INSIDE TODAY
Columns','__ Page 4
Editorials _ Page 4
Sports Page 6
Out On A Limb Page 7 THE AUBURN PUINSMMI
VOTING NO?
For both sides of the radio
station question see Gerald
Rutberg's column and the
editorial on page 4.
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
VOLUME 93 AUBURN UNIVERSITY AUBURN, ALABAMA, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 20, 1965 8 PAGES NUMBER 5
Xentrex' Plan To Improve
Campus Telephone Service
THEY'RE CAMPAIGNING FOR OCTOBER 28 ELECTIONS
The five 'Miss Homecoming' finalists are all smiles as they prepare for a week of
electioneering. Left to right are Adrienne Wise, Randy Pelto-Parris, Karen Kelly, Jackie
Eaken, and Maggie Bonnell.
Five Finalists Selected
For "Miss Homecoming'
By RON CASTILLE
Maggie Bonnell, Jackie
Eaken, Karen Kelly, Randy
Pelto-Parris, and Adrienne
Wise are the five finalists
for Miss Homecoming. They
were selected Oct. 12 in the
final selection sponsored by
Omicron Delta Kappa, senior
men's honorary.
Each contestant was interviewed
for three minutes by a
Students will need ID
cards to participate in the
election of Miss Homecoming
as a new election procedure
is initiated Oct. 28,
according to Ray Bean,
Superintendent of Political
Affairs.
For the first time, students
will be able to vote
at any of several polling
places rather than having
to vote at their schools.
ID cards will be punched
to eliminate the possibility
of voting twice.
Polls will be open from
8 a.m. until 5 p.m. at Comer,
Biggin, Thach, Miller,
and Cary Halls, Magnolia
Dormitories, Commons
Building, the Union Building,
and the Shop Buildings.
Pre-punched IBM cards
will be used as ballots. To
vote, a student will find his
candidate on a numbered
list and punch out the corresponding
space on the
IBM card.
panel of judges consisting of
Dean Howard Strong of Pre-
Engineering, Dr. R. A. Albert
of the School of Veterinary
Medicine, Mrs. Ruth Rainey,
Senior Secretary of the School
of Pharmacy, Mrs.^ James F.
Lawson, an ex-Auburn speech
teacher, and Mr. John Kuyken-dall,
Associate Minister of the
First Presbyterian Church of
(See page 2, column 3)
Concert
To Honor
Philpott
By SANSING SMITH
A concert featuring orchestra,
choral, brass ensemble and music
for voice and piano will be
presented by the Auburn University
Music Department in
honor of President Harry Philpott
on Tuesday, Oct. 26, at 8:15
p.m.
The concert, which is part of
the Music Department's fall
program, features artist faculty
members of the department. No
admission is charged and the
public is cordially invited.
Also on the immediate calendar
of the music department
is the third in a series of interdepartmental
lectures on the
Baroque Spirit. Next Wednesday,
Prof. William McMinn of
the Architecture department
will speak on "The Baroque
Spirit in Architecture" at 4 p.m.
in Biggin Hall.
The Philpott concert will be
opened by the Auburn University
orchestra, directed by Edgar
Glyde, playing compositions
by Mozart, including the concerto
in D major with Hubert
Liverman as piano soloist.
The program continues with
vocal and piano solos by Maureen
Rosenbaum, s o p r a n o;
(See page 2, column 7)
Automated Direct-Dialing System
Will Begin Operation Next Fall
By GENE HOLIMAN
A new direct dialing system will relieve "critically
overloaded" campus telephone facilities next September.
But faculty and students have been asked to keep their
calls to a "minimum" in the meantime.
"The new Centrex system being installed here will
eliminate the bottleneck
BUT HOUSEMOTHER WHAT BIG EYES YOU HAVE!
He was the loveliest housemother in last Wednesday's
Wreck Tech-Pa jama Parade. Theta Xi's freshmen won the
competition with their "Mow 'em Down" float.
President
Approve
Philpott And Faculty
Teacher Evaluation
By RON CASTILLE
The Teacher Evaluation
Committee of the Student
Senate, with the full support
of Auburn President
Harry M. Philpott and the
Faculty Council, is formulating
plans to initiate a teacher evaluation
system on the campus
by the end of this quarter.
In a meeting with the four
student senators on the committee,
President Philpott gave
his full support to the plan and
he expressed his desire that all
instructors would participate.
The plan is on a strictly voluntary
basis.
The Faculty Council endorsed
the plan after it was presented
by senators Gayle Marks
and Ron Castille. The council
commended the entire senate
committee "for its interest and
careful consideration of the
matter" and they set up an advisory
committee to assist the
senate in formulating the questionnaire
to be used in the evaluation.
The present plan calls for distribution
of the questionnaire
to all instructors on the campus
for their approval. Those
approving will be evaluated by
the students in all their classes
on a specified date near the end
of the quarter.
The questionnaire will consist
of two parts. In the subjective
section, the student will give a
short, written evaluation of his
instructor. This will be retained
by the instructor for future reference.
The objective section will be
concerned with actual teaching
ability, qualitative content of
lectures, and classroom procedure.
It will be graded on an
arbitrary numerical scale with
the results processed by an IBM
machine. The results will be returned
to the instructor with
individual ratings and a ranking
relative to the other instructors
on the campus. The
names of students will not be
on the forms.
The only person to see the
(See page 2, column 4)
'Southern' Pep Rally
To Introduce 'Tigeroos'
By BETH YOUNG
The Mississippi Southern pep
rally will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in the Student Activities
Building where the Auburn
"Tigeroos" will be introduced.
Each cheerleader will carry
a plastc tiger which growls
when its tail is pulled. Originally
designed to be used on bicycles,
these "Tigeroos" were
donated to the Spirit Committee
by the Ideal Toy Company.
Two hundred "Tigeroos" will
be given away at the Homecoming
game.
AWS To Choose Vice-President
Tomorrow In Special Election
By CHRIS UNDERWOOD
Election of new vice-president of the Associated Women
Students will be held tomorrow with two contenders in the race.
Paula Lucy and Beth Crawford
are seeking the office left
open this summer when former
vice-president Mary Russell
moved up to the president's position
which was vacated by
Jeanne Swanner Bowline.
Campaigning began l a st
Tuesday and will end tonight.
A schedule was set up to allow
the candidates to speak to
all the women's dormitories before
the campaigns ended.
Polls will be open from 7:45
p.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow at
Alumni Hall, Social Center,
and the South Dorms Administration
Building.
Miss Lucy is a senior majoring
in sociology, with an overall
average of 2.18. A transfer
from Florida State University,
where she was a member of
Delta Gamma sorority, she has
been president of the Sociology
Club, chairman of the Union
Social Committee, vice-presi-
(See page 2, column 5)
The second new feature at
this pep rally is that noisemak-ers
are required for admission.
John Schell, Superintendent of
Spirit, urges every student to
bring "whistles, horns, bells, or
anything else that makes
noise."
Students Vote
Next Thursday
On FM Station
By JANA HOWARD
AHKiHtunt Kriitor
A campaign is under, way to
promote a "yes" vote on a
resolution which would raise
the Student Activities Fee $1
to establish a student radio station
at Auburn.
Spearheaded by the Auburn
Radio Commission, appointed
last spring by Student Body
•President George McMillan, the
drive to secure a radio station
here gained momentum last
week when the Student Senate
adopted the resolution to let
students vote on whether to assess
themselves to raise the
amount needed f»r.-the,facility.
The Auburn Board of Trustees
will have the final say on
whether the fee will be raised
from the present $6 to $7.
"It will take a large voting
turnout and a favorable majority
to make a sufficient impression
on the Board of Trustees
to justify their raising the
(See page 5, column 1 )
Sewell Athletic Dormitory
Dedication To Honor Loyal Alumnus
Auburn will honor one of its
most successful and loyal alumni
here next Friday, Oct. 29,
with the formal dedication of
Roy B. Sewell Hall, dormitory
for athletes.
President Harry M. Philpott
will preside at the 4:30
p.m. ceremony in which Gov.
G e o r g e C. Wallace, chairman
of the Auburn Board of
Trustees; G. W. Beard, athletic
director, and Kelly Mosley, Auburn
Alumni Association president,
will participate.
Dr. Monroe F. Swilley, Jr.,
pastor of the Second Ponce de
Leon Baptist Church in Atlanta,
will give the invocation.
Sewell's best-known contribution
to Auburn is the Auburn
spirit song "War Eagle,"
which he commissioned a New
York song-writing team to compose
in 1955. Other contributions
have included uniforms
for band members and the distinctive
sport coats and slacks
worn by Auburn athletes on
road trips.
A native of Randolph County,
Sewell entered.Auburn in 1918
hoping eventually to study
medicine. He left Auburn, however,
to join two older brothers
in their newly formed business
as jobbers of men's clothing.
Today Sewell is chairman of
the board of Sewell Manufacturing
Co., which with three
modern units at Bremen, Ga.,
and 1,400 employees, is one of
the country's major producers
of men's suits, sports coats and
slacks.
Sewell is a past president of
the Auburn Alumni Association
and of t h e Atlanta Auburn
Club. He was chairman of the
Engineering Emergency Fund
and played more than a titular
role in doubling the initial goal.
As director of the Auburn University
Foundation, he also took
an active part in the success of
the initial Development Program
campaign for Auburn.
The Auburn alumnus is a
deacon of Atlanta's Second
Ponce de Leon. Baptist Church,
a life member of the Gideon
Bible Society, and a member
of ,the board of governors of the
American Foundation of Religion
and Psychiatry. He served
on Georgia's Committee on Economy
and Reorganization during
the Vandiver administration.
Sewell is married to t he
former Mary Whatley. One son,
Roy, Jr., is now president of the
family company and another,
William, is second vice presw
dent.
In 1957 Auburn presented the
Algernon Sydney Sullivan A-ward
to Seweil and in 1958, the
doctor of laws, honoris causa,
for his "outstanding service to
Auburn, to the cause of education,
and to his fellow man."
The dormitory being dedicated
in Sewell's honor on the eve
of Auburn's homecoming, offers
modern accommodations for 144
men as well as an apartment for
a resident counselor, a lobby
and reception area, dining hall
and study facilities. The $350,-
000 three-story structure was
occupied in 1962.
CBS Correspondent Daniel Schorr
Will Open Fall Lecture Series
CBS Bureau Chief and Former Moscow correspondent, Daniel
Schorr, will discuss "The New Balance Between East and
West," Nov. 8 as the first speaker in the current Lecture and
Concert Series. Mr. Schorr will speak at 815 p.m. in the Student
Activities Building.
In his present position since
1961, Schorr is responsible for
covering n e w s developments
throughout Germany, Austria
and Yugoslavia and the East
European satellite countries.
