Hw PlairidmarL To Foster The Auburn, Spirit
VOLUME 90 Auburn University AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1963 8 Pages NUMBER 18
FROM
THE
&cUt&t'&
Ve&6
By CHARLES
f ;^H'
'JALM
McCAY
Some clarification is in order
concerning the recent letter by
Mr. Ray Bullard as to the eligibility
of the coeds chosen for
loveliests. Mr. Bullard apparently
has much to learn about college
newspapers and the facts of life
in general.
You will remember that it was
his opinion that the girls appearing
as "beauty of the week" were
somewhat under par. His conclusion
as to why this was so was
slightly shady to say the least. Of
course, Mr. Bullard's thinking is
completely unfounded, if not ab-lutely
absurd.
Candidates for "Loveliest of the
Plains" are chosen, in advance by
qualified staff photographers. In
doing this, it is the duty of these
photographers to choose not THE
loveliest, but one of the loveliest
girls on this campus. Choosing the
one and only loveliest would be
an unenviable task. It would also
be rather foolish to run the same
girl's picture until a "lovelier" one
one enrolled here.
There is a slight difference in
the meaning of the terms "lovely"
and "beauty" as used in everyday
conversation. Mr. Bullard had obviously
superimposed them.
The staff of this paper believes
that the precedent for truly lovely
young ladies was set at the beginning
of this year and has continued
thus far.
We think that Mr. Bullard's insinuations
that everything might
not be above board are petty and
Sfcjly disgusting. We have a much
higher opinion of the Auburn girl
than to let such ridiculous
thoughts enter our -minds. .'
> The fact that we did not receive
a single letter from an indignant
Auburn coed is proof enough for
us as to the moral standards of
the girls on this campus. They are
such that it is not necessary to
defend against someone as trite as
Mr. Bullard.
As an after thought . . . if perchance
you don't feel that a particular
girl gracing page one of
this publication lives up to the
standards implicit in the title over
her picture, then tear up that copy,
burn the pieces, and fling the
ashes to the winds from the
weather vane atop Samfo.rd tower.
You may find that after a few
weeks of this you will tend to be
rather uneducated as to the affairs
directly and indirectly concerning
Auburn. In this case we suggest
group discussion.
* * *
Similarly to birds singing to
announce the arrival of spring,
our campus politicians drink from
the third floor union building water
cooler and write letters to the
Plainsman when election time is
near. Activity abounds at this
time of year. Committees are
overloaded with the most eager
workers just waiting for some
project in which they can exhibit
their talents. Oh for campus elections
every quarter! Perhaps then
we could get some work out of
these politics all during the year.
\ THE DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA will appear in the Student Activities Building tonight
at 8:15 p.m. The concert is an offering of the Lecture and Concert Series. Admission is free
to students upon presentation of I. D. cards.
Detroit Symphony To Appear
In Student Activities Building
a ."-'
By BETTY THOMAS
Plainsman News Writer
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Werner
Torkanowsky, will appear at Auburn tonight at 8:15 p.m.
in the Student Activities Building.
The symphony orchestra is today one of the world's finest.
Its musicians present more than 140 concerts each year
and reach audiences of more
than 750,000 while in Detroit and
on tour throughout the nation.
Founded in 1914, the Detroit
Symphony Orchestra^ was under
the leadership of Ossip Gabrilo-witsch
from 1918 until his death
in 1935. The second significant
phase began in 1943 under the di-
3fetJife Story'
To Open Monday
By JOAN WHATLEY
West Side Story is to be presented
by the Auburn Dance
Corps on February 18, 19, and 20
in Langdon Hall. The performances
will start at 7:30. Students
wanting tickets for the show may
pick tickets up at Alumni Gym
February 11-15 between the hours
of 3:00 and 5:00. Students m u s t
present their I.D. cards at the intramural
office.
Gus Hoyer, Ranny Carmack,
Avery Taylor, Jay Morrow, Joe
Vella, Sam Wright, Michael Lang-ley,
and James Czap are the cast
members composing the Jet Gang.
Their girls are played by Sandra
Hewston, Jacque Joyner, Sharon
Farver, Kristie Wegener,
Candy W a l k e r , J e a n Parker,
Sherry Shields, and Joan Narrell.
The Sparks are composed of the
following boys: Steve Nugent,
Alice Moss, Linda Lee BetChel,
Robert Eason, Walter Ehgel, Jack
Mitchell, James Hensen, R i ck
Farver, Francisca Bechard, and
Ronald Williams.
Their girls are Marcia Naugle,
Joan Watson, Montyne Hatfield,
Barbara Bourne Rucker, J e r e
Spross, and Sue Dunn.
Those cast members playing the
parts of adults are Juan Duck,
Doug Crucet, Harrison Packard,
and Glenn Segrest.
THE TRAVELERS THREE will be featured entertainment for
the upcoming Southeastern Panhellenic Convention to be held
here Feb. 22-23. Saturday night's performance by the popular
folk singers will be open to the public.
rection of Karl Krueger and lasted
through 1949 when the orchestra
was forced to cease operation
because of inadequate financial
support. In 1951, a group of music
lovers in Detroit joined to reorganize
the orchestra on a sound
financial basis. Financially secure,
the orchestra was able to attract
such world renowned music figures
as Paul.Paray, now'the-orchestra's
Conductor-Emeritus.
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra
has won many honors for itself
through its extensive tours of
the nation. Since 1958, it has been
the official orchestra for Ameri-
General Elections
Slated For April
By HARRY HOOPER
Declarations of intent for persons
wishing to run for student
body offices must be filed with
the Superintendent of Political
Affairs before March 5. This was
announced by superintendent
Brian Mitchell.
The purpose of the early deadline
for the declarations of intent
is to prevent the onslaught of candidates
at the beginning of Spring
quarter.
Final nominations are due on
February 25 for Miss Auburn candidates.
Qualifications as set down by
the Student Body Constitution
state than the candidates must
have an overall 1.0 average or
have a 1.5 average the preceding
quarter. Also candidates must be
enrolled in school during their entire
term of office. Other requirements
refer to specific offices and
may be found in the ninth article,
third section of the constitution.
Campaigning will begin April 2
and end April 10. The general
student elections will be held
April 11.
Candidates must appear before
the Qualifications Board on March
6. and 7. The Qualifications Board
is made up of the president of the
Student body, the vice-president,
the secretary, the president pro-tern
of the senate, and the Superintendent
of Political Affairs.
In commenting on the Qualifications
Board, Mitchell said, "In
the past candidates were not required
to appear before the Qualifications
Board. The board re-?
viewed candidates last fall and
found it to be very successful. We
feel that this is the only way
present student leaders can meet
students who wish to participate
in student government."
The All-Campus Party held its
organizational meeting at the Pi
Kappa Phi house on February 5
in preparation for the up-coming
elections. The University Party
will hold its "first meeting February
14 at the Alpha Gamma Rho
house. One does not, however,
have to have party affiliation to
run for a student body office.
A U Requests Increase
In State Appropriations
Auburn Asks For $19,000,000 In
Support Of Building Program Needs
Auburn University is asking the Legislature to appropriate
a total of $11,804,882 to operate the institution in fiscal
1963-64 and $12,106,400 the next year. The budget request
represents an increase in State funds of more than $3,250,000
for each of the two years over present appropriations.
ca's oldest and most prestigious
music festival at Worcester, Mass.
Its recordings on the Mercury
Classics label have won international
acclaim. Two of them recently
received the coveted Grand
Prix du Disque award of France.
Werner Torkanowsky, conductor
of the orchestra, is unquestionably
one of the most brilliant
of new conducting talents. Before
coming to America in 1948, he
appeared extensively as violin soloist
throughout Europe.
Travelers 3 Play
At Conference
efyJM?B REED
Panhellenic leaders from more
than 47 colleges will meet at Au-b
u r n f o r the Southeastern Panhellenic
Conference on Feb. 22-23.
Featured entertainment for the
Saturday night banquet in the
Union Ballroom will be the Travelers
Three, one of the newest
folk-singing groups in the entertainment
world. Their performance
will be open to the public
free of charge.
Described as "one of the hottest
trios in show business," the Travelers
Three consists of three former
University of Oregon students:
Hawaiian guitarists Charlie
Cyama and Pete Apo, and Ore-gionian
bass-fiddler Dick Shirley.
The Travelers Three have been
raising their collegiate voices in
folk song since 1959 when they
were hastily amalgamated to fill
a spot in a University talent show.
That appearance marked the beginning
of a highly acclaimed professional
career that has taken
them in concert rom Honolulu to
the Far East to Broadway. Their
recently released Elektra album
has firmly established them as
one of the top folk groups in the
country.
The theme of this year's conference
is "Fraternity life . . . an
opportunity to prepare for wide
and wise human service." Discussion
groups will be lead by
various faculty advisors on the
subjects of scholarship, health,
ideals, social standards, community
service, and effective rush.
Also included on the convention's
agenda will be several luncheons,
group meetings, and general
business meetings. Margaret
Moore, conference chairman, will
preside over these meetings.
Liberal Arts Schools
To Attend Conference
Thirteen liberal arts and junior
colleges will gather at Auburn
University, Feb. 15.
The subject for their conference
wil be "The Role of Liberal
Arts and Junior Colleges in Engineering
Education." The group
will be welcomed to the campus
by Dr. Ralph B. Draughon, Auburn
University president.-
Dr. Donald M. Vestal, Jr., head
professor of mechanical engineering,
will give the luncheon j address,
"English as a Quantative
Subject in Engineering." Engineering
Dean Fred H. Pumphrey
is host for the luncheon.
The conference will be held in
the Auburn Student Union, Room
322, with registration at 10 a.m.
Building needs submitted by the
AU administration total more
than $19,000,000.
The budget request is designed
to close the gap between s t a te
support at Auburn and that at
other comparable land-grand universities.
Major emphasis is
placed in the area of salaries and
strengthening research programs,
according to Dr. Robert C. Anderson,
executive vice-president,
who also is chairman of the Alabama
Council on Public Higher
Education.
Breakdown of the budget request
follows:
Instruction Division, $6,972,882
in 1963-64 and $7,112,340 the next
year. (Present appropriation, $4,-
918,174).
s Agricultural Experiment Station,
$1,880,100 the f i r s t year
and $1,917,744 the second year.
(Present appropriation, $1,342,-
784).
Agricultural Extension Service,
$1,989,600 in 1963-64 and $2,029,-
392 in 1964-65. (Present appropriation,
$1,421,113)..
Educational television and engineering
experiment station have
asked for $174,000. and $155,400
respectively.
A special request, totaling
$632,000, has been made for a
General Fund' appropriation for
the purpose of purchasing books
for the new AU library, rural resource
development, Alabama resources
inventory, and water resources
research, The $11-million-plus
request is for money from
the special educational trust fund.
President Ralph B. Draughon,
Dr. Anderson, W. T. Ingram,
treasurer-business manager, Dean
M. C. Huntley of the Instruction
Division, Dean E. V. Smith of the
Physicist's Portrait
Donated To Gallery
The portrait and works of Dr.
James P. C. Southall, deceased
professor of physics at Auburn
University, is being .added to a
collection honoring contributors to
the physical sciences in New
York.
Dr. Southall, a native of Charlottesville,
Va., served as head
professor of physics at Auburn
University from 1901-14.
While at Auburn, Dr. Southall
wrote Principles and Methods of
Geometrical Optics which was
published by Macmillan in 1910t
Works published after leaving
Auburn included Mirrors, Prisms
and Lenses and Introduction to
Physiological Optics.
In addition, Dr. Southall .authored
two autobiographical book
and was editor of three volumes
published by the Optical Society of
America.
The former Auburn.professor is
one of the first among 600 important
contributors to 19th and 20th
Century physical science in the
United States selected by the
American Institute of Physics for
its project on the history of recent
physics in this nation.
School of Agriculture and Agricultural
Experiment Station/ and
Director Fred Robertson of the
Extension Service will be on hand
at Montgomery Feb. 15 for budget
hearings before the legislative interim
committee on finance and
taxation.
"Auburn University, the University
of Alabama and the state
colleges are now competing in the
national market place for faculty
members who leave Alabama
each year.to go to positions in
universities of the west, the midwest
and the east," Dr. Anderson
said.
Although Alabama's higher institutions
have been able in the
past few years to improve salaries,
they have only been able to
hold their own in relative position
with institutions of o t h er
states, he pointed out.
"Salary improvement has been
accomplished at the expense of
other functions. Funds needed for
maintenance, research, repairs
and equipment have, of necessity,
been tunneled into salaries, in the
effort to maintain quality of instruction.
Funds for those services
are now desperately needed,"
Dr. Anderson declared.
