INSIDE TODAY
Columns Page 4
Editorials Page 4
Guest Column Page 5
Homecoming Page 2
Sports Page 6 THE AUBURN PUMN$MJMSI
BRUCE NICHOLS
With Bruce Nichols' column
on LBJ and statesmanship,
the Plainsman presents
its newest columnist.
See page 4.
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
VOLUME 93 AUBURN UNIVERSITY AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3, 1965 8 PAGES NUMBER 7
Debaters
To Leave
For Meet
By JERRY BROWN
Auburn debaters Kathy
Lou Bailey and John Schell
will leave tomorrow for the
University of Chicago Debate
Tournament in Chicago
where they will debate
the affirmative side of
the national debate topic,
"Resolved: Should law enforcement
agencies in the
United S t a t e s be given
greater freedom in the investigation
of crime?"
Last week the varsity debaters
won three rounds and lost
three at the Dixie Debate Tournament
at Mercer University,
Macon, Ga. Standouts Schell
and Bailey were the only affirmative
team in the tournament
to defeat winning Emory
University.
Miss Bailey was named top
female speaker in the tournament
and the third place speaker
in the contest as a whole.
Varsity debaters Carol Ble-vins
and Eddie Freeman, debating
the negative, won four
rounds and lost two. Yesterday
they debated against an affirmative
Mississippi State team for
the Young Men's Business Club.
This was carried out as a part
of War Eagle-Bulldog Week in
Birmingham.
Also participating in the
Dixie Debate Tournament in
Macon were novice debaters
Jane Hall and Wayne Lee.
"ALCOHOLISM, A HATCHET, A STRAITJACKET . .
More than alcholism, the Auburn Players' opening production, "Come Back Little Sheba"
is a realistic look at a man's life. Trying to sober Doc, played by Robert Chisnell, (seated)
are Mrs. Coffman, played by Valerie Sjolund, and Ed of Alcoholics Anonymous played by
John Lopiccolo. Seated at left is Doc's dejected wife, Lola, played by Jayne Rushin.
The contemporary drama opens next Tuesday at 8:15 p.m.
Auburn Players Open Season
With Tone Back Little Sheba'
Alcoholism, a strait jacket,
a hatchet, and disillusioned
people are some of the ingredients
of "Come Back,
Little Sheba," forthcoming
production of the Auburn
CBS's Schorr To Talk
On East-West Balance
CBS Bureau Chief, Bonn-Berlin and former Moscow correspondent,
Daniel Schorr will present a lecture Nov. 8, at 8:15
p.m. in the Student Activities Building.
The first speaker in the current
Lecture and Concert
Series, Schorr will discuss "The
New Balance Between East and
West." The lecture was orig-ionally
scheduled for Oct. 8,
but was changed due to a commitment
of Schorr to CBS.
The lecture is open to the
public. Tickets may be purchased
at the door for $1. Students
will be admitted with
identification cards.
In his present position since
1961, Schoor has pounded news
beats across East and West
Europe, Russia, Latin America
and Asia. He is responsible for
covering news developments
throughout Germany, Austria,
Yugoslavia and the East European
satellite countries. Last
year he received critieal acclaim
for his report on life
under the East German Communist
regime for CBS Reports,
"The Land Beyond the Wall."
Players.
Opening night for the play
is Tuesday. Curtain time is 8:15
p.m. The production will run
through Nov. 13, and open again
on Nov. 16.
Reserve tickets may be se- j
cured through the Drama Department
office. Admission is
free for students with an I.D.
card. " — v-*-"
Although one of 'the most
dramatic scenes in the play is
one in which the alcoholic
"Doc," in a drunken rage, attacks
his wife Lola with a hatchet,
Kelly Collum, director of
the play, said the problem of
drinking is only a part of the
theme of the play. "Here are
disillusioned people, people who
are disappointed with life," he
said. "It is a study of their disappointments
that gives the
play substance."
Members of the cast of "Come
Back, Little Sheba" have been
drawn from the town of Auburn
as well as the faculty and
(See page 5, column 7)
Trustees Approve Increase
In Dormitory Meal Costs;
Arena Gets Swimming Pool
The board failed to act on
the proposed $1 per quarter
hike in student activities fees to
provide funds for a 50 watt FM
student radio station. President
Harry M. Philpott could not be
reached for comment.
MORE FACULTY, PAY
President Philpott, in presenting
retired President Ralph
B. Draughon's final report on
the state of the university, asked
the board for an increase in
faculty to provide the proper
faculty-student ratio. He also
asked for a pay raise for the
faculty.
"Auburn still pays its faculty
about 10 per cent on the aver-
16 Freshman Women Initiated
Monday By Alpha Lambda Delta
Alpha Lambda Delta, national freshman women's scholastic
honorary, initiated 16 new members Monday night, who either
made a 2.5 point average their first quarter or maintained a
2.5 overall their entire freshman year.
Initiated were Carol Lynn
Vehicle Fire Destroys
Paintings, Art Projects
By SANSING SMITH
News Editor
Numerous interior design projects of inestimable value and
over $3260 worth of paintings by Auburn faculty members were
destroyed last Thursday when a truck carrying them to an
exhibit in Birmingham caught fire.
were
Barnes, Patricia Ann Graham,
Jeanne Elizabeth Hawke, Mary
Martha Herring, Katherine
Burns Hodgins, Terry Belinda
Hull, Judy Anita Kennedy,
Sara Eugenia Lee, Nancy
Lucius.
THE HAPPIEST AUBURN FAN . . .
If any one ever seems to be doing a little "Nya, ha, ha. . ."
gloating President Harry Philpott does after Auburn defeated
the great Florida team. For a complete look at the
homecoming spectacle, see page 2.
Joan Elizabeth McCracken,
Suzanne McDonald, Linda Carol
Montgomery, Virginia Lynn
Moore, Linda Carolyn Newton,
Nancy Ruth ' Nunnery, and
Marion Barnes Roberts.
Alpha Lambda Delta annually
plans social functions with
Phi Eta Sigma, its national male
counterpart, including a reception
for new members and a
banquet.
It annually offers a book
award to the graduating senior
with the highest scholastic
average and a book scholarship
to a deserving senior girl with
a '2.0 overall' average.
The National Council of Alpha
Lambda Delta will award
four graduate fellowships for
the 1966-67 academic year. The
Maria Leonard, the Alice
Crocker Lloyd, the Adele Hag-ner
Stamp' and the Kathryn
Sisson Phillips Fellowships are
being offered for graduate
study and are worth $1500 each.
Any member of Alpha Lambda
Delta who graduated in 1963,
1964, or 1965 and who has
maintained the scholastic average
throughout her college
career is eligible. Graduating
seniors may apply if they have
maintained this average to the
end of the first quarter of this
year.
Applicants will be judged on
scholastic record, recommendations,
the soundness of the applicant's
project and purpose,
and, to some extent, on need.
Application blanks and information
may be obtained
from Miss Mary Bradley, advisor
to Alpha Lambda Delta,
at Social Center.
Architecture Dean W. A.
Speer, chairman of the exhibit,
was driving the truck into Birmingham
on Interstate Highway
65 Thursday morning when
a passing motorist called his attention
to the smoking back
end of the truck. The truck
burst into flames, but Dean
Speer was unhurt. The projects
were completely destroyed.
The interior design projects,
along with works by architecture
students, were to have
been displayed in downtown
Birmingham as a part of the
"War Eagle-Bulldog Week"
program.
"Yar Eagle-Bulldog Week"
was proclaimed by Birmingham's
Downtown Action Committee
to honor the universities
and to acquaint the people of
Jefferson county with the two
land grant schools.
The paintings and prints
were to have been on display
this week at the Birmingham
Museum of Art. The only
painting now being shown in
the Auburn exhibit is the official
portrait of Dr. Ralph B.
Draughon by art professor
Maltby Sykes. Because of its
value, the portrait was sent to
New Rates Are Effective June 1;
Radio Proposal Awaits Decision
By JERRY BROWN
Managing Kditor
A $15 increase in "room and board" rates for all university
dormitories was sanctioned by the Auburn University
Board of Trustees at the traditional homecoming
meeting of the board Friday.
The change in rates will become effective' June 1.
NO ACT ON STATION age l e s s t h a n QUr g i s t e r i n s t U u.
tions in the South," he said.
"Approximately 75 new academic
positions are needed for a
better student-faculty r a t i o,
with accompanying secretarial
and technical positions," he told
the board.
The increase in "room and
board" rates is necessary because
of the "continuing rise in
construction, operating and food
costs," Philpott said.
He said that a recent study
reveals that the current room
and board rates are below the
average in comparable Southeastern
Universities.
COMPULSORY
Dormitory residence is comp
u l s o r y for undergraduate
women at Auburn. The price
rise will be combined in "room
and board" rates for them,
while men living in the dormitories,
who have an option on
whether to eat in the dormitory
cafeteria, will be raised $15 on
"board" rates only.
Non-air conditioned dormitories
will be raised from $180
per quarter to $185, and air
conditioned dormitories from
$200 to $215 per quarter.
Present for the meeting were
Dr. Paul H. Haley, Dr. Austin
R. Meadows, Roberts Brown,
Redus Collier, M. H. Moses,
John W. Overton, John W. Pace
III, Dr. Frank P. Samford, Sim
A. Thomas, and E. L. Wynn.
The only absent members
were Governor George C. Wallace
and R: C. Bamberg.
Birmingham by car.
The interior design projects
were the work of students for
the past five years. They included
a therapeutic arm exerciser
designed by Joseph
Blake for rehabilitation of
(See page 5, column 2)
Knowles To Open
Fine Arts Series
By JERRY L. GANTT
Professor Robert L. Knowles of the Drama Department has
been selected by the Union Fine Arts as the Committee's
Distinguished Professor for fall quarter.
Knowles'will speak tomorrow
night at 7:30 p.m. in the
Union Building. His topic will
be the role of the college theater
on campus.
An associate professor of
drama, Knowles has been at
Auburn for 15 years. He both
teaches drama and directs the
Auburn Players, college theatrical
group.
Knowles received his B.A.
degree from Stetson University
in DeLand, Florida, and his
M.A. from the University of
Florida. He is a member of
Phi Kappa Phi honor society
and Theta Alpha Phi drama
honorary.
Before coming to Auburn in
1951, Knowles taught at the
University of Florida. Each
June he returns to his native
state to serve as critic for the
Florida Theater Festival. He is
a member of the Faculty Council
at Auburn and is stage manager
for the Concert and Lecture
Series.
Highest Scholastic Honorary
Wilt Initiate 24 Students
Alumni President
Ken Lott
To Head
Alumni
Ken L. Lott, vice-president
of the Merchants National Bank
of Mobile is the Auburn Alumni
Association president for
1965-66. __
Lott succeeds W. Kelly Mos-ley
of Atlanta, Ga., who becomes
an ex-officio member of
the executive board. He was
elected at the Alumni Association's
meeting Saturday.
Three new members were
also elected to the board for
two-year terms at the annual
business meeting. They are Dr.
Don A. Goodall, a dentist from
Gadsden; Leonard Hudson, a
pharmacist from Decatur; and
Ruel Russell Jr., assistant superintendent
of personnel services
for the United States Steel
Corporation, Fairfield.
Members serving their second
year on the board are Alvin
W. Vogtle Jr. of Birmingham;
W. O. Butler Jr. of Montgomery;
and A. D. Holmes Jr. of
Gallion.
The new Alumni president is
a native of Selma and holds the
B.S. degree from Auburn University
where he was a member
of Sigma Nu, Delta Sigma Pi,
Blue Key, Scabbard and Blade,
(See page 3, column 1)
$ . 5 Million
In Arena Funds
Assures Addition
By CHARLEY MAJORS
Assistant Kditor
Authorization for an additional
$500,000 to insure a
swimming pool for the new
auditorium-physical education
complex was approved
by the Board of Trustees
last Friday.
At their quarterly meeting,
the request of President Harry
M. Philpott was approved to
increase from $4.5 million to $5
million the estimated cost of the
complete facility. This would
allow the complex to include a
collegiate-sized pool and additional
theatre equipment.
It was announced last summer
that construction costs
would exceed the original estimate
and the swimming pool
would not be built until later.
Student requests and a Student
Senate resolution asking for the
addition of a pool followed this
announcement. Upon taking office
this September, Dr. Philpott
studied the architectural
plans and decided to ask the
Board for additional funds to
finish the complete facility.