Last year he reported on life
under the East German Communist
regime for CBS Reports,
"The Land Beyond the Wall."
As CBS correspondent in
Moscow f r o m 1955 through
1957, Schorr arranged former
Soviet Premier Nikita Khru-schev's
first television appearance.
The interview was filmed
in Khrushchev's office in the
Kremlin and broadcast to Russian
audiences, as well as on
"Face the Nation." Schorr accompanied
the Soviet Premier
on so many of his travels
through Eastern and Western
Europe and the U.S. that Khru-schev
once labeled the newsman,
"my favorite Sputnik."
However, Schorr's refusal to
bow to S o v i e t censorship
brought him in constant conflict
with Communist authorities.
When he came home in 1957 for
a broadcast, his visa to the Soviet
Union was refused.
(See page 2, column 6)
we
now have on campus and will
allow a greater number of
phones to be installed in the
future," said Col. L. E. Fun-chess,
director of Buildings and
Grounds.
OVERLOADED
. But while the new automatic
exchange is being readied for
direct dialing on and off campus,
he said "existing dial
equipment and our manned
switchboard are critically overloaded."
Col. Funchess said this
has resulted in failure to get
calls through on and off campus,
including emergency messages.
MINIMUM CALLS
In a memorandum to staff
and faculty, he requested that
"all faculty and staff and students
keep their calls to a. "minimum."
He emphasized that
telephones in offices are intended
for transacting business.
~!'Be brief," he said, "If possible
wait and- make personal
calls from home, and have your
family refrain from calling you
unless absolutely necessary. In,
this connection our peak period
during the weekday is from 3
to 5 p.m."
Col. Funchess urged that students
in dormitories "be advised
to limit their calls to five
minutes," adding, "the peak period
is from 5 to 9 p.m., including
weekends."
NO SWITCHBOARD
The new automatic exchange
will be linked with the city of
Auburn's. Phone calls will no
longer have to go through a
switchboard, so the process of
placing a call will be greatly
speeded up, W. S. Sechriest of
Southern Bell said.
"Four digits will be dialed for
on-campus calls, and seven for
all others," he said.
OUTSIDE CALL CONSOLE
Outside calls to the University's
official number will be
answered at a new desk-model
console and be completed to the
desired party. The caller will
then be informed that future;
calls may be dialed direct.
Unlike the present switchboard,
the new console will immediately
be free to handle an-r
other connection, regardless of
the number of telephones in use
at the time.
'Loveliest of the Plains'
ON THE AIR
Tuning in her FM radio, Martha Kearley eagerly, awaits the approval of the proposed
student radio station. A freshman in secondary education, Martha hails from sunny
Gainesville, Florida. She is a pledge of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and lives in
Auburn Hall.
From Television Commentator . . .
Columnists Draw Praise
By BRUCE NICHOLS
The editorial staff of WRBL-TV
Columbus, Ga., featured
discussion and praise of the
Plainsman editorial page Oct.
5, 6, and 8 on its daily program
"Personal Opinion."
In a letter to Plainsman Editor
Mary Whitley, George Gin-gell,
Director of News and Public
Affairs for the station, said,
"I think you have no reason to
worry about the success of the
paper during your tenure as
editor."
The three editorials concerned
the Sept. 24 columns of
Jerry Brown, Charley Majors,
and Ron Castille, whom the
commentator said "might easily
qualify with professionals in
the field."
In the Oct.. 5 commentary the
editorialist, concurred with
Brown's discussion of patriotism
and commented, "Auburn's
campus newspaper can put.
many of its commercial contemporaries
to shame. Its editorial
page consistently offers
sound, thought-provoking commentary."
On Oct. 6, the program praised
Majors5''"maturity and insight"
in his consideration of
the "gulf of human indifference
The New Cassell's German
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Cassell's Spanish Dictionary
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VAN HEUSEN9
HARWELL'S MEN'S SHOP
ACROSS FROM CAMPUS
and animosity which separates"
Americans in one geographical
area from those in
another.
The Columbus commentator
finished his series concerning
the Sept. 24 Plainsman, labelling
Ron Castille's thoughts on
"student activism" and the student
demonstrations at Berkeley
"a little off beam" but called
Castille a "talented young
man."
Continued From Page One . . .
Evaluation . . .
results of the evaluation will
be the individual instructors. In
this way the evaluation committee
hopes to eliminate any
chance of misuse of the results.
Committee chairman Gayle
Marks, "The purpose of the
evaluation will be to make the
instructors aware of various
teaching virtues and faults. This
we feel will raise the overall
teaching level at Auburn, and
with better instruction and its
related benefits, both the instructor
and the student will
profit."
Continued from page one . . .
Students To Select
'Miss Homecoming'
Auburn.
The girls appeared before the
judges unidentified and were
rated on beauty, personality, intelligence,
appearance, and
overall impression.
MAGGIE BONNELL
Maggie Bonnell is a Junior in
Secondary Education and the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
W. Bonnell of Fairhope. She attended
Auburn one year and
trnsferred to Huffstetler Business
College in Mobile, but returned
after a year. She has
been the Sigma Alpha Epsilon
sweetheart and eventually
hopes to be a teacher. She is
being sponsored by SAE and is
a member of Kappa Delta Sorority.
ADRIENNE WISE
Adrienne Wise, a member of
Chi Omega Sorority, is a Junior
in Secondary Education and the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Goldston of Montgomery.
She is a transfer student from
Judson College in Marion where
she was a yearbook favorite
and the Homecoming Queen of
Marion Military Institute. Since
coming to Auburn, she has been
Kappa Sigma Sweetheart, in
Angel Flight, and was a former
Loveliest of the Plains and
Greek Goddess finalist. She was
sponsored by Kappa Sigma
fraternity..
RANDY PELTO-PARRIS
Randy Pelto-Parris, daughter
of Air Force Major and Mrs.
D. H. Parris presently stationed
in Oscoda, Mich., is a member
of Kappa Delta Sorority and
is a Sophomore in Pre-Law.
She eventually hopes for a career
in law. Randy is the present
Miss Summerville, S.C. and
the second runner-up in the
Miss South Carolina Contest
where she won the talent and
evening gown competitions, and
a two year scholarship. She is a
member of Alpha Lambda Delta
girl's honorary and is the
present Navy Color Girl. She
was sponsored by Kappa Delta.
KAREN KELLY
Karen Kelly is a Junior in
Science and Literature and the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
E. Kelly of Birmingham. She is
a member of Phi Mu sorority,
her sponsor, and hopes for a
career in modeling. She was
third alternate in the Miss Alabama
Contest where she won a
one year scholarship. She is a
former Loveliest of the Plains,
Union Calendar girl, and a
Glomerata Beauty for two
years. She was a Greek Goddess
finalist and Honorary Colonel
of the three ROTC branches.
JACKIE EAKEN
Jackie Eaken, the daughter of
Col. and Mrs. H. A. Eaken of
Decatur, is a Sophomore in Visual
Design and hopes for a career
as a commercial artist. She
is a member of Kappa Delta
sorority and was sponsored by
Sigma Nu fraternity. Jackie was
seventh alternate in the Miss
Alabama Contest and won a
scholarship from the contest.
She was a Union Calendar Girl
and finalist in the Navy Color
Girl and Greek Goddess contests.
All five finalists will be presented
at the halftime of the
Auburn-Florida g a m e where
they will receive trophies.
Black or
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The Bootery
Auburn's Most Complete Shoe Center
N. College St. Phone 887-8411
OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY
Faculty Committee Chairman
Dr. James R. Woodall said,
"The aim of improving the instruction
at Auburn is very
commendable," and he feels
"there will be an amazing a-mount
of cooperation on the
part of the faculty."
The Teacher Evaluation Committee
was set up by the Student
Senate and its members
are Gayle Marks, Wynona Mer-ritt,
Charley Majors, and Ron
Castille.
A.W.S. . .
dent and currently president of
her dorm.
Miss Crawford is a junior
majoring in secondary education
and English, with a 2.16
overall. A member of Alpha
Gamma Delta sorority, she has
served on the Public Relations
Council, on the A.W.S. Legislative
Council, and is vice-president
of the School of Education.
Daniel Schorr .. .
Schorr was assigned briefly
to Warsaw, where he filmed a
notable study of life in a Communist-
ruled country, "Poland
on a Tightrope." He accompanied
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
on his tours of South
America and the Far East in
1960.
Schorr was born in New York
City and began his newspaper
career with the Bronx Home
News. He joined CBS as a
Washington correspondent in
May, 1953.
During World War II Schorr
served as a sergeant in U.S.
Army Intelligence. After the
war he went to the Low Countries
in Europe as a free-lance
correspondent.
Schorr received the first William
the Silent prize and in
1955 was decorated by Queen
Juliana of the Netherlands as
an Officer of the Order of Orange-
Nassau—the first Ameri-
2—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965
can correspondent to be decorated
for peace-time reporting
in the Netherlands.
The lecture is open to the
public. Tickets may be purchased
at the door for $1. Students
will be admitted with identification
cards.
Philpott . . .
Joseph Rawlins, tenor; Albert
Singerman, Richard Wursten,
and William Tamblyn, pianists.
In the Baroque series, t he
final lecture will be presented
Nov. 10 by Prof. William Tamblyn
on "The Baroque Spirit in
Music." The first two programs
in this series were Dr. Carl
Benson's "The Baroque Spirit"
and Prof. Hugh Williams' "The
Baroque Spirit in Art."
A life spent worthily should
be measured by deeds, not
years.—Sheridan.
Chamber Music Society
of Auburn-Opelika
1965-66 Series
November 16, 1965
January 11, 1966 .
February 8, 1966 .
March 8, 1966 . .
. Kroll Quartet
Cadek Quartet
Marlboro Trio
Clarion Quintet
TICKET ORDER FORM
NAME._ _ TEL.
ADDRESS
Enclosed find $ __ for season tickets
for the 1965-66 Chamber Music Society Series.
Please check preferred membership:
• Donor (4) _:_ $100.00
• Sponsor (2) _ 25.00
The above memberships entitle
holders to charter membership
in the Society and
names in program.
• Twin-Ticket __.
• Individual
• Student
$15.00
10.00
5.00
Make checks payable to Chamber Music Society.
Mail to:
MRS. MALTBY SYKES
712 BRENDA AVE., AUBURN, ALA.
GLENDEAN ONE-HOUR wwinizm: CMTIFieS
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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.
Sure
we
have
desk
jobs.
Desk jobs at Cape Kennedy, helping
check out the Apollo moon rocket.
Desk jobs at an air base, testing the
world's most powerful jet engines.
Desk jobs in Samoa, setting up a lV
network to help teach schoolchildren.
