INSIDE TODAY
Columns Pg. 4
Editorials Pg. 4
Letters To Editor L_i_ Pg. 5
Out on a Limb „ . __ Pg. 7
Sports Pg. 6 THE AUBURN PIJUNSMAN FAMOUS MAN
amed publisher of
uth's Standard News-
.' is characterized in
^A <»' i l v Stephens' column.
f
VOLUME 92 AUBURN UNIVERSITY
To Foster Th£ Auburn Spirit
H
AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14, 1964 8 PAGES
fog
J t , -
page 4.
NUMBER 4
Norman Luboff Choir
To Present Concert
Monday At 8:15 p.m.
Norman Luboff and the Norman Luboff Choir will
open the Concert and Lecture series Monday at 8:15
p.m. in the Student Activities Building.
This performance marks the
group's debut in Auburn. Although
the choir is well known
to music lovers throughout the
world, the concert begins its
second touring season this
year.
Popularity of the conductor-arranger
and his group was
achieved primarily through the
many recordings for which the
group was originally created.
Twenty-five to 30 virtuoso
professional singers sing songs
ranging from such spectaculars
as "76 Trombones," to
classical selections.
Club Rush'
Scheduled
October 20
By JIM TILLMAN
Organizations Day, designed
to be an organizations "rush,"
is being held for the first time
here Oct. 20 in the Auburn
Union Ballroom.
Each organization under a
campus school will be represented
by a member at a table
in the ballroom with information
concerning his club's purpose
and activities. I
Jeff Stein, Superintendent of
Organizations, has urged students
to come in and familiarize
themselves with various
organizations on campus. "Organizations
day .was, <set-up to
inform students about what
each club offers to encourage
freshmen and other undergraduates
to join organizations,"
Ite explained.
As a member of an organization
on campus the freshman
is eligible for membership
on the freshman council
and may become an ex-officio
member of the Student Senate
with a vote and a voice in
student government.
To represent his school in
student government, a freshman
must be a member of a
recognized campus organization
in his school.
Luboff's professional career
began with commercial arrangements
and orchestrations. He
was also a popular singer, engaged
by major radio programs.
By 1945 the demand for
Norman Luboff arrangements
was so great that he gave up
singing, moved to Hollywood
3nd has since arranged music
for more than 80 movie hits.
Luboff arrangements have
been heard regularly on such
television programs as the
Telephone Hour, Dinah Shore,
The Ford Star Jubilee, and
Jerry Lewis. Others have been
created especially for top artists
and music directors.
Admission is free to Auburn
students on presentation of I.D.
cards.
Student Injured
In Traffic Mishap
By JIMMY STEPHENS
Munatfiiig Editor
William Cody Lee sufferred
cuts on the head and knee when
his motorcycle crashed into a
white '64 Chevrolet driven by
Debra Crow at 11 a.m. Monday
at the corner of West Magnolia
and Duncan Streets.
Lee was immediately taken
to Drake Infirmary for examination
and treatment.
Miss Crow was turning left
off Magnolia when Lee, who
was going East, .rammed into
the front of her car, witnesses
said.
Miss Crow said, "I was turning
off Magnolia to Duncan
Street and stopped when I saw
him coming. He didn't see me
in time to swerve out of the
way." Lee's statements to police
confirmed her story.
Bill Vernon, a witness at the
scene, stated, "The driver of the
motorcycle was thrown over
the hood of the car and landed
on the pavement near the door
on the driver's side."
No charges were filed against
either driver.
Birmingham Holds
'War Eagle Week'
To Honor Auburn
BAND DAY
The marching Blue Devils of Columbus High, Columbus, Georgia, were one of two bands
chosen to appear at half-time during Band Day activities Saturday. The other band was
chosen frm Decatur High.
Freshmen To March This Afternoon
In Annual 'Wreck Tech' Parade
By JIM RUTLAND
• The annual Wreck Tech Parade will be this afternoon ajt
3 p.m.
Each year prior to the Georgia Tech game, Auburn freshmen
put on the Wreck Tech or Pajama Parade. Various independent
groups and fraternity pledge classes march displaying floats and
rat caps and pajamas.
'Loveliest of the Plains'
Sorority pledges carry banners
identifying their sorority
and sing their sorority songs.
The parade takes place just
prior to the Wreck Tech pep
rally.
This year the parade will assemble
from the corner of Duncan
and Thach Streets, along
Duncan Street towards the
Commons Building.
Independents will be lined up
first followed by sorority and
fraternity groups. Positions will
be in alphabetical order, designated
by numbers assigned
and posted along the street.
Groups must be assembled no
later than 2:15 p.m.
At 3:00 p.m. the parade will
begin, moving along Duncan
to Magnolia Street and Toom-er's
Corner. It will then proceed
down College Street and
turn onto Thach, moving down
past the Field House to the
field next to the Football stadium.
The floats will be
abandoned and the pep rally
will begin at 4 p.m.
Floats of groups will be
judged on the basis of neatness,
theme, and originality.
The Chamber of Commerce
has donated four trophies for
the first and second places of
the independents and the fraternities.
The maximum height
of each float must not exceed
seven feet, and the length and
width, twelve feet six inches
respectively.
Renneker Announces
SGA Appointments
By LILY ROSS
Additional Student Government
appointments were announced
this week.
Bill Renneker, Student Body
president, has named Sharon
Anthony as Superintendent of
Women's Intramurals. Doug
Jones will serve as the Superintendent
of High School Relations.
Bill Brown will be in charge
of gathering and preparing the
material to be presented on the
Auburn Hour. The actual presentation
will be done by Mike
Flannigan.
Case Dropped
In Shooting 01
War Eagle III
The case against a teenage
Gardendale boy accused of
shooting War Eagle III two
weeks ago has apparently been
dismissed because of insuffi-
"(MSht evicterfSfeT r>" •
According to a story in the
Birmingham News, Garden-dale
Police Chief Harold Lit-trell
said that a sufficient case
could not be made against the
boy who reportedly shot the
Auburn mascot.
"The boy never did admit
it," said the chief. "We had a
witness who quoted the boy as
saying he did it. But then the
witness backed up and said he
couldn't remember it."
Both boys, under 17, were
questioned l a s t Wednesday,
Littrell said. They were taken
before Gardendale City Court
Recorder Earl Hall, who lectured
them.
"Apparently there were just
two of them out there, the boy
and the bird," said Littrell.
"We have no further proof he
shot the bird. The judge was
satisfied we have no case."
The chief said also that as
far as he knew, federal authorities
had also closed the
case.
According to an earlier story
in the News, the person who
shot War Eagle III would have
(See page 2, column 7)
Freshman Council System Affects
Upperclassmen Elections Method
Civic Groups
To Promote
Debating Duel
By MARY WHITLEY
News Editor
"War Eagle Week" is being
observed this week in
t h e City of Birmingham.
The observance is sponsored
by t h e Birmingham
Downtown Action Committee
in cooperation with Aub
u r n and t h e Jefferson
County Alumni Club.
The week of activities includes
a debate between Auburn
and the University of
Alabama, speeches by several
faculty and staff members, receptions,
and art exhibits.
Auburn as a moving force
throughout Alabama academically,
industrially, socially, and
in every phase of life will be
the topic of discussion at the
Birmingham meetings.
DEBATE TEAMS MEET
Debate teams from Auburn
and the University will meet
face-to-face for the first time
.tomorrow at 10 a.m. ,at the
Tutwiler Hotel to debate the
national topic: Resolved: That
the federal government should
establish a public works program
for the unemployed.
Carol Blevins of Birmingham
and Eddie Freeman of Columbia
will represent Auburn,
defending the negative.
The teams have met in debate
over educational television
and have participated in
the same tournaments but
never face-to-face in compe-tion
before.
AUBURN OFFICIALS SPEAK
"Auburn University: The
Draughon Years," was the topic
of Auburn's executive vice
president Dr. Robert C. Anderson's,
address to the Birmingham
Kiwanis Club at a
luncheon yesterday in the
Tutwiler Hotel.
E. J. Brumfield, Director of
Admissions, speaks to t he
Downtown Lions Club today
projecting t h e future educational
needs in the state. His
(See page 2, column 6)
ACOIA
Harry Hooper, left, and Dr. Max Autrey, one of two
ACOIA faculty advisors, map preliminary, plans for this
year's conference. The other fadulty advisor, Professor
Claude McNorton, could not be present for the picture.
ACOIA Faculty Advisors Named;
Important Student Positions Filled
Dr. Max Autrey, head of the dairy science department, and
Prof. Claude McNorton of the history and political science
department will be faculty advisors for the Auburn Conference
on International Affairs, to be held February 18-19.
Dr. Autrey expressed particular interest in the role of agriculture
in the world in relation
Loveliest Susan Williams participates in the observance
of National Newspaper Week by learning how to oil the
Lee County Bulletin printing press. Susan is a first quarter
freshman from Huntsville and is majoring in Home Economics.
She lives in Dorm 9.
By LYNNE GRIFFIN
Editor's note: This is the
third in a series of articles explaining
the Freshman Council
system, initiated this year.
This week's article deals with
how the new system affects
upperclassmen.
The Freshman Council System
is as important to the
junior or senior at Auburn as
to any "rat-capper."
One of the main purposes of
the system is to strengthen the
individual school clubs. If the
clubs become more effective
and more active within the respective
schools, 'the schools
themselves cannot help but
become stronger.
Under the revised Constitution
the 'Senate will be arranged
through the schools,
rather than by classes. Beginning
with the elections- to
be held on the third Thursday
in April, a President, Vice
President, and senator will be
elected from every school.
These people will be nominated
from their respective
clubs, as members of the Freshman
Council are. Under old
election laws, the political
old election laws, the political
parties were responsible for
nominating qualified people
for these positions.
There will be six senators-at-
large, elected by the stu-dent-
body-at-large. There will
be 15 members of the Student
Senate, which is identical to
the number in the Senate now.
Candidates for senator-at-large
and Student Body officers
will be nominated by the
political parties.
To be qualified for the position
of School Senator, the
candidate is required to have
completed at least four-fifths
of his total hourly load for two
quarters in residence, and no
less than four-fifths of his
total hourly load for eight
quarters in residence. In effect,
this means that the candidate
must be at least a third
quarter freshman and no more
than a third quarter Junior.
Student senators-at- l a r g e
must have completed four-fifths
of their total hourly load
for eight quarters in residence.
The qualifications for the
school officers and student
body officers remain the same
except for several m i n or
changes, noted in the revised
Constitution.
Because the majority of the
senators will be elected from
their own school, the people
who elect them will know well
their qualifications. There will
be a more direct relationship
between the Senate and the
schools, between the electors
and the elected.
The President a n d Vice
President' of the schools will
have a greater responsibility
than ever before.
IRC CLUB NOTICE
The International Relations
Club will meet Friday at 7:30
p.m. in Room 322 of the Union
Building. Dean Pumphrey of
the School of Engineering will
be the speaker. His topic will
be his recent trip to India.
Plans Continued
For Atomic Center
By HYLLIER SESSIONS
Final plans for a new nuclear
science center here are
almost complete.
Col. L. E. Funchess, director
of the Department of Buildings
and Grounds, said the architect
is near completion of the
final revised plans for the new
center, which will complement
the present physics program,
and that offers for bids are being
solicited for the contract to
be awarded in December.
Col. Funchess added that actual
construction is scheduled
to begin in January.
