About The Red and Black (Athens, Ga.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1994)
I % 2 » The Red and Black « Wednesday. January 26, 1994 BRIEFLY ■ UNIVERSITY Looking for a summer job? Try the Georgia Hall In Tate The Career Planning and Placement Center is sponsoring an employ ment fair on Thursday, Feb. 3 for students looking for summer jobs. The fair will be held in Georgia Hall at the Tate Student Center from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. During the fair, representatives from more than 50 businesses will answer questions and hand out applications, according to the center. The businesses will send employees representing camps, industries, recreational and temporary services. For more information call 542-3375. - Jennifer Baker NATION Abortion protestors say ruling violates free speech rights WASHINGTON— Some anti-abortion groups see a new Supreme Court ruling as a "vulgar betrayal” of their right to free speech. Legal experts say the rights of most protesters will not suffer, but heavy penalties al lowed by the decision could stifle minor acts of civil disobedience. ‘The Supreme Court has told civil protest to go to hell,” Randall Terry of Operation Rescue said after Monday’s decision, which allows anti-abor tion protesters to be sued under a federal racketeering law. "I don’t think the First Amendment is a defense to arson,” countered Patricia Ireland, president of the National Organization for Women, which sued Operation Rescue and other groups that have led numerous protests at abortion clinics. “We’re not out to stop them from peacefully protesting,” she added. Monday’s ruling allowed Operation Rescue and other anti-abor tion groups to be sued under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law. If they are sued successfully, the law’s triple damages provision could spell financial ruin. Terry called the decision “a vulgar betrayal of over 200 years of tolerance towards protest and civil disobedience.” Legal experts said the ruling will not harm the free- speech rights of peaceful, law-abiding protesters. But its effect on those who engage in civil disobedience by breaking the law is open to debate. - The Associated Press UGA TODAY Meetings • The French Organization of the University of Georgia is sponsoring “A Night in France” tonight at 8:30 in the second floor TV lounge of Morris Hall. For more information call Frederic Fauchie at 357-0133. • Gamma Beta Phi will meet tonight at 6 in room 142 of the Tate Student Center. • Students for Environmental Awareness is sponsoring a Bike Lane Action Workshop at 8 tonight in room 145 of the Tate Student Center. For more infor mation 542-8102. • The American Red Cross will hold the UGA Hill Blood Drive today in the O’House base ment from 1 to 6:30 p.m. The Brumby Blood Drive will be held from 1 p.m to 6:30 p.m. tomorrow Jan. 27. • B’Nai B’Rith Hillel is spon soring its Tu B’Shvat Seder tonight at Hillel. For more infor mation call Heather or Andra at 543-6060. • A colloquium on “Influences of Local Similarity on Global Processing” will be held today at 3:30 p.m. in room 120 of the Psychology building. For more information call 542-4211. • NAACP presents the “Essence of Our People Series Part I” in Creswell lobby at 7:30 tonight. The topic will be blacks in the media. For more informa tion call George at 357-2491. • Paul Heard, candidate for gov ernor, will speak at the meeting of the College Republicans tonight at 6 at Peppino’s. The topic will be the 1994 gubernato rial campaign. For more infor mation call Scott at 613-8461. Upcoming • The International Business Society will meet Thursday Jan. 27 at 6:30 p.m. in room 107 of Caldwell Hall. All interested parties are encouraged to attend. • Unity of Athens services are held each Sunday at 7.30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Center at 1250 S. Lumpkin St. This week on Jan. 30, Steve Bolen will be the guest speaker. For more infor mation call 543-7754. Announcements • Student Activities is sponsoring UGA’s first alternative spring break trip. Twenty students will be selected to travel to Mt. Pleasant, S.C. to work on homes and renovate a homeless shelter. The cost of the trip is $35 and applications are available until Jan. 31 in room 325 of Tate Student Center. For more infor mation, call 542-7774. • Frank DeFord who spent 25 years working for Sports Illustrated and currently works for Newsweek, will speak on “Gender Equity in College Sports” tonight at 7:30 in Georgia Hall. For ticket informa tion call 542-6396. • Journalism 586 is having an open casting call for a short video to be shot in February. Auditions are at 7:30 in room 144 of the Tate Student Center on Thursday, January 27. • Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. is sponsoring Sigma Week this week. Tonight they will hold an AIDS awareness program at 7:30 p.m. in the Russell Hall lob by. For more information call Kenny at 357-3257. • Mortar Board