The most interesting desk jobs in the
world are at General Electric.
(Have a seat.)
First, why not sit down with the man
from G.E. when he visits campus.
Talk with him about your goals.
He'll talk with you about the hundred
different avenues available at
G.E. to help you reach those goals.
You may be working anywhere
in the world, doing anything in the
world. From marketing appliances
like a new oven that cleans itself
electrically . . . to designing a computer
that's no bigger than a suitcase.
Interesting problems. Important
challenges. Real rewards, in money
and opportunity. They're all part of
holding down a desk job at G.E.
Come to General Electric, where
the young men are important men.
"Rogress Is Our Most Important Ptoluct
GENERAL® ELECTRIC
Radio Vote Planned
(Continued from page 1)
fee, "Chairman of the Radio
Commission Bill Kennedy told
the Plainsman, stating this as
the purpose for a meeting of
student leaders he called Monday
night to promote passage
of the resolution through active
campaigning.
He called on Miss Homecoming
candidates to promote the
resolution through their campaigns
and asked for volunteers
to form a speaker's bureau
to explain the referendum
to fraternities, sororities, and
other groups.
Kennedy pointed out to students
attending the meeting that
at least $25,000 could be raised
over a period of three quarters
by upping the Student Activities
Fee $1.
This money would be used
initially to set up the radio station,
he said, but in future
years, after a sum for maintenance
of the station had been
taken out, at least 810,000
would be left to be divided
among other student government-
supported activities.
"Auburn's enrollment has
grown tremendously over the
past few years, "Kennedy emphasized,
"but its Student Activities
Fee has been raised
only once—about ten years ago
to finance the construction of
the present Union Building.
"We are in the position of
having more students and more
activities to support, but no
more money per student," he
said. Almost every activity on
campus needs more financial
support, he added, citing the
Plainsman and Glomerata as
examples.
The radio station planned by
the Radio Commission would
be a 50-watt stereo FM educational
facility, Kennedy said.
Explaining the reason for the
FM station he pointed out that
it was almost impossible to get
an AM educational station today
because most channels were
filled.
The management of the station
would be under the
auspices of the Educational TV
program here, directed by Ed
Wegner, it would be housed
adjacent to the ETV studio. Engineering
for the proposed facility
is being handled by Bob
Brannon, who estimates the
initial cost at $25,000.
The resolution will be on the
ballot with the Miss Homecoming
candidates on election day
next Thursday.
NOTES and NOTICES
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Also available in bl'ehdsnof
7 0% Orion* acrylic, 30%
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with " O r i o n ".
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m
\
sr * ? •
HUSPARD
...'• : < V /-'
New Honorary
Picks Officers
For 1965-66
SHOWING OFF AT SUSGA
Showing off the Plainsman and Glomerata at the Publications Workshop of the Southern
University Student Government Associations held at Florida State University last week.
Shown left to right are Charles Bentley and Bob Wiggins of the Glomerata staff and
Charles Majors and Ron Mussig of the Plainsman.
By BRUCE NICHOLS
Mary Lee Strother is the
newly-elected president of Phi
Alpha Theta, national history
honorary beginning its first full
year on the Auburn campus.
Other officers are: Sylvia
Hollis, vice-president; Berry
Brown, secretary-treasurer; and
Nan Rainwater, historian. Dr.
Wesley Newton is the advisor.
Though the chapter has received
a charter from the
honorary's national headquarters,
a charter from the university
officially establishing
the chapter is still forthcoming.
Newton said, however, that the
university charter is expected
very soon.
Membership in Phi Alpha
Theta is not limited to history
majors. National headquarters
requires that an undergraduate
have finished 15 quarter hours
of history and that a graduate
student complete 30 per cent of
his residence requirements in
history courses.
National headquarters also
requires that a student have a
2.1 overall average and a demonstrated
interest in history.
Newton said, however, that
when the chapter's by-laws are
completed, local requirements
may be above minimum standards
outlined by National.
Full-time faculty members
are automatically eligible for
membership, b'it the honorary
is principally for students, said
Newton. The chapter presently
has 15 members.
Preliminary plans for the
year include sponsoring a state
meeting of Alabama's Phi Alpha
Theta chapters, a spring
banquet for members and their
guests, and a book sale.
Ballet To Perform Here
Theatergoers will have an opportunity
to see one of Spain's
most popular and exciting song-and-
dance companies when
Jose Molina's Bailes Espanoles
appears at the Student Activities
Building Oct. 27 at 8:15
p.m. to open the Auburn University
lecture and Concert season.
Bailes Espanolees features a
company of 12 performers in a
dazzling program of Flamenco
songs and dances. The artists,
among the most popular in
Spain today, have been described
by American critics as "incredibly
youthful, talented and
handsome."
The current 40-week tour
will take the troupe all over the
U.S., to all the Canadian provinces,
Puerto Rico, Hawaii and
the Virgin Islands. It is the
longest tour ever played by a
Flamenco dance company within
a single season in the history
of U.S. show business.
The new program consists of
songs and dances from all of
the Spanish provinces, from the
court of Charles III, from the
great Spanish operas and ballets
and from the Spanish gypsy
camps.
The wardrobe for the spectacular
attraction was created
in Madrid by Spain's foremost
designers. Valued at $80,000, it
was created over a period of
months by nearly 100 designers
and craftsmen. Many of the
fabrics used are hand-woven.
The concert is open to the
public. Tickets are $2.50. Students
will be admitted free with
identification cards.
PROFESSIONAL
ADMISSION TESTS
The Medical College Admission
Test will b" given Saturday
and the Law School Admission
Test on Saturday, Nov.
13. Those wishing to take one
of these or the Dental Aptitude
Test Winter or Spring Quarter
should stop by Tichenor Hall
and pick up an application.
* * *
A.I.Ch.E.
The Auburn Student Chapter
of the American Institute of
Chemical Engineers will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. in room 254
of the Commons Building. Dr.
P. McCracken will speak on
"Chemical Engineering Problems
in Solid-Liquid Processing."
All interested persons are
invited to attend.
* * *
PHI KAPPA PHI
Phi Kappa Phi is beginning
a new year and would like all
interested members to contact
Dr. Edward R. Graf, Secretary-
Treasurer, Electrical Engineering
Department. Phone Ext. 575
for information concerning the
next Initiation and Banquet to
be held in November. President
Harry M. Philpott is to be the
speaker.
LECTURES ON
SPECTROSCOPY
A series of eight lectures on
spectroscopy will be held in the
Chemistry Department on October
26-29 at 10 a.m. and 2
p.m. each day. The visiting scientists
in this program are Dr.
Milton Orchin of the University
of Cincinnati and Dr. J. C. D.
Brand of Vanderbilt University.
* * *
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Ryan deGraffenreid, gubernatorial
candidate for the coming
May Primary, will speak to
the Auburn Wesley Foundation,
Sunday, Oct. 24 at 6:30 p.m.
PHI ETA SIGMA
All members are urged to attend
initiation ceremonies for
23 freshmen and President Philpott
tomorrow night at 7 p.m.
in room 320 of the Union Building.
Every man has three characters—
that which he exhibits,
that which he has, and that
which he thinks he has.—Al-phonse
Karr.
if she doesn't give it to you...,
—get it yourself!
JADE EA5C
Cologne, 6 oz., $4.50
After Shave, 6 oz., $3.50
Deodorant Stick, $1.75
Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz., $8.50^
Spray Cologne, $3.50
Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00
Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00
After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50. SWANK; NEW,VO»K - SOLE DISTMBUTO*
3—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965
• • . . . : • : . . . ; : . • : ' .• :
Anger makes dull men witty,
but it keeps them poor.—
Francis Bacon.
The Young Man
in the Know
knows "Dacron".
Looks great any place,
any time in a wrinkle-fighting
poplin raincoat
of 65% Dacron* polyester,
35% combed
cotton. Tan, black,
muted plaids at fine
stores everywhere.
*Du Pont's registered
trademark.
We'll be on campus
soon to talk about a new
breed of engineering you
can't get a degree in.
" R A N G E P R O F E S S I O N A L . " It's a new discipline of our own creation77. a blend of the
many technologies required to support our nation's space and missile launches.
When a new grad joins Pan Am at the Eastern Test Range with a degree in electronic,
electrical, mechanical, chemical, civil or industrial engineering, physics, or math... or even
if he's an experienced specialist in telemetry, optics, hydraulics, radar, statistics, infrared,
orbital mechanics, data handling, communications or what have you...he soon becomes
proficient in many disciplines. '
The multiple striking power of this all-around engineer goes a long way in explaining
our success with planning, engineering, and directing operation of the Air Force's multi-million
dollar instrumentation complex stretching from Cape Kennedy to the Indian Ocean
' . . . a nd why we're working ahead confidently for launches of MOL, Apollo, Voyager and a
host of other sophisticated programs.
Find out more about your potential as a Range Professional when our team visits,
your campus.
INTERVIEWS
FOR BSEE's
MONDAY & TUESDAY, OCT. 25-26
Arrange an appointment with your Placement Director now.
Or write for information to Manager of College Relations.
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i
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
Mary Whitley
Editor
Marbut Gaston
Business Manager
Associate Editor—Gerald Rutberg; Managing Editor—Jerry Brown; Assistant E d i t o r s -
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; Assistant Copy Editor—Susan Shaw.
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.
If You're Going To Gripe, Vote
In a little over a week, Auburn students
will go to the polls to select a
new Miss Homecoming and in the
words of several students, "put a noose
around their own necks."
The reason for the concern, alas, is
not the budding young beauties, but
rather the fear, even horror, expressed
by some students at the proposition of
raising the student activity fee.
You ask what barb could cause so
many ruffled feathers? Simple—Auburn
needs a $25,000 radio station, a
third floor added to the Union Building,
an increased Entertainment fund
and the 15 Student Government-operated
organizations need a shot in the
arm. The best and only way to secure
these necessities is by raising the Student
Activity fee $1 per student per
quarter.
Then comes the problem of the
olympic-sized swimming pool planned
for the new sports arena. Where will
it come from? The legislature has
promised $11.9 million and the possibilities
of asking for another $1 million
or even a paultry $25,000 next week
and getting it, are mighty slim.
We feel that the answer to the entire
problem lies in the hands of Auburn
students. The facilities and services
would be for us. The vote Oct.
28 of yes or no means more than "we
want a University radio station." It
Say It Loud And Clear
"It's almost enough to make a fellow
cry War Eagle," the Tuscaloosa
gentleman said.
For the second time in less than two
weeks, the Auburn Plainsman has
made news on the editorial pages of
the Crimson-White, student newspaper
of the University of Alabama.