The regular base appropriation
to Auburn for the fiscal year
1962-€3 showed-an increase over
1959 appropriation of only a fraction
of one per cent, while increase
of enrollment and operating
expenses have mounted, adding
further strain to the university's
budget, Dr. Anderson added.
Dr. Anderson expressed concern
that state expenditure per
student in Alabama universities
and colleges has dropped over the
past 10 years while a notable increase
is reflected in the South
and the nation as a whole.
"According to figures compiled
by the Southern Regional Education
Board, Alabama spent $549
per student in 1961-62. as compared
to $554 ten years previous.
At the same time, state expenditure
per student in all Southern
states increased by 22.7 per cent
and in the nation by 23.7 per
cent.
Auburn's building n e e d s —
which are not listed as a part of
the regular budget request for
educational trust fund money—
were catalogued as follows:
Administration Building, $850,-
000.
Architecture, Art, Music and
Drama Building, $1,200,000.
Auditorium—Physical Education,
$2,500,000.
Buildings and Grounds Annex,
$90,000.
Continuing Education Center,
$1,500,000.
Economics and Business Administration
Building, $1,200,000.
Education Building, $2,000,000.
Educational TV Studio addition
and closed circuit TV system,
$225,000.
Engineering Classroom Building,
$1,000,000.
Engineering Laboratory, $1,-
200,000.
Forestry Building addition and
renovation, $180,000.
Liberal Arts Building, $1,450,-
000.
' Military Building for Three
ROTC Units, $750,000.
Veterinary Science Building,
$1,750,000.
(No order of priority for these
buildings has been announced).
DR. J. C. P. SOUTHALL
ATTENTION MARCH GRADS
Any senior expecting to graduate
on March 16 who has not had
a final credit check in the Registrar's
Office this quarter should
do so immediately! February 15
is the last day that diplomas may
be ordered for March graduation.
ATTENTION MARCH GRADS
Admission tickets are not required
for attendance of parents
and friends for the March Graduation
Exercises.
DR. FRANK GRAHAM
'Bus Stop' Opening
Set For Tomorrow
"Bus Stop," a Broadway comedy
that took nearly every significant
award in the theater world
will come to Auburn Feb. 14 at
8:15 p.m. at the Auburn Union
Ballroom.
Presented by the Town and
Gown players of Birmingham, the
William Inge play is currently
touring the state, playing to
standing-room only crowds.
"Bus Stop," first presented at
New York City's Music Box Theatre
in 1955, is a three-act comedy
packed into a few early morning
hours when bus passengers are
forced to find shelter in a street
corner restaurant during a blizzard.
. _...
Betty Caldwell Foley will play
the lead role created on the New
York stage by Kim Stanley and
in Hollywood by the late Marilyn
Monroe. She was in the original
Town and Gown cast and her last
role was in "The King and I."
Also from the original cast is
Johnny Johnson, program director
for station WAPI-TV. Making
his debut will be Dennis Berg of
Mobile, a recent "find" of James
Hatcher, director of the Town and
Gown players.|
"Bus Stop" is sponsored by the
Auburn Union Entertainment
Committee, with no admission
charge to students. Due to the capacity
attendance expected, Clarence
Cook, Auburn Union director,
requests students^ to reserve
tickets immediately.
UN AMBASSADOR
TO SPEAK HERE
ON FEBRUARY 19
The United Nations Representative
for India and Pakistan, Dn
Frank P. Graham, will be the
featured speaker at Auburn Uni_
versity on Tuesday, Feb. 19. The
address will begin at 8:15 in the
Auburn Union Ballroom.
Dr. Graham, who has been a
United States Senator from North
Carolina, and who was president
of the University of North' Carolina
for 19 years, will speak on
"The United Nations in the
Atomic Age."
"Every person his life touches
is enriched," former secretary to
Dr. Graham, Mrs. Ella Evans
said this week. Mrs. Evans is
currently secretary to Dean Roger
Allen in the School of Science
and Literature here.
"He is interested and concerned
with people. Ih the simplest conversations,
he makes the other
fellow feel like the most important
person in the world. We all
felt like better persons just for
having known him." Mrs. Evans
worked for Dr. Graham when he
was doing special work in Raleigh
prior to becoming president of
North Carolina University.
Dr. Graham was first chairman
of the Board of the Oak Ridge
Institute of Nuclear Research and
was defense manpower administrator
in the United States Department
of Labor.
Dr. Charles Anson, head of
the department of Economics and
Business Administration "at Auburn
University, was a student
during Dr. Graham's administration.
Anson describes Graham as
"one with excellent administrative
qualities, whose leadership
made his presence felt all over
the campus."
Looking forward to Dr. Graham's
visit, Dr. Anson said, "He
was tolerant and understanding,
particularly in the development
of new ideas. Although he took
positions which were sometimes
unfacorable in the state, he stood
OK the strength of his convictions.
Dr. Frank, as we called him, was
democratic, approachable, and
above all, a man with outstanding
humility."
Prior to his current appoint-
(See AMBASSADOR, page 3)
'Loveliest Of The Plains'
LOVELIEST CAMILLE CLEMENTS was obviously chosen
by a harrassed photographer trying to prove that he did have excellent
taste. Camille hails from Atlanta but her heart (the real
one) is with Phi Mu at dorm six.—Staff photo by Jim Laney.
Winter Formats Continue To Hold Spotlight
By FRAN COOPER
Society Editor
Along with formals many other events a r e h a p p e n i n g on
campus. Pledge classes are being initiated, honors a r e being
bestowed upon students, and p a r t i e s a r e b e i n g held.
Congratulations to Beth May, w h o was recognized as
t h e outstanding Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority member at t h e chapter's
annual White Violet Formal.
The Alpha Omicron Pi's were
visited by their national president,
Mrs. Marie Cramer of Kansas
City, Missouri, on Feb. 6-7.
Tri-Delt Initiates.
Delta Delta Delta sorority has
initiated these girls:
Patricia Louise Boozer, Frances
Phyllis Gray, Phoebe Lorin Hale,
Pamela Jean Hardwick, Carla
Jane Harshbarger, Marsha Lee
Jones, Alicia Ann Huff, Linda
Ann Holt, Judy Rose LaFlam,
Nancy Evelyn Lott, Shirley Ann
Palmer.
Theodore Kay Roth, Gwendolyn
Smith, Sara Jane Thompson, Marilyn
Tutweiler, Dorothy Calhoun
Wilkinson, Martha Mary Wood,
Linda Sue Word.
Ruth Chappell received the
pledge scholarship trophy, and the
honor pledge trophy went to Kay
Roth.
ZTA Officers
Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority elected
Joan McDaniel, president; Pa-
SEE
WEST SIDE STORY
At
Langdon Hall on February 18, 19, and 20
at 7:30
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tricia Ann Jerkins, vice president;
Karin De Beek, recording secretary;
Thera Lou Wilson, corresponding
secretary; Lina Abney,
treasurer; Minerva Prendergast,
membership chairman; Barbara
Brown, historian-reporter and
Joan Cannon, ritual chairman.
Alpha Delta Pi
Alpha Delta Pi held its annual
Mardi Gras Formal at the Ralston
Hotel in Columbus, Ga., recently.
The Oxfords furnished the entertainment.
Those who attended were: Ka-thy
Slaughter, John Ransom;
Mary Ellen Hicks, Jimmy Jenkins;
Sally Quillian. Johnny Wood; Linda
Myrick, Bill Mayrose; Kathy
Farrell, Kim Daniel; Andrea Pollard,
Ed Mims; Anne Gaither,
Clift Minter; Barbara Clark. Leek
Mansfield; Jenny Hodges, Robert
Davie; Celia Brooks, QUie Rollins;
Jane Hackett, James Casale;
Mary Louise Mullen, Kenny Johnson;
Virginia Smith, Wayne Collins;
Marian Mahorner, B u t ch
Blankenship; Rosemary Harris,
Butch Brown; Ercel Frield, J o h n
Donehoo; Nancy Wells, Billy Lawrence;
Frances Gibson, Roy Bigger;
Sally Stockman, Bill Gorman;
Tish Davis, Billy Smith; Judy Allen,
George Lanier.
Dorothy Smith, Philip. Gidiere;
Lenora Sylvest, Howard Up-church;
Cindy Smith, Morris Slin-guff;
Ann Welch, Otis Jones; Mary
Dean, Jerry McPherson; Martha
Woods, Henry VanTyke; Martha
Newsome, Stacy Welch; Stella
Curry, Andy Gentry; Joan Con-nell,
Albert Elebash; Deana Jenkins,
Clyde Prather Pat Johnson,
Ed Evans, Janie Tanner, Jimbo
Henderson; Pat Wittel, Les Tre-rnaine;
Sherry Russell, Bob Tom
Snellgrove; Birginia Ann Graf,
Jack Waddey; Kathy Gilmore,
Everitt Vincent;
Mary Emma Turner, Terry
pooper; Sylvia Carr, Fred Wald-ing;
Cindy Lee, Buzzy Mitchel;
Sarah McCorquodale, J o h n ny
Jeffers; Bess Collier, Dan Ennis;
Anne Green, Joe Fuller; H e l en
IVtosely, Joe Fleming; Diane Moody,
Tom Pope; Linda Sylvest,
Mike Tolbert; Pat Quillian, Sam
White; Joyce Johnson, Litt Glover;
Joy Johnson, Sam Jones; Alice
Chandler, Richard Colby; Paula
JRandall, Jimmy Randall; Ann
Crabtree, Frank Salter; Delores
pendedson, Hunter Flack; J u d y
Byrd, Charles Reed Martin, Nancy
Moses, Danny Paul; Patsy Hos^
mer, Gainqs Montgomery; TJftllis
Slaughter, Sandy Bolir.
Omega Tau Sigma
Omega Tau Sigma, professional
veterinary fraternity at Auburn
University, will hold its annual
winter White Carnation Ball Friday,
Feb. 15, at the Martinique
Motor Hotel in Columbus, Ga.
Musis will be furnished by the
Night Shadows of Atlanta, Ga.
Leading the dance will be Miss
Penelope Wooten escorted by
Douglas Morgan, president of the
chapter. Others in the leadout will
be vice president Sam Thompson
and Mrs. Thompson; secretary
Perry Smith will escort Adele
Eckford.
Members and their dates attending
will be Lea Mathis,
Wayne Adams: Jeri Spross, Paul
Altemuehle; Virginia Dorland,
Charles Bated; Kay Stacy,, H u g h
Bessham; Carole Eversole, Jim
Boyer, Helen Phillips, Allen Carb
Joyce Garrett, Lowell Crowdej;
Alison Jones, Charles Frith; Char-lene
Smith, fl/Jelvin Davis; Joy-
Brumby, Charles Glickersberb;
Shirley Blotner, Dave Greenfield;
Martha Walker, Bob Greenwald;
Melba Green, Charlie Horton;
Elaine Koplon, Bert Lipitz; Jacqueline
Rice, Bob Lynch; Josephine
Burks, Ed Malone; S u s an
Dees, Robin Mumford; Charlotte
Edwards," Bob Nance; Jane Miller,
Ed Perryman; Mary Anne Gilmer,
Sid Remmele; Adrian Ansel, Jerry
Rogers; Linda Coffman, Hal
Seigel; Marty Everts, Emmett
Smith; Nancy Ivey, Damon Stem-bridge;
Betty Davis, Bob Tramon-tin.
Janet Cop'eland, Sam Williams;
Jane Rippey, Norman Ackerrnan;
Linda Blackwell, Roland Byrd;
Ann Hodges,'Charles Erwin; p i -
anne Smith, Wellington Ford; Betty
Smith, Roy Harlan; Barbara
Eckman, Bill Harris; Peggy Allen,
Jim Heath; Martha Frakes,
Jim Howard; Beverly Montgomery,,
Barry Ligon; Nancy Chen-ault,
Paul Plummer; Helene Myers,
Keith Powell; Jeanie Davis,
Mike Pullen; Arlene Stone, Al
Legendre; Sandra Coker, Robert
Shimp; Terry Lipman, Ben Stal-lard;
Betty Mann, Linton Dan-gar;
Linda Bone, Bill Smith; Nancy
Robinson, Huey Edmondson;
Sally Offenberg, Ron Russell;
Joyce Sanders, Ron Chapman;
Margaret Byers, Bernie Fitzsim-ons;
Jackie Bliss, Frank Brown.
