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t
Tuesday, Novfmbrr 3, I9K7
The Ked and Black
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$995 384K 3’/,” Drive
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196 Alps Road
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Tuesday
Free-Pool from 9-11
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100 N. Jackson St.
548-0689
UG A Today
Ad club Sliest
The Advertising Club will host speaker Tod Martin of Babbit and
Rieman tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 412 of the Journalism School
SA wants you!
%/
The Student Association is forming a committee to organize its
Winter elections Interested persons should attend a meeting in Room
414 of Memorial Hall at 5 p.m tonight
McWhorter Prize
Applications arc due November 9 for the McWhorter Prize, which
recognizes students for general excellence in scholastic and extracur
ricular University activities" in their freshman year Applications are
available in the Office of Student Financial Aid and at the Tate Student
Center for students who were freshmen in 1986-87
We want your blood
Students may donate blood at the Pharmacy School from 9:30 a m
to 3 p.m today
Study across the water
(Jene Tanzy will give a seminar about studying in England or Italy
at 3 p.m in the Conference Room of the International Services and Pro
grams Office. For more information, call 542-1557
480 E. Uroatl St
& Thomas SI.
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Deli'Market & Cafe
353-DEl A
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Leadership UGA open to top students
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Early Georgia planes
The Georgia Mae. a B-l bomber that has flown many Bulldog fans to
University football games, was the object of curiousity at this weekend's
airshow and dedication of the Ben Epps Airport. The airshow featured his
toric aircraft, both military and general aviation, the 1911 Ben Epps Mono
plane, radio-controlled iumlel planes and tours of the t'.S. Weather Bureau
in the main terminal of Ularke County’s airport. The dedication ceremony
featured Ben Epps Jr. speaking on the honor of C’larke County renaming
the airport for his father. Epps Sr., a self-taught aviator, designed, built
and in 1907 flew (Georgia's first airplane, the Monoplane. Epps opened an
airport at the present airfield's site in 1917, operating a flying service for 20
years. Ilis light planes would get 25 miles per gallon at 60 miles an hour,
but in 1937 he died from injuries after one of these such planes crashed on
takeoff. The University’s Air Force ROTC also participated in the ceremo
nies Saturday, which included a F-4 Fly-by by the Air Force’s 4th TAC
Fighter Wing.
(^onc^ratufationd
1988 PANDORA Outstanding Senior Leaders
Beth Anderson
Kelle Chandler
Donya Green
Gregory Gretsch
Beth McCarter
Lee McLees
Bran Parker
Lynn Reddish
Jett Sisarsky
Tammy Tate
Neil Thom
Cathy Tremayne
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By Kevan Ward
Red and Hlai-k Senior Reporter
University students again will have an opportunity to
participate in seminars with University, local and state
leaders in the leadership UGA program.
leadership UGA is a series of seminars for 30 to 40
University juniors and seniors who ‘‘have already dis
tinguished themselves as leaders and demonstrated
commitment to serving the community,” Director of
Judicial Programs Bill Bracewell said last week.
The object of the program is to expose these student
leaders to the issues that are going to confront them
when they leave the University, he said.
‘‘We also just want to say ‘You did the right thing,
and when you leave here do it again Students don’t get
enough credit for the work and effort they put into the
University,” Bracewell said.
Last year, the group participated in seminars at the
Carter Presidential Center, the University President’s
Home and the Morton Theater, as well as other places
Last year’s participants even had dinner with Former
President Jimmy Carter
Julie James. Panhellenic Council public relations
representative and a partiepant last year, said the pro
gram is eye-opening and forced her to think
‘‘It was one of the most valuable things I’ve done so
far here at UGA,” she said.
Clay McKemie, Interfratemity Council president and
also a participant from last year, called it mind
opening experience that was “very helpful for me.”
"I found it to be a really well-planned program with a
lot of valuable input to the students from community
and state leaders,” he said
The Russell Foundation funds the Leadership UGA
program every year, and last year the Georgia Athletic
Association also contributed. The program doesn’t cost
anything for participants
Applications are available in Academic Building
Room 210 and at the Tate Center information desk The
deadline for entries is Nov. 13.
nuiirc aim uic .Morion ineaicr. as wen as otner places.
Douglas County prayer issue goes back to court
Oirb. Harinun/The Red and Black
»\< ea
546-5014
238 E. Clayton Downtown
IBM
COMPATIBLE
ATLANTA (AP) - If it's OK to
open sessions of the U S Senate
with prayer, it’s OK to start
Douglas County football games with
a "ceremonial invocation,” an at
torney for the county's schools said
Monday.
“Surely it's just as permissible
for a student volunteer to give a 60-
to 90-second invocation as it is for
the paid chaplain of the U S.
Senate," attorney Frank Jones told
a three-judge panel of the 11th U S,
Circuit Court ol Appeals
Former Douglas County High
School student Doug Jager and his
father sued the suburban Atlanta
school system last year, claiming
the pre-game prayers by members
of the county ministerial alliance vi
olated constitutional guarantees of
separation of church and state
Jager was at the time a member of
the school band, a capacity in which
he said he was forced to listen to the
prayers. He since has graduated
from the high school
U S District Judge Ernest Tid
well issued a temporary order stop
ping the prayers last fall, and later
sided with the Jagers But when the
school board asked for a clarifica
tion, he deemed the equal-access
plan, which uses volunteers to give
the invocation, constitutional.
The Jagers appealed that deci
sion, claiming the equal access ap
proach had changed nothing in the
content of the invocations, which
they said continue to espouse Prot
estant Christianity.
"The same conduct that the trial
court found unconstitutional con
tinues," argued Jeffrey Bramlett,
an American Civil Liberties Union '
attorney representing the Jagers
Bramlett told the panel the invo
cations “lack secular purpose."
But Jones, arguing for the school
district, said, “You can have a reli
gious purpose as long as there is a
secular purpose."
Jones said the invocations con
tinue historical practice, add sol
emnity and dignity to the occasion,
and remind the participants to prac
tice good sportsmanship and fair
play
And, Jones said, "The 60- to 90-
second ceremonial invocation is
(lost) in the two-hour secular event
of w hich it is a part "
Jones also likened the invocation
to opening prayers given before the
U.S. Supreme Court, state legis
lative sessions and “this very court
today.”
Jones argued that the pre-game
invocations are governed by dif
ferent guidelines because they are
“outside an instructional environ
ment," do not involve a teacher-stu
dent relationships, and are heard by
a less impressionable audience
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