Newspaper Page Text
The Red and Black. Friday, May 19. 1972
Page 3
Graduate requirements change
Graduating seniors will
now have their iast quarter’s
grades counted toward their
graduation honors. Faculty!
Executive Committee Chair
man John W. Shruni said this
week.
Previously computation of
averages used in awarding
graduation with honors (Sum-
ma Cum Laude, Magna Cum
Laude and Cum Laude) had
ended with the quarter pre
ceding the quarter in which
'Individual has
meant the most'
Photo by MARY RUTH JONES
KAM photo contest winner
This portrait by Mary Ruth Jones took
first place out of 77 entries in the Kappa
Alpha Mu Photography Contest. The
competition, which ended May 15, was
judged by Dr. Barbara McKenzie of the
School of Journalism, Dr. Robert Nix of
the Department of Visual Arts, and Nick
Colquitt of REM Studios and the Georgia
Professional Photography Association.
First, second, and third place ribbons
were awarded in each of four categories:
portrait, pictorial, still life, and news/
sports. Three overall winners were
awarded cash prizes of $50 for first, S2S
for second, and $10 for third. A pictorial
by Yvonne Fitzgerald took second place,
and a still life by Albert B. Hefner placed
third.
Anchor splash Sunday
Twenty-lwo fraternities will
compete in the second annual
Delta Gamma Anchor Splash
Sunday at Legion Pool.
Anchor Splash, a swimming
competition which includes
both serious and non-serious
events, will be from 2 p.m to
4 p.m. Sunday. It is a
national Delta Gamma event.
The fraternities will receive
points for placing in each of
the 10 events. The winning
fraternity will be awarded a
4-foot rotating trophy.
The 10 Anchor Splash
events include an Ugly Sea
Creature contest, in which
fraternities will dress one of
their members using such
items as crepe paper, coat
hangers, a mop head and
aluminum foil. The creatures
will be judged on originality,
creativity and ugliness.
THE SERIOUS events in
clude a SO-meter breast
stroke, 50-meter back stroke,
100-meter free style, a crawl
relay and a medley relay.
The Granny Gown Race
requires a fraternity member
to swim the widths of
Legion Pool in a gown made
from a bed sheet. He must
then take off the gown
without assistance, give it to
another member, who then
puts it on and swims another
two widths.
The Kickboard Race in
volves one member from each
fraternity swimming across
the pool with a kickboard
between his legs. In the Ping
Pong Race, each participant
will swim across the pool
carrying a ping pong ball in a
spoon in his mouth.
There will also be one
secret event to be announced
Sunday.
JUDGES FOR the Ugly
Sea Creature will be Dean of
Student Affairs O. Suthern
Sims; Advisor to Sororities
Jennie Reed; Mrs. Milladenc
Warnock, Delta Gamma
housemother; Jim Ratcliffe
and Dr. Charles Smock of
the psychology department.
Coach Mike Castronis, head
of the intramural program,
will start the events.
The fraternities that will
participate include Alpha
Epsilon Pi, Alpha Gamma
Rho. Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha
Tau Omega, Chi Phi, Chi Psi,
Delta Tau Delta, Kappa
Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lambda
(’hi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta,
Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa
Tau, Phi Kappa Theta, Pi
Kappa Alpha, Pi Kappa Phi,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma
Chi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Pi, Tau
Epsilon Phi, Theta Chi.
As a prelude to Anchor
Splash, Delta Gamma is spon
soring a casual dance Satur
day from 9 p.m. to I a.m. at
the Cracker Barrel Restau
rant. “The Flares” from
North Carolina will perform
for the dance, and the public
is invited.
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SHELLY WINTERS
“The single individual that
has meant the most to the
state of Georgia in any field
has to be Dean William Tate
of the University of Geor
gia,” Speaker of the House
of Representatives George L.
Smith said in an address to
the Delta Tau Delta Frater
nity, on Parent-Alumni Day
last Saturday.
Speaker Smith commended
Dean Tate’s outstanding work
and fine personal example.
‘‘Students have graduated and
taken their positions in socie
ty as better people. This is a
direct result of Dean Tate’s
interest and unflagging sup
port," Smith said.
‘‘He is indeed worth his
weight in gold," he said.
Smith then spoke on the
value of fraternities and the
validity of_a fraternity life-
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style in the development of
individual talents.
"Nowhere but in a respon
sive fraternity can a man
have a chance in his youth
to find and develop his
strengths, and to find and
overcome his weaknesses.”
the degree was conferred.
Shrum said a student who
reached the required avarage
for honors his last quarter
would be cited in the revised
version of the commencement
program. He said lack of
time between the end of the
quarter and graduation would
prevent the names being
listed in the original program.
No student will at this
time lose his honors standing
if his last quarter's grades
would lower his cumulative
average below the required
level, Shrum said.
‘‘Possibly some time in the
future people will lose as
well as gain honors standing
in the final quarter before
graduation, but at this time
we felt the notice was so
short it would be unfair to
at 2 00
penalize people on the basis
of that final quarter,” Shrum
said.
Commenting on last week's
Faculty Executive Committee
meeting, Shrum noted that
the committee’s recommenda
tion to record any grade,
including “F", that a student
received on a course chal
lenge was made in the
interests of fairness.
“We felt that it would be
more fair for a student to
take any grade received on a
challenge, just as he would if
he were to take the course,”
Shrum said.
He also said the change in
graduation with honors re
quirements reported in Tues
day’s Red and Black had
been planned since 1970,
when the switch from a 4.5
to a 4.0 grading system was
made.
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