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Th#* Rr4 Miid Klaek. Timda). Marc h 6. 197V
PM* 3
BOOT AND SHOE SALE
New Shipment of Men's
and Women's Boots Just in!
Brand Name Boots
size 5 women's to size 13 men's
A slight bkmtsli
can save you a fortune.
Boots regular '78 ‘88
All Boots SAB
Shoes regular ’30‘40
All Shoes SJ5
MASADA
540-5014 Downtown 355 East Clayton
LEATHER
SHOP
Choose a different
lunch everyday
from our luncheon buffet
Roast Beef Buffet *3.50
salads, vegetables, entrees and desserts
Regular Buffet S3.10
everything except Roast Beef
Salad Bar S2.50
your choice of any or all salads
Vegetable Plate Si.95
no salad or meat but great vegetables and hot breads
Sandwich Buffet *250
build your own sandwich from assorted meats, cheeses,
relishes and breads
Soup of the Day *.85
with cornbread or crackers
You may also select from our daily specials or ordei
from our complete luncheon menu.
Monday through Friday
&vcvC
DOCKSIDES
Grab a pair of Sabago Docksides whan you're fitting
out this Spring The construction >s rugged The design
it sound Sebagc with years of experience making
boatmg moccasms. engineered a combination of tha
finest materials into a super deck shoe Than tasted
it in the 1970 Bermuda Cup Race Results: remark
able performance
Examine the elk tanned cowhide upper Built to resist
salt, perspiration, mildew Test the white rubber, sura-
grip, non-slip sole Either ashore or afloat, this tola
tread refuses to pick up sand or pebbles. Won't
scratch bnghtwork or canvas deck Lay hold of tha
rawhide lacings Sue up tha salt resistant, nylon and
dacron stitching throughout
Docksides mean quality Quality that's hendtewn by
Yankee craftsmen Others try to imitate. Oockaidea
are built to refute imitation — and they coat leas.
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 6.30
Amended schedule
for library, buses
During finals week the library will be open from 8am
to 2am Monday through Thursday and Bam to 6 p m
on Friday. March if. Residence ha'ls will close Saturday.
March 17. at 10 a m and re-open Sunday. March 2Z, a' 10
a m Men needing spring break hous.ng should contact
the Reed office and women should contact the Myers
office
Sneiling will serve its final meal Thursday evening.
March 15. and Bolton will serve its final meal Friday
evening. March 16 Both dining ha'ls will reopen Monday.
March 26. for breakfast
University buses will run on a reduced < half-service i
schedule Tuesday through Friday. M».rch 13-16. and on
Monday. March 26 They will tesume full operation on
Tuesday. March 27
Transportation plan
to help Athens area
By TOM KELLEY
Staff writer
A rural transportation project to help the
elderly, the handicapped and others with
transportation problems will begin operation in
Barrow County and will include Athens and
Clarke County within three years
The project will begin in Barrow County in
late February or early March, according to a
project spokesman
Existing resources, such as vans, drivers and
repair crews, (rom various human service
agencies in the county will be used, said David
Grayson, project manager These resources
are already used by organisations such as day
care centers, family service organizations,
menial health services, handicapped aid
centers and other organizations
Many of tnese groups offer similar services,
especially transportation programs, and the
project will un.te these services and eliminate
duplications
These agencies will be able to contract with
the project for transportation services,
according to Grayson
The project has been studied for the past
year or so to determine the needed resources.
Grayson said He has been the project manager
smee Dec 1. 1978
Grayson said the project was "stalemated.
and the project had to iron out bureaucratic
problems" so that the various communities
could make use of the iransjmrtation project
The transportation project will begin in
Barrow County, but will grow to serve Jackson,
Madison. Elbert. Oglethorpe. Clarke Walton.
Oconee. Morgan and Greene Counties
The project will be organized in one county at
a time, starting in Barrow County Eventually
all 10 counties will be "meshed together." with
Athens in the center ot the system and the
county seats connected by the project.
The project is being funded by a federal
grant for the first 18 months of operation The
money will be used only to "supplement
facilities which exist now." Gravson said The
money will not be used to create any new
services
Kelley Workshop. Inc . an agency contracted
with the Department of Human Resources, is
coordinating the project, according to Nathan
D Carmack, the workshop's executive
director.
Kelley Workshop. Inc is "a complete
rehabilitation center for the physically and
menially handicapped in the 10-county area.
Carmack said
The Workshop was chosen for the project
because it had been already establshed in the
10-county area and would be able to coordinate
the project with few problems. Carmack added
A GATHERING FOR ALL BELIEVERS
Marijuana has lost its cultural
symbolism, according to Schott
IN CONCERT
CRAIG SMITH
Guest Guitarist from Van Buren, Arkansas
"SPIRITS HAVING FLOWN"
on RSO Records
Only s 5.39 (‘8.95 uso
ot CHAPTER 3
229 Eost Broad (Across from the Arch)
Monday-Saturday 10:00-6:00
TUESDAY. MARCH H 7:30 P.M.
