V Ten Outstanding Junior Men Tapped For Spades-Top Honorary
Ten juniors, selected as the most outstanding
in their class, will wear the Spade during the
coming year—symbol of the highest honor that
can come to an Auburn man.
Picked as "the most prominent and influential
men of the class," the following were named
to the top senior honorary in early morning ceremonies
at Ross Square yesterday:
Paul Adamson, Lanny Crane, Ray Daniel,
"Bo" Davidson, Bob Long, Bob Lynn, Doug Mcintosh,
Lloyd Nix, Morris Savage and "Sonny"
Stein.
The retiring members each year elect ten
men to Spades for the coming year. To wear
the Spade pin is the goal which all underclassmen
may seek as "the highest honor an Auburn
man can attain."
Spades has no officers. Its purpose is set down
in the preamble; "Whereas feeling the need of
some organization in the Senior Class of the institution
which, wholly independent of the social
and other relations, shall seek to. gather together
the most prominent and influential men
of the class and of the institution, this society is
organized." •
Activities and home towns of the new members
are:
Paul Adamson, Birmingham . . . Superintendent
of Union Activities, president Southern Region
Association of College Unions, secretary Pi
Kappa Alpha, vice-president Blue Key, circulation
manager of The Plainsman, chairman Village
Fair Committee, chairman Union Publicity
Committee, Jurisprudence Committee, Publications
Board and chairman Union Program Council.
, Lanny Crane, Montgomery . . . President Inter-
Fraternity Council, vice - president IFC,
Rush Week chairman, chairman Greek Week,
chairman Village Fair Special Publicity, Spirit
Committee, Ring Committee chairman, Union
Board, Jurisprudence Committee, Lecture and
Concert Committee.
Ray Daniel, Atlanta . . . Senior senator, treasurer
of Studen Body, president Blue Key, president
pro-tern Senate, Squires, Village Fair business
manager, Alpha Tau Omega, Auburn Conference
on International Affairs business manager
and member Board of. Publications.
"Bo" Davidson, Chickasaw . . . Vice-President
Student Body, junior senator, secretary Theta
Chi fraternity, Omicron Delta Kappa, chairman
Village Fair Festival Committee, chairman ACOIA
Faculty and Research Committee,' Jurisprudence
Committee and chairman War Eagle Political
Party.
Bob Long, Atmore . . . . President Omicron
Delta Kappa, superintendent of political affairs,
superintendent of public relations, coordinator of
Village Fair, chairman Rat Cap Committee, Disciplinary
Committee, Delta Sigma Pi and treasurer
of Sigma Chi.
Bob Lynn, Douglasville, Ga. . . . Squires, vice-president
Omicron Delta Kappa, coordinator of
student activities, Chairman of Village Fair,
member Board of Publications, Delta Tau Del-
. ta, sophomore senator, chairman of Decorations
Village Fair and Continuation of Village Fair.
Doug Mcintosh, Mobile . . . Editor of The
Plainsman, Plainsman news editor, Blue Key,
Registration Council, Jurisprudence Committee,
Village Fair Newspaper Publicity Committee
chairman, Scabbard and Blade, Lambda Chi Alpha
and Publications Board.
Lloyd Nix, Kansas . . . Captain football team,
varsity baseball team, secretary-treasurer Blue
Key, secretary-treasurer "A" Club, chairman
Insurance Committee, Kappa Alpha Order,
Squires.
Morris Savage, Dora . . . Senior senator, secretary-
treasurer Omicron Delta Kappa, junior
senator, chairman Village Fair Buildings and
Grounds Committee, chairman Village Fair Finance
Committee, president "A" Club, varsity
football and baseball, president Squires and
member Kappa Alpha Order.
"Sonny" Stein, Birmingham . . . President
Student Body, freshman senator, vice-president
Squires, superintendent of student spirit, circulation
manager Glomerata, chairman Village Fair
Exhibits Committee, member of Omicron Delta
Kappa and Pi Kappa Alpha. PAUL ADAMSON LANNY CRANE
RAY DANIEL 'BO" DAVIDSON BOB LONG BOB LYNN DOUG MCINTOSH LLOYD NIX MORRIS SAVAGE "SONNY" STEIN
Thz tW'*'
TO FOSTER THEAUBURN SPIRIT
VOLUME 86 Alabama Polytechnic Institute AUBURN, ALABAMA,;WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1958 6 Pages Number 30
•
575 Graduates To Hear
Dr. Frank Rose Speak
in Cliff Hare Stadium
Summer Quarter
Fee Payments
Start Today
575 diplomas will be awarded to graduating seniors and
graduate students at spring commencement exercises in Cliff
Hare Stadium on June 3. Dr. Frank A. Rose, University of
Alabama president, will be the speaker for the ceremonies.
Dr. Rose is a native of Meridian,
Miss. He received his
A. B. degree from Transylvania
in 1942. In 1946 he received
his B. D. degree from
the College of Bible. He did
graduate work at the University
of London in 1950.
From 1947 to 1951 Dr. Rose
served as minister of the First
Baptist" Church of Danville, Ky.
He became president of Transylvania
College at 30 years of age.
Also active in civic organizations,
he was voted one of the ten outstanding
young men in America
in 1954 by the National Junior
Chamber of Commerce.
Dr. Rose became president of
the University of Alabama in
January of this year.
Among the distinguished members
of the spring 1958 graduating
class are Robert Lee Tarte
and Thomas Raymond Baxter.
Students who have pre-regis-ter'ed
for summer quarter should
pay their fees according to the
following schedule:
Wednesday, May 21
Aa-Bea, 8:30 to 9 a.m.; Bec-By,
9 to 10 a.m.; Ca-Cut, 10 to 11 a.m.;
Cut-Fy, 11 a.m. to noon; Ga-Gy,
1 to 2 p.m.; Ha-Hos, 2 to 3 p.m.;
Hot-Ja, 3 to 4 p.m.
Thursday, May 22
Je-Ly, 8 to 9 a.m.; Ma-McL, 9
to 10 a.m.; McM-Moo, 10 to 11
a.m.; Mop-Nel, 11 a.m. to noon;
Nem-Py, 1 to 2 p.m.; Q-Ry, 2 to
3 p.m.; Sa-Smy, 3 to 4 p.m.
Friday, May 23
Sn-Thomas, 8 to 9 a.m.; Thomas-
Wade, 9 to 10 a.m.; Wadi-Wolf,
10 to 11 a.m.; and Wolg-Zy, 11
a.m. to noon.
All students unable to clear fees
by the above schedule may do so
from 1 to 4 p. m. Friday. Late fee
begins Saturday, May 24.
Invitations
Graduation invitations may
be picked up in the Student
Body Administrative Office,
Union Building, from 2-5 o'clock
any afternoon this week.
Auburn Hall Elects
New Officers
Residents of Auburn Hall last
week elected officers for the
coming school year.
The election was the first for
Auburn Hall since its constitution
was adopted last fall.
Elected'were Charles Newman,
president; Jack Ford, vice-president;
Edwin Wood, treasurer; and
Troy Vining, secretary.
Staff Members Needed To Work
On Plainsman During Summer Quarter
&;.
More people are urgently needed
to fill vacancies in various jobs
on the staff, of the summer
Plainsman. Experience is not
necessary and anyone interested
in newspaper work, and who will
be in school this summer quarter
should get in touch with Doug
Mcintosh at the Lambda Chi Alpha
house.
There will be a meeting of all
staff members, summer and regular,
at 5 o'clock tomorrow afternoon,.
May 22, in the Plainsman
office. Everyone interested in
working on the Plainsman staff
this summer should attend.
The summer editions of the
Plainsman will be tabloid size
and will be published every Wednesday.
The Plainsman staff for this
summer includes Doug Mcintosh,
editor; Ronnie McCullars, managing
editor; Jim Phillips, sports editor.
Jack Crumpton will be features
editor, and Hoyt Sherard
will be art editor.
DEAN CATER
Dean Cater To Get
Honorary Degree
Miss K a t h a r i n e C. Cater,
dean of women, will be the recipient-
of an honorary doctor of
letters degree on June 1. Awarding
the honor will be her alma
mater, Limestone College, Gaf-fney,
S. C, the oldest women's
college in South Carolina.
Dr. A. J. Eastfood, Limestone
president, speaking of the cot
lege's board of trustees' decision
to award the honorary doctorate
to Miss Cater, said, "We are most
happy to award the honorary
doctorate of letters to so illustrious
an alumna as Dean Cater.
Her contributions to the field of
education as a student, a teacher
and an administrator make tlv
trustees of Limestone College
proud to recognize her as one of
the college's outstanding alumnae."
P r e s i d e n t Ralph B. Draug-hon
expressed pleasure over the
action by Limestone by saying,
"Dean Cater deserves the honor.
To us she is the best dean of
women in the South."
After receiving her A.B. degree
from Limestone in 1935, Miss
Cater obtained her M.A. degree
from Mercer University in 1938
and the M.S. degree from Syracuse
University in 1942. At present
she is a candidate for the
Ph.D. degree at Syracuse.
