THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
TMMER EDITION
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
AUBURN UNIVERSITY, AUBURN, ALABAMA JUNE 23, 1965
* K
]m Suspended
tudents Plan
o Return In Fall
By LEE SENTELL
Two Auburn students accused
of assaulting a campus civil rights
leader plan to return to the university
fall quarter after being
suspended by the men's discipline
committee for the current term,
reliable sources disclosed.
Suspended by the committee
were James R. Blevins of Stevenson,
a sophomore in business administration,
and James Carter of
Birmingham, a senior in business
administration. Both are married
and resided in campus apartments.
Blevins told the Plainsman Saturday
that he had not planned to
be in school summer quarter. "At
this time, Jimmy (Carter) and I
plan to continue at Auburn next
quarter," he said.
PROBATION
The suspension action, which
will be listed on the students' permanent
records and also will place
them on probationary status next
fall, was approved by President
Ralph B. Draughon, according to
the report.
No information concerning discipline
cases is made public by
University officials.
Blevins was acquitted in city
Recorder's Court of an assault and
battery charge brought by Tom
(See column 1, page 7)
Alcohol Outlawed
At Chewacla Park
Alcoholic beverages are now
out-lawed in Chewacla State Park
according to an announcement by
Claude Kelly, state director of
conservation. The ruling went into
effect June 7.
Violators are subject to be fined
, not more than $500 or imprisoned
not more than six months, accord-
.' ing to the announcement. No rea-
|. son was given for the action.
i In an earlier ruling the Depart-
'' ment of Conservation initiated a
$.50 entrance fee to the park. There
is no extra charge for swimming
I officials said. This was done because
the park was losing over
$10,000 per year, officials said.
Wife of Dean Huntley
Dies Following Illness
Sue Lillard Lee Huntley, wife
of Dean of Faculties Michel C.
Huntley, died late Saturday at the
age of sixty-six following a prolonged
illness.
Funeral services were h e ld
Monday at 10:00 a.m. at Auburn
Methodist Church. The burial took
place at 4:00 p.m. in Elm wood
Cemetery in Birmingham with the
Council of Deans serving as honorary
pallbearers.
Mrs. Huntley, a native of Oklahoma
City, is survived by one
F6ister, Mrs. Francis Howell, also
from Oklahoma.
Men's Housing To Reach
Critical Stage By Fall
Due To Peak Enrollment
Call Issued To All Local Residents
To List Accommodations With Office
By JIM YEAMAN
Shortage of men's housing is expected to reach a critical
stage this fall, according to men's housing officials. With an
expected enrollment of an all-time high of 12,500 students
anticipated this fall, Mr. Charles S. Bentley, director of off-campus
housing, has issued a call to all local residents to list
with his office any student ac-
For those of us "old" Auburnites, students, faculty,
and staff, may I express a hearty WELCOME to our
new freshmen, transfer and graduate students. We're
glad you're here! You are needed to take the places of
those who have graduated and are now filling positions
of responsibility and leadership in adult life. They will
surely serve with distinction.
Auburn is truly a way of life. As it stands, it is the
accumulated best effort of students such as you and of
the entire University community—a mutual effort. We
are proud of Auburn, its spirit, its academic excellence,
its character, its personality and its traditions. We know,
though, that it can be better. We're expecting you to
join the effort with us so that together we will add luster
to the flaming spirit that thrills every Auburn man.
As stated in the Auburn creed, the first requisite of
success here is work—hard work—so you will certainly
want to study hard to attain a high level of excellence
in your education. May I urge you also to actively participate
in those out-of-class activities which strengthen
character and which develop a pleasing personality, high
qualities of leadership, and an attitude of service.
You have our best wishes for a successful college
career. When you graduate, may your love for Auburn
be strong, vibrant, robust, and exuberant. May you be
prepared to serve your state and country in a way that
will reflect credit on yourself, your family, your country
and Auburn. War-r-r Eagle!
James E. Foy
Dean of Student Affairs
pi;
Following Spring Controversy
Two Architecture Professors Join
Faculty At University Of Kentucky
One instructor who had b e en
dismissed and another professor
on leave of absence from Auburn's
Department of Architecture w i l l
join the faculty at the University
of Kentucky.
Richard S. Levine, assistant
professor, was dismissed on the
grounds of allegedly "not being
competent to teach." James A.
Prestridge, who had been studying
last year at University of
Pennsylvania, resigned from Auburn
to accept the Kentucky appointment.
Prestridge's action came despite
an earlier statement in which he
said: "I <an't say what my plans
will definitely be, but at the present-
time I do plan to come back
(to Auburn)."
Prestridge could not be contacted
for comment as to whether his
change in decision was based on a
reaction to turmoil in Auburn's
Department of Architecture.
Architecture Department H e ad
D. A. Polychrone, who decided not
to renew Levine's contract, was
himself dismissed last spring. This
"surprise" action was the most
recent element of unrest in architecture.
CONTROVERSY
Controversy last spring also
whirled about resignations or dismissals
of nine of the 10-department
teaching staff members, curriculum
changes in the department,
and Levine's dismissal.
commodations which might be
available this fall.
For the first time in the history
of the institution, Auburn admission
officials have halted admission
of male students due to the
limited number of available living
accommodations for such students.
Since women must have
on-campus, or university approved
housing before they can be admitted,
the admission of women students
has always been limited to
the facilities available.
FILLED BY MARCH
The men's dormitory complex
has been full since March 1, and
the admissions office feels it
necessary to cease male admissions
for the fall term because the students
will not be able to find accommodations.
An increase in private dormitory
construction has been noted
along Donahue Drive, West Magnolia
Ave, East Glenn Avenue, and
elsewhere in the city. This construction
should swell the number
of possible accommodations
for male students, but unless more
private or university building construction
for male students is undertaken
soon, an even greater
shortage of men's housing accommodations
is foreseen with Auburn's
steadily increasing enrollment.
Townspeople can help alleviate
the shortage of men's housing by
listing their facilities with the Office
of Student Affairs by calling
887-6511, extension 721. ..
'Loveliest Of The Plains'
SUSAN FOY
Loveliest Susan Foy honors tradition by warning freshmen '
away from the Main Gate. The 5*3" sophomore is a transfer
student from Agnes Scott College and is majoring in English.
She resides at 329 Gardner Drive. >
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN June 23, 1965.
