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the A\ ubum To Foster The Auburn Spirit VOLUME 87 AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1960 NUMBER. 36 607 receive degrees- Commencement set for August 26 Loveliest of the Plains THE BEST WAY to get that good grade is bribery, but if money won't do it then violence will. Loveliest Katherine Harrison, who during other quarters employs this method at the University of Alabama, is sure that it will help her in Business Education. The pretty Opelika Miss says she "thinks she is a junior." Draughon announces Karl Brenkert to be assistant Dean of Engineering New assistant dean of the School of Engineering at Auburn University will be Dr. Karl Brenkert Jr. In announcing the appointment, President Ralph B. Draughon said Dr. Brenkert will succeed Dr. Earl I. Brown II, who is joining the Duke University faculty. In addition to his duties as assistant dean, Brenkert will serve as head of the engineering physics department and as assistant director of the Engineering Experiment Station. The appointment is effective Sept. 1. The 39-year-old Brenkert is from Detroit. He received his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at Stanford University in engineering mechanics. He comes to Auburn from Michigan State University, where he has served for the past four years. Prior to that term, he was a member of the University of Alabama faculty in 1954-56. Also, he served at Stanford and the University of Utah. During his summers, he has been an engineering consultant with General Motors and with Convair. Engineering Dean Fred H. Pumphrey said of the appointment, "With Dr. Brenkert's exceptional technical background, he fills in a need of graduate instruction capabilities in the area of theoretical fluid mechanics. With his personality and interest in administration we anticipate he will make a major contribution to the program of the School of, Engineering." John Wiley and Sons will publish Brenkert's new book, "Elementary Theoretical Fluid Mechanics," this month. DR. KARL BRENKERT New Assistant Dean ATTENTION VETERANS All veterans attending school under Public Law 550 and 634, please come by the Veterans Affairs Office the last day of your finals and sign the pay-roll before going home. NOTICE The Physical and Health Education for the Elementary Teacher display will be held all day Thursday and Friday in Thach, second floor. Visual displays of the work done this quarter will be shown. Council of Deans approve 1960-'61 residence revisions On June 29, 1960, the Council of Deans approved a policy containing a revision of the requirements for Continuation in Residence. As Stated in the 1959-60 Tiger Cub, the present minimum requirements for a student's continuation in residence d u r i n g his first thorough fourth quarters is: "Pass a minimum of 50 per cent of the total number of credit hours attempted through the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th quarters in residence, and also accumulate not less than an equal number of honor points." The revised regulation not only changes this requirement, but clarifies it somewhat: "At the end of the Spring Quarter, a student must have earned credit hours and grade points equal to 60 per cent of all work attempted at Auburn during his first through fourth quarters of college residence at Auburn and elsewhere." The obvious change is "that the requirement for the first four (Continued on page 6) Graduates to hear Dr. John H. Buchanan The summer quarter graduation list of Auburn University lists 607 candidates for degrees at 5:30 p.m., Aug. 26 in Cliff Hare Stadium. Of the total, nine are doctoral candidates, 164 are candidates for the master's degree while 434 are seeking bachelor's degrees. . - >. . The summer commencement speaker will be Dr. John Hall Buchanan, chaplain of the Birmingham Baptist Hospital. Dr. Buchanan is a member and past president of the Birmingham Rotary Club and the Protestant Ministers Association, a trustee of the Young Women's Christian Association and the Young Men's Christian Association, and a vice-president of t h e Community Chest. The Jefferson County Community Chest awarded Dr. Buchanan its highest honor, an honorary life membership on its board of directors, in January of 1959. The same year, he was recipient of the first annual B'nai B'rith Humanitarian Service Award. In 1956 he was chosen Birmingham's Man of the Year by the Young Men's Club. Formal citations have been awarded him from the City Commission for his civic leadership and from the Jefferson County Coordination Council of Social Forces. He has served as president of the Birmingham city parole board. Degrees held by Di. Buchanan are B.A. from, Mississippi College; Th.M. from Southern Baptist Seminary; honorary D.D. from Ouachita College; and honorary D.D. from Howard College. During a tour of duty with the United States Army during World War I, he served as chaplain. He has pastored churches in six southern states. For 20 years he served as pastor of the Southside Baptist Church of Birmingham. As an educator, he has been trustee of Howard College and several other schools. Bruce, Maria, Morgan, Wooley selected Union calendar beauties by Jane Ellen Brown At the Annual Talent Snow" on Thursday night, Aug. 11, the Calendar Girls for the months of September, October, November, and December were chosen. Sadie Bruce of Boaz is Miss September. She is a Junior majoring in Social Science. She is an A O Pi. While at Auburn, Sadie has been "Rose of Delta Sigma Pi," Pi Kappa Alpha Calendar girl, Finalist Omicron Delta Kappa- Glomerata Beauty Ball, and finalist for Theta Chi Dream Girl. Miss October is Gerrie Maria, a sophomore majoring in Secretarial Science. Her sorority is AO Pi. She is a member of the Entertainment Committee and Junior Pan-hellenic. Gerrie has been a Finalist for the Glomerata, Candidate for Greek Goddess, and the Sweetheart of Division I. A freshman, Anna Morgan is the New Miss November. She is from Opelika. While in high school, she was Valentine queen, Homecoming sponsor, Best Looking Who's Who, in the court for Miss Village Fair, and Loveliest of the Plains in last week's Plainsman. Miss December is Reba Wool-ley of Meridianville, Ala. She is a junior majoring in P. E. She has been "Loveliest of the Plains in the June issue of the Plainsman, Sweetheart of Division P, Flight leader for Track and Sabers, and this year's Madison County Maid of Cotton. The Recreation Committee under the direction of Fred Bag-gett wants to announce the winners of the Tennis and Ping-Pong Tournament. In Tennis the winner is John Brantham and the runner-up is Harry Clark. In Ping-Pong, the winners are Saed (Continued on page 7) THESE GIRLS are the Union calendar girls for this fall. Left to right: Miss November, Anna Morgan; Miss September, Sadie Bruce; Miss October, Gerrie Maria; and Miss December, Reba Wooley. 607 August graduates receive "'sheepskins" f AUBURN CNTVEBSITI Auburn, Alabama CANDIDATES FOR GRADUATION August 86, 1960 SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES Doctor of Education Arthur J. Benson, Ruena Vista, Ga.— B.S., University ot Georgia, 1947; M. of Ed., University of Georgia, 1948. Dissertation: "An Analysis of. a Guidance Workshop in Terms of Certain Characteristics of Its Participants." Myrtle Clara Studdard Bonner, Montgomery— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1940. M.S., Auburn University, I960. Dissertation: "A Critical Analysis of the Relationship of Reading Ability to Listening Ability." Hugh Franklin Moss, LaGrange, Ga.— B.S., Auburn University, 1956. M. of Ed., Auburn University, 1957. Dissertation: "A Descriptive Analysis of a Leadership Workshop." Doctor of Philosophy Daniel Edward Dupree, Coushatta, Iia.—B.S., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, 1954. M.S., Auburn University, 1959. Dissertation: "Existence and Uniqueness of Interpolating Rational Functions." Jimmie Dale Gilbert, Quitman, La.— B.S., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, 1956. M.S., Auburn University, 1957. Dissertation: "On Subdirect Products." John Lambert Locker, Florence—B.S., Auburn University, 1962. M.S., Auburn University, 1964. Dissertation: "A Statistical Analysis of the Propagation of Rounding Errors." Norman Alton Minton, Piedmont—B.S.* Auburn University, 1960. M.S., Auburn University, 1951. Dissertation: Investigations into the Resistance of Cotton to Root-Knot Nematodes, Meloidogyne Spp." Charles Alfred Payne, Mobile—B.S., Auburn University, 1954, M.S., Auburn HELP WANTED: College students to service radio and television sets during off time. Also general appliance service man. Positions open Sept. 1. Call Mr. Smith, SH 5-2308. University, 1956. Dissertation: "The Syntheses of Some Highly Methylated In-dole- 3-Acetic Acids." James Robert Piper, Tallassee—B.S., Auburn University, 1955. Dissertation: "A Study in the Indole Series. Unambiguous Syntheses of Some 4- and 6-Sub-stituted Derivatives of Heteroauxin." Master of Arts Leah Marie Rawls Atkins. Auhurn— B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Thesis: "Early Efforts to Control Tuberculosis in Alabama: The Formation and Work of the Alabama Tuberculosis Association, 1908-1930." Curtis Winfred Childs, Brunswick, Ga. —B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1950. Thesis; "History of Brunswick, Georgia." Charles William Geyer, Sturgis, South Dakota—B.A., Augustana College, 1958. Thesis: "Hawthorne—Allegorist and Artist: The Use of Idea as Technique in The Scarlet letter." Dorothy Clyde Blackmon Hatfield, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Thesis: "The W; O. Tuggle Manuscript of Creek Indian Folktales — Its History and Significance." James Ray Mount, PheniK City—B.S. Auburn University, 1952. Thesis: "A Re- Evaluation of the Fourth Voyage of Lemuel Gulliver." Julius Pinckney Hagerty, Jr., Atinis-ton— B.S., Auburn University, 1946. Thesis: "The Early History of the Industrial City of Anniston, Alabama, 1873-1889." Master of Science Carl Melvin Bennett, Panama City, Fla.—B.E.E., Auburn University, 1966. Thesis: "The Development of Statistical Frequency Distributions." Augustus Hammond Green, Jr., Montgomery— B.E.B., Auburn University, 1957. Thesis: "A Survey of the Basic Concepts of Analysis of Variance." Kwangil Koh, Ulziro, Seoul, Korea— B.S., Auburn University, 1969. Thesis: "On Definitions of a Matric Function." Margaret Pansy Light, Meridian, Miss. —B.S., Mississippi Southern, 1938. M.A., Auburn University, 1954. Thesis: "On the Matric Equation AX-XAT." Master of Education Cary Woods Armistead, Columbia, Tenn.—B.S., Middle Tennessee S t a te College, 1956. Mildred Inez Piper Ashurst, Tallassee —B.S., Auburn University, 1957. Jacquelyn Fay Chandler Autrey, Pratt-ville— A.B., Judson College, 1957. fir*$ton* TIRE SALE 6. NYLON TIRES: x 15 Champion Nylon - reg. 16.95 NOW 12.95 EXCHANGE PLUS TAX 7.50 x 14 Champion Nylon-reg. 18.75 NOW 14.95 EXCHANGE PLUS TAX Firestone 18-inch Bar-B-Que Grill regular 5.98 NOW 4.98 A. Meadows Garage Home & Auto Supply Auburn, Alabama PHONE TU 7-2201 Eddie Osborne Bacon, Pembroke, Ga. —B.S., Georgia Teachers College, 1**9. Verla Evelyn Barnett Ballard, Hance-ville— B.S., Howard College, 1948. John Hillyard Barber, Orlando. Fla.— B.S., Auburn University, 1959; Alyce Ruth Barrow. Empirer-B.A„ Birmingham-Southern College, 1949.. Gerald Wayne Benson. Georgians.—B; S., Troy State College, 1964. Ruth Bottoms, Ozark—B.S., ^roy State College, 1949. Jule Bradley Browder, Andalusia—A. B., Alabama College, 1946. Helen Weaver Brown, Tuskegee—B.S. Alabama College, 1940. Mary Will Berry-Brown, Midland-City —B.S., Troy State College, 1949. Robert Bryan, Phenix City—BjS„ Troy State College, 1940. Zula Lee Bullock, Montgomery—B.S. Jacksonville State College, 1953. Martha Faye Long Burgess, Boaz—B. S., Jacksonville State College, 1957. William McCoy Burt, Pittsview—B.S. Auburn University. 1930. Sara Mac Weed Buttram, Auburn—A. £ . , Alabama College, 1939. i Pearl ] Mae Lawrence Byrd, Evergreen —B.S., Troy State College, 1951. Ruby Pearl Dilbeck, Cagle. Hanceville •—B.S., Auburn University, 1953. i James Lohrone Cannon, Fayette—B. S., Livingston State College, 1955. ; Reginald Dewey Carlton, Sylacauga— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 19S3. i- -Sarah Lee Poole Carter, Elba—B.S., fTroy State College, 1951. Stella Wester Chambliss, Grand Ridge, iFla.—B.S., Troy State College, 1954. Thomas Anderson Chambliss, Pratt- -ville—B.S., Troy State College. 1965. Emma Frances Bynum Clary, Georgetown, South Carolina—A.B., Coker College, 1939. Jessie Mae Collins Collier, Titus—A.B. Huntingdon College, 1959. Allie Carolyn Williams Cook, Union Springs—A.B;, Huntingdon College, 1958. Lynda Leona Carman Cook, Quincy Fla.—B.S.. Florida State University, 1954. Edgar Armistead Crenshaw, Lineville —B.S., Howard College, 19S6. Joseph Jerome Day, Jr., Columbus, Ga.—B.S., University of Georgia, 1966. Clifford Ray Dean, Decatur, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Josie Lee Alford Eason, Geneva—B.S., Troy State College, 1952. Louise Foshee, . Maplesville — A.B., Huntingdon College, 1935. Lethia Myrtle Mize Foster, Wedowee —B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1952. Anne May Ward Gaither, Auburn—B. S., Livingston State College, 1957. James Roy Gantt, Wetumpka—B.S., Auburn University, 1923. Thomas Morris Goolsby, Jr., Wetumpka— B.S., University of Alabama, 1954. Bddis Hall Granger, Equality—B.S., Auburn University, 1952. . Eunice Ethelyn Johnson Green, Wedowee— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1M2. I Gola B. Still Hall, Titus—A.B., Huntingdon College, 1959. Charles Hamby, Prattville—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Ann Lee Ballard Harmon, Wetumpka —B.S., Auburn University, 195S. Harold Eugene Harris, Lineville—B. S„ Auburn University, 1952. Mavis Lee Griffin Harris, Lineville— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1951. Julia Inez Fuller Herring, Deatsville— B.S., Auburn University, 1956. Lillian Hodgson, Uriah—A.B., Florida State University, 1930. Jessie Merle Willoughby Hornsby, New Brockton—B.S., Troy State College, 1950. Laura Virginia Stovall Jennings, New-nan, Ga.—B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1949. Anne Buchanan Jones, LaFayette—A. B., Howard College, 1952. Lila Spearman Jordan, Ashland—B.S. Alabama College, 1936. I Floyd Furman Kearley, Montgomery— M.A., Harding College. 1956. John Douglas Kennedy, Silas — B.S., Livingston State College, 1959. William Ernest Kennedy, Hurtsboro— B.S., Auburn University, 1937. : Joyce Gene Griggs Kirkland, Morrow, Ga.—A.B., Brskine College, 1960. Frances- Jane Kershaw Lamberth, Alexander City—A.B., Alabama College, 1944. Winfred Alexander Lecroy, Clanton— B;S., Auburn University, 1948. - Robert Fulton Lewis, Jr., Opelika—B. ;S., Auburn University, 1952. M.S.. Auburn University, 1958. Frederick Barton Lindler, Chapin, S. C.—A.B., Newberry College, 1938. Robert Marion Lowe, Fort Payne—B. S., Auburn University, 1956. Henry Anson Martin, Ozark—B.S., Troy State College, 1957. Mary Nell Bachelor McCarter, Wetumpka— A.B., Huntingdon College, 1929. Mary Martha Thomas McClendon, Ozark—B.S., Auburn University, 1945. Dorothy Statz Frazier McConnell, Columbus, Ga.—B.A., Pan American College, 1956. Lois Vaughn Calne McCulIy, Safford— B.S., Auburn University, 1950. Charles Clifton McCurley, Opp—B.S., Auburn University, 1954. Ruby Clyde Chambers McLendon, Franklin, Ga.—B.S., University of Georgia, 1947. , Charles Winfield McNutt, Hanceville— B.S., Auburn University, 1950. John Laurence Meacham, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1959. Homer Dodwell Meeks, Jr., Dothan— 2—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 WAR EAGLE CAfETERIA in the Auburn Union Building W E L C O M E Students Faculty Friends Visitors CAFETERIA HOURS: Breakfast Daily 6:35 to 8:00 Lunch Daily .. _1_ 11:30 to 1:00 Dinner Daily 5:30 to 6:45 Breafast Sunday 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 B.S., Troy State College, 1951. Mary Katherine Mickle, Roanoke—B. A., University of Alabama, 1922. Lloyd Donald Minis, Clanton — B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1953. Fiances Julene Gothard Norris, Mill-brook— B.S., Troy State College. 1950. Charlie Williams Parker. Lanett—B. S., Auburn University, 1958. Hunter Bransc'omb Parker. Union Springs—B.S., Auburn University, 1952. Anne Lambert Penny. Repton—B.S., Livingston State College, 1955. Joseph Jackson Perry, Kinston—B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Edgar Fulmer Peterson, Jemison—B. S., Auburn University, 1956. Thelma Merle Tadlock Peterson. Dothan— B.S., Troy State College. 1954. Felix Webster Posey. Auburn—B.S.. Auburn University, 1955. Lou Ellen Proctor, Gadsden—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Thomas Jefferson Bayfield. Jr., Sylacauga— B.S., Howard College, 1950. Edward Reed, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1950. Jere Minter Richardson, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Berry College, 1949. Annie Daniel Robinson, Tallassee—B. S., Auburn University, 1957. Buford Alto Robinson, Clermont, Fla. —B.S., Auburn University, 1962. Susan Riley Salter, Andalusia—B.S., Alabama College, 1961. David Fench SamuefcL Sylacauga—B, S., Jacksonville State College, 1951. George Larry Scales, Fairfax—B.S., Auburn University, 1958. John William Scott, Atlanta, Ga.—B. S., University of Georgia, 1953. George Earle Sigler, Ja., Theodore— B.S., Livingston State College, 1955. Robert Davis Simpson, Newell—B.S. Jacksonville State College, 1950. Blllie Clifton Smith, Springhill, La.— B.S., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, 1953. Martha Ann Smith, Boaz—B.S., Aur burn University, 1950. Ha May McDow Spradlin, Woodland— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1952. Connie Caddell Sturkie, Gadsden—B. S., Auburn University, 1959. Foy Campbell Thompson, Camden, S. C.—B.S., Auburn University, 1963. Drew Chitwood Tinsley, Camden, Arkansas— B.S., Arkansas Agricultural Mechanical College, 1957. Annie Mae Paulk Turner, Union Springs—A.B., Alabama College, 1940. Margaret Janet Vaughn. Americus, Ga.—B.S., Valdosta State College, 1958. Margaret Melinda Branham Voss, Fruithurst—B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1955. Jeremiah Jackson Walker, Jr., West Point, Ga.