Miss Cater has had teaching
experience in secondary schools
and at Limestone. She has been
director of student personnel at
Furman University. In 1946 she
came to Auburn as dean of, women
and social director.
'New Evidence'
To Be Submitted
f
SEC To Hear 'Secret'
Information Tomorrow
"We've come up with further
evidence which naturally
we'll unveil to the SEC," were
the words of Auburn Athletic
Director Jeff Beard a week
ago in regard to the possible
probation the Tigers may receive
from the National Collegiate
Athletic Association.
Tomorrow, Beard and his associates
will present that evidence—
which is' secret at the
present—when the SEC Executive
Committee meets in Atlanta
for its final hearing on the alleged
illegal recruitment of Gun-tersville's
highly touted quarterback
Don Fuell.
Commissioner Bernie Moore
and his committee Could appeal
to the NCAA and ask them to
reconsider the case or they
could accept the action of that
body and further penalize Auburn.
•
. Auburn was only two weeks
away from being released by the
NCAA' for illegal recruiting of
two Gadsden footballers when
the NCAA stamped them with
another three-year probation
sentence. This sentence, if it
holds, will ban the Tigers from
all NCAA-sponsored activities
until 1961.
'LOVELIEST OF THE PLAINS'
Glom Distribution
The Glomerata office will be
open today from 2-5 p.m. for
those students who failed to get
their yearbook during the regular
distribution last week.
Five API Students
Injured In Accident
On Weekend Trip
One Auburn student suffered a
brain concussion and four others
sustained minor injuries in an
automobile accident 11 miles
south of Dothan last Friday night.
Robert C. Franck, S i g n al
Mountain, Tenn., is being treated
at Frazier Ellis Hospital in Dothan
for head injuries, while William
L. Little, Austell, Ga.; R. O.
(Tony) Dykes, Newnan, Ga.; and
Ross Hamilton and Charles G.
Mills, Chattanooga, were released
after being treated for minor in-quries.
All five are members of
SAE fraternity.
The accident occurred about
11:30 Friday evening as the men
were traveling to Panama City
in a Volkswagen driven by
Dykes. The car suddenly flipped
over, throwing Franck and
Dykes out.
Voluntary Program To Provide
Coverage During Entire Year
Students will be given an opportunity to buy a health and
accident insurance policy for a full year for $10, beginning
next fall. A student-faculty committee has recommended that
the American Casualty Insurance Company be awarded the
contract and the Board of Trustees is expected to approve
the plan at their next meeting on June 2.
the I : "
SYLVIA BROWN is going to mow 'em down as she helps
B&G with is task of trimming the acres and acres of. "lawns" on
campus. Sylvia, a sophomore in psychology, transferred to Auburn
this quarter from Birmingham Southern. Their loss is our gain!
2 From API Join Nuclear Program
Two Auburn NROTC midshipmen
have been selected for the
Navy's nuclear propulsion program.
They are seniors Roger
Hemminghaus and Jack Brandel.
The midshipmen were interviewed
in Washington by Rear
Admiral Hyman Rickover and his
staff. They will be commissioned
ensigns upon graduation June 3
and will report for duty in Washington
on June 16.
They are among 22 prospective
ensigns from NROTC colleges in
the country selected for the
Navy's specialized nuclear program.
The selected young officers
will work directly under the
overall supervision of Admiral
Rickover, the guiding force behind
America's nuclear-powered
submarines.
At the Union . . .
A "Final Fling" dance will be
held in the Union Ballroom Friday
evening, May 23, from 7:30
to 10:30, with music by the Auburn
Knights. The floorshow will
include entertainment by the
"Toe Tappers" and other talent
from Tallassee, along with Rita
Maldonado doing a Spanish dance
and Bob Alexander singing popular
songs. '
The dance will be for couples
only and admission will be free.
Benefits receivable from
policy will include reimbursement
up to $500 for accident
costs (medical, nurse, hospital,
surgical and dental expenses); a
maximum of $300 ($10 a day for
30 days) for sickness involving
hospital confinement, $75 for additional
expenses such as ambulance
fees and laboratory tests;
$200 for surgical expenses, and
up to $90 for doctors' visits (30
visits at a rate of $3 per visit).
Rates for coverage under this
plan will be $10 for a single student,
$20 for a married student
and his wife and $30 for married
students with more than one dependent.
. The policy is designed to supplement
services offered by the
college infirmary. If the student
needs medical care while
away from the campus, the policy
provides for services of any
doctor or hospital selected by the
student. The policy would be in
effect at all times with the exception
of instances covered by
workman's compensation.
Under the proposed plan, coverage
will run from fall quarter
of one year to the next fall quarter.
Students taking the policy after
fall quarter will be charged
for the remaining policy time until
the next fall quarter.
All students planning to attend
API in fall quarter 1958 will be
mailed a brochure, enrollment
card and instructions for obtaining
coverage, sometime in August.
Participation in the program
will be on a voluntary basis.
The plan Was developed by a
student-faculty committee after
being proposed by the Student
Senate. Student members of the
committee were Walter Glenn,
Lloyd Nix, Larry Scanlan and
Bob Tarte; faculty members were
Dr. David W. Mullins, W. T. Ingram
and Professor C. C. Stal-naker.
- . .
Summer Quarter
Registration Set
For June 11,12
Regular registration for the
summer quarter will begin at 8
a.m. Wednesday, June 11, and
continue through June 12. Former
students and those currently
enrolled who have not pre-regis-.
tered may register on June 11-12.
New freshman and transfer students
must report for orientation
in the Union Building at 8 a.m.
on June 11.
Class work will begin Friday,
June 13. Saturday classes will be
held the next day, following a
Thursday schedule. Saturday will
also be the last day for summer
registration. Any changes in registration
for dropping or adding
courses will be. held from Saturday,
June, 14 to Tuesday, June
17.
Medals Awarded
To Winners Of
Speaking Contest
Gold and silver medals were
awarded the winners of the 11th
Annual Intramural Public Speaking
Contest last week.
First place winner was Jose
Mejia from Medellin, Antioquia,
Colombia, whose subject was
"Democracy." Mejia is a junior
in mechanical engineering.
Lawrence S. Hawsey's subject,
"Improving Education in Alabama,"
won him second place
honors. He.is a junior in agricultural
education. .
Neilson Martin, A l i c e v i l l e ,
won third place. Paul Spahos. of
Ft. Valley, Ga., took fourth place
J.
Exceptional Glom—Great Year 2 — THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, May 21,1918 CAMPUS 10 CAMPUS
The Glamerata you picked up last week
was an exceptional portrayal of an Aub
u r n year.
As you leafed through the pages for t he
first time—reviewing a year that you will
relive again and again in the life time
ahead—you might have wondered how
t h i s year's Glomerata compares with past
years.
To drag out a p h r a s e t h a t has been used
before to describe the Glom, but should
have been preserved especially for this
year, it is t h e best year book Auburn has
seen!
We realize that such a bold statement
covers much ground, but if anyone would
deny that the 1958 Glomerata is not the
most colorful, vivid and exciting chronicle
yet, let h im bring forth from t h e files t h e ]
dusty, ancient book that beats it. A better
yearbook must certainly have been collecting
dust for some time.
The Glomerata you received last week
is your passport back into a year on the
campus. I t s color will t a k e you many times
back up into t h e stands, t o sit among the
cry of 'War Eagle' a n d watch a No. 1 football
t e am bang out t e n victories. Its pages
will bring a smile as you greet old friends
—and sometimes a sadly nostalgic longing
to live again in the u n d e r g r a d u a t e world
at Auburn.
This has been an exciting year.
Thank you Doug Hawkins and Daisy
Golson, for so wonderfully capturing it for
us.—Tarte.
LITHE MAMfCAMPUS m War
The Socially Outcast Hero
For the last two weeks, t h e r e has been
much discussion held in the Union Building,
back halls of fraternities and over t he
phone. There was a question of letting
Auburn men on athletic scholarship p a r t icipate
in all f r a t e r n i t y athletics except the
ones in which they received their scholarship
aid and others in which t h e y took p a rt
as Auburn varsity athletes. All men i n order
to be eligible for f r a t e r n i t y athletics
were to have been active, initiated members
of the respective fraternities.
Last Monday night a final decision was
reached by the Intrafraternity Sports
Council. It was decided by nine social
groups that fraternity members on scholarship
should not participate as f r a t e r n i ty
men in sports. There were only t w e n t y of
t h e twenty-two fraternities interested
enough in this issue to a t t e n d t h e meeting
and cast ballots expressing their opinions.
Eleven of t h e t w e n t y at t h e meeting voted
in favor of l e t t i n g any member of a frat
e r n i t y participate.
Although t h e m a j o r i t y of t h e fraternities
a t t e n d i n g were in favor of t h e change, it
r e q u i r e d a three-fourths vote to revise the
e x i s t i n g rule. From the standpoint of
building a g r e a t e r Auburn, it was inspirational
to l i s t en to this typical v i ew from
many fraternities.