6 4 - ' 6 5 Editor Wins $1,000
DON PHILLIl'S
Board Of Trustees
Honors Anderson
A resolution commending the
"unusual and extremely valuable
services to his Alma Mater" performed
by Dr. Robert C. Anderson,
executive vice-president, Auburn
University, and the naming of six
new dormitories for prominent
Alabama women — two of them
living—were among actions taken
by the Auburn University Board
of Trustees in its recent annual
meeting.
Dr. Anderson, who is leaving
Auburn to become vice-president
for research at the University of
Georgia, was commended for his
handling of legislative programs,
his efforts in faculty improvement
and other activities during his
four-year administrative career at
Auburn.
The Board expressed "great regret
at. the loss of one of such
proven administrative ability"
and congratulated the University
of Georgia upon acquiring the services
of Dr. Anderson.
The names of Mollie Hollifield
Jones, Margarite Prendergast
Toomer, Annie Smith Duncan,
Dixie Bibb Graves, Zoe Dobbs and
(See page 3, column 1)
One of the nation's top honors
for excellence in college journalism
has been awarded to Don
Phillips, 1964-65 editor of The
Auburn Plainsman.
Phillips, competing with 167
other college editors for the $1,000
cash award sponsored by the
American Association of Advertising
Agencies, was named first
place winner in the editorial category
of the Associated Collegiate
Press' annual Excellence in College
Journalism Contest.
ONLY SOUTHERNER
He submitted a portfolio of 15
editorials and columns appearing
en the editorial page of the Plainsman
during the last academic year.
According to C. J. Leabo, assistant
director of the Associated
Collegiate Press, entries were received
this year from 107 colleges
in 32 states. Of the top 10 finalists,
he 'said, Phillips was the only
southerner and was competing
with such schools as the University
of California and Massachusetts.
The award is given for "creativity
in application and execution,
on excellence in technique, arid in
fulfillment of journalistic responsibility
in presenting fact and
opinion clearly and fairly."
PAST EXPERIENCE
Pricr to Phillips' election to the
editorship, he served in various
positions en the Plainsman as
managing editor, features editor,
reporter, and. columnist. During
the past summer he worked as a
reporter for The Atlanta Constitution
and is presently employed by
the Lee County Bulletin while
completing journalism studies at
Auburn.
Second place award ($500 cash
prize) in the nationwide editorial
competition went to Greg Hill, editor
of Daily Trojan at the University
of Southern California in
Los Angeles. First and second
place awards in the advertising
categories were received by Ronald
Eastburn of the Ai-izona Wildcat
at the University of Arizona
and Roy Holland of the Iowa State
Daily.
Notice
PLAINSMAN MEETING
There will be a meeting of the
Plainsman staff today at 3 p.m. in
the Plainsman office on the first
floor of Langdon Hall. Anyone interested
in working on the staff
please attend.
Summer Parking
Termed Problem
Parking will be inadequate for
the B zone areas until the end of
the first six weeks term. According
to Mallard Dawson Chief of
the Auburn Security Police, the
deficit is caused by the large number
of special students in summer
school.
Chief Dawson said 1,300 B zone
stickers are expected to be issued
and there are only 465 parking
spaces. Parking spaces in C zones
are plentiful behind the Student
Activities Building, library, and
Comer Hall, he said.
According to Dawson the rate of
auto damage is down from last
year. Dawson attributes this to
people controlling their speed and
obeying stop signs.
Hills
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THE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
IN THE UNION BLDG.
Notebooks
Study Aids
Art Supplies
Textbooks
Engineering Materials
"We've Bent Over Backwards
to Offer The Greatest
Savings For ALL AUBURN
STUDENTS."
' June 23, 1965 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
Auburn Plans Materializing
Construction Will
Begin In Summer
On Girls' Dorms
Shown at the right is a bird's-eye
view of the area upon
which the new women's dormitories
will be constructed.
Construction of the proposed
four buildings will begin this
summer on the site south of the
existing dormitories marked by
lettered boxes in the picture.
The new dormitories, to be
constructed at a cost of $3,000,-
000, will include two six-story
structures, providing 650 additional
spaces for women.
Three dorms, costing $1,270,-
000, are now being built in the
area and will be occupied this
fall. These buildings are located
in the picture within the box
numbered " 1 " .
Auburn's projected housing
plans total $4,300,000 and include
the construction of additional
dormitories for men and
women as well as more married
' student apartments.
Not shewn in the picture are
26 new apartment units costing
' $1,010,000 which are nearing
' completion in the Caroline
: Draughon Village married student
apartment complex. They
• will be occupied this fall and
provide the university with 336
units in this apartment complex.
The $1,017,000 Nuclear Science
Center is nearing completion
on the site marked "3"
in the picture.
Foy Urges Lighting Tennis Courts
A request that any new tennis courts built be equipped with
lighting facilities for night use was made recently by Student
Affairs Dean James E. Foy.
As a result of a recent bond issue, an education building and
liberal arts building will be erected on the site presently used
for volleyball and tennis courts.
Dean Foy's memorandum to Col. Linwood Funchess, chair^
man of Campus Planning Committee,, stated: "Lights would
make the tennis courts usable by faculty, students, and staff."
He felt that such lights would help to alleviate the shortage
of student recreational facilities in Auburn. .
Copies of the memorandum were sent to President Ralph
B. Draughon and George McMillan, student body president.
.
Renovation Plans
To Include Space
For New School
Pictured at left is one area
of the campus that will see an
extensive amount of building
and renovation during the proposed
$24 million building program.
Renovation and alteration of
Thach Hall and Tichenor Hall
was approved to provide adequate
space for the proposed
new School of Commerce. A
fund, of $200,000 was. allocated
for converting these two buildings
into first-class facilities for
the new school.
A fund of $25,000 will be a-vailable
for converting Cary
Hall, now used by the School
of Veterinary Medicine, to
headquarters for the three
ROTC units.
The School of Education's
psychology laboratories will be
relocated in the present physiology
building when the building
is vacated. A fund of $10,-
000 will be available.
The square in the picture
marked "B" is the site of the
proposed auditorium-physical
education center, which is to
provide 13,000 seats for sports
and campus activities. A fund
of $4,500,000 was allocated for
this structure.
Two multi-story classroom-laboratory
buildings and a lecture
hall to serve Auburn's fast
growing programs in teacher
education and the liberal arts
.will be .built on the site
marked "A" in the picture.