The center will be built at a
cost of more than a million
dollars to be raised by alumni.
It will house some of the most
modern equipment available
in the instruction of nuclear
science.
Planned location is on Wire
Road, east of the Plainsman
Dormitories. There are plans
for possible expansion of the
center later.
Facilities of the center will
be available to students in
other curriculums such as engineering,
pharmacy, chemistry,
agriculture, and vet medicine
inasmuch as the study of
nuclear science applies to their
particular course.
to this year's ACOIA topic,
"Poverty and the Population
Explosion." Dr. Autrey was the
originator of "Village Fair" in
1951.
Prof. McNorton has served on
a number of panels concerning
foreign affairs throughout the
South.
Four other men will hold key
positions in ACOIA as assistant
to the chairman. They are
Bill Renneker, Don Phillips,
Skip Barker, and Jim Sims.
One key position that needs
filling immediately is that of
business manager, according to
ACOIA chairman Harry Hooper.
"The conference will be
stalemated until one is found,"
he said.
Serving as directors of various
facets of the program are
Charley Majors, Bill Rainey,
Page Riley, and Seth Harp.
Student Leaders
Cancel Meeting
By ALLEN GANEY
A better relations meeting
of' student leaders from Auburn,
Georgia, and Georgia
Tech will not be held preceding
the football' games this
year.
Since the Georgia Tech ball
game will be played in Birmingham
and the Georgia
game in Auburn, no trouble is
expected, Bill Renneker, President
of the Student Body said.
The meeting would require
a day's trip to Athens. Renneker
said he and the other student
leaders feel this would be
a waste of time and money because
of the present circumstances.
There are a few positions of this
nature which are still unfilled,
Hooper said.
SENIOR NOTICE
Graduation invitations must
be purchased by Friday. They
can be bought at the main
Union Desk from 8 to 10 a.m.
and 2 to 4 p.m. every day.
New War Eagle
Debuts Saturday
By JANA HOWARD
A new War Eagle will be
lord of the skies over Birmingham,
Saturday when Auburn
meets Georgia Tech in Legion
Field.
Yesterday morning a new
mascot, War Eagle IV, was officially
presented to Auburn
by the Downtown Action Committee
of Birmingham. It will
be presented to Auburn students
this afternoon at the
"Wreck Tech" pep rally.
The shooting of the former
mascot, War Eagle III, by a
teenage boy in Birmingham
about two weeks ago led Birmingham
citizens, pushed by
the Birmingham Downtown
Action Club and the Birmingham
News, to start a drive to
obtain a new mascot for Auburn.
The Jackson, Miss., Zoo donated
an eagle and Auburn
eagle trainer, Elwyn Hamner,
was flown to Jackson last
Wednesday morning to pick up
the new mascot.
War Eagle IV is five and one
half years old, and has a wing
span of five and one half feet.
War Eagle, III measured about
six feet in the wing span, but
was older than the new mascot.
Birmingham citizens "turned
heaven and earth" to get the
new golden eagle for Auburn,
Dean of Students James E.
Foy said.
It is against the Federal law
to sell Golden Eagles and those
owning eagles must have permission
from the Department
of the Interior to do so, Foy
explained. He said that leaders
(See page 2, column 7)
Largest Staff Ever Begins 1965 Glom Production
By JERRY BROWN
Production of t h e 1965
Glomerata has beguiv in earnest
with layouts completed and all
working assignments m a d e ,
according to Skip Barker.
Glomerata editor.
Barker said the combined
editorial and business staff of
48 is the largest in Glomerata
history.
At present, business staff
members are selling advertising
space and contracting to
organizations who want pages
in the yearbook.
Portrait pictures for class
sections have already been
made. Freshmen pictures were
made t h i s summer during
orientation. Barker was especially
pleased over the fact
that out of 1275 registering
freshmen, 1250 pictures were
made for the yearbook.
This year for the first time
an editorial handbook has been
published for the Glomerata
staff. It outlines specific instructions
for each staff position.
Barker added that the reasons
for so large a staff this
year are that there were practically
no members returning
from last year's staff; there
has been tremendous interest
shown by students this year,
and also, this year's Glomerata
is going to be an "extremely
ambitious book—complex and
involved."
Glomerata distribution date
has been set for May 20.
Give me the liberty to know,
to think, to believe, and to utter
freely according to conscience,
above all other liberties.—
Milton
Do we really
need a
Medicare Tax
#
Health care
is now available
for "over 65V'
who cannot afford to pay
If you are over 65, facing
medical expense and
can't pay for i t . . . it's
yours for the asking, already
provided for by
law. The Kerr-Mills Act
offers a Health Opportunity
Program for the Elderly
with the federal
and state governments
sharing the cost.
In most states this
care is far, far greater
than that offered by
Medicare proposals...
and no additional tax is
necessary! \
If you are elderly,
and without fund's for
needed medical care, ask
your doctor about the
Health Opportunity Program
for the Elderly, or
call your local medical
society.
HEALTH OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM FOR THE ELDERLY
HET >PS THOSE WHO NEED HELP
LEE COUNTY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
fi
WRECK TECH
Members of the Spirit Committee perform the weekly
task of painting merchant's windows. Bill Ham customers
are now aware that Auburn plans to "Wreck Tech."
Kentucky Names Nutrition Expert
To Distinguished Alumni Group
Auburn's renowned nutrition scientist, Dr. W. D. Salmon,
has been named one of 85 "Distinguished Alumni" of the University
of Kentucky during the institution's 98-year history.
Dr. Salmon's photograph and biography was on display
in the Hall of Distinguished Alumni in Helen G. King Alumni
Building when the new Hall
was dedicated late last month
at the University.
An Alumni Association committee
spent 18 months searching
University of Kentucky
records to select the 85 distinguished
alumni. Salmon's
name was picked for the honor
along with governors, senators,
Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners,
military heir>es, college
presidents, industrial leaders,
cabinet officers, and leaders in
various professions.
This is the second time in
recent years that the. Auburii
Agricultural Experiment Station
nutrition researcher has
been honored by his Alma
Mater. In 1958 he was awarded
the honorary doctor of
science degree, 38 years after
he graduated from the University
of Kentucky with a B. S.
NOTICE
The War Eagle Cafeteria will
close after the noon meal on
Friday, October 16 and remain
closed during the week-end. It
will reopen for the noon meal
on Sunday, October 18. During
this time the vending machines
will be in operation.
There Is A Future In
Agribusiness With
r * * Q U A L I T Y • • i
COTTON PRODUCERS EPA ASSOCIATION
MARKETING PUROHASINQ
9MM* OmtcC and ChtulbtC
Ask a resident of Flowery Branch, Georgia where
CPA is and he will probably direct you to that
" b i g Cooperative M i l l s feed m i l l " on Highway 23.
In Cullman, Alabama, you will likely be sent
south on Highway 31 to the new CPA granular
fertilizer plant or west on Highway 278 to the
CPA Hatchery.
A Graceville, Florida citizen will point to the giant
Gold Kist Peanut Growers' plant.
But to tens of thousands of farmers who look to
CPA for their supplies or marketing, it's the
local Farmers Mutual Exchange or Gold Kist
agent right in their own home town.
CPA is interested in Agricultural graduates and Business A d-ministration
graduates with farm background to enter the General
Training Program.
For more information and schedule for interviews, check with
the Placement Office or write directly to Personnel Director, P. 0.
Box 2210, Atlanta, Georgia 30301.
Cotton Producers Association
degree in agriculture.
Dr. Salmon joined the Auburn
faculty in 1922. He is
internationally known for his
contributions in human and
animal nutrition, and he played
a key role in development of an
important livestock industry in
Alabama.
Delegates Return
From Workshop
Ten representatives of the
Plainsman staff and; five from
the Glomerata staff have returned
from the annual Southern
Universities Student Government
Association Publications
Conference held last week
at East Tennessee State XJnu
versity in Johnson City, Tenn.
Attending the two-day conference
were representatives of
publication staffs from member
schools of SUSGA. The states
are Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida,
Alabama, Georgia, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky.
Scheduled events included
panel discussions on different
problems and phases of campus
publications, informal talking
sessions, and a banquet and
guest speaker. The convention
members were guests at a concert
by "The Chad Mitchell
Trio."
Attending t h e conference
from Auburn were Dean of
Women Katharine Cater, John
Dixon, Don Phillips, Harry
Hooper, J i m m y Stephens,
Gerald Rutberg, Mary Whitley,
Mary Lou Foy, Lynda Mann,
Peggy Tomlinson, and Ron
Mussig.
Bunny Spratling, C a r ol
Coniff, Priscilla Gilmer, Ted
Lanier, and John Gait.
• Those who deny freedom to
others deserve it not for themselves
and under a just God
cannot long retain it. — Lincoln
wB
Continued From Page One • •
topic will be "Admissions in
State Universities, What about
1970?"
"Auburn Research: An Investment
in the Future" will
be discussed Friday by Dr.
Ben T. Lanham Jr., professor
of industrial economics. He
will speak to the Birmingham
Civitan Club.
ART EXHIBIT
A reception at the Museum
of Art held Tuesday marked
the opening of "War Eagle
Week." Works of students and
faculty are being shown. The
exhibition is under the direction
of Hugh Williams, associate
professor of art. It will
last through Saturday.
Sixteen students and 10 faculty
members are exhibiting.
ALUMNI DANCE
Auburn Alumni will hold
their annual eve-of-the-game
dance at 9 p.m. Friday at the
Thomas Jefferson Hotel. Music
will be by the Auburn Knights.
From 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday,
a charity brunch for
the public will be held at Fort
John C. Person Armory, next
to Legion Field. Tickets are
$2.50 per person.
Proceds from the brunch will
go to The Charity League,
brunch sponsors, for its service
projects benefiting handicapped
children and adults.
Half of each ticket is a donation.
Charges Dropped
b e e n . violating Gardendale.
state and federal laws.
Police Chief Littrell claims
Gardendale is a bird sanctuary,
which makes it illegal
to kill birds in the area. It is
against state laws to fire a gun
within the limits of any city,
and it is against federal laws
to kill Golden Eagles, the species
of which War Eagle III
was a member.
New War Eagle
of the Birmingham drive have
contacted the Department of
the Interior and received permission
for Auburn to own its
new mascot.
War Eagle III was given to
Auburn before the law was
passed by Congress making it
illegal to possess an eagle
without permission so t he
school's ownership of it was valid,
Dean Foy explained.
Dean Foy said that he had
received word from one radio
announcer in Birmingham, Le-land
Childs, that he had accumulated
a total of about $250
donated by persons to help buy
Auburn a new eagle. Foy also
said that he had received a
letter from a small girl, who
said she would be a member
of the class of '78, donating a
dollar to the cause from her
savings.
Foy said these were only a
few examples of the interest
aroused in the state by the
death of the mascot.
"We're trying to get a program
started to raise our own
eagles from now on," Foy said.
He mentioned that the school
had looked into the possibility
of purchasing or having do-
2—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, October 14, 1964
Parker's College Fashion Board tells you
how to get in and out of sports cars...
QftaC6Ju%
nated another eagle and raising
future War Eagles. He explained
that persons breeding
eagles do not need to get permission
from the Department
of the Interior to own them.
NOTICE
A Peace Corps Team of staff
members from Washingtdn and
returned volunteers will be on
campus Monday, Nov. 9 through
Thursday. Nov. 12, to speak to
students and student organizations.
