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THE COLONNADE
vol. 44 No. 1 Georgia College October 14/1^68
in the music business to- will be formally inaugura- College's recently reno-
day. Their rare combina- ted as Georgia College's vated and expanded lib-
tion of rhythm and har- seventh president on Fri- rary. At eight p.m. the
mony has made them one day, October 18, after a same day, a reception will
of the most sought after series of events occuring be given in honor of Dr.
groups in America. Music October 17 and 18. and Mrs. Bunting in the
-is the biggest thing in According to Dr. Ed Daw- old Governor*s Mansion.
the lives of the Tams and son, chairman of theGeor- Official delegates, mem-
their happiest moments gia College Inauguration bers of the Georgia Col-
are spent on stage. Committee, dignitaries lege faculty, Georgia Col-
Joseph Pope, Charles such as Governor Lester lege Foundation members,
Pope, Robert Smith, and Maddox; John W. Langs- member of the Board of
Horace Key are natives of .daie, chairman of theRegents, Chancellor Simp-
Atlanta and attended Ho- Board of Regents of the son, his Alumni represen-
ward High School together. University System of tatives, representatives of
School days over, they Georgia; and George L. the College Government
formed a vocal group that Simpson, Jr., Chancellor Association and others will
soon became a sensation of the University System attend the reception.
in the Southeast. Bill Lo- will attend. There will On Friday, October 18 at
wery, a perceptive Atlan- also be representatives 10:30 a.m. in Russell Au-
ta music publisher, be- from over 200 colleges, ditorium the inauguration
came their manager, ar- universities and profes- exercises will begin with;
ranged a recording ses- sional societies present. Chancellor Simpson pre-
sion and the result was ®l THE TAMS On Thursday. October 17, siding. The last event in
the hit "Untie Me.*'
«\'\ytw*4\
at three p.m. delegates the formal inauguration
ABC Records heard the will register in Chappell will be a luncheon for the
Tarns and signed them to Hall. They will be taken delegates in the College
a contract. Their first on guided tours of Mill- dining hall at 12:30 p.m.
session produced '*What own orchestra, an emcee, guests will go on sale on
Kind of Fool (Do You Think and at least one other act, October 14th. All tickets
I Am)** which became one
of Americas number one
making it a complete r e -
view of some seventeen
must be purchased by 11:00
a.m. on October 26th. The G.C. Drops
songs that year. people. The demand for schedule for sale of tickets
The Tams have toured
with such international
this show is so great that
promoters are now asking
will run:
October 14,, 15, and 16-
First Game
greats as James Brown, for dates as far ahead as 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Otis Redding, Ray Charles, 1970. October 21,22, 23, 24 and The first intercollegiate team has played competi-
The Lovin* Spoonful, and The Tams will perform 25 - 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 soccer team at Georgia tively, whereas Georgia
many others. at the Georgia College Fall p.m. Saturday, October 26- College was defeated this State has been playing in
Al Cottle of Washington, Dance this year. Students 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. past Saturday by the Geor- competition for three
D.C., is the latest mem- of Georgia College will be gia State Panthers, the fi- years. The Coach feels
ber of this group. Also, admitted by showing their Each guest ticket will cost nal score being 8 to 0. that now that the first game
the Tams now carry their ID cards. Tickets for all $3.00. Steve Mwamba was the has been played his team
leading scorer for the knows what to expect and
Georgia State team with will be capable of playing
four goals. a more agressive ball
Georgia College's Coach Larry Bosserman
singled out a defensive
game.
The soccer team will play )1
player, GC's goalie, Phil host to Emory's junior
varsity team Saturday,
Future Hoyt, as one of the bright-
er players, of the team. October 19. The game
He also pointed out that will be played at Bald-
this is the first time his win High's football field.
It is apparent that Geor- Dr. Jones, will determine union will include the new Kickoff time is 2:00 p.m.
