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Tuesday, October 13, 2009 | The Red & Black
GRAPES OF WRATH
When: Oct. 13-18,8 p.m,
Oct. 18, 2:30 pm
Where: Seney-Stovall
Chapel
Cost: $7 (students)
GRAPES: Male
actors grow
facial hair
for play
► From Page 1
multiple roles in the
production.
Contini’s style of
directing has proven to
be just as abnormal as
the medley of trash
props.
Prior to blocking the
play, he made the cast
tape-record all of the
dialogue separately. He
then played the tapes at
the first rehearsals and
required the actors to
perform, without speak
ing, along to the pre-re
corded dialogue.
To push the play’s
dirtiness a step further,
the male cast members
have been growing out
their facial hair for sev
eral weeks.
“[The beards)
weren’t required, but
they were asked, and we
kind of took it upon our
selves to make them as
bushy as possible,” said
one actor. “So we
haven’t shaved in weeks,
which is hard because it
itches —but whatever
will make the play bet
ter.”
In this production of
“The Grapes of Wrath,”
Contini and the cast
hope to reiterate that
one man’s trash is
another man’s treasure,
and in this case, the
treasure is a minimalist
production that defies
the restraints of money.
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ACROSS
1 Difficult
5 Apple
drink
10 Killed
14 Vicinity
15 Peruvian
pack animal
16 Father
17 Bleachers
level
18 Birch tree
19 Enthusiastic
20 Melancholy
22 Go over
one’s steps
24 Mischief
maker
25 Wading bird
26 Makes, as
an income
29 1/4 and 3/4
30 Walked the
floor
34 Tiny branch
35 Building
wing
36 Declining
mentally
due to old
age
37 Possesses
38 Moderately
slow, in
music
40 Neon or
helium
41 Constructs
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43 Sunbeam
44 Put in order
of impor
tance
45 Of the kid
neys
46 Insurance
company
rep.
47 Joker &
deuce
48 Analyze a
sentence
50 Saloon
51 Mythologi
cal winged
horse
54 Trash
58 Saudi or
Jordanian
59 Biblical
tower
61 Notion
62 Small brook
Two words meaning
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Animals up for
adoption in Tate
By ASHLEY HIEB
The Red & Biack
For being man’s best
friend, these dogs are
pretty lonely. But they
just might find their best
friend in the Tate Student
Center Plaza today.
Forgotten Friends will
be holding its first Animal
Adoption Day in the Tate
Plaza from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Dogs provided by
ACC Animal Control will
be available for students
to adopt.
“Our goal is to raise
awareness of adoption,”
said Lauren Miller, presi
dent of Forgotten Friends
and a senior from
Lawrenceville.
Miller founded
Forgotten Friends in fall
2008with Kelly Cummings,
a junior from Marietta, to
raise awareness about
animal care. Since then,
the group has held a pet
supplies drive, free trans
portation to get animals
spayed and neutered, and
an adoption day for pit
bulls - which featured
Chuckie, a dog that was
previously owned by
Michael Vick before being
rehabilitated.
This is the first time
Forgotten Friends has
held an Animal Adoption
Day, but they plan to hold
more on the second
Tuesday of each month.
The next adoption day
will be Nov. 10 and will be
the last one of the fall
semester. The adoptions
will begin again in
January.
“These animals really
need to be adopted,”
Miller said.
“If we don’t have
enough room, we have no
choice but to euthanize,”
said Christy Champagne,
supervisor of ACC Animal
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64 Ripped
65 Leg joint
66 Thrill
67 Winter toy
DOWN
1 Derby and
fez
2 Opera solo
3 Marsh
grass
4 Mending
5 Hold tightly
6 Troubles
7 TV’s
“American
8 Come forth
9 More
unusual
10 Lacking any;
kind of luxu
ry
11 Etna’s out
put
12 Heroic tale
13 Get one’s
feet wet
21 Els’follow
ers
23 Cone
shaped
dwelling
25 Expand
26 Old anes
thetic
27 On the ball
Control.
Champagne said
Animal Control has no set
policy on euthanization,
but follows certain guide
lines.
If the animal is a stray,
it will be kept at Animal
Control for six days; but if
an owner gives their pet
up to Animal Control
then euthanization
depends on whether or
not there is room at the
facility for the pet. Feral
animals that cannot be
socialized are typically
euthanized as well, she
said.
Students interested in
adopting a pet can fill out
an application in Tate
plaza. “The applications
are first-come, first
serve,” Miller said.
There is a SSO adoption
fee that is due once the
application is processed,
which includes vaccina
tions and micro-chipping.
Animal Control gives a
$25 refund to an owner
after they get the adopted
animal neutered or
spayed, which typically
costs S4O to S6O.
“Students tend to get
a bad rap as dog owners,
but it’s really unjustified,”
Champagne said. “They
tend to be our best pet
owners.”
For students who
aren’t interested in adopt
ing a pet right now,
Forgotten Friends will
have adoption pledges
available that students
can fill out, promising
that they will adopt their
next pet. And the organi
zation still encourages
students to stop by and
play with the animals.