Married members and their
wives who will attend are the
Teb Bonderants, George Blrowns,
Don Buxtons, Flake Chamblisses,
Terry Clays, Joe Cookseys, Bill
Cummingses, Stuart Denmans,
Lowell Dolers, Doyle Eaveses,
Jere Fowlers, John Gores, Ed
Grants, Ed Halls, SamJ Herwells,
Bill Holbrooks, Matt Holmses,
Buddy Johnsons, Butch Krahwin-kels,
Vernon. McAnallys, Wright
McManusses, John McPeaks,
George Moores, Jerry Myers, Bob
Nays, Luel Overstreets, G e o r ge
Pages, John Ragans, Howard
Rands, Junior Rogerses, Bill Scar-broughs,
'Bill Silers, Jim Stan-fords,
Jerry Truitts, Wayne Sieg-fields,
Jack Varners, Mike Walls,
Jim Wards, Bob Warrens, Buddy
Yarboroughs, Dave Sidels, Ken
pixons, John Keys, Ray Bakers,
Joe Pettuses, Elwood Browns.
Chaperoning the dance will be
Dr. and Mrs. B. T. Robertson, Dr.
mt^Mrs- N. H. Eubank, and Mrs.
Minnie HamiL
Other activities for the weekend
will include a breakfast after
the formal and a Saturday brunch.
A cookput is scheduled Saturday
evining before the informal party,
which will be held at the fraternity
house, music by "The Night
Shadows" of Atlanta. Sunday the
entire chapter and dates will attend
services at the First Baptist
Church. A buffet dinner at the
chapter house will complete the
weekend.
Delta Zeta
Beta Xi chapter of Delta Zeta
Sorority held its annual banquet
and Rose Formal Satin-day at the
Martinique in Columbus, Ga. The
Music Men furnished the entertainment.
Highlighting the banquet was
the presentation of Delta Zeta
Man of the Year. Allan Stanfield,
Birmingham, had held this title
for the past year.
Linda Turvey, retiring president,
led the formal and presented
roses to Carole Oliver, incoming
president. Escorting Miss Turvey
and Miss Oliver were Wilson Mc-
Clellan and Hedge Swing, respectively.
Other officers and their
dates in the leadout were: Helen
Lijcis, Jedge Daniel; Linda Bo-wen,
Dennis Higgingothem; Rose
Anne Sarkiss, Joel Mullinaz; Elizabeth
Fry, Monte Whiting.
Other members, pledges, and
their dates included: Janice
Holmes, Gene Boyde; Joan What-ley,
Mike Parker; Karen Hol-combe,
Dave Worley; Carol Kemp,
John Henley; Daye Pate, Pete
Buffington; Averil Vann, Eric
Smith; Janice Waters, Maitland
Adams; Jerolyn Ridgeway, Jim-mie
Carnes; Janice Smith, Kent
Hanbe; Sandy Flick.enger, Rodney
Clark; Judy Watkins, George
Tray lor; Linda Moses, David B^ell;
Alice Russell, Alex Gpe; Linda
Bagley, Jim Weldon; Linda Rich-ey,
Bob Woodfin; Theresa Rush-ton,
Raymond Taylor; Carol Ann
Ripley, Emery Baker; Jan Roberts,
Bill Stout; Betsy Joiner,
John Denson; Gudrun Hellebrand,
Dennis Willis; Joyce Herring,
Richard Raiford; Rosalie Cook,
Gerald Killian; Kathy Humbracht,
Herman Wilkes;
Gail Pearce, Ray Dempsey; Sandra
Zuck, Gene Moorje; Kay Poe,
Bill McCartney; Jo Cletiand, BfUy
Bell; Nancy prummond, Charles
Hankey; Linda Williams, James
Thomas; Nancy Pettis, Milton
Wood; Brenda Ford, Eddie Propst;.
Jean Johnson, Carl Adams; Jean
Hall, Hagood Tingley;' Frances
McClendon, Jim McCollough;
Martha Holmes, Ronnie Hall; Jane
Marshall, Bancroft Hall; Lynda
Sisco, Kerry Scheer; Sandra Moon,
pharles Oliver; Mary Whitley,
Jerry Greer; Dottie Pepper, Joe
Harrison; Susan Fonner, Shorty
Piel; Sandra Howard, Tommy
pook; Nancy Walker, Al Davis;
Btenda Green, Ben Livie; Martha
Harris, Larry Creel; Carolyn
Boyles, Dickie Lee; Gail Williams,
Jimmy Carter; Pam Turvey, Allan
Stanfield; Terry Peerson, Bill
Ward; Sherry Mims, Don Ray-field;
Judy Malonee, Joe Harris;
Sherrill Wifliams, Bill Riley; Sylvia
Malone, Jim Jackson.
Pi Kappa Phi
Alpha Jota PhaRter of Pi Kap-ia
Phi Fraternity held its annual,
ted Rose Formal Friday in the
Mirror Ballroom, Ralston Hotel,
in Columbus. Miss Claudia
Spence Chi Omega, was crowned
as the 1963 Rose of Pi Kappa Phi.
Music was provided by the Abstracts.
The dance was led by Miss Tana
Newman. She was escorted by
the Chapter president, C h a r l e s
Branch. Following her will be
Miss Carol Strain, 1962 Rose who
will be escorted by Lee Griffith.
Other officers and their dates
were: Sally Lairlow, Gene Hea-cock,
treasurer; Ann Buvens,
Stuart Horn, secretary; Jane
Francis, Bill Bell, warden; Cheryl
Williams, Fred Sullivan, chaplain.
Following the officers were the
1963 Rose candidates and their
escorts: Judy Gibson, Phi Mu,
pave Stoddard, historian; Shirley.
Fromby, Kappa Alpha Theta, John
Ellis; Gail Summerlin, Kappa
Kappa Gamma, Maynard Ham-rick;
Joan Knight, Alpha Delta Pi,
George Pratt; Dianne Shoddy,
Delta Zeta, Paul Harper; Claudia
Spence, Chi Omega, Stuart
Kearns..
Members and their dates were:
Patty Pritchett, Jim Lynch; Sam-mie
Wagoner, Jim Mann; Kay
Tadlock, Wayne Graves; Suzanne
Doster, Richard Krause; Norma
Morgan, Clay Porter; Jan Welch,
Tom Clark; Lyn Gernon, Harold
Hartwell; Gail Miller, Jim DeWitt;
Peggy Walton, Bobby Summers.
Sylvia Scherl, Richard Barrow;
Susan Mason, Danny Flournoy;
Marian Mahorner, Butch Glan-kenship;
Linda Williams, J a m e s
Thomas; Peggy Fain, Larry Puc-kett;
Linda Lankford, John Chris-tianson;
Bernadette Stone, Bill
Clements; June Robinson, Norman
Rkobie, Lin Holson, Richard
Workman; Gloria Puckett, Tommy
Young; Phoebe Hale, Lige Rob-bins;
Carolyn McGill, Bud Beatty
Lynn Preston, Joe Young; Brenda
Perry, David Kearns; Toni Gaut-reaux,
Gary Thompson; Beth
Coleman, Harry Baldwin; Mary
Lou Rhodes, Sam Windham; Barbara
Winecoff, Winston Hughes;
Sally Allen, Jim Burleson; Sharon
McAllister, Jim Dunning; Phylis
Seals, Jim Gibson; Patsy Thompson,
Perrin Bryant.
Pledges and their dates were:
Judy Halter, Charles Phillips;
Jane Keowin, Eddie Newburn;
Marilyn Conken, Mike Bumgard-ner;
Barbara Kennedy, Jerry
Smith; June Keowin, Sam Irby.
There was a breakfast at the
Pi Kappa Phi House following the
formal. Saturday night, the members
and their dates had a party
at the VFW Club in Opelika,
where music was furnished by the
Mark B.
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Tau Kappa Epsilon, Beta Lambda
chapter at Auburn University,
will hold its annual Red Carnation
Formal Saturday night, February
1.6, 1963, in the civic room of the
Ralston Hotel in Columbus, Ga.
The Stardusters will furnish the
music for the event.
Highlight of the evening will be
the announcement of the 1963
sweetheart. Finalists for the title
and their escorts are: Sandra
Lowry, Jim Dunlap; Mary Ann
Cahoon, Robert Dickson; Carole
Freeh, Marion Aquilino; Beba
Roundtree, Wendell Scott; and
Jenny McBride, Clifford Dykes.
The girl who receives the honor
will be awarded a silver bowl
presented by Mrs. Suzie French,
fraternity housemother, and a
dozen red roses by outgoing
sweetheart, Gundrun Hellebrand,
escorted by Mason Daniel.
Officers in the leadout and
their dates are Barbara Beckman,
Conrad Beland, president; J e an
Johnson, Douglas Kidd, vice president;
Ann Aderholt, Victor Shirley,
treasurer; Helene Peythress,
Albert Gualtier, secretary; Linda
Brock, Henry Small, historian;
Peggy Loughlin, Russell Rabby,
sergeant-at-arms; Jo Kennedy,
Charles Heaton, chaplain; Jenny
McBride, Clifford Dykes, pledge
trainer.
Other members and dates include:
Ann Waldrop, Mike Zim-lich;
Frances McClendon, Jimmy
McCullough; Linda McBrayer,
James Forman; Joyce Klbbey,
Clifton Crisler; Jo Brizendine,
Walter Brush; Rita Wilmont, Gary
Voyles; Marylin Chaff in, J a m e s
Davis; Dicky McGowen, Skip
Walsh; Pat Grove, Ray Turner;
Sharon Farver, Toy Bryan; Frazee
Capps, Stuart Callaway; Martha
St. John, Pug Palmer; Sandra
Sykes, Don Smaha; Cecilia Rum-sey,
Jack Stahl; Freda Webb, Gor-
(See FORMALS, page 3)
2—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, February 13, 1963
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(Continued from page 2)
don Holmes; Ann Windham, Steve
Brooks; Diane Holmes, Charles
Miller.
Patty Logan, Robert Barrs; Beth
Jeter, Robert Eddings; Donna
Mueller, David Rees; Sharon Cole;
John Curtis; Janet Mitchell, Bruce
Bradbury; Candy Bailey, Robert
Windsor; Toni Dozier, L a n i er
Durden; Linda Hafling, Frank
Brizendine; Sandra Dewitt, Rick
Farver; Pamela Brown, Bill E-kiss;
Judy Gielle, Don Bradford;
Sally Proctor, Hugh Hiott; Ardith
Harrison, Lee Green; Sarah
Twine, Rick Twins; Libby Brantley,
Jerry Phillips.
Chaperones for the event wil
be Mrs. Mamie Hightower, Mr?
Suzie French, and Dr. and Mr?
John E. Deloney.
SIGMA CHI
The Sigma Chi fraternity held
its a n n u a l Sweetheart Bal1
at the Holiday Inn at Callowa
Gardens Friday evening, Feb. 8
Following the Bali, a breakfas-was
served at th-3 Sigma Ch
House.
A party was held S a t u r d ay
afternoon at the Plainsman Clut
preceded by a Wild West part-
Saturday night at the Marthr
Scott Hotel in Opelika.
Members and their dates were
Smiley Nichols, Dot Willcutt
Gray Gordon, Jo Anne Tancaster;
Frank King, Kay Stapleton; Bill
Bruner, Betty Brockway; Jay
Mabry, Barbara Massey; Jack
Tompkins, Janie Thompson; Jimmy
Duke, Sandra Hope; Jack
Neil, Linda Sue Terry; Sam Belcher,
Carol Whetstone; Stuart
Raine, Jo Anne Steiner; Jimmy
Thomas, Sylvia Gravler; David
!Cnox, Lela Jane Martin; C r a ig
Dupriest, Lena Bingham Graves;
'ack Henry, Judy Glennon; Ro-and
Copeland, Suzzy Logan; Guf
)rum, Gloria Pickett; Bill Pon-ler,
Jaan Connell; Steve Gillikin
jheryl Fendley; Jerre Feagin
L,inda Shelter; Dean Neptune, Sui
AcDanal; Hall Bryant, Susar
Vestbrook; David Libbe, Mar?
Frances Marshall; Mide Fazio, Ca
ol Wilson; Cliff Harrison, Tami(
Aac Eachern; Billy Spencer, San
ra Willingham; Chip Single}
'ean Weldon; Jerry Porter, Pa
•'lannagan; Pat Reid, Barbar
Collier.
Johnny Dismukes, Carolyr
luincy; Tom Payne, Cheryl Nix
tabby Burke, Boone Arendall;
'ohn Woodliff, riinda CrSver; Al-en
Fulmar, Jean Ann Hargette;
landy Havicus, Katheririe Wilr
:ams; George Junemah, Sandra
Toe; Bobby Pou, Virginia Miller;
"•rank Pattoh, Paula Addison;
"•om Duncan, Karen. Deiters; Jim1
"aldwell, Leslie Simpson; Charles
Boutwell, 'Ann Pearson; Richard
Yesterday's Plainsman
10 Years Ago Today . . .
Campus hit by flu epidemic. Infirmary packed.
Miller Hall, new pharmacy building, dedicated. Building
named for Emerson R. Miller, Auburn's first teacher of pharmacy.
ZTA, KD, Sigma Nu, Kappa Sigma hold annual formals.