Anyone interested in having
one of the representatives
meet with their organization
please contact Dean Jams E.
Foy, Room 304 in Martii Hall.
Wide selection of
Higgins Slacks
available at
Tiger
Men's Shop
217 N. College
"DACRON"*
makes
the
campus
scene
with Higgins and the
combination is Big On
Any Campus. Tailored
in traditional Yale and
Trim Fit models of 65%
"Dacron"* polyester
•35% combed cotton
for wrinkleless neat
looks and carefree wear,
at Finer Stores everywhere.
*Dupont's registered
trademark
Student Becomes First Alabamian
In National Pharmacy Organization
An Auburn student has become the first Alabamian and the
second Southerner to be elected to an office of the student
branch of the American Pharmaceutical Association.
James V. Stowe Jr., a senior in pharmacy was elected student
delegate to the House of Delegates of the APhA, the professional
organization representing all
people in the field of pharmacy.
Stowe will meet with the professional
organization twice
during his one-year term. He
will be the voice of 26,000
• pharmacy students in the 86
schools and colleges of pharmacy
within the territory he
represents.
Election as delegate, one of
four student branch offices, is
by vote of the student section
of APhA. Stowe, nominated
by Rhett Paul of the Southern
College of Pharmacy in Atlanta,
won the election over nominees
from the Philadelphia and
Massachusetts C o l l e g e s of
Pharmacy during a recent
meeting in New York. A Florida
student elected chairman
last year was the first Southerner
elected by the student
branch.
At Auburn Stowe is, in addition
to being a member of the
student chapter of APhA and
the Alabama Pharmaceutical
Assn., vice-ipresident of Phi
D e 1 ta Chi, a professional
pharmacy fraternity.
All cruelty springs from
weakness.—Seneca
make
mistakes. • •
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(including dirty camel)!
ALSO: Brookfield 100% wool-worsted flannel
slacks with Perma-Crease $X2
at your favorite retailer, or write
BROOKFIELD • 1290 Ave. of Americas • New York 10019
NORMAN LUBOFF CHOIR
Norman Luboff and the Norman Luboff Choir will open the Lecture and Concert Series
On Oct. 19 at 8:15 p.m. in the Student Activities Building. Students are admitted free upon
presentation of I.D.'s.
m& mm • m m • » %mm \ m \ : mm . ^mmm^sm : ••. g
Quips and Quotes
By SALLY Q U I L L I AN
At the University of Florida
.he registration fee is expect-
;d to decrease next year. The
lifference will be paid with
he income from new parking
neters on campus. This sounds
lice, but the "Florida Flam-
)eau" makes reference to sev-
;ral problems which will arise.
'The limit on the meters is
ne hour. Well, that's fine because
classes are only 55 min-ttes
long. The only real prob-em
will be getting to class
and back to the meter in five
minutes. With the 60 minutes
eeway, it is within the realm
jf chance to just barely sneak
under the wire by three or
four minutes, except for one
thing. They check the meters
ibout five minutes before class
is out. With odds like that even
j professional gambler would
not try it.
"Why not just hand out five
3r 10 parking tickets at registration
and let the driver pay
them at his own discretion?
Another good solution is to
park in the outlying districts
and take a subway or helicopter
to class. At the present
rates they are going to be able
to install two subways. It
would be a lot more enjoyable
to pay 60 cents for a helicopter
or subway ride than financing
somebody through four years
of school on a parking ticket
scholarship."
* * *
The University of Texas is
having its troubles with discrimination.
A men's clothing
shop which is part of the university
co-op refused to hire a
student as a sales clerk reportedly
because he was not in a
fraternity. The boy who applied
for the job said that the
manager of the store would not
hire him because "fraternity
men bring in more business."
In spite of protest, a Greek
was eventually given the job.
* * *
From the Crimson White . . .
The University of Alabama has
maintained in past years a
policy that has made it virtually
impossible for many
students to go home and vote
on election day. 1964 is probably
the most important election
this nation has faced in
several decades. In view of
this crucial year, we urge the
University to seriously consider
granting excused absence
to students who wish to vote.
Surely some kind of affidavit
could be devised to be notarized
by a polling official as
proof of the student's integrity.
We do not make this as a
request, but rather as a plea
for the cause of democracy.
* * #
A check cashing service is
furnished students of George
Washington U n i v e r s i t y in
Washington, D.C. through the
school's cashier. Students must
apply for approval by the office
and may then cash any
number of i checks during the
year. Applications for approval
cost $1.00 and must be
signed by parents of any student
under 21. A l t h o u gh
checks must be for less than
$25.00, checks amounting to
$3,000 a week were handled
for students last year, (from
The University Hatch)
Aviation Team
Visits Campus
The U.S. Naval Aviation Information
Team from the Naval
Air Station in Atlanta will
visit here Oct. 19 through Oct.
22.
The team, headed by Lt.
Commander W. E. Biro, will
discuss gaining commissioned
status, with emphasis on avia-
New Approach
Replaces Old
In Fund Drive
By M U F F I N W I L L I A MS
Personal, heart-to-heart appeal
will replace Greek competition
this November to give
the annual All-Campus Fund
Drive a new look.
"The Fund Drive committee's
idea and purpose is to make the
drive truly all campus and to
encourage giving on an individual
basis and for a personal
.reason," explained Dick
Teed, chairman, in announcing
the changes.
The success of the yearly
drive, which takes the place of
numerous charity requests during
the year, has depended
chiefly upon sorority and fraternity
competition in fund-raising
and has left little interest
in personal giving.
Instead of a set goal this
year, the new system aims at a
contribution of one dollar per
person on campus. Tags will be
given to donors to encourage
fuller participation.
Collections, which will be received
in November will be
handled in booths across campus
manned by Greeks and independents.
Funds are distributed
to organizations and
charities recommended and approved
by Student Senate.
The All-Campus Drive is the
one chance students have each
year to support the charities in
this area. Other drives are not
allowed without special consideration
by the Senate.
tion officer programs, with interested
students.
Indoctrination flights may
be given to students who have
successfully completed t he
Naval Aviation Selection Tests
which are administered on
campus.
When Ralph Terry
goes golfing...
'Chap Stick'goes along!
"With today's heavy schedules," says this
Yankee ace, "I just can't sneak in much golf
during the ball season. So I don't really hit the
courses till October.The weather's cool, and
that's trouble for my lips.To soothe them, I
always use 'Chap Stick'. It takes away that
uncomfortable, dry feeling —helps heal sore
lips fast—summer or winter.With 'Chap Stick'
along—on the diamond or golf course—I don't
worry about my lips, just my game!"
The lip balm selected
for use by the
§ U.S. Olympic Team,
DON'T LET DRY, SORE LIPS SPOIL YOUR FUN-WHEREVER YOU GO, GO WITH 'CHAP JBTICK'
•CHAP SUCK' IS RfS. IM ©I94< MORTON MFG. CORP., U N o i » " * c i V A'
Air Force Announces Promotion;
Alumnus Named Brigadier General
By STAN WADE
The United States Air Force has recently announced
the promotion of Col. John R. Dyas, a member of the
Class of '39 of Auburn, to Brigadier General.
Dyas is one of a small num
ber of Auburn graduates to
ever make the rank of General
in the Armed Services.
Currently, Gen. Dyas commands
t h e USAF Military
Personnel Center, Randolph
Air Force Base, Texas. His
present command provides
personnel management and
services to the Air Force's
750,000 airmen. Its worldwide
operation constitutes the larg-ast
personnel management activity
in existence today.
Gen. Dyas, who completed
his pilot training in July, 1941,
is a veteran of tactical air operations.
He served as a combat
Squadron and Group
Commander in the North African
and European theater
during World War II.
During the period of Korean
operations, Gen. Dyas commanded
the 363rd Tactical Reconnaissance
Wing, which was
the parent unit for combat reconnaissance
crews and units
deployed to Korea and Europe,
and the first reconnaissance
wing in Tactical Air
Command to reach operational
status completely equipped
with jet aircraft.
After returning to the United
States from Europe in July,
1961, Gen. Dyas was assigned
to Headquarters, USAF as
Deputy Director of Military
Personnel u n t i l assuming
command of the Military Personnel
Center in July, 1963.
A rated command pilot, Gen.
Dyas holds the Silver Star,
Legion of Merit with one oak
leaf cluster, Air Medal, and the
Air F o r c e Commendation
Medal. He received the Aviation
Cross from the government
of Peru for his work as
an advisor to their Air Force
from 1948 to 1950.
Gen. Dyas is a former resident
of Mobile, the son of the
GENERAL DYAS
late Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Dyas,
Jr., of Spring Hill.
3—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, October 14, 1964
Exciting
New
Designs
ROTC Names
Student Heads
By V I C T O R I A HRUTKAY
New student heads of ROTC
Programs are Cadet Col. Don
J. Newell, Jr., Air Force ROTC;
Midshipman Battalion
Commander William Earl Major
II, Naval ROTC; and Cadet
Col. Cecil W. Sowell, Army
ROTC.
Newell, a graduating senior
in Business Administration, is
married and lives in Auburn.
He is the son of a retired Air
Force Warrant Officer.
Major is a senior majoring
in Electrical Engineering. He is
from Lebanon, Tenn., and has
been in ROTC for four years.
Sowell is from Memphis,
Tenn. He is a graduating senior
in Building Construction.
He is a member of Scabbard
and Blade, an honorary military
fraternity, and the Society
of American Military Engineers.
TCe e;p> ^ gblcre*
D I J+* t*\ O r>4 D R I M «3 S
PARTY NOTICE
Students are invited to the
annual pre-Georgia Tech Auburn
Alumni Party at the
Thomas Jefferson Hotel in Birmingham
on' Friday night, Nov.
16, according to Tommy Lorino,
chairman of the event. Price
for the dance will be $1 stag
or drag for students. The event
will begin at 9 p.m. with music
furnished by t h e Auburn
Knights.
True artistry, is expressed in the brilliant
fashion styling of every Keepsake diamond engagement
ring. Each setting*is a masterpiece of
design, reflecting the full brilliance and beauty
of the center diamond... a perfect gem of flawless
clarity, fine color and meticulous modern cut.
The name, Keepsake, in the ring and on the
tag is your assurance of fine quality and lasting
satisfaction. Your very personal Keepsake is
awaiting your selection at your
Keepsake Jeweler's store. Find
.him in the yellow pages under?
"Jewelers." Prices from $100
to $2500. Rings enlarged to
show beauty of detail ^Trademark
registered.
HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING
Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plon
Your Engagement and Wedding" and new 12-page
full color folder, both for only 25tf. Also, send
special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book.
Nome-f
• ~:% ,
• Good Housekeeping • I
^<C,„ r^ I
Address-
**mu
City- -Co.. -State-
JMIUNDW n«r KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, SYRACUSE,_N._Y.J320£
T
I
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Mr. Thomson... .phase!,!
Please tell me how you manage
to make me look so great on campus.
The only thing I can't pass now
is a crowd of boys. Those vertical
stretch pants follow the
sleek line of most resistance.
And guarantee the least resistance
on campus. Then, total recovery
(only the pants, Mr. Thomson, not the boys).
The reflex action of your
proportioned stretch pants
is second only to the reflex action
of that Psych major I've had my eye on.
And the fit! Mr. Thomson, please,
how did you get them to fit so well?
