Newspaper Page Text
The Red and Black. Friday. September 23. IH77
I’uKe 2
<
CHAPTER THREE RECORDS
229 E. Broad St - 549-0461
Across from UGA Arches
Rock -Soul - Jazz - Imports
We buy & Trade used LP’s
Starting Today at
with ALTEC Sound
THE SCARIEST COMEDY
OF ALL TIME IS BACK.
m
iL. Eve. 7:20 9:24
IS Sat. & Sun. 3:10 5:12
Final Week At
tEi'o, Eve. 7:13 9:11
1 — Sat. & Sun. 3:20 5:15
Coming—
Liza Minelli in New York, New York
600 BAXTER ST
Best Fried Chicken in Town
Great Chic Filets
FRIED MUSHROOMS
ONLY 90 c
Great Food Reasonably Priced
FREE ICED TEA
WITH LUNCHES
Pandora plans
format changes
By HOPE DLl'GOZI.MA
Assistant campus editor
The Pandora yearbook,
which has been plagued by
staffing and financial problems
in recent years, will increase
its size by 160 pages this year,
according to Managing Editor
Scott Kenny.
We have big plans. We are
going to increase the book size
by 160 pages and enlarge the
size of the pages to 9 (inches)
by 12 (inches). In addition
we've been given permission to
sell ads for Ihe first time this
year." Kenny said.
The Pandora will also be
Tropical Plant
Extravaganza
33% to 75% off all
plants and pottery
Cacti & Succulents -
Reg. 99c
Now 49c
4' Schefflera - Reg. $14.99
Now $9.99 '
Hanging Baskets—One Group—99c ,
3” Jade 39c
Flowers, Inc.
Greenhouses
2145 W. Broad St
546-7624
Prices Good Thru Oct. 1st
Paris Adult Theatre
140 Washington St. 549*1879
Open 10 AM
Now Showing
"Susan Sue”
“Sherry’s Surrender”
XXX Rated
Student & Faculty
Dis. with I.D.
7 41
HI
MjIinc
Sit 4 S««
2 71
4 IS
SSI
DAVID CARRADfNF.
RATE JACKSON
MwhMlfMI
4*
fvt
7 N
HI
MU
Sit ISm
2:11
4 41
10 oz. N'oxema
While Supplies
Last
Come Early
39 oxy5
99*
WELCOME
BACK
SALE
1 oz. Oxy 5
Wide Selection of Filler Paper
and Composition Books
Flair Pens
Soap Box
19*
I 2 oz. Wetting Solution or
4 oz. Cleaning & Soaking Solution
99*
300 Count Filler
8 X 10% Wide Rule
ARGUS
POSTERS *
69*
Many I'nadvertised Specials!
69*
Summer's Eve Twin Pack
I
il L. / v „
59*
too Count Typing Paper
Schick Super II 5's
59*
Baxter street store
OPEN TILL 10 PM
FRIDAY SEPT 23
100 Count Composition
Book 8 X 10% Wide Rule
★ These Items Available at Baxter Street Store
2**
Selsun Blue 8 oz.
ICING
™ 510 Baxter zss K Cl
)AY SEPTEMBER 24
255 E. Clayton
Across from Brumby Downtown
working with new formats,
according to Kenny. “We are
going to have a new section
cailed the Academic Section. It
will feature people like Presi
dent Davison and the Board of
Regents."
All major staff positions
have been filled for the 1977*78
year, including two new
positions. This year the staff
will include a graphic designer
and promotion and PR person,
according to Kenny.
As part of the promotion for
the yearbook, there will be a
Pandora week in November.
“During Pandora week we will
be doing a special act at the
football game. We are also
reviving the Miss Pandora
Beauty Contest, which hasn't
been held since 1972." Kenny
said.
Kenny attributes some of the
new interest in the y earbook to
its location. “We’ve moved off
the fifth floor to the second
floor of Memorial and now
have easy access. This year
the Pandora is being sponsored
by Student Activities. W'ith our
new office we have found a
home at last." Kenny said.
Even though major staff
positions have been filled,
there is still a need for
enthusiastic people. Kenny
said.
The Pandora will be sold
through Oct. 31 for $8 at the
yearbook office, according to
Kenny.
Gospel
singout
Sunday
By SWANN SEILER
Feature editor
The Black Student Union will
kick off its year of community
activities with a gospel singout
Sunday nighl at 7 at the Clarke
Central High School auditor
ium
The singout program, enti
tled "Gospel Extravaganza,”
will feature choirs from Athens
and the surrounding areas and
include the BSU Famoja Choir
According to BSU President
Michael Vincent Smith, the
choirs will feature a variety of
gospel music which should
appeal to everyone.
Smith said that the "Extra
vaganza” would be the first
type of community involve
ment program for the year, ffe
added that the main purpose of
the singout was to get the
community interested in and
aware of the BSU as well as
get the BSU involved in
community affairs
Smith said last year the BSU
worked with day care centers
in the community The Extra
vaganza is a continuation of
that type involvement
Athens Mayor Upshaw Bent
ley issued a statement at the
end of August giving merit to
the activities of the BSU and
his support to the upcoming
Extravaganza All Athens area
churches were invited to take
part in the program. Smith
said the response to the
program was good
According to Smith, the BSU
not only hopes to attract area
churches, but also hopes that
anyone interested will attend.
There is no admission charge.