The sum of $4,500,000 was allocated
for the construction of
this large new complex.
Trustees...
Berta Dunn were proposed as
names for the South Women's
Dormitories, all of which will be
occupied in the fall.
\ A special act of the legislature
will be required to name the
dormitories for Miss Dunn and
Miss Dobbs.
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THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN June 23, 1965
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
Horry Hooper
Editor
Marbut Gaston
f Business Manager
Associate Editor—Don Phillips, Managing Editor—Peggy
Tomlinson, News Editor—Walter Massey, Sports Editor—Larry
Lee, Copy Editor—Mary Lou Foy, Features Editor—Carol Rish-er,
Advertising Manager—Hazel Satterfield, Circulation Manager—
Bill Rodney.
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
located in Langdon Hall. 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 5,000
weekly. Address all material to The Auburn Plainsman, P. O.
Box 832, Auburn, Alabama—36830.
A Step Forward
Auburn's physical plant has improved dramatically
in the past four years. The new $24 million building program
indicates that in the next few years the physical
plant will be no less than astounding.
New buildings and remodeled buildings contribute
much to the student's comfort as well as his ability and
desire to study. They are an impressive tribute to Alabama's
progress in the recognition of the necessity for
improved higher education.
Good physical plants do not, however, make a university.
Good universities must have good faculties. Good
faculties come to schools where an atmosphere of learning
exists, where they have academic freedom, and where
they can make more money than truck drivers.
It should be recognized that a run-down ^building
with a good professor has distinct advantages over a multi-
million dollar structure containing a dim-wit professor
wondering why the class is asleep.
Chewacla A Go-Go
Through some line of reasoning (assuming there was
one) the State Department of Conservation has decided
that no longer will alcoholic beverages be allowed in
Chewacla State Park. This along with the recent decision
to charge 50 cents entrance fee will probably limit the
use of the park to teetotalers who have money to spend.
For years the park has been a place where Auburn
students, faculty, and townspeople have come to picnic,
party, swim, or just to ride around. Few people care to
pay the entrance fee just to ride around in the woods and
to many people, parties, and picnics just aren't the same
without store-bought spirits.
We can see paying entrance fees to Yellowstone or
Yosemite (where, by the way, drinking is permitted). But
Chewacla just isn't worth it anymore. The Conservation
Department would do well to end both policies before the
park becomes entirely deserted.
Riot Offensive
While Americans are observing the so-called "monsoon
offensive" in Viet Nam they can also look home to
our own summer "riot season." This week the featured
attractions have been in Laconia, New Hampshire and
Chicago.
The rioters seem to be the same general breed whether
they are bearded beatniks or motorcycle-riding punks.
They are characterized by blatant immaturity, total lack
of respect for decency, and utter confusion as to purpose.
Panty raids, pushing beds, and swallowing goldfish
used to be suitable if ridiculous to vent youthful emo-"
tions. Usually the only danger was in actually obtaining
panties or asphixiation caused by a windpipe jammed
with still flopping goldfish.
But now they have purpose. When someone drives
his car across the dragstrip they have a reason to burn
it. If they don't like the school superintendent they sit
down in "The Loop." If they don't want to fight in Viet
Nam they teach-in (while men younger than they die
for their right to protest).
Surely history will record their purposes as foolish
ones.
*PRE? W t JOtWSOl* 0U6HT TO 5T0P HMN6 66NEHAL."'
How Much More .. .
Of King George, Col. Lingo
And Round Table Bumbling
By Don Phillips
How much more will the people of Alabama take
from Col. Al Lingo? Surely the discordant state
public safety director will not be able to get away with another stunt.
The stage for this latest of Lingo's clumsy indiscretions was set in
Tuscaloosa last week when 150 state troopers suddenly appeared on
the orders of someone to vote Lingo into the vice presidency of the
Alabama Peace Officers Association.
Lingo has gotten away with
blunders before, including the
senseless club swinging, tear gas
incident at che Edmund Pettus
Bridge in Selma. As Sen. Ed Hor-ton
of Limestone put it, Lingo
"has skated on thin ice before."
But this time the legislature is
going to take a closer look at the
Colonel, and the results might be
embarrassing. This incident is already
embarrassing even to the
brash Lingo, since he was in the
process of asking for more money
from the same legislature.
Lingo showed his true colors at
Auburn during our integration a
year and a half ago. After Auburn
officials and the Governor's office
had carefully worked out a plan,
Lingo took great pride in ripping
it to pieces. He made new rules,
made brash statements, made
newsmen mad and generally made
a nuisance of himself.
The size of the contingent of
newsmen in town doubled when
Lingo threatened to keep federal
officials off the campus. One network
even flew a camera crew in
from New Orleans.
Lingo took gieat pride in posing
defiantly for news cameras, and in
basking in the limelight of notoriety.
Auburn's integration was peaceful
in spite of—not because of—
Lingo and his troopers.
Lingo is not really a career
peace officer anyway. His experience
before the appointment to his
present position by Gov. George
Wallace was limited to a few years
as a highway patrolman before
World War II.
At the time of his appointment
he was a businessman in Eufaula.
Sources close to Governor Wallace
report that he is dissatisfied
with Lingo also, but is caug!:t in a
bind as far as dismissing him goes.
Apparently many of Wallace's
political friends have an affinity
for Lingo. To top that off, Wallace
doesn't like to admit he makes a
mistake. The trouble is, in this
case Lingo is admitting the fact
for him.
Lingo's "victory" in last week's
election means that he will automatically
move up to the presidency
of the respected APA next
year, thus giving him a spring
board to vault into the Jefferson
County sheriff's office.
Surely the people of Birmingham
will see through such a shallow
man. That city has had enough
trouble without having an overbearing
hothead for a sheriff.
An almost humorous sidelight
was added to the legislative proceedings
on Lingo. Sen. Bob Gilchrist
of Morgan, an outspoken
foe of both Lingo and Gov. Wallace,
undertook a "defense" of
Lingo.
Gilchrist said it wasn't fair to
censure Lingo and then condone
Gov. Wallace's use of funds in his
presidential campaign.
He called Lingo the "strong
right arm of our governor," and
said he has brought more "publicity"
to Alabama than "all the
coal and iron in Jefferson County."
"If we're going to attack this
knight of the round table," Gilchrist
said, "Let's take King
George with him."
Lingo, at least, should go.