—A.B., Mercer University, 1929. Clara Mae Brltt Washburn, Fairfax— B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Blanch Mildred Willett, Autaugaville —A.B., Alabama College, 1941. Robert Harold Willis, Ashland—B.S,, Auburn University, 1951. Mineola Foshee Wilson, Evergreen— B.S., University of Alabama, 1946. Carl Nelson Wood, Columbus, Ga.— B.A., Piedmont College, 1949. Malcolm Richard Wood, Lanett—B.S., Auburn University, 1969. Nancy Ophelia McLeod Wright, Wedowee— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1946. Verdyne McClung Tork, Columbus, Ga. —B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Ned Young, Elba—B.S., Troy State College, 1948. Richard Earle Young, Auburn—B.S., Florence State College, 1944. Master of Science in Agricultural Economics Allen Jackson Brown, Union Springs —B.S., Auburn University, 1947. Thesis: "Resource Accumulation and Efficiency Aspects of Intergeneration Family Farm Business Arrangements." Master of Science in Agronomy Javad Ismail Bazargani, Tehran, Iran —B.S., American University of Beirut; 1958. Thesis: "Potassium Content of Certain Forage Species as Related to Their Relative Yield." John Ben Henderson, Camp Hill—B. S., Auburn University, 7957. Thesis: "Magnesium Availability of Certain Soils as Affected by Potassium and Soil pH." James Ray Watson, Jr., Anniston—B. S., Auburn University, 1967. Thesis: "Effect of Sodium on Oat Forage at Various Levels of Calcium, Magnesium. Potassium, Phosphorus and pH." Master of Science In Education Eva Shields Carr, Montgomery—B.S. Livingston State College, 1949. Thesis! "Job Opportunities and Requirements, for Beginning Office Workers in Montgomery, Alabama. Master of Agricultural Education Curtis Nathan Beverly, Sweet Water— B.S., Auburn University, 1949. Leonard ,D. Brooks, Ashland—B.S. 'Auburn University, 1948. Gilbert Marvin Butler, Sylvania—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Joseph Glenn Carmichael, Glenwood—. B.S.. Berry College, 1960. B.S., Auburn University, 1962. Eugene Howard Davis, Alexander City —B.S., Auburn University, 1948. William Harold Freeman, Bridgeport —B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Robert Augustus Griffin, Eden—B.S., Auburn University, 1959. Mohammed Ekramul Haque, Patna, Behar, India—B.S., Auburn University* 1959. Elmer Jackson, Lester—B.S., Auburn University, 1961. Charles Allen Knowles, Montevallo— B.S., Auburn University, 1949. Johnie Andrew Marable, Bay Minette —B.S., Auburn University, 1964. Randall Paramore, Midland City—B. S.. Auburn University, 1958. Earnest Van Pruett, Pasgah—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. William Fred Rush, Cragford—B.S., Auburn University, 1948. Norman Gale Spillers, Moulton—B.S. Auburn University, 1949. Elmer Oscar Strickland, Dadeville— B.S., Auburn University, 1956. Posey Ernest Thompson, Town Creek —B.S., Auburn University, 1939. (Continued on page 3) CURRY'S DRIVE-IN CLEANERS 'SERVICE IS OUR SPECIALTY' AND THE FAMOUS SPEED QUEEN COIN-OPERATED LAUNDROMAT Cleaners Open 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Free Parking Always Available Laundromat Open 24 Hours EXTRA URGE DRYERS - -zs More degree candidates listed (Continued from page 2) Wayne Tifton Trawick. Ash ford—B. S.. Auburn University, 1959. William Dwight Webb, Cullman—B.S. Auburn University, 1948. ' Master of Science in Entomology Matt Eitel Dakin, Jr., Skene, Miss.— B.R., Delta State College, 1958. Thesis. "The Cyrtacanthacrinae (Orthoptera) of Alabama." Master of Science in Fisheries Management Luther Glendale McBay, Hattiesburg, Miss.—B.S.. Mississippi Southern College, 1958. Thesis: "The Biology of Tilapia Nilotiga Linnaeus.' 3faster of Home Economies Sara Bess Kelly Hay, Auburn—B.S., University of Georgia, 1933. Master of Science in Home Economics Hazel Virginia Killingsworth Fancher, Flomaton—B.S.. Alabama College, 1950. Thesis: "Relationship of Poultry Products and Marketing Practices to Alabama Cities of Two Sizes." Susan Charlotte Mi 11 is. Crystal Springs, Miss.—B.S., Auburn University, 1957. Thesis: "A Study of Methods Used in Achieving Practical Home Management Experience for Married Women Home Economics Students." Felicia Annette Ray, Birmingham—B. S., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "An, Evaluation of the Home Management .Residence Course as Expressed by Graduates of Auburn University from 1955 to .19G0." Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering Ernest Cary Bryan, Union Springs—B. M.E., Auburn University, '1958. Thesis: "An Analysis of a Nonlinear Mechanical Vibration Problem." Franklkin Louis Davis, Jr.. Auburn— B.M.E.. Auburn University, 1955. Thesis: "Frictional Losses of Air-Lubricated Hydrodynamic Journal Bearings." Gerald Faust Gillis, Dothan—B.M.E., Auburn University. 1959. Thesis: "Stresses in Rotating Elliptical Plates." Donald Clarence Raney, Birmingham —B.S., University of Kentucky. 1954. Thesis: "A Study of the Stability Criteria for Numerical Solutions of Transient Heat Conduction Equations." James Fritchett Smith. Louisville. Ky. •—B.M.E., University of Louisville. 195S. Thesis: "The Development of an Internal Combustion Engine Carburation System Employing Electrical Control." William Donald Whetstone, Birmingham— B.M.E., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "Transient Thermal Stresses in Flat Plates and Hollow Circular Cylinders." Ma«*er of Science in Nuclear Science Donald Ray Wood, Gadsden—B.E.P., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "A Coincidence Scintillation Spectrometer." Master of Science in Pharmacy Irving Wade Waters. Baldwyn, Miss.— B.S., Delta State College, 1958. Thesis: '.'The Effect of Altered Carbohydrate Metabolism on Barbiturate Detoxica-tion." Master of Science in Physics Jirr.es Michael Scarborough, Lockhart —B.E.P., Auburn University, 1958. Thesis: "Construction of a Positive Ion Bombardment Apparatus." John Paul Scheiwe, Auburn—B.E.P., Auburn University, 1958. Thesis: "Design of a 150 Kilovolt Cockroft-Walton Accelerator." Master of Science in Poultry Husbandry Robert Nelson Brewer, Phil Campbell —B.S., Auburn University, 1955. Thesis: "The Development of Immunity in Chickens to the Large Intestinal Roundworm, Ascaridia Galli, Schrank," Master of Science (Psychology) Frank Horry Price, Jr., Decatur—B. S., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "An Assessment and Comparison of Scores of Selected Groups of College Students on a Standard Supervisory Skill Test." Bobby Michael Thornton, Gadsden— B.S., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "Dimensions of Perceived Relationship as Related to Marital Adjustment." SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE Bachelor of Science in Agriculture - Bobby Earl Anderson, Thomasville; Winston O'Neal Bice, Clanton; Jerry Caldwell, Tallassee; Billy" Ray Carroll, Fort Payne, David Woolley Crosland, Jr., Montgomery; Douglas Franklin Rosser, Piedmont; Thomas Leroy Spruiell, Leeds; Edward Davis Walker, Montgomery; William Garner Wyatt, Jr., Tuscaloosa; Rudy Paul Yates, Woodland. Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Adm inistration Jame? Walter Crawford, Gallion; Robert Raymond Frayne, Summerdale; George Foster Guess, Jr., Stevenson; Samuel Wayne Thames, Evergreen. • Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Engineering John Newton Sulla van, Bessemer. Bachelor of Science in Forestry Jerry Robert Davidson, Vinegar Bend; Hey Man! Dig these cool new items for your pad: Columbia Portable Phonos Transistor Radios New Dave Gardner Disc Herbert Music Rainer Clark Ezell, Lisman; Arthur Henry Kirkby, Jr., Sheffield; Neil McNair, Mason, Jr., Red Level; Joseph Dennis O'Gara, Ja., Bessemer; Charles Edward Sellers, Jr., Ramer; Balford O'Neal Thompson, Bay Minette; William Thomas Wooden, Cleveland, Tenn.; George Gray Woodyard, Jr., Calvert. Bachelor of Science In Zoological Sciences Charles Otis Knowles (Zoology), Tallassee; Vernon Eugene Oglivie /"Fisheries Management), Nashville, Tenn. SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND THE ARTS Bachelor of Architecture William Hamilton Huntington, Hazel-hurst, Miss.; James Webster Mount, Brantley; Huey Stanton Wright, Pensa-cola, Fla. Bachelor of Applied Art Jean Anita Camp, Gadsden; Reuben Owen Dykes, III, Newrian, Ga.; Robbie. Ann Gibbons Harris, -Birmingham; Dan; Greely Laird, Birmingham; Ruth Mun-dine, Birmingham; James Roger Nelson, Birmingham; Charles Montgomery Patterson, Tucker, Ga. Bachelor of Arts Anita Louise Lewis Hoodless, Milton Fla. Bachelor of Building Construction John Arthur Cook, Czenovia, New York; Roger Callaway Dickinson, Al-any, Ga.; Robert Austin Hornsby, Jr., Eufaula; John Morrill Laurendine, Mobile; Jere Louis Lillich, Birmingham; Dan Franklin Nelson, Decatur; Alva Morgan Williams, Jr., Panama City, Florida. Bachelor of Interior Design Gerald Eugene Carter, Montgomery. SCHOOL OF CHEMISTRY Gus Symmes Coats, Auburn; Ellis Gray Fleming, Salitpa; James William George, Florence; Frederick Lee Gras-feder, Union City, Tenn.; Howard Roger Hrbek, Birmingham; Michael Warren Maldney, Norcross, Ga.; James Arnold McKirizey, Brent; Samuel Edward Mc- Rae, Mobile; Charles David Montgomery, Florence; Paul Miller Waite, Grove Hill. Bachelor of Science in Laboratory Technology Katie Elizabeth GoUlsby, Mobile; Molly May Earnest Miller, Opelika. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Bachelor of Science in Education Sberrell Winona Berry Alexander, Prattville; Linda Marie Anderson, Atlanta, Ga.; Dorothy Marie Ashcraft, Mobile; Patricia Grace Bailey, Roanoke; Thomas 'Richard Barr, Montgomery; Electa Agnes Chappell Bentley, Phenix City; Ouida Ann Blackshear, Panama City, Fla.; Myrna Laura Blanton, Punta Gorda, Fla.; Jack • Marvin Burkett, Georgiana; Frank Butensehon, III, Oxford; Russell La Payette Chandler, Tal- (Continued on page 4) 3—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 The Bonanza Burger 'Short Order Specialists Chicken & Shrimp Baskets 90 For The Best In Food And The Finest Service OPEN 4 P.M. to 12 P.M. Closed Monday A DIAMOND IS A GIRL'S BEST FRIEND Engagement Rings and Wedding Bands All Styles . . . All Prices! Budget Terms Can Be Arranged For All Your Jewelry Needs See . . . Jockisch Jewelry "Auburn's Oldest Jeweler" N. College Street TU 7-5491 TAKE A HINT The best place to buy books and equipment for all your classroom needs Oi^Jpfi) CU> University Book Store fif BUY AND SELL USE'S BOOkS loco-feed IN the UWION BUI IdiNQ Editorials Let's Get Tough Let's get tough. The University of Alabama did so last week when they expelled two students and placed over eighty others on either suspension or probation for cheating incidents last spring. If such measures are necessary to maintain honesty in our classrooms, then, by all means, lets get honest with ourselves and get tough with cheaters. Auburn has been for so long indifferent, incurious, and unconcerned; completely detached from cheating, ts practitioners and its inherent moral degradation that the apathy has become instilled in the mind of almost every student here. We would have the college install posthaste Hiroagh-out the school an honor system under which violators would be perfunctorily dismissed. Each quarter it's the same old business of rifling trash cans, bribing janitors, breaking into professor's offices, student syndicates dealing in final exams, and the countless stolen glances, passed information, trading notes, and "cheat sheets." People talk about the weather, but they never do anything about it. University leaders talk about applying brakes to dishonesty in our classrooms, but they seldom do anything about it. It's time to get tough. Plan Ahead Last Thursday night, after a drought of entertainment all summer long, two major events were scheduled on the campus. Fortunately, or unfortunately depending upon your view, rain forced the cancellation of one of them. However, the fact remains that these two affairs, each of which would have in its own right drawn a fine crowd, were inadvertently set for the same night one haflf •hour apart. This unfortunate mistake could easily have been prevented had either of the two sponsoring organizations only bothered to check the quarterly calendar in the Union. Summer quarter is probably lacking in entertainment moreso than any other term and why the student body 'must have to suffer the anguish of a decision of which •affair to attend and the regrets of missing the other is •-most unfortunate. It is the sincere hope of the PLAINSMAN that such mistakes of planning can be corrected in the future to allow students the full benefit of good entertainment on the campus. — McCullars Summer's Almost Gone Now that summer is almost gone and the last minute struggle for those grades is under way, unshaven faces are becoming more and more prevalent and the bleary, haggard look of no sleep, long hours of study, and a couple of No-Doze is making its quarterly appearance. The quiet early morning streets are flooded with light from midnight-oil lamps at the desks of ambition. This quarter we did differently from those past in which we were forced by necessity at the term's end to exist entirely upon a diet of study and no sleep for the days prior to exams. Yes, this time we planned ahead. Now, only two weeks of 24 hour a day work might possibly save us from all that planning and remarkable foresight and the laziness that makes every quarter like the last and 'next quarter' the time to work. to Foster the Auburn Spirit JOHN WALLACE — Editor HUNKY LAW — Business Manager RONNIE McCULLARS — Managing Editor PEYTON McDANIEL — Sports Editor TOMMY AMASON — Circulation Manager BOBBY HYDRICK — Advertising Manager ALAN TAYLOR — Copy Editor ANN WALKER — Secretary PHOTOGRAPHER — Larry Bevis DOT SARRIS — Features Plainsman offices are located in Room 318 of the Auburn Union and in The Lee County Bulletin building on Tichenor Avenue. 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. The Plainsman is the official student newspaper of Auburn University and is written and edited by responsible students. Opinions published herein are not necessarily those of the administration. Publication date is Wednesday and circulation is 5,000. More degree candidates listed (Continued on page 3) lassee; Harry McDonough Clark, Mobile: Elizabeth Ellis Cobb, Birmingham; Franklin Melvin Conary, Ellsworth, Maine; William Henry Cook, Cairo, Ga.; Rubye Evelyn Jones Coulter, Columbus, Ga.; Mallnee Foster Crawford, Mobile; John Albert Cummings. Wedowee; Annette Willcoxon Davis, Tuskegee; Vester Ree Dobson, Jr., Lanett; Thomas Byers Doner, Auburn Frances Deanna Duffey, Carrollton, . Ga.; Sandra Ellen Ennis, Opelika; Ann Ford, Auburn; Sue Ellen Scott Ghahre-mani, Elmore; James Clyde Gibson, Jr., Columbus, Ga.; Judith Gillespie, Montgomery; Marvena Dick Hammond, Ashland; Jerry Dunaway Halt, Georgetown, Ga.; Marcilla.Ann Jacobs Heath, Perry, Ga.; Sandra Lynn Hampton Hickman, Talladega; Barbara Jean Hocking, . Auburn." Nancy Elaine Holdbrooks, Wetumpka; William James Ikerman, Selma; Willie Clair Boyett Johnson, Rockford; Bill Vernon Klrkpatrick, Rogersville, Tenn.; Martha. Lee Littlefield, Lipscomb; Lillian Lee Lother.^' Birmingham; Sarah Faye Malone Lowery, Belmont, Miss.; Jane Cole ' Lbwry; Summerville, Ga.; John Herod Mann,' Jr., Rockford; Peggy Jane Mathis, Opelika; William Roger Mathis' Mobile; Calvin Homer McCar- Iey, Jr., LaFayette; William Sylvester McFarland, Opelika; Addigene Grubbs McKay, Mobile; Norma Gayle McKtn-ney, Pine Level; Odell Bay ward Mc- Manus, Hamilton, Ga. John Lawrence Minor, Clanton; Thomas Gordon Nunn, Wadley; Danforth Ferrie Pritchett, Grantville, Ga.; Shelby Joyce Quinn, West Blocton; Sandra Ann Ross, Phenix City; William Patrick Sellers, Mobile; Melba Jeanette Ham Sprulell, Sylacauga; Warren Thomas Starke, Seale; Marcus • Crowder Stewart, Jr., Fort Payne; Virginia Louise Martin Stone, Hurtsboro; Mortimer Jefferson Thurman, Sylacauga; Sara Jean Waller, Roanoke; Lynda Goode Walraven, Montgomery; James Hoyt" Welch, Alexander City; Mary Patricia Wheeler, Lanett; James Orrin Williams, Sylacauga. Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Education Jimmy Warren Beason, Springville; Joshia Showell Robins Carothers, Jr., Winfield; Charles Wallace Reed, Pine Hill; Homer Lee Stoker, Auburn; Henry Austin Tidwell, Jr., Auburn; Richard Waco Wright, Graham. Bachelor of Science in Home Economics Education Patricia Ann Garrett Bishop, Albert-ville; Betty Jean-Gauntt Canada, Talladega; Mary Elizabeth Dopson, Montgomery; Elizabeth Ann Johnson, Douglas-ville, Ga.; Rosalyn Ketchum, Jackson; Mary Lou Kolb McNair, Ozark; Vita Annette Nail, Georgiana; Mary Etta Van Devender Terrell, Birmingham'; Gloria Ann Thomas, Pell City, Margaret Gle-nora fillery, Riverview. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Bachelor of Aeronautical Administration Edward Snow Bolen, Chattanooga, Tenn.; .Louis Nelson Brown, Jr., Birmingham ; Don Harold Burleson, Sheffield; John Philmore Chapman, Atmore; Richard Eugene Davis, Crossville; James Harold Dorris, Florence; George Chandler Mapes, Jr., Corning, New "York; John Alton Synco, Dothan. " Bachelor of Aeronautical Engineering Daniel Elliott Acker, Anderson, S. C.; Marx Hilliary Branum, Greenville; Cecil David Creel, Andalusia; James David Hooper, Tarrant; Charlie Frank Johnson, Phenix City; Kurt Lee Keene, Columbus,- Ga.; Roy Clifford LeCroy, Brundidge; Jim Jordan Lindsay, Headland; Cecil Warren Messer, Clanton; George ; Wayne Mobley, Gadsden; Winston PoVter Newton, Phenix City; Ennis Allen Roper, Birmingham; James David Tadlock, Andalusia; Thomas Phillip Tytula, Signal Mountain, Tenn. Bachelor of Civil Engineering Terry Grantham Arnold, Montgomery; Ahmed Maher Atassf, Aleppo, Syria, U. A. R.; Farrior Eugene Channell, Alexander City; Robert Stanley Fishbough, Balboa, Canal Zone; Ronald Lee Harmon, Dothan; Bobby Ray Laseter, Dothan; Robert Edwin Lunsford, Birmingham; Mark William McCurdy, Henegar; George Edward Ramey, Mobile; Marcus Eugene Shelby, Livingston; Richard Lamar Thompson, Anniston; Gordon Warren, Jr., Chipley, Fla. Bachelor of Electrical Engineering Julian Gregory Angus, Cali, Colombia, South America; Robert Avery, Alexander City; Richard Clark Bishop, Helena; Cecil Brooks Brown, Woodland; Harrison Brunson, Enterprise; Richard Lynn Buckelew, Boaz; Robert Ray Cobble, Fort Payne; Charles Benson Cole, Birmingham; Stephen Paul Dean, Dothan; Richard Elmer Dedels, Birmingham ,- William Edwin Dowdell, Auburn; Donald Cooper Dutton, Mobile; James Richard Fucci, Columbus, Ga.; George Michael Garber, Tuscumbia; Louis Leon Gibbs, Birmingham; Milton Charles Ha-wie. Mobile; Leon Jerry Johnson, Birmingham. Lumey David Jump, Jr., Haughton, La.; William Marion Justice, Pensacola, Fla.; Henry Robert Lane, Boaz; Richard LeVoy Manley, Fairfax; Joe Morris McKay, Auburn; William Stewart Moorehead, Jr., Leesburgh, Fla.; John Bower Overmeyer, Jr., Mobile; George Christopher Parr, Helena; Harold Hugo Scarbrough,. Warrington, Fla.; Donald Peter Schambeau, Pensacola, Fla.; Jimmy South, Montgomery; Patrick Thur-low Spence, Macon, Ga.; James Kenneth Stephens, Yazoo City, Miss.; James Howard Stewart, :Jr., Anniston; James Eugene Strickling, Jr., Birmingham; Gerald Newton Summers, Jackson, Tenn.; Richard Delano Thompson, Clanton; Richard Warren Tingle, Montgomery; John Frank Wilson, Jr., Birmingham; Guy Eugene Womack, Cedartown, Ga.; James Kenneth Wright, Decatur. Bachelor of Engineering Physics John Brewer Beck, Childersburg; Ralph Montgomery Ford, Tuscaloosa; Paul Jackson Hays, Hueytown; Mabry Stone Phillips, Jr., Albany, Ga. Bachelor of Industrial Management Charles Walter Adams, Birmingham; John Olen Ballard, Montgomery; Vernon Eugene Brackett, Mobile; Ralph Carroll Brown, Clayton; Wayne Culvln Burns, Talladega; William Joseph Callaway, Macon, Ga.; Robert Gerald Chandler, Mobile; Lee Douglas Coker, Atmore; Wyman Moye Colson, Mobile; Thomas Edward Crowder, Franklin, Ky.; Elliott Durwood Dominey, Dudley, Ga.; Thomas Lee Farris, Fortson, Ga.; Larry Addison Gordon, Alexander City; Alvis Gerald Hand, -Mulga; Cornelius Herbert Harrell, Jr.,. Montgomery; Richard Dean Hartley, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Charlie Wilburn Henson, Moultrie, Ga.; Thomas Elver Hill, Jr., Pinson; Florian Janes, Demopolis. Rethel Houston Jones, Geneva; John Leon Kidd, Jr., Birmingham; George Marvin Kuffskie, Mobile; Joseph Lake, "Birmingham; William Austin Lank-ford; Jr., Birmingham; Maurice Franklin Law, Jr., Linden; Jack Carlton Lewis, Georgiana; George Werner Lind-enmuth, Ozark; Albert Manoske, Brook-side; Gary Clements Martin, Sacramen-ton, Calif.; James Douglas McCune, Wetumpka; George Edward Meeks, Opelika; Don Arthur Morris, Uriah; Thomas Edward Mullis, Phenix City; Billy Samuel Nelson, Clanton; Wiley Graham Newman, Birmingham; Charles Edward Olson, Jr., Birmingham; Benjamin Franklin Padgett, Jr., Griffin, Ga.; Jerry Elbert. Page, Birmingham; Henry Eugene Peace, Jr., Birmingham; Jack Arthur Price, Mount; Olive; James Daniel Proctor, Reform. Edward Louis Rand, Atlanta, Ga.; Culver Leonard Revell, Jr., Columbus, Ga.; Raymond Eugene Robbins; Sumi-ton; Daniel Ruffner Robinson, Signal Mountain, Tenn.; Donald Edward Russell, Monroeville; William Joseph Ry-land, Selma; Louie Daniel Sansing, Birmingham; James Dempsey Selvey, Val-ricb, Florida; Charles Edward Shaffer, Jr., Birmingham; Newton Marriner Smith, Mobile; Ernest Gary Stringer, Birmingham.; . Myron . Scott . Stringer, Florence, Harold Gray Taiilbee, Mobile; Max Ray Taylor. Hamilton; Donald Carey Thomason, Jr., Talladega; Robert Harold Tuck, Mount Olive; Clyde Anthony Turner, III, Montgomery; Charles Raymond Vines, Bessemer; Jerald Bryan White, Talladega. Bachelor of Mechanical Engineering Alfredo Arevalo, Carcacas,' Venezuela, South America; Manouchehr Azmoudeh, Teheran, Iran; Ralph Edward Bailey, Jr., Eagle Lake, Fla.; James William Bannister, Sylacauga; Robert Patrick Black, Decatur, Ga.; Thomas Neal Bras-selle, Albany, Ga.; Alwin Horatio Carl- Crossville; Gordon Edward DeRamus, ton, Gadsden; Robert Malcolm Croft, Jr. Selma: Jerome Rae Dickey. Montgomery; Bernard Anthony Downing. Jr., Mobile; James Wallace Fleming, Mon-roeville; Howard Stephen Fogelson, Charlotte, N. C; William Aubrey Fon-dren, Hartford; William Long Forbes, Birmingham; Odus William Francis, Dothan; Joseph Neil Frederick, Birmingham; Donald David Freeman, Birmingham; Jerry Wayne Glidewell, East Gadsden; Richard Collier Green, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Ralph McKinley Hoodless, Jr., Milton, Fla.; Alan Clyde Horn, Tullahoma, Tenn.; Harry Linden Hunt, Sheffield; James Harris Hurst, Trinity; Panos George Ioannides, Serres, Greece; David Ard Kite, Phenix City; Patrick Joseph McGeever, Jr., Birmingham; Jerry Wayne Miller, Boaz; Rondal Curtis Mize, Cullman; William Robert Murdock, Jr.; Birmingham; John Michael O'Brien, III; Anniston; James Meriwether Patterson, Tucker, Ga.; Morris Gene Porter, Birmingham; Hugh Milton Roberts, Birmingham; Gordon Lee Robertson, Jr., Clanton; Gordon Mack Ross, Phenix City; David Killough Searcy, Trussville; James KInser Shelton, Eclectic; Arthur John Steely, Jr., Birmingham; Andrew Jackson Stephens, Mobile; Carl Hugh Warren, New Hope; Thomas Watson Winstead, Gadsden; John Arnold Wol-ler, Decatur; William Bryan Woodson, Tullahoma, Tenn. Bachelor of Textile Engineering Edward Lee Eubanks, Wetumpka; Charles Allen Maddox, Childersburg. Bachelor of Textile Management Thomas David Vivin, Jr., Sylacauga; Glenda Ree- Bolton, Sylacauga; Bill Dodd Morton, Boaz; Roland Donald Sledge, Fairfax. SCHOOL OF HOME ECONOMICS Bachelor of Selene in Home Economics Mary Sue Gann (Home Demonstration) Hamilton; Marion Snow McGowan Proctor (Clothing and Textiles), Reform; Janett Rebecca Rogers (Clothing and Textiles), Sylacauga; Sylvia Cook Thomas (Clothing and Textiles), Glen-wood, Ga. SCHOOL OF PHARMACY Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy Jackie Sue Crawford, Bessemer; Paul Alden Harrison, Abingdon, Va.; Belar Buris Hunt, Jr., Montgomery; Luther Theodore Long, Jr., Mobile; Roy Wise McClendon, Jr., Shawmut; Walter Horace McNabb, Jr., Ducktown, Tenn.; John Eldridge Reid, Grove Hill; Fred Melvin Woods, Jr., Piedmont. SCHOOL OF SCIENCE AND LITERATURE Bachelor of Arts Mary Ruth Barrow, Auburn; Patricia Margaret Drlggs, Austin, Minn.; John Wilson Dunlop, Auburn; Frederick Oliver Fay, Jr., Union Springs; Marie Dea- Bon Fenn, Billingsley; Barbara Virginia Hollberg, Senoia, Ga.; Gerald David Johnson, Bremen, Ga.; Marguerite Garner Lovelace, Decatur; Clarence Irving Meeks, III, AndersSn, S. C.; Edward Mobley Pattillo, Tallassee; Ellis Warren Pope, Opelika; Alice King Prather, Auburn; John Davis Sample, Hartselle; William Langham Thompson, III, Troy; Rudolph Terrell Tidwell, Camp Hill; Sandra Louise Vaughn, Montgomery; Price Stevens Williams, Jr., Mobile. Bachelor of Science Donald Walter Bishop, Guntersvllle; Thomas Frederick Borst, Birmingham; Herman Jerome Clark, Mobile; Charles Acker Cooper, Birmingham; Bobby Bo-dine Copeland, Arab; John Dupree Davis, Dothan; Joseph Albert Dolan, Cedartown, Ga.; Frances Tomllyn Eagar, Auburn; Mamie Sue Welch Fox. Alexander City; Constance lone Dufford Garner, Birmingham; Michael Andrew Gray, Dothan; William Fay Guyton, Auburn; Martha Blanche Hodges, Headland; William David Jones, Decatur, Ga.; Alexander Gennady Kosolapoff, Auburn. Frank Martin Lester, Pulaski. Tenn.; Charles William Me Rae, Austell, Ga.; Mona Leah Newman, Tyler;" William David Parker, Marion Junction; Don Watson Powell, Birmingham; Jack Kenneth Pruett, Newton; Regina Autrey Rhoades, Auburn; Peter Robertson, Jr., Irvington, New York; John Paul Rod-gers, Mobile; Gus William Schlitzkus, Columbus, Ga.; Noble Richard Thompson, Tallassee; Alfred Waldrep, Jr., Talladega; Donald Robert Wheeler, Montgomery; Nancy Ann Kemp Williams, Auburn; Jerry Lea Williamson, Birmingham; Lowell Asher Womack, Gar-dendale Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Doyle Brady Adams, Stevenson; Donald Marrison Armlstead, Montgomery; Edward Ellis Barnes, Loxahatchee, Fla.; Jerry Max Barnes, Bay Minette; Robert Anthony Benz, Warrington, Fla.; Roy Conrad Billingsley, Prattville; John Clement Boehl, Jr., Pensacola, Fla.; Robert Charles Boland, Opelika; William Larry Booth, Cocoa, Fla.; Walter James Boucher, Opelika; Harris Stanton Burns, Florence; Lytle DeWitt Burns, III, Atlanta, Ga.; Ronald Tipton Coffee, Selma, James Michael Coker, Atmore; Charles Dubose Cole, Monroeville; John Hubert Crlm, Bessemer; Jesse Elbert Croley, Atmore; Merwyn Erie Danley, Montgomery; Stanley Eugene Dyal, Mobile; James Tucker Fry, III, Epworth, Ga.; Bobby Joe Hardy, East Tallassee. Dudley Bryan Hare, Mlnter; William Ted Heath, Enterprise; Marvin Merrltt Holman, Dothan; Wilbur Jackson James, Jr., Birmingham; Damon Albert Jones, Miami, Fla.; William Edward Kemper, Jr., Columbus, Ga.; Edward Franklin Kern, Atlanta, Ga.; James Autrey Man-ley, Jr., Macon, Ga.; Don Carl Marino, Birmingham; James Larry McMlllon, Anniston; Billy Marshall Murchison, Birmingham; John Jordan Newman, Gadsden; Atha Ann Parham, Birming- 4—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 Letter To Editor To The Editor: I read Mr. Larry Clark's letter to you and your reply in the issue of The Plainsman dated Wednesday, August 10, 1960. I was one of the irresponsible delegates representing the Third District of Alabama. I am a native of Lee County. I did not ask anyone personally to vote for me in Lee County but received approximately 3,600 votes. These voters must have had a different opinion about me. Our delegation, by and large,; was composed of men and women of character and intelligence, dedicated to our'state and its ideals. I, for one, paid all my expenses from the time I left home on. Saturday, the. 9th until I returned on Saturday, the 16th. This is not the act of an irresponsible man, or should I have allowed my expenses to be paid by others. I recommend you read carefully and prayerfully the Democratic platform adopted in Los Angeles. You will agree it is the most socialistic platform ever adopted by a supposedly free people anywhere. It promises everything to everybody — less work for more pay. Where the •money comes from is of no consequence. The civil rights plank — can we accept it? Will you accept race mixing in every area of community life? Will you integrate all of our public and private schools? Will you integrate our churches, service clubs, country clubs and masonic lodges? Will you integrate our restaurants, motels, hotels, swimming pools, etc? Will you approve dating of colored boys and white girls, eventual intermarriage? Will you approve a mulatto race for the Southland? Token integration is a shame aad hypocritical. It will not be accepted by the NAACP. The FEPC will meddle in every phase of business. Would you like this? If we Southern people agree to a gradual approach, we might as. well go overboard for it all. Night follows day and so will total integration follow partial. Our national government has been steadily robbing us of our birth right, our freedom, and liberty since 1933. Some of us are getting battle weary and too old to fight. We need young and strong reinforcement, not ap-. peasers but men of character and ability, men who can see through the fruad and hypocrisy that is now being forced upon us. The only reason for the assault on the South is to control the block vote in the large population centers of the North and West. The next president of the United States must be a man who knows the Constitution and is willing to follow it. His respect for it must be profound, the right of states respected, especially the conduct of local affairs, education, voting, and police power. Our Supreme Court should consist of our best legal minds, not politicians of questionable ability. The above things disturb me greatly and they are the reasons I wanted to represent our state as a delegate. I was greatly disappointed. I wish to commend Larry Clark for his defense of Alabama's delegation. Sincerely, I. J. Scott ham: Ashbarn Richard Plland, Jr., Griffin, Ga.; Joseph Edwin Pope, Tucson, Ariz.; Elmer Edward Pruitt, Birmingham; Luther Beebe Ray, III, Macon, Ga.; Jimmy Wayne Russell, Cedar-town, Ga.; Clarence Lavert Seale, Jr., Bessemer; Haywood Mai Sport, Montgomery; John Kellett Seinhauer, Decatur, Ga.; Gilbert Vernon Stewart, Sylacauga; Edward Allen Sullivan, Jr., Mobile; Greene Alonza Taylor, Jr., Rome, Ga.; Donald Morris Walters, Auburn; Jerry Max Watson, Gadsden; Patricia Wells, Trussville; Rather ine Thompson Wine, Tuscumbia; Jack Emory Worthlngton, Pepperell; Avery La-vaughn Yarbrough, Alexander City, to be moved — House on corner has interesting historic past by Dot Sarris The quaint old house on the corner of North College and East Thach, the site of Auburn University's new library, is a familiar sight to most Auburn students. Not so familiar to us, however, is the wealth of history held within the walls of this house — most interesting to those who know of it and most meaningful to the people of Auburn. Built in the 1800's by Frank Dillard, we trace the owners of the home back to the Glenn family. At this time John Bowles Glenn was President of the Board of Trustees of the college. Following the Civil War, John's son, E. T. Glenn and his family moved into the house. Elizabeth (Glenn) Wilder, whose mother—Maude (Glenn) Smith was born in the house in 1873, is a resident of Auburn. Her home is located on the street that bears the name of her ancestors — Glenn Street. Charles B. Glenn, Superintendent Emeritus of the Birmingham City Schools is the only Glenn living today who lived in the home. General J. H. Lane, who; had served as an adjutant, on Robert E. Lee's staff during the ;Civil War bought the house in 11882. Lane who had been teaching at VPI for a time after the! war ended, decided to go into business for himself. He opened the "Lane School for Boys", an aristocratic school in Virginia. In this postwar period, however, the school failed and Lane was forced to seek other means of employment. The general called upon a friend, Dr. Leroy Broun, who sat at that time President of the college at Auburn. Broun, a fellow Virginian, secured for Lane a position on the Auburn faculty and the Lane's came to Auburn to live. General and Mrs. Lane had four lovely daughters, all of whom graduated from Auburn. Lidie, the oldest, went to teach in Virginia, but became ill shortly afterward and returned to Auburn, a semi-invalid to spend her remaining years. Lidie, who never married died at the age of 30. Mary, the next daughter married Dr. Petrie, of the History Department at Auburn, who later became Dean of the Graduate School. In 1902 General Lane gave the Pe-tries a lot behind his, on which they built their home. Kate never married and is still living in Auburn. Lottie, the youngest, married Mathew Scott Sloan, an Auburn graduate in the School of Engineering. Sloan later became President of the Brooklyn — Edison Company in New York. The Sloans had one child whose name was Lidie. Lidie (Sloan) McBurney • lives in New York with her husband and two sons— Sloan and Lane. After Lane's death, his home went to Kate and the Petries. Mr. and Mrs. Petrie died in 1947 and 1943 respectively and the property was reverted to Kate the only survivor. Kate kept an apartment in one wing of the old house until 1950, although she had another residence. When the college requested to buy the land on which the house stood, Kate was a little reluctant to part with the house that held Auburn Vet School tops again For the fourth consecutive year Auburn University veterinary students have topped those of all other veterinary school on a special U. S. Department of Agriculture veterinary examination. The examination is given to the senior class in each veterinary school across the country. for her so many fond memories. However," the property was finally sold to the college for the purpose of constructing a new library for the University. Kate was very pleased when the Woman's Club of Auburn decided to purchase the house, whose history is so intertwined in the history of Auburn and to preserve it. The house itself, which is a pure Victorian cottage is one of the few of its type still in existence. With the city's approval, the house will be moved to Cary-wood, a permanent memorial to the people whose live's it has involved and a lasting reminder of it's facinating history. The house itself will tell the story of its tenants who were pioneers in the days when Auburn was but a small college. The land on which the house once stood, the site of the new library for Auburn University, will stand Auburn Circle K to be represented at national conclave in Toronto Auburn University will be represented at the fifth annual convention of Circle K International, meeting in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, by four delegates. Attending the Aug. 24-26 session will be Club President Bert Hitchcock, Demopolis; Vice President Jim Kilpatrick, Opelika; Andy Gentry, Auburn, and J. D. Faulkner, Ft. Payne. Gentry will enter the international oratorical contest at the convention, speaking on the topic "Build Individual Maturity." Although the Auburn Circle K is only six months old, the club is entering the international service award competition. The 72 members have completed 37 projects for a total of 1400 man hours of labor since re-organizing last March. Dr. John E. Deloney has been named as faculty sponsor to Circle K replacing J. Grady Cox who resigned in order to complete work on his Ph.D. degree. Deloney is associate professor of agricultural education. At the final meeting of the club Monday night, two members were tapped: Steve Davies of Decatur and Bob Preskett, Ft. Walton Beach. A "sweetheart locket" was presented to Mary Ann Faulkner, Montgomery, who has served as the club's "sweetheart" for the summer term. The first meeting of the fall [quarter will be a reception honoring Dr. Deloney on Sept. 26. a mark of progress toward an even greater Auburn. 