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PEOPLE'S PARK
LOOK NtnrttY, OYfWK. 1 I've niReo
THf TEBMITE UNION TO HELP uj
WIN rue -S«rA ELECTIONS*
by Phil Sanderlin and Wiley Stone
Thf lied and Black, Frida), April 6. l»7:i
I'age 5
Thiy'ul HIDE IN TNf
BALLOT Bo* and EAT Any
Ballots MARKED INCORRECT!*,
• like NOT V0TIN6 FOR US/
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voter fraud/ dishonesty#
there's only one way i'd
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THAT Sordid Anb nasty//
Sex discrimination cited
in Atlanta school system
wuog schedule Treatment
stop drug
Saturday
9 a m.
12 noon
1:25 p.m
European Baroque music with Howard
Winkler.
Mlls'e with George (iearino
University ot Ga baseball with hosts Dave
Deppisch. Bill Lee. Dan McIntosh and Bruce
Einland. Direct from holey Field. Georgia vs
Fla
programs
addiction
4 p.m.
7 p.m.
10 p.m
2 a m. till
6:30 a.m.
Sunday
■6:30 a m.
10 a m.
1 p.m.
4 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
H:30 p.m.
9 p.m. to
1 am
TBA
Mike Carr Show
Larry Wagner Show
Music to while away the hours. Bill Greeman
till sunrise.
The David Powell Show
The Mark Brannan Happening
Sunday Classical" Selections from classical
symphony and chamber music, host Dick
Daneke
D.T. s Dave Chestnut brings you comedy
and general insanity.
The Dave Deppisch Show, with discussions on
topics from horror movies to meditation.
Radio Drama with host Dick Daneke
“My favorite Things" Host. Howard Winkler,
with progressive music till 1 a m
MONDAY - FRIDAY Daily Shows
6:30 a m. Cliff Houston
10 a m. Mike Hooper
I p.m. Bill Davis
4 p.m. Patti Oates
9 p.m. Don Sylvester (M & Tu)
Bob Gibson (W & Th)
1 a m. to Dave Chesnut (M & Tui
3 a.m. Chuck Peach (W)
Danny Beard < Th)
SPECIAL WEEKLY PROGRAMMING
Monday
7 p.m. “The Blues" with Pat Frye.
Tuesday
6 p.m. "Forum” Representatives from the campus
media will talk with candidates for executive
positions in the up-coming Student Govern
ment Election.
6:30 p.m. "Dialogue" Host Bill Lampton brings you
discussions with faculty, students, and
administration on current issues.
7 p.m. "2000" A look at 2uth century classical music
with Tony Crcazzo
9 p.m. "Waters of Lethe" Larry Estees features
obscure rock, jazz, and folk groups.
Wednesday
2:55 p.m Baseball with hosts Dave Deppisch, Bill Lee,
Dan McIntosh, and Bruce Finland. Ga. vs.
Clemson direct from Foley Field.
6 p.m Continuous spot coverage of Student
Government election returns
(Regular programmin will continue as
normal.)
7 p.m. "Jazz Tonight” Host John Hillis will feature
Stan Getz as well as old and new —
progressive and traditional jazz.
Thursday
7 p.m.
Friday
7 p.m.
9 p.m.
1 a.m. to
6 a m.
"The Super Fly Experience" Two hours of
super soul with Delphin Barnes.
Bluegrass and traditional country music with
host Ed Dunbar
Rock Histories with Tommy Bowden, (once a
month Orts Oldies — TBA)
"Midnight Madness” Dick Daneke with your
favorite progressive music till dawn.
INFORMATION PROGRAMS
Heard daily Monday through Friday
9 a m., 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. — "What's Going On" the
entertainment scene in and around Athens with Kathy
Little.
8:30. 9:30, 10:30. 11:30 a m., 12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 9 p.m. —
Newscasts featuring local, state and national news from
ABC and the wires of the Associated Press
5 p.m. Daily News Summary
8:35 am. 12:35 and 5:10 p.m. — Sports
Saturday News 12:30 and 5 p.m.
Sunday News 12 noon and 5 p.m.
Rob suspect
kidnaps pair
ATLANTA — A South
Carolina robbery suspect
forced two Atlanta detectives
at gunpoint, one a young
woman, to drive him around
the city for an hour Wednesday
threatening to shoot them
FLOWERS. INC.
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ALPS DRIVE
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By KEN WII.LIK
The former director of the
Georgia Department of Drug
Abuse declared here Tuesday
that drug treatment programs
need to be made more readily
available.