Following loss to Tennessee, API basketball team rolls
over Georgia and Mississippi State, prepares to meet Florida.
Coach Umbach's wrestling team starts season with 32-0
win over Vanderbilt, after six straight SEC championship
years.
20 Years Ago Today . . .
ODK-Lions Club paralysis drive nets $350.00; half to be
used in Auburn, half to go to Warm Springs.
Ten Auburn students lose all possessions in fire which
destroys the Wild Building on the corner of Magnolia and
South Gay. ; •; .
Editorial calls for truce in war between -Auburn student
and local theatres. * : ' ,
Auburn drops pair of basketball games to Tennessee
and Georgia Tech, face Georgia, LSU, and Tiiiahe-
Announcement made that 17-year-old college men may
enlist into certain branches of the armed services.
Colby, Alice Chandler; Tom McMillan,
Harriet O'Olive; Rick
Bean, Natalie Cordill; Bobby
Branch, Linda Mayson; Jim Henry,
Jo Cabler; Larry Ruis, Judy
Jeffords; Dave Gaillard, Susan
lores Henderson; David Kuyken-dall,
Maud Ellen Bell; Bill Mid-gette,
Virginia Beard; Bill Hall.
Sdie Mitchell; Hank Erkel, Helen
Earl; Frank Raue, Carlos Fendley;
Warren Bridges, Dell Duke; Walter
Bradley, Marianne Mann:
3teve Burns, Marietta Chambers;
Bobby Sisk, Liz Perry.
Ken Spano, ' Mary Gail Hall:
hunter Flack, Delores Henderson'
Oan McMillan, Eleana Manuel;
^tick Watts, Marilyn Knox; Jere
divers, Marina Marko' < ; Dwight
Vallick, Mary Harriet Roberts'
Vren Avery, Nancy Bryant;
Charles King, Bunny Green; Hen-y
Holt, Susan Haley; Guerry Ed-vards,
Betsy Legge; Norman
"Hieaune, Lyndia Cummins; Jim
Tar.rison, Peggy Whittle; B i l ly
Wilcox, Peggy Dunbar; Buddy
Steel, Alice Moss; David Wilson,
Mary V. Hughes; Juan M. Duke,
Candy Woods; Mike Hillrhan, Jan-dy
Woods; Sonny Brittain, J u d y
Woodall; Les Currie, Lynda Mel-viri;
iuddy Morgan, Jane Balch;
Bill Vernon, Linda Brabensteder
Inge Waddle, Ellen McRae; Dick
Witaker, Judy Laplam; Bob Hens-ler,
Melissa Harp.
Ambassador...
(Continued'from page 1)
ment, Dr. Graham was United
States Representative on the United
Nations Committee of Good
Offices in the Duth-Indonesian
Dispute.
While a number of other former
students and friends of Dr.
Graham's are on the Auburn
Campus, Dr. Clyde Cantrell, library
directot, has a special kind
of rememberahtse.
'•'I feel very close to Dr.
Graham,," Dr.- Cantrell says, "because
as a member of the University
Band, I blew the bugle
call that started the academic
procession, for the ceremonies
which .were to install him as
president of the university."
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
\,eve> GO sotA&pipcg mem tie CAN 4TUOY—
Chemistry Organizations
Hurt By Size Of School
"T00/S MC#£ UK£/rf"
Summer Job Program For this Year
Now In Effect In Union Building
The student sumrh^r job program for this year is being
held in the Union Building, through February 22. Sponsored
by the Student Body, the program is designed to make available
to Auburn students information cncerriing how and
where to apply, for summer work.
NOTICE
Lieutenant Allan Meyer of the
Naval OfWeer: Programs Office,
Birmingham, Alabama, will be on
the Auburn University campus ^2,
13 and 14 February, 1963, to lp
terview and test students interested
in becoming naval officers
after graduation,
Summer job directors and ift:
structions on how to writ? appli
cation letters will be available to
students during the tw6-week
period from thfee to f fys o'clock
in the afternoons., information
will be available on both foreign
and domestic job opportunities.
Names, addresses,. and lother information
about firms and government
agencies hiring students
for summer work will also be on
hand for student's use.
Last year several hundred students
f o u n d summer work
through the aid of the program.
A larger number of Auburn students
are expected to participate
this year. According to Jim Sims,
chairman of the Summer Job
Committee, "There are thousands,
of jobs for interested students, if
they apply now: This is a great
opportunity for people who are
looking for exciting jobs in interesting
places."' .••' '
i j j i i /*;•:••'' - - . . . ' . . '•
5 Those. interested s h o u l d first
get the addresses of companies' for
which they are interested in
« t.VtViiiiwajlHftiTffiHB^ mmm*
IS THIS YOUR SHIRT?
working from the directories.
Then, using an instruction book-
The Council of the School of
Chemistry is waiting for final approval
under the new Student
Body Organizations Law.
On February 7, the final draft
of the council's constitution was
drawn up and submitted to, the
entire council for approval.
The 400 students of the School
of Chemistry are under the leadership
of president Pete Richardson
and vice-president Barry
Brubaker. The council itself is
composed of the president of each
of the organizations within the
school and representatives-at-large,
which have not been elected
yet.
Active organizations in the
school are The American Chemical
Society, president Joe Hut-cheson;
The Institute of Chemical
Engineers, president' Pete Richardson;
Lambda Tau, lab technology
honorary, president Gerrie
Fowler, and Phi Lambda Upsilon,
chemistry- honorary, president
Crews Askew.
The only planned activity a+
present of the chemistry council
is participation in Village Fair.
Each organization is planning a , The council is expecting prob-project
to be exhibited at the lems to arise because of the small
Fair. I size of the school.
3—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, February 13, 1963
let ,to be provided free, a l e t t e r
of' application should be written.
This year a letter fro mthe Student
Body office addressed to the
prospective employer will be given
each student who applies for a
job. It will explain the program
and urge consideration of the application.
Your are cordially invited
to an Autographing Party
Honoring
Dr. Malcolm Cook McMillan
On The Publication of
'The Alabama Confederate Reader'
February 14, 1963
Three to Five P.M.
Burton's
Book Store
Tempest Winners...Lap 1!
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flu ViamAman
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
Charles McCay
Editor
Richard Raiford
Business Manager
P"*ESS
Managing Editors—Harry Wilkinson and Milton Williams; Sports Editor — Pete Morgan; Newt
Editor—Bob Reed: Features Editor—Don Phillips; Intramural Sportt Editor — Crawford Welch;
Society Editor—Fran Cooper; Editorial Assistant—John Dixon; Editofial Cartoonist—Tom Walker;
Photographer—Jim Laney; Secretary—Joyce Blackman; Assistant Sports Editor—George
Gardner; Assistant News Editor—Harry Hooper ;Assistant Features Editor—Hunter Smith; Columnists—
Diane Snoddy, Ronnie Wynn, Bert Hitchcock; Staff Writers—Bill Mazarcl, Ann Risher,
Lynn McLaughlin, Mary Manly, Mary Dixon, Jim Sims, Betty Thomas, Victoria Hrutkay, Linda
Hayes, Mary Whitley, Walter Massey, Gerald Rutberg, Bob Snyder, Tommy Lindsey, Linda Bo-wen,
Joan Whatley, Terry Scruggs, and Reggie Gilbert; Sports Cartoonist—.Rick Webb; Advertising
Manager—Dan Ennis; Circulation Manager—James Fincher; Assistant Advertising Managers—
Judy Copeland, Virginia Smith and Jim Barber; Copy Readers—Marilyn Sanders and Joyce
Blackman.
Plainsman offices are located in Room 318 of the Auburn Student 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.
Circulation—3,000 weekly. Publication date is Wednesday.
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.
The Plainsman is represented by the National Advertising Service and affiliated with the
Associated College Press.
AUBURN UNLIMITED
An educational complex such as Auburn
University is an awesome thing to behold.
We are constantly staggered by the educational
gains of this institution. This is assuredly
an historic period of transition and
growth for Auburn. Beautiful new buildings
have emerged from the face of the
earth, record numbers of students have arrived,
and teachers' salaries have painfully
but gradually increased. On the surface,
the situation looks good. Below the surface,
a heretofore quiscent giant is beginning
to awaken. This giant is to appear Friday
before the state legislative committee
on finance and taxation. He will assume the
form of Auburn's biannual budget request.
The budget request calls for an increase
of more than $3,500,000 per annum over
present appropriations. Figuratively speaking,
the sum seems quite large. In 'view of
facts presented, the request seeks only to
guarantee to Alabama students the educational
facilities granted other students in
similar universities in the South and a-round
the nation.
Current university gains have been
made at the expense of other important
functions. Salary increases to professors
for instance have taken needed funds
away from such items as research and
equipment. Additional building needs are
estimated to approach the $19,000,000
mark.
One stunning fact has arisen from comment
on the proposed budget. According
to the Southern Regional Education Board,
"Alabama spent $549 per student in 1961
as compared to $554 ten years previous."
We face this statement while at the same
time considering a 22.7% increase per student
expenditure for the ten years in all
Southern states.
This fact becomes even more stunning
when we consider that tuition increases
across the state and nation for the past decade
have far exceeded increases in family
income.
Alabama citizens must realize that higher
education is the state's soundest investment
in the future. There seems to be an
almost hysterical fear amongst the citizenry
of higher taxes. If such tax increases are
to be avoided, the state must either discard
its "no debt" law or increase its number of
taxpayers and their median incomes. It
seems only rational that greater numbers
of college graduates in the state will increase
tremendously the state's tax revenue
and relieve present payees of added
responsibilities.
' The hew state administration has shown
a strong desire to end the days of proration
and decreased budgets as regards education
outlays. We can only hope that this
influence will weigh heavily with the state
solons as they consider the financial structure
of higher education institutions in Alabama.
Withholding needed funds from state institutions
as a means of maintaining present
policies on tax rates and state debts
is a useless concept. Complexity and progress
in a system of free enterprise breeds
increased costs. We can't have one without
the other.
Education in Alabama is quite frankly
an opportunity. It has been shown to be
an area for which positive action is called.
We sincerely hope that Friday's appeals by
officials of this university will not fall on
the ears of deaf legislators. Continued proration
and decreased budgets will eventually
eradicate those specialists trained to
create better hearing aids.—Wilkinson.
CULTURE ABOUNDING
If there are those who think Auburn is
devoid of cultural entertainment, let us
reiterate the special events on the campus
recently and in the near future.
Last Wednesday, the Auburn University
String Orchestra was featured in a program
of the ensemble music of Bach. It
was attended by 400 plus students and faculty—"
A goodly crowd for a Bach performance,"
stated the director.
The students and faculty alike are to be
commended for this outstanding attendance.
The Detroit Symphony Orchestra, one of
the best in the business, will appear in concert
tonight in the Student Act Building.
"West Side Story," a musical of some
renown, will run for three nights beginning
next Monday. This presentation is by
the Auburn Dance Corps under the direction
of Mrs. Louise Turner, who has directed
several outstanding shows on campus.
I
Dr. Frank Graham, former University
president and presently the United States'
U. N. representative for India and Pakistan,
will lecture in the Union Building ballroom
next Tuesday night. His talk is entitled,
"The United Nations in the Atomic
Age.'
A company of professional actors and
actresses will perform in the Broadway
comedy, "Bus Stop" tomorrow night. This
will be presented by the Auburn Union Entertainment
Committee in the ballroom.
The Auburn Players, apparently better
with each performance, opens next Thursday
with an eight night run of "Dangerous
Corner," a mystery.
Finally, the Auburn Panhellenic Council
has announced the signing of a contract
with the Travelers Three, a folk-singing
group, as the entertainment for the Southeastern
Panhellenic Conference.
Each of these events has at least two
things in common. First, they are first-rate
entertaining and knowledge gaining media.
Secondly, they are presented without cost
to the bona fide Auburn student. An ID
card will gain you entrance to any of these
outstanding performances.
Of course, this deluge is somewhat above
the normal rate of things. There may be
weeks when we will not be accorded such
opportunities, so we urge you to take time
out and attend those things which hold special
interest to you as an individual.
We hear quite often tfiat we'll never
have a top-notch University here until we
are able to play basketball in a gigantic
new field house. Perhaps, we should broaden
our scope of things and include cultural
development on campus as one of the primary
criteria for a "top-notch" student
body and subsequently a ''top-notch" university.
The Switchboard
Tkrm. (Ooflfi^u
Letters To The Editor...
Campus Drive Head Clarifies Fund Gift;
Rush Chairman Comments On System
Editor, The Plainsman,
I would like to give an answer
to the letter appearing in last
week's "Plainsman" concerning
the 10% contribution to the Auburn
Community Chest from the
All-Campus Fund Drive.