IFC
Any freshman interested in fall
rush come by the I.F.C. office to
sign up for rush, between 8 a.m.
and 5 p.m.
An
Editor's
Views
By HARRY HOOPER
The hills of northwestern Alabama's
Franklin County look as
though they were formed by a
child in a sand box. They are red
and tree-covered
and support
a hardy breed
of people that
eke out their
livel i h o o d by
plowing the red
dirt.
Carl Elliot is
a son of those
red hills and of
those hardy, individual!
s t i c
people. When he was born the son
of a farmer (who later had eight
other children), there was no electricity
for lights, pumping water
or cooking. He learned the limited
glory in dirt farming in red hills.
He also learned the value of education.
When he was born in 1915,
one-twelfth of our state's white
and one-fourth of our Negro population
was illiterate. He later entered
the University of Alabama
flat broke and worked his way
through.
His background taught him the
value of government in providing
services to poor and uneducated
people. In his long years as Democratic
representative from Alabama
he worked to increase the
government's role in these areas.
The rise of right-wing extremism
in Alabama coupled with the
failure of Alabama to maintain a
high enough population rate placed
Carl Elliot's seat as representative
in a precarious position.
Alabama had to yield one seat in
the House of Representatives and
in the famous 3-8 primary, the
state chose to eliminate the man
v/ho had served her so faithfully.
It was easy to forget the man
who with Lister Hill authored the
National Defense Education Act
which helped put 17,000 Alabami-ans
through college. It was easy to
lorget that Elliot had been standing
up for Alabama long before
Wallace hypnotized Alabama masses
with his battle cry.
Former representative Elliot
spoke here Monday to the ninth
annual Special Education Conference.
He spoke as a man who
knows the problems of education
as well as its possibilities. He is a
man who. knows how it felt to approach
hallowed halls not knowing
from where the money for the
first entrance fees would come.
He hasn't forgotten the feeling.
He knows that there is a better
way to get an education and he
will continue to work for that
better way.
The word is that Carl Elliot may
run for governor in 1966. The
lanky liberal Democrat who spoke
for Kennedy 220 times, who re-fused
to bow to Alabama's racism
policies and who called John
Birchers "loudmouthed know-nothings"
is not likely to be elected.
But it would be good for him to
run. If he does, thousands of Ala-bamians
who are aware of the
perilous course Alabama politics
is taking can express their disapproval.
June 23, 1965 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN 5
Dr. Holmes To Head
EE Department
Dr. Charles H. Holmes will serve as head professor in the department
of electrical engineering at Auburn Univrsity beginning
Jan. 1. The appointment was announced recently by President Ralph
B. Draughon.
Dr. Holmes, a native Alabamian i der a Leverhulme Research Fel-and
Auburn alumnus, is presently
at Nottingham University in England
for post-doctoral studies un-
Alpha Epsilon Pi
To Begin Colony
Alpha Epsilon Pi, a national
Jewish fraternity, will start a
colony on the Auburn campus
soon, according to Randy Partin,
president of the Interfraternity
Council.
The new colony, already approved
by the IFC, submitted its
request for permission to colonize
to Dr. Ralph Draughon. He in turn
sent them a letter giving them permission
to colonize and they
should be ready by this fall.
There are approximately 40
Jewish boys on Auburn campus,
14 of whom are already affiliated
with the colony. Vic Goldman the
president and the other boys already
affiliated hope to bring
their membership to a more respectable
number during the fall
rush. They are now looking for a
house in which to carry out the
formal rush fall quarter.
Alpha Episilon Pi has a chapter
at the University of Alabama but
because of weakness in the organization
there, they plan to get most
of their help from chapters at the
University of Georgia and Georgia
Tech.
The fraternity is mainly for
Jewish boys but they accept others.
Any boy interested is welcome to
come out during rush.
lowship. He succeeds Dr. Charles
H. Weaver who will become dean
of the College of Engineering at
the University of Tennessee Sept.
1. Prof. M. A. Honnell has been
named acting head of department
until Dr. Holmes' return.
EDUCATION
Dr. Holmes, a native of La-
Fayette, received the bachelor of
electrical engineering at Auburn
University in 1952. Other studies
have been at the University of
Tennessee and Polytechnic Institute
of Brooklyn where he re-cived
the master's degree and at
Stanford University where he was
awarded the Ph.D. in 1963.
He first joined the Auburn
faculty in 1957, leaving the following
year for doctoral studies under
a National Science Foundation Fellowship
at Stanford University. He
rejoined the department at Auburn
in 1962.
At the University of Nottingham
where Dr. Holmes is one of eight
citizens selected annually from the
British Commonwealth and the
United States for study under the
Leverhulme Trust, he is conducting
post-doctoral studies in the
field of electromagnet theory.
Dr. Holmes has been actively
engaged in research in the field
of electromagnetic engineering
throughout his studies and during
his teaching career. He has
also served as a member of the
technical staff for Bell Telephone
Laboratories. He is a member of
numerous honor and professional
societies and has authored several
papers for publication in professional
journals.
Mutual of New York
announces the appointment of
James D. Stephens
As
Field Underwriter
for the Auburn Area
We are pleased to have Mr. Stephens, an Auburn
University graduate in business administration,
associated with the company. He offers
MONY's complete line of life, health and accident
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life lniurone«-Accid»nf and Skkn»u-Hotpiloliiotion-
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MONY olltcti ore beared (hroughoul the Unittd SloFej and M Cunodo
M O N V TODAY MEANS M O N E Y TOMORROW!
DR. CHARLES H. HOLMES
OUTSTANDING STUDENT WINNER
OF TWO TOP NATIONAL HONORS
Two of the nation's most coveted
scholarship awards have been received
by William Current-Garcia,
a spring graduate of Auburn University
who majored in economics
and history.
Shortly before his June 3 graduation,
Current-Carcia was notified
that he is the recipient of a Ful-bright
Fellowship for study at
Strasbourg, France. He is also one
of 40 students selected from the
entire nation to participate in the
U.S. State Department's summer
intern program.
Current-Garcia is the first student
ever to be selected from Auburn
University for the intern
program. Selection is based on the
applicant's college record and his
interest in a career in international
affairs.
He will enter the summer intern
program July 1, working as an assistant
in one of the regional bureaus
of the State Department until
Sept. 10. He then reports to
Paris for orientation before beginning
studies under the Ful-bright
Fellowship Oct. 4.