"We have n o m e n on scholarship and t he
proposed change would decrease our
chances of winning . b u t after careful consideration,
we have decided t h a t as men
of a social organization, t h e r e is n o correct
choice but to allow any member to take
an active p a r t ."
As long as m e n will t h i n k like this Aub
u r n will grow toward an even greater
university. Perhaps the idea will be
brought u p again in coming y e a r s a n d t h en
t h e S a t u r d a y Hero will not be put aside as
a social outcast.—Castellow.
Eagle Anyway
A columnist for a college daily
was commenting in his writings
on how times have changed and
how years slip up on us. He
quoted an elderly gentleman who
complained of how everything is
S farther than it
•used to be and
: twice as fast.
;"It's twice as
I far to the sta-
"PlCNTCHA S8E TH'SIGN. RJPDlgf*
ROLL CALL
The Feeling Toward The Negro
I tion," he said
I 'and they have
;; added a hill. I've
' given up running
for my train . . .
;it leaves faster
than it used to.
"Seems to me they are making
staircases steeper than they used
to make them in the old days.
And have you noticed the small
print they are using? Newspapers
are getting father away when I
hold them, and I have to squint
to make out the news. No sense
in asking to have them read
aloud. Everyone speaks in such
a low voice that I can hardly
make out what they say.
"The barber doesn't hold a mirror
behind me anymore so that
I can see the back of my head.
The material in my sprits is always
too skimpy around the waist,
and in the seat. And shoe laces
are so short they are all but impossible
to reach.
"Even people are changing.
They are so much. younger than
they used to be when I was their
age. On the other hand, people
my own age are so much older
than I am. I ran into an old
classmate the other night and he
had aged so he didn't recognize
me. I got to thinking about the
poor fellow while I was shaving
this morning. While doing so, I
glanced at my own reflection in
the mirror. Confound it! They
don't even use the same kind of
mirrors anymore!"
Well, I don't know if this applies
to you, but somehow I just
couldn't make this old typewriter
act right. Is is constantly getting
harder to make the letters on the
keyboard correspond with the
actual print. Arid then I was
thinking about how fast this
school year has gone by. It doesn't
seem like eight months ago that
Billy Atkins was kicking that field
I Y JIM KILPATRIC
goal over in Atlanta, and it was
just yesterday wasn't it that Ted
Smits was giving the trophy? Who
could forsee all that has taken
place during this year of 1957-58.
Who would have know about the
AP and UP polls, the ECPD dis-accreditation,
or the NCAA probation?
Who predicted all the
Sputniks, Muttniks, and Vanguards?
It's things like this that
put gray hairs in our heads and
wrinkles in our faces. But it's
those same things that keep us
young, that bring our spirits into
a deeper and more meaningful
reality. Hard work for something
that is loved never made anybody
old.
And who can see into next
year? What lies ahead then? We
have yet to see. But being Auburn
men and women and being
Southerners, we'll lick anything
that threatens us and take our
victory with graciousness.
I'll bet neither the columnist
nor the old man ever thought
they'd bring about such rantiifg
and raving as this. I guess it's
just the dread of finals that did it.
But War Eagle anyway.
Plea For Traffic Co-Operation
How the Southern Negro has
become such a mistreated, poor,
uneducated waif in Northern eyes
is, and probably always will be,
a baffling mystery; for Northerners
have more illusions about the
meaning of segregation than they
r„, ,....;, m do about any
| other trans-Mail
son-Dixion lines
I problem. On the
I other hand, just
| how an integrat-
| ed school ope-
I rates is a blank
on the
When seven thousand automobiles ply
pedestrian-crowded streets on a campus
t h e size of our own, t h e r e s u l t i n g condition
may be described as "dangerous." Add to
t h i s the fact that a large portion of the
drivers are madly racing to beat yellow
light or absently driving through a stop
sign and the resulting description could
be termed "suicidal."
Normally careful driver'ifeiieem to pay
absolutely no attention to ;their speedometers
once t h e y reach t h e campus: some
of t h em even consider it to be a sanctuary.
For these and other reasons The Plainsman
lauds the "crackdown" now being
conducted by the campus police. The demands
of this department for the strict
adherance to traffic regulations is t h e most
constructive step t a k e n towards the problem's
solution t h u s far.
Yet, there is a question as to just how
effective any mandatory attempt at enforcement
can be. With only six officers
and one patrol car they can reasonably
expect to catch a very small percentage
of the total number of violators. These
can be fined and t h e aggravated cases r e f
e r r e d to t h e Disciplinary Committee but
t h e overall situation will be changed only
slightly.
The final answer lies w i t h us, t h e students.
We must be made to realize the
t e r r i b l e responsibility we assume when
driving an automobile. We must be made
to realize t h a t t h e possibility of inflicting
i n j u r y or death on our fellow m a n is far
too great a price to pay for a moment of
thoughtlessness.
Above all, we must be made to realize
t h a t this traffic "crack-down" is only a
plea for our co-operation.—Mcintosh.
lisBeenFun i
d5ui6uWS&uiivwfi^
BOB TARTE
Editor
to foster the Auburn spirit
JERRY GODARD
Business Manager
Tom Baxter—George Wendell
Managing Editors
Doug Mcintosh
News Editor
Marie Peinhardt
Features Editor
Bryant Castellow
Editorial Assistant
Hoyt Sherard
Art Editor
Paul Hemphill
Sports Editor
Dick Roll
Assistant Editor
Sales Agents: Ann Wilbanks, Randy Rickels,
end Isom Ingram.
Plainsman offices are located In Room 31S of the
Auburn Union and in The Lee County Bulletin building
on TW'liehor Avenue. Entered as second class
matter at the post office in Auburn, Alabama. Subscription
rales by mall are $1 for three months and
13 for a full year.
The Plainsman Is the official student newspaper
of the Alabama Polytechnic Institute and is written
end edited by responsible students. Opinions published
herein are not necessarily those of the administration.
Spring publication date is Wednesday and circulation is
8,600.
The Plainsman is represented by the National Ad-
^ertisiner Service
Every year about this t i m e editors struggle
w i t h a farewell editorial, a final word, a
summing up.
Every year muddled thoughts run
through the typewriter and the floor is
covered w i t h t h e crumpled pages of words
t h a t don't quite fit.
I t ' s a hard job—this farewell, but, it
must be done. After all, isn't it impolite to
leave without saying goodby?
Some editors say it w i t h a laugh and a
wave of the hand, and t h e y ' r e on their
way.
Some recount the year with a note of
sadness . . . a longing look at all t h e good
moments and memories.
Some are boastful . . . as t h e y recount
t h e goals t h e y held, the things they pursued,
t h e things t h e y did. A few are apologetic
. . . for the things t h e y wanted to
do—and didn't, or couldn't.
A farewell might include all of these.
But when you say goodby . . . in spite of
a few moments t h a t weren't so good . . .
you say, " I t ' s been fun." Because it has.
And you say t h a n k you.—Tarte.
spot
brain of many
In Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, and
New York as well as the Middle
and Far Western United States,
the Southeastern Negro is looked
upon as a poor unfortunate who
is flogged with a cat-of-nine-tails
in the public square if he
refuses to work for 30c a day
spreading fertilizer by hand at
a plantation owner's request. This
is ridiculous, of course, but many
people who have never been to the
deep South think of this as a common
occurrence.
" The Northern press invariably
plays up unfortunate incidents
. caused by fanatics who represent
only a very small minority of Southerners,
such as the recent trial
of several Birmingham men for
the emasculation of a Negro. And,
because this is the only kind of
publicity ever received in the
North, they think all Southerners
would commit similar atrocities if
they were given the chance.
Another incident that could
have harmed the South, had it
been printed in Northern publications,
was the recent visit of a
candidate for the Alabama State
Legislature from Henry and Houston
counties to a local fraternity
house. This person, (I refuse to
call him a man, much less a
gentleman), appeared one Saturday
night after a party and began
to expound his political ideas
and ambitions to this entire chapter.
The case of beer he conveniently
brought along was his main
drawing card at first, but as he
grew drunker and his statements
grew concurrently bolder, his audience
began to listen to what he
was saying.
"I'm proud to shay that I wash
preshent at the lash nigger lynching
in Henry County," and—
"I'm proud that the NAACP
branded me the mosh dansherous
BY DICK ROLL
white man alive," were some of
his more memorable remarks.
He sat in the same spot all
night long and by 6 a.m. was literally
too drunk to walk. But he
kept on talking. When he finally
gave up the ghost and was carried
back to the hotel, he left behind
him a nauseating and amazing
mark on the minds of many
of his listeners. Amazing because
it was unbelievable that a person
such as he could actually be running
for the Alabama Legislature.
But his racial feeting did not
make him as undesirable as did
his indiscribable appearance and
character. He was a drunkard and
an unclean, uncouth form of a
human being.
Luckily for the State of Alabama,
he lost the political race,
but imagine the gullible Northerners
who would have eaten up
his statements and pointed accusing
fingers at Alabama had Life
Magazine obtained the tape recording
that was taken at that
fraternity house that night and
printed it in their recent article
'about the Alabama gubernatorial
race.