gia College is changing, what our campus needs post office, a lounge for on the sides would house
but with this transistion and then seek to meet those faculty members and a most of the residents. The
comes, not only the growth needs. A college union, an special dining hall for the center building would con- Students Hear
of the student body, but al- addition toHerty, and a new use of both faculty and tain the house director's
so the physical change on dormitory are the forth- students. apartment, study rooms, Dr. Littleton
GC*s campus. When we coming additions to our kitchens, recreation and
return to our alma mater school. As our enrollment in- game rooms, coed televi-
in the years to come the The college union, the hub creases, spaces to put in- sion rooms and a listen- Formal acceptance of the
small college we now know of student and faculty ac- coming students becomes ing booth. The outer Honor Code of Georgia
will have grown in remark- tivity, will be built on front a problem. It is for this buildings would have study College was held on Thurs-
able size. ' campus directly across reason that plans fora.new areas, garment and trunk day night, October 3, at
In an interview with Dr. from Parks Hall. The dormitory have been made storage rooms, and sun- 7:00 p.m. in Russell Audi-
W. Alan Jones, Director of plans for the union have and approved. The new decks. This dorm would torium. Assembled ac-
Institutional Research and been approved since June, addition to our campus will encompass approximately cording to classes, stu-
Planning, it was discov- but legal matters have be constructed in the area 55,000 square feet and cost dents accepted the solem-
.ered that GC's future is slowed the building pro-, of Nesbitt Woods and will $1,850,000. nity of the occasion as
tremendous and already gress down. When com- accommodate approxima- Georgia College has great Dr. William H. Littleton,
have three major projects pleted, the union win have tely five hundred students. possibilities for growth Dean of -Students, spoke.
been approved for the ex- cost a million and one half The structure will be built and expansion in her fu- "Honor is a personal
pansion of Georgia Col- dollars and will contain of- so that it may serve as ture. We have many bright thing - one of the few
lege. fices, dining facilities, either a boy's or a co- and imaginative people things which we can nei-
Although there is no ap- bookstore, lounges, listen- educational dorm. It will with great ideas for her ther give to each other nor
proved masterplan at GC, ing and study rooms, and be composed of three progress, but growth takes take -away from each
there Is a masterplan study also offices for the three buildings, the center one time, money and a great other." With these words,
in progress. This study, major organizations to being the "control" build- deal of patience. We need
under the leadership of meet and function. The ing and the two buildings all three. (Cont. on page, 7)
*i . .'i .
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NASH'S
have paid your fees. Now, you are in for a real t h r e a t - (Lmipmry .5^hap
excuse m e — a real treat. You.are going to lunch. Cartoonist. Layout Editor. • ..Truett Leyentt of serving and the taste of
•Linda Williams
No lines at all, of course, and you are welcomed by Photographer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B u f f R o u n t r e e Xih. the food should be changed.
beautiful signs like "This is not a cafeteria, it is a Staff-Yank Obevleitiiev, Freda Simpson, Kenneth Champion; Diane MI'jeOGfVILU, GEORGIA The minority opinion this •fi
weeks seems to be that the
scramble", etc. Well, you get your food, get checked ClementSiJenny Bailey, Harvel Boyer, David Perkins, Mary Jane
out, and sit at a table. You observe the quantity and Hunt, Patricia Estes, Barbara Hand, Judy McClure, Sammy Jones,
AND NASH'S Squire ^ V p cafeteria is fine. • • • ' • . ' ' : , / • •
. .; •••* M
you just know that two more people could eat from your Susan Jackson, Sandra-McCranie, Linda Thurmond, Janie Evans,
serving and you would all be completely satisfied. Carol Irby, Charlene Patterson, KathyCrowe,Diane LiHosey, Cyn-
thia VanScoy, Peter Piro, Cliarles Bryant, Marianne Wetherington,
Well, you go ahead and get started. By gosh, the Robert Davis, Jr., Bob Fallon, Sandra Howell, LouAnne Tuck, Eva
quality is so good that you decide to stop right there. Wliitaker, Pat Keum.enewen, and Linda Lawson.
This ambrosia — food of the gods — has a taste that Faculty Advisors.. .Mrs. Mary Key Ferrell and Dr. Edward Dawson WOULD TWO
is out of this world, and it makes your stomach feel Editorial Policy-The Colonnade serves as a clearing house for stu-
like, it is so good tliat you can. not describe it. You dent opinion, provides coverage of activities and features topics of
interest to students. Editorial views expressed are those of the edi-
EXTRA HOURS
return the tray and all its contents to'where it belongs. torial
Then you set out to look over the campus.
You have now been introduced to one half of a first
staff and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the ad-
ministration or tlie student body. HUHTT
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cultural College. Under new Management. fore the November elec- Fall Dance. It will be responsibility for self and
tion and one afterward.
^m& held in the Milledgeville for others.