Last week Columnist Castille's tirade
on the riots at Berkeley was featured
en toto. This week Alabamians
learned how "shocked" the CW was to
find that her "backward" little-sister
university across the state" had effected
changes in women's rules and planned
the introduction of spring computer
registration.
The Alabama editor wastes no words
in decrying the absurdities of the "capstone's"
labors beneath the burden of
"over-restrictive 'liberal' rules." He
urges University officials to note Auburn's
registration progress.
Meanwhile, closer to home, Berkeley
Columnist Castille, joined by his
comrades Jerry Brown and Charley
Majors, found themselves and the
Plainsman subject to scrutiny by "TV-
3," WRBL in Columbus. News Director
George Gingell eyed the Castille views
of student "activism" warily, contrasted
Columnist Brown with the hunger-striking
Ft. Benning soldier who refused
to go to Viet Nam and suggests
that to the Majors admonition of "See
America First," the concept of "Understand
America First" be added.
Says Gingell, "You'd do well to get
vourself a subscription to the Auburn
Plainsman."
To both gentlemen, a sincere "Thank
You." In the words of the Crimson-
White, "It's almost enough to make a
fellow cry 'War Eagle'."
Making A Different 'X'
Auburn students will be afforded
the opportunity to "lay their college
educations on the line" Thursday when
new ballots are pressed into service
for campus elections.
They are truly a pulpwood marvel.
Unlike the old sense-mark (pencil-plus
colored in square-equals vote) type,
the new variety is rectangular, sky-blue
and possesses forty rows of twelve
holes on which to make mistakes instead
of the usual eight or ten.
We understand the reason for the
drastic change is monetary, as usual.
We'll be using what we have instead
of importing the comforting, old sense-mark
method. With this we have no
quarrel. We just hope that the directions
for voting will be printed legibly
with an interpreter attached to each
card so that all students may vote successfully.
,
Let's hope the new method is not
as difficult as it sounds. The best way
to decide is to try it at the polls Oct. 28.
The Lady Or The Tiger?
Auburn Has Progressed
More Than We Realize
By Mary Whitley
Imagine the Auburn Plainsman without a
story on race, religion, or politics. Could you
believe it? But, even more important, would you read it?
Picture the upcoming "race" for Miss Homecoming and surmise
that the Plainsman editorially endorsed one of the candidates
over the other four. What would, your reaction be? . . .
elect the young lady? . . . dem- and front page display? What,
{fL
S~*5 f X
& &
fcCAo, o
wk
. . or merely sack
the newspaper of-will
be an indication to the Board of
Trustees that we, the students, are concerned
enough about our plight to
make an effort to improve it.
The student body can't raise the fee
or insist that it be spent in any given
way but, with recommendations to the
Board of Trustees as timely and necessary
as these, there is little doubt that
our cries will fall on deaf ears.
Next time you happen by the Union,
drop over to Alumni Gym and take
a look at the "pool." You may have
been away from it so long the memories
have lost their effect. Some evening
about 10:45 or so, turn on your
radio to one of the better local or state
stations and try to concentrate on English
Lit with the latest rendition of
"Help" or "Try Me," (or if you're
really brave, "Papa's Got A Brand New
Bag").
Next time you read The Plainsman,
look at the number of ads (revenue!)
and remember that if there had been
just a little money in the contingency
fund for it and other Student Government
projects it might not look quite
so much like a clothing store catalogue.
We urge you to see the situation
in its true proportion. This referendum
means money out of your pocket for
services at your disposal.
Those who fail to vote, can't gripe.
onstrate? .
and burn
fices?
Last week when leaders of
two Auburn publications journeyed
to Florida State University
for the ESixah etaoin eta
sity for t h e Sixth Annual
Southern Universities Student
Government Association workshop,
they too were "rendered
speechless" with some of the
things they saw and heard.
SUSGA is not an organized
bunch of campus "know it alls"
who formed an organization out
of a lack of personal activities.
It's people from the south who
share genuine problems and
seek their solutions.
SUSGA is the communications
link between the colleges
and universities in the southeast,
and, other than trading
newspapers, this is their only
medium of exchange. The group
remains aloof from any type of
policy-making or ram-rodding.
It avoids direct problem-solving.
At no place, no time does
anyone say "This is the way it
should be done." SUSGA refrains
from supervision. It exists
to allow discussion and
suggestion. Herein lies her real
strength.
The marches, the beatniks,
the demonstrations — e v e r y
school had them in some form,
the question was, how to handle
them. The school from Louisiana
which was forbidden by
the administration to write any
article on any topic touching on
race, religion or politics—how
is it to survive? Integration after
the newness has worn off—
does it deserve editorialization
if anything, will it accomplish?
Each school learns that it
must endure pressure, exercise
restraint and tread lightly when
dealing with local taboos. But it
becomes easier when the group
shares an identical predicament.
It is a lonely group. For it is
they who are blamed if stringy-haired,
sandaled students boycott
the dining hall because the
food is unfit for human consumption.
It is they who have
failed if students raise their
voices to question the appropriateness
of out-dated university
rules. It is they who pick
up the pieces after a so-called
peaceful student demonstration.
Though in calendar years at
Auburn is very old and wise in
the ways of a college in the
sense it has been known over
the last century, she is young in
the ways of a University. The
hours of discussion, debate and
head-banging attest to this. For
better or for worse, Auburn
does not bear the scars of political
upheaval worn by many of
her southern counterparts.
But, she has not had to. Thus
far, problems came one at a
time and she was ready for
them.
From an overly criticized
c o n s e r v ative administration,
Auburn has progressed to an
open-minded, completely free
institution. This has been because
of a few hard-working
idealists and an affirmative nod
from fate.
We have a great deal to be
thankful for at Auburn. No
other college could more easily
adapt, and fulfill, the title University.
.•.•::::::::-::;V.:;:;:::: ^ « y ~ ^ ' ^ - ^ - Insights
Parking And Punishment
Strong Feelings Sometime
Hide The Important Things
By Don Phillips
It is a known fact that during the selection
of a new Auburn president last year, Gov.
George Wallace overtly tried to pressure a certain member of the
Board of Trustees into voting for "his man."
His man was behind six to five by a head count before a
crucial meeting, so Wallace and some of his lieutenants called
aside the man most susceptible At least one other college
to pressure and "worked on paper has been called on the
him" for thirty minutes or more
to change his vote. Luckily he
stood firm in spite of financial
and political threats.
(Let me hasten to add here
that Dr. Harry M. Philpott was
not mixed up in this situation
at all. He was not even seriously
considered by the Board until
after the "political" aspects
of the selection had died
down.)
Auburn is not the only school
to feel Wallace's heavy hand.
Southern Union College in
Wadley was recently threatened
with a loss of funds unless the
Senator from that district voted
for the Wallace succession bill.
This was later corrected when
the story hit the press and adverse
public reaction set in.
Or take the press itself, including
even the college press.
At one time in the summer of
1964 the Governor tried to cow
the Plainsman into submission
through the thinly veiled threat
of his Board of Trustees committee
to look into the "selection
of editors." At the same
time he moved to take the contract
for printing the Plainsman
away from the Lee County
Bulletin, which had editorially
opposed him many times in
the past.
The Governor let the Plainsman
project die when the state
press took a dim view of political
interference with any
newspaper.
carpet, the Troy State Tripoli-tan.
A call from the governor's
office silenced the Tripolitan
when it began going too far
afield in its racial views.
Then there is the most recent
case, newspaper liquor advertising.
It seems that the six
daily newspapers in Alabama
opposing the Wallace succession
bill have suddenly lost
their multi-million dollar state-controlled
liquor advertising
contracts.
Governor Wallace is obviously
a dedicated man who
stands strongly on his convictions.
He is also a politically
ambitious man, which is no
crime, for there are many politically
ambitious men in the
world.
But a man can become so engrossed
in his own strong stand
that other, more important considerations
are shunted out the
door. A politician who would
use his vast power indiscriminately
against any who oppose
him and who would try to control
even the educational processes
of his state, is past this
point.
If the Governor gets his succession
bill, he will appoint
four more Auburn trustees, giving
him eight of twelve appointees.
This is only one danger
of letting any governor succeed
himself.
Shades of Gene Talmadge
and Huey Long.
**U*
"^**S'««
/ /
t; <z L Ass ev^R, A, &AIM /
Bad Mouth . . .
A Campus Radio Station
It Not Our Main Need
By Gerald Rutberg
A campus radio station is not the Auburn
student body's number one need and the
October 28 referendum on the FM station should be defeated.
First, there are a number of student wants which rate priority
over the radio station and bypassing these desires for an item
further down the list may well jeopardize the approval of other
projects in the future.
Second, we have no quarrel
with such a station per se, for
there is no question but that a
station would be of benefit to
the student body, however htis
project should be pratically
underwritten by the University
for it will also serve as an educational
and training medium.
Financing the cost of the
proposed station would come
from a $1 per quarter hike in
the student activities fee. The
station is estimated to cost
$24,000 initially and about $13,-
000 per year to operate.
The catch is that this $1 per
quarter should raise at least
$35,000 per year. After the
original expenditures for construction
and equipment, better
than $20,000 will annually ac-cure
to swell the activities fee
budget.
Where this surplus of funds
will specifically go the student
body has not yet been told, but
there are a few suggestions
which we feel take priority
over the radio station in the
first place, at least at the present
time.
Included on this higher priority
list is a workable, feasable
rapid transit system for the
campus, air-conditioning of the
Union Building, increased outdoor
and indoor facilities for
intramurals and a greater dollar
allocation for the popular
entertainment committee in order
to bring more top names in
every field to Auburn.
The student body should even
be prepared to shoulder part of
the burden of paying for a
swimming pool in the new
Sports Arena ^ A u d i t o r i um
should our efforts to get this
million-dollar item added to
the state's appropriation fail.
The popular entertainment
committee should be endowed
with sufficient funds to bring
the world's top attractions to
Auburn whether they be James
Brown or Charles de Gaulle.
Air-conditioning the entire
Union Building would make
meeting and working in the
campus hub a much greater
pleasure and would encourage
participation of more students
in extra-cirricular activities.
There no doubt, are other
services which the student activities
fee doees not support
which have priority over the
50-watt broadcasting station.
This project should not be
considered piecemeal from other
wants. A single fee hike including
specifically earmarked
funds for the above-mentioned
projects would be far more
desirous.
It is risky at best to oppose a
question which a straw poll
shows is favored by a considerable
majority of students but
we must not plunge headlong
into a single undertaking and
later regret not having waited
for the formulation and approval
of a comprehensive fee hike
plan.
The referendum should be
defeated.
Personalities
Succession Fight Centers
On Wallace, Not The Bill
By Jana Howard
Gov. George C. Wallace is on a whistle-stop,
hand-shaking tour of the state in an
effort to bolster support for the bill now before the State Senate
which would allow him and other state officials to secede themselves.