Incidents such as the following
one are rarely mentioned outside
a local Northern area where they
occur while national publicity is
awarded any Southern racial disturbance
6f much less conse- •
quence.
Several years ago In a small
Missouri town, a Negro school
teacher was placed on top of a
wooden school house by a mob
that then proceeded to burn the
place down, Negro and all. The
only reason they had for such
action was a rumor that the
Negro had been calling a local
white woman on the telephone . ..
No court action was ever taken
and the only publicity received
was a small article on an inside
page of the Kansas City Star. This
points out the fact that Northerners
are so busy watching the
South that they don't have any
time to watch themselves.
Southerners and Northerners
jare much alike in their feeling
toward the Negro, but tradition
and publicity have combined to
create a feeling of mutual distrust.
Perhaps the seed of distrust
is the fact that neither side
will admit their feeling is shared
in practically the same degree.
CAST OUT
Parable Of The Initiation
BY
"One, two, three, four; one, two,
three, four," he counted out in a
hollow tone as he paced back
and forth on the bricks of Ross
Square. The clock of Samford
Tcwer pealed out the hour as if
to echo his words. "One, two,
three, four," he subconsciously repeated
as each beat rolled out
across the plains.
"Four o'clock in the early morning.
Why can't I be like the rest
of the people in this world and be
in bed? Why do they make us do
silly things like this just for an
initiation? I've been standing
guard over this durn cotton-picking
muddy fishpond now for foui
hours."
He mocked his plebe trainer as
he repeated his orders of the day,
"To defend the sleeping cadets of
this campus from enemy submarine
attack, laying down my life
if need be."
He threw his wooden rifle toward
a bed of red blossoms. It
clattered against a concrete bench
and bounced into a hedge. With a
sign of relief he stretched his
weary frame out on the ledge of
brick that edged the pool and
stared into the dark sky above.
"The quarter will soon be over,"
he thought. He closed his eyes and
felt the cool breeze and early
morning dew fall on his face.
A thousands thoughts, too insignificant
to enter his' thinking
pattern during the crowded .and
busy days, now seeped into his
weary mind.
"The hustle and bustle of Ross
Square at five after eight each
morning as I hurry to make my
first class . . .
"The crisp snap of the November
breeze as I slowly moved
from the stadium in Atlanta...
"The long night full of blaring
music and coffee and endless paper
punching for the homecoming
float . . .
"The fear that turned to hope
as we trailed Mississippi State in
Birmingham . . .
"The never ending row of
small white No-Doze pills that
kept me going during finals . . .
"The confused fire of emotions
that swept through VniefXa't the
spontaneous pep sxally " following
the announcement of the nation's
number one football team . . ,
"The joy of Christmas with my
family . . .
"The confusion of registration
BRYANT CASTELLOW
"The hearty amusement of The
Moon Is Blue . . .
"The complete relaxation listening
to Joni James breath life into
her songs . . .
"The boredom of afternoon labs
on a warm spring day and the
daydreams that often follow . . .
"The excitement and then the
tragedy of Spring Elections that
made me think how easily it
could have been I . . .
"The many afternoons and evenings
spent in that mood indigo,
enjoying the pleasures of a hi-fi
and a' mind set free from troubles
. . ."
Suddenly the world was real
again. The sky began to lighten
behind Samford and in the morning
mist, the building seemed to
take on a shimmering glow that,
gave it an effect of a supernatural
life.
The neophyte slowly rose to his
feet in a reverent spirit. He now
realized the purpose of the initiation.
For the first time since he
had "been at school he recognized
a feeling of humbleness. He was
happy to realize that he was A
part of. Auburn and even more, to
know now that Auburn had become
a small part of him. -
GUEST COLUMN
The Red Hot Idea Of Names
During a last minute brain- ^designated in such a manner. He,
wracking session to find some- rof course, is exalted over his
DEATH WATCH
A Look At Brussels
On April 17, The Brussels Universal
and International Exposition
was officially opened. The
most popular attractions in the
American Pavilion, according to
our representatives there, are
the voting machines and the fa-sion
shows. It seems that beauty
and honesty are universal ideals.
The Brussels World's Fair will
last for six eventful months. The
cause of science will be furthered.
The cause of art will be furthered.
But the major question
is whether or not the cause will
be furthered. Our relations with
the Russians on the fairground
could well set a perecedent for
our relations with the Russians
around the conference table.
The fair has started off with
much fanfare. Millions of. dollars
and thousands of man-hours
have gone into making it a success.
It is a spectacle created by
man for man. Therein lies the
significance of the Brussels
Fair. It is a work created for the
betterment of man, and not his
destruction. We may well wonder
what a different world this
would be if all the energy expended
for destructive purposes,
were expended for constructive
purposes.
The Brussels Fair is a worthy
effort. Men overcame insurmountable
odds to complete it.
Seven years ago they forged
ahead, starting work on it,
though scoffers said,, It couldnot
be done," while others doubted
there would be a world in
BY PAUL SPAHOS
which to hold a fair in 1958.
We should take heart from the
fact of its creation and realize
that with dedication and perseverance,
we too can overcome the
confused world we have created
for ourselves.
The Brussels Exposition will
make its place in t he history
books. But whether or not its
significance endures will depend
on whether or not the seeds it
has attempted to furrow get any
further than the fairground.
Nothing useless is, or low;
Each thing in its place is
best;
And what seems but idle
show
Strengthens and supports
the rest.
—-Henry Wadswerth Longfellow
Final examinations in all subjects carrying three credit or less,
unless in "Special Schedule" below will be held at the last class meeting
prior to Friday, May 30.
REGULAR SCHEDULE
Friday, May 30
7:00 a.m. Classes—9:00-11:30 a.m.
8:00 a.m. Classes—1:00- 3:30 p.m.
11:00 a.m. Classes—3:30- 6:00 p.m.
Saturday, May 31
9:00 a.m. Classes—9:00-11:30 am.
12:00 noon Classes—1:00- 3:30 p.m.
EH 010, 101, 102, 103, 104—3:30- 6:00 p.m.
Monday, June 2
10:00 a.m. Classes—9:00-11:30 a.m.
2:00 pan. Classes—1:00- 3:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m. Classes—3:30- 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday, June 3
3:00 p.m. Classes—9:00-11:30 a.m.
4:00 p.m. Classes—1:00- 3:30 p.m.
5:00 p.m. Classes—3:30- 6:00 p.m.
SPECIAL SCHEDULE
Tuesday, May 27
6:00 to 8:00 p.m.—AFROTC
Wednesday, May 28
6:00 to 8:00 p.m.—Army ROTC
Thursday, May 29
4:00 to 6:30 p.m.—EC 200
7:00 to 9:30 p.m.—MH 040
Graduating seniors having examinations scheduled for Tuesday,
June 3, will clear these prior to noon Monday, June 2, by
special arrangement with the instructor.
thing to write a few words about,
an article in The Plainsman of
June 2, 1952 crossed my rather
limited field of vision. The article
was an effort to impress upon
the world the need for names for
the women's dormitories.
Now that the project is at last
an accomplished fact, it comes
to mind that perhaps it wasn't
such a red-hot idea after all.
From the viewpoint of a male
student who has just recently
come to this campus, the naming
may easily be accepted as a move
on the behalf of the powers that
be to promote confusion; and it
might be further added that a
masterful job was done in this
respect.
Picture the poor soul who has
just (after many long hours of
diligent effort) finally succeeded
in acquiring a date with one of
the members of the other half,
and has been informed by said
member that she lives in Dorm
I or Dorm VII of some other place
much delayed success, but little
does he know that the place he is
to meet his lady-fair no longer
bears the nomeclature she has
ascribed to it.
After he has frantically questioned
everyone in his acquaintance
trying to discover the relationship
between Dorm VII and
.the discouraging list of names
given so recently to the abodes
of the "fairest" of the Fairest Village,
he finally collapses into a
bundle of frayed nerves and
chewed fingernails. If he is lucky
he may come to an early demise;
if he is even luckier someone
may be able to tell him of the
mysteries of the vanishing numbers.
This may all sound a little bit
on the ridiculous side, and, quite
frankly, that's just how it's supposed
to sound, but it is, nevertheless,
more than just a little
bit confusing to correlate numbers
with names, particularly
when virtually everyone still
BY JACK CRUMPTON
uses the numbers and all the
buildings are labeled only by the
names of women who, beyond
the shadow of a doubt, are not
residents therein.
The secret of success for my
hypothetical (only because he
lacks a name) poor soul would
be for the group of people mentioned
as "everyone" in the preceding
paragraphs to think of
themselves as visitors or residents
of a place with a name and break
down and use that name. Another
little thing that would be of inestimable
value to the little man
would be a very large and picturesque
map of the disputed
area, indicating very clearly locations
in relation to names AND
NUMBERS.
Let no one feel as though I'm
"agin" the new names and the
integrity they impose upon the
lintels of the dormitories. I
whole-heartedly favor that, but
even more favor would be imbued
if some kind person woul<J
create a solution to the confusion
that has resulted.