Previous to 1950 the Auburn
Students were plagued with as
many as six fund raising projects
throughout the academic
school year. At that time a Drives
Law was Voted into the Student
Body Laws stating "only one
drive shall be held each year
for the purpose of raising funds
for the Campus Chest." The law
does not state who has the specific'
responsibility for deciding
which charities shall reap benefits
from the funds raised. Therefore,
the responsibility fell into
the hands of the Drives Committee
which is also in charge
of coordinating the All-Campus
Fund Drive.
In the past, the City of Auburn
has conducted a community chest
drive each year. Since the installation
of the Drives Law, it
has been standard procedure for
the Drives Committee to turn a
certain peicentage of the funds
collected aver to the Auburn
Community Chest under agreement
that during the community
chest drive no Auburn student
would be directly contacted for
the contribution of money. This
procedure has become more or
less a custom for each successive
Drives Committee.
The checks were sent to the
respective charities approximately
two weeks ago. Since then it
has been learned that there will
be no Auburn Community Chest
Drive this year. The money donated
to this charity will be returned
and due to this, there remains
$347.50 which has yet to
be turned over to any specific
charity. This afternon the Drives
Committee meets to decide the
destination of this remaining
$347.50.
I would like to say that opinions
from students not directly
concerned are always welcome
in regards to the All-Campus
Fund Drive and any other facet
of Student Government. You the
students are the ones who support
the Fund Drive and make it
a success. Suggestions are always
welcome.
Bill Mayrose
Supt. of Campus Drives
» * *
Rush Chairman
Comments On Editorial
Editor, The Plainsman,
Fraternity rush week on the
Auburn campus has always been
and shall continue to be a controversial
issue in that, during
this brief time the futures of
several hundred boys will be determined.
It may be thought by
some that this is a fairly bold
statement, but deeper thought
would bring to light the fact that
the basis for a boy's adult life
is formed during his college days.
Rush is also a time in which the
fraternity system itself is brought
into the limelight. It is a time
in which the leaders of the I.F.C.,
the leaders of individual fraternities,
and the fraternity men
themselves are called upon to
prove their worth to society.
Last year's rush was met with
disapproval by many, and the
I.F.C. has tried to bring forth a
suitable plan for the up-and-coming
year. Many hours were
spent in deliberating many
points from as many different
aspects, and the basis for what
we consider a workable plan that
is fair to all the. fraternities and
to the rushees has been developed.
It is unfortunate that
there are those in position of authority
on this campus who do
not have enough initiative and
pride in their work to follow up
on an issue as important as this
before making a feeble attempt
to express their views on the.
subject. I refer specifically to the
editorial in the Plainsman last
week concerning this issue. In
my opinion, it is the perfect example
of what an editorial
should NOT be! It was founded
on incomplete information without
even having consulted anyone
directly connected with the
proposal, namely an officer of
the rush commission. I do not
deny him the right to say what
he ,said, but I DO say that he
abused his right by not obtaining
all the facts before expressing
his view.
My point will be made clearer
by refuting his criticism in the
points that he brought up in the
rush editorial of last week. Let
me start by saying that the information
from which the .editorial
must have been taken was
the commission report to the
I.F.C., which outlined next year's
rush, and was designed to be
supplemented by an explanation
of many of the points as the report
was given.
The "widely dispersed quiet
hours" were put in effect for
very specific reasons; those of
taking some of the monotony
out of the week, and , cutting
down on the length of the rushing
day. A complete analysis of
this year's rush showed that the
evening hours were poor rushing
periods for most fraternities
and that their usefulness could
be improved by cutting their
length. This two hour break will
allow the evening parties to be
cut to ' two and one half hours
rather than four and one half
as was the case last year. This
break wil come Tuesday and
Thursday nights, with Monday
and Wednesday nights having
rush activities ending at eight
thirty, allowing fraternities to
have parties away from Auburn
in the afternoon without having
to hurry back to meet the six
o'clock quiet hour deadline of
the alternate days. Mention was
made in the editorial about the
use of these hours, stating only
one of the very many possible
uses of this time. I will not bore
you by elaborating on the very
many other obvious uses, other
than dirty rushing.
Fraternities are coming to the
time when they either prove
their integrity or vanish from
society. These two hour breaks
will give the fraternities another
opportunity to show their worth,
these rules were made by their
own representatives who were
stating the opinions of their chap,
ters. If fraternities cannot abide
by the rules that they themselves
set up, then something is inherently
wrong with them, and they
Will certainly meet a just death.
I do not believe that this is the
case!
Mention of the Monday night
at the movies displayed gross
incompetence on the part of the
editor, in that in this event
NONE of the facts were obtained.
The purpose of this event is to
prevent rushees from being unduly
influenced by fraternity
men after the end of the day's
rush, and to provide them with
entertainment to keep them from
seeking some less desirable form
of recreation. The rushees are the
guests of the fraternity system
'! while o :they are going through
rush in that they are in Auburn
at our invitation, and we realize
our responsibility toward them.
Rushees will be issued tickets to
the show at registration and these
tickets will be presented for admission
to the show. When the
show is over these tickets will
be stamped by I.F.C. officials
stationed at all doors, and these
tickets wil be presented to the
proper authorities before any boy
may receive a bid from any fraternity.
As for the issuance of stamps
to the fraternities, it is quite obvious
that the I.F.C. would have
special stamps made up for each
fraternity and ONE issued to •
the I.F.C. representative or some
other responsible person in each
house. This point was brought
out in the I.F.C. meeting at
which this report was given to
show that misuse of stamps
would not be a problem.
The r u s h commission•• is by
no means through with rush regulations
for the coming year. We
realize that there are many points
that will have to be cleared up
before a really functional rush
program will be brought forth,
but to condemn the basic structure
around which the complete
program will be fitted when so
little is known by the critic displays,
in my mind, a negative
attitude and a grave lack of confidence
in the fraternity system
at Auburn. I urge the entire
student body to try to understand
before you criticize! Realize
the problems at hand and
the steps being taken to find the
solution, and then, if you must,
offer criticism — constructively.
Yours for a better Auburh, I
remain
Danny Paul, Chairman
I.F.C. Rush Commission
Billiard Letter
Called Unfounded
Editor, The Plainsman,
We were disgusted by Ray
Bullard's letter to the editor in
February sixth's issue of The
Plainsman. We were astonished
at the depths that an Auburn
man would sink to belittle the
honored title of "Loveliest of
the Plains." In our opinion the
pornographic pictures that cover
the holes in the walls in Mr. Bullard's
room, inhibit his judgement
of Auburn coeds to the extent
that they render him incapable
of judging the "Loveliest
of the Plains."
Taking into consideration more
than one connotation of the word
"loveliest," we feel that, on the
More Cultural Development Called For
To Broaden College Experience At AU
* * By Bert Hitchcock
Student Body President
In a revealing session several
weeks ago, I had the eye-opening
opportunity to learn how
Southern education looks to those
in other parts of our countnry.
We certainly aren't seen in a
very good or complimentary
not fully agree
p e r s o n s who
are supposed to
know a b o ut
such things. I
question, first
of all, their
presumption to
set themselves
up as supreme
j u d g e s , and
secondly I can-light
by the
that a head full of facts is evidence
of a superior education.
Still and yet, this attitude or
opinion brings out many points
which are well-taken and meaningfully
close to home.
There have been many voices
raised in a crescendo of cries to
"University, University, we want
a University!" Students have
been very pronounced in their
desire to place more emphasis on
intellectualism and to create a
more cultural atmosphere. Other
students have looked on with
much skepticism and continued
down Party Road with their
orange and blue pennants. The
pseudo-intellectuals bemoan their
plight even louder; by now Joe
College is completely oblivious
to why he came to school in the
first place.
There is a certain tragedy in
both of these extreme positions.
Perhaps Auburn does need to exert
more effort to deserve in all
respects the honored name of
University, but first we students
must begin to take advantage of
those elements of education which
are offered to us and neglected
by us. Such terminology could
apply to classroom instruction
as well, but here I am speaking
specifically of those numerous
extra-curricular exhibits, lectures,
and cultural events which,
if attendance is used as a criterion
(What other standard can
there be?), are neglected, ignored,
or forgotten by the student body.
We are simply letting a large part
of our education slip by.
Such a statement coming from
me is much more like true confessions
rather than a reprimand,
for I have been right with the
majority which just "didn't have
the time," "didn't know about
it," or "didn't care for that kind
of stuff." Most of us are probably
not aware of half of the programs
which are brought in to this university.
Some fault may lie in the
publicity, but we must take by
far the bulk of the blame because
we just don't bother about this
sort of thing. We don't bother
about it now, and we don't bother
about it in the future. We will
have our college degree but what
about the disciplined and cultured
mind which we should have
from this college education?
A college community provides
many opportunities which we will
never find again after our Auburn
days; too often we take advantage
of. the wrong opportunities
and fail to avail ourselves of
those which would benefit us the
most.
The scheduled performance of
the Detroit Symphony on February
13 or of Jose Greco on
April 1 generally will mean
nothing more to us than an article
or two in this paper. That Dr.
Frank Graham, past president of
the University of North Carolina
now holding an important
position in the United Nations,
will be in Auburn the 19th of
February is of little or no concern
to. the vast majority. We go
along our merry way or else we
wail that there are never any
opportunities for us to enjoy the
arts or to develop intellectually.
Why don't we wake up?
It just might be an interesting
and enjoyable experience. One
thing for sure, for most of us*
it will be a novel one!
Blue Horse And Pencils
Columnist Suggests Unlimited Cuts
To Give Opportunity For Responsibility
By Diane Snoddy
Isn't it funny how pencils are
worn down in so many different
ways? At the first of the quarter
students jot down with great zest
the number of cuts allowed them
by each of their professors; toward
the end of the quarter professors
use up more pencil-points by filling
out with equal enthusiasm
those charming little drop slips.
Students waste money, professors
waste time, and the Blue Horse
people get richer every quarter.
The only sensible solution is for
the students and professors to invest
their otherwise wasted resources
in pencil and paper stock
and forget about the higher education.
This solution falls short of
the goals of our society and is,
therefore, not really acceptable.
Well," as everyone knows, there
are two other possible answers,
and in all fairness, both possibilities
must be examined. First, students
could attend class regularly,
but some unforseen difficulty
always manages to deter even the
most reliable and conscientious
i scholars, to say nothing of the
hindrances we backsliders have to
cope with. Although possible, the
success of this approach seems
highly improbable. Besides, with
all the note-taking, those fat capitalist
pigs, the pencil manufacturers,
would be able to rule the
world with all their money.
Now, the other solution seems
much more suitable. Let's just do
away with compulsory class attendance.
Naturally this suggestion
will meet with stern and turbulent
disapproval from some
quarters, but only reason can
overcome reason. So, students,
stop applauding, and professors,
hear me out!
Rationally speaking, the only
drawback of the unlimited cut
whole, the "Loveliest of the
Plains" has been both well
chosen and well photographed.
We feel that The Plainsman has
in the past, and will continue to
demonstrate good taste in their
selection of the "Loveliest of the
Plains."
John Gait
and
Bill Thomas
The above statements should
be well-chosen. The reader is
requested to refer to our page
one column for further remarks
concerning this subject. —Ed.
system would occur during its installation
and adaptation period,
and this is not unusual. In every
such installation of any kind of
system which affects human actions
there is a period of adjustment.
It is only fair to assume that
the system would be taken advantage
of at first, but after a
brief time devoted to trial and
error, the men would stand above
the boys. And as for the boys,
isn't it reasonable to assume that
they, too, would benefit from this
experience; the boys would be at
least one step closer to manhood,
would have taken their first realistic
glance at their capabilities,
and might even begin to show
some signs of self-discipline and
responsibility.
At the thought of self-discipline
or will-power most people shudder.
It's so much easier to sit back
and to either tolerate the rules or
to fight the rules. But is this the
type training that prepares men
and women to face reality and to
govern this world? No! How can
anyone who has never had to govern
himself adequately govern society?
A sense of responsibility
just doesn't suddenly appear in an
individual when he reaches the
ripe old age of twenty-one; responsibility
is the result of training
of one's self by one's self.
How can will-power be exerted
by someone who has never had
any reason to exert any pressure
oh his own will? It can't be. It is
therefore insane to expect the
average college student to be anything
but lost upon graduation,
because of his inability to make
his own decisions. It's too bad that
we can't all go into the pencil
business and get filthy rich.
Speaking of rich, professors
aren't. And they have reason to
become disgusted with students
who fail to attend class; they also
have reason to favor compulsory
class attendance: But what difference
is there between a classroom
filled with empty chairs and
a classroom filled with empty
people? As far as lectures go,
neither of these circumstances are
especially outstanding ego-builders.
The choice is the individual
professor's whether to have quantity
or quality in his classroom.