But he's having a hard time convincing the people of Alabama
that his fight is really for them.
In following the trend of "computer-
mania" which seems to be sweeping
the country along with thong sandals
and long hair for everyone, we suggest
for Auburn's parking problem, a solution.
Everyone agrees the problem is
grave. There's nothing left to do but
computerize it.
For students and faculty members
alike who consistently disobey parking
regulations—abolish fines completely.
Instead substitute disciplinary actions.
For instance:
"Three violations—a warning letter."
"Four violations—a 30 day suspension
of parking privileges on university
property."
"Five violations—dismissal from the
university."
This system coupled with campus
elections, registration, and test grading
could keep the computers "busy" indefinitely.
It's frightening to think that a system
like this could be initiated. It's
worse to realize that if local violations
increase such a plan could become a
reality.
Letters Policy
The Auburn Plainsman welcomes
all critical, complimentary
or informal letters to the
editor. No letters of more than
250 words will be printed. Letters
should be typewritten and
triple spaced, and must reach
The Auburn Plainsman, P. O.
Box 832, Auburn, Alabama, no
later than the Saturday preceding
publication.
Libelous and vulgar material
will not be printed. All letters
must be signed, but publication
of names will be withheld on
request. All names will be certified.
Campus
Undercurrent
It's the fourth week of the
quarter and about time for
hordes of froshwomen to be
wearing some new jewelry.
Ignorance is bliss.
* * *
Unannounced beats continue
to disturb students who break
their necks just to get to class.
* * *
Why can't you make a left
turn at Toomer's Corner after
peak hours? The sign says "no
left turn" period.
Opposition to the bill calls
Wallace a man with "a passion
for power," and insinuates that
his open seeking of the governorship
for the next four years
is merely another move in a
chess game — a move which
would keep him in the limelight
long enough to afford
him a chance to grab at the
presidency in '68.
But even Wallace's opponents
must admit that he has
reached an enviable height of
popularity with the people of
the state during his term of
office. The reason? George
Wallace has worked long and
hard for Alabama. He has
traveled throughout the U. S.
carrying the message of state's
rights. And he has not forgotten
his responsibility within the
state. Legislation Wallace has
spearheaded for education, free
textbooks,, a better highway
system, and the industry he has
recruited for the state add up
to a mighty fat governor's report.
Those against Wallace's seeking
the Presidency, if that is
his ultimate goal, seem to be
so because they feel it will hurt
Alabama's position with the
traditionally more conservative
Republican p a r t y. Wallace
would not stand much of a
real chance in the final analysis,
they say. He would only
take votes away from the more
conservative of the other two
candidates.
In this point, the question
seems to be one of whether to
sacrifice Alabama's interests
locally for her interests nationally.
For even those against
Wallace recognize his record of
service within the state.
In analyzing the situation,
one must look at Wallace's personal
position. He has much
to lose in this campaign. He
could easily have gone out of
office in an unquestioning wave
of public support if he had not
brought this issue up.
Instead he chose to take his
chances at re-election, realizing
the opposition this would bring.
Wallace has not backed down
in his fight to get a succession
bill passed. Some say he has
Chains On The Plains
Auburn Students
Conform To Fear,
Refuse To Create
By Jerry Brown
I have no beef with conformity.
The Weejun shoes and
wide horseshoe buckle belts of
the men and the madras shirts
and leather trimmed handbags
of the women
are only
symbols, I
t h i n k , of
man making
some effort
to iden t i f y
himself with
h i s fellows.
They are inevitable
to a
degree. The
conform i n g
urge g i v es
man something in common to
tell him subconsciously "I am
a man like other men, am I
not?"
There is, however, at Auburn
a conforming trend that supercedes
surface likenesses. It is
deeper and more terrifying; it
is stronger and more likely to
lead to more significant attitudes;
it is horrible and malignant.
The conformity which is appearing
on the Auburn campus
is fear. It is being afraid to
question, afraid to peer into old
doubts of man; it is fright at a
query that is out of the contest,
out of the ordinary. The student
is caught up in a flurry
of going to classes where there
are no real classes. There is no
exchange of intellect—only the
same muttering from professors
who have long since given up
on students that sit inanimate
and never see the continuity of
subject matter, whose minds
are only little computers to record
and belch back.
The malignancy is a spreading
thing in the classrooms. The
student who asks is whispered
about: "What's wrong with
him? Is he some kind of nut?"
For this reason there can be no
progress of any sort, save to return
to the world a horde of
plow mules to pull their slide
rules* and lead similar minds
through the educational system
on the same uncreative, unproductive
path.
The students, especially the
younger ones, are particularly
sensistive to the atmosphere of
sick quietness. Because they
don't know they don't want to
be subjected to the ridicule, and
because the professor has gotten
into a rut of routinely drilling
blank faces, he might forget
that in his classroom another
Eliott might be waiting. In
short the professor is becoming
too involved in the masses and
is forgetting that despite the intellectual
vacuum here, there
may be one, possibly, who can
create and further something.
Conforming here is holding
hands while the ship is sinking.
It is sacrificing bright young
minds to nothingness. Who is
to say that this conformity is
the students, the faculty's, the
administration's, the state's, or
the country's fault? No one can,
for we are all to blame. At the
same time, the tools, the intellectual
giants in every field,
are here to rectify and reconstruct.
The student must begin
to seek and question and discipline
himself without conforming,
intellectually, to the
ignorant fear found in the
masses.
When William Faulkner accepted
the Nobel Prize for
literature he said he would
like to use the great honor as
a pinnacle "from which I might
be listened to by the young men
and women already dedicated
to the same anguish and travail
(i.e. creating), among whom is
already that one who will
some day stand here where I
am standing."
But Faulkner couldn't have
been speaking to the Auburn
students. The conforming manacles
are too strong here to be
broken.
gone too far.
But some Alabamians are of
the opinion that we have as the
governor of our state a man
who is above wish-washy politics.
A man who is not afraid
to state his opinions and to
fight for them. A man who
would stake his entire reputation
for something he feels is
best for Alabama.
The question of succession
should rightfully be decided on
its merits alone. But because
of circumstances, the debate on
theory has ceased. This is a
personality issue now. Alabamians
must, and are, looking at
George Wallace, the man.
Letters To The Editor
Student Ridicules
Communism Editorial
Editor, the Plainsman:
Congratulations to that lovely
gal Diane Snoddy for her
wonderful column on Communism,
that wonderful cure-all for
ills of the underdeveloped
countries. You did a terrific
job, Diane, of getting across a
very good point.
Americans should realize how
wrong they are in opposing
Communism merely because it
is an atheistic movement with
the ultimate goal of enslaving
mankind. It's a terrific way of
bolstering the standard of living
of all underdeveloped
countries. Yes, the Russian
people had never had it so good
before that glorious revolution
that brought the first nation
under the wonderful movement.
For proof of this, you could ask
the farmers of the Ukraine. But
very few of them older ones
are around. Seemed most of
them starved to death in the
'30's when the benevolent
government seized all their
crops. Boy, they never had it
so good!
But it is not really Communism
that Americans fear;
it's warmonging. Only reason
people wage war is because
they are hungry, despite the
fact that the German people
were better off than any other
nation in Europe in the early
1900's. The best way to prevent
war is to give aid to all hostile
nations. Think how well this
has worked with Nasser, Tito,
and Sukarno. In fact a lot of
people in this country are worried
about Red China. The
people there are all starving.
To prevent war, why not give
Red China the states of Iowa
and Nebraska? We have a food
surplus anyway.
Remember, Diane, that that
wonderful man Khruschev once
said that our grandchildren will
live under Communism. If
more Americans start thinking
like you do, he's right.
Bob Lowrey, 4 CE
DON'T
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Reader Objects
To Snoddy Editorial
Editor, The Plainsman:
I object to Diane Snoddy's
argument that the only reason
American citizens oppose the
U.S. sale of wheat to Russia is
fear of war. I feel that they
have realized Russia to be an
enemy of the American system;
and in order to preserve free
enterprise, representative government,
and personal liberty,
they object to aiding the enemy.
The patriots are aware that the
Communists plan is to "smash
them with clenched fist!"
(Pravda, Nov." 1931) They are
aware that Russia is our enemy
in Viet Nam, however indirectly
is their aid to the Viet Cong.
Furthermore, they are aware
that the U.S. Constitution defines
treason as giving aid and
comfort to the enemy. Twenty-five
years ago, a citizen would
have been considered a traitor
for suggesting that the U.S. sell
wheat or construct industrial
plants for Hitler.
It must also be noted that
these same American citizens
who wish to preserve their
country have also looked at the
historical fact that countries do
not prosper under Communism.
Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania
(to name only three) have declined
since the Communist
takeover twenty-five years ago.
Indeed, the Russian wheat failure
is due not to natural causes,
but to man's unwillingness to
work for the state rather than
himself. (When the New Economic
Policy was in effect prior
to 1928, Russia prospered by
using this capitalist system.)
These, I believe, are the true
reasons of the American citizens'
protest of the U.S. wheat
sale to Russia.
John L. Hillhouse Jr.
3 CE
Pageant1 Planned
For Calendar Girls
The Calendar Girl Pageant
for calendar girls and Auburn
Union hostesses for January
through August will be held
Nov. 11 at 7:30 p.m.:in the Union
Building. Each girl's dormitory
and each sorority will be
allowed to enter two contest-ents.
The first judging will be on
ranch coat WATER REP&LENT-WASHABLE-SNAGPR0OF
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(52% creslan acrylic, 48% cotton)
Village Men's Shop
Harwell's Men's Shop
Auburn, Alabama
E. W. SKIDMORE
Former Senator
Will Address
County Group
By ANN JOHNSON
Mr. E. W. Skidmore, outstanding
mental health leader
and former state senator, will
address the Lee County Mental
Health Association membership
dinner Monday at 6:30 p.m. in
the Union Ballroom.
Kappa Phi Kappa, law fraternity,
presented Mr. Skidmore
with the Alabama "Man of the
Year" award in 1959. Mr. Skidmore
will speak on the personal
stake in mental health.
Tickets are $2 and may be
purchased in room 224 in Thach
Hall or call 887-5234. The public
is invited.
ATTENTION
DECEMBER GRADUATES
Candidates for degrees in
December who have not cleared
deferred grades (Incomplete
and Absent Examination) may
do so only with permission from
the Council of Deans. Graduates
who need to secure such approval
should check with the Registrar's
Office immediately.
Reservations for caps and
gowns must be made at the
University Book Store (Union
Building) before Oct. 29. The
Cap and Gown Rental Fee is
payable to the Book Store when
measurements are taken.
-I ! !