Dr. Peter Bourne, now
Deputy Director of the Special
Action Office for Drug Addic
tion Prevention in Washington,
told the second annual South*
eastern Drug Studies Seminar
at the University that. "The
question is not whether one
treatment is more effective,
the question is to make all
treatments available and to
operate them with quality."
"We have seen a remarkably
high rate of failure in dealing
with heroin addiction in the
past." he said. He blamed the
failure of recent treatment
programs on their preoccupa
tion with the physical depend
ence of the individual.
"Getting somebody off hero
in is the very simplest part of
the problem," he said "The
real issue is how do you keep
the person away from heroin
once you've got him off."
He said addiction treatment
programs have not looked
adequately at the supply of
heroin on the street, what the
addicts friends are doing, and
the pressures that a person has
to go back to heroin, and the
"very broad social factors."
"I don’t think even today we
really understand what the
broad social problems really
are." he said. Racism, pover
ty, war times, and the
"remarkable system" of trans
portation have been blamed as
sociological factors in addic
tion. "but these issues have
really not been addressed until
recently." he said.
The drug specialist said
there is a point at which the
spread of heroin addiction in a
community declines. ‘‘When
heroin gets into a community,”
he said, "it will rise and reach
a peak for two or three years,
and then decline to some
extent whether or not you
provide any treatment, inter
vention. or law enforcement.
"What we don’t know is why
the spread of addiction ceases.
If we knew those factors, then
perhaps we could develop
more successful educational
prevention programs."
Bourne said that the two
main methods of addiction
treatment, methadone mainte
nance and therapeutic commu
nities have undergone substan
tial evolutions in the past two
years. He defended the use of
methadone, which has been
attacked for its addicting
tendencies.
‘‘There is increasing evi
dence." he said, "that if you
can get people stabilized and
change their lifestyles, you
have a reasonably good chance
of getting them off methadone
in time, particularly when you
have a chance of getting his
(the addict’s) friends involved
in the program and reducing
the availability of heroin."
He said that therapeutic
communities, which help ad
dicts to see the "error of their
ways”, have an extremely high
recovery rate when addicts
seek their help voluntarily.
But. he said, the communities
are spending more and more
time on people ordered to them
by the courts.
The problem with methadone
treatment and therapeutic
communities. Bourne said, is
not their success rate. "The
biggest problem." he said,
"has come from their abuse
This is particularly true of
methadone; some physicians
have made enormous profits."
By PEGGY GEARY
Feminism is a means of
looking at people more hu
manely as individuals and not
stereotyped according to sex,
said .Martha Gaines, state
coordinator for the National
Organization of Women (N O.
W.i.
In a speech Monday night
sponsored by the student
chapter of the American
Veterinarian Medical Associa
tion Gaines, a University
graduate told listeners that
most discrimination against
women is in the area of
employment, and she added
that this is a major problem in
our particular type of econo
my.
"The situation no longer
exists in many cases where we
can afford only one of a two
person couple to work outside
the home." said Gaines.
In many instances where the
family is headed by a woman.
Gaines said, it "almost costs
them to work." because they
have to pay for child care
Gaines pointed out that cur
rently women earn 38 cents for
every $1 earned by men
regardless of educational back
ground
Another area of discrimina
tion cited by Gaines was
sports, both in public and
private schools and on all
levels. "Of all the money spent
on sports only a small
percentage is spent "n develop-
Waking
TAIl
“SLAM-BANG IMPACT!
It plugs directly into
the current cry for
law and order.
DEEPLY INVOLVING!
i Thomas. L A Timas
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4:20
4:35
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[Liza Minnelli Michael York
1 Helmut Gnem. * f#«*» A ***** hgfadR* Cabaret .
» Marisa Be'ecvxi Fnt1 Wepoe' — Joel Grey. Emcee” war s
ing healthy bodies for fe
males," Gaines said
Last summer FulIon County
school system voted to delete
its physical education program
tor girls According to Gaines
the main reason for this was
because "the program wasn't
making any money
Gaines, who has been with
NOW since 1967, criticized
grammar school textbooks for
preaching rigid and specific
sex roles through stereotyped
characters in the stories
"There are three kinds of
Give
Blood.
+
women in textbooks that have
jobs: teachers, nurses, and
secretaries and they are all
miss. Mommys, of course,
never work," said Gaines, who
is herself a working mother.
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"Hileriout" —WABC TV
"The humor it everywhere" -Chicago Tribune
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FROM NEW UMt CINEMA
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in TMtie new me
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