5—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 WAR EAGLE THEATRE W E D N E S D A Y - T H U R S D A Y Two Color Westerns! Richard Eagan—Dorothy Molone TENSION AT TABLER0CK' — A N D — THE BADLANDERS' Alan Ladd—Ernest Borgnine FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY ... . - i ALL THE EXCITEMENT THE SCREEN CAN HOLD! You'll see H from the edge of your seat J R0RY CALHOUN I N H A L E - CONNIE NINES - JOHN G E N T R Y ^ Mm wiDESCRttR jltolnflonfteptaklai .,»,„», HIMMtinafal J j | TUESDAY OF NEXT WEEK KIRK DOUGLAS in IN THE BIG SKY' Wed. through Thurs. DOUBLE FEATURE Gates Open at 6:45 p.m. F i r s t Show at 7:15 p.m. 110 SMASH HIT SONGS! fj* lrst SMRHMD ut spu PMfMMM SECOND BIG HIT: Robert Mitchum Curt Jergens In 'The Enemy Below' A SUBMARINE THRILLER IN CINEMASCOPE Friday •• Saturday Wed. - Thurs. - Fri. AUGUST 17-19 "ONE OF THE BEST PICTURES YOU WILL SEE THIS YEAR!" —Atthet Winston, Post RT7HE7qP? SUir*»f INKME MMCT- IBTHW SMS • 5*0* SHNOM?' IMilkilllM>IH-IHaMMM«l»Wm' Saturday, Aug. 20 DOUBLE FEATURE For every girl who was ever involved with an older man... BLUEBEARD'S/3 HONEY/MOONS • itorriK* GEORGE CORHME SANDERS. CALVET Sun. - Mon. - Tues. Begins 6 p.m. Saturday! t V . ON THE SHEEN ATUSTI rfctmnnm JWTKU f RED CLARK with -U EDDIE F0Y, Jr. *r JEAN STAPLET0N * Next Wed. - Thurs. AUGUST 24-25 NEVER BEFORE ON XTHE SCREEN! KIM FREDRIC NOVAK* MARCH hvmmmmk-hmommm — P L U S — Gregory Peck Ava Gardner Susan Hayward in 'The Snows of Kilmanjara' Plus Chapter 14 of "Wild Bill Hickok's Great Adventures." PLAY BINGO TONIGHT Sun. - Mon. - Tues. AUGUST 21-23 Hilarious Comedy Hit BASED ON THE BOOK THAT HIT AMERICA HI THE FUNNYBONEI r'C„ DOMS DAY DAVID NWEH fpi^MifTtM) I WEOWSllS/ IMS PACE • S n K M K TM Freshman requirement, other changes made by council (Continued from page 1) quarters of residence has been raised from 50 percent to 60 percent. However, there will be no change in the present requirements concerning students in quarters beyond the fourth. Another difference is that under the new ruling, transfer students will be held responsible only for the work they have attempted at Auburn in meeting this requirement. A technical change, illustrated in the above rule is that the term "honor point" will become simply "grade point." In another change in terminology, t h e "Dean's Honor Roll" has been made the "Dean's List." Must Pass 5 Hours There will be a revision, of the present rule which states, "After the first quarter of residence at Auburn University or elsewhere, a student will be dropped at the ft—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 THE 'GOOD OLD DAYS" r&WMWA VS. TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION PRICE In the eld days, when you were hit with a serious Illness, you might spend only a dollar for a prescription . . . but: you were likely in bed for three costly weeks, had six visits from the doctor, lost a month's wages, took a whole assortment of other medicines, too. Was that cheap? Today, thanks to new drug discoveries, you need perhaps on* visit from the doctor, fever's down in hours, you're out of bed in a couple of days, back on the job in a week. Today's prescription cost! you more, yes . . . and isn't it a bargain/ TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION DRUGS SAVE LIVES, SAVE MONEY Campus Drugs TOU »! AlWArS HflCOME <; rOUH *Wa£gA£&H/ AGENCY DRUG STORE end of any quarter during which he does not pass at least five credit hours of work at Auburn." Beginning September 1960, a student will be suspended for a period of 12 months at the end of any quarter during which he does not earn at least five credit hours. There will no longer be an exception made for first quarter freshmen. No Permanent Drop To be completely abolished is •the rule stated in the 1959-60 Tiger Cub as follows, "failure during a summer quarter to reestablish eligibility for continuation in residence, will cause the student to be permanently dropped from the roles." Under the new regulations it will be possible for a suspended student who attempts but fails during a summer quarter to reestablish eligibility, to return at the end of his 12 months suspension. Stu-r dents may no longer be permanently droped. As of September 1960, a freshman who needs counseling will be required to report to the Student Guidance Center only once. "The first time a student classified as a freshman earns less than ten credits and/or ten grade points, he is required to go to the Student Guidance Service during the first three weeks of his next quarter of residence," is the revised rule. This is contrary . JOHN HUBERT LIVERMAN, head of the Auburn University music department, finds some well-tempered chords on a clavichord he made with his own hands. He constructed the instrument in his spare time during a three-week period. A regular performer on the Alabama Educational Television Network, Liv-erman has made one appearance with his new instrument from Auburn's television studios. to the present regulation, under which a student may be required to go to the Guidance Center many times. The Council of Deans has also taken action on an important point not pertaining to residence requirements. It voted to discontinue in September 1960 it's ruling that permits dropped or permanently dropped students to be allowed automatic readmission following military service. This ruling was put into effect during the Korean Conflict as an emer- For Quality and Friendly Service 'You Will Always Find It At STOKER'S' // MOTEL a 24 ROOMS— Air-Conditioned Free Television Telephone Tile Bath Wall-to-wall carpet For Reservations Call TU 7-3481 s T 0 DRIVE-IN AND DINING ROOM QUALITY FOODS Choice Steaks — Seafoods Pizza Open 6:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. S T O K E R S TRAILER SALES * MARLETTE * NEW MOON Small Down Payment Long-Term Financing Low Monthly Payment See the "SPECIAL" on our lot now! E R S TRAILER PARK C H O I C E LOTS City Sewage City Water Patios Automatic Laundry Service For Reservations Call TU 7-3481 STOKER'S SERVICE STATION One Mile From Auburn on the Opelika Road gency measure, and the Council of Deans feels that it is no longer necessary. It's provisions are as follows: "A Student who has been dropped or permanently dropped under the present regulations may be readmitted, after serving in the armed forces at the beginning of any quarter without petitioning the Council of Deans. Such a student will be subject to the requirements governing continuation in residence for students transferring from other institutions; that is, the work counted for continuation in residence will be measured from the date of readmission. AS SEEN IN LEADING FASHION MAGAZINES } «* K KNIT ONE . o and Span Seasons! Proud Httle*otton knit diamond plaided to wear regardless of season. Deep rib knit banding at neckline emphasized with huge black button. Slightly Moused and elasticised beneath self belt. Tomato with Black, Alpine Green with Black, Antique Gold with Black. Sizes 5-13 . . . 14.98 PaKkek^? Tigers solid at Full-QB by Gordon Murphree Quarterback and fullback look solid for the Auburn Tigers this year with junior Bobby Hunt and pre-season all SEC pick Ed Dyas returning. Both these men played first team last year and are expected to pick up this fall where they left off last year. Hunt should be the starting quarterback. He will be backed up by senior Bryant Harvard. Also expected to help out are Joe Overton, a very fine passer from Greenville, Miss, and S o ph Mailon Kent. Fulback will, be capably manned by Sr. Ed Dyas, back for his third season as the starting fullback. John McGeever, if he is not writched to halfback, should be a very fine second: team fullback, but he could be pressed by the speedy Larry Laster, soph form Covington, Ga. Also expected to see action are Bill Baggett and Bill Burgess. Hunt — Soph of Year Last year Bobby Hunt became the first starting soph QB under head coach Ralph Jordon. Hunt led the SEC in average gain per cary last year with a 5.6 average on 98 runs for 552 yards. He was named Sophomore of The Year in the SEC. Hunt is the top Auburn defensive back, also, his improvement on passing this spring will make him one of the top quarterback threats in the country. He has become especially dangerous on roll-outs, which will enable him to moke more effective use of his pet wide keeper plays. Hunt completed 15 of 37 passes last year for 240 yards, one TD and a 40.5 percent accuracy mark. His 78-yard TD pass to open the Miami game was the second longest Tiger gain of the year. Hunt's 254 yards gained against Mississippi State last fall were .the most pained by one player in a game all season. Dyas — A student Ed Dyas, a straight-A student in pre-med, will be starting his third year as the top Auburn fullback. He has taken summer school work to speed up graduation and will graduate from Auburn at the end of the first quar ter of 1960. He will be only 20 years old at that time. Dyas carried the ball 96 times for 506 yards last fall, good enough for fifth place among SEC ball carriers. He averaged 5.3 yards per carry last season and he usually carried the ball in the toughest of situations. Tiger coaches believe he's the finest fullback in Auburn history, which includes all-Ameri-oan Joe Childress. Dyas is an excellent blocker, the best in the Tiger backfield, and is the top linebacker on the team. 15 of 17 PAT's He kicked 15 of 17 PAT's last year and connected on four of six field goals, including 43 and 40 yard efforts which are the longest in Auburn history. Both came in the crucial Georgia game. "Dyas is toughest under pressure," coach Jordan says, "he has the poise and determination to rise to the occasion under pressure." Comparison with last year. Quarterback — should be about the same or better. Hunt will New and Used Typewriters And Adding Machines FOR SALE Appointment by Phone Only Opelika Business Machines Phone SH 5-4211 or write: P. O. Box 53 improve with each game. Harvard will see action. The strong right arm of Joe Overton may be called on for his passing ability. Fullback — Stronger with Ed Dyas returning. McGeever played last year and should be adequate. Soph Larry Laster looked good during the spring and should see action. Punting — Stronger with Joe Dolan returning after a 41.7 average last fall. DEATH WATCH Final Examination Schedule For The Summer Quarter, 1960 Final examinations in all subjects carrying less than 3 hours credit, unless in "Special Schedule' below, will be held at the last class meeting prior to Tuesday, August 23. 7—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 REGULAR SCHEDULE Tuesday, August 23 — 8:00 a.m. Classes, 8:30-11:00 a.m 1:00 p.m. Classes, 1:00-3:30 p.m.; 9:00 a.m. Classes, 3:40-610 p.m. Wednesday, August 24 — 7:00 a.m. Classes, 8:30-11:00 a.m.; 12:00 a.m. & 3:00 p.m. Classes, 1:00-3:30 p.m.; 10:00 a.m. Classes, 3:40-6:10 p.m. Thursday, August 25 — 11:00 a.m. Classes, 8:30-11:00 a.m.; 2:00 a.m. Classes, 1:00-3:30 p.m.; 4:00 p.m. & 5:00 p.m. Classes, 3:40- 6:10 pjn. Notes: Conflicts with MWF 3 hour subject will follow schedule fof 12:00 m. classes. SPECIAL SCHEDULE Friday, August 19 — 6:00 p.m. ROTC (Army and Air); 7:00- 9:30 p.m. Remedial Algebra (MH040) TERM COURSE SCHEDULE (Term course classes continue through Tuesday, August 23. In case of conflict with final examinations in quarter courses, final examination takes precedence over classwork in term courses.) Wednesday, August 24 — 7:00 to 8:30, 9:00 or 10:00; 7:30 to 9:30; 7:45 to 9:00; 8:30-11:00 a.m. 8:00 to 9:30, 10:00; 8:30 to 10:00, 10:30; 9:00 to 10:30, 12:00; 9:30 to 11:00; 1:00-3:30 p.m. Thursday, August 25 — 10:00 to 11:15, 11:30, 12:00, 12:30 or 1:00; 10:30 to 12:00; 11:00 to 12:30; 8:30-11:00 a.m. 1:00 to 2:30, 3:00 or 3:30; 1:30 to 3:00; 3:00 to 4:30 1:00-3:30 p.m. GRADUATION EXERCISES will be held Friday, August 26 at 5:30 p.m. A list of degree candidates will be furnished instructors by the Registrar's Office. Grades for degree candidates should be reported as soon as possible after each examination. These will be assembled by Department Heads or the Dean's Secretary. ATT, SENIOR GRADES MUST BE REPORTED TO THE REGISTRAR NOT LATER THAN 8:00 A.M. FRIDAY, AUGUST 26. (In-sctructors are reminded that "final" grades must be reported; grades of "ok" or "passing" are not acceptable.) It is requested that all other grades be filed with the Registrar's Office by 8:00 a.tm. Friday, August 26. Beat the cost of high rent apartments! Park your House Trailer for $15.00 per month at Auburn Shady Trailer Park Located on pared Wright's Mill Road outside city limits beyond super highway overpass—look for trailer court sign on next hill. Nearer to the campus than any established trailer court! • Free water and sewer facilities • Large, lots—beautiful green lawn— shade trees • Quiet—ideal for families • Direct route to campus • No town or highway traffic • Trailer park private road to be paved prior to Fall Quarter. Call TU 7-3641 today and reserve space for Fall Quarter. Auburn Shady Trailer Park Wright's Mill Rood Former Plainsman end killed in Japan A former Auburn football player was killed in Japan last Thursday when the T-33 jet trainer he was piloting crashed near Nagoya in central Honshu. He was David T. Ridgway Jr., an Air F o r ce captain. Ridgway was an end on the Auburn team, playing his last season in 1951. He was graduated from Auburn University in May of 1952. Ridgway was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and the A Club. According to reports from Japan, Ridgway a n d a Japanese student were on a routine flight when the plane plunged into a field and burned. The student, a member of the Japanese Self-Defense Force, also was killed. Cause of the crash had not been determined at last report. Union . . . (Continued from page 1) Maghsoodloo and J. P. Wood. The Union wants to congratulate the Summer Committees on their fine job they did this summer. The summer chairmen are Sally Jones — Social-Dance Committee and Fred Baggett — Recreation Committee. The permanent committee chairmen are Anne Walker — Entertainment- Fine Arts Committee & Dot Sawis — Secretarial Committee a nd Chuck Hoffman — Publicity. BOOKS Bought and Sold Gifts of all types for all occasions! Beach towels Before you buy or sell... see... Burton's Bookstore 'Something New Every Day' SATURDAY, AUG. 20—Double Feature "FLYING LEATHERNECKS" — A N D — "First Traveling Saleslady" SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY THE MOST AMAZING OF ALL POSSIBLE WORLDS! 2o>, tClNEMAScOPE _ mm*. COLOR by DELUXE MICHAEL RENNIE • JILL ST. JOHN • DAVID HEDISON • CLAUDE RAINS WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY - FRIDAY FOR YOUR COMFORT. AmmCGm*^ MARTIN THEATRE Admission .25 & .50 \ former greats move into the pro ranks and stardom A close rtm down of the rosters of the football teams In the National Football League and the newly organized American Football League will find the names of many former Auburn greats lifted. Within the last seven years .there have been numerous Auburn players to join the professional ranks after graduation. Tori ay there are no less than 15 who, are still active. Since Coach Jordan took over as head football coach in 1951, Auburn has become the spawning ground for many of the top professional players. One such player is Jimmy "Red" Phillips, who played end on the 1957 championship Auburn Tigers, and is now playing with the Los Angeles Rams of the NFL. Last season with the Rams Phillips caught 38 passes for 541 yards and four touchdowns. "Red" is considered as one of the top four offensive ends in pro football. The Ram coaches say that he shows signs of developing into another Tom Fears. "Dave "Hoppy" Middleton of the 1954 Auburn team is another Tiger who has fared well in the pro ranks. "Hoppy" plays slot- HOW TO GET NEW-TIRE MILEAGE AT HALT NEW-TIRE PRICE . . . ROYAL TREAD Tli© Custom Quality Retread Look for the sign of top quality retreads. It's your as* •surance of top grade materials plus top grade workmanship. For the most economical mileage get U. S. Royal Treads. Ask about our unbeatable guarantee. 10.95 (ONE WEEK ONLY) ROYAL TREAD AVAILABLE IW MOWTIME DESIGN urn Tire Service (Where Service and Quality Come First) 453 OPEL1KA ROAD back for the Detroit Lions. He has many times been the all-pro selection at this position. Lion coach George Wilson considers Middleton as one of the games best "deep" pass receivers. During the off season "Hoppy" is a doctor at an Ann Arbor Michigan hospital. He went on to medical school at the University of Tennessee while playing for the Lions. When the 1960 professional football season starts this fall there will be five players from last year Tigers on various pro teams. Ail-Americans Jackie Bur-kett and Roger "Zeke" Smith will join the World Champion Baltimore Colts, along with quarterback Richard Wood. Smith and Burkett are considered as the Colts top draft choices in the line. Bobby Wasden and Teddy 8—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 Successor named to replace Hamlin George M. (Buddy) Rutledge will handle t h e play-by-play broadcast of Auburn's 1960 football games for a network of 50 stations in southeastern states, succeeding Tom Hamlin. Rutledge, who served as sports director and commercial manager of radio station WHMA in Annis-ton, was named sports director for WAPI radio and television stations in Birmingham this week. He also will announce Auburn basketball games next winter. Rutledge was an outstanding Foret, also members of last year's Auburn team, have also signed professional contracts. Wasden goes to the San Francisco 49ers and Foret signed with the Montreal team of the Canadian Football League. athlete before contracting polio at the beginning of his sophomore year at the University of Georgia. He has been confined to a wheel chair since that time. At Anniston High School he was an all-county fullback for two. years and also was a star baseball pitcher and track man. He won a Georgia football scholarship and entered as a pre-med student in 1949, playing on the freshman team as a halfback. After his polio attack and a recuperative p e r i o d at Warm Springs, Ga., Rutledge returned to his Anniston home. He began his radio career in 1952. Buddy was chosen Anniston's ".Young Man of the Year" in 1956 and was one of Alabama's f o ur "Outstanding Young Men" in 1959. CALL AHEAD! GIVE YOUR ORDER Ready to go in 7 MINUTES Pizza Menu mmm Lit* JW*-* +*A If— Open 11 a.m. 'til 12 midnight 7 days a week Opelika Hiway TU 7-2735 Tomato & Cheese Pepperoni Sausage Anchovies Mushrooms ~: Mushrooms & Pepperoni Sausage & Mushrooms.. Sausage & Pepperoni.... Combination 9" Small . 90 .95 1.00 1.10 1.15 1.30 1.30 1.30 1.50 12" Med. 1.35 1.50 1.60 1.60 1.65 1.80 1.80 1.80 2.25 16" Large 1.70 1.95 2.00 2.00 2.20 2.50 2.50 2.50 3.00 Chicken Box 99 Shrimp Box .99 Dogwood .55 Char-Co-Burger .30 Cheeseburger .35 French Fries ......:......— ... .20 Onion Rings .20 Cash For Your Books —Sell Your Books To BOOKSTORE "Headquarters For All Your College Needs" We con buy all textbooks of value even though no longer used at Auburn. Remember^ books are changed and revised often. Jf you intend to sell your books, they sold as soon as you finish with them. FOR YOUR BEST DEAL - SELL YOUR BOOKS TO JOHNSTON & MALONE ALL BOOKS OF VALUE! T
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Title | 1960-08-17 The Auburn Plainsman |
Creator | Auburn University |
Date Issued | 1960-08-17 |
Document Description | This is the volume 87, issue 36, August 17, 1960 issue of The Auburn Plainsman, the student newspaper of Auburn University. Digitized from microfilm. |
Subject Terms | Auburn University -- Periodicals; Auburn University -- Students -- Periodicals; College student newspapers and periodicals |