THE ARCHITECTURE and ARTS COUNCIL
OF AUBURN UNIVERSITY
ANNOUNCES THE SUMMER
Fine Arts Film Festival
TO BE SHOWN AT THE WAR EAGLE THEATRE
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, JUNE 30-JULY 1
GLORIOUSLY TOLO IN ENGLISH!
BREATHTAKING COLOR BY TECMNK
Tuesday-Wednesday
July 27-28
"A hypnotic,
engrossing
f i l m !"
—CrowMier, N. Y. Timet
"A CINEMA MASTERPIECE!
A powerful, luminous
and violent
existential thriller!"
— Time Mogozin.
Woman h
the Dunes
"Enthralling! Right
up there with the
French and Italians
in nudity and
erotic passion!"
—Thompiofl, Journal Amtrkan
Tuesday-Wednesday
August 10-11
Admission: $1.00
Season Ticket: 2.75
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-Alton Cook, WofW Telegram
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN June 23, 1965 .
Boys State 'Best Ever;'
May Return Next Year
By MARTHA RUSHING
Calling the 1965 Boys State Convention "the most successful program
ever," officials of the American Legion, sponsoring organization,
are presently considering an invitation by Auburn President Ralph
B. Draughon to hold the conference on Auburn's campus again in 1966.
Auburn hosted Boys State this
year for the first time in the pro
gram's 26-year history. Draughon's
invitation was enthusiastically endorsed
by Auburn's presidentelect,
Dr. Harry M. Philpott.
DECISION EXPECTED
Auburn officials expect a decision
in August on the location of
1966 convention.
Attending this year's conference
held in early June were 559 high
school juniors. Acting as consultr
ants for the group were 14 high
school athletic coaches and five
state officers of the American
TIGER
Thur.-Fri.-Sat.
URSULA ANDRESS
2:10,4:20,6:55,9:00
Legion.
The five-day program included
a one-day visit to Montgomery,
where the group held a legislative
session, during which they passed
seven "bills." These included a
call for a constitutional amendment
for the State of Alabama.
Governor George C. Wallace also
addressed the group.
DRAUGHON WELCOME
During the opening session
President Draughon welcomed
Boys State to Auburn's campus.
Dr. Philpott also addressed the
first meeting.
Other speakers during the week
included: Ralph Jordan, Auburn
head football coach; Roy Riley,
state commander of the American
Legion; Dr. Malcolm McMillan,
head professor of history and
political science; Gen. Rex Roach,
director of State Industrial Development;
and Hon. Oakley Melton,
Elmore County judge.
From Monday through Wednesday,
Boys State delegates received
instruction on state and local
levels of government.
ORGANIZATION
Boys State is divided into groups
called "cities." Each city has an
elected mayor and • city council.
Cities are combined into "counties,"
for which various officials
are also elected by the delegates.
Troubled? Help Is Available
By KENNY GRAFF
Having problems with your
grades? Can't decide whether to
major in animal husbandry or
aerospace engineering?
Or maybe your girlfriend wants
you to change your major.
The Student Counseling Service
probably has the answer for you.
Answers and advice are their business:
for educational difficulities,
vocational affairs, and even personal
problems.
The dean of each school aids the
individual student in such academic
problems as arrangement of
schedules, straightening out of degree
requirements, and the clearing
of probations. If further help is
needed, the student may consult
any member of the staff of trained,
experience counselors maintained
by the service.
LIBRARY AVAILABLE
A Career Information Library is
available for use to all students
without appointment and testing
programs may be arranged on request.
The Student Counseling
Service also offers its assistance to
high school seniors with no obligation
to them.
The Pre-College .Counseling Program
is now a required function
for all entering freshmen. Its purpose
is to aid the new students to
make wise decisions in choosing
their field of study and to help
them adjust more readily to their
first quarter of college life. Here
they achieve more individual attention
from faculty advisors unhampered
by registration of up-perclassmen.
PLACEMENT OFFICE
The Alabama Department of In-
W E L C O M E . . . Summer Quarter
Students And All New Freshmen.
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dustrial Relations maintains a
Graduate Placement Office on
campus. This is a placement and
guidance office for employment of
graduated seniors. The office is responsible
for personal conferences
between seniors and business concern
representatives.
TYPEWRITER RENTAL
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AUBURN
June 23, 1965 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
AU's Nuclear Science Center
To Be One Of South's Finest
By JERRY GANTT
Excavation underway now for
the Edmund C. Leach Nuclear
Science Center is the first big step
toward making Auburn one of the
best equipped universities for nuclear
study in the Southeast.
The $1.2 million development
will provide research facilities for
the campus, especially for the biological
and physical sciences.
Two Suspended . .
(Continued from page 2)
Millican of Valley Head, who has
received wide-spread attention
during the past six months concerning
his civil rights activities.
Carter, though not named in Mil-lican's
warrant, was a witness for
Blevins in the case.
The version of the incident
when the two boys visited him in
his dormitory room the evening
of May 21 given by Millican was
in sharp contrast to the account
given by Blevins and Carter.
DISALLOWED TESTIMONY
Testimony of events immediately
following the boys' visit was
not allowed in the city court case
but received a complete airing in
the discipline hearing.
Sam Baker, counselor for the
dormitory division in which the
incident took place, was said to be
the first person on the scene after
shouts and the sound of glass
breaking were heard around 10:45
p.m. "I thought at first it was just
some of the boys horsing around,"
Baker told a reporter. "But as I
came downstairs I saw two boys
run out of Tom's room. I chased
one to the door and then ran >for
the graduate counselor."
James Fulton, a student, was
the first person to enter Millican's
room after that, it was reported.
. "MILLICAN SCARED"
"Millican appeared very scared
and looked like he'd been slapped
around," Fulton said. "Then Blevins
came back and I asked him
if he had beat Tom up. He said
he had just come to talk. He was
argumentative and belligerent,
and I smelled the odor of alcohol
although I wouldn't say he was
drunk."
Baker soon returned to the
room with the graduate counselor,
who could not be reached for comment.
"When we got back," Baker
said, "Blevins was back in the
room. Carter returned a little later.
Tom was visibly shaken both
mentally and physically. One
cheek was a little red and puffed,
and he had a small scratch on one
side of his neck."
TIGER
Thur.-Fri.-Sot.