Smith also said the general
public is asked and invited to
attend the reception following
the Extravaganza at the high
school cafeteria
Unlike most gospel singouts
the Extravaganza will not
include any competition or
judging of any type, Smith
said. He added that the
program was intended for the
entertainment of the commu
nity.
Among some of the various
churches in attendance will be
the Stephens Baptist Church
from Stephens Ga.; the
Thank ful Baptist Church The
C.D. Wilkerson Church Choir
The First A M E Church; the
New Growth Baptist Church
Choir: and the Chestnut
Baptist Church Choir, all from
Athens
Additional funding for the
Extravaganza was provided by
Athens area merchants and the
University of Georgia Founda
tion.
The Extravaganza will coin
cide with the BSU’s Freshman
Orientation Week, which will
conclude with the Gill Scott
Herrin concert Thursday
Busbee voices support
for parole board head
ATLANTA (UPU—Gov. George Busbee expressed hope
Thursday that state Pardons and Paroles Board Chairman
Cecil McCall would not have to undergo '.he kind o(
investigation which ended in the resignation of Budget
Director Bert Lance.
Busbee said that “if Cecil McCall cannot stand up to one
of these investigations, then we are going to have to go
outside the country to find competent people” But the
governor expressed confidence McCall would have no
problems getting confirmed by the Senate as head of the
federal Parole Commission.
McCall was nominated Thursday by President Carter for
the paroles post.
The governor said he did not think Lance owuld be
interested in getting into politics again in Georgia and
suggested that this was probably "the furthest thing from
his mind..."
Busbee touched on several other matters at his weekly ,
news conference.
He said that barring severely cold weather on the order
of that which occurred last January there should be an
adequate supply of natural gas in Georgia this winter.
He said Revenue Commissioner Nick Chilivis. who is
expected to step down by Jan. 1, has not said when he will
resign and that he has not put any pressure on him
concerning the planned resignation But he said Chilivis
took the state job at a great financial sacrifice and
probably is anxious to return to private life.
Busbee announced the appointment of Chief Deputy
Legislative Counsel Charles E Tidwell to be executive
counsel to the governor. Tidwell, 44, succeeds William L.
Harper who resigned to become U S. attorney for the
Northern District of Georgia. He is an Atlanta native and a
graduate of Emory University Law School.
The governor recommended that the coastal Plains
Regional Commission fund 23 projects at a cost of
$1,976,865 to help boost the economy of middle and south
Georgia during 1978. He said that when these funds are
added to those from other sources, the total expenditures
for the projects will be $10,683,000.
“If all of the projects I am recommending are funded,
the Coastal Plains Regional Commission will have spent
some $20,400,000 in Georgia since its creation in 1967,"
busbee said. The governor said that one of the proposed
projects involves studying the feasibility of using wood
wastes as a source of energy for industrial plants in the
Coastal Plains region. The study also would look into the
possibility of a wood energy center for the southeastern Un
ited States.
SALT talks resume
but pact may expire
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The 1972 strategic arms pact that
opened the era of detente apparently will be allowed to
expire while the United States and Soviet Union informally
abide by its provisions and talk about a new agreement
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko arrived
Wednesday to resume talks with Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance in a renewed attempt to break a deadlock on
long-term limitations on strategic weapons
“I have come with a feeling of good will," Gromyko said
on arrival to Andrews Air Force Base in suburban
Washington.
"We are prepared to seek common language...but I
should say the results will depend on movement by both
sides."
U S. officials expect no immediate breakthough in the
stalemate that chilled progress earlier this year while
Vance was in Moscow.
The five-year "Interim Agreement," which expires Oct.
3, limited the United States to no more than 710 submarine
launched missiles and Russia to 950.
In addition, Ihe two countries were to build no more new
strategic missile launchers, leaving the United States 1054
strategic missiles to 1618 for Russia
This temporary pact was to be replaced by an agreement
lasting until 1985
but neither former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
nor Vance has managed to cut through a handful of final
major problems.
Malpractice lawsuit filec
against Seattle schools
SEATTLE (UPI*— A man has filed an "educational
malpractice" lawsuit against the Seattle School District on
behalf of his 21-ye ir-old son who allegedly cannot read well
enough to get a job.
Frank Fisher of Seattle said his son, Richard, a 1974
Lincoln High School graduate, “can't read an application to
get a job."
The action was filed in King County Superior Court
Wednesday. In addition to the school district, named as
defendants are the state and Frank M. Brouillet, the state
superintendent of public instruction.
The suit seeks unspecified damages against the school
district and the state for allowing the graduation "without
the requisite reading skills," and it asks that young Fisher
be given remedial instruction at the school district’s
expense.
Duvalier orders freeing
of 104 political prisoners
PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti (UPI)-The rulers of Hath,
among the most repressive in the Western Hemisphere,
have marked their 20th year in power by freeing 104
political prisoners-some who had been thought dead and
others jailed for decades
The amnesty announced Wednesday cane a little more
than a month after U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young
sharply criticized Haiti's human rights record during a
visit to the Caribbean island.
The prisoners were ordered freed by President
Jean-Claude Duvalier to mark the 20 years in power begun
by his late father, Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier when he
was elected Sept 22, 1957 Jean-Claude succeeded Francois
when he died in 1971.
Eleven of the freed prisoners will not be permitted to
remain in Haiti because the government claims they were
trained by Cuba or the Soviet Union in subversion and
sabotage. It is believed they will be deported to France.
Young criticized Haiti's "imprisonment of voices of
dissent, the denying of access to families and the denial of
the most fundamental human right*.’*
(j