Decade | 1960s |
Document Source | Auburn University Libraries. Special Collections and Archives |
File Name | 19600817.pdf |
Type | Text; Image |
File Format | |
File Size | 30.3 Mb |
Digital Publisher | Auburn University Libraries |
Rights | This document is the property of the Auburn University Libraries and is intended for non-commercial use. Users of the document are asked to acknowledge the Auburn University Libraries. |
Submitted By | Coates, Midge |
OCR Transcript | the A\ ubum To Foster The Auburn Spirit VOLUME 87 AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1960 NUMBER. 36 607 receive degrees- Commencement set for August 26 Loveliest of the Plains THE BEST WAY to get that good grade is bribery, but if money won't do it then violence will. Loveliest Katherine Harrison, who during other quarters employs this method at the University of Alabama, is sure that it will help her in Business Education. The pretty Opelika Miss says she "thinks she is a junior." Draughon announces Karl Brenkert to be assistant Dean of Engineering New assistant dean of the School of Engineering at Auburn University will be Dr. Karl Brenkert Jr. In announcing the appointment, President Ralph B. Draughon said Dr. Brenkert will succeed Dr. Earl I. Brown II, who is joining the Duke University faculty. In addition to his duties as assistant dean, Brenkert will serve as head of the engineering physics department and as assistant director of the Engineering Experiment Station. The appointment is effective Sept. 1. The 39-year-old Brenkert is from Detroit. He received his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at Stanford University in engineering mechanics. He comes to Auburn from Michigan State University, where he has served for the past four years. Prior to that term, he was a member of the University of Alabama faculty in 1954-56. Also, he served at Stanford and the University of Utah. During his summers, he has been an engineering consultant with General Motors and with Convair. Engineering Dean Fred H. Pumphrey said of the appointment, "With Dr. Brenkert's exceptional technical background, he fills in a need of graduate instruction capabilities in the area of theoretical fluid mechanics. With his personality and interest in administration we anticipate he will make a major contribution to the program of the School of, Engineering." John Wiley and Sons will publish Brenkert's new book, "Elementary Theoretical Fluid Mechanics," this month. DR. KARL BRENKERT New Assistant Dean ATTENTION VETERANS All veterans attending school under Public Law 550 and 634, please come by the Veterans Affairs Office the last day of your finals and sign the pay-roll before going home. NOTICE The Physical and Health Education for the Elementary Teacher display will be held all day Thursday and Friday in Thach, second floor. Visual displays of the work done this quarter will be shown. Council of Deans approve 1960-'61 residence revisions On June 29, 1960, the Council of Deans approved a policy containing a revision of the requirements for Continuation in Residence. As Stated in the 1959-60 Tiger Cub, the present minimum requirements for a student's continuation in residence d u r i n g his first thorough fourth quarters is: "Pass a minimum of 50 per cent of the total number of credit hours attempted through the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th quarters in residence, and also accumulate not less than an equal number of honor points." The revised regulation not only changes this requirement, but clarifies it somewhat: "At the end of the Spring Quarter, a student must have earned credit hours and grade points equal to 60 per cent of all work attempted at Auburn during his first through fourth quarters of college residence at Auburn and elsewhere." The obvious change is "that the requirement for the first four (Continued on page 6) Graduates to hear Dr. John H. Buchanan The summer quarter graduation list of Auburn University lists 607 candidates for degrees at 5:30 p.m., Aug. 26 in Cliff Hare Stadium. Of the total, nine are doctoral candidates, 164 are candidates for the master's degree while 434 are seeking bachelor's degrees. . - >. . The summer commencement speaker will be Dr. John Hall Buchanan, chaplain of the Birmingham Baptist Hospital. Dr. Buchanan is a member and past president of the Birmingham Rotary Club and the Protestant Ministers Association, a trustee of the Young Women's Christian Association and the Young Men's Christian Association, and a vice-president of t h e Community Chest. The Jefferson County Community Chest awarded Dr. Buchanan its highest honor, an honorary life membership on its board of directors, in January of 1959. The same year, he was recipient of the first annual B'nai B'rith Humanitarian Service Award. In 1956 he was chosen Birmingham's Man of the Year by the Young Men's Club. Formal citations have been awarded him from the City Commission for his civic leadership and from the Jefferson County Coordination Council of Social Forces. He has served as president of the Birmingham city parole board. Degrees held by Di. Buchanan are B.A. from, Mississippi College; Th.M. from Southern Baptist Seminary; honorary D.D. from Ouachita College; and honorary D.D. from Howard College. During a tour of duty with the United States Army during World War I, he served as chaplain. He has pastored churches in six southern states. For 20 years he served as pastor of the Southside Baptist Church of Birmingham. As an educator, he has been trustee of Howard College and several other schools. Bruce, Maria, Morgan, Wooley selected Union calendar beauties by Jane Ellen Brown At the Annual Talent Snow" on Thursday night, Aug. 11, the Calendar Girls for the months of September, October, November, and December were chosen. Sadie Bruce of Boaz is Miss September. She is a Junior majoring in Social Science. She is an A O Pi. While at Auburn, Sadie has been "Rose of Delta Sigma Pi," Pi Kappa Alpha Calendar girl, Finalist Omicron Delta Kappa- Glomerata Beauty Ball, and finalist for Theta Chi Dream Girl. Miss October is Gerrie Maria, a sophomore majoring in Secretarial Science. Her sorority is AO Pi. She is a member of the Entertainment Committee and Junior Pan-hellenic. Gerrie has been a Finalist for the Glomerata, Candidate for Greek Goddess, and the Sweetheart of Division I. A freshman, Anna Morgan is the New Miss November. She is from Opelika. While in high school, she was Valentine queen, Homecoming sponsor, Best Looking Who's Who, in the court for Miss Village Fair, and Loveliest of the Plains in last week's Plainsman. Miss December is Reba Wool-ley of Meridianville, Ala. She is a junior majoring in P. E. She has been "Loveliest of the Plains in the June issue of the Plainsman, Sweetheart of Division P, Flight leader for Track and Sabers, and this year's Madison County Maid of Cotton. The Recreation Committee under the direction of Fred Bag-gett wants to announce the winners of the Tennis and Ping-Pong Tournament. In Tennis the winner is John Brantham and the runner-up is Harry Clark. In Ping-Pong, the winners are Saed (Continued on page 7) THESE GIRLS are the Union calendar girls for this fall. Left to right: Miss November, Anna Morgan; Miss September, Sadie Bruce; Miss October, Gerrie Maria; and Miss December, Reba Wooley. 607 August graduates receive "'sheepskins" f AUBURN CNTVEBSITI Auburn, Alabama CANDIDATES FOR GRADUATION August 86, 1960 SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES Doctor of Education Arthur J. Benson, Ruena Vista, Ga.— B.S., University ot Georgia, 1947; M. of Ed., University of Georgia, 1948. Dissertation: "An Analysis of. a Guidance Workshop in Terms of Certain Characteristics of Its Participants." Myrtle Clara Studdard Bonner, Montgomery— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1940. M.S., Auburn University, I960. Dissertation: "A Critical Analysis of the Relationship of Reading Ability to Listening Ability." Hugh Franklin Moss, LaGrange, Ga.— B.S., Auburn University, 1956. M. of Ed., Auburn University, 1957. Dissertation: "A Descriptive Analysis of a Leadership Workshop." Doctor of Philosophy Daniel Edward Dupree, Coushatta, Iia.—B.S., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, 1954. M.S., Auburn University, 1959. Dissertation: "Existence and Uniqueness of Interpolating Rational Functions." Jimmie Dale Gilbert, Quitman, La.— B.S., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, 1956. M.S., Auburn University, 1957. Dissertation: "On Subdirect Products." John Lambert Locker, Florence—B.S., Auburn University, 1962. M.S., Auburn University, 1964. Dissertation: "A Statistical Analysis of the Propagation of Rounding Errors." Norman Alton Minton, Piedmont—B.S.* Auburn University, 1960. M.S., Auburn University, 1951. Dissertation: Investigations into the Resistance of Cotton to Root-Knot Nematodes, Meloidogyne Spp." Charles Alfred Payne, Mobile—B.S., Auburn University, 1954, M.S., Auburn HELP WANTED: College students to service radio and television sets during off time. Also general appliance service man. Positions open Sept. 1. Call Mr. Smith, SH 5-2308. University, 1956. Dissertation: "The Syntheses of Some Highly Methylated In-dole- 3-Acetic Acids." James Robert Piper, Tallassee—B.S., Auburn University, 1955. Dissertation: "A Study in the Indole Series. Unambiguous Syntheses of Some 4- and 6-Sub-stituted Derivatives of Heteroauxin." Master of Arts Leah Marie Rawls Atkins. Auhurn— B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Thesis: "Early Efforts to Control Tuberculosis in Alabama: The Formation and Work of the Alabama Tuberculosis Association, 1908-1930." Curtis Winfred Childs, Brunswick, Ga. —B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1950. Thesis; "History of Brunswick, Georgia." Charles William Geyer, Sturgis, South Dakota—B.A., Augustana College, 1958. Thesis: "Hawthorne—Allegorist and Artist: The Use of Idea as Technique in The Scarlet letter." Dorothy Clyde Blackmon Hatfield, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Thesis: "The W; O. Tuggle Manuscript of Creek Indian Folktales — Its History and Significance." James Ray Mount, PheniK City—B.S. Auburn University, 1952. Thesis: "A Re- Evaluation of the Fourth Voyage of Lemuel Gulliver." Julius Pinckney Hagerty, Jr., Atinis-ton— B.S., Auburn University, 1946. Thesis: "The Early History of the Industrial City of Anniston, Alabama, 1873-1889." Master of Science Carl Melvin Bennett, Panama City, Fla.—B.E.E., Auburn University, 1966. Thesis: "The Development of Statistical Frequency Distributions." Augustus Hammond Green, Jr., Montgomery— B.E.B., Auburn University, 1957. Thesis: "A Survey of the Basic Concepts of Analysis of Variance." Kwangil Koh, Ulziro, Seoul, Korea— B.S., Auburn University, 1969. Thesis: "On Definitions of a Matric Function." Margaret Pansy Light, Meridian, Miss. —B.S., Mississippi Southern, 1938. M.A., Auburn University, 1954. Thesis: "On the Matric Equation AX-XAT." Master of Education Cary Woods Armistead, Columbia, Tenn.—B.S., Middle Tennessee S t a te College, 1956. Mildred Inez Piper Ashurst, Tallassee —B.S., Auburn University, 1957. Jacquelyn Fay Chandler Autrey, Pratt-ville— A.B., Judson College, 1957. fir*$ton* TIRE SALE 6. NYLON TIRES: x 15 Champion Nylon - reg. 16.95 NOW 12.95 EXCHANGE PLUS TAX 7.50 x 14 Champion Nylon-reg. 18.75 NOW 14.95 EXCHANGE PLUS TAX Firestone 18-inch Bar-B-Que Grill regular 5.98 NOW 4.98 A. Meadows Garage Home & Auto Supply Auburn, Alabama PHONE TU 7-2201 Eddie Osborne Bacon, Pembroke, Ga. —B.S., Georgia Teachers College, 1**9. Verla Evelyn Barnett Ballard, Hance-ville— B.S., Howard College, 1948. John Hillyard Barber, Orlando. Fla.— B.S., Auburn University, 1959; Alyce Ruth Barrow. Empirer-B.A„ Birmingham-Southern College, 1949.. Gerald Wayne Benson. Georgians.—B; S., Troy State College, 1964. Ruth Bottoms, Ozark—B.S., ^roy State College, 1949. Jule Bradley Browder, Andalusia—A. B., Alabama College, 1946. Helen Weaver Brown, Tuskegee—B.S. Alabama College, 1940. Mary Will Berry-Brown, Midland-City —B.S., Troy State College, 1949. Robert Bryan, Phenix City—BjS„ Troy State College, 1940. Zula Lee Bullock, Montgomery—B.S. Jacksonville State College, 1953. Martha Faye Long Burgess, Boaz—B. S., Jacksonville State College, 1957. William McCoy Burt, Pittsview—B.S. Auburn University. 1930. Sara Mac Weed Buttram, Auburn—A. £ . , Alabama College, 1939. i Pearl ] Mae Lawrence Byrd, Evergreen —B.S., Troy State College, 1951. Ruby Pearl Dilbeck, Cagle. Hanceville •—B.S., Auburn University, 1953. i James Lohrone Cannon, Fayette—B. S., Livingston State College, 1955. ; Reginald Dewey Carlton, Sylacauga— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 19S3. i- -Sarah Lee Poole Carter, Elba—B.S., fTroy State College, 1951. Stella Wester Chambliss, Grand Ridge, iFla.—B.S., Troy State College, 1954. Thomas Anderson Chambliss, Pratt- -ville—B.S., Troy State College. 1965. Emma Frances Bynum Clary, Georgetown, South Carolina—A.B., Coker College, 1939. Jessie Mae Collins Collier, Titus—A.B. Huntingdon College, 1959. Allie Carolyn Williams Cook, Union Springs—A.B;, Huntingdon College, 1958. Lynda Leona Carman Cook, Quincy Fla.—B.S.. Florida State University, 1954. Edgar Armistead Crenshaw, Lineville —B.S., Howard College, 19S6. Joseph Jerome Day, Jr., Columbus, Ga.—B.S., University of Georgia, 1966. Clifford Ray Dean, Decatur, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Josie Lee Alford Eason, Geneva—B.S., Troy State College, 1952. Louise Foshee, . Maplesville — A.B., Huntingdon College, 1935. Lethia Myrtle Mize Foster, Wedowee —B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1952. Anne May Ward Gaither, Auburn—B. S., Livingston State College, 1957. James Roy Gantt, Wetumpka—B.S., Auburn University, 1923. Thomas Morris Goolsby, Jr., Wetumpka— B.S., University of Alabama, 1954. Bddis Hall Granger, Equality—B.S., Auburn University, 1952. . Eunice Ethelyn Johnson Green, Wedowee— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1M2. I Gola B. Still Hall, Titus—A.B., Huntingdon College, 1959. Charles Hamby, Prattville—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Ann Lee Ballard Harmon, Wetumpka —B.S., Auburn University, 195S. Harold Eugene Harris, Lineville—B. S„ Auburn University, 1952. Mavis Lee Griffin Harris, Lineville— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1951. Julia Inez Fuller Herring, Deatsville— B.S., Auburn University, 1956. Lillian Hodgson, Uriah—A.B., Florida State University, 1930. Jessie Merle Willoughby Hornsby, New Brockton—B.S., Troy State College, 1950. Laura Virginia Stovall Jennings, New-nan, Ga.—B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1949. Anne Buchanan Jones, LaFayette—A. B., Howard College, 1952. Lila Spearman Jordan, Ashland—B.S. Alabama College, 1936. I Floyd Furman Kearley, Montgomery— M.A., Harding College. 1956. John Douglas Kennedy, Silas — B.S., Livingston State College, 1959. William Ernest Kennedy, Hurtsboro— B.S., Auburn University, 1937. : Joyce Gene Griggs Kirkland, Morrow, Ga.—A.B., Brskine College, 1960. Frances- Jane Kershaw Lamberth, Alexander City—A.B., Alabama College, 1944. Winfred Alexander Lecroy, Clanton— B;S., Auburn University, 1948. - Robert Fulton Lewis, Jr., Opelika—B. ;S., Auburn University, 1952. M.S.. Auburn University, 1958. Frederick Barton Lindler, Chapin, S. C.—A.B., Newberry College, 1938. Robert Marion Lowe, Fort Payne—B. S., Auburn University, 1956. Henry Anson Martin, Ozark—B.S., Troy State College, 1957. Mary Nell Bachelor McCarter, Wetumpka— A.B., Huntingdon College, 1929. Mary Martha Thomas McClendon, Ozark—B.S., Auburn University, 1945. Dorothy Statz Frazier McConnell, Columbus, Ga.—B.A., Pan American College, 1956. Lois Vaughn Calne McCulIy, Safford— B.S., Auburn University, 1950. Charles Clifton McCurley, Opp—B.S., Auburn University, 1954. Ruby Clyde Chambers McLendon, Franklin, Ga.—B.S., University of Georgia, 1947. , Charles Winfield McNutt, Hanceville— B.S., Auburn University, 1950. John Laurence Meacham, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1959. Homer Dodwell Meeks, Jr., Dothan— 2—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 WAR EAGLE CAfETERIA in the Auburn Union Building W E L C O M E Students Faculty Friends Visitors CAFETERIA HOURS: Breakfast Daily 6:35 to 8:00 Lunch Daily .. _1_ 11:30 to 1:00 Dinner Daily 5:30 to 6:45 Breafast Sunday 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 B.S., Troy State College, 1951. Mary Katherine Mickle, Roanoke—B. A., University of Alabama, 1922. Lloyd Donald Minis, Clanton — B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1953. Fiances Julene Gothard Norris, Mill-brook— B.S., Troy State College. 1950. Charlie Williams Parker. Lanett—B. S., Auburn University, 1958. Hunter Bransc'omb Parker. Union Springs—B.S., Auburn University, 1952. Anne Lambert Penny. Repton—B.S., Livingston State College, 1955. Joseph Jackson Perry, Kinston—B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Edgar Fulmer Peterson, Jemison—B. S., Auburn University, 1956. Thelma Merle Tadlock Peterson. Dothan— B.S., Troy State College. 1954. Felix Webster Posey. Auburn—B.S.. Auburn University, 1955. Lou Ellen Proctor, Gadsden—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Thomas Jefferson Bayfield. Jr., Sylacauga— B.S., Howard College, 1950. Edward Reed, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Auburn University, 1950. Jere Minter Richardson, Columbus, Ga.—B.S., Berry College, 1949. Annie Daniel Robinson, Tallassee—B. S., Auburn University, 1957. Buford Alto Robinson, Clermont, Fla. —B.S., Auburn University, 1962. Susan Riley Salter, Andalusia—B.S., Alabama College, 1961. David Fench SamuefcL Sylacauga—B, S., Jacksonville State College, 1951. George Larry Scales, Fairfax—B.S., Auburn University, 1958. John William Scott, Atlanta, Ga.—B. S., University of Georgia, 1953. George Earle Sigler, Ja., Theodore— B.S., Livingston State College, 1955. Robert Davis Simpson, Newell—B.S. Jacksonville State College, 1950. Blllie Clifton Smith, Springhill, La.— B.S., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, 1953. Martha Ann Smith, Boaz—B.S., Aur burn University, 1950. Ha May McDow Spradlin, Woodland— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1952. Connie Caddell Sturkie, Gadsden—B. S., Auburn University, 1959. Foy Campbell Thompson, Camden, S. C.