2:10,4:20,6:55,9:00
ATOMIC SOURCES
Three atomic sources to be employed
by the center will be a
$200,000 3 MEV. (million electron
volt) particle accelerator, a $25,000
10,000 Curie Cobalt-60 source, and
a $30,000 Cobalt-60 teletherapy
unit. The latter is primarily for
use in the veterinary medicine and
animal science departments. In
addition to these features, the center
will provide a radio-chemistry
laboratory, graduate laboratories,
offices, and classrooms.
The new facilities will be adequate
for almost any experiment
involving nuclear science, according
to Dr. Warren Andrews, Director
of the Nuclear Science Center.
AID TO RESEARCH
One-third of the doctoral candidates
now at Auburn are researching
in the biological and agricultural
sciences, according to Andrews.
They are now conducting
some experiments with low-level
radiation, but the new facility will
open up entire new fields for this
group as well as the entire campus.
The new building will be situated
on Duncan Drive at the top of
the .hill behind the Physical Science
Center. The hillside site was
chosen to utilize the natural earth
formation for shielding against
radiation. It will also be convenient
to the physics and chemistry
buildings.
CAMPUS CAPSULE
AGRICULTURE SCHOLARSHIP
A new scholarship for $500 in
the Auburn University School of
Agriculture has been awarded to
Jerry Rainey, Griffin, Georgia, a
junior in agricultural administration.
Donor of the award is the
Alabama Council of Farmers Cooperatives,
Montgomery. Scholarship,
interest in the field of agribusiness,
and leadership qualities
are bases for the award.
RALSTON-PURINA
SCHOLARSHIP
Jerry Brown, an agricultural
journalism major from Toxey, is
the recipient of a $500 scholarship
given by the Ralston-Purina Company.
The scholarship, effective
next September, is given for leadership
and scholarship.
TOP AG ENGINEER
J. R. Williford, Hackleburg, was
selected by Tau Beta Pi honorary
fraternity as the outstanding agricultural
engineering graduate in
the spring quarter.
Glome rata Improvement
Slated For '66 Edition
By MARTHA RUSHING
Revisions and improvements are
planned for the 1966 edition of the
Glomerata, according to Tommy
Fisher, business manager. ' .
Changes include new layout
ideas "designed to improve class
sections of the Auburn yearbook."
Also planned is up-dating student
portrait files in an attempt to eliminate
possible mistakes.
Pictures of new freshmen will
be taken this summer, stated Fisher,
to ease possible delays in layout
next fall.
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Auburn
8 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN June 23, 1965
In search for something to say in my very first column ever,
I ambled down Thach Avenue last Friday afternoon and turned
left at the Field House.
Since this is the center of sports activity around the Plains, it
seemed the place to start.
Entering, I descended the stairs and headed for the office of
"retired" coach Wilbur Hutsell, the Dean of Southern Track Coaches.
By this time I had decided that the subject of Richmond Flowers
Jr. and where he might be going to college would be of great reader
interest. At least all the other sports writers seem to think so.
In case you don't recall, Richmond is the fastest son that any
Alabama attorney general ever raised—or any attorney general in
the United States for that matter. A national high school record
of 13.5 seconds for running 120-yards of high hurdles makes him so.
'Best High School Hurdler Ever'
What did coach Hutsell think of young Flowers?
"The best high school track athlete ever produced in the South.
And the best schoolboy hurdler in the nation—by far."
Why?
"Good speed (a 9.5 hundred in fact), excellent form a real
knowledge of hurdling."
I considered this high praise from a man who has coached three
national champion high hurdlers and three Olympic teams.
"Would Richmond get and better?" I asked.
"He should, as he matures and gets stronger," came back a reply.
"And his speed should increase too."
And what about college?
"You'd better ask him about that."
This looked like the end of the road on our discussion of Richmond
Flowers Jr., high school high hurdler supreme.
So I sat back in my chair and wandered down another path.
AAU, NCAA Squabble
What about the squabble between the national Amateur Athletic
Union, better known as the AAU, and the National Collegiate Athletic
Association, most often called the NCAA?
As I understand it, each organization is hoping to get the other
to change some of its views on who should control national athletic
competition in the U.S. So far, both are failing.
But the man behind the memento cluttered desk understood a
little better, especially after having just returned from a Chicago
meeting of the two groups.
"The NCAA simply believes that after spending time and money
on a college athlete, it should be able to have a say-so about where
he competes, what he is competing for and so forth. But right now
the votes of the AAU far outnumbers ours and we can't do a great
deal."
He scrambled through a paper-filled leather folder to prove his
point. Which he did.
How did he personally feel about the feud?
"A lot of boys are being hurt by it. Right now college runners
can't compete in AAU sanctioned meets without fear of some action
by the NCAA. This is certainly going to hurt the team that will be
picked to compete against the Russians this summer." This team
will be selected at the national AAU meet in San Diego this weekend.
By now the Field House was quiet as we sat in the softening light
of the late afternoon. The conversation drifted from swift-footed
17 year-olds and foolish misunderstanding into a past filled with
runners, jumpers and throwers.
Cigar Smoke And Memories
The bespectacled gentleman lit a cigar and spoke of former Auburn
greats.
Weems Baskin, "my first national hurdles champion." Whitey
Overton, "he hit the last hurdle in the '48 Olympic Trials and sprawled
across the track. But he got up, finished third and made the team."
Jim Dillion, "It's a bad feeling to see your Olympic discuss thrower
go down in a football game with a busted knee."
We talked on for a while, the white-haired coach with his 70-
odd years of rich memories and the young student who was thrilled
with the chance to share them.
And then it was time to go. A white brick house and a bride of
long ago were waiting—and a modest apartment and a young wife
and blue-eyed little boy.'
As I closed the car door, amid goodbyes and an invitation to
"come again," I realized that I had been sitting in the presence of a
great coach, a great Auburnite, and above all—a great man.
Intramural Activity Kicks
Off With Meet Tonight
ATTENTION AUGUST GRADS
Graduation invitations will be
on sale weekday afternoons from
June 30 to July 8 at the Union
Desk between 3 and 5. Invitations
will also be sold from 8 to 11 a.m.
on July 5 and 6. For information
call Doug Jones at Ext. 315 or
887-5425.
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS CLUB
The International Relations Club
will meet in room 322 of the Auburn
Union at 7:30 Friday night.
The new International Loan will
be presented.
Wilbur Hutsell
Coach Wilbur Hutsell, Auburn's
"Grand Old Man of
Track," visits with Sports Editor
Larry Lee in this week's column.