I adore you, Mr. Thomson!
Available At Better Campus Shops
PI.FASF. SFN'D MF.
MR. THOMSON PANTS
STRETCH NYLON
PAIR (St OF
STYLE =7201/02. 55%
45% VIRGIN WOOL, IN:
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PROPORTIONED SIZES:
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NAME
ADDRESS.
CITY_
STATE. .ZIP CODE.
• C.O.D. • CHECK ENCLOSED AMT. $_
In those areas where city or state taxes are applicable,
add amount of tax to price listed.
THE AUBURN PUINSMM
Don Phillips
Editor
John Dixon
Business Manager
Editor's Views LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Wrfue . . .
The People Can Blame
No One But Themselves
ASSOCIATE EDITOR—Harry Hooper; MANAGING EDITOR—Jimmy Stephens; ASSISTANT
EDITOR—George McMillan; SPORTS EDITOR—Gerald Rutberg; COPY EDITOR—Jana
Howard; NEWS EDITOR—Mary Whitley; FEATURES EDITOR—Walter Massey; EDITORIAL
ASSISTANT — Lynne Griffin; EDITORIAL SECRETARY — Peggy Tomlinson; ASSISTANT
SPORTS EDITOR—Ron Mussig; ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS—Sansing Smith, Mary Lou
Foy; ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITORS—Cathye McDonald, Dru Wendell; SECRETARIES—
Allen Ganey, Page Riley; ADVERTISING MANAGER—Lynda Mann; CIRCULATION MANAGER—
Roy Trent.
The Auburn Plainsman is the student newspaper of Auburn University. The paper
is written and edited by responsible students. Editorial opinions are those of the
editors and columnists. They are not necessarily the opinions of the administration,
Board of Trustees or student body of Auburn University. Offices are located in
Room 2 of Samford Hall and in Room 318 of the Auburn Union Building, phone
887-6511. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Auburn, Alabama.
Subscription rates by mail are $1 for three months and $3 for a full year. Circulation—
9500 weekly. Address all material to The Auburn Plainsman, P. O. Box
832, Auburn, Alabama 36830.
By Don Phillips
It is continually surprising to find" a great
many Auburn students still thinking that Ala-bamians
have a choice between President Lyndon Johnson and
Sen. Barry Goldwater in the November election.
Such is not the case. The Alabama voter has a choice between
a slate of Republican electors pledged to Goldwater and a slate
of Independent Democratic
Putting On The Eagle
Birmingham is really putting on the
dog, or should we say eagle, for Auburn
this week. "War Eagle Week,"
sponsored by the Birmingham Downtown
Action Committee, is in full swing.
Auburn officials are making speeches
to various civic clubs on Auburn's past,
present and future. Auburn and University
of Alabama debate teams will
meet for the first time face to face.
An art exhibit and other activities are
planned.
Birmingham is giving Auburn more
than a week of its own. The city has
located a Golden Eagle in Jackson,
Miss., to replace former mascot War
Eagle III, shot in Birmingham last week.
It is also reported that a Birmingham
radio station had raised $250 for a new
eagle through donations.
To top all this off, The Birmingham
News is in the midst of an excellent
series on Auburn by writer Mickey
Logue, "The New War Eagle—a Battle
Cry for Academic Excellence."
What can we say? We feel as though
Auburn should sponsor a "Birmingham
Week" or some such. Such kindness
is greatly appreciated, and will, we are
sure, be remembered.
electors who pledge nothing except
to vote for a Democrat.
Neither Johnson nor his representatives
are even mentioned
on the ballot.
Thus, the people of this state
may vote either for Barry
Goldwater or against him.
This unnatural political situation
was brought about when
Gov. George Wallace and others
decided the South would name
the country's next President.
The Southern states as a bloc
were to elect these slates of
unpledged electors en masse.
If the electoral vote were close
enough in the rest of the country,
this bloc of unpledged electors
could bargain with the two
major party candidates for
"Southern" concessions.
With adamant Wallace backing,
the Alabama unpledged
electors won by an 80 per cent
landslide. The plan might
have worked except for the fact
that nobody bought it except
Alabama and Mississippi.
Gov. Wallace then decided to
run for the Presidency himself.
We may assume that the Alabama
and Mississippi electors
would then have supported
Wallace in the electoral college.
Wallace received tremendous
support from the conservative
and reactionary elements, that
is, until another political variable
thrust itself upon the already
aborted situation. Barry
Goldwater captured the Republican
party in San Francisco.
Adamant Wallace supporters
such as Georgia's Marvin Griffin
and Mississippi's Ross Bar-nett
began to desert the Wallace
fold for Goldwater. Wallace
took the hint and bowed out of
the race. Most observers considered
this an endorsement of
Goldwater.
But how Wallace has a problem.
The unpledged electors on
which his whole approach has
been based are calling for support.
One of his most loyal
allies and head of the unpledged
elector slate, Lt. Gov.
James Allen, has publicly stated
that Wallace will probably lend
them his support.
But what about Barry? He is
the conservative candidate, and
Lord knows, he needs support.
If the unpledged electors win,
he can't get Alabama's 10 votes.
It will be more than interesting
to see how Wallace gets out
of this one. The funny thing
is, he probably will.
M e a n w h i l e , Alabamaians
have no choice, and they have
no one. to blame but themselves.
We Need Them Now
A new approach to academic excellence
was taken last Saturday when
some 600 academically outstanding
high school students paid the university
a visit.
These students were invited on the
basis of mental maturity and achievement
l^ests. They were given tours of
the campus, interviews with Deans, a
free meal and a ticket to the Chattanooga
game. This is the first time Auburn
has ever tried anything like this,
and according to most reports it went
off rather well.
We hope that among these scholars,
Auburn made some friends. Auburn
needs men and women who will take
their work seriously, who will raise the
academic standards of the University.
Times are changing. College is getting
harder, much harder. It must to
keep pace with our rapidly developing
world. We are confronted with a
knowledge explosion as well as a population
explosion.
The day of Joe College with his juvenile
thought and lack of academic interest
is beginning its decline. ' Before
too many years, America's already
crowded colleges will not have room
for him.
In the years to come it is the serious,
dedicated scholar who will receive priority
not only in college admissions
but in positions of leadership in a more
serious world.
Auburn must have its share of these
serious scholars now to set its academic
pace toward the future. Our visitors
last Saturday were more than possible
future enrollment statistics. They represented
what must be our future.
We trust they will be pursued.
Racial Demonstrations . . .
'Academic Freedom' Cry
Is Often Misapplied
By George McMillan Jr.
A University of California campus ban on
such activities as collecting money for civil
rignts work in the South sparked a series of demonstrations last
week.
In the heart of'" the campus, demonstrators surrounded a
campus police car for more than 24 hours. Inside the car was
-a'* nonstudent member' >f ; the
A Free Press In A Free Society
Always fight for progress and re-
'orm, never tolerate injustice or corruption,
always fight demagogues of all
oarties . . . always oppose privileged
classes and public plunderers, never
lack sympathy for the poor, always remain
devoted to public welfare . . .
never be afraid to attack wrong,
whether by predatory plutocracy or predatory
poverty.—Joseph Pultizer.
This great newspaper publisher's
jarting words on the occasion of his retirement
remind us during this observance
of National Newspaper Week that
a free press in a free society has an
almost overwhelming responsibility to
the public welfare.
The lives of Pulitzer and many others
remind us that the newspaper has not
only the responsibility, but the power
to accomplish these ends.
The newspaper is probably the most
effective means of mass communication
in existence today. In the United
States, 1,800 daily and nearly 9,000
weekly newspapers reach almost 90 per
cent of the American people. More
than 60 million newspapers go daily
into American homes.
In a free society, the press is the
guardian of all freedoms, as well as the
informer, the stimulator and the entertainer
of the members of the society.
In a despotic or totalitarian society,
the newspaper is the most successful
method ever devised of social control.
For this reason, corrupt politicians, extremists,
would-be despots and all
others who feel most the sting of truth
seek first to silence or buy off the press.
All newspapers have felt their heavy
hand. In this country, most have
resisted.
Few people really know how lucky
they are to live in a land with a free
press.
Every day we hear the press attacked
by those who do not agree with its
stands, or who feel it is slanting the
facts. The woods are full of malcontents
and would-be world saviors
who would gladly censor all mass communications
media into conformity.
They fail to realize that their own
freedoms would go with the freedom
they seek to deny.
Newspapers make mistakes from
time to time, because they are run by
imperfect human beings. But they must
never deliberately betray their great
trust, either through misrepresentation
of fact or deliberate misinformation.
The tremendous responsibility of the
press is felt keenly by those on whom
the greatest responsibility falls. It is
a sobering thought.
Congress of Racial Equalityj,
arrested for trespassing while
,h?|lpjng colle^, c i v i l rights
funds.
' Two campus policemen stood
guard, but helpless to take the
accused trespasser off to jail
as student demonstrators demanded
that the University lift
bans on the collecting of civil
rights funds, political recruitment
and other banned campus
activities.
Students contended that the
bans interfered with their freedom
of speech, and were infringements
on such things as
"academic freedom."
It has become a matter of
habit something like the behavior
of a friend of mine, who
when drunk, no matter where
he is or how he got there, stumbles
to the nearest telephone
and calls one of his fraternity
brothers. He is confident that
this is all he need do. Many
citizens—especially college students
and professors—intoxicated
by liberal propaganda are
confident that to get home safe
they need only align themselves
with the defenders of "academic
freedom".
But let us determine whether
freedom was being violated by
the administration of the University
of California.
The educational overseer—
the trustee who directs the
policy of the school—was violating
no freedom we know of
when he insisted on a ban on
racial demonstrations. Rather
he was asserting his own freedom.
For if the educational overseer
in the exercise of his freedom,
espouses a set of values,
his is the inescapable duty to
give support to these values.
But one might argue, if no
one supports the student then
he will have been persecuted
for his beliefs. But this is not
so for no freedom has been
abridged so long as the student
is at liberty to leave the University.
As long as the student
remains in attendance he is
subject to the University's
regulations.
It is time that honest men
cease to manipulate the term
"academic freedom" for their
own ends. As William Buckley
says in his God and Man at
Yale, in the last analysis, academic
freedom must mean the
freedom of men and women to
supervise the educational activities
and aims of the schools
they oversee and support.
Dr. Clark Kerr, president of
the seven-campus University
of California, retorted that freedom
of thought and expression
has not died at the University
of California. But the rules
will not be changed by mob
action.
Students have more opportunity
to hear and to express
opinions than have any earlier
student generation. But as in
all affairs of men, freedom
must be matched by responsibility
if freedom is to survive.
A Saddening Shock
For the benefit of those who missed
our news story last week, the Student
Activities Building has a new roof. This
is not all the story, however. The new
roof is insulated.
This is a somewhat saddening shock
to those veterans of past winters who
have fond memories of huddling together
for warmth during the concert
season.
There was a certain element of
drama in those concerts, as performer
and audience alike fought a common
enemy—the cold. The whistling of a
cold wind outside blended with human
voices and human sneezes inside in a
way unique to our old barn.
The barn is still with us, but now we
will remain warm, we are told, even
during the coldest of winters. Some
people have no flair for the romantic.
My Impressions . . .
White House Conference
Outlined By Participant
By Bill Renneker
Last Saturday, Oct. 3, 1964, I traveled
to Washington, D.C. to a conference of college
student leaders called by the President of the United States.