—B.S., Auburn University, 1963. Drew Chitwood Tinsley, Camden, Arkansas— B.S., Arkansas Agricultural Mechanical College, 1957. Annie Mae Paulk Turner, Union Springs—A.B., Alabama College, 1940. Margaret Janet Vaughn. Americus, Ga.—B.S., Valdosta State College, 1958. Margaret Melinda Branham Voss, Fruithurst—B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1955. Jeremiah Jackson Walker, Jr., West Point, Ga.—A.B., Mercer University, 1929. Clara Mae Brltt Washburn, Fairfax— B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Blanch Mildred Willett, Autaugaville —A.B., Alabama College, 1941. Robert Harold Willis, Ashland—B.S,, Auburn University, 1951. Mineola Foshee Wilson, Evergreen— B.S., University of Alabama, 1946. Carl Nelson Wood, Columbus, Ga.— B.A., Piedmont College, 1949. Malcolm Richard Wood, Lanett—B.S., Auburn University, 1969. Nancy Ophelia McLeod Wright, Wedowee— B.S., Jacksonville State College, 1946. Verdyne McClung Tork, Columbus, Ga. —B.S., Auburn University, 1958. Ned Young, Elba—B.S., Troy State College, 1948. Richard Earle Young, Auburn—B.S., Florence State College, 1944. Master of Science in Agricultural Economics Allen Jackson Brown, Union Springs —B.S., Auburn University, 1947. Thesis: "Resource Accumulation and Efficiency Aspects of Intergeneration Family Farm Business Arrangements." Master of Science in Agronomy Javad Ismail Bazargani, Tehran, Iran —B.S., American University of Beirut; 1958. Thesis: "Potassium Content of Certain Forage Species as Related to Their Relative Yield." John Ben Henderson, Camp Hill—B. S., Auburn University, 7957. Thesis: "Magnesium Availability of Certain Soils as Affected by Potassium and Soil pH." James Ray Watson, Jr., Anniston—B. S., Auburn University, 1967. Thesis: "Effect of Sodium on Oat Forage at Various Levels of Calcium, Magnesium. Potassium, Phosphorus and pH." Master of Science In Education Eva Shields Carr, Montgomery—B.S. Livingston State College, 1949. Thesis! "Job Opportunities and Requirements, for Beginning Office Workers in Montgomery, Alabama. Master of Agricultural Education Curtis Nathan Beverly, Sweet Water— B.S., Auburn University, 1949. Leonard ,D. Brooks, Ashland—B.S. 'Auburn University, 1948. Gilbert Marvin Butler, Sylvania—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Joseph Glenn Carmichael, Glenwood—. B.S.. Berry College, 1960. B.S., Auburn University, 1962. Eugene Howard Davis, Alexander City —B.S., Auburn University, 1948. William Harold Freeman, Bridgeport —B.S., Auburn University, 1951. Robert Augustus Griffin, Eden—B.S., Auburn University, 1959. Mohammed Ekramul Haque, Patna, Behar, India—B.S., Auburn University* 1959. Elmer Jackson, Lester—B.S., Auburn University, 1961. Charles Allen Knowles, Montevallo— B.S., Auburn University, 1949. Johnie Andrew Marable, Bay Minette —B.S., Auburn University, 1964. Randall Paramore, Midland City—B. S.. Auburn University, 1958. Earnest Van Pruett, Pasgah—B.S., Auburn University, 1951. William Fred Rush, Cragford—B.S., Auburn University, 1948. Norman Gale Spillers, Moulton—B.S. Auburn University, 1949. Elmer Oscar Strickland, Dadeville— B.S., Auburn University, 1956. Posey Ernest Thompson, Town Creek —B.S., Auburn University, 1939. (Continued on page 3) CURRY'S DRIVE-IN CLEANERS 'SERVICE IS OUR SPECIALTY' AND THE FAMOUS SPEED QUEEN COIN-OPERATED LAUNDROMAT Cleaners Open 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Free Parking Always Available Laundromat Open 24 Hours EXTRA URGE DRYERS - -zs More degree candidates listed (Continued from page 2) Wayne Tifton Trawick. Ash ford—B. S.. Auburn University, 1959. William Dwight Webb, Cullman—B.S. Auburn University, 1948. ' Master of Science in Entomology Matt Eitel Dakin, Jr., Skene, Miss.— B.R., Delta State College, 1958. Thesis. "The Cyrtacanthacrinae (Orthoptera) of Alabama." Master of Science in Fisheries Management Luther Glendale McBay, Hattiesburg, Miss.—B.S.. Mississippi Southern College, 1958. Thesis: "The Biology of Tilapia Nilotiga Linnaeus.' 3faster of Home Economies Sara Bess Kelly Hay, Auburn—B.S., University of Georgia, 1933. Master of Science in Home Economics Hazel Virginia Killingsworth Fancher, Flomaton—B.S.. Alabama College, 1950. Thesis: "Relationship of Poultry Products and Marketing Practices to Alabama Cities of Two Sizes." Susan Charlotte Mi 11 is. Crystal Springs, Miss.—B.S., Auburn University, 1957. Thesis: "A Study of Methods Used in Achieving Practical Home Management Experience for Married Women Home Economics Students." Felicia Annette Ray, Birmingham—B. S., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "An, Evaluation of the Home Management .Residence Course as Expressed by Graduates of Auburn University from 1955 to .19G0." Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering Ernest Cary Bryan, Union Springs—B. M.E., Auburn University, '1958. Thesis: "An Analysis of a Nonlinear Mechanical Vibration Problem." Franklkin Louis Davis, Jr.. Auburn— B.M.E.. Auburn University, 1955. Thesis: "Frictional Losses of Air-Lubricated Hydrodynamic Journal Bearings." Gerald Faust Gillis, Dothan—B.M.E., Auburn University. 1959. Thesis: "Stresses in Rotating Elliptical Plates." Donald Clarence Raney, Birmingham —B.S., University of Kentucky. 1954. Thesis: "A Study of the Stability Criteria for Numerical Solutions of Transient Heat Conduction Equations." James Fritchett Smith. Louisville. Ky. •—B.M.E., University of Louisville. 195S. Thesis: "The Development of an Internal Combustion Engine Carburation System Employing Electrical Control." William Donald Whetstone, Birmingham— B.M.E., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "Transient Thermal Stresses in Flat Plates and Hollow Circular Cylinders." Ma«*er of Science in Nuclear Science Donald Ray Wood, Gadsden—B.E.P., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "A Coincidence Scintillation Spectrometer." Master of Science in Pharmacy Irving Wade Waters. Baldwyn, Miss.— B.S., Delta State College, 1958. Thesis: '.'The Effect of Altered Carbohydrate Metabolism on Barbiturate Detoxica-tion." Master of Science in Physics Jirr.es Michael Scarborough, Lockhart —B.E.P., Auburn University, 1958. Thesis: "Construction of a Positive Ion Bombardment Apparatus." John Paul Scheiwe, Auburn—B.E.P., Auburn University, 1958. Thesis: "Design of a 150 Kilovolt Cockroft-Walton Accelerator." Master of Science in Poultry Husbandry Robert Nelson Brewer, Phil Campbell —B.S., Auburn University, 1955. Thesis: "The Development of Immunity in Chickens to the Large Intestinal Roundworm, Ascaridia Galli, Schrank," Master of Science (Psychology) Frank Horry Price, Jr., Decatur—B. S., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "An Assessment and Comparison of Scores of Selected Groups of College Students on a Standard Supervisory Skill Test." Bobby Michael Thornton, Gadsden— B.S., Auburn University, 1959. Thesis: "Dimensions of Perceived Relationship as Related to Marital Adjustment." SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE Bachelor of Science in Agriculture - Bobby Earl Anderson, Thomasville; Winston O'Neal Bice, Clanton; Jerry Caldwell, Tallassee; Billy" Ray Carroll, Fort Payne, David Woolley Crosland, Jr., Montgomery; Douglas Franklin Rosser, Piedmont; Thomas Leroy Spruiell, Leeds; Edward Davis Walker, Montgomery; William Garner Wyatt, Jr., Tuscaloosa; Rudy Paul Yates, Woodland. Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Adm inistration Jame? Walter Crawford, Gallion; Robert Raymond Frayne, Summerdale; George Foster Guess, Jr., Stevenson; Samuel Wayne Thames, Evergreen. • Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Engineering John Newton Sulla van, Bessemer. Bachelor of Science in Forestry Jerry Robert Davidson, Vinegar Bend; Hey Man! Dig these cool new items for your pad: Columbia Portable Phonos Transistor Radios New Dave Gardner Disc Herbert Music Rainer Clark Ezell, Lisman; Arthur Henry Kirkby, Jr., Sheffield; Neil McNair, Mason, Jr., Red Level; Joseph Dennis O'Gara, Ja., Bessemer; Charles Edward Sellers, Jr., Ramer; Balford O'Neal Thompson, Bay Minette; William Thomas Wooden, Cleveland, Tenn.; George Gray Woodyard, Jr., Calvert. Bachelor of Science In Zoological Sciences Charles Otis Knowles (Zoology), Tallassee; Vernon Eugene Oglivie /"Fisheries Management), Nashville, Tenn. SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND THE ARTS Bachelor of Architecture William Hamilton Huntington, Hazel-hurst, Miss.; James Webster Mount, Brantley; Huey Stanton Wright, Pensa-cola, Fla. Bachelor of Applied Art Jean Anita Camp, Gadsden; Reuben Owen Dykes, III, Newrian, Ga.; Robbie. Ann Gibbons Harris, -Birmingham; Dan; Greely Laird, Birmingham; Ruth Mun-dine, Birmingham; James Roger Nelson, Birmingham; Charles Montgomery Patterson, Tucker, Ga. Bachelor of Arts Anita Louise Lewis Hoodless, Milton Fla. Bachelor of Building Construction John Arthur Cook, Czenovia, New York; Roger Callaway Dickinson, Al-any, Ga.; Robert Austin Hornsby, Jr., Eufaula; John Morrill Laurendine, Mobile; Jere Louis Lillich, Birmingham; Dan Franklin Nelson, Decatur; Alva Morgan Williams, Jr., Panama City, Florida. Bachelor of Interior Design Gerald Eugene Carter, Montgomery. SCHOOL OF CHEMISTRY Gus Symmes Coats, Auburn; Ellis Gray Fleming, Salitpa; James William George, Florence; Frederick Lee Gras-feder, Union City, Tenn.; Howard Roger Hrbek, Birmingham; Michael Warren Maldney, Norcross, Ga.; James Arnold McKirizey, Brent; Samuel Edward Mc- Rae, Mobile; Charles David Montgomery, Florence; Paul Miller Waite, Grove Hill. Bachelor of Science in Laboratory Technology Katie Elizabeth GoUlsby, Mobile; Molly May Earnest Miller, Opelika. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Bachelor of Science in Education Sberrell Winona Berry Alexander, Prattville; Linda Marie Anderson, Atlanta, Ga.; Dorothy Marie Ashcraft, Mobile; Patricia Grace Bailey, Roanoke; Thomas 'Richard Barr, Montgomery; Electa Agnes Chappell Bentley, Phenix City; Ouida Ann Blackshear, Panama City, Fla.; Myrna Laura Blanton, Punta Gorda, Fla.; Jack • Marvin Burkett, Georgiana; Frank Butensehon, III, Oxford; Russell La Payette Chandler, Tal- (Continued on page 4) 3—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 The Bonanza Burger 'Short Order Specialists Chicken & Shrimp Baskets 90 For The Best In Food And The Finest Service OPEN 4 P.M. to 12 P.M. Closed Monday A DIAMOND IS A GIRL'S BEST FRIEND Engagement Rings and Wedding Bands All Styles . . . All Prices! Budget Terms Can Be Arranged For All Your Jewelry Needs See . . . Jockisch Jewelry "Auburn's Oldest Jeweler" N. College Street TU 7-5491 TAKE A HINT The best place to buy books and equipment for all your classroom needs Oi^Jpfi) CU> University Book Store fif BUY AND SELL USE'S BOOkS loco-feed IN the UWION BUI IdiNQ Editorials Let's Get Tough Let's get tough. The University of Alabama did so last week when they expelled two students and placed over eighty others on either suspension or probation for cheating incidents last spring. If such measures are necessary to maintain honesty in our classrooms, then, by all means, lets get honest with ourselves and get tough with cheaters. Auburn has been for so long indifferent, incurious, and unconcerned; completely detached from cheating, ts practitioners and its inherent moral degradation that the apathy has become instilled in the mind of almost every student here. We would have the college install posthaste Hiroagh-out the school an honor system under which violators would be perfunctorily dismissed. Each quarter it's the same old business of rifling trash cans, bribing janitors, breaking into professor's offices, student syndicates dealing in final exams, and the countless stolen glances, passed information, trading notes, and "cheat sheets." People talk about the weather, but they never do anything about it. University leaders talk about applying brakes to dishonesty in our classrooms, but they seldom do anything about it. It's time to get tough. Plan Ahead Last Thursday night, after a drought of entertainment all summer long, two major events were scheduled on the campus. Fortunately, or unfortunately depending upon your view, rain forced the cancellation of one of them. However, the fact remains that these two affairs, each of which would have in its own right drawn a fine crowd, were inadvertently set for the same night one haflf •hour apart. This unfortunate mistake could easily have been prevented had either of the two sponsoring organizations only bothered to check the quarterly calendar in the Union. Summer quarter is probably lacking in entertainment moreso than any other term and why the student body 'must have to suffer the anguish of a decision of which •affair to attend and the regrets of missing the other is •-most unfortunate. It is the sincere hope of the PLAINSMAN that such mistakes of planning can be corrected in the future to allow students the full benefit of good entertainment on the campus. — McCullars Summer's Almost Gone Now that summer is almost gone and the last minute struggle for those grades is under way, unshaven faces are becoming more and more prevalent and the bleary, haggard look of no sleep, long hours of study, and a couple of No-Doze is making its quarterly appearance. The quiet early morning streets are flooded with light from midnight-oil lamps at the desks of ambition. This quarter we did differently from those past in which we were forced by necessity at the term's end to exist entirely upon a diet of study and no sleep for the days prior to exams. Yes, this time we planned ahead. Now, only two weeks of 24 hour a day work might possibly save us from all that planning and remarkable foresight and the laziness that makes every quarter like the last and 'next quarter' the time to work. to Foster the Auburn Spirit JOHN WALLACE — Editor HUNKY LAW — Business Manager RONNIE McCULLARS — Managing Editor PEYTON McDANIEL — Sports Editor TOMMY AMASON — Circulation Manager BOBBY HYDRICK — Advertising Manager ALAN TAYLOR — Copy Editor ANN WALKER — Secretary PHOTOGRAPHER — Larry Bevis DOT SARRIS — Features Plainsman offices are located in Room 318 of the Auburn Union and in The Lee County Bulletin building on Tichenor Avenue. 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. The Plainsman is the official student newspaper of Auburn University and is written and edited by responsible students. Opinions published herein are not necessarily those of the administration. Publication date is Wednesday and circulation is 5,000. More degree candidates listed (Continued on page 3) lassee; Harry McDonough Clark, Mobile: Elizabeth Ellis Cobb, Birmingham; Franklin Melvin Conary, Ellsworth, Maine; William Henry Cook, Cairo, Ga.; Rubye Evelyn Jones Coulter, Columbus, Ga.; Mallnee Foster Crawford, Mobile; John Albert Cummings. Wedowee; Annette Willcoxon Davis, Tuskegee; Vester Ree Dobson, Jr., Lanett; Thomas Byers Doner, Auburn Frances Deanna Duffey, Carrollton, . Ga.; Sandra Ellen Ennis, Opelika; Ann Ford, Auburn; Sue Ellen Scott Ghahre-mani, Elmore; James Clyde Gibson, Jr., Columbus, Ga.; Judith Gillespie, Montgomery; Marvena Dick Hammond, Ashland; Jerry Dunaway Halt, Georgetown, Ga.; Marcilla.Ann Jacobs Heath, Perry, Ga.; Sandra Lynn Hampton Hickman, Talladega; Barbara Jean Hocking, . Auburn." Nancy Elaine Holdbrooks, Wetumpka; William James Ikerman, Selma; Willie Clair Boyett Johnson, Rockford; Bill Vernon Klrkpatrick, Rogersville, Tenn.; Martha. Lee Littlefield, Lipscomb; Lillian Lee Lother.^' Birmingham; Sarah Faye Malone Lowery, Belmont, Miss.; Jane Cole ' Lbwry; Summerville, Ga.; John Herod Mann,' Jr., Rockford; Peggy Jane Mathis, Opelika; William Roger Mathis' Mobile; Calvin Homer McCar- Iey, Jr., LaFayette; William Sylvester McFarland, Opelika; Addigene Grubbs McKay, Mobile; Norma Gayle McKtn-ney, Pine Level; Odell Bay ward Mc- Manus, Hamilton, Ga. John Lawrence Minor, Clanton; Thomas Gordon Nunn, Wadley; Danforth Ferrie Pritchett, Grantville, Ga.; Shelby Joyce Quinn, West Blocton; Sandra Ann Ross, Phenix City; William Patrick Sellers, Mobile; Melba Jeanette Ham Sprulell, Sylacauga; Warren Thomas Starke, Seale; Marcus • Crowder Stewart, Jr., Fort Payne; Virginia Louise Martin Stone, Hurtsboro; Mortimer Jefferson Thurman, Sylacauga; Sara Jean Waller, Roanoke; Lynda Goode Walraven, Montgomery; James Hoyt" Welch, Alexander City; Mary Patricia Wheeler, Lanett; James Orrin Williams, Sylacauga. Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Education Jimmy Warren Beason, Springville; Joshia Showell Robins Carothers, Jr., Winfield; Charles Wallace Reed, Pine Hill; Homer Lee Stoker, Auburn; Henry Austin Tidwell, Jr., Auburn; Richard Waco Wright, Graham. Bachelor of Science in Home Economics Education Patricia Ann Garrett Bishop, Albert-ville; Betty Jean-Gauntt Canada, Talladega; Mary Elizabeth Dopson, Montgomery; Elizabeth Ann Johnson, Douglas-ville, Ga.; Rosalyn Ketchum, Jackson; Mary Lou Kolb McNair, Ozark; Vita Annette Nail, Georgiana; Mary Etta Van Devender Terrell, Birmingham'; Gloria Ann Thomas, Pell City, Margaret Gle-nora fillery, Riverview. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Bachelor of Aeronautical Administration Edward Snow Bolen, Chattanooga, Tenn.; .Louis Nelson Brown, Jr., Birmingham ; Don Harold Burleson, Sheffield; John Philmore Chapman, Atmore; Richard Eugene Davis, Crossville; James Harold Dorris, Florence; George Chandler Mapes, Jr., Corning, New "York; John Alton Synco, Dothan. " Bachelor of Aeronautical Engineering Daniel Elliott Acker, Anderson, S. C.; Marx Hilliary Branum, Greenville; Cecil David Creel, Andalusia; James David Hooper, Tarrant; Charlie Frank Johnson, Phenix City; Kurt Lee Keene, Columbus,- Ga.; Roy Clifford LeCroy, Brundidge; Jim Jordan Lindsay, Headland; Cecil Warren Messer, Clanton; George ; Wayne Mobley, Gadsden; Winston PoVter Newton, Phenix City; Ennis Allen Roper, Birmingham; James David Tadlock, Andalusia; Thomas Phillip Tytula, Signal Mountain, Tenn. Bachelor of Civil Engineering Terry Grantham Arnold, Montgomery; Ahmed Maher Atassf, Aleppo, Syria, U. A. R.; Farrior Eugene Channell, Alexander City; Robert Stanley Fishbough, Balboa, Canal Zone; Ronald Lee Harmon, Dothan; Bobby Ray Laseter, Dothan; Robert Edwin Lunsford, Birmingham; Mark William McCurdy, Henegar; George Edward Ramey, Mobile; Marcus Eugene Shelby, Livingston; Richard Lamar Thompson, Anniston; Gordon Warren, Jr., Chipley, Fla. Bachelor of Electrical Engineering Julian Gregory Angus, Cali, Colombia, South America; Robert Avery, Alexander City; Richard Clark Bishop, Helena; Cecil Brooks Brown, Woodland; Harrison Brunson, Enterprise; Richard Lynn Buckelew, Boaz; Robert Ray Cobble, Fort Payne; Charles Benson Cole, Birmingham; Stephen Paul Dean, Dothan; Richard Elmer Dedels, Birmingham ,- William Edwin Dowdell, Auburn; Donald Cooper Dutton, Mobile; James Richard Fucci, Columbus, Ga.; George Michael Garber, Tuscumbia; Louis Leon Gibbs, Birmingham; Milton Charles Ha-wie. Mobile; Leon Jerry Johnson, Birmingham. Lumey David Jump, Jr., Haughton, La.; William Marion Justice, Pensacola, Fla.; Henry Robert Lane, Boaz; Richard LeVoy Manley, Fairfax; Joe Morris McKay, Auburn; William Stewart Moorehead, Jr., Leesburgh, Fla.; John Bower Overmeyer, Jr., Mobile; George Christopher Parr, Helena; Harold Hugo Scarbrough,. Warrington, Fla.; Donald Peter Schambeau, Pensacola, Fla.; Jimmy South, Montgomery; Patrick Thur-low Spence, Macon, Ga.; James Kenneth Stephens, Yazoo City, Miss.; James Howard Stewart, :Jr., Anniston; James Eugene Strickling, Jr., Birmingham; Gerald Newton Summers, Jackson, Tenn.; Richard Delano Thompson, Clanton; Richard Warren Tingle, Montgomery; John Frank Wilson, Jr., Birmingham; Guy Eugene Womack, Cedartown, Ga.; James Kenneth Wright, Decatur. Bachelor of Engineering Physics John Brewer Beck, Childersburg; Ralph Montgomery Ford, Tuscaloosa; Paul Jackson Hays, Hueytown; Mabry Stone Phillips, Jr., Albany, Ga. Bachelor of Industrial Management Charles Walter Adams, Birmingham; John Olen Ballard, Montgomery; Vernon Eugene Brackett, Mobile; Ralph Carroll Brown, Clayton; Wayne Culvln Burns, Talladega; William Joseph Callaway, Macon, Ga.; Robert Gerald Chandler, Mobile; Lee Douglas Coker, Atmore; Wyman Moye Colson, Mobile; Thomas Edward Crowder, Franklin, Ky.; Elliott Durwood Dominey, Dudley, Ga.; Thomas Lee Farris, Fortson, Ga.; Larry Addison Gordon, Alexander City; Alvis Gerald Hand, -Mulga; Cornelius Herbert Harrell, Jr.,. Montgomery; Richard Dean Hartley, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Charlie Wilburn Henson, Moultrie, Ga.; Thomas Elver Hill, Jr., Pinson; Florian Janes, Demopolis. Rethel Houston Jones, Geneva; John Leon Kidd, Jr., Birmingham; George Marvin Kuffskie, Mobile; Joseph Lake, "Birmingham; William Austin Lank-ford; Jr., Birmingham; Maurice Franklin Law, Jr., Linden; Jack Carlton Lewis, Georgiana; George Werner Lind-enmuth, Ozark; Albert Manoske, Brook-side; Gary Clements Martin, Sacramen-ton, Calif.; James Douglas McCune, Wetumpka; George Edward Meeks, Opelika; Don Arthur Morris, Uriah; Thomas Edward Mullis, Phenix City; Billy Samuel Nelson, Clanton; Wiley Graham Newman, Birmingham; Charles Edward Olson, Jr., Birmingham; Benjamin Franklin Padgett, Jr., Griffin, Ga.; Jerry Elbert. Page, Birmingham; Henry Eugene Peace, Jr., Birmingham; Jack Arthur Price, Mount; Olive; James Daniel Proctor, Reform. Edward Louis Rand, Atlanta, Ga.; Culver Leonard Revell, Jr., Columbus, Ga.; Raymond Eugene Robbins; Sumi-ton; Daniel Ruffner Robinson, Signal Mountain, Tenn.; Donald Edward Russell, Monroeville; William Joseph Ry-land, Selma; Louie Daniel Sansing, Birmingham; James Dempsey Selvey, Val-ricb, Florida; Charles Edward Shaffer, Jr., Birmingham; Newton Marriner Smith, Mobile; Ernest Gary Stringer, Birmingham.; . Myron . Scott . Stringer, Florence, Harold Gray Taiilbee, Mobile; Max Ray Taylor. Hamilton; Donald Carey Thomason, Jr., Talladega; Robert Harold Tuck, Mount Olive; Clyde Anthony Turner, III, Montgomery; Charles Raymond Vines, Bessemer; Jerald Bryan White, Talladega. Bachelor of Mechanical Engineering Alfredo Arevalo, Carcacas,' Venezuela, South America; Manouchehr Azmoudeh, Teheran, Iran; Ralph Edward Bailey, Jr., Eagle Lake, Fla.; James William Bannister, Sylacauga; Robert Patrick Black, Decatur, Ga.; Thomas Neal Bras-selle, Albany, Ga.; Alwin Horatio Carl- Crossville; Gordon Edward DeRamus, ton, Gadsden; Robert Malcolm Croft, Jr. Selma: Jerome Rae Dickey. Montgomery; Bernard Anthony Downing. Jr., Mobile; James Wallace Fleming, Mon-roeville; Howard Stephen Fogelson, Charlotte, N. C; William Aubrey Fon-dren, Hartford; William Long Forbes, Birmingham; Odus William Francis, Dothan; Joseph Neil Frederick, Birmingham; Donald David Freeman, Birmingham; Jerry Wayne Glidewell, East Gadsden; Richard Collier Green, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Ralph McKinley Hoodless, Jr., Milton, Fla.; Alan Clyde Horn, Tullahoma, Tenn.; Harry Linden Hunt, Sheffield; James Harris Hurst, Trinity; Panos George Ioannides, Serres, Greece; David Ard Kite, Phenix City; Patrick Joseph McGeever, Jr., Birmingham; Jerry Wayne Miller, Boaz; Rondal Curtis Mize, Cullman; William Robert Murdock, Jr.; Birmingham; John Michael O'Brien, III; Anniston; James Meriwether Patterson, Tucker, Ga.; Morris Gene Porter, Birmingham; Hugh Milton Roberts, Birmingham; Gordon Lee Robertson, Jr., Clanton; Gordon Mack Ross, Phenix City; David Killough Searcy, Trussville; James KInser Shelton, Eclectic; Arthur John Steely, Jr., Birmingham; Andrew Jackson Stephens, Mobile; Carl Hugh Warren, New Hope; Thomas Watson Winstead, Gadsden; John Arnold Wol-ler, Decatur; William Bryan Woodson, Tullahoma, Tenn. Bachelor of Textile Engineering Edward Lee Eubanks, Wetumpka; Charles Allen Maddox, Childersburg. Bachelor of Textile Management Thomas David Vivin, Jr., Sylacauga; Glenda Ree- Bolton, Sylacauga; Bill Dodd Morton, Boaz; Roland Donald Sledge, Fairfax. SCHOOL OF HOME ECONOMICS Bachelor of Selene in Home Economics Mary Sue Gann (Home Demonstration) Hamilton; Marion Snow McGowan Proctor (Clothing and Textiles), Reform; Janett Rebecca Rogers (Clothing and Textiles), Sylacauga; Sylvia Cook Thomas (Clothing and Textiles), Glen-wood, Ga. SCHOOL OF PHARMACY Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy Jackie Sue Crawford, Bessemer; Paul Alden Harrison, Abingdon, Va.; Belar Buris Hunt, Jr., Montgomery; Luther Theodore Long, Jr., Mobile; Roy Wise McClendon, Jr., Shawmut; Walter Horace McNabb, Jr., Ducktown, Tenn.; John Eldridge Reid, Grove Hill; Fred Melvin Woods, Jr., Piedmont. SCHOOL OF SCIENCE AND LITERATURE Bachelor of Arts Mary Ruth Barrow, Auburn; Patricia Margaret Drlggs, Austin, Minn.; John Wilson Dunlop, Auburn; Frederick Oliver Fay, Jr., Union Springs; Marie Dea- Bon Fenn, Billingsley; Barbara Virginia Hollberg, Senoia, Ga.; Gerald David Johnson, Bremen, Ga.; Marguerite Garner Lovelace, Decatur; Clarence Irving Meeks, III, AndersSn, S. C.; Edward Mobley Pattillo, Tallassee; Ellis Warren Pope, Opelika; Alice King Prather, Auburn; John Davis Sample, Hartselle; William Langham Thompson, III, Troy; Rudolph Terrell Tidwell, Camp Hill; Sandra Louise Vaughn, Montgomery; Price Stevens Williams, Jr., Mobile. Bachelor of Science Donald Walter Bishop, Guntersvllle; Thomas Frederick Borst, Birmingham; Herman Jerome Clark, Mobile; Charles Acker Cooper, Birmingham; Bobby Bo-dine Copeland, Arab; John Dupree Davis, Dothan; Joseph Albert Dolan, Cedartown, Ga.; Frances Tomllyn Eagar, Auburn; Mamie Sue Welch Fox. Alexander City; Constance lone Dufford Garner, Birmingham; Michael Andrew Gray, Dothan; William Fay Guyton, Auburn; Martha Blanche Hodges, Headland; William David Jones, Decatur, Ga.; Alexander Gennady Kosolapoff, Auburn. Frank Martin Lester, Pulaski. Tenn.; Charles William Me Rae, Austell, Ga.; Mona Leah Newman, Tyler;" William David Parker, Marion Junction; Don Watson Powell, Birmingham; Jack Kenneth Pruett, Newton; Regina Autrey Rhoades, Auburn; Peter Robertson, Jr., Irvington, New York; John Paul Rod-gers, Mobile; Gus William Schlitzkus, Columbus, Ga.; Noble Richard Thompson, Tallassee; Alfred Waldrep, Jr., Talladega; Donald Robert Wheeler, Montgomery; Nancy Ann Kemp Williams, Auburn; Jerry Lea Williamson, Birmingham; Lowell Asher Womack, Gar-dendale Bachelor of Science in Business Administration Doyle Brady Adams, Stevenson; Donald Marrison Armlstead, Montgomery; Edward Ellis Barnes, Loxahatchee, Fla.; Jerry Max Barnes, Bay Minette; Robert Anthony Benz, Warrington, Fla.; Roy Conrad Billingsley, Prattville; John Clement Boehl, Jr., Pensacola, Fla.; Robert Charles Boland, Opelika; William Larry Booth, Cocoa, Fla.; Walter James Boucher, Opelika; Harris Stanton Burns, Florence; Lytle DeWitt Burns, III, Atlanta, Ga.; Ronald Tipton Coffee, Selma, James Michael Coker, Atmore; Charles Dubose Cole, Monroeville; John Hubert Crlm, Bessemer; Jesse Elbert Croley, Atmore; Merwyn Erie Danley, Montgomery; Stanley Eugene Dyal, Mobile; James Tucker Fry, III, Epworth, Ga.; Bobby Joe Hardy, East Tallassee. Dudley Bryan Hare, Mlnter; William Ted Heath, Enterprise; Marvin Merrltt Holman, Dothan; Wilbur Jackson James, Jr., Birmingham; Damon Albert Jones, Miami, Fla.; William Edward Kemper, Jr., Columbus, Ga.; Edward Franklin Kern, Atlanta, Ga.; James Autrey Man-ley, Jr., Macon, Ga.; Don Carl Marino, Birmingham; James Larry McMlllon, Anniston; Billy Marshall Murchison, Birmingham; John Jordan Newman, Gadsden; Atha Ann Parham, Birming- 4—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 Letter To Editor To The Editor: I read Mr. Larry Clark's letter to you and your reply in the issue of The Plainsman dated Wednesday, August 10, 1960. I was one of the irresponsible delegates representing the Third District of Alabama. I am a native of Lee County. I did not ask anyone personally to vote for me in Lee County but received approximately 3,600 votes. These voters must have had a different opinion about me. Our delegation, by and large,; was composed of men and women of character and intelligence, dedicated to our'state and its ideals. I, for one, paid all my expenses from the time I left home on. Saturday, the. 9th until I returned on Saturday, the 16th. This is not the act of an irresponsible man, or should I have allowed my expenses to be paid by others. I recommend you read carefully and prayerfully the Democratic platform adopted in Los Angeles. You will agree it is the most socialistic platform ever adopted by a supposedly free people anywhere. It promises everything to everybody — less work for more pay. Where the •money comes from is of no consequence. The civil rights plank — can we accept it? Will you accept race mixing in every area of community life? Will you integrate all of our public and private schools? Will you integrate our churches, service clubs, country clubs and masonic lodges? Will you integrate our restaurants, motels, hotels, swimming pools, etc? Will you approve dating of colored boys and white girls, eventual intermarriage? Will you approve a mulatto race for the Southland? Token integration is a shame aad hypocritical. It will not be accepted by the NAACP. The FEPC will meddle in every phase of business. Would you like this? If we Southern people agree to a gradual approach, we might as. well go overboard for it all. Night follows day and so will total integration follow partial. Our national government has been steadily robbing us of our birth right, our freedom, and liberty since 1933. Some of us are getting battle weary and too old to fight. We need young and strong reinforcement, not ap-. peasers but men of character and ability, men who can see through the fruad and hypocrisy that is now being forced upon us. The only reason for the assault on the South is to control the block vote in the large population centers of the North and West. The next president of the United States must be a man who knows the Constitution and is willing to follow it. His respect for it must be profound, the right of states respected, especially the conduct of local affairs, education, voting, and police power. Our Supreme Court should consist of our best legal minds, not politicians of questionable ability. The above things disturb me greatly and they are the reasons I wanted to represent our state as a delegate. I was greatly disappointed. I wish to commend Larry Clark for his defense of Alabama's delegation. Sincerely, I. J. Scott ham: Ashbarn Richard Plland, Jr., Griffin, Ga.; Joseph Edwin Pope, Tucson, Ariz.; Elmer Edward Pruitt, Birmingham; Luther Beebe Ray, III, Macon, Ga.; Jimmy Wayne Russell, Cedar-town, Ga.; Clarence Lavert Seale, Jr., Bessemer; Haywood Mai Sport, Montgomery; John Kellett Seinhauer, Decatur, Ga.; Gilbert Vernon Stewart, Sylacauga; Edward Allen Sullivan, Jr., Mobile; Greene Alonza Taylor, Jr., Rome, Ga.; Donald Morris Walters, Auburn; Jerry Max Watson, Gadsden; Patricia Wells, Trussville; Rather ine Thompson Wine, Tuscumbia; Jack Emory Worthlngton, Pepperell; Avery La-vaughn Yarbrough, Alexander City, to be moved — House on corner has interesting historic past by Dot Sarris The quaint old house on the corner of North College and East Thach, the site of Auburn University's new library, is a familiar sight to most Auburn students. Not so familiar to us, however, is the wealth of history held within the walls of this house — most interesting to those who know of it and most meaningful to the people of Auburn. Built in the 1800's by Frank Dillard, we trace the owners of the home back to the Glenn family. At this time John Bowles Glenn was President of the Board of Trustees of the college. Following the Civil War, John's son, E. T. Glenn and his family moved into the house. Elizabeth (Glenn) Wilder, whose mother—Maude (Glenn) Smith was born in the house in 1873, is a resident of Auburn. Her home is located on the street that bears the name of her ancestors — Glenn Street. Charles B. Glenn, Superintendent Emeritus of the Birmingham City Schools is the only Glenn living today who lived in the home. General J. H. Lane, who; had served as an adjutant, on Robert E. Lee's staff during the ;Civil War bought the house in 11882. Lane who had been teaching at VPI for a time after the! war ended, decided to go into business for himself. He opened the "Lane School for Boys", an aristocratic school in Virginia. In this postwar period, however, the school failed and Lane was forced to seek other means of employment. The general called upon a friend, Dr. Leroy Broun, who sat at that time President of the college at Auburn. Broun, a fellow Virginian, secured for Lane a position on the Auburn faculty and the Lane's came to Auburn to live. General and Mrs. Lane had four lovely daughters, all of whom graduated from Auburn. Lidie, the oldest, went to teach in Virginia, but became ill shortly afterward and returned to Auburn, a semi-invalid to spend her remaining years. Lidie, who never married died at the age of 30. Mary, the next daughter married Dr. Petrie, of the History Department at Auburn, who later became Dean of the Graduate School. In 1902 General Lane gave the Pe-tries a lot behind his, on which they built their home. Kate never married and is still living in Auburn. Lottie, the youngest, married Mathew Scott Sloan, an Auburn graduate in the School of Engineering. Sloan later became President of the Brooklyn — Edison Company in New York. The Sloans had one child whose name was Lidie. Lidie (Sloan) McBurney • lives in New York with her husband and two sons— Sloan and Lane. After Lane's death, his home went to Kate and the Petries. Mr. and Mrs. Petrie died in 1947 and 1943 respectively and the property was reverted to Kate the only survivor. Kate kept an apartment in one wing of the old house until 1950, although she had another residence. When the college requested to buy the land on which the house stood, Kate was a little reluctant to part with the house that held Auburn Vet School tops again For the fourth consecutive year Auburn University veterinary students have topped those of all other veterinary school on a special U. S. Department of Agriculture veterinary examination. The examination is given to the senior class in each veterinary school across the country. for her so many fond memories. However," the property was finally sold to the college for the purpose of constructing a new library for the University. Kate was very pleased when the Woman's Club of Auburn decided to purchase the house, whose history is so intertwined in the history of Auburn and to preserve it. The house itself, which is a pure Victorian cottage is one of the few of its type still in existence. With the city's approval, the house will be moved to Cary-wood, a permanent memorial to the people whose live's it has involved and a lasting reminder of it's facinating history. The house itself will tell the story of its tenants who were pioneers in the days when Auburn was but a small college. The land on which the house once stood, the site of the new library for Auburn University, will stand Auburn Circle K to be represented at national conclave in Toronto Auburn University will be represented at the fifth annual convention of Circle K International, meeting in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, by four delegates. Attending the Aug. 24-26 session will be Club President Bert Hitchcock, Demopolis; Vice President Jim Kilpatrick, Opelika; Andy Gentry, Auburn, and J. D. Faulkner, Ft. Payne. Gentry will enter the international oratorical contest at the convention, speaking on the topic "Build Individual Maturity." Although the Auburn Circle K is only six months old, the club is entering the international service award competition. The 72 members have completed 37 projects for a total of 1400 man hours of labor since re-organizing last March. Dr. John E. Deloney has been named as faculty sponsor to Circle K replacing J. Grady Cox who resigned in order to complete work on his Ph.D. degree. Deloney is associate professor of agricultural education. At the final meeting of the club Monday night, two members were tapped: Steve Davies of Decatur and Bob Preskett, Ft. Walton Beach. A "sweetheart locket" was presented to Mary Ann Faulkner, Montgomery, who has served as the club's "sweetheart" for the summer term. The first meeting of the fall [quarter will be a reception honoring Dr. Deloney on Sept. 26. a mark of progress toward an even greater Auburn. 