have at least six months
professional experience or
educational experience in the
field as a disc jockey,
newscaster, radio management
trainee and/or Armed Forces
radio experience.
5. Can and will devote a
minimum of three consecutive
quarters in the position
applying for.
6. Must be a resident of the
University of Georgia for at
least one full quarter.
Minimum requirements for
the non-salaried positions of
Student Fngineer, Station
Secretary, Record Librarian,
Traffic Manager, Promotion
Director, Sports Director and
staff newscasters and announ
cers are:
1. Have an accumulative
2.20 grade point average.
2. Freshman standing or
above.
3. Have a third class license.
4. Can and will devote a
minimum of one full academic
quarter in the position
applying for.
A PERSONNEL Board of
two students and two faculty
members from the Board of
Student Communications along
with seven radio professionals
will select the FM salaried
positions and make recommen
dations for the non-salaried
positions. According to Sean
McCleneghan, Director of
Student Communications, the
inclusion of outside radio
personnel in the selections will
eliminate “student politics"
and will make the new station
truly “a campus radio station."
Selections by the Personnel
Board will take place in late
May. Students interested in
applying for positions may
obtain further information
about job descriptions and
interviews from the Office of
Student Communications in
the Academic Building.
Internship
official here
Wednesday
A representative from the
governor's Internship Program
will be on campus Wednesday
to screen applications received
for that program, according to
Ted Hammock, assistant to the
vice president for instruction.
Deadline for the applica
tions was Apr. 10 but was
extended to Apr. 22 because of
the small number of
applications received. Inter
ested students may pick up an
application from the dean of
their school or in Hammock's
office.
The program was begun
under Gov. Carl Sanders but
has been expanded under Gov.
Jimmy Carter to include some
300 positions.
I he Red and Black, Tuesday. April 18, 1972 p a( , e
Kennedy supports
women's movement
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Supreme Court ruled
Monday that a state is
constitutionally entitled to
forbid the use of any public
funds to support a school
controlled by a religious
denomination.
Gridiron
selections
If you saw ten young men
crawling into a Dempster
Dumpster Saturday night
on Broad Street with
blindfolds on, it was the
ten you sec above being
initiated into the Gridiron
Secret Society. They are
(L-R) Richard Lewis, Bob
Trill, Frank Gillcland.
Nelson Gamclt, Andy
Knox, Bob Killian. Frank
Butler. John Rice. David
Burch and Mixon Robin
son.
Seven Missouri families had
challenged a provision in the
state constitution to this
effect.
They contended that the
state should give as much of
their tax money to
church-oriented private schools
attended by their children as it
does to public schools
The Supreme Court in a
brief order affirmed the
decision of the lower court on
Sept. 23, 1971, which upheld
the state constitution and
dismissed the lawsuit.
• .
i .
» i
(From Page I)
W. F. “Dub" Taft, a former
editor of The Red and Black,
worked for the Arsenal last
quarter. According to Taft,
they keep a list of writers on
file, and whenever they need a
paper to wnte, they just call
one of them.
“I answered one of their
ads for writers in the “Bird,"
(The Great Speckled Bird,
Tilled out an application, and
had an interview, just like a
regular job. I just wanted to do
it as a one-time deal, out of
curiosity. The one paper I
wrote was on one of the
characters in William Faulk
ner’s I‘he Sound and the Fury.
I wrote it more for myself than
I did for them," he said.
Although Taft is on their
list of writers, he said he
probably wouldn’t write for
them again. "The type of
writer they’re looking for is
one who can take any subject
and write about it over night.
All of them are required to
have college degrees. But if it
was a subject I was really
interested in, or long enough to
be profitable, or if I already
had the information, I’d
probably do it," he said.
According to Taft, the
Arsenal pays their writers
$2.00 per page. He recieved
$14.50 for his paper on
Faulkner. If a person wants to
sell a paper, he must contact
the L.A. office. They
reportedly pay $4.50 per page,
if the writer writes on an
assigned topic.
IF A STUDENT chooses to
take advantage of one of these
services, how can he be sure
that another student, at the
same school, in the same class,
using the same service, isn’t
getting the identical paper?