Nov. 2. Contestants will be
judged in Sunday dress. The
semifinalists selected then will
be judged in bathing suits on
Nov. 10.
The pageant is sponsored by
the Auburn Union Entertainment
Committee. Entertainment
will be featured during intermissions.
YcRlG\L,
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IT -WlFrl
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Circle K To Sponsor
U. S. History Museum
The Miniature Museum of
American History will be exhibited
in Glendean Shopping
Center October 29, according to
an announcement today by Kim
Johnson, president of the Circle
K Club, which will sponsor
the showing of the fund raising
project. -
According to Johnson, the
club believes the museum will
serve to stimulate patriotism
and knowledge of American
History.
The exhibit consists of 35
diaramas, showing each of the
presidents and their first ladies,
an significant scenes from
American history, from the discovery
of the new world to
the launching of the astronauts.
The museum was created by
the Randall Publishing Company
of Washington, D. C. as
an educational tool. It has been
given the Freedoms Foundation
Award from the Freedoms
Foundation of Valley Forge,
Pa., for its "contribution to
5—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965
Films Scheduled By Arts Council
Americanism."
Especially interesting to the
thousands who have seen the
display in the past year is the
ballroom scene in the East
Room of the White House where I
each of the presidents and first
ladies are portrayed in cos
tumes identical to those on dis
play at the Smithsonian Insti
tute in Washington. D. C.
Three art films, sponsored by
the Architecture and Arts
Council, will be shown in Auburn
this quarter, according to
Aubury Garrison, spokesman
for the Council. One film,
"Seance on A Wet Afternoon,"
was shown last week.
The council has previewed
each of the three films, which
will be shown at the War
Eagle Theater. They are "He
Also Must Die," to be shown
Nov. 3-4, "A Midsummer
Night's Dream," to be shown
Nov. 16-17, and "Ashes and
Diamonds," Dec. 7-8.
Season tickets for the series
can be obtained at Biggin Hall
or the War Eagle ticket office.
The Architecture and Arts
Council sponsors the film series
to raise money for its quarterly
magazine, Basis, and to present
outstanding films to the
public, according to Garrison.
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Engineers and Scientists: ,
Let's talk about a career at Boeing...
50-year leader in aerospace technology
Campus Interviews Thursday and Friday, November 4 and 5
The most effective way to evaluate a company
in terms of its potential for dynamic
career growth is to examine its past record,
its current status, and its prospects
and planning for the future, together with
the professional climate it offers for the
development of your individual capabilities.
Boeing, which in 1966 completes 50 years
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offers you career opportunities as
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Whether your interests lie in the field
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Boeing encourages participation in the
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equal opportunity employer.
(1) Boeing's new short-range 737 jetliner. (2)
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(5) Boeing-Vertol 107 transport helicopter
shown with Boeing 707 jetliner.
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Tiger
Topics
By RON MUSSIG
» o ^ ^ ^ > — ^ i
Tough Row To Hoe
While walking down to the Plainsman office Sunday, we
were wondering just what we were going to use to write a
column considering the fact that the Tigers had lost Saturday.
With the season half over, and the Tigers owning a 2-2-1 record,
just what could the big Blue gain out of the rest of the
season?
It suddenly occured to us that the SEC title is not at
all out of reach. With five games left and four of them with-in
the family, the Tigers could capture another trophy. The
SEC is in one of its most befuddled states in recent years.
Perhaps only three teams can be counted out of the running—
Vanderbilt, Tulane, and, surprisingly enough, Mississippi.
Georgia and Mississippi State are undefeated in conference
play, while Alabama, Florida, and LSU have all lost one.
Tennessee and Auburn each have a tie to blemish their records
and Ole Miss has one win against three losses. Winless are
Tulane and Vandy.
Perhaps you noticed, all of the front-runners appear on the
Tiger schedule in the next few weeks. Every team in the
family has lost at least one game this fall except Tennessee
who has tied two. You may have guessed what we are leading
up to here. All the Tigers need do is win their four upcoming
conference squabbles and the crown will rest on their heads
and nobody else's. OK, so you don't think that anybody could
beat those four—Florida, Mississippi State, Georgia, and Alabama—
well, let's think about it for a minute.
tost Year At This Time . . .
Following a heart-breaking loss to Georgia Tech in Birmingham
7-3, the Sewell Dormitory residents pulled themselves
together and won three of the last five. They lost to Florida in
Gainesville via their own mistakes and we don't need to mention
the 21-14 loss to Alabama which would have been a 14-0
Auburn victory except for three very short lapses.
This year the Gators must make the trip up from the
center of Florida to serve as opponents for the Tigers homecoming
game. We shudder to think how long it has been since
the Tigers have been on the short end of a homecoming score.
We must admit that the Gators are on the rebound since an
opening loss to Mississippi State but if a team being 'up' for a
game can win it, we figure the Plainsmen will get this one.
Next on the list is Mississippi State. The Bulldogs lost their
first game last Saturday to Memphis State in one of the upsets
of the season. They will be trying to win all the rest, but
they obviously can be beaten.
Ex-Auburn freshman coach, Vince Dooley is still riding high
in the SEC despite an upset loss to Florida State last Saturday
in Tallahassee. Dooley claimed that this would be his lean
year before his recruiting began to pay off. So far, it appears
to be anything but lean. On an overall team effort, with no
superstars, the Georgians have won four straight in the conference
and are striving for the title this year.
Finally, Auburn and Alabama both travel to Birmingham's
Legion Field for a typical rock-em, sock-em type game. Once
again, the Tigers are going to want this one very much. In
our three football seasons on the Plains, it has always been
said that a victory over Alabama made it a successful season,
regardless of the team's record. Besides, we have seen that
the Red Tide doesn't always roll this year, contrary to what we
read in a local daily.
Now that we have won all of Auburn's conference games on
paper, all we have to do is settle back and wait for the score
on the board when that horn blows for the last time. As we
said, it's possible—-if the Tigers pull together for the last half
of the season as they did in 1964,—it is very possible.
TV In Atlanta . . . i
We viewed the Tech game from the press box in Grant Stadium
and on our left was Carl Stevens, who broadcasts the
Auburn game playbacks on Sunday afternoon over WSFA-TV.
He told us that the Jackets were using a TV instant replay
system. They employed two cameras—one for the offense and
one for the defense. After each play, they replay the action for
the coaches to examine in detail. Stevens told us that the
system cost around $40,000. If it had anything to do with the
Jacket's impressive showing in Saturday's defeat of the Tigers,
it just may be worth the expense. Now that the Engineers are
on their own, all the proceeds of a post-season bowl belong
them and not an entire conference. With a few more games
like that one, they'll have it made.
Sty? Bqnm &$$$
• Eagle Shirts
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Always Welcome To
Come By and Look Around
EAST MAGNOLIA
Tigers Host
Mississippi
Southern
"Looking forward to the
game with Auburn," once-beaten
Southern Mississippi
invades Cliff Hare Stadium
Saturday to do battle. The
Southerners, now consider-ered
a major college, will
strive to hand the Tigers
their third defeat of the
season.
Under the direction of Coach
Thad (Pie) Vann, the Southerners
have won four of five
games this season, defeating
Southeastern Louisiana, Memphis
State, Richmond, and V.M.
I. Their lone loss came at the
hands of Mississippi State.
Vann, who is in his 17th year
as head coach, has never had a
losing season and now ranks
among major college coaches
behind Ole Miss' J o h n ny
Vaught and Ohio State's Woody
Hayes. His teams have compiled
a record of 116-40-2 and have
twice been UPI small college
champions.
The Southerners this season
have exhibited a fine defense,
a fast offense and an improved
passing and receiving corps.
Coach Vann lost only five let-termen
from last year's squad,
and has 25 lettermen available
for duty. These were all in action
in last year's Auburn game,
which the Tigers won by a 14-
7 margin.
Monday night, Coach Vann
told The Plainsman, "We think
that Auburn is the finest team
that we have played to date,
and this included Mississippi
State."
"We hope that we will be a
worthy opponent. We are certainly
going to Auburn expecting
to play a good game."
Led by explosive quarterback
Vic Purvis, a 181-pound senior,
the Southerners have been outstanding
in all of their victories
this season.
Purvis was injured in the
first half of the V.M.I, game.
Kicked in the leg, he was unable
to compete during the second
half. However, Coach Vann
stated that backup man Glenn
Byrun "is a good one."
Southern's receivers are both
big and strong. Wingback Rabbit
Brown weighs in at 206,
while tight end George Rodman
tips the scales at 225.
A seasoned defensive squad,
consisting of all juniors a nd
seniors, is built around a huge
tackle, a ball-hawking linebacker,
and aggressive ends.
Southern Mississippi expects
great things of John Mangum,
a home-grown tackle who
stands 6-3 and weighs 260
pounds. The pros are mighty
interested in Mangum also, according
to pre-season reports.
Doug Satcher, 216 pounder,
holds down one linebacker slot.
Satcher is reported to have ex-
ASSISTANT COACH
Auburn assistant football
coach Bobby Freeman was a
starting defensive halfbacki n
the NFL for six years and
played on the 1960 Philadelphia
Eagle team which won the
world's title.
6—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965
HADDOCK TRIES FOR YARDAGE
Georgia Tech's Terry Haddock (41) is straining for yardage in Saturday's Auburn-
Georgia Tech game. Auburn's linebackers, John Cochran (31) and Bill Cody (11), are
impairing his progress.
cellent quickness and speed for
his size. He will team with Ken
Avery, 215, Tom Brennan, 195,
and Tom Youmans, 180, in
Southern's 5-4 defensive alignment.
Vann's Southerners will meet
Auburn in top physical shape
with all hands prepared to meet
the Tigers.
Basketball Team
Holding Practice
By ALAN HINDS
Lack of height is the main
problem facing the Tiger basketball
team now engaged in
fall practice.'
Seven returning lettermen
form the nucleus of Coach Bill
Lynn's 65-66 basketball squad
with no man over 6-5.
Sharpshooters such as Lee
Defore and Jimmy Montgomery
and a 'hustle' corps of guards
led by Bobby Buisson are
counted to compensate for the
Tiger's altitude difficulties.
Lettermen Buisson, Tee Fair-cloth,
Herbie Green and Tommy
Fibbee head an experienced
backcourt group that is fast,
mobile, and defensively tough.
It is two gigantic gaps in Auburn's
front line that causes
(See page 7, column 2)
Baby Tigers' Second Half Surge
Falls Short Against Gator Frosh
By DAVID HOUSEL
T h e Florida freshmen
owned a 15-0 lead at the
half and held on for a 15-9
win over the Auburn freshmen
in Cliff Hare Stadium
last Friday.