The ultimatum, in a freshly coined
phrase, might be "dull pencils
and dull minds or sharp pencils
and sharp minds."
: . •
Women's Student Government To
Elect Officers Thursday/ February 2 8
By ANN PINSON
Plainsman News Writer
Women's Student Government
officers will be elected Thursday,
February 28, 1963, by women students.
The offices to be filled are
president, vice-president, secretary,
treasurer, social chairman,
and town representative.
To be nominated to the office of
president, vice-president, secretary,
treasurer, or social chairman,
the candidate must submit
her name in writing with the signatures
of one hundred women
students to the Qualifications
Board. The candidate for town
representative must submit her
name in writing with the signature
of twenty-five women students
residing off-campus. These
petitions must be submitted to the
Qualifications Board by 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday, February 12.
The Board shall hear the candidates'
qualifications and candi.
er their nominations. The candidates
will be notified of the
board's action on Feb. 13, so that
the nominees may begin their
campaign.
Some of the basic qualifications
Holiday Attendance
Rated Outstanding
Attendance at pre-Thanksgiv-ing
and post-Thanksgiving classes
last Fall quarter exceeded overall
average class attendance.
For several years the faculty
had difficulty in keeping students
on campus the day before and the
day after Thanksgiving vacation.
The Council of Deans became
disturbed a b o u t this problem.
They passed regulations concerning
Thanksgiving vacation which
were published in the Plainsman.
Then student leaders devised a
plan of their own and presented
it to Dean Huntley, Dean of faculty.
This plan called for a five
percent reduction in the grade of
any student who missed classes
the Wednesday before and the
Monday after Thanksgiving vacation
unless the student was excused
by the Council of Deans or
the Infirmary. This plan was presented
to the Council of Deans
who repealed their former plan
and adopted the students' plan.
Dean Huntley reported the overall
attendance on these two days
has been approximately 98 per
cent since;the;- pl^chiisolKetvHift:
effect. This is a higher percentage
of attendance than on an average
day.
Psi Chi To Donate
Textbooks Abroad
By ANN RISHER
Auburn's chapter of Psi Chi,
national psychology honorary, has
recently sent two shipments of
psychology textbooks as a gift to
the University of Decca library in
East Pakistan. The shipments'total
some thirty different texts,
plus some duplicates.
Psi Chi, under the direction of
Mr. Max Killingsworth, president
of the organization and an instructor
in psychology, became
aware of the need for up-to-date
social science textbooks through
letters from Mrs. Floyd Vallery,
Fulbright exchange professor at
the University of Decca, to friends
in the psychology department.
Until Psi Chi's gift arrived, only
1940 editions of psychology textbooks
were available at the university.
Mrs. Vallery was formerly a
psychology professor at Auburn
University, and her husband, Dr.
Floyd Vallery, was assistant to
President Draughon.
In response to her need, Psi Chi
has started collecting used textbooks
to send to the University of
Decca. Mr. Max Killingsworth
said that any donations of used
textbooks will be appreciated.
Anyone wishing to help this cause
may contact Mr. Killingsworth.
for these offices are a scholastic
average of at least 1.5 the preceding
quarter or a 1.5 overall
average. The candidate must not
have been convicted of a major
offense or repeated minor offenses.
The president, vice-president
and secretary of WSGA cannot
hold another major campus office.
The president must be a resident
second or third quarter junior
at the time she assumes her
office in the spring. She must
have attended Auburn University
at least two quarters prior to the
quarter she assumes office.
The president, vice president,
and secretary must have been a
member of the Legislative Council
for at least two quarters.
The secretary must be a resident
upperclassman (incoming
junior or senior) and must h a v e
attended Auburn University at
least two quarters prior to the
time she assumes office. The
treasurer must be a freshman or
first quarter sophomore at the
time she assumes office.
The social chairman must be at
least a third quarter freshman
and attended Auburn University
for at least two quarters.
The town representative must
reside in Auburn or Opelika and
show an interest in Women's Student
Government work.
Sally Jones, president of WSGA
said, "I urge all girls who are interested
in Women's Student Government
work to run for an office.
It is an excellent opportunity
for women students as well as a
wonderful experience."
Debater* PtM^Second In Georgia Tournament
The Auburfr DebStf^eam placed
second in the thirteenth annual
West Georgia Invitational Tournament
at Carroltdf}, Ga.
In general eteib&ie the Auburn
debaters for' the negative side
won, making their overall record
five wins and no losses. The team
took second in impromptu speaking,
and participated in persuasive
speaking and interpretative
reading.
5—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, February 13, 1963
WEST SIDE STORY opens next Monday under the direction of Mrs. Louise Turner. Those appearing
in the dance number "Cool" are (left to right) Jean Parker, Jay Morrow, Avery Taylor,
Joan Narrell, and Kandy Walker. The production will run for three nights in Langdon Hall.—Photo
by Les King.
Engineer's Week Observance
Engineering Council Sponsors
PRE-REGISTRATION
Juniors, seniors, and graduate students will plan schedules
with their Dean, as follows:
Monday, February 18,1963 Tuesday, February 19,1963
Seniors: Juniors
9-10 a.m. — (M-O) 8-9 a.m. — (T-Z)
10-11 a.m. — (P-S) 9-10 a.m. — (A-C)
11-12 noon—(T-Z) 10-11 a.m. — (D-G)
. -11-12 noon — (H-L)
1-2 p.m. — (A-G)
2-3 p.m. — D-G) 1-2 p.m. — (M-O)
3-4 p.rn: ^- (H-L) 2-3 p.m. — (P-S)
Freshman and Sophomores approved to pre-register ^~
8 ^ ^ g ^ e - ' p . m * — 'Tuestfay February 19, 1963. Graduate'
Students'" may register either day of the Pre-Registration
Period. .
Appearing as guest speaker will
be George Bynum who is president
of the Carrier Corporation.
Mr. Bynum was born in Oneonta,
Ala., and attended Blountsville
High School. He obtained his A.B.
degree in electrical engineering at
the University of Alabama in
1924. He was athletic coach at
Troy State for two years and then
entered Auburn.
Also during each day of Engineer's
Week the council is sponsoring
a movie entitled "George
Spelvin—Professional Engineer."
It will be shown at 3:15 p.m. in
Wilmore 163. The. film shows
many of the experiences in the
professional career of an engineer
from his training in college
and working in industry. This
sbauld be Of interest to all pre-engineerihg
and engineering students.
Everyone is welcome to see
the film.
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
SALUTE: JOE AMWAKE
Engineer's Week will lae held at Auburn February 18-23.
Engineer's Week is observed nationally at this time on campuses
across the country.
The Engineering Council of the School of Engineering
will sponsor the event here.
Players To Rehearse
'Dangerous Corner'
The Auburn Players have cast
and are now in rehearsal for their
second production of winter quarter,
"Dangerous Corner."
This exciting mystery by J. B.
Priestly involves a close-knit
family that owns a publishing
house. Some of the mystery involves
some stolen checks, an unfaithful
wife, and an unexplained
suicide.
Included in the cast are Lanita
McDonald, Stephanie Pitts, Jean
Weiland, Rondia Widner, David
Hiley, Bill Crandall, and Bruce
Bradbury. Telfair B. Peet is directing
and Monroe Swilly is assistant
director.
, Peet explains the plot "as"'"'a
"strongly tense and gripping
story of a quest for truth which
bit by bit unravels to tear a
family to pieces."
"Dangerous Corner" opens Feb.
21 for an eight-night run. Production
dates are February 21,
22, 23, 26, 27, 28, March 1 and 2.
Joe Amwake (B.S., 1959) is a Sales Engineer with the
Long Lines Department of A.T.&T. Joe supervises five
people who are responsible for the sale of intercity telephone
services in the state of Alabama. Quite a responsibility
for a man who's been in the business only three years.
Joe had demonstrated on earlier assignments that he
could handle responsibility. For instance, on his first,
telephone job he coordinated the installation of new teletypewriter
services in Detroit.' This earned him-his-job
as Sales Representative where he contacted important network
television customers, among others. Then.came.his
latest step up.
Joe Amwake and the other young engineers like him
in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help
bring the finest communications service in the world to
the homes and businesses of a growing America.
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
MARTIN
THEATRE
OPELIKA
Lost Times Friday
Two Walt Disney Films
WALT DISNEY'S
(MlKftdt
'ANGELS
Saturday Only
DOUBLE FEATURE
TECHMICOLOIt
JOEL
McCREA
P L U S —
GARY COOPER
TkiENDiar
COLOR by P« Lu» • m-stolim DOROTHY McGUIRE
Sun. - Mon. - Tues.
-Wednesday - Thursday,
Jessica
/ t ^ ^DRIVE-IN
GATES OPEN AT 6:15
FIRST SHOW AT 6:45
Ends Thursday
METRO-SOLDWYN-MAYER
BRIGITTE BARDOT
MARCELLO MASTROIANNI
"A VERY PRIVATE AFFAIR"
Filmed In EASTMAN COLOR.
Friday - Saturday
FOUR BIG FEATURES
Metro
Goldwyn
~ Mayer presents
A Euterpe Production
* In Cinemascope and METROCOLOR •
— P L U S —
cool-
Plisnlm By IMFWIAI WODUttlONS
Released D< AMERICAN INHRIUIIQNAL PICIUMS
— P L U S —
l Paramount Preaertt"
A Carmel Production
An American-International Picture
Admission: $1.00 for Adults
Sun. - Mon. - Tues.
7F*MAt(
ANSWERS'
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JTAMING,
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DEE* DAM !
MieilE|lNEP»JoHNLUND|
— C E S A R RPMERP • STEFANtE POWERS |
A Uniwrsal-lnteinatiooal PMuia
MAURICE CHEVALIER • ANGIE DICKINSOH
Wednesday - Thursday
v i - v' ' • r » , f - vK
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S < ^
TIGER •^Theatre:
•3TU 7-2491:
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY
EXTRA SPECIAL SHOWING
SIX ROADRUNNERS IN COLOR
AM A FEATURE TOO . . .
WARNER
BROS.
mcSBNTS
NIL
As Billy Thi Kid I
MJQmtMM .MILAN-DEINER-HA'
Screen play by LESLIES'
*RM>AY - SATURDAY
— Double Feature —
.. -. i •:.-- • - '
ROCK HUDSON • GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA
SANDRA DEE - BOBBY DARIN • WALTER SLEZAK
*Come w September
unannmiasiow
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l%N^IMsoN^Dofus DAY^TONYR^OAU
iEpVEROGMEBACK*
' Hi Etttmin COLOR — — — —
-.EDIE ADAMS -JACK OAKIE-JACK KRUSCHEN
4 IMmi#MintfM M M AN ADULT, somiSHCAKO cornert
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SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY
Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven" was a highly imaginative
poem of tetror, but the film version stretches the imagination
beyond Poe's wildest dreams and adds both broad
and. tongue-in-ch'eek touches of comedy which give the picture
a unique status. Although literary scholars may object
to the liberties: taken with Poe's epic, they can't help
but be entertained and that's the purpose of any picture.
. . •..,
WAR EAGLE THEATRE
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY —Double Feature
u
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I" SIO«*A^»IITHAym
I limEMSSWlF SW
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m and MetreCeler
g»gaB8affltasgi '•' '•. ininniiemmi
S e c r e t s of the psychiatrist's couch!
^ M - G - M dares to present the bold
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strange mansion on the
hill! In COLOR and.
1
K I M DOUGLAS
LUST FOR
RICHARD WIDMARK
LAUREN BACALL
Av CHARLES BOYER ,/
r \ GLORIA GRAHAMEJ£>
A&LUIUAN GISHl7e£i&
the COBWEB i
And Mroduan, J Q H N K E R R ^ *
FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY - MONDAY
J0SEWJEJUMNE
HMARCELLO
ian Style
fjKMIt* CMHtS fCSTlVAl AWAR0 "ICST CQMCDI*
An EMBASSY PICTURES M i l *
COMING FEBRUARY 21 through 27
An Avalanche off Fun!,
Walt Disney
PRESENTS- V
JULES VERNE'S
In search of t/ie
TECHNICOLOR*
«*»*M!KUVlST«l),»l,|lW«nC, »-JDjW>|a|tMN*Mw)
MILTON WILLIAMS
Managing Editor
Assistant Sports Editor
George Gardner *7& 'PtcUtt&mcut, Sfionfo
'Best Sports Coverage In The SEC
Intramurals Editor
Crawford Welch
PETE MORGAN
Sports Editor
THE PLAINSMAN AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1963 PAGE 6
Morgan's
Meditations
Speaking Of Basketball...
Basketball has recently become a big topic in the SEC conversations.