The purpose of the meeting as stated by President Lyndon
B. Johnson was "to better understand the thinking of the younger
generation."
During the next few weeks I'
would like to share with you
my experiences at this conference.
This week I shall briefly
outline the evening's proced-ings,
waiting to following weeks
to elaborate on many of the
ideas which wei|e expressed.
I
The conference held at the
White House consisted of about
150 students from all parts of
the United States. It began
at 5 p.m. in the East Room of
this building with remarks by
Secretary of State Rusk, Secretary
of Defense McNamara,
and Secretary of Labor Wirtz.
Immediately after Secretary
Wirtz's remarks, President
Johnson welcomed us "to our
house", and elaborated briefly
on the history of our generation.
This session was then terminated
for the official President's
reception in the Blue
" I LIKE THIS tfEtf/ UW& m&QHX, V&ti Woo&&•"
I McGill. .
I Fame, Influence Alone
| Are Not True Greatness
^L^FJtM fy J,mmy Stephens
Wk *^ H * have often wondered what it would be
B k IL-% . j i t . like to sit down and talk to a great and
famous man and to be able to see at first hand what kind of
person he really is.
Last week a group of us from Auburn had the privilege
of visiting the Pulitzer Prize winning publisher of the Atlanta
Constitution, Ralph McGill. He
is one of the few sons of the
present-day South who is recognized
the world over as a
"great man," one who has taken
a large hand in forming our
society and our world.
He is not at all the imposing
picture of the man I have
seen in his portraits and in his
writing. He is not the man
hardened by criticism that has
been thrown at him by his
Southern people who have disagreed
with his liberal philosophies
over the years.
He spoke of Auburn and its
progressive movement in recent
years to the position of esteem
it now holds. He loves Auburn
as he loves the South and
all of its institutions like Auburn
that have helped the South
lift itself up from the scars of
poverty and ignorance that
were left by the War a century
ago.
Due to our apparent interest,
he then pointed out various objects
in the room. He showed
us a photograph and a personal
note from Carl Sandburg, a
picture of Mahatma Gandhi,
given to him by Gandhi's son.
He showed us the desk where
Henry W. Grady had lashed
himself to the task of helping
build the "new South" after
the War Between the States.
He spoke in a matter-of-fact,
not an ostentatious manner.
It occurred to me that had
we met the man down on
Peachtree, we probably would
have taken him for a common
man.
His desk was covered and
his shelves were stuffed to
capacity with literature. It
must take tireless hours each
day to peruse all that and to
glean the facts and thoughts to
carry on his work to better
mankind.
Surely it is his tremendous
intellect and his long labor
that make him the great man
that he is.
But, on second thought, it is
not his labor, but his love that
makes him what he is. It is
his unselfish love, his driving
compassion for all mankind, not
for just one race or creed, that
makes him read and listen and
think and write and speak to
better man's position in our
world.
The Left Bank . . .
Chilean Socialist Win
Was Fortunate For U.S.
By George Gardner
A national presidential election in which
the U.S. cheered the victory of a socialist last
month probably went un-noticed by the majority of Auburn's
10,000-plus students.
But the record turnout of over 2 million voters in Chile to
elect a socialist president to a six-year term in the face of a
serious Communist threat didn't
go un-noticed in Washington.
For the first time in decades
(if ever), a country threatened
to vote in a Communist chief-executive
by popular free election.
But the bid failed, and
pro-Western socialist Edurdo
Frei won the reins of the copper-
rich South American nation
until 1970.
Frei, 53, described as a
moderate leftist and a self-p
r o c l a i m e d reform-minded
Christian Democrat, trounced
Communist-back Salvador Al-lende.
The implications and repercussions
of his 1,460,000 to
975,000 victory are far-reaching,
both in the U.S. and in the
Red bloc.
Room and a White House buffet
dinner held in the State
Dining Room. While we were
eating we enjoyed conversations
with the aforementioned,
the First Lady, Lynda Byrd,
and many Presidential advisors.
During this time also we listened
to the music of the Marine
Corps Ochestra.
We were then escorted back
into the East Room by military
assistants for entertainment
from the Chad Mitchell Trio,
Bob Newhart, and the Stan
Getz Quartet. The evening was
brought to a close by informal
gatherings between delegates
over a cup of White House
coffee.
Next Week: Dean Rusk's message.
Allende had threatened to
nationalize nearly $2 billion
worth of U.S. property in Chile
and to restore diplomatic relations
with Cuba.
But after the Christian socialist
victory, stock in U.S.-
based copper companies gained
strength and Mexico remained
alone as the only Latin country
maintaining diplomatic relations
with Communist Cuba.
Incumbent president Jorge
Alessandri, barred from running
again by law, chose to announce
the dramatic break only
weeks before the September 4
general election. Uruguay followed
a similar course only
days later.
In campaign speeches Allende
said that if elected he would
immediately nationalize two
U.S. copper companies and r e sume
diplomatic relations with
Cuba.
A frequent traveler to Havana,
he also wanted to break
up the estates of Chile's old
land-owning families. Rumors
had it that revolution might
imminent if Allende won.
On the other hand, Frei has
said that he will encourage
foreign investments—especially
American copper investments
in the ore-rich Andes mounti-ans
of central Chile.
Frei also supports a major
program to improve the lot
of Chile's millions of "rotos"—
ragged ones—but cautions that
the reforms should be undertaken
with moderation.
He promised that Chile-U.S.
Dictated Morals
Have No Place
At Universities
By Harry Hooper
The recent defeat of a measure
to provide a more lenient
"apartment rule" for Auburn
men and women deserves a
great deal of thought.
Reasons were given for the
.defeat of the
lew r u l e .
They encompassed
s u ch
j a r e a s as
I -norality, the
| mage of the
i n i v c rsity,
l a n d relations
I with our kind
I and benevol-
| e n t townspeople.
Of these stumbling blocks the
greatest is morality. Morality is
a broad term but is nevertheless
neatly defined by Webster
as "characterized by excellence
in what pertains to
practice or conduct; right and
proper." That is the first definition.
The second through
ninth definitions clarify the
meaning with such words as
character, "right and wrong,"
and virtue.
Our question is what "pertains
to practice or conduct?"
In other words who is to say
what one's moral principles
should be?
Our society outside of the
college world sets moral standards
in the form of laws. These
laws or standards are characterized
by the fact that they are
designed to protect the individual.
Limiting the individual's
actions only to the point of protecting
another individual's
right is our society's criteria of
morality. I might qualify this
by saying there are certain antiquated
laws that further restrict
an individual's actions but
they are seldom, if ever enforced.
In the world of the university,
however, an individual's actions
are much more limited,
particularly if the party in
question happens to be of the
female gender. Thus the "a-partment
rule."
I question the right of the
university to dictate moral
standards 'to its students. Upon
whose code of conduct (or religion)
will the standards be
based? And is it not the student's
right to decide for himself
what his moral code shall
be if it fits within the framework
of not doing injury to
another?
As a lesson in the ridiculous
consider a situation where a
Southern Baptist administration
dictates drinking regulations
to its students. An Episcopalian
would find this intolerable.
In a situation such
as this the seemingly inre-concilable
difference over the
question of "what is moral"
can only be solved by each individual
deciding for himself
what is right in his own context
of morality.
College students aren't children
and they are able to make
mature decisions as to what
will be their own particular
moral standards. A mature administration
will grant them
their right of choice.
relations would be strengthened,
and thus far, officials in
Washington think that Frei has
lived up to his promises.
Many factors were involved
in the socialist defect of the
Communist candidate—including
a third political party—but
the large turnout of women in
Chile is cited by experts as
the key factor.
As the returns poured in,
with Frei leading almost all the
way, Allende's backers protested
that President Lyndon
Johnson and Pope Paul VI had
contributed money to defeat
Allende, a psychiatrist by profession.
However, while shouting
"revolution, revolution", they
openly admitted that both Moscow
and Havana had contributed
funds to Allende.
Without a coup in 33 years,
Chile's per captia income has
climbed to $325 compared to
$300 for Latin America generally.
U.S. aid averages $27 per
person annually, exceeded only
in Latin America by U.S. aid to
Brazil.
With Frei now set to take
office, U.S. officials can now
apparently cross Chile from the
top of their list of headaches
and worries in South America.
But with a century-old record
of political and economic
unrest, how i°nS will the
Washington bureaucrats have
to sleep soundly?
Letters to the Editor
Student Football Tickets
Are Always The Worst
Editor, The Plainsman:
After numerous years of
complacently buying football
student tickets, and just as assuredly
getting excellent 5-
yard line seats, I have decided
to ask a simple question: Do
you have any idea who gets
good seats at any Auburn
football game? It seems that
even if the entire student body
of about 11,000 went to a game
here (let alone B'ham), there
would still be about 35,000
seats available. Who gets the
seats not allotted the graduates
on the East and West
sides? Do any students ever
get 50 yard line tickets (I
might as well dream big,
hadn't I) to any games? Where
are the missing (to students)
35,000 seats? Please answer
this if you can.
Clyde Hogg
4 VA
* * *
Let's Keep Christmas
On Postage Stamps
Editor, The Plainsman:
I recently noticed (Sept. 5
issue of Stamps magazine) that
the Post Office Department is
'planning to issue four Christmas
stamps instead of the usual
one. This would be well
and good, if it were not for the
fact that the word "Christmas"
is completely omitted from all
four stamps.
I remember an article some
months ago that said certain
anti-Christian groups w e re
pressing for the omission of
'Christmas" from the annual
stamp. You can imagine what
groups would want this action.
All Christians should protest
this attack on Christ and on
the day that has been set aside
to commemorate his birthday.
A protest letter should be
written to the Postmaster General,
to our U.S. Senators and
Representatives, and to any
other official that might be
in position to seek corrective
action before this Christmas
passes. It may already be too
late, but we should try to prevent
this omission from occurring
again.
James C. Reeves, Jr.
6 FY
* * *
Goldwater Is Amateur
On Important Issues
Editor, The Plainsman:
Barry Goldwater has proved
time and again that he is inconsistent
and wavering in his
views on important issues, and
impetuous in answering questions
in public. He has a, bad
habit of putting his foot in his
mouth—when he sticks to a
prepared speech he is revolting
enough, but when he
speaks off-the-cuff he invariably
makes a complete fool
of himself. This can be traced
in part to the fact that he
dropped out of college after a
rather poor freshman year.
How can a man who by his
own admission does not read,
except for an occasional fiction
book, expect to keep up
with what is going on in the
world? The answer is easy—
he doesn't even bother. He
bases his entire campaign on
the "issue" of federal power.
Wouldn't he look silly discussing
states' rights with Erhardt,
Home, or even DeGaulle? An
amateur can't expect respect
from the pros.
The Republican Party has
consistently tried to bring
Bobby Baker into the campaign.
Well, in the first place
Baker is not the Democratic
nominee—Johnson is. In the
second place, the Republicans
should spend a little more time
explaining w h a t Goldwater
means by some of his state-
: • '
;Sjg|sp||3§|
Etienne Aigner handbag, Jeune Leigne
by Chermont as worn by Cindy Smith and
sold by
O/f'fi L Hill
"In This WorW Series, One Wild PitcK
Ends The Whole Ball Game"
IMC fc*"\*rif"J«TV* #»«?n*
ments—Heaven knows most of
them need explaining.