Preliminary plans call for a
75' by 45' swimming pool to be
joined by a 37' by 35' diving
pool. Seating capacity for 690
will be provided on one side
of the pool. Roll-up steel doors
will provide outside exposure
on one side. Although the pool
will probably be in a separate
building, the location will be
arranged for the common use of
dressing facilities with the main
building.
A plan of financing the extra
half million dollars will be presented
to the Board at a later
date. Part of the money is hoped
to be obtained as a grant
from the Higher Education Facilities
Act of 1963 for the instruction
part of the complex.
The remainder of the amount
will probably come from the
athletic association and the special
building fund of the university
fee.
'Loveliest of the Plains'
By DONNEE RAMELLI
President Harry M. Philpott
will be the guest speaker
at the Phi Kappa Phi
initiation banquet on Nov.
23, when 24 graduate and
undergraduate s t u d e n ts
will become members of the
University's highest scholarship
honorary.
Seventeen undergraduate students
and seven graduates were
tapped after the honorary's October
14th meeting and will be
initiated at the banquet.
The number of undergraduate
members in Phi Kappa Phi is
limited to not more than five
per cent of the various schools'
enrollment, according to Edward
Graf, secretary-treasurer
of the honorary. Election to the
honorary is based on distinction
in scholarship, character,
and service to the university.
Undergraduate students tapped
for initiation were Robert
Edward Melton, Bobbie Thomas
Umbach, Johnny Lee Junkins,
Declan E. Huber, Robert Golden
Belcher, Harold Hugh Sorrell,
David W. Meeks Jr., Grace
Hines Pritchett, Philip Wayne
Garrison.
Ben Allan Laravia, Johnnie
B. Vinson, Cornelia Anne Phillips,
Oliver Dowling Kingsley,
Raymond Oliver Cobb, Roberta
McCue, Sharon Etheridge, and
Lynda K. Hines.
Graduates chosen for membership
were: Neal Grigg, Peggy
Reid Poduska, James A. Bu-ford
Jr., Betty Bentley Layton,
Albert Joseph Bekus, Ray Jar-rell
Vinson, and Carolyn Geyer.
Phi Kappa Phi was founded
at the University of Maine in
1898.
"THE AUTUMN LEAVES, DRIFT BY MY WINDOW"
Lowering leaves and Loveliest Julie Archer assure the
arrival of autumn for Auburn. A freshman from Indian
River City, Florida, Julie is a Phi Mu pledge and is majoring
in home economics.
mmimssmm ......
Homecoming 1965—The Weekend That
WALLACE WITH A SMILE AND A WAR EAGLE
Wtih a War Eagle in his lapel, Governor George C. Wallace, of Alabama, leads
Florida's Governor Hayden Burns through the crowd as Auburn President Harry
M. Philpott follows. Philpott has served under both.
PAST QUEEN KIT, KING BILL AND QUEEN ADRIENNE
NUMBER 11 WAS ALL OVER THE FIELD
Linebacking headhunter Bill Cody came through Saturday to make his finale at
Cliff House worth remembering. Two touchdowns and a Ray Graves' ulcer have
been attributed the All-American.
Bringing It All Back Home
The Homecoming for 1965
has been duly marked on
the pages of history and laid
away to mold and yellow.
For 44,000 fans, foes, and
friends of Auburn, it was a
remarkable display of that
intangible something called
"The Auburn Spirit."
The game was won by the
hearts and hard work of the
coaches, players, and the
fans.
These pictures attempt to
preserve a little of the
whirling kaleidoscope of
Saturday, October 30; to remind
us Auburnites of a
weekend well • worth • remembering:"
"this * was the
weekend that was.
MM*!!
Bill Rainey, ODK president,
looks on as last year's
M i s s Homecoming, K i t
Wheeler Ingram, (left) presents
Miss Homecoming 1965,
Adrienne Wise, (right) with
a bouquet of red roses.
SoMf GALS * J # * "*
CL4$SiCS
c NAVY
9 CORDO
s PALIMINO
# GOLDEN
SCOTCH
Others from $5.99
to $12.99
Auburn's Most Complete
Shoe Center
The
Bootery
N. College Auburn
THE AUBURN PIJMIKMMI
Classified Ads
To pla<>e Classified Advertising in
The Auburn Plainsman, come by the
newspaper office in Pamford basement
or Student Affairs Office in
Martin Hall. Low rates: 5c per word
for each week. Deadline: S p.m.
on the Friday prececding publication.
(Commercial line rate quoted on request.
WANTED: One Blue-eyed,
blonde sophomore coed for
United Nations Park Inspector.
Must like New York
City, hot pretzels, and teddy
bears! Contact—W.S.W.
FACULTY-STAFF-STUDENTS
-BUSINESSMEN: Business
and personal cards, simulated
engraving (raised) as low as
$4.95. Write for samples—
S. & S. Enterprises, P. O.
Box 641, Auburn.
"TEACH ME TIGER"-45 r.p.m.
record by April Stevens.
Send $1.25 each to Teach Me
Tiger, P. O. Box 641, Auburn.
THE BRAVE MAN STANDS OUT
Captain Roger H. C. Donlon, the first man awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor since Korea, stands quietly
amid all the joviality of the homecoming victory. Back
from the jungles of Viet Nam, he is now stationed at Ft.
Benning, Georgia.
CONGRATULATIONS FROM A TRUE FAN
He wanted to see the Auburn coach who put the Tiger
back in his team and racked up another homecoming
victory. It was Coach Jordan's 100th regular season win.
The smile seems definitely heartfelt.
WILKINSON AND THE WAR—PENQUIN?
NBC sportscaster and former Oklahoma coach Bud
Wilkinson tells the regional TV audience all about how
Auburn came through to win in the last half of a "great"
homecoming game.
Standard Brands
To Interview Here
Yd5 Gotta Have Hope!
:
Miles & Utiles of HOPE . . .
Something wonderful happens
when you join Boh in his
latest road discovery.
Travel with him on every
HILARIOUS step of the way
he led over 70,000,000
television viewers on the
twice repeated network (NBC)
showing of his memorable
junket of joy for our hoys
in Vietnant. Recorded during
actual performances at U.S.
Military bases in Vietnam,
Thailand, Korea, etc.
mill
IIOI'I
$700 million food firm needs
graduates for plant management,
engineering, food research
and development
Just Arrived:
First Quality "t-3 Classic"
LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
Stripes, Plaids, Solids, Herringbone
While They Last, Only $3.79
MEN'S CREW SOCKS
All Colors 79? or 3 for $2.25
HANES UNDERWEAR
(Irregular) 79? or 3 for $2.25
Other Outstanding Buys
Come to See Us
SECOND FLOOR MEN s WEAR
Student Owned and Operated
Open 1-6 Daily, 9-6 Saturday
Above Liptcombs RexaU Drugs
On North College
remuiumati t«,«. sunn
mum**.
CADET LP4046 £ There's a World of Excitement on CADET Record*
(Chest Prod. Corp., Chicago, Illinois 60616)
NEW YORK: Standard Brands
Inc., a giant in the nation's booming
food field, today announced
that their college recruiting program
has been expanded extensively.
Interviews are scheduled
to take place here shortly.
With a whopping sales increase
last year of 13% over the previous
one, Standard Brands ranks
as one of the fastest growing food
processors in the country. Its'
products are a line of blue chip
brands that include Chase & Sanborn
Coffees, Planters Nuts, Baby
Ruth and Butterfinger Candy
Bars, Fleischmann's and Blue
Bonnet Margarines, Royal Desserts,
Tender Leaf Teas, Fleischmann's
Yeast and a long list of
bulk products sold to volume users
such as bakeries, hotels and restaurants.
In discussing the college recruitment
program, officials of
Standard Brands stressed the
immediate need for mechanical,
chemical and industrial engineers
with a Bachelor's degree. Also
needed are chemists and food
technologists, some with Bachelor's,
others with advanced degrees.
Comprehensive training programs
that are individually tailored
and that include on-the-job
training, are designed to fill positions
in engineering, plant management
and research and development.
Opportunities for rapid advancement
to supervisory level in
engineering and in plant management,
and to project leader in
research and development were
said to be excellent. Salary increases
are commensurate. A long
list of new products, currently in
development, point to enormous
future company growth and increased
job security.
Those selected for training by
Standard Brands will receive full
fringe benefits that include retirement
plans, comprehensive
group insurance and paid vacations
and holidays.
Company officials urged graduates
who are interested in a career
with an unlimited future to sign
up now for Standard Brands'
schedule. Complete information
about opportunities, training programs,
and the Company is available
in the Placement Office.
The Company's Technical Representative
will visit your campus
on November 9.
masculine
. . . that's the kind of aroma she likes being
close to. The aroma of Old Spice.
Crisp, tangy, persuasive. Old Spice . . .
unmistakably the after shave lotion for
the untamed male. Try it soon... she's
waiting. 1.25 & 2.00
.. .that's the way it is
with Old Spice
BHULTON
New Phones Installed Quips and Quotes
Seven special long distance telephones are now in use on reist said, more will be install- li
campus on a trial basis.
According to W. S. Sechreist
of Southern Bell, the phones
have no dial and are designed
exclusively for placing collect
or credit card calls.
The line is connected directly
to a long distance operator
in Montgomery. When the receiver
is picked up, the phone
automatically rings the operator,
who can place calls anywhere
in the United States.
Local calls cannot be placed on
these phones.
The seven new telephones
were installed for public use
in time for the Homecoming
weekend. They are located on
the first floor of the library, in
Sewell athletic dormitory, in
Alumni Hall, and in dorms A,
B, C, and 6. If these trial
phones prove successful, Sech-ed
in other dorms.
Along with the new Centrex
direct dialing system which
will be made available to the
campus by Southern Bell next
fall and will bypass the campus
switchboard for local calls,
Sechreist hopes that the new
long distance system will relieve
the heavy load on Auburn
operators and make long distance
service more readily
available.
Ken Lott . . .
(Continued from page 1)
and the football squad.
He holds the master's degree
from Wharton School of Finance
and Commerce, University
of Pennsylvania, and has been
graduated from the Graduate
Schools of Banking at Rutgers
University and of Credit and
Financial Management at Dartmouth
College.
Lott is a member of the board
of directors and vice-president
of the Associated Industries of
Alabama, and is section leader
of the School of Banking of
the South at Louisiana State
University.
In Mobile he is a member of
the Senior Bowl Committee and
is active in the Community
Chest, Mobile Area Chamber of
Commerce, Episcopal Church
Kiwanis, and the Seaman's
Club.
DISTINGUISHED ALUMNUS HONORED
Coach Shug Jordan and Dr. Harry M. Philpott converse with Roy B. Sewell, distinguished
Auburn alumnus and benefactor, after the dedication of Roy B. Sewell Athletic
Dormitory.
FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE
NEEDS SEE
HULSEY TEXACO
Corner of N. Gay and Opelika Rd.
887-9655 Auburn
"You can trust your can to the man who wears the Star"
By KAY DONAHUE
Exchange Editor
PLAYBOY PROBLEM PREVAILS AT LSU
Controversy still rages at LSU concerning the confiscating
of Playboy by the student proctors in the men's dorms. The
student body is seeking a reevaluation of the rule structure in
order to prevent "over-zealous interpretation of the rules and
regulations." Playboy is available, however, in the LSU library.
It has been placed on reserve by the English Department and
may be "read—or viewed as the case may be—by any student
who wishes to."
MYSTERIOUS PROWLER—FRUSTRATED RUSHEE ? ?
A "tall, dark, and scroungy" man invaded the Tri-Delt house
at the University of Kentucky. Nobody sems to know how or
when he got in but he didn't leave until about 5 a.m. Perhap:
he was a frustrated rushee who wanted to pledge . . .
MATCHMAKING COMPUTER PROGRAMS DANCE
Apparently machines can do everything—even arrange dates!
At Tennessee Tech a computer was called into service to program
;he "perfect matches" for a Computer Dance. Each person wa;
i receive a number upon his arrival at the dance. This numbei
/as also given to the girl who was to be his date and 45 minute-
/as allowed for finding dates. The response for this firs
.tempt at computer matchmaking was quite good accordin.
the Tennessee Tech Oracle.
IT'S THREE O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING . . .
To add more fuel to the curfew complaints of coeds or
is campus . . . Women at Rochester Institute of Technolog:
ave curfews ranging from 12 to 3 a.m. on weekends accordin.