5—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 WAR EAGLE THEATRE W E D N E S D A Y - T H U R S D A Y Two Color Westerns! Richard Eagan—Dorothy Molone TENSION AT TABLER0CK' — A N D — THE BADLANDERS' Alan Ladd—Ernest Borgnine FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY ... . - i ALL THE EXCITEMENT THE SCREEN CAN HOLD! You'll see H from the edge of your seat J R0RY CALHOUN I N H A L E - CONNIE NINES - JOHN G E N T R Y ^ Mm wiDESCRttR jltolnflonfteptaklai .,»,„», HIMMtinafal J j | TUESDAY OF NEXT WEEK KIRK DOUGLAS in IN THE BIG SKY' Wed. through Thurs. DOUBLE FEATURE Gates Open at 6:45 p.m. F i r s t Show at 7:15 p.m. 110 SMASH HIT SONGS! fj* lrst SMRHMD ut spu PMfMMM SECOND BIG HIT: Robert Mitchum Curt Jergens In 'The Enemy Below' A SUBMARINE THRILLER IN CINEMASCOPE Friday •• Saturday Wed. - Thurs. - Fri. AUGUST 17-19 "ONE OF THE BEST PICTURES YOU WILL SEE THIS YEAR!" —Atthet Winston, Post RT7HE7qP? SUir*»f INKME MMCT- IBTHW SMS • 5*0* SHNOM?' IMilkilllM>IH-IHaMMM«l»Wm' Saturday, Aug. 20 DOUBLE FEATURE For every girl who was ever involved with an older man... BLUEBEARD'S/3 HONEY/MOONS • itorriK* GEORGE CORHME SANDERS. CALVET Sun. - Mon. - Tues. Begins 6 p.m. Saturday! t V . ON THE SHEEN ATUSTI rfctmnnm JWTKU f RED CLARK with -U EDDIE F0Y, Jr. *r JEAN STAPLET0N * Next Wed. - Thurs. AUGUST 24-25 NEVER BEFORE ON XTHE SCREEN! KIM FREDRIC NOVAK* MARCH hvmmmmk-hmommm — P L U S — Gregory Peck Ava Gardner Susan Hayward in 'The Snows of Kilmanjara' Plus Chapter 14 of "Wild Bill Hickok's Great Adventures." PLAY BINGO TONIGHT Sun. - Mon. - Tues. AUGUST 21-23 Hilarious Comedy Hit BASED ON THE BOOK THAT HIT AMERICA HI THE FUNNYBONEI r'C„ DOMS DAY DAVID NWEH fpi^MifTtM) I WEOWSllS/ IMS PACE • S n K M K TM Freshman requirement, other changes made by council (Continued from page 1) quarters of residence has been raised from 50 percent to 60 percent. However, there will be no change in the present requirements concerning students in quarters beyond the fourth. Another difference is that under the new ruling, transfer students will be held responsible only for the work they have attempted at Auburn in meeting this requirement. A technical change, illustrated in the above rule is that the term "honor point" will become simply "grade point." In another change in terminology, t h e "Dean's Honor Roll" has been made the "Dean's List." Must Pass 5 Hours There will be a revision, of the present rule which states, "After the first quarter of residence at Auburn University or elsewhere, a student will be dropped at the ft—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 THE 'GOOD OLD DAYS" r&WMWA VS. TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION PRICE In the eld days, when you were hit with a serious Illness, you might spend only a dollar for a prescription . . . but: you were likely in bed for three costly weeks, had six visits from the doctor, lost a month's wages, took a whole assortment of other medicines, too. Was that cheap? Today, thanks to new drug discoveries, you need perhaps on* visit from the doctor, fever's down in hours, you're out of bed in a couple of days, back on the job in a week. Today's prescription cost! you more, yes . . . and isn't it a bargain/ TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION DRUGS SAVE LIVES, SAVE MONEY Campus Drugs TOU »! AlWArS HflCOME <; rOUH *Wa£gA£&H/ AGENCY DRUG STORE end of any quarter during which he does not pass at least five credit hours of work at Auburn." Beginning September 1960, a student will be suspended for a period of 12 months at the end of any quarter during which he does not earn at least five credit hours. There will no longer be an exception made for first quarter freshmen. No Permanent Drop To be completely abolished is •the rule stated in the 1959-60 Tiger Cub as follows, "failure during a summer quarter to reestablish eligibility for continuation in residence, will cause the student to be permanently dropped from the roles." Under the new regulations it will be possible for a suspended student who attempts but fails during a summer quarter to reestablish eligibility, to return at the end of his 12 months suspension. Stu-r dents may no longer be permanently droped. As of September 1960, a freshman who needs counseling will be required to report to the Student Guidance Center only once. "The first time a student classified as a freshman earns less than ten credits and/or ten grade points, he is required to go to the Student Guidance Service during the first three weeks of his next quarter of residence," is the revised rule. This is contrary . JOHN HUBERT LIVERMAN, head of the Auburn University music department, finds some well-tempered chords on a clavichord he made with his own hands. He constructed the instrument in his spare time during a three-week period. A regular performer on the Alabama Educational Television Network, Liv-erman has made one appearance with his new instrument from Auburn's television studios. to the present regulation, under which a student may be required to go to the Guidance Center many times. The Council of Deans has also taken action on an important point not pertaining to residence requirements. It voted to discontinue in September 1960 it's ruling that permits dropped or permanently dropped students to be allowed automatic readmission following military service. This ruling was put into effect during the Korean Conflict as an emer- For Quality and Friendly Service 'You Will Always Find It At STOKER'S' // MOTEL a 24 ROOMS— Air-Conditioned Free Television Telephone Tile Bath Wall-to-wall carpet For Reservations Call TU 7-3481 s T 0 DRIVE-IN AND DINING ROOM QUALITY FOODS Choice Steaks — Seafoods Pizza Open 6:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. S T O K E R S TRAILER SALES * MARLETTE * NEW MOON Small Down Payment Long-Term Financing Low Monthly Payment See the "SPECIAL" on our lot now! E R S TRAILER PARK C H O I C E LOTS City Sewage City Water Patios Automatic Laundry Service For Reservations Call TU 7-3481 STOKER'S SERVICE STATION One Mile From Auburn on the Opelika Road gency measure, and the Council of Deans feels that it is no longer necessary. It's provisions are as follows: "A Student who has been dropped or permanently dropped under the present regulations may be readmitted, after serving in the armed forces at the beginning of any quarter without petitioning the Council of Deans. Such a student will be subject to the requirements governing continuation in residence for students transferring from other institutions; that is, the work counted for continuation in residence will be measured from the date of readmission. AS SEEN IN LEADING FASHION MAGAZINES } «* K KNIT ONE . o and Span Seasons! Proud Httle*otton knit diamond plaided to wear regardless of season. Deep rib knit banding at neckline emphasized with huge black button. Slightly Moused and elasticised beneath self belt. Tomato with Black, Alpine Green with Black, Antique Gold with Black. Sizes 5-13 . . . 14.98 PaKkek^? Tigers solid at Full-QB by Gordon Murphree Quarterback and fullback look solid for the Auburn Tigers this year with junior Bobby Hunt and pre-season all SEC pick Ed Dyas returning. Both these men played first team last year and are expected to pick up this fall where they left off last year. Hunt should be the starting quarterback. He will be backed up by senior Bryant Harvard. Also expected to help out are Joe Overton, a very fine passer from Greenville, Miss, and S o ph Mailon Kent. Fulback will, be capably manned by Sr. Ed Dyas, back for his third season as the starting fullback. John McGeever, if he is not writched to halfback, should be a very fine second: team fullback, but he could be pressed by the speedy Larry Laster, soph form Covington, Ga. Also expected to see action are Bill Baggett and Bill Burgess. Hunt — Soph of Year Last year Bobby Hunt became the first starting soph QB under head coach Ralph Jordon. Hunt led the SEC in average gain per cary last year with a 5.6 average on 98 runs for 552 yards. He was named Sophomore of The Year in the SEC. Hunt is the top Auburn defensive back, also, his improvement on passing this spring will make him one of the top quarterback threats in the country. He has become especially dangerous on roll-outs, which will enable him to moke more effective use of his pet wide keeper plays. Hunt completed 15 of 37 passes last year for 240 yards, one TD and a 40.5 percent accuracy mark. His 78-yard TD pass to open the Miami game was the second longest Tiger gain of the year. Hunt's 254 yards gained against Mississippi State last fall were .the most pained by one player in a game all season. Dyas — A student Ed Dyas, a straight-A student in pre-med, will be starting his third year as the top Auburn fullback. He has taken summer school work to speed up graduation and will graduate from Auburn at the end of the first quar ter of 1960. He will be only 20 years old at that time. Dyas carried the ball 96 times for 506 yards last fall, good enough for fifth place among SEC ball carriers. He averaged 5.3 yards per carry last season and he usually carried the ball in the toughest of situations. Tiger coaches believe he's the finest fullback in Auburn history, which includes all-Ameri-oan Joe Childress. Dyas is an excellent blocker, the best in the Tiger backfield, and is the top linebacker on the team. 15 of 17 PAT's He kicked 15 of 17 PAT's last year and connected on four of six field goals, including 43 and 40 yard efforts which are the longest in Auburn history. Both came in the crucial Georgia game. "Dyas is toughest under pressure," coach Jordan says, "he has the poise and determination to rise to the occasion under pressure." Comparison with last year. Quarterback — should be about the same or better. Hunt will New and Used Typewriters And Adding Machines FOR SALE Appointment by Phone Only Opelika Business Machines Phone SH 5-4211 or write: P. O. Box 53 improve with each game. Harvard will see action. The strong right arm of Joe Overton may be called on for his passing ability. Fullback — Stronger with Ed Dyas returning. McGeever played last year and should be adequate. Soph Larry Laster looked good during the spring and should see action. Punting — Stronger with Joe Dolan returning after a 41.7 average last fall. DEATH WATCH Final Examination Schedule For The Summer Quarter, 1960 Final examinations in all subjects carrying less than 3 hours credit, unless in "Special Schedule' below, will be held at the last class meeting prior to Tuesday, August 23. 7—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 REGULAR SCHEDULE Tuesday, August 23 — 8:00 a.m. Classes, 8:30-11:00 a.m 1:00 p.m. Classes, 1:00-3:30 p.m.; 9:00 a.m. Classes, 3:40-610 p.m. Wednesday, August 24 — 7:00 a.m. Classes, 8:30-11:00 a.m.; 12:00 a.m. & 3:00 p.m. Classes, 1:00-3:30 p.m.; 10:00 a.m. Classes, 3:40-6:10 p.m. Thursday, August 25 — 11:00 a.m. Classes, 8:30-11:00 a.m.; 2:00 a.m. Classes, 1:00-3:30 p.m.; 4:00 p.m. & 5:00 p.m. Classes, 3:40- 6:10 pjn. Notes: Conflicts with MWF 3 hour subject will follow schedule fof 12:00 m. classes. SPECIAL SCHEDULE Friday, August 19 — 6:00 p.m. ROTC (Army and Air); 7:00- 9:30 p.m. Remedial Algebra (MH040) TERM COURSE SCHEDULE (Term course classes continue through Tuesday, August 23. In case of conflict with final examinations in quarter courses, final examination takes precedence over classwork in term courses.) Wednesday, August 24 — 7:00 to 8:30, 9:00 or 10:00; 7:30 to 9:30; 7:45 to 9:00; 8:30-11:00 a.m. 8:00 to 9:30, 10:00; 8:30 to 10:00, 10:30; 9:00 to 10:30, 12:00; 9:30 to 11:00; 1:00-3:30 p.m. Thursday, August 25 — 10:00 to 11:15, 11:30, 12:00, 12:30 or 1:00; 10:30 to 12:00; 11:00 to 12:30; 8:30-11:00 a.m. 1:00 to 2:30, 3:00 or 3:30; 1:30 to 3:00; 3:00 to 4:30 1:00-3:30 p.m. GRADUATION EXERCISES will be held Friday, August 26 at 5:30 p.m. A list of degree candidates will be furnished instructors by the Registrar's Office. Grades for degree candidates should be reported as soon as possible after each examination. These will be assembled by Department Heads or the Dean's Secretary. ATT, SENIOR GRADES MUST BE REPORTED TO THE REGISTRAR NOT LATER THAN 8:00 A.M. FRIDAY, AUGUST 26. (In-sctructors are reminded that "final" grades must be reported; grades of "ok" or "passing" are not acceptable.) It is requested that all other grades be filed with the Registrar's Office by 8:00 a.tm. Friday, August 26. Beat the cost of high rent apartments! Park your House Trailer for $15.00 per month at Auburn Shady Trailer Park Located on pared Wright's Mill Road outside city limits beyond super highway overpass—look for trailer court sign on next hill. Nearer to the campus than any established trailer court! • Free water and sewer facilities • Large, lots—beautiful green lawn— shade trees • Quiet—ideal for families • Direct route to campus • No town or highway traffic • Trailer park private road to be paved prior to Fall Quarter. Call TU 7-3641 today and reserve space for Fall Quarter. Auburn Shady Trailer Park Wright's Mill Rood Former Plainsman end killed in Japan A former Auburn football player was killed in Japan last Thursday when the T-33 jet trainer he was piloting crashed near Nagoya in central Honshu. He was David T. Ridgway Jr., an Air F o r ce captain. Ridgway was an end on the Auburn team, playing his last season in 1951. He was graduated from Auburn University in May of 1952. Ridgway was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and the A Club. According to reports from Japan, Ridgway a n d a Japanese student were on a routine flight when the plane plunged into a field and burned. The student, a member of the Japanese Self-Defense Force, also was killed. Cause of the crash had not been determined at last report. Union . . . (Continued from page 1) Maghsoodloo and J. P. Wood. The Union wants to congratulate the Summer Committees on their fine job they did this summer. The summer chairmen are Sally Jones — Social-Dance Committee and Fred Baggett — Recreation Committee. The permanent committee chairmen are Anne Walker — Entertainment- Fine Arts Committee & Dot Sawis — Secretarial Committee a nd Chuck Hoffman — Publicity. BOOKS Bought and Sold Gifts of all types for all occasions! Beach towels Before you buy or sell... see... Burton's Bookstore 'Something New Every Day' SATURDAY, AUG. 20—Double Feature "FLYING LEATHERNECKS" — A N D — "First Traveling Saleslady" SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY THE MOST AMAZING OF ALL POSSIBLE WORLDS! 2o>, tClNEMAScOPE _ mm*. COLOR by DELUXE MICHAEL RENNIE • JILL ST. JOHN • DAVID HEDISON • CLAUDE RAINS WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY - FRIDAY FOR YOUR COMFORT. AmmCGm*^ MARTIN THEATRE Admission .25 & .50 \ former greats move into the pro ranks and stardom A close rtm down of the rosters of the football teams In the National Football League and the newly organized American Football League will find the names of many former Auburn greats lifted. Within the last seven years .there have been numerous Auburn players to join the professional ranks after graduation. Tori ay there are no less than 15 who, are still active. Since Coach Jordan took over as head football coach in 1951, Auburn has become the spawning ground for many of the top professional players. One such player is Jimmy "Red" Phillips, who played end on the 1957 championship Auburn Tigers, and is now playing with the Los Angeles Rams of the NFL. Last season with the Rams Phillips caught 38 passes for 541 yards and four touchdowns. "Red" is considered as one of the top four offensive ends in pro football. The Ram coaches say that he shows signs of developing into another Tom Fears. "Dave "Hoppy" Middleton of the 1954 Auburn team is another Tiger who has fared well in the pro ranks. "Hoppy" plays slot- HOW TO GET NEW-TIRE MILEAGE AT HALT NEW-TIRE PRICE . . . ROYAL TREAD Tli© Custom Quality Retread Look for the sign of top quality retreads. It's your as* •surance of top grade materials plus top grade workmanship. For the most economical mileage get U. S. Royal Treads. Ask about our unbeatable guarantee. 10.95 (ONE WEEK ONLY) ROYAL TREAD AVAILABLE IW MOWTIME DESIGN urn Tire Service (Where Service and Quality Come First) 453 OPEL1KA ROAD back for the Detroit Lions. He has many times been the all-pro selection at this position. Lion coach George Wilson considers Middleton as one of the games best "deep" pass receivers. During the off season "Hoppy" is a doctor at an Ann Arbor Michigan hospital. He went on to medical school at the University of Tennessee while playing for the Lions. When the 1960 professional football season starts this fall there will be five players from last year Tigers on various pro teams. Ail-Americans Jackie Bur-kett and Roger "Zeke" Smith will join the World Champion Baltimore Colts, along with quarterback Richard Wood. Smith and Burkett are considered as the Colts top draft choices in the line. Bobby Wasden and Teddy 8—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, August 17, 1960 Successor named to replace Hamlin George M. (Buddy) Rutledge will handle t h e play-by-play broadcast of Auburn's 1960 football games for a network of 50 stations in southeastern states, succeeding Tom Hamlin. Rutledge, who served as sports director and commercial manager of radio station WHMA in Annis-ton, was named sports director for WAPI radio and television stations in Birmingham this week. He also will announce Auburn basketball games next winter. Rutledge was an outstanding Foret, also members of last year's Auburn team, have also signed professional contracts. Wasden goes to the San Francisco 49ers and Foret signed with the Montreal team of the Canadian Football League. athlete before contracting polio at the beginning of his sophomore year at the University of Georgia. He has been confined to a wheel chair since that time. At Anniston High School he was an all-county fullback for two. years and also was a star baseball pitcher and track man. He won a Georgia football scholarship and entered as a pre-med student in 1949, playing on the freshman team as a halfback. After his polio attack and a recuperative p e r i o d at Warm Springs, Ga., Rutledge returned to his Anniston home. He began his radio career in 1952. Buddy was chosen Anniston's ".Young Man of the Year" in 1956 and was one of Alabama's f o ur "Outstanding Young Men" in 1959. CALL AHEAD! GIVE YOUR ORDER Ready to go in 7 MINUTES Pizza Menu mmm Lit* JW*-* +*A If— Open 11 a.m. 'til 12 midnight 7 days a week Opelika Hiway TU 7-2735 Tomato & Cheese Pepperoni Sausage Anchovies Mushrooms ~: Mushrooms & Pepperoni Sausage & Mushrooms.. Sausage & Pepperoni.... Combination 9" Small . 90 .95 1.00 1.10 1.15 1.30 1.30 1.30 1.50 12" Med. 1.35 1.50 1.60 1.60 1.65 1.80 1.80 1.80 2.25 16" Large 1.70 1.95 2.00 2.00 2.20 2.50 2.50 2.50 3.00 Chicken Box 99 Shrimp Box .99 Dogwood .55 Char-Co-Burger .30 Cheeseburger .35 French Fries ......:......— ... .20 Onion Rings .20 Cash For Your Books —Sell Your Books To BOOKSTORE "Headquarters For All Your College Needs" We con buy all textbooks of value even though no longer used at Auburn. Remember^ books are changed and revised often. Jf you intend to sell your books, they sold as soon as you finish with them. FOR YOUR BEST DEAL - SELL YOUR BOOKS TO JOHNSTON & MALONE ALL BOOKS OF VALUE! T |
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