When a student buys a
paper, most companies require
him to give the name of the
school, the course number,
when the class is being taught
(Spring Quarter, 1972), and
the name of the professor. This
avoids the possibility of
duplications.
Other companies assign
papers on the same topic to
.different writers, thus assurin :
blacks are concerned with
freedom.
“How many here would say
sexism is more dangerously
oppressive than racism? If
you’re a black in America you
stand to lose your life. If
you’re a white female the only
thing you can lose is your
identity.”
She criticized blacks,
however, for not getting
themselves organized and
working to eliminate oppres
sion.
Term Paper
Photo by RICK DUNN
‘Ours is Whorehouse Society’
Florynce Kennedy, Black Lawyer
“I’ve never recruited black
women into the feminist
movement and I don't plan
to," Flo Kennedy, black
liheratiomst from New York
and supporter of Shirley
Chisolm for president, said.
Speaking to a primarily
black audience of approxi
mately 50 students and faculty
Friday night. Ms. Kennedy said
“the absence of movement”
among blacks was her reason
for participating in the feminist
movement.
“It opens up a whole new
front on the white male
scene," she said, referring to
the movement. "Everybody
who’s uncomfortable ought to
struggle whether they’re
black or white. A nigger is
anyone who consents to
oppression."
Ms. Kennedy, said she
could understand why black
women would not join a
movement concerned with
consciousness raising when
union to sponsor play in Memorial
5 piuuumun oi rvicgan a. IV ui juspcis
Terry s Keep Tightly Closed In A Cool wife. The production, sponsored by the
Dry Place" will be presented tomorrow
night in Memorial Ballroom at 8:30 p.m.
The play explores the struggle of three
men. Jaspers, Michaels and Gregory,
University Union, is free to students with
I. D. General admission is $ 1. Doors open
at 7:30 p.m.
State entitled to outlaw public funds
| Correction
The Apr 13 issue of The :j:
;*• Red and Black reported that >>
w Isaac Hayes concert was to
be sponsored bv the IFC. $
•S The concert is sponsored by ;£
| the University Union in jx
conjunction with Black
Awareness Week, said :£
Gerard Chmielewski, pro- £:
tfi gram advisor of the Union.
at least some degree of
originality.
Business is booming for
these companies, a cause for
alarm among many college and
university administrators, be
lieving it is dishonest and
unethical. But Bartlowe insists
that “it’s all in how you look
at it. Most people don’t use the
papers verbatim, but as
condensed research material. If
it’s used in this context, it’s
moral.” If it’s illegal, he
suggests that Cliff and Monarch
notes better go, too.
WHEN THE ARSENAL
opened in Atlanta, it came
under much criticism from
Atlanta professors. In fact, the
administration at tmory
University issued a statement
that if any student were caught
using the service, he would be
expelled. But, as yet, no
student has used the service —
or at least no one has been
caught.
“It’s the height of
hypocrisy for people to blast
this place and do the same
thing themselves," Bartlowe
said, noting that many
professors who criticize the
service often publish others’
material under their own name.
The University prohibits
the use of these services, as
stated in Items I, 2, and 4
under Section 1 of the
Individual Conduct Regula
tions in the Student
Handbook. No cases have come
before the Student Judiciary
concerning this subject,
according to Jan Summer,
administrative specialist for
Student Judicial Affairs.
Dr. Ira Robinson, professor
of sociology and anthropology
at the University, doesn’t know
of anyone in the sociology
department who even assigns
term papers in basic courses.
But he said that manufactured
term papers are usually easy to
detect.
“IF YOU KNOW your
field, you can spot these
papers Usually the papers are
too glib and too well-wntten.
The student isn’t cheating the
professor, he’s cheating the
student," he said.
According to Ward Warren,
co-founder of Termpaper
Research Unlimited Inc.,
students, however, seem to
have no second thoughts about
buying a term paper. One
freshman, according to Warren,
bought and submitted as his
c vn work a five-page paper
entitled, “Why I Wouldn’t Use
a Professional Term Paper
Writing Service."
Cycl
Din
241
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