Hutsell, a three-time Olympic
coach, comments on Richmond
Flowers Jr., Alabama schoolboy
whiz, and the current NCAA-AAU
squabble. He also speaks
of a memory-laden past, recalling
a few of Auburn's—and his
—Olympic performers.
Richmond Flowers Jr., the most
sought-after and talked-about high
school athlete in Alabama history,
will not enroll at Auburn the
Plainsman learned yesterday.
Flowers said several weeks ago
that he would either go to Auburn,
Alabama, Tennessee or Florida
but a reliable source said Tuesday
that Auburn was now out of the
picture—and probably Florida also.
The young Montgomerian's ability
to run, both on a track and
down a football field, is the reason
for the great interest in where he
will go to college.
He set a national high school
high hurdles record of 13.5 seconds
this Spring and has clocked 9.5 for
100 yards.
The Plainsman was not able to
learn which school would get the
speedster. Flowers has said that he
will decide by June 26.
ATTENTION AUGUST GRADS
All candidates for degrees in
August will be notified to report
to the Registrar's Office for a final
credit check. This will be done
alphabetically. Please report immediately
when notice is received.
By EDWIN TEW
Auburn's summer intramural
program, offering competition in
five sports, kicks off tonight with
an organizational meeting at 7 in
the Student Activities Building.
Any team interested in entering
the summer program must have a
representative at this meeting.
Softball, volleyball, bowling,
badminton and tennis will be offered,
with equipment available
for all sports except bowling at the
intramural check-out service in
the Student Act Building.
All students are eligible to participate,
and all activities, including
bowling, are financed by the
intramural sports department.
League play begins Monday,
June 28.
Softball will be divided into two
dormitory and two independent
leagues, with each league having
four or five teams.
Each league will play twice a
week, two on Monday and
Wednesday and the others on
Tuesday and Thursday.
Bowling is set for Monday and
Thursday nights from 7 to 8.
Matches will be on a team basis,
with each team consisting of three
men, each bowling one game.
Both doubles and singles tennis
matches are scheduled.
Badminton is tentatively scheduled
for Tuesday night. No day
has yet been set aside for volleyball.
The Student Activities Building,
will be open from 3 to 5:30 p.m.
daily for students interested in
using its basketball, vollyball or
badminton facilities.
ATTENTION AUGUST GRADS
Candidates for degrees in August
must clear all deferred
grades (Incomplete and Absent
Examination) prior to June 29.
Auburn Ruled Out;
Vols, Bama Head
Flowers' Choices
June 23, 1965 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
SCHOLARSHIPS MAY GIVE HOPE
FOR GOLF AND TENNIS TEAMS
It's never taken a crystal ball
to foretell an Auburn golf or tennis
teams' chances for the upcoming
season — they've never been
too good. But with the hint of
scholarships in the air, 1966 should
be a little different.
"We'll be much stronger," said
golf coach Sonny Dragoin of his
1966 team.
"With tennis, you just have to
play it by ear . . . never know just
who will come out," added tennis
mentor Luther Young.
FIRST SCHOLARSHIP
Primary reason for coach Dra-goin's
optimism is a fine group of
freshman who will be making
their varsity bids plus scholarship
aid—the first ever.
"We have a fine crew of freshmen
who should give the returning
varsity players a real battle,*'
said Coach Dragoin.
Craig Clemons, Tom Perry, Randall
Walker, Bucky Ayers, Tommy
Zorn, Rodney Hardeman, D a v id
Bell, Morris Henderson and Monroe
Whitaker will challenge veterans
Mike Keeble, Randy McGee
and Andy Ferguson.
CLEMONS GETS AH)
As for golfing scholarships,
Craig Clemons earned Auburn's
first as the top frosh on last
spring's team.
And he will have company next
year.
"We've just signed two outstanding
Georgia high school
players," said Dragoin. "And we're
also trying to get John Sales of
Brewton who is the Alabama high
school tournament champion for
1965."
The two Georgia signees are
Macklyn Sartin of Cedartown and
Bill Lovett of Toccoa.
Coach Young is somewhat more
reserved about next year than his
golf counterpart.
Notice
WOMEN'S INTRAMURALS
All girls in summer school are
being urged by the Women's Intramural
Office to sign up for
some sports activity. Those offered
are: softball, co-recreational bowling
(two boys and two girls make
up a team and bowl once a week),
tennis, and swimming (Tuesday
and Thursday nights 7 to 9).
Alumni Gym is also open for badminton,
shuffleboard, table tennis
and basketball. Interested girls
can sign up in the dorms or in the
Women's Intramural Office. at
Alumni Gym.
TIGER
Thur.-Fri.-Sat.
M-G-U PresentsASEVENARTSHAMMEP
i-H.RttRHAG6AR0'S;
CINEMASCOPE'
TECHWCOLOR*
2:10,4:20,6:55,9:00
TENNIS SITUATION
"With our situation, you just
never can tell what sort of team
you'll have," said Young. "Our
situation" referred to depending
on the student body for players
and then hoping their schedules
fit tennis play.
Concerning aid for some of his
boys, the Auburn coach of 19 years
replied, "Scholarships are not the
only answer to a good tennis program
— but of course they sure
help.
"We just can't compete with the
real tennis schools like Tech, Tu-lane
and Miami where boys can
get plenty of top-flight competition
the year-round." .
As things stand now, Coach
Young will build around varsity-
Jeff Beard Next SEC Commissioner?
School Presidents Decide In January
Coach Beard
men Jack Payne, Eddie Williamson,
Charlie Frye, Bob Hurst and
freshman Norman Waldrip.
By MARCUS HICKSON, III
Will Jeff Beard, Auburn's Athletic
Director, be selected as the
Southeastern Conference Commissioner
next January? If not,
who will?
The presidents of the various
conference schools met in Atlanta
Friday to discuss a commissioner
to replace retiring Bernie Moore.
Among those being considered are
Beard, Jim Corbett of LSU and
Wade Walker of Mississippi State.
Prior to the meeting, Corbett,
who supposedly was the leading
contender at the time, withdrew
his name. However, the presidents
decided to keep his name "in the
hat."
Some sources have stated that
someone outside the conference is
now being mentioned as a possible
candidate for the position.
'MAGNIFICENT JOB'
Moore has held the position for
17 years and according to Coach
Beard, ". . . has done a magnificent
job . . . he did a great deal for the
Conference and the NCAA."