“It’s the dogs’ day out
they get a fun day
where people come and
play with them,” Miller
said.
39 King
Cole
42 Qualified
44 Cottontails
46 Attack vio
lently
47 Baby bear
49 Russian
money
50 Heartbeat,
as detected
in the wrist
51 Leave the
car
28 “He is !";
Easter
phrase
29 Ancient
31 Cuban
export
32 Large ante
lope
33 Office furni
ture
35 Nav. rank
30 Pigpen
38 Book of
maps
□□□□□□
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NEWS & VARIETY
. Young Americans for Liberty:
favoring neither left nor right
By JENNIFER JOHNSON
The Red & Black
It doesn’t favor either
side of the aisle
but it’s not the
Green Party,
Libertarians or
Independents.
What is it?
Young Americans
for Liberty.
YAL is anew stu
dent group aiming
to avoid political
pigeon-holes and
inspire student
interest and robust debate
on national concerns.
“Young Americans for
Liberty is an advocacy
group that stands for indi
vidual liberty, sound money,
limited government and
noninterventionist foreign
policy,” said Carter Kessler,
a senior economics msgor
from Eatonton and presi
dent of the University’s
chapter of YAL.
According to Kessler,
the organization sets itself
apart from existing politi
cal organizations not only
through its faith in free
markets and individual lib
erty, but also its approach
to bringing about a
change.
YAL plans to host meet
ings based more on ideas
and political views, rather
than politicians and politi
cal strategy.
“We’re for principals, not
TUESDAY
Want to know what's going on in
Athens today? See all the music,
lectures, events and sports hap
penings at www.redandbiack.
com
MUSIC
Mlcah Dalton, Drew Holcomb
& The Neighbors, Paul Smith
When: 9 p.m.
Where: 40 Watt Club
Price: S6 (21+), $8 (18+)
Contact :www 40watt. com
UGA Wind Ensemble: Street
Song
When: 8 p.m.
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52 Gray or
Moran
53 Strong wind
54 Tenant's
payment
55 False deity
56 Withered
57 in; sub
mit
60 Crushing
snake
party heads,” Kessler said.
“Hopefully we will get peo
ple to realize politicians are
saying one thing and doing
another.”
KESSLER
nizations on campus, and I
found them to consist of
more campaign speeches
rather than a platform to
debate hot topics in the
political arena,” Collins
said.
According to Collins,
the organization is looking
to bring in political speak
ers and approach them
with tough questions to
see how they handle
them.
YAL opens its doors to
all students, including
Republicans, Democrats
and students who may not
be well versed in the ways
of politics and govern
ment.
Doug Schwartz, a soph
omore finance major from
Acworth and member of
both YAL and College
Republicans, is supporting
the group’s interest in
expanding its numbers and
UGA TODAY
Where: Hodgson Hall, UGA
Performing Arts Center
Contact: 706-542-3736, www.
music.uga.edu
Steel String Session
When: 7 p.m.
Where: The Melting Point
Price: $3
Contact: www.meltingpointa
thens.com
ART & FILM
Imtimacy
Where: State Botanical Garden
of Georgia
Price: Free
Contact: 706-542-6156, www.
uga.edu/botgarden
Fall Ring Week
October 12-16
UGA Bookstore &c
Sanford Hall Coca-Cola
Will l ounge 1
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
3 UGA
Alumni Association
Tfce VltfMiitf r Out|ii
James Collins, a
sophomore market
ing major from
Norcross and mem
ber of YAL, is look
ing forward to the
growth of the club
and the ability to be
more involved in
political discussion.
“I have gone to
other political orga-
YOUNG AMERICANS
FOR LIBERTY
When: 5 p.m. today
Where. 250 MLC
drawing a diverse crowd.
According to Schwartz,
the goal is to increase
awareness and inspire peo
ple who sit on the sidelines
when it comes to political
issues.
“I feel like this is a great
way to get involved, make
a difference and do some
thing that I believe in,”
Schwartz said.
The organization
intends to bring about the
changes it would like to
see with the ultimate goal
of auditing the Federal
Reserve, repealing legal
tender laws, getting rid of
the Federal Reserve and
income tax and eliminat
ing a lot of government
institutions that have
already been created,
Kessler said.
“We need to offer solu
tions,” he said.
“It’s not enough to say
we want to do these things.
We need to have tangible
ideas regarding issues such
as transitioning from cen
tral banking to a gold stan
dard, how to transition
from an empire to a consti
tutional republic, and so
forth."
Lord Love You: Works by R.A.
Miller
When: Tues & Thurs, 12-9 p.m.,
Wed, Fri, & Sat, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Where: Lyndon House Arts
Center
Price: Free
Contact:7o6-613-3623
Film: Made In USA
When: 6:30 p.m., every Tuesday
through Oct. 27
Where: Tate Student Center
Contact:7o6-542-3042
Film: Ayat AyatCinta
When: 6:30 p.m.
Where: 101 MLC