I think that the Republican
Party realizes that the election
is lost, and is wisely
throwing Goldwater into the
ring. That is one sure way to
get him out of Washington,
and the Senate will be much
better off without him.
Greg Lynch
Bullard Hall, 2 PS
* * *
Johnson Knows Well
The Poverty Condition
Editor, The Plainsman:
In recent months, we have
heard a few Democrats say that
they were going to switch parties
and vote for Goldwater.
Most of these people will tell
you that they are going to do
this because of the civil rights
issue. Granted, this is a very
important issue. But, aren't
there other important issues
also?
Some people consider the
question of whether they are
going to eat well the next four
years to be important. The
number of families who are ill-fed,
ill-clothed, and ill-housed
has steadily declined largely
due to the efforts of Roosevelt,
Truman, Kennedy, Johnson,
and Democratic Congresses.
President Johnson is no
stranger to poverty. He has
known the hard life from his
younger days as a son of a
tenant farmer when he shined
shoes, herded goats, paved
roadways, and performed other,
similar jobs to help his family
meet their day-to-day needs.
Lyndon Johnson doesn't agree
with the statement, made by
Senator Goldwater before a
group of millionaires in New
York, that the poor are lazy and
shiftless.
The major weapon in the war
against poverty is the administration's
Economic Opportunities
Act of 1964.
The program would bring:
A national jobs corps to educate
and train 100,000 young
persons for a productive role in
society.
A work-training program to
provide work and training for
200,000 young persons.
A work-study program to
provide 140,000 young persons
part-time jobs to permit them
to go to college.
Employment and investment
incentives to assist the long-term
unemployed and small
businesses lacking managerial
skill.
Loan and guarantee programs
to permit cooperative associations
to furnish essential services,
supplies, and facilities.
Tom Millican, President
Auburn Young Democrats
Co-ed Trip!ersr Being Considered
As Top Material For Olympic Team
! It has been rumored that the P.E. department is thinking of
sponsoring a great many of the Auburn co-eds occupying triples
in the next summer Olympic games.
These "athletes" will be featured in a game of skill closely
aligned to that of broad jumping.
5—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, October 14, 1964
Co-eds Give Various Reactions
To Boy-Girl Ratio On Campus
By SUSIE FRENCH
"Oh! The ration of girls to boys at Auburn is wonderful!
It's just TWOOOOOOOOOOO much!"
This reply is typical of the many remarks this writer received
while confronting a cross section of the Auburn co-eds
concerning their ideas of the two to one boy-girl .radio here
on campus.
When the ultimate question
was poped, eyebrows raised,
eyes lit up, and the answers
came fast and furious.
Some of the comments are
humorous, and others are on
the more serious side, but all
are completely true and extremely
candid.
From the feminine frosh the
comments are ear-marked with
that unaffected candor that belongs
to our underclassmen.
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CAMPUS DRUGS
Many a petite co-ed may be
seen in practice sessions air
ready as she bounds out of a
top bunk-bed over a red hot
radiator, and with one final
leap, clears a third roommate's
bed with a style that would put
the greatest of hurdlers to
shame.
This physical exercise is
unavoidable in an infamous
triple where two is company
and three is unbelievable.
There are naturally more rewards
to be had when one
shares his cubical with two
other people. Don't let anyone
tell you differently.
Why, three girls attempting
to use two mirrors before an
eight o'clock class can hardly
help developing resourcefull-ness,
agility and—to say the
least—tact.
And a word to the Auburn
men—don't be angry when your
date is half an hour late. She's
been waiting to get a shower
since mid-afternoon.
Of course things really begin
to get interesting if you're the
type of girl who has led a
sheltered life and prefers a
"Gosh, I think it's wonderful,
but I wish we had more boys
in the Home-Ec. department!"
"I think it's sooooooooo good!
All those senior men! Just
think of all those boys we have
to go around! "„
"Auburn may have a shortage
of parking spaces, but they
make up for that with boys!"
Moving on, the sophomores
are found to be a little less enthusiastic.
Many of our second
year women are experiencing
that infamous ebb in their
social whirl when they find the
phone ringing only half the
number of times that it rang a
year ago.
"I don't care about any ratio!
I'm in the midst of my sophomore
slump."
"Well the odds really don't
affect me. I have my own ratio
of 117 to one. You see I'm in
Electrical Engineering!"
"The way I feel about it is
that somebody took my two!"
"Oh, dear! I've got someone's
boy!"
From our Juniors the rat-race
of the first two hectic
years looms somewhere in the
far past, and they are able to
speak more rationally on the
subject of two to oriei
"It's just fine with me!"
"I wish the ratio was five
to one, and I hope my pinmate
doesn't read this article."
"I've been here three years
and still can't find my one
much less two or three!"
Our older and much wiser
seniors remark with reminiscent
and more serious tones.
"It's said, When I first came
to Auburn the ratio was eight
boys for every two girls and
now it's only two to one!"
And that's the story. Watch
out boys—we girls are gaining
on you. But wouldn't it be
kind of nice, at least from a
feminine viewpoint, if the
ratio were still eight to two?
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The Procter & Gamble Company
Wishes to interview seniors interested in
SALES and SALES MANAGEMENT
We will interview seniors in any school, but we are
primarily interested in senior class members of the
Business School, and the School of Arts and
Sciences.
Please arrange interviews for Wednesday, October
21, and Thursday, October 22, with your Placement
Office.
The representatives will be:
J. R. Etheridge (Memphis State)—Memphis District Manager
W. J. Phelan (Vanderbilt)—Birmingham Unit Manager
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7 Axr^jr tains trt ct rt
^; Best Sports Coverage In T h e S E C *
Sports
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14, 1964 PAGE SIX
GERALD RUTBERG . . .
B
m
Tigers At Last . . .
Until Tucker Frederickson blasted across the goal-line with
a little more than half of the third quarter remaining to end a
touchdown drought of more than 170 minutes duration, last
Saturday's football game with Chattanooga was a nightmare.
31,000 fans, an exceptionally fine crowd for a "no contest" game,
came out to see Auburn football under near-perfect weather
conditions. High school bands played all varieties of music
incessantly, with many of the groups apparently oblivious to
what was taking place, perhaps for the better. For 37 minutes
and five seconds Auburn was flatter than a deflated pancake.
"What is wrong with Auburn? Better yet, what is right with
Auburn?", exclaimed one student at halftime. Others were
sitting in silent disbelief. Many were thinking what they were
going to say to their relatives from Tennessee.
Suddenly, with Jimmy Sidle out of the game and long
shadows beginning to shroud Cliff Hare Stadium, the Tigers
began playing like tigers at last; something they had not done
since the second half against Nebraska in the Orange Bowl
game.
The Plainsmen were learning that they could work as an
effective unit without Sidle and the lessons which had been
almost too long in striking home were at the doorstep just in
time to avoid disaster. Eleven men comprise a football team.
By game's end it was equally obvious that Joe Campbell and
Tom Bryan are more than capable of successfully directing
Tiger fortunes. It was also apparent that there are a number
of unheralded Plainsmen who would like to see increased duty.
Look for Harrison McCraw to make room at the top.
Wreck Tech . . .
The loss of Jimmy Sidle for the Tech game is both ironic
and heartbreaking. Sidle made himself an All-American by
playing like one in the two years he has appeared against the
Yellow Jackets. To deny him the opportunity of a final
appearance against the Atlantans is a cruel blow. It was Jimmy
who asked to play against Chttanooga and you can bet that
Sidle will be in the line-up this Saturday if playing is humanly
possible.
While Tech is a slight favorite, we are going with Auburn
all the way. The Tigers found themselves against Chattanooga
and in recent years have had Tech's number. The Yellow
Jacket backs are quick but,small and Bill Cody will be there
to remind them that its safer to go backward rather than forwards
Auburn's pass defense, of late found to be dangerously
lacking, will receive quite a workout. We think you are about
to see the Plainsmen pick themselves up from the floor. Tech
is undefeated, but we suspect untried. This is- a "must" game
for both teams.
48 To What??? . . :
While we usually favor SEC teams when they are not playing
the Tigers, Florida State's 48 to six blitzing of Kentucky
was well received in this corner. The Seminoles have earned
a ticket of admission into the Southeastern Conference the
hard way, and it is becoming increasingly apparent that the Hal-lahasseans
are playing better calibre football than several members
of the Conference. Its time to refer to the SEC as the Dixie
Dozen once again.
Freshman Football . . ~.
Monday afternoon the freshman Tigers are scheduled to
meet the Mississippi State frosh eleven. First-year men are
purposely shaded from publicity to allow the ex-high school stars
time to adjust to the facts of collegiate football life, however
you are urged to support them in their intercollegiate undertakings.
Also, it may be the only chance you will have to
sit anywhere near the 50-yard line as a student.
Wreck Tech!
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Dodd's Unbeaten Yellow Jackets
Tangle With Tigers In Birmingham
Visitors Assume Favorites Role
Over Sidle-less Auburn Eleven
Veteran coach R. L. "Bobby" Dodd sends his unbeaten
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets against the unpredictable
Auburn Plainsmen Saturday afternoon in Birmingham's
Legion Field beginning at 2 p.m. (CST) before
an anticipated sellout crowd of 60,000 football fans.
TERRY HADDOCK—TECH HALFBACK
Georgia Tech halfback Terry Haddock will be running
against the Tigers for the second time in his career Saturday.
In last year's contest, the junior letterman from Coffee
County High School of Florence Alabama, scored one of
Tech's touchdowns. He is reported to be the fastest man
on the Yellow Jacket squad, having been officially checked
at 9.6 in the century dash.
Plainsmen Frosh Entertain Bullpups
In Cliff Hare Stadium On Monday
By GENE PHILLIPS
The Auburn freshman footballers
will open their 1964
season Monday when they
meet the tough Mississippi
State Bullpups in Cliff Hare
Stadium at 2 p.m.
Coach Hayley has prepared
a two platoon type of offense
for his team. It is based on two
complete units appropriately
known as the orange and blue
teams. Each team is well balanced
and capable of playing
both offense and defense. Both
units are physically big. The
lines average 205 pounds and
the backs average 195.
The freshmen will have their
work cut out for them when
they square off with Mississippi
State. The Bullpups have
previously defeated Auburn's
rivals at the University of Alabama.
They impressively defeated
the Crimson Tide by a
score of 14 to 7. The Mississippi
team was sparked by
quarterback Bill Kiser and
halfback Mickey Edwards. The
victory over Alabama will give
the Mississippians a slight advantage
of experience when
they tangle with the Auburn
Baby Tigers.
CRUDE HAIRCUT
Auburn's freshmen will have
one thing in common when
they take the field on Oct. 19.
Each of them has been given a
crude haircut by their older
counterparts.
GRUMBACHER
"Gainsborough" Oil
Painting Set
No. 310
The Mohawk haircut was
the most common style used,
but there were several variations.
A few players were allowed
to keep a Chinese style
top-knot.
Other less fortunate freshmen
were given a complete
shaving.
This hazing by the upper-classmen
may not make the
freshmen any more vicious in
their upcoming game, but it
will certainly give them a vicious
appearance.
Tickets will be on sale at the
box offices that surround the
stadium. The prices are 25
cents for students and $1.00 for
visitors.
Jerry Priestly and Bruce
Fischer handle the signal-calling
chores for the Atlantans
who last Friday evening shutout
Navy, 17-0, in Jacksonville
for the Jackets fourth victory
of the season without defeat.