MEMORIAL HALL BALLROOM. UGA
FREE ADMISSION—EVERYONE INVITED
Stall illustration Krark
exam schedule
Time
March III 1 Tuc i
H 00 II DO III, 270
12:00 :t oo period I POL 101
3:30-6 30 PC'S 101. 127. 128 . 220 MS 209 . 312
7:30-1010 Periods 6. II. 14
March II < Weill
8:00-1! INI Period 2
12:00-3 00 BIO 101 102 HOT 122
3:30-6 Ml Periods •*». 9
7:30-10 30 Period 13: CUM III. 112. 121. 122. 128. 240. 241.
340. 341
H 301100
12.00-3 INI
3:30-6:30
7 :30 10 30
'eriods 8. lo
12.00-3 oo Period 4
3 10-6:30 KN<; loo. KN(i 101. 102. 131. 132; CML 121. 122
*eriod 12. ACT 110. 111. MAT 253. 254
March 16 < Frii
8:001100 Period 7
12:00-3:00 FR SI* CJKR 101. 102. 103; FR-GER 104
3:30-6:30 Period 3
5 hour courses taught in double periods are examined the
hour of the first period (or M W F classes and the hour of
the second (htiikI lor T II classes
3 hour courses with M W F classes are examined the first
I'.- hours til the designated periods. 2 hour courses
scheduled TH are examined the lust 1 1 • hours of Ihe
designated |>eriods Courses conducted on other days will
follow a similar schedule
All I hour and latioralorx courses are examined during
Ihe last scheduled class |>criod<s)
(CPSl— Larry Schott, the
new dirveto- of the National
Organization for Reform of
Marijuana Lews < NORML), is
not entirely happy about the
complacent attitudes of college
students toward marijuana
"Pot has become so common
place." laments Schott. “It’s
not a cultural symbol any
more "
NORML. an eight year old
organization that lobbies for
decriminalization and. more
recently, legalization of mari
juana. is finding students'
widespread acceptance of pot
can be a problem "There’s no
great sense of urgency." Scott
says, when NORML tries to
rally students to the decrimin
alization cause.
"We stir a lot of sentiment."
he cedes. "When we cite the
statistics (an all-time high of
457,000 marijuana arrests in
1977; 90 percent of these for
possession), people gasp—but
that’s not enough."
Which is not to say that
college students are oblivious
to NORML's goals. "College
and military memberships are
two of our largest groups,"
Schott said Schott attributes
this to a higher percentage of
students and soldiers who read
Playboy, which has contri
buted money to NORML. and
runs complimentary NORML
ads frequently Scott adds that
‘many" campuses have
NORML chapters, though they
tend to "come and go" as
students move or graduate
College support has always
been germane to NORML.
which has grown from i971 to
include an eight-member staff
at its Washington. DC. head
quarters. a $500,000 budget,
and offices in San Francisco.
New York. Atlanta. Chicago
and Los Angeles During the
early seventies. Schott recalls,
it was easier to garner support
in the more "politically ener
gized" environment of cam
puses Since then, though.
NORML’s college constituency
las dropped from its peak of
several thousand Thus.
NORML plans to intensify
their campus efforts by direct
mailing and a stepped-up tour
project. Over 40 lecture tours
are scheduled this year.
A typical lecture involves a
showing of the 1930s anti-mari
juana film Reefer Madness, a
talk and a question and answer
session According to Schott,
"invariably our lectures will
draw some of the biggest
audiences at schools ’’
Peter Meyers, chief counsel
for the group, agrees Meyers
recently returned from a
circuit that included such
schools as Mississippi State.
Southwest Texas University.
West Liberty State (West
Virginia), Mayhurts (Pennsyl
vania) and Rochester tom-
nunity College in Minnesota
Campus is a delight, and the
kids like us better than the
magicians of DNA or ESP
because we re a lot closer to
'heir lives."
At present. NORML lectures
>nly at schools, and there is a
good reason for such a policy
Besides the fact that they'll be
speaking to many in the prime
18-to-26-year-old pot smoking
group. NORML tour leaders
find that "colleges are a
natural base of operations "
Notes Keith Stroup, founder of
NORML. "one of the bttl
techniques is to tie student
voter registration with the
issue " Mark Heutinger. an
other NORML veteran, says
campuses have inherent ad
vantages "You have a Xerox
machine and rooms for meet
ing They’re ideal places for
organizing "
The lecture leaders acknowl
edge that students are sympa
thetic NORML goals, which
include freedom to exchange
or possess small amounts of
pot. the abolition of "lengthy”
prison terms for dealers, and
destruction of criminal records
for those arrested in the past
for "marijuana offenses " At
its seventh annual meeting last
December. NORML also set up
a task force for legislation
A lecture. Schott says, will
usually get students "fired up
enough" to write a letter to
Congressmen Others go on to
take a more active role Law
students have worked as
interns, for credit, at NORML’s
headquarters, and interns from
several west coast colleges
have also gained credit by
working in the San Francisco
office
Other students have worked
through their student govern
ments to facilitate decriminali
zation lobbying Alex Kaplan, a
University of New Mexico
student, is a state-coordinator
for NORML. and was able to
persuade the student govern
ment to appropriate funds for
local lobbying
cwntfiafi
1 75 Eost Cloyton
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