A COLUMN
On Democracy And Auburn
The thunder and wind of H. L.
Mencken were never q u i te
quelled. For 30 years, and actually
more, the most respected of
American institutions, names,
faces, and idols were scalded by
HLM and his rather omniscient
pen.
While he chewed his cigar,
HLM jeered and punched, and
the men opposite him cursed and
ducked and threatened. But nobody
ever really debunked the
great debunker.
Mencken was fat. He gained
his weight from an over-abundance
of guillible American idealism.
Democracy was his bread.
"Hallucination," he termed it. If
one pumps envy from democracy,
he vowed, it is emptied of its very
life Meed. Democracy is immovably
grounded "upon the inferior
man's hatred of the man who is
having the better time." The single
sound virtue of ttie system,
he noted, was that it is a crime
for any man to hold himself out
as better than other xaen and,
above all, "a most heinous offense
for him to prove it."
The voice of the U. S. legislature
was to him anything but the
voice of the people. "There is, in
fact, no reason for confusing the
people and the legislature: the
two are quite distinct. The legislature
has ceased to be t h e creature
of the people: it is the creature,
in the main, of pressure
groups, and most of them are of
dubious wisdom and even more
dubious honesty i . . The typical
law-maker is 4evoid of princi-
BY CARLISLE TOWERY
pie. If the right pressure were
applied to him he would be.
cheerfully in favor of polygamy,
astrology or cannibalism."
"Adultery," he laughed, i s
merely "the application of democracy
to love."
Had Mencken got fat and fatter
on the meat of American idealism
in our particular time, he could
have finished off API as a sweet
dessert. How easily, we must
know, he would have brightened
the farce of our campus political
system. How delightful he would
have neeled the gild from our
athletics and numbed the Saturday
g l a m o u r . Unfortunately,
HLM would have found no room
here for one of his favorite past-times—
scoffing at scholars. *
3 — THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, May 21,1958
BEARDS AND MORE BEARDS will be seen at the Wood-chopper's
Ball Friday where these and other lumberjacks vie for the
grand prize of a Remington-Rand electric razor. It goes to the
man sporting the largest set of whiskers.
Shoes Preferred, Not Required At
Woodchoppers Annual Bearded Ball
iV
Bearded men and fair-skinned
ladies will convene at the VFW
Club in Opelika this Friday night
for the annual Woodchopjoer's
Ball. Rules for the ball are:
1. Shoes preferred; not required.
2. Bring your own battleaxe.
3. No fighting allowed in the
middle of the dance floor.
4. Gentlemen dance with only
one lady at a time.
5. Beards are to be admired and
not yanked.
6. Chop axes, crosscut saws,
peavies, canthooks, files, wedges
and mauls are considered weapons
and must be checked at the
door.
A grand prize of a Remington-
Rand electric razor will be
awarded to the man with the
most outstanding beard. The
dance will get underway at 8
p. m. and will last until midnight.
Music will be provided by
the "Southerners." Tickets, priced
at $1.25, are available from
the Forestry Department on Ag
Hill. Dress for the occasion will
be woodchopper's formal (blue-jeans
and calico). The dance will
be open to the public.
•I
'Incite Into Opera'
To Be Presented
By Opera Workshop
The Auburn Opera Workshop
will present an "Incite into Opera"
on Monday, May 26th at
8:15 p. m. in the Music Hall. The
presentation will consist of a concert
and comment featuring excerpts
from and comments on
three grand operas.
The first excerpt will be from
"The Abduction From the Seraglio,"
by Mozart. Following the
excerpt, Mr. John Tamblyn of
the Music Department will comment
on the opera.
The second selection will consist
of excerpts from "Cavalleria"
and "Rusticana," by Mascagni
followed by comments by Mr.
Don Murray, also of the Music
Department.
Dr. David Malone of the English
Department will then present
comments and a comparison
on Goethe's Faust-the play, and
Gounod's "Faust"—the opera—
after which arias and excerpts
from the opera "Faust" will be
heard.
Everyone is cordially invited
to attend the "Incite into Opera."
There will be no charge for the
performance.
• •• v.')r""*yr.'"y.'>*•«••»•t.'i—• I.'».T"•m.f-.-r •••• • —•"• w»-.,—w..~--.w ^ • - ^ , » n w f . — - w - , . — . w _ . „ . * , . -
President Draughon To Present
Awards To ROTC Students
Army, Air Force and Navy ROTC units will observe
President's Day tomorrow, honoring President Draughon
with a review on the drill field at 1 p. m. President Draughon
will present awards to selected ROTC cadets prior to the review.
Cadets and the awards to be given are:
MARTHA O'DAY YOUNG was chosen by men of Magnolia Dormitories
last week to be their sweetheart for the coming year, succeeding
Ann Ford to the title of Miss Magnolia Dormitories. Martha
is a freshman in psychology and a native of Opp. She was chosen
by popular vote of the more than 1,000 residents of Magnolia Dormitories
last Thursday. During the same election, Gerald Stroud,
a junior in industrial management,
was selected as the new
president of the dormitories.
Ivy League
i s it ever Ivy! Why, Coke is the most
correct beverage you can possibly
order on campus. Just look around you.
What are the college social leaders
going for? Q»ca-Cola! So take a leaf
out of their Ivy League book and do the
same! Enjoy the good taste of Coke!
Drink
CcW(Mi
SIGN OF GOOD TASTE
Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company bjf
OPELIKA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
^Co1e»" b a registered trade-mark. © 1954, THE COCA-COLA COMMNT
ARMY
Richard L. Hazelwood, Daughters
of Founders and Patriots of
America Medal; James B. Askew,
Association of the United State
Army ROTC Medal; Thomas R.
Baxter (senior), Maurice F. Wil-helm,
Jr., (junior), John D.
Holt, (sophomore) and Royal E.
Colson (freshman), Superior Cadet
Ribbon; John D. Holt, Mobile
District Shoulder Cord;
James S. White,- Armed Forces
Communication A s s o c i a t i on
Medal; James S. White (senior),
John A.-Holman (junior), James
H. Hurst (sophomore) and Lynn
F. Robertson (freshman), Alabama
Military District Distinguished
Cadet Award; and Joe
B. Broadwater, Third Army Certificate
of Meritorious Leadership.
AIR FORCE
Allen M. Easterling (senior),
Troy G. Dobbins and John W.
Blum (junior), Charles W. Ash-more
(sophomore) and Joel C.
Boeder Wins 1st Place
In SCRA Arts Exhibit
First place in the Religious
Arts Exhibit sponsored by SCRA
went to John Baeder for his
painting, "Spiritual." According
to the judges, his entry expressed
"affective representation of old
sympathy and maturity in its
testament symbols and showed
treatment of color, subject, and
pattern.
Second place went to Federico
Aldarondo, third to Marline
Hunt, and honorable mentions to
J. R. Farill, Charles Irwin, Ama-sa
G. Smith.
Hosea (freshman), Highest Scholastic
Standing in Air Scjence,
Winer Quarter 1958; Allen M.
Easterling, Chicago Tribune Gold
Medal Award; Ronald A. Mitchell,
Air Force Association Award;
George V. Egge, Jr., Chicago
Tribune Silver Medal Award; and
Samuel E. Armistead, Tommy Wj
Kalkenberry, Wayne A. Lightsey,'
Theron J. May and Larry R. Mc-'
Lennan, Secretary of the Air,
Force ROTC Rifle Match Medal
NAVY
John P. Brandell and Joseph'
H. Whitesell, United States Naval
Institute Award; Jerry S. Pierce;
Marine. Corps Association Award;
James R. Clinton, Armed Forces
Communication and Electronics
Award; T. Kenneth Mattingly, II,
NROTC Certificate of Merit for
Platoon Drill;
John -E. C r o f t on, Convair
NROTC Award; Nath C. Dough-tie,
First Place Pistol Award;
John E. Crofton, First Place Rifle
Award; and Thomas H. Oswald,
Hunter Brown Memorial Award.
Distinguished guests will be
Mayor and Mrs. M. N. Brown,
Enterprise, Alabama. Mayor
Brown, who is president of the
Southeast Alabama Chapter of the
Association of the United States
Army, will present the Association
of the United States Army ROTC
Medal to Cadet Askew.
AH military and civilian personnel
are invited to attend the
review tomorrow.
Inscho, Rasco Get
Top Architecture
Department Awards
. Ralph "Wally" Inscho and Ber-tis
Rasco received the top awards
at the Department of Architecture's
First Annual Honors Banquet
last night at Holiday Inn.
Inscho was given the American
Institute of Architect's Medal and
a copy of the renown "Mont St.
Michel and Chartres" for his performance
in scholarship over, the
course of the five-year curriculum.
Rasco was recognized for
outstanding leadership and service
with the Alpha Rho Chi
Medal.
The A.I.A. Second Award, another
copy of the book, "Mont St.