' their classifications. Girls who are over 21 have 3 a.m
ri. and Sat. with midnight on Sunday. It appears that tht
reets are not rolled up at 12 in New York. Just imagine. . .
Pi Kappa Alpha Float
Captures First Place
By Donnie Ramelli
Pi Kappa Alpha captured first place in the Omicron Delta
-Cappa homecoming decorations contest with an exhibit of a
33-foot War Eagle, a drunk Gator, and a bottle of "Ole War
Eagle Auburn Spirits" carrying out their central theme of
"Auburn Spirits Did It."
The four top displays were
announced at the homecoming
game Saturday.
Kappa Sigma placed second
with their "Von Bryan's Express,"
while Beta Theta Pi
came in third with the theme
"Fair is Foul and Florida Is
Foul." The fourth place trophy
went to Delta Sigma Phi's
"Stomp Gaters In Graves."
Judges for the competition
were Professor W. A. Schaer of
the Architecture Department;
Mrs. Jeannette Land, head of
the Department of Women's
Toronado
will get you
if you don't
watch out!
Physical Education, and Harold
N. Gully Director of BSU. The
judges saw the homecoming
decorations between 7 and 9
p.m. Friday.
According to Ben Laravia,
chairman of the contests, there
were no financial restrictions
or fraternity divisions this year.
Pre-registration Instructions
Pre-registration for the Winter Quarter will be held November 15, 16, and 17, 1965,
for currently enrolled juniors, seniors, graduate students, and those freshmen and
sophomores who in the last previous quarter made a grade-point average of 1.5 or
will assist with "Regular Registration" on January 3-4, 1966. Other students needing
preferred schedules who have been approvd by the Council of Dans for early
registration will register at the first hour of the Regular Registration Period on
January 3, 1966. Students changing schools cannot register until the Regular Registration
Period at which time a "Change-in-Curriculum Permit" must be secured from
the Registrar's Office.
JUNIORS, SENIORS, and those FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES approved to
pre-register will plan schedules with their Deans as follows:
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SENIORS: 8-9 a.m. (H-O); 9-10 a.m. (P-Z); 10-11 a.m. (A-G).
JUNIORS: 11-12 noon (M-O); 1-2 p.m. (P-S); 2-3 p.m. (T-Z); 34 p.m. (A-C).
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16
JUNIORS: 8-9 a.m. (D-G); 9-10 a.m. (H-L).
SOPHOMORES: 10-11 a.m. (M-R); 11-12 noon (S-Z); 1-2 p.m. (F-L); 2-3 p.m.
(A-E).
FRESHMEN: 3-4 p.m. (M-O).
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17
FRESHMEN: 8-9 a.m. (P-S); 9-10 a.m. (T-Z); 10-11 a.m. (A-C); 11-12 noon
(D-G); 12 p.-m. (H-L).
Soprano
To Give
Recital
Soprano Maureen Rosenbaum
vill be heard in a faculty-artist
:oncert Nov. 3 at 8:15 p.m. in
he Auburn Union Ballroom.
7he public is invited at no
•barge.
Mrs. Rosenbaum will sing an
iria from Bach's secular "Cof-
!ee Cantata," two arias from
/lozart, "Ridente La Calma"
md "Porgi Amor," and a cycle
if six songs from Debussy.
Also included in the program
will be "O Mio Babbino Caro,"
by Pccini, and the contemporary
Hermit Songs by Samuel
Barber.
The concert is one in a series
being sponsored by the department
of music. Mrs. Rosenbaum
will be accompanied by Richard
Wursten of the music department
faculty.
NOTES and NOTICES
S.E.A.
S.E.A. will meet Monday,
Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. in Thach Auditorium.
Pictures for the Glom
will be taken, and girls are to
wear light blouses with dark
skirts. Because next week is
American Education Week,
there will be a film pertaining
to this subject.
CALENDAR GIRL
PAGEANT
Calendar Girl Pageant will
be held Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m.
in the Union Ballroom.
* * *
FREE UNION MOVIE
The movie, "Charade" will
be shown free of charge in the
Auburn Union, Nov. 5 and 6 at
7:30 p.m.
Don't look now. But a keen machine called Toronado has
designs on you. Out to get you with a new way of going—front
wheel drive—that puts the traction where the action is!
Extra stretch-out room for six. (Flat floors, you know.) Full-view
side windows. Draft-free ventilation. Many other swinging
etceteras! Like we say, Toronado has designs o n you. Or is it
the other way around! LOOK TO OLDS FOR THE NEW!
Olds-mobile Division • General Motors Corp.
6lEP
OUTFRONT
£t\( 66. ..in a Rocket Action
OLDS/
• -is*''*
3—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1965
| GLENDEAN ONE-HOUR [mminizm: • CtftTtFICS
I THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING
- SPECIAL -
Every Wednesday
STUDENT AND FACULTY MEMBERS
WITH I.D. CARDS SEE AND TRY
THIS FABULOUS OFFER:
^ Long Garments Beautifully Cleaned and
pressed 79c each
•k Short Garments 44c
3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE ON REQUEST
Shirts Laundered and Finished, 5 for $1.10
A LITTLE EXTRA FOR HANGERS
Parking No Problem At Beautiful Glendean
Shopping Center — Home Of
ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING
STUDENTS AND STAFF MEMBERS
To take advantage of our Wednesday Special, you
must show your I.D. card when you bring in your
clothes, NOT when you pick them up. If you don't
show your I.D. cards as you bring them in, you will
pay the regular price. We will not change the price
on our ticket.
•fffidS
Jslnm
9
Charcoal Steaks
Seafood
Bar B-Q
Special Sunday Buffet
5-different meats
8-different vegetables
4-different salads
desert, coffee or tea
$1.50
Served from 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
PARTIES—A SPECIALITY
2nd Ave.
"The extra special place, for
the extra special person."
Opelika 745-2441
The
ENGAGE-ABLES
go for
Prices from $100. to $2500. Ring! Enlarged
lo Show Beauty of Detail. ® Trade-Hark Reg.
Each Keepsake setting is
a masterpiece of design, reflecting
the full brilliance
and beauty of the center diamond
. . . a perfect gem of
flawless clarity, fine color and
meticulous modern cut. The
name, Keepsake, in the ring
and on the tag is your assurance
of fine quality.
Your very personal Keepsake
is now at your Keepsake
Jeweler's store. Find him in
the yellow pages under
"Jewelers."
HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING ,
Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engagement |
and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, both for only 25*. |
Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book. j
Nam*u .1
Address-
City- -State- Zip-
KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, SYRACUSE, NEW YORK 13202
Sold exclusively at:
Hill's Jewelry
11 East Magnolia
AUBURN
THE AUBURN PWINSMJW
Mary Whitley
Editor
Marbut Gaston
Business Manager
Associate Editor—Gerald Rutberg; Managing Editor—Jerry Brown; Assistant Editors-
Charley Majors, Jana Howard; Sports Editor—Ron Mussig; News Editor—Sansing
Smith; Assistant Managing Editor—Bruce Nichols; Features Editor—Peggy Tomlinson;
Editorial Assistant—Olivia Baxter; Assistant Sports Editor—Larry Lee, Bob Snellgrove;
Assistant News Editor—Donnee Ramelli; Assistant Features Editor—John Cole; Secretary—
Beth Young; Advertising Manager—Hazel Satterfield; Business Secretary-
Marilyn Parker; Circulation Manager—John Forrester; Route Manager, Jim Barganier;
Exchange Editor—Kay Donahue; Copy Editors—Susan Shaw, Ann Johnson, Mary
Bruce Cornelison, Mary Dixon; Headline Writer—Ray Whitley, Ron Castille.
The Auburn Plainsman is the student newspaper of Auburn University. The paper
is written and edited by responsible students. Editorial opinions are those of the
editors and columnists. They are not necessarily the opinions of the administration,
Board of Trustees or student body of Auburn University. Offices are located in
Room 108 of Langdon Hall phone 887-6511 extension 720 or 729. 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—10,400 weekly. Address all
material to The Auburn Plainsman, P. O. Box 832 Auburn, Alabama 36830.
Will The Real Student Leader
Please Stand Up?
There will always, we suppose, be
certain misunderstandings of terms
among "student leaders" as to who is
and who is not a so-called "student
leader." The Plainsman ordinarily refrains
from interfering in such matters
but, time has come when something
needs to be said and, it is obvious that
only the Plainsman will,- say it.
We do not pretend to be experts on
protocol nor would we deny any student
(whether elected or appointed)
the right to the title "student leader."
Having no personal axes to grind,
we ask merely, is it not incongruous
that freshmen with no previous experience
in student government are immediately
included in student government
sponsored luncheons and better
relations meetings when (and we hope
he will forgive us) the vice chairman
of the Southeastern Universities Student
Government Association was not
ever extended an invitation?
Were this the first or second time
that a seemingly recognized student
"leader" had failed to receive an invitation,
we could write it off to inexperience
of staff members making up lists
and getting out invitations. Since this
is not the case, we are at a loss to explain
the situation to Auburn students
questioning us on the matter, much
less students of other universities who
ask, "why wasn't John Clod invited to
today's meeting? I thought he was a
senator and senior leader."
No doubt there are differences of
opinion somewhere but, personal battles,
we feel, are to be fought in private.
For the sake of the good name of
the University and the Student Government
public functions should not be
"used" to perpitrate dissention.
The present administration shows
signs of accomplishing more than just
a "creditable job" in the year which
lies ahead. We hope they will see fit
to investigate irregularities and correct
them immediately.
The Water's F i n e ; :.
Friday the Board of Trustees placed
their stamp of approval on addition of
the often discussed swimming pool to
plans for Auburn's new sports arena.
Though their decision may provoke an
occasional sigh of relief or congratulatory
handshake among pool advocaters,
we fear that, in general, the decision
will go unnoticed.
The untiring efforts of persistent
and dedicated student and administration
leaders in securing the necessary
addition may also pass unnoticed.
We are pleased to see the wheels of
progress actually turning. With fairytale
precision concerned students who
spoke up when pool plans were deleted
from the master blueprint saw student
leaders take up the cause. The Student
Senate then passed a resolution—hoping
that somehow, somewhere, money
could be secured to shape the dream
into reality. Realizing that the olym-pic-
sized pool which they first desired
was somewhat of a pipedream, they
agreed to seek a pool which would be
adequate.
Their resolution was submitted to
Dr. Harry Philpott who nodded in assent
and took up the fight. He, too, felt
that even if corners had to be cut, the
students still needed a pool.
Thankfully, the Board of Trustees
was impressed with the sincerity, concern,
and willingness to make "do with
less". which the determined group
showed. Or maybe it was their "stick-to-
it-iveness" in time of need which
helped sell the pool idea.
Whatever the cause of the Board's
decision, we are grateful for their half
million dollar second look at the situation.
We commend the Student Senate,
Dr. Philpott and the Board for
their dedication to a cause well worth
heralding.
Ma And Pa Wallace
Well, the Crimson-White's done it
again. In a front page editorial-type
feature the nostalgic University of Alabama
journalists recount for their read.
ers the tale of Ma and Pa Ferguson:
the governor and first lady of Texas
during the depression days.
"He was a popular and progressive
governor," the C-W states. He believed
in such measures as providing free text
books for school children placing high
taxes on commodities with high sales
volume, and most of all the customs
and traditions that Texas had known
since its inception." (It is said that
included in this were hanging rustlers
without a trial and prohibitin' Indians
from buyin' whiskey and habitin' bars.)
But then, the story continues, "Miserable
luck soon found her way to Pa's
doorstep." After looking over Pa's record
and finding a fault or two in his
"seemingly efficient adminstration,"
the State legislature "took it upon itself
to impeach Pa, leaving him jobless
in the midst of a terrible depression."
Being the resourceful politician he
was, Pa hit upon a loophole to regain
his former status. And, though it was
a little indirect, he knew it would
work.
Law prevented Pa from succeeding
himself, but, Pa knew how to beat it—
Ma became the gubernatorial candidate
that year. "Since the people of
Texas didn't have the choice to decide
whether or not he should be able to
seek reelection," they showed their
contempt, the C-W says, by electing in
a landslide, Ma Ferguson.
And so the story goes "Ma, content
to idle her time with a wad of 'bacca'
and a slug of 'shine, then stepped out
of the way and Pa ran the state government
from behind her apron strings
for the next eight years."