Dodd's team has also triumphed
over Vanderbilt (14-2),
Miami (20-0), and Clemson
(14-7).
DOUBLE TROUBLE
Speedy halfbacks and a
rock-ribbed defensive u n it
have formed the basis for
Tech's surprising early-season
success. The loss of do-every-thing
quarterback Billy Lothe-ridge
through graduation has
been minimized by the deployment
of effective replacements
to each of the various positions
which Lotheridge previously
filled.
Johnny Gresham, G e r ry
Bussell, and Terry Haddock,
head a deep, fleet, and experienced
Yellow Jacket halfback
corps. All have been timed in
considerably less than 10 seconds
for the 100-yard dash,
and each is a threat to score
from any field locale.
Standout center Bill Curry
anchors a solid Tech' line
which Coach Dodd prefers to
operate under the platoon system.
Joe Campbell and Tom Bryan
are expected to fill Jimmy
Sidle's big shoes in the event
that the senior quarterback is
unable to participate.
The last time Georgia Tech
met Auburn in Birmingham
was in 1962, when the Tigers
jumped to a 17-0 lead and held
on to score a 17-14 triumph
over the Yellow Jackets in a
battle featuring two undefeated
elevens.
Auburn's All-America quarterback,
Jimmy Sidle, is ham-
12 tubes Va" x 2" size,
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Suitable for students or at
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And Coca-Cola—with that special zing
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pered with a dislocated left
shoulder suffered in the Tigers'
costly 33-12 victory over
the Chattanooga Moccasins last
Saturday, and his playing status
is doubtful. Primarily for
this reason, the Jackets have
been established as a slight favorite
for the third straight
year.
CLOSE SERIES
The Atlantans have not defeated
Auburn since 1961, and
have won on only one occasion
since 1957. Only 10 points had
separated the two teams over
a period of six years until last
year's 29-21 Tiger victory. In
last year's fray, played in Atlanta,
Auburn overcame an
early Tech lead to win going
away.
Women's
Intramurals
By JANE MAULDIN
Participation in Women's intramurals
, this year has been
exceptionally good with 47
teams entering volleyball competition,
26 teams entering co-recreational
volleyball, 117
teams in shuffleboard singles,
52 couples participating in
shuffleboard doubles, 14 single
table tennis participants, and
(See page 8, column 1)
Sports Spectacular . .
JANICE HARWELL
Janice Harwell serves to remind all students wishing
to borrow sports equipment that the intramurals check-out
office is now located in the refurbished Student Activities
Building.
Miss Harwell, a brown-haired 5'4" freshman from Tal-see,
Alabama, living in Dorm 10, is a Home Economics major.
The equipment check-out center is open from one until
six p.m. Monday through Friday.
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Hunting Season Has Arrived So...
Take To The Woods And Fields
By MIKE PRUETT
That time of the year is here agairi! Time to oil up
that shotgun or rifle and take to the woods and fields
in pursuit of one's favorite game.'
The first half of dove sea
son opened October 1 and the
dove shooting looks to be real
good this year. Reports I have
heard so far say that the doves
are really here this year, but
bad weather has ruined the
good hunts.
Squirrel season opens north
of Highway 80 on October 15.
According to reports coming
to my ear (my ears are open
wide to this subject), the
squirrels .are having a hard
time finding food and where
there's food there is bound to
be some squirrels. Squirrels
coming into town in search of
food have gotten so bad that
many Auburn residents have
secured permits to protect
their pecan crop.
Also on October 15 the bow
hunter will get a jump on the
gunner for deer and turkey.
If they can't get a buck or
gobbler at least maybe they'll
have found themselves a good
spot when gun season opens in
November.
GUN SAFETY
With the opening of dove
season many Auburn students
will be banging away at that
high flying fowl. Many times
the shooting gets so fast and
exciting that the shooter forgets
to check his shotgun while
loading. This could be very
dangerous. Each year many
shooters are injured because
they loaded a smaller gauge
shell in their gun.
A smaller gauge shell fired
in a larger gauge gun will
drop down in the bore of the
7—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, October 14, 1964
ARTIN^v& zi>e,
PHONE SH 5-2671
IN OPELIKA
Thursday-Friday-Saturday
'TWILL H A U N T YOU
Feature Times:
Thurs.-Fri.-3:15, 6:07, 9:09
Sat.—12:00, 3:03, 6:06, 9:09
JVIGUTMARE
F w • • 1 • •AUWKRSM.HaBSt
A UWVHSAL RElEASt
DAVID KNIGHT MOIHA REDMOND
Feature Times:
Thurs.-Fri.—4:30, 7:32
Sat.—1:25, 4:28, 7:31
Sunday-Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
SAMUEL BRONSTON
PRESENTS
SOPHIA LOREN
STEPHEN/ ALEC k
JAMES /CHRISTOPHER
MASON/
SAFETY WITH FIREARMS
Dramatically demonstrating what happens when hunters
carelessly mismatch their shells and guns, Mike Pruett
urges all prospective woods-venturers to exercise safety
measures designed to insure the hunter a safe and successful
season.
shotgun allowing another shell
to be loaded behind it. When
the second shell is fired, terrific
pressure in the chamber
causes the barrel to explode or
bulge (See Picture). So always
check your shells before going
into the field to be sure no
shells of the wrong gauge have
gotten mixed in. I t may save
your life!
Q U A L I F Y I N G MATCH
A qualifications match with
30.06 rifles is set for October
25 by the Conservation Club.
All members are urged to meet
at Ross Square at 8:00 a.m.
Anyone interested in becoming
a member may call 887-5854
and talk to Daniel Codespoti.
The next meeting is set for the
first Thursday in November.
WAR EAGLE THEATRE
DIAL 887-3631-AUBURN
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY
Here is a highly controversial picture those
who like it rave about it. See it and decide for
yourself.
JOHN IRELAND I MEL FERRER I OMAR SHARIF
« D ANTHONY QUAYLE TECHNICOLOR8
Directed by ANTHONY MANN • Music by DIMITRITIOMKIN
KD Minks • BASILIO fMHCHINA • PHILIP YORDM • SHWEL HOUSTON • U L T R A ' P A N A V I S I O N " PAB.MOUNT
- - I RLOtSC
Feature Times: Sunday—1:30, 4:42, 8:04
Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday—3:50, 7:45
THURSDAY through SATURDAY
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
Suspensetul Sex Mystery.1,
TIGER
- m P P I HEDREN SEAN CONNERY
CMDIANEBAKER• MARTINGABEL.*«*«-«-.TECHNICOLOR* | ^ |
Show Times: 1 : 5 0 , 4 : 1 5 , 6 : 4 0 , 9:15
Late Show Friday 11:00 p.m.
"All In A Night's Work"
Dean Martin Shirley MacLaine
ON STAGE . . . CRAZY AUCTION
SUNDAY through TUESDAY
WINNER SWEDISH FILM ACADEMY AWARD • BEST FILM OF THE YEAR. ISB3
No children or high school students admitted
College students show their I. D. cards at box
office.
NO INCREASE IN ADMISSION
5 DAYS FRIDAY through TUESDAY
A towering triumph of
Adventure and
) Excitement!
C0LUM8!APICTURESffi£sais 1
ALEC GUINNESS JACK HAWKINS
W i n n e r of 2 7 I n t e r n a t i o n al
A w a r d s . . . 7 A c a d e m y A w a r d sl
«wm tmrnmooUam nimnirui iMMUiif
StSSOEWfAKWft- JMKSDOMLD AHHSEARS-GEOFFffilHORK- OAViDLEAN Km.BOUUE KSSS TECHMUS* CKUSCK
Late Show Saturday 11:00 p.m.
Melro-Goldwvn-Maver presents A Seven Arts Production
KIM NOVAK and LAURENCE HARVEY
IN W SOMERSET MAUGHAM'S OF Human eonoace
ion
Game
•
Auburn-Georgia Tech..
Texas-Arkansas _
Georgia-Fla. State
; Baylor-Texas Teeli __
California-Navy
Minnesota-Illinois
Wisconsin-Iowa _
Kentucky-L.S.U _:_...
Miss. St.-Sou. Miss
Notre Dame-U.C.L.A...
Ohio State-Sou. Cal.._.
S.M.U.-Rice
1 Last Week
Season Percentages
j r ut
Old Pro
t Auburn
Texas
FEU
. TT
Cal.
111.
Iowa
Ky.
MS
ND
OSU
Rice
20-6
.704
on
Rutberg
Auburn
Texas
FSU
TT
Navy
Minne.
Iowa
LSU
MS
ND
OSU
Rice
18-8
.648
Several OUT ON A LIMBERS went out to
this week's prognosticat
about some "Big Blue"
Gardner, former sports
bus Ledger, current full
] a l
Dixon
Auburn
' Texas
FSU
TT
Cal.
111.
Wis.
Ky.
MS
ND
OSU
SMU
19-7
.635
r •
LrlHI
Stallard
Auburn
Texas
FSU-Baylor
Navy
111.
Iowa
LSU
MS
ND
OSU
SMU
18-8
.635
« f »
bI; 9
Phillips .
Auburn
Texas •
FSU
Baylor
Cal.
111.
Wis.
Ky.
MS
ND
OSU
SMU
13-13
.537
;
'•7 1
Gardner
(Guest)
Auburn
Texas
FSU
TT
Navy
111.
Wis.
Ky.
SM
ND
OSU
Rice
. 16-10
.500
a local oasis recently to "limber up" for
ions. Seems they were unable
outfit taking up all the seats.
to get in the door.
Our guest this week
Something
is George
editor, current full-time writher (not a misprint) for the Colum-
-time student, and future candidate for a
was bitten by a dog last week.
one of his famed nosedives.
breakdown Rutberg
We are hoping for rabies. Phillips is staging another
SEC Wrap-Up . . .
Three Family Feuds
Flavor Football Menu
By RON MUSSIG
Three SEC games are scheduled
for Saturday. Alabama (4-
0) will meet Tennessee (3-1)
at Knoxville, Kentucky (3-1)
hosts LSU (3-0), and Mississippi
(2-2) travels to New Orleans
to play Tulane (0-3).
The other five SEC . teams
will all see action. The top
game should be Auburn (3-1)
hosting Georgia Tech (4-0).
Florida (3-0) host to South
Carolina (1-2-1), Georgia (2-
1-1) entertains high riding FSU
(4-0), Southern Mississippi
(4-0) visits Mississippi State
(1-3), and Vanderbilt (1-3) is
at George Washington (1-3).
FLORIDA SHOCKS REBS
In action last Saturday, Florida
shocked Ole Miss 30-14. The
Gators scored first in the secibrld
period when Tom Shannon
capped a drive with a .one vard.
scamper. Mississippi came "back
Thurs. - Fri. - Sat.
FOUR FEATURES!
An Allied Artists Picture
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THE MIRISCH COMPANYw BARBICAN FILMS
COLOR a- DE LUXE
inasto imu UNITED EQ ARTISTS
— P L U S—
JOHN STURGES'
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• PAUL ANKA • RUTH ROMAN
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An ALLIED ARTISTS Release
in the same period with a 45
yard drive to even the score.
Mike Dennis scored from the
two yard line. Florida closed
out first half scoring with a 31
yard field goal by Bob Lyle.
After the intermission, the
Gators again scored first, on a
62 yard punt return by Allen
Trammel. In the fourth period,
the Floridians scored twice.