Michel and Chartres," went to
Kenneth R. Montgomery for his
scholastic record. T. A.I.A. Scholarship
Competition winner John
B. McDonald, was recognizer1
along with the 1st, 2nd, and honorable
mention awards. McDonald
received a one-year tuition
scholarship for his design of a
veterinary school for Auburn.
- Scarab, national architectural
fraternity, gave its Scarab Bronze
Medal for Excellence in Design
to William O. Moorefield. Decor,
interior design club, announced
Bob Gray, Alice Aitken, and
Sharon Murphy, as the outstanding
interior design students in
the senior, junior, and sophomore
classes.
1000
Sport Shirts
Displayed in our window. Take your pick
$2.98
HARWELL'S MEN SHOP
'Down the Hill from High Prices'
Nicely Furnished Rooms for Rent
Summer Quarter
All The Comforts of Home ,
• Living Room
• Refrigerator
• Washing Machine
• Maid Service
• Attic Fan
Two students per room
Contact:
H. C. GOOLSBY
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let me tell you about State Farm's budget-planned
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G. J. 'Joe' Ward
Across from the Post Office
Phone 257
"Jockey brand underwear
helped me get elected!"
" 'Me run for class president?' I said with mockery in my voice,
'why I can't even run for a bus!' That's how uncomfortable
my underwear was in those days. But my roommate solved
everything. He got me to try tailored-to-fit Jockey brand briefs.
What a difference!
"I felt so comfortable—so poised—and I acquired a trim,
athletic look that I knew would impress the masses. Running
for office was easy now, so I ran and won. And I owe it all to
Jockey brand briefs, the only underwear that's tailored from
13 separate pieces to provide a perfectly smooth fit."
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world. Be sure you get
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regular or new mentholated
Take your choice of new, cool mentholated or regular
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I
WWITH THE HELP OF THIS TINY, SPARKLING FILTER
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/A/ AN BLECrROMCS CLASS
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RADIO SIGNALS-THIS NEW <S
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YES, TODAY'S FILTER SCIENCE
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TAKE THE MARVELOUS FILTER
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...IT CHANGED AM ERICA'S
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¥'
(THAT'S WHY I SMOKE VICEROYS
> VICEROY GIVES YOU THE
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u \OW FAMOUS FAMILIAR PACIC,
w
Two Coeds Receive Danford Awards
Two home economics students
i have received Danforth awards
which are annually presented to
the outstanding freshman and
the outstanding junior in home
economics. The two selected by a
home economics faculty committee
were Margaret Sears, Mobile,
freshman, and Marie Peinhardt,
Cullman, junior.
The freshman award is a trip to
the American Youth Foundation
Camp on Lake Michigan. The
junior awards consists of the
Today & Thursday
M-G-M
presents
AN
EXPERIENCE
IN
SUSPENSE!
CRY TERROR!
*•*, JAMES MASON
ROD STEIGER
INGER STEVENS
Friday - Saturday
camp trip plus two weeks training
and study in St. Louis.
Located on the shores of Lake
Michigan, the camp is a leadership
training camp. and includes
both class work and recreation.
Much emphasis is placed on personal
evaluation and development.
The two weeks residence in St.
Louis will include visiting research
laboratories and experimental
stations, a study of manufacturing
and distribution and
an introduction to business personnel
problems. One girl from
each of the forty eight states as
well as a representative from a
Canadian, Alaskan, Hawaiian, and
Puerto Rican University w i ll
study and tour St. Louis together.
Margaret is a clothing textiles
major who was active at Murphy
High School in such organizations
as Quill and Scroll and
National Honor Society. She is
a member of Auburn's Freshman
Advisory Council. A home dem
onstration major, Marie is Features
Editor of API's No. 1 Publication,
vice-president of Delta
Delta Delta and president of
Omicron Nu, senior home economics
honorary.
WAR EAGLE
THEATRE
Mag Hall Division 'W
Picks New Sweetheart
Division "W" of Magnolia Dormitories
has elected Carolyn
Dorough, a Dorm IV resident, for
their sweetheart. Carolyn, a
freshman from Notasulga, is majoring
in Art. Her hobbies and
interests are painting, swimming,
and dancing. She plans to pursue
a career in fashion illustration after
her graduation.
&'***GEORGE
STEVENS'
*•" -v MKXXKTKm -
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CtrtAben? ROCK JUMES
TAYLOR-HUDSON-DEAN
OU.Ml«IKaCtPBl
Late Show Sat. l i p .
Sun. - Mon. - Tues.
Shirley
B O O T H
Anthony
Q U I N N
in
" H O T
S P EL L
m.
Thurs. Thru Saturday
BRIGETTE
BARDOT
'AND GOD
CREATED
WOMAN'
CinemaScope and
Color
Sunday - Monday
Late Show Saturday
# ' • • : :
# #
^Tte SHAPE of
tihings to come...
George
GfciBEL
Diana
DORS
JUNE GRADUATES
Graduation instructions have
been mailed to all candidates
for a degree in June. If you are
planning to graduate this quarter
and have not received the
letter of instructions, you should
check with the Registrar's Office
immediately.
FRANCES ANN BISHOP was presented as
the 1958 Sweetheart of Delta Tau Delta at the
fraternity's annual Purple Iris Ball this
month. She is a sophomore from Montgomery.
ALICE PRATHER was recently named
Sweetheart of Tau Kappa Epsilon at the annual
Red Carnation Formal. Alice is a sophomore
in education from Auburn.
Gates Open at 6:30
First Show at 7:00
Thursday & Friday
MAY 22, 23 8iIS _ - ••i-Tcnrni IRIS I
KELLY-MR
Ml TAIN*
KENDALL-ELG
Saturday, May 24
i
API Chosen With 14 Other Schools
To Initiate Navy Education Program
William Holdin-Glinn ford +d
thin Trtvor-Ctofgt Bnmroft J
*
«
»
I
married
aTV&man
m (ahd t W r e tlie test klndl) £
«N RKO RADIO PICTURE • * UNfVHBALlKTISJMHONAL ROKSC
««J» I
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I
1
I
M
Coming Very Soon
THE YOUNG
LIONS'
Starring
Marlon Brando
Montgomery Clift
Diana Varsi
Sunday - Monday
MAY 25-26
JERRY LEWIS flgs
THESAP SACK
Tuesday, May 27
JOSEPH COTTEff. EVA BARTOK
API has been selected by the
Navy to help initiate its new
Scientific Education program for
enlisted men this fall. Auburn is
one of 15 institutions of the 52
in the nation having Naval ROTC
to be selected for the program.
Capt. W. C. Jonson, Jr., professor
of Naval Science, believes
Auburn will get 10 to 20 Navy
enlisted men to open the program.
Under the plan, the men
will study for bachelor of science
or bachelor of engineering degrees
in aeronautical, chemical,
civil, electrical and mechanical
engineering. They may study also
for the bachelor of science or
bachelor of arts degree in physics,
chemistry, psychology and
mathematics.
The Navy has received 6,100
applications from throughout the
fleet. From this entire group 180
men will be selected. An additional
20 will come from the
Marines.
While in school, the enlisted
men will be on active duty and
will be eligible for advancement
in rate. When the degree is granted,
the graduate may apply for
a Naval commission. Four additional
years service will be required
of men taking opportunity
of the program.
Although the students will not
be a part of the Naval ROTC
program, they will be under the
command of Capt. Jonson. They
will be subject to the regular social
and academic controls of the
institution. Permitted to wear civilian
dress, they will have no
regular Naval responsibilities
other than such personnel inspections
required by the commanding
officer, NROTC.
Home Ec Honorary
Selects Officers
Omicron Nu senior home economics
honorary, recently elected
the following officers: president,
Marie Peinhardt; vice president,
Fran Williams; secretary, Greta
Weeks; treasurer, Inez Donovan.
Omicron Nu furthers scholarship,
leadership, and research in
home economics and has this year
sponsored a research program
featuring outstanding speakers in
physics, physiology, animal husbandry,
and home economics.
THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, May 21, 1958
Wednesday, May 28
FOOTSTEPS IN
Thursday - Friday
MAY 29-30
JEANNE EAGELS
API Instructors Stage
Contemporary Art Show
Works of four contemporary
artists, all new instructors at
API will be on exhibit now
through May 24 at the Biggin
Hall Art Gallery. Title of the
show is "New Faculty."
The four artists are Earl Drais
Layman, associate professor of
architecture; Louis T. Cheny, instructor
of Art; Hugh O. Williams,
assistant professor of art;
and Paul Reeves, instructor of
art.
Get Set To 'Shine' On Your Vacation
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CURRY'S CLEANERS
244 W. Glenn Ave.—Phone 573
Substation at 400 S. Gay Street
1
Sport Shirts
Displayed in our window. Take your pick
$2.93
HARWELL'S MEN SHOP
'Down the Hill from High Prices'
To All Students
Congratulations On Graduation
A wonderful summer vacation and a
happy return for the fall session.
Quality Laundry & Dry Cleaners, Inc.
Phone 740 Opelika Hwy
ASHAMED OF YOUR LODGING?