The Gator freshman struck
like lightning in the second period
for their point total. Riding
on the strong right arm of
quarterback Larry Rentz, the
visitors drove 54 yards for their
first touchdown. Rentz completed
four out of four passes
for 50 yards in the scoring drive
which culminated with his 26
yard pass to end Jim Yarbrough
for the touchdown. Dave Barn-hart
missed the attempted point
after and Florida led 6-0 with
9:21 left in the quarter.
SAFETY
On the first play following
the ensuing kickoff, Auburn's
Bobby Wilson fumbled a pitch-out
and was tackled by the
Baby Gator's Walter Ritchie in
the end zone for a safety putting
Florida ahead 8-0.
Larry Smith returned Auburn's
free kick to the 50 yard
line and the Gators set sail for
the end zone again. With second
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and 15, Rentz passed to George
Dean for 12 yards to Auburn's
43. On a third down and eight
situation, Smith ran 19 yards to
the Auburn 29. Rentz then fired
to Yarbrough who was stopped
by Larry Blakeney at the two.
Lewis Robles cracked over from
there to make it 14-0. Barn-hart's
point after was good and
Florida led 15-0, scoring all 15
points in just two minutes and
19 seconds.
AUBURN SCORE
Early in the third period,
Rentz fumbled at the Florida 25
when he was tackled by Steve
Marks, and Joe Varner recovered
for the Tiger Cubs. Quarterback
Tim Christian circled
left end for the only Auburn
touchdown 'of the day. The try
for the extra point was foiled
when the ball was fumbled.
(See page 7, column 2)
King And Tech Friends
Hand Plainsmen Loss
The site was Grant Field and the final score was
23-14 in the 68th Auburn-Georgia Tech game. The fired-up
gridders who inhabit the Atlanta stadium claimed
the 23 points.
Kim King, Georgia Tech's left-handed quarterback
passed and rushed the Yellow
Jackets over Coach Ralph Jordan's
eleven who were just visiting
for the weekend. King
didn't even try to make the Tigers
welcome as he passed for
135 yards and rushed for 81
more to lead everybody present
in both departments.
AUBURN MISTAKES
Capitalizing on Auburn mistakes,
Bobby Dodd's eleven
scored 17 points in the third
quarter to ice the game away.
Bobby Beaird fumbled the
second half opening kickoff on
the Auburn 31, where Tommy
Elliott covered it. On the first
play from scrimmage King
scampered across the 31 hostile
yards for six points. Bunky
Henry booted the PAT.
Hank Hall fumbled on the
Tech 18 and King directed his
side to the 29 yard line. From
there Tommy Carmichael booted
a 46 yard field goal.
INTERCEPTION
Auburn mounted a drive behind
the arms of Alex Bowden
and Tom Bryan to the Tech 47
where left corherback Tommy
Bleick picked off a Bryan pass
and lugged it 53 yards to pay-dirt.
Henry's kick was true to
run the total to 17 points.
Earlier in the contest Tech
had scored on a drive of 69
yards in nine plays. King had
his left hand in this one too as
he tossed a nine yard scoring
pass to Corky Rogers. Bunky
Henry was wide on his PAT try
for his first miss in 23 attempts.
FIELD GOAL RECORD
The visiting Tigers were
even with the Engineers at the
end of the first half on the
strength of two Don Lewis field
goals. Lewis' first broke the
Auburn record for field goal
length when it traveled 49
yards. He eclipsed the record
set by Woody Woodall against
Georgia in 1963 of 47 yards.
Lewis' other field goal was a
31 yarder which hit the upright
and slid through on the three
point side. He sandwiched in a
missed 35 yard attempt and was
cheated out of a 19 yard try
by confusion as to the down
number with short seconds left
in the half when an out-of-bounds
pass, intended to stop
the clock not only did that but
also ate up the fourth down
and gave Tech the ball.
PLAINSMAN SCORE
Early in the fourth quarter
the Plainsmen tallied again to
add hope to the sagging Auburn
spirit, but it was too late for a
comeback against the determined
Tech eleven. Alex Bowden
connected with Joe Campbell
on a 37 yard scoring pass and
Bryan carried t h e pigskin
across for a two point conversion
to end game scoring.
Auburn Harriers
Finish Second
In Jacket Meet
By LARRY LEE
Auburn's cross - country-team
took second-place
honors in last Frday's Georgia
Tech Invitational run,
falling to a fine University
of Miami team.
Auburn was led by "Gator"
Williams who covered the 4.4
mile course in 24 minutes flat.
Williams finished seventh in the
field of 45 runners.
He was followed by Glenn
McWaters, eighth; Dan Storey,
ninth; Bob Vickery, 11th; Dixie
Foster, 14th; Larry Lee, 21st;
David Bruce, 24th; and Ralph
Blaine, 30th.
AUBURN'S FIRST
The meet, entered by six
schools, was Auburn's first of
the year, and Coach Mel Rosen
called it "a fairly successful
one."
"I think "we're ahead of last
year's team and should come
on strong. In fact, I think this
can be the best team we've ever
(See page 8, column 1)
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ENGINEERING MECHANICS
APPLIED MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS and
ENGINEERING PHYSICS
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
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SEC WRAPUP . . .
Tennessee Ties The Tide,
Remains With Undefeated
By EDWIN TEW
The University of Tennessee
leads the SEC in
very few statistical categories,
but as confusion-producers
the Vols must
rank among the best. Coach
Doug Dickey's orangeshirted
warriors have met two conference
opponents, and in each
case, the befuddled opponent
has muffed an opportunity to
win.
Auburn, a f t e r scoring a
fourth q u a r t e r touchdown
against the Vols, was set to go
for a two-point conversion and
a 14-13 victory, but the Tigers
couldn't get the correct number
of players on the field and drew
a five-yard delay-of-game penalty.
They kicked the PAT and
settled for a 13-13 tie.
TIDE GOOFS
With Alabama apparently in
position for a field goal in the
final seconds of their game with
Tennessee, quarterback Kenny
Stabler intentionally threw an
incomplete pass to stop the
clock. Unfortunately for t he
Tide, Stabler had lost count of
the downs and had thrown the
pass on fourth down. Tennessee,
taking possession of the ball on
the four-yard line, ran out the
clock to preserve the 7-7 tie.
The two ties are the only
blemishes on the Tennessee record,
and if Georgia and Mississippi
State each lose one conference
game, the Vols could
gain at least a tie for the conference
crown by winning their
three remaining conference
games.
TEWS FEARLESS FORECAST
Georgia will have offensive
problems with star halfback
Bob Taylor injured, but Ken-i
tucky's Bird and Norton are
ready to go. KENTUCKY 14,
GEORGIA 13.
t - r r u PPHHOONNEE SSHH 55-.7A71
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Vic Purvis and his Southern
teammates are tough, but Auburn
should be tougher. AUBURN
23, SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI
7.
Another narrow escape for
the Crimson Tide. ALABAMA
10, FLORIDA STATE 3.
Tulane's sophomore quarterback
Bobby Duhon is good, but
the Green Wave defense isn't.
State will escape Duhon's trap.
MISSISSIPPI STATE 21, TU-LANE
14.
Mississippi 7, Vanderbilt 0
Tennessee 35, Houston 6
LSU 23, South Carolina 7
LSU used the running and
passing of sophomore quarterback
Nelson Stokley and an a-lert
pass defense to upend Kentucky
31-21.
, Stokley ran for 118 yards, in-
Basketball
(Continued from page 6)
most concern for Coach Lynn.
Graduation of Freddie Guy and
Joe Newton, both of whom were
All-SEC calibre, have diminished
some of the Tiger's growl
beneath the boards.
The Auburn mentor looks to
letter-earners Montgomery and
Randy Thomas to fill these vacancies.
Hardy contenders for
the same positions are Rcnnie
Quick and Joe Millsap, who finished
strong toward the end of
last season.
Adding bench strength to give
Auburn better depth than last
year, promising sophomores
Alex Howel, Randell Walker,
Tom Perry, and Bob Miller are
quite capable of seeing varsity
action this winter.
Smaller than most SEC foes,
Auburn will play a more conservative
game than last year.
The Tigers open their season
here on Dec. 2, against Rice
University.
Cross-Country . . .
(Continued from page 6)
had," added Rosen.
"Over-all, we ran well in
Atlanta," he continued. "The
team was bunched well at the
finish, which is something you
have to have if you're going to
win many big meets."
DIDN'T SHOW UP
What would it have taken to
win?
"We were hurt by the fact
that a couple of schools didn't
show up. If they had, they
would've probably bumped a
couple of the Miami boys further
back and we might have
won," said Rosen- '.
The harriers next outing is
Saturday in the Callaway Garden
Invitational.
ItJbljtfl^DlWftf
OPEN 6:15; STARTS 6:45
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
TWENTIETH CENTURYf OX PRESENTS
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Sun.-Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
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FRANK SINATRA
TREVOR HOWARD.
eluding a 50-yard touchdown
scamper, and completed six of
nine passes for 88 yards. The
LSU defensive secondary intercepted
six of Rick Norton's
aerials, with Jerry Joseph pulling
in three of the interceptions.
Florida State scored 10 points
in the fourth quarter to gain a
come-from-behind 10-3 victory
over nationally fifth-ranked
Georgia. The Bulldogs, never
able to muster an offensive
drive against the tough Seminole
defenders, took a 3-0 second
quarter lead on Bob Etter's 38-
yard field goal, but Pete Roberts
booted a 31-yarder for the
Seminoles and Bill Moreman
added a 20-yard scoring run.
FLETCHER STOPS STATE
Memphis State pulled off one
of the year's biggest upsets with
a 31-13 spanking of previously
undefeated, tenth-ranked Mississippi
State. Tiger quarterback
Billy Fletcher tossed three
touchdown passes, kicked two
field goals and three extra
Game
'Out On A Limb'
Mussig Lee ' Old Pro HER Snellgrove GUEST
S. Miss.-Auburn
FSU-ALABAMA ......
Ark.-N. Tex. St
Army-Stanford
Bucknell-Lafayette—4-.
California-UCLA..
Colorado U.-Nebraska_
Duke-Illinois —
Navy-Georgia Tech
Georgia-Kentucky
Houston-Tennessee
South Carolina-LSU
Miami-Pittsburg
Michigan St.-Purdue
Vandy-Mississippi
Miss. St.-Tulsa
S. Calif.-Notre Dame....
Rice-Texas....
Virginia-Virgina Tech-
Last Week: —
Season: _
Season Percentage: -
Aub.
Ala.
Ark.
Army
Buck.
UCLA
Neb.
111.
Navy
Ga.
Tenn.
LSU
Miami
Purd.
Miss.
Miss. St.
N. D.
Tex.
Va.
9-7
51-19
.729
Aub.
Ala.
Ark.
Army
Buck.
UCLA
Neb.