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Political News - And Your Candidates
in Indiannapolis after major party candidates. fairs. He is constantly government should stop a-
Nixon Humphrey had strongly Nixon would like to bring in touch with all aspects pologizing ' for riots and
suggested that poverty more young people into of our global relations and start doing something
was its cause, Nixon government, to invite responsibilities. His about them. To reinforce
In the recent Disney more constructive criti- search for just and lasting his views on crime, Wal-
spectacular "The Family charged that Humphrey
was ''tragically naive** cism, and to bring in the peace has been a keystone lace advocates full support
Band**, there is a stirring dissenters, not freeze of Humphrey*s complete of the policemen and fire-
political - rallying song about the nature of the
crime wave engulfing our them out. ,. record in public life, a men of this country and ur-
called **A Man For the This is a "Man of our public life that has as its ges the public to take this
Times.*' We can readily nation. "Just like the Ad-
ministration of which he is Times." appropriate slogan, "Make same stand.
apply this epithet in our This is Richard M. Nix- peace, not war.** Many people feel that
own time to Richard Mil- a part,** Nixon stressed,
"Mr. Humphrey has exag- on! VI. Viet Nam Wallace is ignorant to the
hous Nixon. . In a speech before the facts of the war in Viet
And what are '*the gerated and overempha-
sized poverty in this coun- Liberal Party on August Nam. On: the contrary,
times**? What are the is- 17, 1968, Hubert Hum- Wallace is well informed
sues? What are the an- try as a cause of crime. Humphrey
...the war on poverty is phrey stated that he sub- on the Viet Nam situation.
swers. . scribed, to the late Sena- He believes that the United
Along the campaign trail, not a war on crime and it
is no substitute for a war "The time has come to tor Robert Kennedy* s States should step up the
, Nixon has been stressing point of view that called bombing of North Viet
that, unlike Humphrey, on crime.** speak , out in behalf of
"Poverty**, said Nixon, America. . .not a" nation for "free elections so that Nam. In regard to.those
he favors the retention the government of South who are advocating sedi-
of the Taft - Hartley*s "cannot explain the rising that has lost its way, but
growth of crimes of vio- a restless people, a great Vietnam can be chosen tion and raising money,
famous Section 14b which democratically by the clothes and supplies for
permits states to enact lence and larceny among nation striving to better
the youth of suburban its way." people. . .** the Viet Cong Communists,
right - to - work laws, Speaking on "Issues and Wallace feels that these
thus abolishing compul- . America. Poverty cannot A vigorous and daring
explain the 187 per cent leader, Hubert Humphrey Answers*' on August 11, people should be dealt
sory unionism. Unlike 1968, Humphrey stated, with as traitors.
Humphrey, he vigorous- increase in daytime burg- has in his twenty years of
laries in this country in public service amassed a "There isn*t any problem George Wallace is also a
ly disagrees with certain as far as we are concern- firm believer in states
Supreme Court decisions the last seven years.** public record that.is un-
Nixon stated that "there equaled in its diversity, ed about halting the bomb- rights. He feels that the
which have turned crimin- ing if we have some kind states should be free to
als loose upon the streets. are thousands of hardened its range, and its breadth
criminals in the United of vision. In creating ima- of restraint or response run their own domestic in-
Unlike Humphrey, he is from North Vietnam.** stitutions. The states
opposed to bigger and big- States who steal and rob, ginative programs and act-
not because they are liv- ing as an innovater and a With sincerity and con- should determine what
ger government spending. viction, Hubert Humphrey type of school system they
And unlike Humphrey, he ing in conditions of pov- voice for progress, he has
erty but because they can helped America transform sums up his basic belief are going to have. They
thinks the federal govern- in this statement: "I shall should also determine
ment, through the power make a comfortable and many of her dreams into
successful c a r e e r of realities. The following base everything I do on one their own hospital poli-
of the purse, has been conviction—that thiscoun- cies, and private proper-
arbitrarily and danger- crime.,..** highlights of his career
Recently, Nixon has also serve as a clear indica- try, we, the people of these ty rights should be res-
ously abusing its autho- United States, working ina tored to the Individual.
rity to. force school inte- displayed his difference tion of his devotion to
wi.th Humphrey by scoring American government, as spirit of unity, can over- During his service to the
gration in the South. In come any obstacle in fi- state of Alabama, Wallace
a speech made in Char- the Czech invasion, call- well as his unusual abili-
ing for government action ties and capacities as a nally realizing the full- made a great deal of pro-
lotte, N.C., Nixon stated: ness of freedom, the prize gress in education, indus-
**I look with great con- to assist Czech refugees leader.
and requesting the Ad- I. Civil Rights of peace and the happiness try, agriculture, labor,
cern whenever I see fed- of human opportunity both welfare and roadbuilding.