Although our rival newspaper
claims to have changed the names to
protect the innocent, they do admit
that the scene takes place right here
in the "long seceded state of Alabama."
We can appreciate the satire of their
charming tale and at the same respect
and admire the colorful characters
deemed Ma and Pa.
It is our hope, however, that the
drama will remain on stage . . .
The Lady Or The Tiger?
Rutgers University Marxist
Poses Political Dilemma
By Mary Whitley
Alabama politicians and concerned citizens
who survived the battle of the speaker ban
bill in the legislature this summer had it easy. The real battle,
at least in the South has not yet begun.
Now that the demonstrations, both peaceful and otherwise,
are beginning to lose their touch, and the spice and excitement
of near-rebellion on the street- marks could find no reason to
jrr3E^r<™srr-
PLUNK •
corners is being checked by law
enforcement officials, a not-so-new
but ever-so-popular movement
is beginning to emerge.
In a nutshell, Eugene D.
Genovese, American history instructor
at New Jersey's state
university, Rutgers, advocates
Marxism and because of his
views the incumbent democrat
Gov. Richard Hughes will very
probably be defeated at the
polls this week.
Hughes opposition comes
from a little-known state senator
from a rural county, Republican
Wayne Dumont, Jr.,
who is demanding removal of
the Marxist sympathizer from
the university for "sedition."
Said Marxist professor Genovese
at a Rutgers teach-in on
Viet Nam in April, "Those of
you who know me know that
I am a Marxist and a socialist.
Therefore, unlike most of my
colleagues here this morning,
I do not fear or regret the impending
Viet Cong victory in
Viet Nam, I welcome it . . ."
In late June he gave New
Jersey voters who had thus far
experienced a campaign void of
any real issues (even taxes,
education ,and the water shortage
failed to provoke serious
discussion) something to think
about. He demanded that Genovese
be fired. Dumont contended
that a man such as this had
no place in the classroom, much
less in a state university where
his salary was paid by the public.
Much to the governor's
distress, he was forced to take
up the issue and began his own
investigation into the matter.
Believing that the issue
would "die before the leaves
fell from the trees," however,
Gov. Hughes defended Geno-vese's
right to say what he
wanted to just as long as he did
it outside the classroom.
The Rutgers Board of Governors,
after investigating the
Marxist's background and re-dismiss
him.
When Rutgers opened its
doors this fall, this issue which
state Democrats seemed to think
would have long been dead,
arose plainly once more. A
student free speech committee
took a swing at Dumont for his
anti-Marxist views and then
came another teach-in.
Genovese refrained from this
one but two more professors
appeared to carry on the battle.
Another history professor, from
another New Jersey college not
only defended Genovese but
also told the teach in that he
wouldn't teach if he couldn't
voice Marxist views in the
classroom.
Several weeks ago teach-in
number three dealt the biggest
and bitterest blow in the
election. Another professor
from the women's branch of the
state university defended the
Genovese stand. The mother
of a Coast Guard officer in Viet
Nam received national recognition
when she was punched by
a student who called all servicemen
in Viet Nam "drips."
Gov. Hughes called for disciplinary
action against the youth.
Then public attention was
focused on New Jersey when
national anti-Viet Nam war
demonstrations began. "Rid
Rutgers of Reds" campaigns began
next.
Republican Dumont holds
that Gov. Hughes refuses to act
against "sedition" and possibly
"treason." In effect, Hughes
counters the argument with a
cry of witch-hunting aimed at
Dumont.
The remarkable twist to the
tale is politicians on both sides
have once again crossed party
lines to defend or deny the
Marxist's right to speak freely
outside the classroom.
The noose has been lowered
around the neck of New Jersey.
How long will it take the
hangman to reach Alabama?
SORRY^ BUD
Stealing For Fun . . .
Adolescent Pranksters
Pose Campus Problem
By Peggy Tomlinson
We are faced with a problem at Auburn
which, I am sure, plagues all college campuses
at one time or another, the problem of "stealing for fun." This
includes taking college property—-from furniture in the dorms to
stop signs at intersections.
Most Auburn students are too mature for this kind of harmful
prank. But we do have a
Scrambling For Votes . . .
Is Statesmanship Gone
From American Scene?
By Bruce Nichols
President Johnson has energetically and
tenaciously pursued the securing of civil
rights for each and every American. In addition, he has launched
his anti-poverty war to free all Americans for the living of a
"good life." These goals are very noble indeed, if nobly intended.
Strangely enough, the President
seemed to reverse himself
last month in supporting
the repeal of the 'Right to
Work Clause" cf the Taft-Hartley
Act, which permits states to
establish laws outlawing union
membership as a prerequisite
for employment. Ban of these
state limitations would, in effect,
coerce workers to join a
union or face unemployment.
The President had committed
himself to this favor to organize
labor in the 1964 campaign
and in his State of the
union or face unemployment.
The President reversed his
stand on individual rights for
political convenience, to satisfy
the demands of the all-important
labor bloc vote, scuttling
the individual's right to work
after having fought so "valiantly"
for his right to do everything
else. But Mr. Johnson is
a very talented politician, not
likely to risk losing the organized
support of labor. Although
the dictionary lists the word
"politician" as a synonym of
the word "statesman," in modern
usage, "politician" is a
disparaging term suggesting
artifice and intrigue while
"statesman" implies broad-minded,
far-seeing sagacity in
the affairs of state.
"The difference between a
politician and a statesman,"
added A. L. Kinsolving, "is that
the politician thinks of himself
and his party; the statesman
thinks of the people and the
country."
If previous actions haven't,
this latest action has eliminated
Lyndon Johnson from the
ranks of the statesmen.
Indeed, statesmen are • difficult
to find in the United
States today. The order of
Dulles and Stevenson is fast
passing away. In an age of
political cynicism where anything
is done for the almighty
bloc vote, perhaps statesman
are out of place.
Fortunately a senatorial voice
of outstandingly statesmanlike
qualities would negate this
latter conjecture. That voice is
Senator Everett Dirksen of
Illinois, Senate minority leader
and the leader of opposition to
the repeal of 14b
The successful Dirksen-di-rected
filibuster postponed action
on the repeal until next
session at least. But Senator
Dirksen does not oppose repeal
merely because, as Republican
minority leader, he has a rubber
starnp marked "reject" for
every executive proposal. He
doesn't Operate in such a manner.
For example, the two to
one Democratic majority in the
Senate enables executive forces
to pass nearly anything they
desire. Another man might
have remained silent permitting
a Southern Democrat-Republican
coalition to form and perhaps
to stall the Civil Rights
Act of 1964.
Instead, Dirksen, in a Presidential
election year, took an
active part in building and passing
the Civil Rights Act. Criticized
by members of his own
party for helping the Democrats
to cinch the Negro bloc vote in
1964, he replied, "The civil
rights act . . . involved the upward
thrust of civilization."
Similarly, in the face of
Union threats of political retribution
which have been
devastating in the past, Mr.
Dirksen directed opposition to
the repeal of 14b on what he
reportedly called "a matter of
personal conviction." Unlike,
President Johnson, his actions
show consistency resulting from
a meaningful, public-minded
philosophy of government not
altered by every changing political
breeze.
Also unlike Mr. Johnson,
Senator Dirksen is a statesman.
small group of childish students
who haven't learned the danger
inherent in some pranks.
Fun is fun and everyone at
one time or another likes to
play a practical joke or pull off
a prank, but I can't understand
these practical jokers who only
think of themselves. When they
steel a stop sign do they realize
someones life is in danger? No,
they just think how nice the
sign will look on the bare spot
in their room.
Some boys were caught last
week in what they called a
practical joke. A construction
crew had put up signs to
transfer traffic on the superhighway
to Opelika into one
lane while some work was being
one on the road. The boys
took up each- sign leading to the
transfer and got caught. Each
boy was fined $55 by the City
Court for their joke.
Before our first home game
this year the police put out
signs directing traffic to the
stadium and, within 5 minutes
after the signs were put out,
they were gone. All the traffic
had to stop to ask for directions
which the signs would have
given if they had been in their
place.
We still don't knew who stole
the historical marker given to
the University by the Alabama
Historical Society; it was in
place one night and the next
morning it was gone. Many
rumors have been floating
around campus about the guilty
party. The lateset seems to be
that the "ghost" in Samford
planned the whole thing. He
watched for weeks for his
chance, and when the campus
police weren't on that side of
the campus, he just flew down
and took it. I can say one
thing for him, he put a lot of
planning into his little caper.
How many of you have
walked into the lobby of your
dorm and noticed a chair or a
painting missing? There are
many examples of this. A student
recently persented a
painting to one of the girls
dorms and the painting disappeared
within a few days. At
several different times chairs
have been missing from the
Union Building for several
weeks.
Chief Millard Dawson,
head of our campus police, said
he had seen many recovered
stolen objects at Auburn but
the strangest to him was a
funeral sign brought all the
way from Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Seme of you are probably
smiling at these examples and
saying students will be students.
BUt when "stealing for
fun" endangers someone's life
it is time to stop the stealing
and as soon as possible.
Insights
We Have Paid A Price
For McCarthy's Ambition
By Don Phillips
The integrity of the U.S. Congress sank
to a new low in the early '50.'s when Wisconsin
Senator Joseph McCarthy went on his wild anti-Communist
tyrade.
To McCarthy, anti-Communism was a political gimmick,
something to keep him in office just like racism kept many a
Southern Senator in office. McCarthy
found Communism in
every corner, and anyone who
dared disagree with him for
any reason found himself a
Communist and an outcast.
Many innocent Americans were
ruined for life during his ty-ranical
reign.
McCarthy's downfall came
during the Army-McCarthy
hearings, however, when he
went just a little too far. It
is reported that he even offered
to find a few thousand fewer
Communists in the Army hierarchy
if they would release the
young crony of one of his 'investigators"
from the draft. The
"patriotic" Eugene McCarthy
was a partner in draft dodging.
McCarthy knew when his
downfall had come. It was during
a particularly stormy hearing
on the. Army when an attorney
rose to the floor and
stormed, "Sir, have you no decency?'
It was over, and everyone
knew it. "I think I went too
far," he said, and indeed he
had. Resolutions were drafted
in his own Congress condemning
his actions, and the power
that had been his ebbed away.
But the seed was planted, and
for over a decade now, the
word "Communist" has struck
blind fear into the hearts of
all within hearing distance. It
doesn't matter whether there
are any real Communists
around; the word itself is
enough. This blind fear has
been kept alive by such organizations
as the House Un-American
Activities Committee, the
John Birch Society and, of
course, the Ku Klux Klan.
The fear has lived on longer
and stronger in the South than
in other parts of the country,
mainly because of the race issue.
It is much easier to label
a man a Communist than it is
to argue his points en merit,
especially when such issues as
voting rights are involved.
No one denies that there are
Communists in this country and
that they are infiltrating various
facets of American life, although
not nearly to the extent
many are led to believe.
But we must remember that
the fact that a Communist advocates
some action or line of
political thought does not mean
that it is wrong or all bad. It
is about time we started fighting
basic points on their merits
and not on how many Communists
advocate them. We
have a Federal Bureau of In-
Cultural Gap ^ . !
Musical Tastes
Lag Behind
Educational Level
By Sansing Smith
He is one of those men who
possess true talent—yet among
our circles he is little known,
for among our circles true talent
seems to be little appreciated.
His name is Don Shirley and
his versatile
piano keeps
his audience
spell - bound
for "Clare de
Lune," hum-in
i n g to
"Georgia on
My Mind,'
and cheering
for "Drowned
in My
Own Tears."
H i s fingers
glide easily over the keys, producing
too many sounds for
just one man.
He is no ordinary pianist, and
no ordinary man. Don Shirley,
at age 35, has earned three Ph.
D. degrees in music, psychology,
and liturgical arts. He is a musical
master with the classics, the
show tunes, spirituals, jazz, and
blues.
It was my good fortune to
attend one of Don Shirley's recent
concerts at a nearby college.
For the second year in a
row on that same campus, he
packed the house. The captivated
audience clung to each
silvery note of this talented
genius. I could not help but
think of a concert given on our
own campus by another member
of Don Shirley's race.
While one group of students
strained to catch every note,
the Auburn students w e re
clambering for the cuff links
of James Brown as he frothed
at the mouth and screamed
hysterically while hopping on
one foot all over the stage.
Some call it talent, but I can't
see it.