If so, try the best in Auburn
C & C Dorm
Genalda Hall
Cherokee Hall
• Air Conditioned
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• Full Time Janitor Service
• Individual Beds—No Double Deckers
• Quiet Hours Strictly Enforced
Contact:
C & C Dorm—Jim Vaughn—2285
Genalda Hall—Bob Foster—2031
Cherokee Hall—Ray Wiseman—1588
Smedley
f ARE YOU SURE \
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prevent odor, working to check perspiration.
For this non-stop protection, get Mennen!
60c and *1.00
W I N $ 2 5 ! For each college cartoon situation
submitted and used! Show how Smedley gels the brushoffl
Send sketch or description and name, address and college to
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CASH FOR YOUR BOOKS SELL YOUR BOOKS TO
tyo&a&fott & yttatotte Soo& Stone
We can buy all textbooks of value even though no longer used at Auburn. Remember, books
are changed and revised often. If you intend to sell your books, they should be sold as soon
as you are finished with them.
i
For Your Best Deal . . . Sell Your Books to . . . Johnston & Malone
CASH FOR ALL TEXTBOOKS OF VALUE
1
I
5
•!
H^rara^mn»^mHaHmnssrass
PLAYERS PICK DUKE AS MOST VALUABLE
1
Detroit's major league Tigers
told the world what they
thought of him when they
shelled out $15,000 Saturday
to get his name on a contract.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
showed its respect
last week, too, when it named
him the top catcher in the
Southeastern Conference.
But scrappy Auburn catcher
Pat Duke got probably the
finest tribute of all yesterday
when his teammates — the
ones who should know—almost
unanimously picked him
as the most valuable player
on the SEC's best baseball
team, year of 1958.
Duke, leading Tiger hitter
at .349, pulled down 11 of a
possible 19 first place votes
to win, hands down, the first
annual PLAINSMAN "Most
Valuable Player" poll.
Rudolph native Duke's
nearest . competitor for the
honor was sophomore pitcher
Quineth "Red" Roberts,
who gathered four first place
nominations.
For Duke, due to report to
Detroit's Class AA Birmingham
farm when school lets
out in June, the honor was
well deserved. In addition to
being the top Tiger at the
plate, the 5-11, 180-pounder
was also given much of. the
'credit for sensational performances
hung up by soph
hurlers Roberts and Alan
Koch.
With Tigers voting on first,
second and third choices,
Duke polled 44 of a possible
114 points. Three points were
given first place votes, two
for second and one for third.
Total points received with
first place votes in parentheses
follow: Duke, 44 (11);
Lanier, 24 (3); Roberts, 22
(4); Koch, 9; Jack Crouch, 8;
Laster, 6 (1) and Gerald
George, 1.—PAUL HEMPHILL
Bama Victories Give Tigers Second SEC Crown
Can A Tiger Fan Ask For More?
Plainsmen Cop Conference Crown
By Stopping Bama Two Straight
Dominates SEC
Javelin
LSU
Wall Wins
Track Meet;
For Plainsmen
of the hard-hitting Koch, Tide
mentor Tilden "Happy" Campbell
relieved Reeves -with Clyde
Eurick. Following a single by
Koch, Eurich lost the strike
zone. Two wild pitches tallied
Nix and advanced Koch into
scoring position. Third baseman
Jimmy Laster sent Eurick
to the showers by driving a long
double into center, scoring Koch.
The inning's third pitcher,
southpaw Bill Causer, wild-pitched
Laster to third, then
saw his team lose when Laster
legged it home with the fifth
Tiger run on Shot Johnston's
bouncer to shortstop Kubisyn.
BY GEORGE BRUNER
Assistant Sports Editor
As expected, t h e Bengal
Tigers of L S U r a n off w i th
t h e conference track meet
i n Birmingham last weekend.
T h e Bengals compiled a
t o t a l of 53 5/6 points as compared
to t h e i r nearest competitor,
Florida, who could
only gather 24% points.
Georgia and Kentucky tied
for third with 24 points each
and Vanderbilt amassed its
highest number of points in the
history of t he school, 23%.
Auburn came in sixth with
22 Vz points and behind the Tigers
were Alabama, 21%; Tennessee,
18 5/6; Mississippi State
14; Georgia Tech, 3%; Tulane,
2y3; and Mississippi, 1.
Surprises were numerous in
the meet, the biggest being
Auburn's Hindman Wall win
in the javelin. The big boy from
Birmingham won with a fling
of 210-6. His best previous
throw had been 184-1 which he
did in the Friday preliminaries.
Other Auburnites besides Wall
whp placed in the meet were:
Tommy Waldrip, third in t he
440; Nolan Sharp, third in the
discus; Pete Calhoun, third in
the high hurdles; Paul Krebs,
fourth in the 880; and Bobby
Jones,' tied for third in the
high jump. The Tiger mile r e lay
team was barely edged by
LSU, last year's winner.
Auburn freshmen set new
records in both relays as the
440 relay team of Kip Heim-endinger,
Bobby Webb, Benny
Overstreet, and Jimmy Morrow
cut .7 seconds off the old record
with a time of :42.7.
— THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, May 21,19581
I w * *
Sftonte
H "Largest sports coverage by a college weekly in the South"
The mile relay team of Bart
Manous, Richard Acker, Webb,
and Overstreet knocked 10%
seconds off t he old record of
3:35.6 which the Tigers themselves
set in 1956. Overstreet
was the only other Auburn
winner, turning in a :50.3 time
in the 440.
Fleet Auburn gridder Jimmy
Morrow was edged by Vandy's
Guy Tollent, although the time
of : 10.0 was off the :09.8 which
both boys had turned in during
the regular season. Morrow also
placed third in the low hurdles.
Lamar Echols got off a fling
of 175-9% which was good
enough for a second in t he
fP8Shmm-f£velin event. '
Richa*d-* 'Crane heaved the
shot 47-10% and placed third
' in the event which was won
by Georgia Tech's Ed Nutting
on a record-breaking 51-3.
The only other Auburn freshman
to place was Joe Leicht-man,
who tied for third in the
high jump.
Unofficial team scores found
Alabama's yearlings on top
with a total of 20 5/6 points.
Following the Tide was Auburn
with 15%; Florida 15 and
Georgia Tech 13.
Burton's Book Store
pays
good hard cash
for
your used books.
SELL EM NOW!
Stock up on your T-Shirts and Sweat Shirts
before you leave.
'Something New Every Day'
WALDRIP
BY JIM PHILLIPS
Behind the great pitching of Quineth Roberts and Alan Koch,
Auburn's diamond aggregation came from behind in both games
with Alabama last week to seal and deliver the year's second conference
championship to the Plains.
The SEC won't be represented
in the NCAA championship
tourney in Charlotte, N. C, this
June. The Tigers probationary
status limits their entrance,
while runnerup Alabama and
second place finisher in the
Eastern Division, Florida, have
both declined the invitation.
In the Wednesday opener at
Birmingham's Rickwood Park,
Roberts won his seventh of
eight decisions in his initial
season of varsity baseball.
The game appeared as though
it would end in regulation time
with Auburn emerging victorious,
until the head of the Alabama
batting order revised the
situation in the ninth. With the
Plainsmen ahead,2-0, versatile
Jack Kubiszyn singled. Sophomore
LeGrant Scott promptly
followed with a two run blast
into the left field seats, knotting
the count at two-all.
Dissatisfied with only a ninth
inning tie, Bobby Ledford sing--.
led, Bill Walker was hit by
Roberts, and Norman Koury
singled Ledford across with the
go-ahead marker.
But this day the Tigers refused
to be denied. After Kubiszyn
booted Shot Johnston's grounder
and the Auburn outfielder had
reached second on a sacrifice,
two were out and tension on
both sides was mounting. Coach
Joe Connally then chose to
pinch hit Gerald George for
shortstop Charlie Carlan. George
drove a '. single to left scoring
Johnston with the tying
counter.
Not to be easily subdued, the
Tide pressed the issue for 14
long innings of exertion beneath
a penetrating sun. Finally
in the- Auburn 14th,
clutch man Lloyd Nix drove a
Walter Massey pitch far into
rightcenter to score Gerald
•George from first with the winner.-
•
On Thursday it was again t*. e
lanky Koch who succeeded in
firing his team to a championship.
Alabama led all the way in
this one. The Tigers got single
tallies in the fourth and eighth
innings, but when the end near-ed,
they faced a 4-2 deficit.
After hurler Pete Reeves
walked Nix, putting the tying
run at the plate in the person
. . . AND THESE ARE THE GUYS THAT DID IT
These are Auburn Tigers who grabbed two straight from Alabama to win the SEC championship. Top
row 1 to r: Coach Joe Connally, Duke, Savage, Johnston, Crouch, Frederick, Shirley, Koch, Lorino,
Martin, Second: Carlan, Williams, Nix, McDuffie, Dumas. Bottom: Roberts, Lanier, Laster, Vaughan.