Perhaps the spark that ignited all the talk was the downfall
of Georgia Tech as they were trapped in the wilds of the Bayou last
weekend. LSU and Tulane sprang a trap that left the Yellow Jackets
mortally wounded. This is definitely one of the biggest shocks of the
season in this part of the country. Tech now has three losses marked
against them which could do great harm to their SEC crown hopes.
It sure was nice to watch the Tigers romp on Florida the way
they did on Monday night. They are really showing the spark they
' had lacked in the last few games. The floor mistakes were down to a
level where they should be, and the shooting percentage was as high
as you could ask for. If they could beat everybody by 30 points per
game, there would be a lot less worries on the Plains.
State Out Front. . .
Mississippi State is still way out in front in the SEC race with
only one conference loss against them. Their victory over Kentucky
has left them in a very nice place to be in. Auburn could end up in
a tie with State if somebody can catch them off guard, but State
would go to the playoffs because of their beating the Tigers last
month. As things have been going lately, there is nothing for sure
except that somebody has got to win a game that their opponents lose.
The Tigers have been playing their same winning basketball
they played before Coach Eaves unexpected absence, and are trying
to show everybody that he taught them enough to keep them going
until his return. Of course everybody needs someone to keep them
going, and Coach Lynn is doing a fine job. In the eight years that he
has been the assistant under Coach Eaves, he has perhaps gotten the
shuffle down as well as the man who invented it. There are going
to be some rough tests for the Tigers to face in the next few weeks
and there is going to have to be some real playing done to keep the
good position they have gained.
I Can Read!!!
While reading the Spartanburg Herald the other day I happened
to run across some wonderful basketball daffynitions by Bob Quincy,
who is the information director for the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Careful reading will show that they are more fact than fiction.
GUNNER—Anyone, but me, who shoots the ball.
MONSTER—A player half-an-inch taller than me.
REFEREE—Intruder who can blow a whistle and cause a coach
to blow his stack.
SWITCH—What the defensive man hollers when he has no idea
where his man went.
BAD PASS—Any ball I fumble.
JUMP BALL—A party where things are really rockin.'
DOUBLE FOUL—A "chicken" call.
LITTLE MAN—Player shorter than me.
DRIVER—Substitute .who owns a new convertible.
CRAZY SHOT—Any basket made by man Fm guarding.
LONG SHOT—Any shot that isn't a layup.
CHARGING—What an official calls when the bench has complained
of the last blocking infraction."'"
DEFENSIVE STAR—Poor shooter.
FUMBLE—Player who misses my perfect pass..
BALL HOG—Player who wants me to give Tiim the ball.
PRESS—To put a crease in one's trousers; also, fellows who write
for papers; also, a coach at N. C. State.
Freshman Wrestlers
Cripple Andrews
College Saturday
By MIKE WARREN
Plainsman Sports Writer
Andrews College, tussling in
their own arena, fell to Auburn's
freshmen wrestlers in the B a by
Tiger's first formal match of the
season. The frosh won by a final
score of 28-15.
Auburn spotted the opposing
matmen all fifteen of the points
they garnered. Due to the small
size of this year's squad, three
five-point divisions were given to
the home team by virtue of forfeit.
This was, as the score indicates,
the end of the line for the
Andrewsians.
Individual Scores
123—Ed Will (Andrews) won
by forfeit.
130—Louis Castro (Andrews)
won by forfeit.
137—Douglas S h a r p e (Tiger)
pinned Gatey Baynes in 2:56.
147—Stanley Aller (A) won by
forfeit.
157—David Adams (T) pinned
James Mymik in 1:16.
167—Jim Pelli (T) won by forfeit.
177—Larry Rhodes (T) decis-ioned
Dick Thomas by a score of
7-2.
191—Ralph Brewer (T) pinned
George Banks in 0.34.
HW—Carmine Chimento (T)
pinned Jack Wallace in 2:54.
This makes the first official win
for these youngsters even though
they have suffered no defeats this
season. This group, it has been
predicted by Coach Sonny Dra-goin,
will be a great asset to the
"Grown Up" Tigers when t h ey
take their places with the varsity
next season.
Soccer Team Wins
Last Saturday the Auburn Soccer
Club, still fired up from the
upset victory over Huntsville OG-MS,
thwarted the unyielding Berry
College Vikings at Rome, Ga.
by a score of 3-0.
Player-Coach FredTaube ti
ed the game " a good team effort."
This was clearly evident as the
ASC fullback defense, led by Jake
Roll'ison, stopped the Vikings' cold,
letting them have a miserly four
goal attempts which were saved
by Auburn's goalie. Confronted by
a vicious Berry defense, the ASC
. (Continued on page 8)
The Torrid Tigers
To Tackle Tulane
COACH BILL LYNN anxiously watches the Tigers take on
and defeat the Georgia Bulldogs. This was the first game Auburn
has played under Lynn although he has spent the last thirteen
years with the athletic department.
Only Four Seniors Return
For Tiger Spring Practice
Only four seniors will be among the 22 lettermen who
report to Head Coach Ralph Jordan for the start of Auburn's
spring practice March 25.
The two senior lettermen, Quarterback Mailon Kent (La-nett,
Ala.) and Kicking Specialist Woody Woodall (Atlanta),
have been excused to play base
ball. The four seniors are right-halfback
George Rose (Brunswick,
Ga.), end Howard Simpson
(Marietta, Ga.), guard Bill Van
Dyke (Atlanta), and fullback
Larry Rawson (Pensacola, Fla.)
The biggest problem facing Jordan
and his staff this spring is
that of replacing four senior tackles.
Chuck Hurston (Columbus,
Ga.) and Bobby Rogers (Gadsden)
both lettered as sophomores
last year. However, they will get
competition from*, red-shirts
Alan Bohlert, Jimmy Dicso, and
Bobby Walton.
Four lettermen r e t u r n at end,
three at guard, and two at center
to provide experience at the other
line positions. The backfield, with
both quarterbacks coming b a ck
next fall also has experienced
depth.
The Rawson brothers, Larry
and David, return at fullback. Don
Lewis (Decatur), John Rogers
(Gainesville, Fla.), and Jphn
Cochran (Crossville), are good
prospects up from the freshman
team.
Five lettermen, • Rose, Mickey
Sutton (Mobile), Tucker Freder-ickson
(Hollywood, Fla,.), Billy
Edge (Jasper),.and Doc Griffith,
(Hokes Bluff) return at halfback^
The most outstanding halfback on
last year's unbeaten freshman
squad was Gerald Gross of Car-rollton,
Ga. He is expected to be
a strong candidate for playing
time next fall.
Jordan indicated he has several
position changes in mind, but that
no decisions have been made.
By RICK WEBB
Sports Cartoonist
Auburn's rampant Tigers take on the upset-minded Tulane
Green Wave, in the Sports Arena next Monday.
Tulane, fresh from their 77-69 upset of the front-running
Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, is a sure bet to be setting their
sights on Auburn as another possible upset victim.
18.8 points per game.
Gott, a Greenie guard, scored
22 .poiuts against Mississippi State
and 20 against Ole Miss. In those
games, he hit seven of twelve, and
nine of eighteen, mostly from the
outside.
"Unlike Kerwin, Gott has to be
talked into shooting." says coach
Cliff Wells. "Kerwin sometimes
throws them up there from all angles,
off balance and everything
else. Ever since Gott pulled a leg
muscle early in the season, he
hasn't been his old self. He can't Rick Webb
In defeating the Jackets, the
Greenies snapped an eleven-game
losing s t r e ak
sending their
season's record
to 1-6 in the
SEC and 3-12
overall.
Altrough the
Greenies have
had more than
their share of
l o s i n g b a ll
g a m e s . they
have not had
trouble in scoring points with
three of the leagues leading scorers
in their line-up.
Foremost among the Greenie
sharp-shooters is Jim Kerwin. He
has scored 86 points in its last
three outings placing him well in
the lead in SEC scoring with a
22.7 point-per-game average and
296 points in 13 games.
Even if the Tigers succeed in
stopping Kerwin they still have
the content with 6-foot-7-inch
center Bob Davidson averaging
jump as high and he has to release
his jump shot high to be effective.
Now that he can't jump as
high, his shooting percentage has
fallen from 44.3 of last year to
34.6 this year.
Gott is rated the best defensive
player for Tulane, though the
over-all playing of the team is
probably weakest there.
One thing the Tigers will have
to watch is excessive personal
fouls, if for no other reason than
Tulane is the number one foul
shooting team in the country. The
Wave has hit 221 of 289 attempts
for 76.4 per cent.
Auburn's trouble-plagued Tigers
have had more than their
share of bad luck this season, but
probably the worst disaster of all
struck last week when Tiger
coach Joel Eaves suffered a slight
heart attack.
Tigers To Meet LSU
By REGGIE GILBERT -
Plainsman Sports Writer
Cdach Bill Lynn and the Auburn
Tigers will carry their SEC
title hopes against red-hot LSU
Saturday night at 7:30 in the
Sports Arena.
Last Friday the Bengal Tigers
downed a good Vahderbilt quintet
63-46 and followed with a Saturday
night upset of sixth-ranked
Georgia Tech by a 56-54 score.
The LSU contest could well be
the do-or-die game for Auburn
as they head down the stretch of
the 1962-63 season. A win would
put Auburn in a good position to
challenge Mississippi State, the
SEC leader. Auburn has lost two
conference games while State has
lost only one, prior to its big battle
with Kentucky.
Louisiana State will bring a
'(Continued on page 7)
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DONAHUE DRIVE NEAR WEST GLENN
After Tight Squeeze With Bulldogs,
The Tigers Take Revenge On Gators
':\?*$?>##'-Bf*#$:-* i mm
_ By BOB SYNDER
Plainsman Sports Writer
<£S The Bulldogs of the University of Georgia felt the bite
Ofjihe Auburn Tigers last Saturday night as Auburn's basketball
team operating in low gear passed the dogs 70-67
in a thrilling overtime.
^ This game turned out to be a "warming up period for the
jjlainsman as two nights later
•frnhiirn hit high gear and
smashed the University of .Florida
88-59.
1\ When comparing the two games
one can easily see that Auburn
ifeund its old self standing on
Koth feet only in the victory over
'Florida.
oVIn the Georgia game at the half
Auburn was leading by only two
joints, while in the Florida contest
the Tigers were far out in
.ftpjit by 27 points. Just three
points won the game for Auburn
against the Bulldogs while . 29
gpints separated the Gators and
tj)e- victorious Plainsmen.
11 Georgia's Coach Harbin (Red)
Lawson's "Firing Five" came up
short of ammunition as the spiri.
ted- performance of Larry Chapman
scoring 21 points led the
Tigers to the hard fought victory.
Johns scored 14 points and Black-well
was close behind with 13 for
Auburn.
Sophomore Billy Rado, Georgia's
usual big gun, hit only 10
points. This fact can be contributed
to the fine defensive playing
of Chapman. Morris was the
Bulldogs' main threat with his
hook shot which could not be
stopped. Morris ended the night
with 17 points, high man for
Georgia.
With nine seconds left in the
game Crenshaw, of Georgia, tied
the game 61-61 with a free
throw, which caused the game to
go into a five minute overtime.
At this point the Plainsmen took
control of the ball and ended the
game for another Auburn victory,
winning 70-67.
Georgia surprised the Tigers by
taking in 47 rebounds to Auburn's
45. The Plainsman hit 42.9
percent of their field goals while
Georgia hit for 38.7 percent.
Monday night proved to be a
turn of events as the Plainsmen
found the loop and hit for 60 percent
of their field goals while
/lorida hit for only 32*9 per?ent.
In this game the rebounds were
one of the big factors leading
toward an Auburn victory. The
Gators pulled down only 29 and
Auburn had a high of 46, with
Layton Johns leading the way.
Johns also was the leading
scorer with 21 points followed by
Cart with 16 arid Chapman with
15.
The leading: scorer for Florida,
and for the game, was Barbee
with 24 followed by Baxley and
Stokes with 12 points each.
The Florida game started off
at a fast, pace and it ended at
even a faster one. It was quite
evident that Auburn had decided
to make it a running game with
as many fast breaks as possible
with Cart and Chapman taking
the lead. • '
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Stomp State! (Somebody)
Lee Hayley, Former Tiger Captain,
To Join Football Coaching Staff
Employment of Lee Hayley, captain of the Auburn football
team in 1952 and an all-conference end in 1951 and '52, as
assistant coach on the Tiger football staff was announced
this morning.
Hayley fills a vacancy created by the resignation of Er-skine
Russell, who joined the
Vanderbilt staff this month, but
his duties have not been specified.
For the last six years Hayley
has been on the coaching staff of
McNeese State College in L a ke
Charles, La., originally as e n d
coach and for the last three years
as defensive coach and first assistant
to the head coach. The McNeese
team won two Gulf State
Conference .cframpjonships in that
period.