Faith in Auburn's musical
tastes was revived a week-end
ago when the lobby of Smith
HaU-,,^vas packed for the art
students' hootenanny. H e re
were students with true talent
playing true music and singing
true songs. The atmosphere was
informal and the audience quite J
appreciative.
More of this type thing is
needed to round out our education.
It doesn't all come from
books, and our extra curricular
energies should be directed
along constructive and cultural
paths.
We have a wealth of talent
in our students a n d faculty |
alike, but cultural concerts are,
on the whole, poorly attended.
And few students are aware
t h a t we have, at Auburn, a
composer who has played all
over the world, a professor who
has studied under a student of
Franz Liszt himself, and one of |
the nation's top harpists.
The Smith Hall Hootenanny I
revived me, but I could retain
my faith in the campus cultural
trends just so long, for I soon
learned that the entertainment |
committee was seriously considering
the Shirelles for the |
Beauty Ball. If it is the committee's
aim to represent all |
types of music, then the performance
of James Brown was I
enough. The Shirelles offer no |
change in pace.
The creation of the student I
committee on Social Life gives
me hope that something will be
done about entertainment. The
committee, composed of both |
faculty members and students,
will screen and approve all entertainment
brought to the I
campus. Heaven forbid a return
to the days of the Four Fresh- |
men, but we can also do without
so much of screamy, whiney |
voices bolstered by echo chambers
and shoo-be-doo's.
As I compare Don Shirley to |
Mr. Please Please and the shoo-be-
doo Shirelles, I have no I
trouble deciding who is the real
musician, but I have to think
twice about the tastes a nd
values of the t w o different
audiences. The Auburn students
went wild over James Brown's
screaming and prancing. And|
the students of Tuskegee Institute
gave a standing ovation to |
a scholar and musician.
vestigation to watch after the|
Communists.
We are in a life and death I
ideological struggle with Communism
all over the world, andl
we will not win simply by be- [
ing against everything they a r e |
for.
After all . . . it could be a I
trick.
far from The Truth?
Good Guy 'Koob' Refused Enrollment
As Berkeley Seeks Protest Leaders
The following column was written by Thorn Fraser in the
Daily Tar Heel, student newspaper f°r the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, N.C. Due to the present national interest
in Fraser's topic, the I'lainsman Editorial Board deemed
his editorial worthy of reprint this week.—Ed.
University of California researchers
at Berkeley recently
told their professional colleagues
that campus protest leaders
are "the nucleus of future
scholarship."
What is not known, however,
is Berkeley's new graduate
school admission policy. To get
the inside dope, I interviewed
Koob Egdelwonk, who, although
he graduated from the University
of North Carolina with a
4.00 and an impressive record
in student government, was
turned down at Berkeley. He
wanted to work for a Ph.D. in
nuclear physics there.
"You look extremely qualified,"
the admissions officer
said, "yet you have a 4.00 average
without ever having belonged
to the Free Speech
Movement."
"Yes, sir," answered Koob
very respectfully.
"Well. I'm sorry," the official
replied, "but we cannot accept
you because you haven't
engaged in creative protest. I'm
sure you see our side of the
story; the statistics show campus
activists rank higher on the
intellectual orientation scale."
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"We're sorry," the admissions
officer said, "but we must rely
on past deeds, not just on a-bility.
Judging from your record,
I would say you lack the
motivation one needs to succeed
at Berkeley."
Six months later, Koob revisited
Berkeley after changing
his identity. He wore dark
glasses, a dirty T-shirt, and
sandals. What's more, he did
not hesitate before accepting
the marijuana cigarette offered
him by the interviewer.
Koob casually remarked that
he had barely managed to graduate
from UNC, that he had
been suspended from school
several times at the request of
the governor, and that he had
used an LSD (a hallucinatory
drug).
"I'm very impressed," said
the admissions officer. "Seems
to me you're just the type of
fellow who'll fit into our local
Free Speech Movement, although
the experts say the FSM
people are not beatniks."
"Sure thing, old man," Koob
replied. "Me—I go places. Just
ordinary stuff — picketing the
u n i v e r s i t y administration,
working to legalize pot, vandalizing
military monuments."
Two weeks later he received
a letter from Berkeley. "Dear
Mr. Egdelwonk," it read. "We
have been checking and have
found that you have never been
disciplined by the school as you
said you were, and furthermore,
that Chief Beaumont has
never arrested you for smoking
marijuana. We find you to be
an intellectual fraud."
Depressed, Koob ran out into
the middle of Franklin St. and
began screaming obscenities at
the top of his lungs. When the
authorities threw him into the
paddy wagon, Koob said he was
merely expressing his right of
free speech.
Meanwhile, back at Berkeley,
the admissions officers read
about the incident. The next
day they paid Koob's bail so he
could immediately take advantage
of a $6,000 scholarship offered
by their physics department.
Fire . . .
V
(Continued from page 1)
muscle control. Blake won the
Alcoa Student Design award for
this project.
Other products lost in the
fire included a child's multi-j
purpose educational construction
toy designed by John Patterson;
an electroplating device
by William Britt; and a mobile
office shelter for construction
sites designed by William Bullock.
Castleman J. Munro II Arises;
Cuts Certain liberal' Faculty
I Editor, The Plainsman:
If the South is ever to raise itself from the muck of
| hate and bigotry, it will because of the efforts cf Southern-
I ers; that is hard to say and even harder to prove—hard to
| say because the thought has never been kicked around
{ much (to be original is harder than being a conservative
I humanities professor at Auburn), and hard to prove be-
: cause of the mass of "facts" thrown at the student saying
\ that the South has never been able to handle its own
j affairs, that the South has an inferiority complex, that
l the people of the South are airaid to, question themselves,
| and that change can only come through Northern crusaders
I and binding political laws (being a "conservative" and
i saying something that a liberal professor will not guffaw
I at is as hard to locate as the conservative professor).
Consider the professor who spouts the liberal viewpoint
I to his class either by sly insinuation or by twisting his
I subject to meet the political clime; he will stand dauntless
| before his class and beg for a statement from the fledg-
I lings, grind them to hamburger meat, rub his hands toil
gether, then wonder why no one asks questions in his
\ class. (I sometimes ask myself: "Do Ph.D's know all the
\ answers?")
I have digressed for good reason. It has not been
| merely to chide the Auburn professor, who perhaps
\ migrated from the "North," feels prideful that he can
[ bravely survive in a world of only hatemengers and klans-
I men; I have no argument with the liberal viewpoint, how-i
ever I think that the liberals are the,people who narrow
the spectrum and who alienate the classes to the point of
fear.
I have gone off on a tangent because I feel the situation
merits it. (I am not saying this in the sense of a
demagogue—I am not running for a second term in my
humanities course, however I probably will when my
history professor gets wind of this, understand I am not
trying to use Haynevillian tactics to coerce from him a
D or maybe at most a C).
I have been overly caustic in my digression on the
Auburn professor. Of course, I must qualify this by saying
that many of the professors in humanities are not
liberal (I am using this term in the sense of those glorious
men who have a knowledge of the great works and who
proudly proclaim "There is nothing I hate any worse than
a bigot!") Certainly the liberal viewpoint is a valid one,
and there are many conservative professors who advocate
to the point of militancy; but, while they, hold most students
in their viewpoint by relying on whatever traditions
the student has accumulated as a Southerner, the liberal,
for all his rightfully high-minded thoughts, uses tactics
which, as I have already said, alienate the student, blur
his vision of the problem by offending the same traditions,
help to close his mind, and finally confuse him such that
he can never see the problem in an objective light again.
Let me clarify another term. While I am saying "professor"
I am also including in that endearing term, graduate
students, who, maybe, muffle the torch a little more than
do professors.
My grief is great and my feelings are quite strong.
These thoughts may leave no scars; they should. The
opinions and doubts of the student, which will probably, I
and rightfully, spring from his defense of all the standards j
he has accepted since birth, never see the light of day j
here because he is afraid. (One of your columnists brushed j
over this.)
In concluding may I say that the original questions I
concerning the South remain unattempted to answer at j
Auburn. Why? Because the student is never let out j
of his strait jacket, because the harness of a closed mind \
is imposed ironically by those men, on both sides of the I
question, who allow no constructive doubt.
Surely the average Auburn student will never approach j
the dubiosity which will allow the South to solve its own I
problems.
Most are fond of truth, but not of flunking.
Castleman J. Munro II
4 SL
FRESHMAN COUNCIL
University Freshman Council
will meet Wednesday, Nov. 3,
at 4:30 p.m. in Room 319 of
the Union Building. All newly
elected members are invited to
attend.
* * *
The foolish and the dead a-lone
never change their opinion.
—Lowell.
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The
B 0 0 T E R Y
N. College Auburn
Birmingham Symphony
Performs Here Nov. 10
The Birmingham Symphony Orchestra will present a concert
in the Student Activities Building at 8:15 on Nov. 10.
The group is composed of 60
musicians under the direction
of Maestro Amerigo Marino,
now in his second season with
5—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Nov. 3, 196?
'Sheba' . . .
the Symphony.
Marino, a native of Chicago,
has been described as a
"throughly competent leader
with a clear, uncomplicated
beat.steady rhythm and a good
ear for sonority." He displays
"superior musicianship, is venturesome,
versatile, has a flair
for program building, and is
also a masterful accompanist."
The conductor studied violin
at the Chicago Musical College
the Chicago Conservatory of
Music, and conducting with
Campus Drive
Scheduled
January 17-27
The All-Campus Fund Drive
will be held this year during
the week of January 17-27, according
to Jiin Rotch, superintendent
of campus drives.
The drive, which is organized
and conducted each year by the
student government organization,
will be carried out on a
group competition basis this
year, Rotch said.
Proceeds from the drive will
go to the following charities,
as well as others now under
consideration by Rotch and his
staff: The American Mental
Health Foundation, The American
Heart Association, The
Ameridan Cancer Society, Boys'
Homes of America, World University
Service, Care, Radio
Free Europe, and the Auburn
United Fund.
Individual fraternities, sororities,
and independent groups
will compete for a trophy and
another more useful prize, the
identity of which Rotch was
unable to reveal.
I Nicolai Malko. In three years
in the Army Special Services,
he learned that one phase of
music was toe narrow. Consequently
he organized a glee
club, a Dixie-Land Band, arranged
for dance bands and
wrote radio scores.
After the war Marino moved
to the West Coast where he
joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic
as first violinst and
resumed his conducting studies:
with Fritz Zweig.
Marino has served with the
Los Angeles and HsVywood
3owl Orchestras and was associated
with CBS radio and
.elevision as a composer and
conductor. In 1958 he reorgan-zed
the Glendale Symphony
and served as music director
ind conductor until 1963.
The conductor came into
prominence in April of 1963
when he attended the American
Conductors Project at Peabody
institute, in Baltimore Maryland,
as one of four young
American conductors from over
200 applicants. As a result of
his work, Marino was extended
an invitation to guest conduct
the New York Philarmonic in
Lincoln Center. Other guest
appearances have been with the
National Symphcny in Washington,
D.C., the Portland Sym-ohony,
Santa Barbara Symphony,
Los Angeles Opera Company
and the Riverside Guild
Opera.
The Birmingham Symphony
nakes at least five tours each
/ear, does several area concerts
and eight adult and 12
youth concerts in the city. The
Symphony sponsors two training
orchestras for ycung musicians
and participates in the
annual festival of sacx-ed music
as well as leading support to
other cultural activities in the
area.
Concert tickets may be purchases
at the door. Students
with identification cards will be
admitted free.
(Continued from page 1)
student body of the University.
Collum explained that the Auburn
Players is a group traditionally
offering a creative outlet
to the community as well as
to the college at Auburn.
The members of the cast are:
Bob Chisnell of Jacksonville,
Fla., a graduate assistant, as
"Doc"; Jayne Rushin of Auburn
as "Lola"; Tim Barker of
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., as "Turk";
Bobbye Olney, a student of
Montgomery as "Marie"; Wayne
Lacy of Huntsville, a student,
| and John Lopiccolo, a faculty
I member of Auburn as rhilk-i
men.
Valerie Sjolund of Auburn as
"Mrs. Cofl'man"; Jere Hudson,
a student from Montgomery as
the mailman; and Bill Douglas,
a student from Panama City,
Fla., as "Bruce." The stage
manager is Dorset Noble of
Rome, Ga., and the set designer
I is Phil Fitzpatrick of Auburn.
j Both arc students.