eral agencies or courts ministration to re - ex- Hubert Humphrey has
amine it*s "bridge-build- proved himself to be an here and in the world.** If Wallace wins the Novem-
trying to become local ber 5 election, he has pled-
boards. There has been ing** efforts to the East. experienced public servant
Unlike Humphrey, he also in the field of civil rights. ged to make improvements
too much of a tendency in these areas and many
asked for a delay in the As headspokesman for hu-
for both our federal agen-
, ^ cies and courts to use the confirmation of the nu- • man rights he was floor
Wallace more. "It takes courage*'
clear non - proliferation manager for the passage to do what needs to be
whole program of school done for America. George
V integration for purposes treaty as a means of pres- of the Civil Rights Act of It is the opinion of many Wallace
suring the Soviets to with- 1964, clearly the most im- that George Wallace has no and has based has this courage
that had very little to do a great deal
with education and which draw from Czechoslova- portant Civil Rights Act of qualifications to serve as of his campaign
kia. this century. President of the United on it.
do not serve a very use-
ful purpose.** Instead, In short, Nixon has II., Opportunity for_Youth States. On the contrary,
Nixon favors freedom of clearly disproved George In his ninth year as U.S. Wallace is more than
; choice plans and is against Wallace*s self - serving Seantor, Humphrey pro- qualified to hold the posi-
b u s s i n g children to theory that there isn't a posed the first job train- tion of our highest govern- New Seal For
achieve a racial balance. "dimes worth" of dif- ing corp for unemployed ment official. He receiv-
ference between the two youth. Last summer he ed his law degree in 1942
from the University of Ala- GeorgiaCollege
Zeroing in on the crime
headed the drive which
found nearly 11/2 million bama and then saw heavy
jobs for unemployed. combat duty in World War
youths. II. Following the war, he A new Seal for Georgia
III. War on Poverty became an assistant attor- College at Milledgeville,
Sen. Humphrey, as the ney general and was elec- approved by the Board of
majority whip, led the ted to the Alabama House Regents, has been receiv-
drive for the fight against of Representatives/In 1953 ed. Like all the other
poverty. One of his last he became the youngest seals of each unit of the
acts as Senator was open- Circuit Judge in the na- University System, it is
ing the way for the passa- tion when he was elected placed on diplomas, pub-
ge of Headstart, the pro- Judge of the Third Judi- lications, official com-
gram to aid pre-school cial Court. In 1962 Wal- munications, and other do-
children. lace was elected Governor cuments.
138 WEST HANCOCK ST. . IV. Law and Order and during his adminis- The new seal is the work
In 1945 as Mayor of Min- tration Alabama enjoyed of a faculty committee con-
neapolis, Humphrey mo- record breaking growth. sisting of Dr. James C.
HEALTH Sr BEAUTY AIDS dernized, professionali- Wallace has been tagged Bonner, Dr. Ed Dawson,
zed, and strengthened the by numerous newspapers and Miss Jan Hardy.
police department and led and magazines as a racist In the center of the seal
"Why Pay More?" an organized fight against and an anarchist. He is. is the Seal of the State
crime. Concerning law neither. George Wallace of Georgia, indicating that
and order, Vice-Presi- has never made a speech Georgia College is a state-
Bruf Max Factor make-up dent Humphrey had this
to say, "I want one Ameri-
that reflected on anybody supported school. Four
because of race, creed, co- each relating to some
RpVPinn 'Blush-on
nCfCIUII face mates ca, not two, and so do you. lor, religion, or national aspect ofthe college's pro-
To achieve it we must have origin. He is, in fact, gram, are in the four divi-
lade East Wind sons ^p^^^^^^^^^"^ both civil order and civil very much opposed to a- sions, or quadrants around
justice.** narchy and civil disorder. the state seal. The qua-
Ambush spray Cologne Wallace feels that rioting drants contain a retort to
V. Foreign Policy
English Leather As a member of the ca- must cease. If rioters signify science, a book to
Cover Girl S K binet of the National Se- know they will be punish- indicate art, a philoso-
Clearasll Lip Gloss Max Factor
curity Council, Hubert
Humphrey plays an im-
ed, then they will think pher's lamp for philoso-
twice before throwing a phy, and a laurel, wreath
Hal Karate Fabulash by Revlon
portant part in the deci-
sion-making on foreign^f-
brick through somebody*s to represent honor and
window. He feels that the acheivement.
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