Duke, Koch, Lanier, Roberts Merit All-SEC Berths
BY RONNIE McCULLARS
Southeastern C o n f e r e n ce
Baseball Champion Auburn
placed four players on the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution All-
SEC team to tie with Mississippi
State as the team placing the
most players on the 16 man
squad.
Alabama had three, Florida
two, and LSU, Kentucky and
Georgia placed one each on the
team.
Auburn's terrific sophomore
mound stars, Quineth Roberts
and Alan Koch, were on the
four-man pitching staff while
L. F. Lanier and Pat Duke gained
outfield and catching positions
respectively.
Roberts, with a 7-1 record,
and Koch, 7-2, fired the Tigers
by Forida for the Eastern Divi-tions,
respectively.
Duke, senior catcher f o r
Coach Joe Connally's champs,
hit a very respectable .349 and-has
been tabbed by pro scouts
Wm
KOCH
as the best catching prospect
to come out of the SEC in many
years. Duke will be banging
away for another bunch of hard
working Tigers come next
spring. He signed with Detroit's
Tigers last week.
L. J*. Lanier, senior outfielder
and a repeater from last sea-
-^json's- All-Stars, a .330 batting
average and is rated one of the
ROBERTS
best defensive men in the conference.
Florida's Bernie' Parrish —
the guy who cleaned Cincin-natti's
pocket book,
000 bonus—was a s t |
Bama's LeGranf Sjjot|
Al White for' the se
position. . •
In-ithe battle ior*I
vision spots Auburn.
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low-coot wagQ
to beat the
high cost of driving • •.
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I'S KIND OF
GET
THE
-SIZED
SHAVER.
LANIER
and Florida placed four on that
All-Star team.
Other than Koch, Roberts, Lanier
and Duke, Tiger first baseman
Lloyd Nix was named to
the Division squad.
Florida got the other two
pitching positions on this team
with sophomores Ray Ostricher
and Don-McCreary taking the
honors.
• ; :
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WRA Gives Awards;
Names Officers
Five intramural awards were
presented by WRA Thursday
night, May 8th, at the annual
supper which was held this
year at the Chicken House,
Opelika. The Kappa Alpha
Thctas got their share of trophies
as they walked off with
the Volleyball and Co-Rcc
Volleyball awards.
Cynthia Finley received the
Basketball Trophy for Phi Mu's
and Toby Boyd, Swimming
Chairman, presented Chi Omegas
with the Swimming Award.
The Participation Award went
to the Kappa Deltas who have
had entries in all intramural
events and the greatest number
of participants during the year.
The new officers for the coming
year 1958-59 were introduced
by Eleanor Chenault.
These are: Mary- Jane Smilie,
president; Noel Egge, vice-president;
Toby Boyd, secretary;
Gail Jones, treasurer; Kathryn
Upshaw, publicity chairman.
Paul Hemphill"
Memories?...I'll take
a million when I leave
r ; y : ' * ' * ' ' " ? ? ' - ::'•:•." Mag Hall Tracksters Run Today;
All-Sports Trophy Race Gets Hotter
•s».
m
Personally, between you and me . . .
You sit down in front of that typewriter, sometimes, and try
to think of something different to say . . . something that maybe a
few folks haven't heard about.
It's hard, always.
But when you know it's your last column to write from a
place like Auburn, Ala., it's even harder.
Emotions get in the way this time. And that, you may have
heard, belongs elsewhere in a newspaper . . . not on the sports page.
But if having memories and thinking about them comes under
the heading of "emotions," then I'm guilty as charged.
I'm gonna have a million of 'em with me when I leave this
place.
I'll remember the cold rain beating down on an uncovered
head as debuting quarterback Lloyd Nix and the team he led
whipped a Tennessee team much, much worse than 7-0 in the mud
at hilly Knoxville. At the time, that seemed like the greatest victory
any Auburn team had ever seen . . .
The inspiring comeback by basketball seniors Bill McGriff,
Bobby Tuckey and Terry Chandler will always remain, to me . . .
You're aware of all those, I'm sure, if it's the sports page you
read. Everybody knows about the ballplayers, and the games they
won.
But that's where I'll have you beat, right along there. I was
lucky. My job (they really call it a "job") took me a little farther
than that.
I got to know Joel Eaves, basketball coach; and Jeff Beard,
the athletic director; and Ralph Jordan, the football man. I got to
6 — T H E PLAINSMAN Wednesday, May 21, 1958
Your ft'eket it
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Casual Wedges
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North College Phone 47
JORDAN LORENDO BECKWITH BEARD
know all the people down there among the pines on Thach Ave.
at the place they call the Field House.
That's why it's going to be so hard to go out into the sports-writing
world that demands impartiality. How can they ask a man
to be impartial when he's known folks like that?
If it weren't for earning the daily bread, it would be impossible.
They'll ask me—tell me, pleaso^to forget-I'm an Auburn man
while I'm working. I like ,]$> cat regularly . . . I'll forget I'm an
Auburn man. Hp
But I'll remember . '. . '
I'll think of public relations man Bill Beckwith, asking me to
sit down and talk things over, trying with everything he's got to
help a rookie who wants to learn something about the business.
Likewise, I'll recall Eaves—fatherly, just home-folks—thanking
me for something nice said about him or his team. It would have
been lying to have said anything else about one of the finest gentlemen
you could ever know.
I'll remember, and wish I could sense again, the slight chill
that went down my back wheii I heard Jordan say a few words
at one of those pep rallies. I've thought to myself, "If I had a football-
minded son, I'd want this man to teach him."
And most of all—however tijite it may seem—I'll remember how
I felt when Gene Lorendo or Shot Senn or anybody down there
called me .by my first name. :, ., •
I was lucky I wish you could have been, too.
. ' u 1000
Sport Shirts
Displayed in our window. Take your pick
$2.98
HARWELL'S MEN SHOP
'Down the Hill from High Prices'
BY PAT GENTRY
Intramural Sports Editor
Magnolia Hall track a nd
field meet will take place
this afternoon in Cliff Hare
Stadium. The T u g ' o f War,
Centipede Race and hand
w r e s t l i n g will be featured
events. The scheduled contests
begin at 4 o'clock with
t h e 100-yard dash t r i a l s and
high jump. Other events
a r e t h e 220-yard dash, shot
put, broad jump and 440-
y a r d relay.
The first place winner in
each contest will be awarded 8
points; second place, 5; third
place 3; fourth place, 2; and
fifth place 1. The scores will
be totaled at the conclusion of
the meet and the division with
the highest • number of points
will be declared the winner.
Fraternity softball playoffs
began yesterday afternoon. The
four league winners are KA,
SAE, SPE and LCA. A playoff
game took place last Friday to
decide the league 4 winner. The
Lambda Chis beat Alpha Psi,
6-3.
In badminton four teams
were unbeaten. Each of the
teams was a league winner.
Playoffs between the winners
-KA, PKA, PDT and SAE—
were held last night.
Fighting for first place in
tennis are SAE, KS, PKA and
FOR RENT
Available now, one-bedroom
furnished apartment on Ann
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ATO. Playoffs in this division
began Monday. The four league
winners in the golf playoffs are
PDT, PKA, SAE, and KS.
These playoffs begin Monday.
Heading the list in the race
for the intramural all-sports
trophy are KA, PKA and SAE.
PKA has won the trophy the
last two years. At the time of
this writing the Pikes were
in four of the five playoffs.
Softball is the only sport in
which they failed to qualify.
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WAR EAGLE
CAFETERIA
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WELCOME
STUDENTS
FACULTY
FRIENDS
VISITORS
CAFETERIA HOURS
Breakfast Daily .2^1
Lunch Daily
-6:35 to 8:00
1130 to 1:00
Dinner D a i l y _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 5:30 to 6:45
Breakfast Sunday __v_ 8:00 to 11:00
Dinner Sunday 11:30 to 1:00
Supper Sunday 5:30 to 6:45
SNACK BAR OPEN DAILY FROM 8:00 a.m.
to 10:30 p.m. Sunday from 1 P*m. to 10:30 p.m.
WAR EAGLE CAFETERIA
in the Auburn. Union Building
CHIEF'S Does It Again!
In answer to the requests of many of our customers,
Chiefs has just obtained hundreds of
pairs of
Cool Summer Slacks
in a special shipment of Grade A seconds from the Higgins Slack
Co. These slacks were individually hand-picked from their huge
stock and every pair is wash and wear. Choose from a full selection
of colors, sizes, and styles in wonderful, long wearing,
neat looking dacron-cotton and dacron-rayon blends. This week
only, these slacks are all on sale for only.
For the hot Summer months ahead Chief's has
on sale hundreds of
Cool Summer Shirts
Included in this sale are dress shirts in both long and short sleeves,
both white and colored in a wide range of collar styles and colors.
Also included are sport shirts in a variety of styles, colors, and
fabrics including a limited number of wash and wear sport shirts.
Our entire stock of sport shirts, colored dress shirts, and most of
our white dress shirts, with values ranging from $4.00-5.00-5.95,
are now only
$5.49 *2.
Every Item In The Store Reduced!
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