For Collum, "Come Back,
Little Sheba" is a challenging
experience, filled with many
responsibilities and hard work.
Not only must he direct the
play, but he m u s t supervise
every aspect of the preparations
for the drama, from costumes
to scenery.
One of the major responsibilities
the director of a play
snust face, according to Collum,
is that of "unifying the performance
of the various actors."
"In the cast I have 10 different
persons, each with his own idea
of what the character he portrays
should be like. I must
blend their performances together
with my own interpretation
of what the play as a
whole should be."
FACULTY SERIES
The Fine Arts Faculty Series
will present Maureen Rosen-
! barm, soprano, in concert, Nov.
Union.
If you re looking for a nice comfy place
to work
after graduation,
forget about General Electric.
We don't have any place where you
can curl up and snooze away the
next forty years of your career.
There are no quiet little nooks in
any of General Electric's 130 operating
businesses in 19 countries
round the world.
But if you're the wide-awake
type, G.E. can provide the excitement
to keep you that way. Your
first assignment may be helping us
find applications for a whole new
family of plastics recently developed
by G.E. Or you may be working
at Cape Kennedy on the Apollo
moon program. Or you may be
working on the marketing team for
a new home appliance.
Th>gress Is Our Most Important Plvduct
One thing is certain: You'll be
working. You'll have plenty of responsibility.
What you won't have
is a chance to doze off in the prime
years of your career.
Talk to the man from G.E. when
he visits campus. Come to General
Electric, where the young men are
important men.
GENERAL® ELECTRIC
Defense Adds A Score In Auburn Victory Over Florida
Play starts as Spurrier (11) hands off to Wages Wages passes back to his left Spurrier dodges Collins (78) Cochran (31) Baynes Baynes and McAfee (67) close in as Waxman (61) look
Tiger
Topics
By RON MUSSIG
SEC Dark Horses Change Color
Tigers Rise Up, Smash Gators;
Meet State In Crucial Contest
Difference At The Field House m • •
It's really amazing what a big victory can do to a football
team. We spent a portion cf our Monday afternoon at the
field house and noticed a huge difference between this Monday
and last Monday at about the same time. "It's really nice,"
somebody said, "to have the coaches speak to you and "treat
you' like humans on a Monday."
Some of the great 'Blue' hunters had a defenseless squirrel
cornered in an oak tree and were intently engaged in "twistin"
it out. Coach Atkins was surrounded by about 15 blue jersies
and they were all aparently engaged in 'swapping lies' for a
few minutes. Another group was talking over the game Saturday—
Gagner (lineman Larry) isn't too tough, "that No. 51
sure could throw his elbow," "Libertore (quarterback Larry
of three or fcur years ago) wasn't near what he was supT
posed to be," and on and. on. i :' '
Something Extra
Practice was spirited. Everybody seemed to have that little
extra something that has been lacking for the last few weeks.
Maybe the Tigers are really rolling now. There is no question
that the next three grames will tell the tale, but the Tigers
have at least one thing in their favor. They are atop the
SEC heap and they have to be beat to lose the lead. There
isn't any waiting around hoping that LSU will beat Alabama,
or Florida will top Georgia so the Plainsmen can slip into the
lead. They are already there—now the problem is only one
of staying. there.
Can they do it? Against Kentucky and Florida, the Auburn
eleven has shown that it is capable of a fine game or two.
Against Southern Mississippi the Auburn eleven has shown
that it is capable of a very off game. Only question is what
are the next three going to be? About 12,000 students and
countless loyal fans who have stuck by the Tigers thus far are
counting on the fine ones. We think it is quite possible that
they will see them.
Really Fired Up
Auburn won the game Saturday en a whole lot of desire
and a few breaks. The Plainsmen have finally won a game
on the score board and lost it in the statistics. Just looking at
last season, the Tigers didn't lose one statistically, but four of
the grid contests went to the opposition via total points scored.
It has been said a million times and will be said a million
times again that you can't make mistakes and win football
games. Certainly the Gators would be willing to testify to
that today.
Talking to Alex Bowden Monday, we wanted to know just
what it was that put the spark into the Lovliest Village's
eleven. "Was there something special," we asked? "Naw,"
said lanky Bowden, "we were just all ready for this one.
Last week we just weren't up for the game. If you will notice.
Auburn always plays its best games against the toughest teams."
We had to agree with this. Coach Jordan's squad, which just
won his fifteenth straight homecoming game, has always looked
best against the toughest competition. 'We will be ready for
the rest of them," they said. We sure hope so.
Tucker Excels . . .
Marvin Tucker, a 5-9, 190 pound ex-linebacker took over
for injured Bogue Miller at defensive end again Saturday and
did a teriffic job. The Gators wisely tested this unknown
quantity on the first few plays of the game and Tucker proved
sound. Steve Spurrier first called a screen to Tucker's side
which gained nine yards via the sophomore's eagerness. His next
call to the Linden, Ala., native's side lost four yards when Tucker
nailed Baeszler behind the line. Next, Spurrier attempted to
pass only to have the well built defensive end drop him for
minus six. The right side of the line remained secure throughout
the remainder of the game with Tucker, Bobby Walton, and
John Cochran piling up the ball carrier again and again.
By ALAN HINDS
"Mississippi State and Auburn
are a lot alike," said
Florida's Ray Graves of the
only two teams to mar Florida's
record this season. The
two unpredictable grid
squads tangle in Birmingham
this Saturday within
the spacious confines of Legion
Field.
The Maroons, after winninr
four straight (including an 18-
13 victory over Florida), have
hit a midseason slump, losinf
on successive w e e k e n d s tc
Memphis State, Tulane, and
Alabama.
Auburn too has skidded at the
campaigns midpoint, but bounced
back in impressive fashion
dropping Florida, the seventh-ranked
team in the nation, 28-
17 last Saturday,
HAVE DEFENSIVE EDGE
"Auburn has the defensive
edge, especially in the line,"
Graves, the Gator coach, told
the Plainsman Monday. "States
balanced backfield can score
from anywhere on the field. It
should take two touchdowns tc
win."
Using the contrasting attributes
of brawny Hoyle Granger
and boney Marcus Rhoden, the
Bulldogs lead the SEC in scoring
offense, averaging over 23
points per game.
Rhoden, the current SEC 100-
yard dash champion and perhaps
the most dangerous running
back in MSU history, has
scored seven touchdowns in as
many games this season. Three
of those scores have been on
punt returns of 50 or more
yards.
LED RETURNERS
Dan Bland, who led the nation
in kickoff returns last year,
runs opposite Rhoden at right
halfback.
Powerful Granger, the Maroons
leading rusher for the
past two seasons, continues his
form this year. The 223 pound
fullback has been on the AU-SEC
team in his first two seasons
and is a hardy contender
(See page 8, column 5)
By DAVID HOUSEL
When the Auburn Tigers
took over first place in the
S o u t h eastern Conference
Last week, it was rumored
that some of the SEC's sup.
porters had red faces because
of the Tigers 2-3-1
record. If there was any em.
barrassment a r o u n d the
South, it was erased with
the Tiger's 28-17 homecom-ng
win over the Florida
Gators.
A sellout crowd of over 45,-
000 fans and a regional television
audience covering eight
states saw the Tigers win what
Coach Ralph Jordan described
"one of Auburn's greatest victories."
The Gators, rated one
of the SEC's best teams found
the win-hungry Tigers more
than they could handle.
FIFTEENTH STRAIGHT
The victory marked the Tiger's
fifteenth straight homecoming
win and preserved their
Tucker (37), Baynes, and McAfee knock ball loose
Alex Bowden passed for two touchdowns Saturday
Annual ADPi-KD Powder Puff
Contest Today At Felton Little
By HOLLIS EASLEY
Fifty-five bruising, battering, bone-crushing coeds
will collide this afternoon in the third annual ADPi-KD
Powder Puff Football clash at Felton Little Park, beginning
at 4 p.m.
This battle of the weaker sex will benefit the All
Campus F u n d Drive. Tickets
are presently being sold by
members of the respective sororities
and are priced at 35
cents each, even for 50-yard-line
seats.
Trading skirts for faded dungarees,
the two sororities are
expected to wage a fierce but
comical battle, with the ADPi
underdogs attempting to break
a two year jinx.
Highlighting the half time activities
will be the crowning of
(See page 7, column 1)
6—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1965
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Linebacker B i l l Cody's
interception and runback of
Florida quarterback Steve
Spurrier's errant aerial in
the third quarter of Saturday's
game was accomplished
on the identical play
which Cody scored on in
1962 against the Gators.
"I had a premonition just
before the play began that
I might intercept. Spurrier
lined them up in exactly
the same formation as Florida
had been in when I intercepted
in the 1962 game,"
Cody said.
Cody (11) battles Wages for ball
record of having never lost to
Florida in Auburn.
The two teams let their defensive
units battle it out in the
first quarter with neither team
lighting the scoreboard.
Two pass interference calls
aided the Gators in taking a
10-0 halftime lead. Midway in
the second quarter, the Gators
(See page 7, column 2)
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Referee, Fulghum (24) and Tucker signal Cody TD
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- .q;* w;,•.,-••<,
'Out On A Limb'
Lee
Aub.
Army
LSU
Ark.
Tex.
Miami
Cal.
Clem.
Duke
Fla.
FSU
Term.
111.
Neb.
Ky.
Rut.
Navy
N. D.
Purd.
Tul.
12-6
73-34
.682
Mussig
Aub.
Army
Ala.
Ark.
Tex.
Miami
Cal.
N.C.
Duke
Fla.
FSU
G. T.
111.
Neb.
Ky.
Rut.
Navy
N. D.
Purd.
Tul.
13-5
73-34
.682
Game
Miss. St.-Auburn
Air Force-Army
Alabama-LSU
Arkansas-Rice
Baylor-Texas
Boston College-Miami
Southern Cal.-Cal.
Clemson-N. C.
Duke-N. C. St.
Florida-Georgia
Wake Forest-FSU
Georgia Tech-Tenn.
Michigan-Illinois
Kansas-Nebraska
Kentucky-Vandy
Rutgers-Lafayette
Maryland-Navy
Notre Dame-Pitt.
Wisconsin-Purdue
Stanford-Tulane
Last Week:
Season:
Season Percentage:
In a vote taken Sunday night, the regulars voted four to one to exclude the guest
for the remainder of the season because the guest is doing to well. Unfortunately, the
one dissenting vote was that of sports editor Mussig. The guest remains on top on
the strength of Dr. Philpott's 14-4 showing. Lee, Mussig, and the mysterious Old
Pro are all tied for the top spot among the regulars. SHE is second while poor oV
Snellgrove continues as the cellar dweller.
Student Body President, George McMillan is this week's guest. All regulars are
hoping the SGA's top hand is too busy tending to campus business to know much
about football. (Needless to say, the same hopes were dashed last week by Dr. Phil-pott.
)
Old Pro
Aub.
Army
LSU
Ark.
Tex.
Miami
S. Cal.
N. C.
Duke
Fla.
FSU
G. T.
111.
Neb.
Ky.
Rut.
Md.
N. D.
Purd.
Tul.
13-5
73-34
.682
HER
Aub.
Army
Ala.
Ark.
Tex.
Miami
S. Cal.
N. C.
Duke
Fla.
FSU
G. T.
Mich.
Neb.
Ky.
Rut.
Navy
N. D.
Purd.
Stan.
12-6
71-36
.6635
Snellgrove GUEST
Aub.
Army
LSU
Ark.
Tex.
Miami
S. Cal.
N. C.
Duke
Fla.
FSU
Tenn.
111.
Neb.
Ky.
Rut.
Navy
N. D.
Purd.
Tul.
13-5
G9-38
.6448
Aub.
Army
LSU
Ark.
Tex.
Miami
S. Cal.
N. C.
Duke
Fla.
FSU
G. T.
111.
Neb.
Ky.
Rut.
Navy
N. D.
Purd.
TuL
14-4
77-30
.7195
SEC Wrap-Up . . . 7—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1965
Gators Fall . .
(Continued from page 6)
started to drive from inside
their 20 toward the Auburn
goal.
It looked as if Auburn had
stopped the drive, but a fourth
down interference call at the
Tiger 29 gave the Gators new
life and the spark that carried
them to Auburn's 16 yard line.
From there, Wayne Barfield
booted a 26 yard field goal to
put Florida ahead 3-0.
INTERFERENCE CALL
The other interference call
came as the Gators were driving
for their first touchdown.