The only definite thing decided
at the meeting was that a commissioner
will be selected in January.
Neither Coach Beard or President
Draughon had any comment
on the Atlanta meeting.
Beard has been at Auburn 14
years. During this period he has
been responsible for many improvements,
including a new
athletic dorm, a larger Cliff Hare
Stadium and the erection of the
new Sports Arena-Auditorium
complex.
KING'S
Located midway between Auburn and Opelika
on the four-lane highway 29.
Phone: 745-7460
OPEN: 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
SALE ON
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$3.95
10 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN June 23, 1965
Two Auburn Track Men Chalk Up
NCAA Competition To Experience
"We didn't set the world on fire, |
but the boys were able to pick
up some valuable experience," is
the way Auburn track coach Mel
.Rosen summed up last weekend's
NCAA track meet.
"The boys" Rosen referred to
were broad jumper Tom Mitchell
and triple jumper Bill Meadows.
They earned the California trip by
placing in the SEC meet.
Mitchell finished 14th with a
leap of 23' 4 3/4". Bill fared a little
better as an effort of 46' 8"
earned him 12th place.
"But remember," said Rosen,
"the competition out at Berkley
was the best the nation's colleges
had to offer."
In a warm-up meet at Bakers-
Tigers Fifth In SIC
Auburn came up with a fifth
best-balanced sports program in
the Southeastern Conference in
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field the previous weekend, both
Tommy and Bill finished higher in
the placings but their NCAA performances
were better.
GREAT TRIP
How did the jumpers feel about
the trip and competition?
"Needless to say," said Mitchell,
a senior due to graduate in December,
"the trip was really great.
It was a real thrill to represent
Auburn and to compete with some
of the best athletes in the world."
Bill, a lanky sophomore Hrom
Sylacauga felt that the competition
should help him a good deal
in the next two years.
A CASE OF NERVES
"I'll say this," he continued, "at
the Bakersfield meet, I was pretty
shook up. You just don't start
jumping against guys you read
about—and know they're mighty
good—without feeling a little
nervous."
But he added that by the NCAA
meet his nerves had calmed somewhat.
"Maybe by Philadelphia, I'll be
a little more used to the competition
and be able to jump a little
better." Philadelphia is the site of
the 1966 Championships.
1964-65.
Auburn rated 42 points in the
scoring system as compared, to
Florida's top of 6 5 ^ . Sandwiehed
between the Gators and the
Plainsmen were Georgia, Alabama
and Tennessee.
The rating system considers all
sports equal where a majority of
the schools compete on an intercollegiate
level and combines
cross-country, indoor and outdoor
track into one sport.
A breakdown of the individual
Tiger sports shows the cross-country
arid wrestling teams as the
only Conference champions last
year.
The baseball and combined track
teams finished in the No. 2 Conference
spots, whife basketball
was tied for third. Next was football,
sixth, and tennis and golf,
each in eighth place.
Get that greatKEDS*feeUn&
Pied Piper?
Tom Mitchell and Bill Meadows,
Auburn tracksters who competed
in the NCAA championships last
weekend in Berkley, Calif., "had
a swell time" and saw some "oddities."
Perhaps the oddest sight of all
was a "flute-playing, knobby-kneed
wierdo."
"This fellow was sitting out in
front of the school union with- his
shorts hiked up and his flute going
full blast, said Bill. "And the
funniest thing of all was the way
he was trying to keep time with
those skinny legs."
And after seeing Bill's versiop
of the "Berkley Pied Piper" we
agreed that he must have looked
odd indeed.
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AUBURN
/
.;
June 23, 1965 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN 11
It's the early birds that get the empty tennis courts at Auburn.
Auburn, Ala.
Ends Tonight
"Joy In The
Morning' a
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ELVIS PRESLEY IN
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SNEAK SHOW
WEDNESDAY JULY 30th 8:35 P.M.
See "Cheyenne Autumn" and
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Early Birds Obtain
The Tennis Courts
If you don't think tennis is
popular around Auburn, just listen
in on a couple of weekend "ath
letes" planning a Saturday tennis
session.
This is about how it goes:
"Does your alarm clock work?"
asks one.
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"Yeah, but what does that have
to-do with playing tennis?" replies
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"You want to be up early
enough to get a court don't you,"
he is told.
And so it goes—the early bird
ftflARTIN
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Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
..The
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gets the worm and the early tennis
player gets the court.
"At one time there was some
talk about lighting the school's
14 courts, but there was nothing
done," said Auburn tennis coach
Luther Young.
WAR EAGLE THEATRE
DIAL 887-3631-AUBURN
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LATE SHOW SATURDAY NIGHT
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Blondes
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IN GLORIOUS COLOR
?
12 THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN June 23, 1965
Editor Announces
Summer Positions
By KIM OVERCASH
The Plainsman news and business
staffs have been appointed
for summer quarter by Harry
Hooper, editor, and Marbut Gaston,
business manager.
Editor Hooper named Don Phillips
as associate editor and Peggy
Tomlinson as the managing editor.
Walter Massey was appointed
news editor and Larry Lee will
head the sports staff as sports editor.
The summer copy editor is
Mary Lou Foy and Carol Risher is
features editor.
Marbut Gaston, business manager,
named Hazel Satterfield as
advertising manager and Bill Rodney
as circulations manager. Advertising
assistants are Jane Robinson,
Margie Boone, Crit Snell-grove,
Ray Whitley, and Mira
Duncan.
Auburn Graduate Named
New Locaf City Manager
New city manager for the City
of Auburn will be H. R. Thornton,
Jr.. a 30-year-old Auburn University
graduate. Effective July 1, the
appointment was announced recently
by the Auburn City Council.
Thornton earned a bachelor's
degree in civil engineering at Auburn
in 1957. The University of
Kansas awarded him a master's
degree in 1963.
PHI'S TO BUILD DORM SECTION
A new dormitory section is be- materials to be salvaged from the
ing planned by the Phi Delta The- burned building will form a nu-ta
fraternity to replace a dormi- cleus for a fund drive beginning
tory section that burned at the this summer,
latter part of winter quarter. The construction of the new
Insurance compensation of an building is expected to begin in
expected $35,000 and $4,000 from the middle of fall quarter.
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June 25 & 26
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Headquarters For
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THINK YOU
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Phone 887-2601 South College
Phone 887-7653 Auburn, Ala.