applications are available for juniors with 3.1 or better GPA at the Tate Student Center’s information desk. Selection for membership is based on scholarship, leadership and service. Call Liz at 546-4440 for more information. • The Counseling and Testing Center is accepting applications for membership in the winter quarter therapy and support groups. Currently enrolled stu dents are eligible. Call the Center at Clark Howell Hall at 542-3183 for an appointment. • Alpha Phi Omega national service fraternity is currently re cruiting members to charter a chapter at the University of Georgia. Any interested persons can call Harry at 542-9371. • A support group for gradu ate students dealing with rela tionship issues, academic de mands, and time-management stress is getting together. For more information, call Judy Bruckner or Shirley Taffel at 549-5094 or leave a message in mailbox 76 or 91 in 408 Aderhold Hall. • Reverend Alex Williams, Presbyterian Campus Minister, will speak on “Was Jesus a Christian” tonight at 7 at the Presbyterian Student Center lo cated at 1250 South Lumpkin St. i A social will follow. Everyone is invited to attend. For more infor mation please call 548-5932. • Two exhibitions of 20th cen tury photographs will be on view at the Georgia Museum of Art until March 13. The exhibi tion will feature 77 photographs by Carl Van Vechted and Eudora Welty. For more information call 542-1051. • The Native American Cultural Society will hold its first annual fund raising dinner at the Georgia Conservatory on Jan. 29 at 7 p.m. The speaker will be Lakota Sioux Elder and Interpreter Elmer Running. Donations are $25 in advance, $35 at the door and $15 for stu dents with identification. •The Black Educational Support Team is currently ac cepting applications for coun selors for fall 1994. Applications may be picked up at 404 Memorial Hall. The deadline is Friday, Jan. 28. For more infor mation, call 542-5773. • The Sandy Creek Nature Center will host an open house on Saturday, Jan. 29 from 1 to 4 p.m. at the center’s new Walker Discovery Hall. The event begins the year’s membership drive. For more information, call 613-3615. Items for UGA Today must he submitted in writing at least two days before the date to be pub lished. Include specific meeting information - speaker's title, topic and time, and a contact person's day and evening phone numl>er. Items are printed on a first-come, first-served basis as space per mits. Barbara Dooley rides the morning radio waves in Athens WGIi+J By SHARON EGAN Staff Writer In the studio of WGAU radio sta tion, Barbara Dooley’s picture hangs on the wall just to tne right of Rush Limbaugh’s. The new morning talk show host would prob ably agree the position is an appro priate one. “I make Rush look liberal,” Dooley said Tuesday morning fol lowing her new show. Despite her personal views, the self-proclaimed conservative’s show follows a much more tame format than firebrand Limbaugh’s. On the air, Dooley sticks to asking ques tions of her guests on topics aimed at mainstream audiences. Off the air, however, her com mentary gathers steam. Minutes before Dooley’s show aired on Tuesday, the conversation turned to Michael Jackson. Dooley said she feels the entertainer, who has been accused of child molesta tion, is obviously guilty. “They prostituted their son if you ask me,” she said of the child’s par ents. Topics for Dooley’s show, which she chooses herself, range from ath letics (husband Vince was the guest) to depression. She also said she plans to dis- I cuss the issue of condom machines scheduled to be placed in dormito- I ries with future guest University President Charles Knapp this I Thursday. Dooley said she dis- ! agrees with the idea of putting the j machines in a dorm, which she said is supposed to be a home-away-from home. “Your mother wouldn’t set up a condom machine in your home, would she?” she said. Dooley invited Tom Camp, exec utive director of the Samaritan Counseling Center in Athens, to speak on depression Tuesday morning. Camp and Dooley arrived at the station a few minutes before air time to go over notes and decide what to discuss during the show. Dooley explained the setup to Camp, pointing out the earphones and the microphones they are to use. She also explained that there is no talking when producer Matt Caesar goes on the air. Caesar began the show by read ing the introduction: “WGAU presents the Barbara Dooley Show with interesting talk and your phone calls,” he said. Etooley introduced the guest and gave listeners the number to call, 549-TALK. During the show, the host shared some of her own experiences with depression. “There were periods when I would just go into my shell,” she said, adding that she is normally open about her feelings. Camp told Dooley and the morn ing listeners that holding depres sion in is like letting a sore go unat tended. He then asked Dooley if that description is too gross for the radio. “Nothing is too gross