The Auburn defender w a s
charged with the infraction, as
he tried to stop All-America
Charles Casey from catching
one of Steve Spurrier's passes
at the Auburn 22.
On the next play Spurrier
fired to Jack Harper for a
touchdown. Barfield's point after
made it 10-0 at the half,
and, to most fans, it looked as
if school was out for tfie^igers.
Trailing 10-0, the Tigers went
into the dressing room, reached
down and got that "extra something"
that carried them to victory.
The first half was all
Florida, but the second half and
the ball game would belong to
the Auburn Tigers.
SCORING OPPORTUNITIES
The Tigers had two scoring
opportunities right after the
gala homecoming ceremonies at
half time but failed to cash in
on them. A fumble and a 28
yard loss left the Gators ahead,
but not for long.
The Tigers got the ball after
a quick kick on their own 39.
Five plays later the Tigers were
within three points of Florida.
Alex Bowden passed 29 yards
to Scotty Long for the Tigers
first touchdown. Don Lewis
made it 10-7 with his extra
point.
Auburn was still behind, but
not for long. On the first down
after Auburn kicked off, Spurrier
saw one of his passes intercepted
by Bill Cody and returned
29 yards for a touchdown.
Lewis' kick made it 14-10, and
"War Eagles" were ringing in
Cliff Hare.
WASTE NO TIME
The Gators did not waste time
in regaining the lead, driving
80 yards to go on top 17-14. A
pass from Spurrier to Casey accounted
for the touchdown.
Auburn had been out front
one time and liked the position.
With first and 10 on his 31,
Bowden dropped back and fired
a pass to end Freddy Hyatt for
a 69 yard Tiger touchdown and
Auburn was ahead to stay.
With the Tigers leading 21-
17, the pressure was on the Auburn
defense. The defense came
through, putting a tremendous
rush on Spurrier and keeping
the Gators from the Auburn
goal line. . • •
TIGERS ADD ICING
The Tigers added the icing to
the cake when Cody recovered
a Spurrier fumble in the end
zone for the Tiger's fourth score
of the day.
Bowden and Cody led an inspired
team effort on the part
of Auburn. The Tigers were in
the poorest physical condition,
injury wise, this season, yet
they still managed to beat one
of the best teams in the conference.
LEAD CONFERENCE
If Saturday's win was a big
one, it was, at best, only a beginning.
The Tigers presently
lead the SEC with a 2-0-1 record.
Mississippi State, Georgia,
and Alabama are the obstacles
between Auburn and the con-
Powder Puff Game
(Continued from page 6)
Mr. Powder Puff from a revue
of nine male contestants, put up
for the honor by campus sororities.
Mr. Puff will be selected
by a secret ballot vote of the
spectators. The candidates and
their sponsors are: Frank Mc-
Gee—Alpha Gam, Johnny Ro-well—
AOPi, Bill Cody—Chi O,
Phil Hardee—Tri Delta, Max
Richburg—DZ, Bobby Buisson
— Theta, Richard Dean — Phi
Mu and Tom Bryan, Pi Phi.
Ed Kiser, Jim Davenport, and
Louis Glenn will lead cheers for
Kappa Delta. Cheerleaders for
ADPi will be Jack Payne and
Bob Burton.
Serving as coaches for the
twice defeated ADPi's, who
have succumbed to KD each
year since the series began, are
Pat Eagle, Darrel Jordan, Steve
Harris, Barney Lawley, and
Buddy Mitchell. Coaching the
KD squad are Wright Bagby,
Kim Glass, Nick Ardillo, and
Whit Walter.
: Rosters for the two teams include
the following:
ADPi
OFFENSE
Ends — "Nasty" N o r m a n,
"Cruel" Craig
Guards—"Sailing" Satterfield,
"Bar NETTY" Nolen
Center—"Growling" Grant
Quarterback—"Sneaky" Syl-ference
title. The only time Auburn
has won the SEC championship
was in 1957, eight
years ago.
Saturday's win was the 100th
regular season victory, under
the coaching of Jordan. Coach
Jordan is now the all time win-ningest
coach at Auburn with
Mike Donahue, coach at Auburn
in the 1920's.
vest
Blocking Backs — "Pigskin"
Pearson, "Rough-em" Ross
Flanker Backs—"Wholluping"
Woods, "Super" Sutter
Wing Back—"Running" Rob-bins
DEFENSE
Ends—"Stocky" Stout, "Eager"
Easley, "Weighty" Williams
j
Guards — "Whippem" Wallis,
"Gifted" G i b s o n , "Bulldog"
Boon, "Ripper" Williams
Line Backers — "Dashing"
Duncan, "Daring" Delius, "Gritty"
Grissom, "Bruser" Burke.
"Rowdy" Roquemore, "Shifty"
Shaw
Safeties — "Barbaric" Byrd
"Horrible" Hollinger, "Zipping'
Zachery
KD
OFFENSE
Ends —"Lyon" Tamer, "Hit-em"
Hardwick, "Chuck-em'
Chappell
Guards — "Demon" Diamond
"Beat-em" Bogardus
Center—"Obese" Reese
Quarterback — _"Ruff ant"
Ready" Rosy
Blocking Back — "Greenless'
Jean
Flanker Back—"Meek Mama'
Margaret
Wing Back — "Hellacious
Hall
DEFENSE
E n d s — "Bustin" Bonnell,
"Jar-ene" J a n e McKenzie
"Squeally" E 1 e y , "Settlin-
Down" Sue
Guards—"Jockey" Jan, "Put-on"
Pat, "Fluffy" Duffy, "Tom
Terrific" Thomas, "Alluring"
Allen
L i n e Backers — "Varmit"
Vaughn, "Mushmouth" Marcia,
"Crazy-Legs" Stucky, "Flat
Pat" Cobb
Safeties—"Dixie Dahlin" Do-zier,
"Glorious" Glass, "Rootin
Tootin" Rawls, "Cool-it" Cau-then.
Tough Opponents Remain
For Conference's Top Four
By EDWIN TEW
If you're 21
or under you
can Save 40%
on Southern
Airways with
this little old
card.
P.S...and Reservations Confirmed in Advance too.
GOOD CQHNECTIQHS...AU DIRECTIONS
Never in the history of
;he SEC has a team lost two
fames and still won the
conference championship. It
oould happen this year.
Four of the conference's top
powers have suffered their second
defeat, and the teams with
less than two defeats have at
least two tough conference
games remaining.
League leading Auburn (2-0-
1) must still face Mississippi
State, Georgia and Alabama.
Second-place Georgia (3-1) still
has to contend with Florida and
Auburn.
Alabama, in third place, has
LSU and Auburn remaining,
and Tennessee has to play Mississippi,
Kentucky and Vander-bilt
LSU TRAPPED
Last week, the conference
added another improbable week
to its very improbably year.
Nationally . fifth-ranked LSU
fell into an Ole Miss trap and
went down 23-0.
Seventh-ranked Florida had
plans for Auburn's Homecoming,
but the Tigers had plans
of their own and exploded for
four touchdowns to down the
Gators 28-17.
Georgia, the most improbable
team of all, scored four touchdowns
in the fourth quarter to
down North Carolina 47-35.
TEWS FEARLESS FORECAST
LSU will spring back from
the Ole Miss defeat to stop the
Tide in Baton Rouge. LSU 17,
ALABAMA 10.
Injuries have hit the Tiger
offense hard and will leave this
Tie up to the defense. MISS.
ST. 10, AUBURN 7.
Vandy's defense is tough, but
•o is the Kentucky offense.
KENTUCKY 17, VANDERBILT
).
Tech has won five in a row,
.nd the Vols are undefeated.
7hey play at Knoxville, and
^ennessee is hard to beat there.
TENNESSEE 17, GA. TECH 16.
Mississippi 28, Houston 7
Stanford 10, Tulane 7
OLE MISS TRIUMPHS
Inspired Ole Miss held the
aunted LSU offense to 52
ards and turned three LSU of-msive
mistakes into twp
uchdowns and a field goal as
ie Rebs smothered the fifth-anked
Bengal Tigers 23-0.
Ole Miss grabbed a 3-0 lead
in the second quarter when Jim
Harvey recovered a fumble on
the LSU three and then booted
ax 20-yard field goal.
The Rebs made it 10-0 later
in the quarter,, driving 63 yards
for ,a touchdown with Mike
Denriis scoring on a one-yard
plunge. ,
Dennis scored the Rebs' second
touchdown on a four-yard
run after Mike Magee grabbed
an LSU fumble out of the air
and ran it to the Tiger six. Jim
Nelson scored Mississippi's final
six-ipointer, intercepting a Billy
Ezell pass and returning it 26
yards for the touchdown.
BAM A TOPS STATE
Alabama took a 10-0 lead and
then withstood a determined
Mississippi State upset bid to
hand the Bulldogs their third
straight defeat 10-7.
The Tide scored the first time
it had the ball on a 65-yard
Steve Sloan-to-Dennis Homan
pass. Bama's lead went to 10-0
when David Ray toed a 27-yard
field g o a l following a State
fumble early in the third quarter.
The Maroons came roaring
back, driving 78 yards to score
with Ashby Cook at the throttle.
Cook, senior quarterback from
Montgomery, covered 70 of the
78 yards with six pass completions,
including a 17-yarder to
little Marcus Rhoden for .the
touchdown.
State drove to the Tide five-yard
line early in the fourth
quarter b u t Creed Gilmer
blocked a field goal attempt.
After an Alabama punt, the
Maroons made a final thrust at
the Tide goal but Bobby Johns
intercepted an Ashby Cook pass
on the 17 to preserve the victory.
BULLDOGS EXPLODE
Georgia's Bulldogs, normally
a low-scoring team, exploded
for four touchdowns in the
fourth quarter to gain a come-from-
behind 47-35 victory over
North Carolina. Three of the
Georgia scores came in the last
five minutes.
Danny Talbot's 63-yard pass
to John Altherton set up the
first North Carolina touchdown,
with fullback Tom Lampman
taking it in from the three.
Minutes later, Lampman sprinted
27 yards for touchdown and
a 14-0 Tar Heel lead.
Auburn. Ala.
mmmm
NOW
THRU
Is this the way to
make a funny movie?
you bet it is?
PICTURES^
BALLOU
mmki&wm
MlCIUfl EIUM- DWftVIIE HICIUUUI
111 NIK CWSIIIM
SHOW TIMES 2:00-3:50-5:40-7:30-9:20
SU N DAY-MONDAY-TU ESDAY
FILM 1st!!!
THE BEST OF
•TANCfOLUE!
Metro-
Qoldwyn-Mayer
presents a
Robert Youngson
Production
253
SOLID LAUGHS
ACTUALLY
CLOCKED IN
"Laurel wm w SWORN SURVEY!
&HardybgLtmgfiing 1 zor
SHOW TIMES 2:00-3:50-5:40-7:30-9:20
LATE SHOW SAT. 11:15
Filmed at Daytona, Atlanta,
and Charlotte Speedway
Georgia closed the lead to 14-
7 on fullback Dan Jenkins'
three-yard run, and then Jenkins
pulled in a 30-yard scoring
pass from Lynn Hughes to tie
the game at 14-14.
North Carolina took the lead
again on Talbot's two-yard pass
to Charlie Carr, but Jenkins
scored his third touchdown, this
time from four yards out, tc
make the score 21-21 at half-time.
The Tar Heels scored twice
in the third period on seven-yard
runs by Talbot and David
Riggs to set the stage for Georgia's
comeback.
Quarterback Lynn Hughes
scored twice from the one to
cut North Carolina's lead to 35-
34. Preston Hidlehuber's 31-
yard dash to paydirt with less
than three minutes remaining
in the game put the Bulldogs
ahead, and Hughes finished the
scoring with a four-yard run.
KENTUCKY ROLLS
Kentucky rolled up 25 first
downs and nearly 400 yards total
offense to knock off one of
the nation's top offensive teams,
West Virginia, 28-8.
Quarterback R i c k Norton
completed 11 of 17 passes for
144 yards, while Roger Bird and
Larry Seiple led a ground attack
that accounted for 246
yards.
VANDY COOLS TULANE
Steve Bevil sprinted 67 yards
with a Tulane punt and fullback
Jim Whiteside scored on
a three-yard plunge to give
Vanderbilt all the points it
needed to defeat Tulane 13-0.