Steve Spurrier connected on a
19 yard pass to end Charles
Casey and later on a 43 yard
play to the same Casey. Mississippi
scored in the fourth
period after Jim Nelson picked
off a Gator pass. Charles Myers
connected with Allen Brown
from the 17 to close out scoring.
MAROONS EDGE GREENIES
I The only .other SEC contest
saw Mississippi State finally
break into the wia column. The
ilfeirpe'ns 'bleat Tulane 17-6 be-,
hind sophomore flash Marcus
Rhoden. The little halfback
scored twice in the second
period, on a two yard run and
a 77 yard scamper. State's only
other score came in the second
period as Justin Canale kicked
a 27 yard field goal.
Tulane's score came in the
third period. Greenie quarterback
David East capped the
drive with a one yard sneak.
MUSSIG'S FEARLESS
FORECAST
Alabama over Tennessee
LSU over Kentucky
Mississippi over Tulane
Auburn over Georgia Tech
Florida over South Carolina
FSU over Georgia
Mississippi State over Southern
Mississippi
Vanderbilt over G e o r ge
Washington
'Last Week's results: 7 of 9
or .777. \
BENGALS ON BINGE
LSU kept their streak going
by defeating North Carolina
20-3.
Tiger scoring came with a 36
yard field goal by Bob Moreau,
a five yard run by Gawaine
Dibetta for LSU's first TD this
season. Another Moreau field
goal, this one from the 19 and
then Moreau took an 18 yard
pass from Pat Screen to close
out scoring for the Tigers.
The Tarheels scored on a
(See page 8, column 6)
^•OCS
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HAND
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Take the easy way to comfort
in casual or dress type
Apache Mocs, Hand sewn,
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MANY OTHER STYLES
AND COLORS IN STOCK
Feinbergs
N. College Auburn
887-3211
NOTICE
All candidates for the 1965
Auburn varsity baseball team
are asked to meet with Coach
Paul Nix Tuesday Oct. 20, at
4:00 p.m. in the field house.
Tiger
Men's Shop
217 N. College
Headquarters
for
h. i. s.
for
campus
knights
..and days
Post-Grad
slacks by
h.LS
Yoa're probably too tall to fit
into a suit of armor but just
right for the long and lean
look of these pants. Post-
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you down. They're noble and
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Neat belt loops. Narrow
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Shaped on-seam pockets,
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•rjuPont's Reg. TM for its Polyester Fiber
ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
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IN MICHAEL RELPH AND
BASIL DEARDEN'S PRODUCTIOM
PROM THE NOVEL OV CATMCRINE ARLEY
. T J ^ A L E X A N D E R KNOX
6CREENPLAY By ROBERT MULLER A N D STANLEY MANN
PRODUCED BV OIRECTEO BV
MICHAEL RELPH BASIL DEARDEIS
EiASTMANCOLOR
" % ^ UNITED ARTISTS
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for Seniors and Graduates in MECHANICAL,
AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL,
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ENGINEERING
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tn
A Lankerstiim-Pennebaker Production
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
FRIDAY, OCT. ?3
Pratt & M
fiircraft
I An Equal Opportunity Employer
SPECIALISTS IN POM
•VRMNT UTILIZATIONS IHGLUU
Appointments should be made
in advance through your
College Placement Office
POWER.. . POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
IU)t AUKRAEli ftUUlUW, SPACS VMWCISS. MAftlNS AM» INDUSTRIAL APFtltATION*
Women's Intra murals
(Continued from page 6)
45 teams participating in table
tennis doubles.
!The volleyball games will be
played in the Student Activities
building beginning the week
of Oct. 12. The schedule is as
follows:
Wednesday, Oct. 15
i5 p.m.—Court I Zeta Tau
A'lpha team 2 vs T r i Delta team
2.
Court II — Alpha Delta Pi
team 2 vs Dorm 9 team 2.
• Cour III—Alpha Omicron Pi
team 1 vs Delta Zeta team 1.
Thursday, Oct. 16
4:00 p.m.—Court I Tri Delta
team 1 vs Theta team 1.
Court II—Phi Mu team 1 vs
Dorm A.
Court III—Kappa team 1 vs
Dorm 6 team 2
5:00 p.m.—Court I Zeta Tau
Alpha team 1 vs Flint Dorm.
Court I I—Alpha Omicron Pi
team 1 vs Delta Zeta team 1.
Court III—Alpha Delta Pi
team 2 vs Dorm 9 team 2.
Practice sessions are at 4
p.m. in the Student Activities
building or at night in the
Alumni Gym.
Table tennis and shuffle-board
matches are posted on
the bulletin board in Alumni
Gym. First round matches in
these events must be completed
by Oct. 23. The winner of the
match should post her name on
the bulletin board.
All equipment is furnished in
the Alumni Gym which is open
from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., Mondays
thru Thursdays, and 7 a.m. to
6 p.m. on Fridays.
The Dolphin Club party for
new members will be held at
Mrs. Rawls' home on Monday,
Oct. 19.
NOTICE
Freshman basketball coach
Larry Chapman has requested
that all freshmen interested in
playing freshman basketball report
to the Sports Arena Thursday
Oct. 15 at 7:00 p.m. Most
freshmen practices will be at
night.
Intramural Scene . . .
KA's, Sigma Nil's Fall
In Major Grid Upsets
By GEORGE STALLARD
Continuing into the second
week of intramural activity, all
leagues share a full schedule
of competition.
Fraternity football action
last week was largely dominated
by the defensive units,
however, there w e r e two
games which left defense to be
desired.
SAE blanked BTP 25-0, and
PKT blasted DSP 52-0 in one
of the highest scoring games
by one team in intramural
football history.
LEAGUE ONE
LCA upset SN in a thriller
that was decided in sudden
death. Both teams were deadlocked
at 12-12 when the time
expired. In four plays by each
"when can I
interview IBM?"
October 26-30
"for what jobs?"
Manufacturing, Product Development, Programming,
. Branch Office Administration, Systems Engineering, Marketing/Sales
If you are majoring in Engineering, the Sciences, Mathematics,
or Business Administration, see IBM. The development, manufacturing,
and marketing of information systems and equipment offer many opportunities
to show what you can do.
See your placement office for our brochures —
and an appointment with the IBM interviewers. Ask where your ideas can
best be used at IBM, an Equal Opportunity Employer. There are 20 laboratories,
17 plants, and over 200 sales and service offices coast to coast.
If you cannot attend the interviews, visit the nearest IBM office. Or
write, telling us about your interests, to Manager of College Relations, Dept. 882,
IBM Corporate Headquarters, Armonk, New York 10504.
Applied Mathematics, Applied Mechanics,
Data Communications, Digital Computers,
Guidance Systems, Human Factors,
Industrial Engineering, Information Retrieval,
Marketing, Manufacturing Research,
Microwaves, Optics, Reliability Engineering,
Servomechanisms, Solid State Devices,
Systems Simulation, and related areas.
IBM
team LCA outgained SN to
snatch the victory.
SIGMA NU UPSET
LCA quarterback Reggie Gilbert
hit Pat O'brien for one
touchdown and Lamba Chi
John David Ramsey Tallied the
second LCA score on an intercepted
pass. The pass to
O'brien came as the whistle
sounded to end regulation
play.
lation play. SN also scored two
six-pointers on two aerial tos-
SP opened their season with
a 6-0 win over PGD. SP scored
in the first half on a pass from
QB Wayne Stacy to wingback
Bill Mauldin, then held on in a
defensive struggle for the remainder
of the game. Defensive
standouts for SP were Jim
Laney and Larry Crain.
LEAGUE TWO
In what may have been the
key game in League Two, ATO
triumphed over KA 12-0. With
only four minutes remaining
in the game, QB Rick Eign-brod
dented the airlanes with
two scoring strikes to insure
ATO of the win. Steve Bow-den
and John Whatley were
on the receiving end of the
six-point heaves. Bob Blake
shone on defense for ATO. w
AS you
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CHARLIE
BROWN
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SUDDEN DEATH
KS snared a narrow victory
in sudden death over DTD 12-
6. DTD scored first on a pass
from QB Ted Mallory to Rob
Strayhorn and led at the half.
KS rallied in the second half
to tie the game on a pass from
Johnny McAlester to end Bill
Sport. In the sudden death
overtime, KS tallied for a
touchdown in the alloted four
plays to nail down the victory.
SPE made a third quarter
score hold up for a 6-0 win
over OTS. QB Larry Graves
hit left end Sam Monte with a
pass for the only scoring.
LEAGUE THREE
PKT crossed DSP's goal line
eight times enroute to a 52-0
p a s t i n g . PKT intercepted
seven passes and did not allow
DSP to cross the midfield
stripe.
Outstanding for PKT were
QB Billy Hatley, Doug White,
Phil Vaughn, and Bill Pinson.
Pinson intercepted four passes.
In a strong defensive game
that ended 0-0, PKA defeated
AGR in a sudden death contest.
In the overtime period
PKA rolled up 19 yards, while
AGR could gain but nine. Defensive
stars for PKA were
Cecil Robinson a n d Larry
Hubbard with two pass interceptions
each. Stalwarts on
defense for AGR were Billy
Lee and Don Moore.
DC won over SC 12-0. Eight
DC interceptions stalled SC
throughout t h e game. QB
Larry Gable intercepted four
passes and Don Rayfield
latched on to three stray SC
aerials. Gable threw two scoring
tosses.
DORM LEAGUE
In the Dormitory League,
Div. B edged Div. N 6-0, Div.
P squeaked by Div. X2, 6-2,
and Div. J beat Div. F 12-0.
In the Independent League,
Jombies beat Majors in sudden
death. Navy won over APO
6-0, Trailer Park defeated
Wesleyan 27-0, and Lazenbys
stomped BSU 34-0.
SWIM O F F I C I A L S NEEDED
Intramural Sports Director
Coach R. K. Evans needs
swimming officials with experience
for the upcoming
swimming meet Oct. 20, 22, 27
and 29. Needed are one starter,
three timers, and four judges.
Those interested in officiating
contact Coach Evans at the
Student Activities Building,
Telephone Extension 206.
SEC Wrap-Up . .,
(Continued from page 7)
25 yard field goal by Max
Chapman.
WILDCATS HUMILIATED
Giant-killer Kentucky discovered
a new giant-killer,
Florida State. Florida State
quarterback Steve Tensi passed
to halfback Fred Biletnikoff for
scores of 53 and eight yards.
Phil Spooner scored twice on
one yard plunges. Narramore
added six points on a four yard
gallop and reserve halfback
8—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, October 14 ,1964
Wayne Giardino scored from
the one. Number two quarterback
Ed Pritchett lugged the
ball four yards for the final
FSU score.
Kentucky managed a score in
final 30 seconds of the fourth
period when Frank Antonini
bulled over from the five. His
six pointer was the first score
against the Seminoles this year.
WOLFPACK HUMBLED
In action out of conference,
Alabama trounced North Carolina
State 21-0. Steve Sloan had
to substitute for Joe Namath
who received a twisted knee in
the second period. Sloan took
over a drive Namath had
started and went the final yard
himself for the score.
After the intermission, Steve
Bowman carried the pigskin the
last three yards of the 51 yard
drive to score. Alabama's final
tally came after a 53 yard drive
when Tommy Tolleson caught
a 10 yard pass from Sloan.
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