for radio,” Dooley said, laughing. When the show ended at 10 a.m., Mega dittos, Barbara: Producer Matt Caesar (I), Barbara Dooley and talk show guest Tom Camp in the studio. Dooley leaned back in her chair. “That wears me out,” she said. After the show she expressed concern to Larry England, the sta tion’s general manager, that she might have been too personal on the air, and she asked him to listen to a tape of the show to let her know. England and Dooley also dis cussed the lack of phone calls (only two came in). They decided that de pression was a subject people avoid. “It’s such a personal and embar rassing thing for a lot of people. I think people in Athens would be afraid someone would recognize their voice,” Dooley said. Reaction about the show has been very positive, England said, assuring Dooley that he wasn’t just saying that for her benefit. “People will let you know when they don’t like something,” he said. Dooley said listeners have even approached her on the streets. “It’s amazing how people will come up and say, You ought to get so-and-so on your show,’"she said. According to Dooley, family and friends have also provided much needed support. “Vince is just always more than agreeable,” she said of her husband. Besides hosting the morning show, Dooley also is co-owner of a downtown bagel shop. She said hav ing a jam-packed day is beneficial for her. “The busier you are, the more you get done,” she said. Dooley, who has been hosting the talk show every Tuesday and Thursday morning for about three weeks, said she has had previous experience in the radio business at WSB in Atlanta, filling in on talk shows, but this is the first time she has had her own show. “Fm having a ball,” she said. “It’s making me think... I hope that one day people will say, ‘Oh it’s nine o’clock, I’ve got to listen.”’ ’OUNSELING & TESTING CENTER Career Quest Thursday, January 27 2:15-3:15 p.m. Room 145 Tate Center TINKER? TAILOR? SOLDIER? SPY? If you’re wondering where your Interests lie and what you'd like to do, then come to this workshop. You’ll find some careers and college majors to explore. ABRAMS ALPS CINEMA Cl Cfl ALPS CENTER 548 5256 V I a JU GERONIMO « 9:30 w '" Wood* Alton Diana Ksalon MANHATTAN MURDER MYSTERY (Pg-h ms l BATMAN CARTOON (PQ 13) S i S Mil 1«.S* I JURASSIC PARK PG'3 sisma 1 TELLS | PAST, preTentT A FUTUREI You can be HELPED by ccnaultmg Me GIFTED ADVISOR. I SISTER MARIE PALMIST I ■ 5400 ATLANTA HIGHWAY ATHENS. GEORGIA , I One West tom QeorgiiSquae Mill 7 Ain.-10 p.m I [5 48-85 98j5_0FF wUhthii cougorj ' $7.95 LIME MfiRGfiRITfi PITCHERS > $2.50 BEER PITCHERS ■ $1.00 KRMIKRZI SHOOTERS NEW LOCATION WALKING DISTANCE FROM the UNIVERSITY mism ®w mm •AFTER CLASS SPECIALS (2-7) MON - THOR fi ■ 5 TVS ■OPEN ALL DAY-NO SIESTA ■ PRIZES & GIVEAWAYS ■SPECIALS VALID AT BALDWIN ST. ONLY!! “Where It’s Always Springtime" 1 1*^1 I Aaron m 4 I Bonding I Company • 20% Student Discount • Free T-Shirt (limit one per customer) 353-3190 OSD 485 Baldwin St (across from O'Malley's) tSS&uI'^suu.w s “y Pi Beta Phi Loves Our New Sisters //wy "TfCxiaA (Jut ‘SttftAc- 'Ttieote (JUt “TfCeleutie. ©**e<t<% /4tc&&4€ *7 ’TKetitj "Su-iAe £tte* ‘PastAen /4ttoU%*€ £<t$e “P<stt<*si<t (Ut “/Settee EWy 'TtSAceten ulfXU'Ut (Jmh jiavett (Jc*€M4f HEY, YOU IN THE BAND How would your band like to receive detailed bi-weekly coverage in The Red and Black in the form of a documentary about your struggles and triumphs? How would you like to have every minute detail of your lives exposed to the public? Do you have a lot of booze and groupies, and need someone to share it with? Do you believe your endeavors in the musical arena are worthy of intense scrutiny? If this sounds good to you, then you’re just the sick individuals we are looking for. Send a photo, demo tape, and a brief statement explaining why we should pick you, and anything else you think will increase your chances to: Cover This! Entertainment co/ The Red and Black 123 N. Jackson Street Athens, Ga. 30601 All submissions will be considered carefully and are non-returnable. The five finalists ^vill be contacted for an interview. Dcudlinc lor entrants is Friday. January 28. r Rewarding, Challenging, Invigorating, Exciting, Refreshing, Exhilarating... Do these words describe your last Spring Break? If not, Come with us on our first alternative Spring Break to Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. Spend a week building houses and working in a homeless shelter. Pick up your application today in the Student Activities Office (325 Tate Center). Applications are due January 31. For more information call 542-7774 INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL SPECIAL!! Nike Sonic Mid Driving Force 3/4 Air Sheer Force Mid Air Force High Top reg. $70 / NOW $49 reg. $58 / NOW $40 reg. $80 / NOW $60 reg. $115 / 1068 Baxter St. 546-0618 1860 Barnett Slioals Rd. 546-0616 The Mu Beta Chapter©?! Chi Omega Congratulates its new initiates We love our Diamond Pledges^