The 32-year-old Hayley returned
to Auburn for graduate
work in 1955 after two years in
the Air Force. He earned a master's
degree in 1956 and completed
some'work'on a doctorate.
As a flayer, Hayley set three
Auburn records which still stand.
He caught 33 passes in 1951, scored
on six pass plays in 1952, and
was the receiver in an 81-yard
pass play against Wofford in 1952
—all of which are individual records
in those departments.
A first-string Tiger for three
r » .. _ >.*»»•.-.:?.—•-•.••.....
years, Hayley played in the Blue-
Gray game after the 1952 season.
He was drafted by the Pittsburgh
Steelers professional team but did
not sign, a contract.
The new Auburn coach is the
son of Sam Hayley, captain of the
Tennessee team and an all-Southern
Conference fullback in 1914.
He played his high school ball
at Ensley in Birmingham and won
an award as most outstanding
athlete and scholar in 1948.
In the spring of 1952 Hayley
married an Auburn student from
Foley, Miss Floyd Redd. They
have two children: Tom, 8, and
pick, 6.
Maryville Matmen
To Visit The Plains
By TOMMY LINDSFV
Plainsman Sports Writer
Auburn's wrestling team goes against the matmen of
Maryville College here at the Sports Arena this Saturday
night.
The visitors from Knoxville have an outstanding wrestler
in Baxter in the one-hundred and twenty-three weight class.
He has for the last two years been
TIGER CINDERMEN
VIE IN COLISEUM
By GERALD RUTBERG
Plainsman Sports Writer
Making final preparations for
their initial encounter, the cind-ermen
of Coach Wilbur Hutsell
journey to Montgomery, this Saturday,
for the first annual running
of the Coliseum Relays, an
indoor meet with over 60 participating
schools.
Preliminaries will be staged in
the afternoon and the finals will
be run under the lights in the
evening. The meet is divided into
three main divisions consisting of
high schools, college freshmen,
and college upperclassmen. Forty-
five high schools, all twelve
Southeastern Conference teams,
and numerous independents will
compete, with a trophy , being
awarded to the SEC squad accum
ulating the greatest number of
points.
Expected contenders for the title
are Florida, LSU, Mississippi
State, Alabama, and Auburn.
Among independents, Florida
State and Northeastern Louisiana
are given the best chance of success.
High school teams from Alabama,
Tennessee, Georgia, and
Florida will attend.
According to Coach Hutsell,
Auburn should field a solid contender
although hurdlers Ken
Winter and Harvey Johnston have
been slowed somewhat by muscle
injuries. Jerry Smith, Auburn's
fine quarter-miler will be entered
in the 600-yard run as the quarter-
mile dash will not be run at
this meet.
In the sprints, Auburn will have
Gary Ray, Bill MeCormick, and
Mickey Sutton in contending positions,
while in the 1000-yard
run it will be Jim Lynch and John
Anderson.
High jumper Ronald Whaley,
who finished third in a similar
Southeastern Conference champion
in the one-hundred and fifteen
pound class.
Going against Baxter will be
Auburn's fine matman Bob Facto-ra.
Thus far this season Bob has
gone undefeated, and he is considered
to be a big threat in winning
the one hundred and fifteen
pound class in the Southeastern
Intercollegiate Association Championship
this year.
Thus far this season Coach
Swede Umbach's muslemen h a v e
gone undefeated. They have run
rough shot over Georgia 17-14,
Emory 33-0, Georgia Tech 29-3,
and Florida State University 29-
1J0. The only mark on their record
is a 14-14 tie with Chattanooga,
which leaves them with a
won four and tied one season. .
Auburn has one match left after
Maryville College, that one is
with the Uniyersity of the South.
Then they vie for the Southeastern
Intercollegiate Wrestling Association
crown at Emory University
March 1 and 2. Auburn is
again favored to win this title
which it has held for the last sixteen
consecutive years.
indoor meet last year, is in excellent
condition for another g o od
performance. In the pole vault,
Sydney Bufkin of Mobile is being
counted on to score some points
for the Plainsmen.
In addition to this being their
first meet of the year, it is also
Auburn's only indoor encounter
for 1963. Next scheduled outing
for the Tigers is the Florida Re-
Jays in Gainesville on the l a st
Saturday in March.
LSU...
(Continued from page 6)
well-balanced team to the Plains.
Their hopes for an upset will be
carried mainly by Maury Drum-mond
and Howard Keene.
Keene is a consistent high scorer
and the 230 pound Drummond
JEFF MAURER
Jeff Maurer Leads
Big Tiger Grapplers
In the minds of many people
rests the name of Jeff Maurer,
captain' of Auburn's undefeated
wrestling team.
Jeff hails from Bloomington,
111., where he learned and gained
experience under coach Jim Bowers
at Bloomington High School.
He won many outstanding honors
while in high school and he is still
doing the same here at Auburn.
Among the many outstanding
awards, junior Jeff Maurer has
won in his 147-pound weight class
are the Chattanooga Jaycee tournament
last summer, placed third
this year, and was SEIWA conference
champion last year. According
to Maurer, one of the
highest honors he has ever gained
was being elected captain of the
varsity wrestling team this year.
In evidence of this honor, Jeff has
come through with an oustanding
record in the matches thus far
this season.
Maurer is just one of the reasons
why Auburn's wrestling team
has gone undefeated and we hope
they keep up the good work.
is both a high point man and a
vicious rebounder. Drummond is
a cool-headed ball player who
seems to improve under pressure.
In the exciting finish of the
LSU-Georgia Tech game he was
all over the court, intercepting
passes and bulling his way into
grab timely rebounds. The battle
under the boards between Auburn's
Layton Johns and Drummond
should prove interesting.
DON'T PANIC!
7—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, February 13, 1963
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DTIAJJ FILTER.
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Basketball Leagues Led By Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Alpha Gamma Rho, Phi Kappa Tau
By CRAWFORD WELCH
Intramurals Editor
The fraternity basketball season has finally come to the
point where all four leagues have an undisputed leader. This
was brought about last week when AGR beat SPE for the
second time take over first place in the well-balanced League
3Tour.
, The other three leading teams,
SC, SAE, and PKT, retained their
position by winning their game of
;the week. PKT received a real
Jscare from PDT, but finally came
'.out on top, SC and SAE had an
easy week.
AGR beat SPE 40-38 in one of
the best-played games this season.
The game was close all the way
with AGR holding the lead most
of the time. SPE tied the score
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several times but was ahead only
one time by one point in the third
quarter. There was never more
than six points difference in the
score. AGR's Jack McCuiston was
the game's leading scorer with 14.
Ronnie Wynn and Sonny Moore
got seven each. SPE's McKinney
sank 13 and Jerry White got 12.
AGR now has a 6-1 record in
first place. SPE is second with
five wins and two losses.
In League One SC held its number
one position by romping TKE
57-26. SC led all the way and was
never threatened. The game's high
scorer was "Smiley" Nichols with
14 points for SC. Hilman and Roper
also of SC were close behind
with 13 and 12 points respectively.
Reese of TKE got 13.
ATO, the second place team,
had a close game with the PKA's
earlier in the week. ATO won by
a slim margin of 31-28. Cook of
PKA and Brown of ATO had 8
points each.
Later in the week ATO gained
an easy 54-31 victory over a small
SP team. ATO's Whatley got 13
points and Shea of SP finished
with 9.
SAE is still out front in League
Two after beating SN 62-51. This
was the second time SAE has defeated
SN and this win just about
eliminated SN from the play-off.
However, the Snakes are still
second in the League with a 5-2
record. Top scorers for the game
were Mullins with 15 and Stone
with 14, both of SN. SAE's Hill
got 14 and Easterling got 13.
SN squeezed by AP 46-44 in
double overtime. AP got off to a
big lead and led most of the game.
SN fought back and won after
playing 10 extra minutes. Stone
was SN's big man with 15. Wood-fin
of AP got 12.
AP turned the same trick earlier
in the week when they eased
by PGD 35-34. After trailing by
a large margin throughout the
game, they finally went ahead in
the last few seconds. Parker of
AP dropped through 15 points.
McKay of PGD got 14.
PKT hold the lead in League
Three with a 7-0 record. Once
again PKT found their rabbit's
foot at a most crucial moment and
won another ball game in the
closing seconds. PKT won the
game 14-12 over PDT on a lay-up
by Goodwin. Yes, you read correctly—"
Final score 14-12"—this
was probably one of the most
tense games ever witnessed in intramural
basketball.
PDT stalled the whole game
and shot only when they had" a
sure two-point lay-up. PKT fouled
PDT many times in effort to
get the ball. If PDT had hit anywhere
close to a respectable percentage
of their free throws, it
would have meant sure defeat for
PKT.
However, PDT couldn't find the
range from the charity line and
PKT won it in the last four seconds.
PDT was playing for a last
shot when Goodwin of PKT stole
the ball and went in for a two-pointer
to save PKT from defeat.
Leavell of PDT got 10 of their 12
points. Treadwell was PKT's high
man with four points.
KA is second in League 3 with
a 5-2 record. They defeated DC
36-33 in a very exciting game. DC
led most of the game but KA
closed the gap in the last few min-
WRA
NEWS
By CATHY WALKER
The WRA Swimming Meet begins
Tunesday, Feb. 26. The various
events of competition will
be in synchronized swimming, relays
and racing. The relay and
racing teams will be narrowed
down on Tuesday and the finals
will take place the following
Monday.
WRA held its regular monthly
meeting last Monday when the
chairmen of activities gave their
reports. Chairmen this quarter are
Bowling'—Diana Williams; Swimming—
Claudia Spence; and Basketball—
Jeanne Swanneri
Basketball Results
AGD 1 over ZTA 1
Phi Mu over Dorm 4
DZ over KAT
AOPi over ZTA 2
BSU oveV Chi O 1
Dorm 4 over DDD
Phi Mu over ChiO 2
Dorm B over ChiO 4
ADPi over AGD 2
Towers over ChiO 5
Bowling Results:
Pi Phi 1 over AOPi 4
ChiO 19 over ZTA 7
Dorm 2 over ADPi 19
DZ 2 over ADPi 18
AGD 8 over ChiO 7
KAT 6 over KD 2
AGD 4 over ADPi 22
Soccer . . .
(Continued from page 6)
offensive line nevertheless shot 24
attempts, of which three w e re
goals.
Co-captain Ben Shabo, after remarkable
consistent shooting,
powered the ball in from 25 yards
out with 11 minutes left in the
first half. Even though Berry began
pressing heavily, the ASC
held onto their scant lead until
Auburn's Gus Cordovis b r o ke
through to make it 2-0 with eight
minutes left in the game. On a
pass from halfback Jack Bullard,
Cordovis scored again with two
minutes left.
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u'tes to win by a narrow margin.
Gilbert of KA finished with 15
points. Cannon of DC got 10.
• In other games last week DTD
beat SP by one point 46-45. DTD's
Wall poured through 25 points.
Shea of SP sank 15.
TX beat LCA 64-44. TX's Be-thell
and Taylor got 19. Pete Williamson
also of TX got 16. LCA's
Jimmy Barfield sang 17.
AGR won over DU 34-30. Don
Moore and James Collins of AGR
led scoring with 12 each. Moultrie,
Jones, and Booth, all of DU got
8 points each.
SPE beat KS 53-40. SPE's Jerry
White was high individual for the
week with 26 points. Robnette of
KS got 12.
FRATERNITY BOWLING
Each fraternity bowling team
has one match remaining. Only
three out of 25 teams are unbeat-e.
OTS, AGR, and DU have not
lost a match to date, and lead
their respective leagues 1, 3, 4.
League two is in a three tie
between ATO, DTD, and DC. Each
team has lost one match.
AGR has been the most consistent
high team by not bowling
less than 807 in any match. Their
highest game was .868. Harrell
Watts, Haywood Hanna, and La-vaughn
Johnson have averaged
better than 180 in all of AGR's
matches.
Three weks ago, the high individuals
were: Smith, OTS—202;
Nichols, SC—201, and Watts, AGR
—200. The high team was AGR
with 835.
Two weeks ago, the high individuals
were Holsenbeck, KA—
260; Kiviranna, PKP—200. The
high team was KA with 885.
Last week, there was no man
that bowled over or close to 200.
The high team was DC with an
895.
DORMITORY BASKETBALL
League one: Div. PI is out front
with a 5-3 record. PI won from
MO-27. Griffin led PI with 11
points. Wilkerson of M was the
game's high scorer with 12.
PI lost to D 40-34. Pi's Griffin
and Terrell of D shared scoring
honors with 12 each.
League two: Div. W2 is in first
place with a 6-1 record. W2 beat
K 30-26. Hay and Kendrick of W2
got 13 and 12 points respectively.
Orr of K sank 11.
(Continued on page 9)
8—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, February 13, 1963
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