Duke
G. T.
Ky.
Tenn.
LSU
Miami
Purd.
Miss.
Miss. St.
N. D.
Tex.
Va.
10-6
50-20
.714
Aub.
Ala.
Ark.
Stan.
Buck.
UCLA
Neb.
111.
G. T.
Ky.
Tenn.
LSU
Miami
Purd.
Miss.
Miss. St.
S. Calif.
Tex.
Va.
11-5
50-20
.714
Aub.
Ala.
Ark.
Army
Buck.
UCLA
Neb.
Duke
G. T.
Ky.
Tenn.
LSU
Miami
Purd.
Miss.
Miss. St.
N. D.
Tex.
V. T.
11-5
' 48-22
.686
Aub.
Ala.
Ark.
Army
Buck.
UCLA
Neb.
111.
G. T.
Ga.
Tenn.
LSU
Miami
Purd.
Miss.
Miss. St.
N. D.
Tex.
Va.
9-7
46-24
.657
Aub.
Ala.
Ark.
Stan.
Buck.
Calif.
Neb.
111.
Navy
Ky.
Tenn.
LSU
Miami
Mich. St.
Miss.
Miss. St.
N. D.
Tex.
Va.
52-18
12-4
.743
7—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965
Wednesday
And
Thursday
briUW TIMfcS: 2:10, 4:20, 6:50, 9:00
One Great Week—Friday-Thursday
True to form, Lafayette lost another game, this time to Temple 27-12. SHE was
the only one to loose with Lafayette last week. The Leopards are strong underdogs
to fall to Bucknell this weekend before the home crowd.
Guesting this week is George Stallard, last years Out on a Limb winner and presently
Sunperintendent of Men's Intramurals. Stallard tells us that he is still trying
to get the annual prize (which comes in five to the gallon size bottles) from last years
group.
points and scored one touchdown
to lead Memphis State to
(See page 8, column 7)
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For complete information about a career with LTV, consult your
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CORPORATION
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SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY
i rS A BEGINNERS COURSE
IN"BOY-GIRLSMANSHIP"
,*gli^«ino^ ***•*+, %
Department Name Changed
By JOE GAINES
The name of the former Department
of Agriculture Eco-nomics
has been changed to the
Department of Agricultural
Economics and Rural Sociology
after approval by President
Harry M. Philpott.
According to department officials,
the change in name is a
mere formality reflecting the
growing awareness among educational
institutions of the increasing
number of problems
faced by rural people who have
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not adjusted to the socio-economic
changes in the modern
rural life.
Head of the renamed department
Dr. Joseph H. Yeager
said, "The uniting of these two
disciples for administrative
purposes within the University
was a logical and effective combination
leading to a more vital
attack on the economic and
social problems of today's rural
people."
TOUGH DEFENSES
SEC teams filled four of the
top ten spots for total defense
in 1964. Auburn was first, allowing
only 164.7 yards-per-game
to the opposition. L.SU
was third, Alabama eighth,
and Florida tenth.
The Intramural Scene
AGR's Cooled Off By POT;
Independents Feature Shutouts
at
Campus
Drugs
NEW! REVLON
PROFESSIONAL
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By DON SCOTT
The third week of intramural
play saw what may be
league trends as the squads
scrap for the title.
It was the independents who
produced the majority of shutouts
this week.
Davison O topped E 2-0 in
the toughest defensive game of
the week. Division J crushed
M 19-0 and Y-l beat U 6-0.
Trailer Park set the stage
for a showdown with Navy by
whipping a tough Caldwell
House team, 7-0.
Navy's Ken Wetzel meanwhile
turned in one of the best
single performances of the week
as he scored the game's only
seven points to whip Forestry.
The Hawks obviously want
the league title and proved it
by downing BSU 11-6. The
Hawks held BSU scoreless for
three quarters while rolling up
11 points, four by safeties. A
drive with two minutes to play
gave BSU its only tally.
FRATERNITY PLAY
PDT stifled the hottest offense
of the opening games
when the Phi Delts beat AGR
6-0. PDT's Jerry Greene passed
to Hugh Sparks for the points
and PDT's big defense is still
unscored upon.
Theta Chi took advantage of
a faltering Teke offense and
squeaked past TKE 6-2.
ATO rallied its old passing
form to crush on out-played
PKA 25-0.
PKT continued to win but
not so easily. That man Hatley
threw a pay-dirt pass the first
time he got his hands on the
ball. That was all PKT could
do against a stubborn Sigma Pi
team however, as they won 7-0.
KA eeked out 12 points
against a fired up DSP team to
win 12-6.
LCA, meanwhile, clobbered
DTD 34-0, scoring the 93rd
point against the Delts in two
weeks.
Delta Chi drubbed KS 20-0.
PKP outscored BTP 26-13 in
a wild contest. OTS shamed
PGD 34-0, as many points as
DU scored against SPE, 34-6.
SN upset top-seeded AP 7-0
in one of the most significant
games of the week, power-wise.
SWIM MEETS
Preliminaries for the annual
intramural swims will be held
Oct. 18-19 at 7:30 p.m. Semifinals
will be held Oct. 25 and
finals the 26th.
Women's Intramurals
By LYRA WADSWORTH
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Competition is keen as the
women's volleyball tourney begins
in earnest. The four teams
in each of the 15 leagues are
playing three matches. This
determines the league winners
who will compete in the finals.
Last Week's Results
ZTA-2 over ADPi
DZ-2 over KD-2
Pi Beta Phi-2 over AOPi-2
DDD pledges over KAT
pledges
Chi O pledges over AGD
pledges
Pi Beta Phi pledges over
ADPi pledges
AOPi pledges over KD
pledges
DZ pledges over ZTA-3
Chi 0-2 over AGD-2
Phi Mu-2 over KAT-2
Learn Europe from behind the counter.
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and airmail) to Dept. O, American
Student Information
Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,
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for a 36-page booklet giving
all jobs, details and travel
grant application forms.
Chi O-l over Phi Mu-1
Dorm 2-2 over Dorm 4-2
Dorm 12 over Dorm 8 . >
Dorm 1 over Dorm 3
KD-1 over ADPi-1
Tri-Delt-1 over Pi Beta Phi-1
Alpha Gam-1 over KAT-1
AOPi-1 over KKG-1
ZTA-1 over DZ-1
Dorm C over Dorm A
Co-Rec volleyball competition
began Monday night in Alumni
Gym. Teams consist of three
boys and three girls.
Shuffleboard and table tennis
contestants must have their first
round matches completed by
this Friday, Oct. 22. Second
round play must be completed
by Friday, Oct. 29. A schedule
of opponents is posted in. Alumni
Gym. Equipment may be
checked out in .Alumni Gym.
Matches may be played on the
regulation courts in either
Alumni Gym or the Union
Building.
DOLPHIN CLUB PARTY
A party honoring the new
members was given by Dolphin
Club on Monday, Oct. 18 in
Alumni Gym. Films of synchronized
swim teams were shown
after which refreshments were
served. Practice for the water
show will begin next Monday.
New members are Linda Bass,
Charlotte Bohorfouch, Becky
Chappell, Jeannie Clayton, Judy
Daniel, Tommi Cranfeld, Jerri
Derrick, Joan Elliott, Betty
Fuller, Susie Houton, Mary
Kromfield, Barbara Lang, Gene
McCollum, Freda Mann, Libby
Moore, Sally Morris, Jo Jo
Sanderson, Sandy Purdon, Connie
Rutland, Donna Shaw, Mary
Taggert, Carol Van Meter, Bun-nie
Askew, Susie Kates, Susan
McCollough, Cassie McQueen,
and Jerri White.
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Tiger Frosh..
(Continued from page 6)
The Baby Tigers had several
scoring opportunities in the
second half but a 40 yard field
goal by Jimmy Jones was the
only point production the Tigers
could muster.
Christian led the Auburn offense
with 134 yards, running
for 59 and passing for 75 more.
Following Christian in the
rushing department was fullback
Larry Ellis who had 56
yards on 13 carries. Quarterback
Dwight Brisendine w as
the leading passer with four
completions out of 11 attempts
for 76 yards.
In the receiving department
Bobby Wilson caught six for 85
yards while Donald Randolph
snagged two for 33 yards.
8—THE PLAINSMAN Wednesday, Oct. 20, 1965
HAYLEY COMMENTS
Following the game, freshman
coach Lee Hayley, said
that he was "naturally disap-pointed
that we didn't win, but
pleased with the way the boys
corrected their first half mistakes
and played the second
half.
Coach Hayley singled out defensive
ends Ed Beers and Bill
James for credit saying that
they did a particularly good
job. Offensively Hayley said he
was pleased with Christian's
direction of the Tiger attack.
The play of fullback Ellis, especially
his blocking, pleased the
coach. Offensive guard Ricky
Bullard, who had been a back
in high school, also drew words
of praise in his first game on
the line.
SEC Wrapup . . .
(Continued trom page 6)
its first victory of the year.
Tulane stayed close lor three
quarters, but Ole Miss scored
twice in the fourth quarter to
down the upset-minded Green-ies
24-7. Mike Dennis scored
twice for the Rebels, and Doug
Cunningham tallied once on a
seven yard pass from Jimmy
Heidel.
Alabama lost the ball three
times inside the Tennessee five-yard
line as the Vols gained a
hard-fought 7-7 tie, and Florida
stopped North Carolina State.
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OPEN LETTER TO ALL FUTURE DIAMOND BUYERS FROM WARE'S JEWELRY
#
I would like to talk over with you plans for buying a diamond. Regardless of whether
you plan to spend $100.00 of $1,000.00 you want to be able to give her the most beautiful
diamond possible for the money you plan to invest. You want the best buy possible both
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May I explain Ware's Diamond System to you?
1. We sell "loose diamonds" . . . diamonds that we may check the weight, color
and perfection grade. Diamond prices vary greatly depending upon each individual
stone. You cannot get full diamond dollars without proper diamond grading.
2. We have many diamonds . . . many grades and prices . . . so that we can fill
your needs regardless of size or quality desired.
3. We are Auburn's dealer for Arange Blossom, Art Carved, Jabel and Gomez.
From our mounting selection we can find just the mounting to please "HER"
heart's desire.
4. First we explain diamond grading step by step and assist you in selecting the size
and grade best fitted to your individual needs. Next we assist you in selecting the
mounting. From our "loose diamond" stock we can select just the stone . . . just
the mounting . . . and put the two together for s a v i n g s that you won't believe
possible.
5. All we ask is a chance to prove to you that "WARE'S LOOSE DIAMOND SYSTEM"
can mean a larger, finer diamond than you ever dreamed possible.
6. Terms may be arranged if desired.
WARE JEWELER'S
111 S. College Street
Auburn, Alabama