The Vandy defense, ranked
second in the nation, picked off
four Green Wave passes and
allowed only 13 completions in
32 attempts.
PHONE SH 5-2671
OPELIKA
Ends Thursday
'La Boheme'
Begins at 3:00 and 8:00 p.m.
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
DOUBLE FEATURE
O/in L Hill
WAR EAGLE THEATRE
DIAL 887-3631
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY
"THE BEST FOREIGN FILM
OF THE YEAR... A GREAT
FILM THAT MUST LIVE!
-Now York Times
"ONE OF THE BEST!"
—New Yorker Magazine
"ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL
THE SCREEN HAS MADE IN MANY
A YEAR! MAGNIFICENT!" -TMM^.
CINEMASCOPE • COLOR BY DELUXE • 2o.»
—PLUS-directed
by
JULES DASSIN
starring
MEUNAMEKCOURI
and PLERRE VANECK • JEAN SERVAIS
prcrfuced by HENRI BERARD CINEMASCOPE
distributed by
LOPERT PICTURES CORPORATION
ORIGINAL VERSION
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Sponsored by the Architecture and Arts Council
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FRI.-SAT.-SUN.-MON.
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TERENCE STAMP
% SAMANTHA EGGAR
U KENNETH MORE
• 4 1 II Ji A WILLIAM WYLER PRODUCTION
fit \jl['^ A .(-"'•""•"» "•• '
Wednesday, Nov. 10
A CINEMATIC MIRACLE!
SERGE BOURGUIGNON'S
• ©1957 Wilt Oimer Pnrfuclions T E C H N I C O L O R "
TUESDAY-ONE DAY ONLY
When 4
P F 2QOOOGIR4-S f
W meet
f 20,000 BOYS I
The last time around for this college epic
HERE'S ANOTHER VIEW OF THE AUBURN CHEERLEADING SQUAD
Cheerleaders' Hectic Week Begins Monday
By HOLLIS EASLEY
As the last "War Eagle!" echoes across the emptying
confines of Cliff Hare Stadium, Auburn's versatile cheerleaders
frazzled but enthusiastic, conclude a hectic week
of activities.
These nine student leaders, in charge of channeling
the emotions of thousands of screaming Tiger fans include
seven standing members and two alternates.
Markie Robinson, Sally Sutter, Sherry Russell, Bill
Ledyard, Grover Swilley, Phil Phillips, and Mit Roth,
head cheerleader, compose the main squad, with Kathy
Reese and Ed Kiser available when needed. Kathy and
Ed cheer at all in-state games.
Managing the rigorous spirit schedule demands superior
mental and physical condition of the cheerleading
squad. Each Monday the cheerleaders meet with members
of the Spirit Committee, of which they are ex-offi-cio
members, to assist in organizing publicity, pep rallies
and decorations for the forthcoming game.
Continually busy, the cheerleaders gather Wednesday
afternoon at the stadium to practice. Meanwhile,
tl"3ir uniforms, supplied by the Auburn Athletic Association,
are being cleaned and pressed.
At practice sessions, the squad reviews its yells for
timing and clarity to insure quality performance.
I Tigers Offer Interesting Fare |
i To Television's Football Fans 1
The Auburn Tigers are
an interesting television
team. The past four times
Auburn has been in the
camera eye, fans and television
have seen exciting
ball games.
The Tigers 13-0 win over
Tennessee in 1958 was televised
f r o m Birmingham.
The Tigers played one of
their best defensive games
in Auburn football history
that day, holding the Volunteers
to minus yards
rushing and not allowing
the Tennessee team a single
first down.
The next time Auburn
was on television was in
1964 in the Orange Bowl.
Spotting the N e b r a s ka
Cornhuskers a 13-0 half-time
lead, Auburn battled
back to 13-7 and was on the
Nebraska 11-yard line in
the last minute of play. The
Orange Bowl game was one
of the Letter bowl games
played that day.
Last year's contest with
Bear Bryant's A l a b a ma
Crimson Tide was seen nation
wide. "Mighty" Alabama
had all they could handle
with the Auburn Tigers.
Alabama won, but not without
a fierce fight and a
game that entertained millions
on Thanksgiving. The
Tide fans were glad to have
a 21-14 win even though
they had expected to have
a much easier time of it.
Saturday's victory over
Florida provided television
viewers with plenty of excitement
as the lead chang'-
ed hands three times. Both
teams excited fans with
their spectacular plays and
razzle dazzle offense at
times.
Should Auburn win the
next three games, which
would mean an SEC championship,
it is quite possible
that football fans might get
to see Auburn on television
again in 1965.
The Tigers seem to save
their best games for top
rated teams. Kentucky came
to Auburn in the top 10,
but left a defeated football
team. Florida did a repeat
of Kentucky's visit.
Auburn fans over the
South are hoping that the
Tigers will consider Mississippi
State, and Georgia as
the top teams in their states
and beat them too. Then, if
Alabama is in the top 10 or
not, they are top team on
the list of "Wanteds."
ONE DAY
ONLY
WED. NOV. 10th
Presents
ON THE STAGE
Cfo'Pe'l'tOrts and
ON THE SCREEN
i To
# Travel
A I %
Possess
•*i World"
2 HOUR'AMOTION PICTURE
COLOR
on our OJwtitoy GIANT SCREEN
Exactly as presented at CARNEGIE HALL
They decide upon the particular yells to be used at
pep rallies and games and, when necessary, transportation
plans are made for contests out of town.
Advertising the pep rallies is first on Thursday's
agenda, with the cheerleaders broadcasting the time and
location of the rally over the campus sound truck.
Thursday evening the local spoxiight focuses on the
collective talents of the squad as they lead the student
body in pre-game cheers which initiate spirit and farri-liarize
students with the various yells to be used on
Saturday.
The 'Big Day' begins early on chilly autumn days
as the nine scjuad members report to Cliff Hare at 8
a.m. to supervise and assist in painting the stadium in
the traditional blue and orange.
Attired in their neat and colorful uniforms, the cheerleaders,
second on the day's billing to the Tiger team,
are watched by thousands of War Eagles from the end
zone to the fifty yard line.
In addition to activities directly related to Auburn
athletics, the entire squad are members of the Better
Relations Committee. A representative from the squad
is present at all university receptions and teas for state
officials and guests. The cheerleaders are also represented
at student leaders meetings at Dr. Philpotts'
home- i4K:)iF;i!i&l
Other activities include judging surrounding high
school cheerleader tryouts, instructing high school pep
leaders in southeastern summer cheerleader clinics, and
attending the Alabama State Fair.
"One of the most unusual experiences in cheerleading
has been autographing countless football programs
for little Tiger fans," commented S h e r r y Russell, a
cheerleader of two year status.
"When I first went out for cheerleading, I never realized
how much behind the scene work went into the job,
but when I see Auburn spirit in action, it's really worth
it," said Mit Roth, head cheerleader.
State Next. ..
(Continued from page 6)
for the honorary first team this
season.
Ashby Cook, of Montgomery's
Lanier High, directs the Bulldog
attack. Cook is the fourth
leading passer in the SEC, completing
59 of 114 passes for 817
/ards and five touchdowns. Dan
Saget has been the most frequent
receiver of Cook's aerials.
LEADS LINE
Center Bootsie Larsen leads
the offensive line that hopes to
spring State's speedy backs.
The defense is anchored by
250 pound Grady Bolton and
aggressive Tom Folliard. Let-termen
James Carroll and Marvin
Cornelius oversee the Bulldogs
secondary.
State's Richard McGraw follows
close behind Auburn's
Tom Lunceford in SEC punting.
Both have plus 40 yard averages.
OFFENSIVE CASUALTIES
Auburn once again searches
for offensive linemen as cas-ualities
have plagued the Tiger's
Sophomore-Junior forward
wall. Soph guard Ken
Jones is gone after his first
starting job with a severe
charley horse. Hobbled Wayne
Burns will probably return to
t h e Plainsmen's diminishing
guard ranks. Gusty Yearout,
who pleased Auburn's coaches
with his fine pass protection,
will move to left guard with
the return of Burns.
The Florida mentor said,
"Bowden certainly impressed us
. . . but Bryan is still dangerous
with his rollout passes and
sweeps." Both will direct what
could be Auburn's eighth back-field
combination.
Despite the Tiger's line troubles,
Ray Graves feels, "Auburn
should pick up confidence on
offense."
PRAISE FOR CODY
Auburn's defense, which must
keep constant vigilance on Rho-den
and company, will be tough
as ever. Graves said, "State
doesn't have anyone to compare
to Cody. He certainly was
an All-America against us." The
defensive line has not slacked
a bit as Marvin Tucker, a sophomore,
who took over for injured
Bogue Miller, kept Florida's
backs in a horizontal position.
The Intramural Scene
PKA Wins Swim Meet;
LCA Second, PKT Third
By DON SCOTT
Pi Kappa Alpha rolled up
47 points to take the annual
intramural swims, beating
Lambda Chi Alpha by 10
points.
Dick Tanner and John Sch-legle
came through in the breast
and back strokes for the Pikes
as Rcnny Lankford and Buddy
Alderman cinched the PKA victory
by adding points in the
free style and relays.
LCA with excellent effort in
the 50 meter as well as wins in
both relays, racked up 37 points.
In addition, Mike Heuson broke
the record for the 100 with a
sizzling 39.2. The old record was
set by Hamilton, SAE, in 1957.
Last year's All Sports winners,
Phi Kappa Tau, picked up
third place with 32 points. The
PKT relay team: Teague, Kier-stead,
Roberts and Coley, finished
second in both relays.
Alpha Psi was the surprise
of the meet finishing fourth
with 25 points. Tim Johnson
won the 50 and John Kennan
placed third in the breast
stroke.
FOOTBALL
Independent-Dorm
Division A now holds undisputed
possession of first place
in League One by tromping X-l
20-0.
Phenomenal frosh QB Lee
Carpenter threw to ends Tony
Granham and Bill Clemens for
all the scoring. Granham now
has scored five touchdowns.
Mike Tingle was A's defensive
standout.
Elsewhere U topped O 6-0. J
trounced E 27-6, R eaked out a
6-0 victory over G.
Wesley slipped past the Newman
Club 7-0. FS missed their
extra point and it cost them as
T triumphed 7-6.
Forestry moved into the win
column against Caldwell House
13-2.
The Hawks handed Trailer
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Park its second defeat in a row
9-0 as the mystery team moves
toward the showdown with
Navy.
Navy, meanwhile, had little
.rouble with BSU 14-0.
FRATERNITY PLAY
Alpha Tau Omega tried to
-un a punt out of the end z;ne
and didn't as Delta Chi held
3n to a 2-0 lead for three quar-
,ers. ATO picked off three DC
aerials while the DC defense
repeatedly stifled ATO drives
as one died on the one foot line.
In the fourth quarter, how-aver,
Rick Eigenbrod threw to
Danny Stanley for six and ATO
moved ahead to stay with the
conversion 7-2.
•DU, meanwhile, remained undefeated
as it whipped PKA
12-0.
PKT just won't be stopped
and PDT won't be scored on as
PKT whipped SC 27-6 and PDT
blanked DTD 20-0.
AGR outgained SAE in sudden
death eight yards to three
in a defensive battle.
Other scores: SN over PKP
25-6; KS blanked SPE 32-0;
OTS over BTP 19-7; AP blanked
PGD 20-0; SP over TKE 13-
6; TC over TX 19-6; LCA
blanked DSP 28-0.
VOLLEYBALL
Four fraternity teams remain
unbeaten on the courts: DU-KS,
in league two; DC in league
three and DSP in league four.
Forestry division M, and P-2
are the unbeaten independent
teams.
AS THEY STAND
League One leaders are PKT
3-0 and TC 3-1. PKT seems a
sure bet to cop the league title
since their remaining game is
with winless TC. SP 2-2 must
whip TC if SP or SC 2-2 are
to tie for second.
The League two championship
will rest on the winner of
the ATO-DU game.
League Three will go to SN
unless winless BTP or OTS can
whip the SN's. Should one or
the other come through the
league could conceivably end in
a three-way tie.
Unless somebody not only
scores against PDT, but whips
the high riding crew, PDT will
walk into the semifinals untouched.
BASKETBALL OFFICIALS
Men interested in officiating
intramural basketball games
next quarter should see Coach
R. K. Evans or George Stallard
at the Intramurals office in the
Student Activities Building or
call Ext. 206 as soon as possible.
8—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Nov. 3, 1965
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