IMSIDt TODAY
School of Business Pg. 2
New Heads Pg. 3
Editorials Pg. 4
Sports Pg. €
Robert Welch Pg. 10
THE AUBURN PUINSVUN RUSK
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
Managing Editor Bruce
Nichols writes his impressions
of Secretary of State
Dean Rusk. See Page 4.
VOLUME 94 AUBURN UNIVERSITY AUBURN, ALABAMA THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1967 12 PAGES NUMBER 20
Fraternity Forum Will Conclude Today;
New Blood Record Sought Next Week
Drive Goal Of 4,000 Pints
Aims For New World Record
An attempt to break Auburn's own world's record for
a two-day blood drive will be made Wednesday and
Thursday when the Spring blood drive begins with a
goal of 4,000 pints for soldiers in Viet Nam.
The sports arena and the Student Ac building will be
used to make the drive
faster and easier, according
to drive chairman Larry
Menefee.
Dean's excuses will be
given for the hour of donation
and the hour following,
the drive spokesman
said.
FROM 10 TO fi
Lines will form from 10
a.m. until 6 p.m. both days
in the arena for preliminary
information and blood typing,
Menefee said, and then
donors will move to the Student
Ac for actual donation.
Drive managers have set
the 4,000 pint goal to break
the current world's record
of 3,507 set by Auburn students
last year. A spokesman
for the University Relations
said that Life magazine had
been notified about the attempt
to "demonstrate the
Auburn way" and that national
coverage may be given the
drive.
JORDAII LEADS OFF
"Coach -Snug Jordan and
the football squad will begin
the drive at 10 a.m. Wednesday,"
Menefee said, "and
it is hoped that a large portion
of the student body will follow
their spirited example."
Hours have been allotted
to fraternities, sororities,
independent organizations and
dorms for giving blood. But
members are being urged by
drive managers to donate at
any time they are free.
AWARDS PLANNED
Awards will be given in
each of the following categories:
independent organizations,
sorority, large fraternity,
small fraternity,
men's housing, and women's
dorms. Any student may credit
his pint of blood to his
fraternity or sorority, or to
any dorm or independent group
he wishes.
Anyone still in line at 6,
when the line closes, will
still be able to give blood
Fraternities
Tap Goddess
Tonight
The 1967 Greek Goddess,
elected by the 27 campus fraternities
in conjunction with
Greek Week, will be crowned
tonight at intermission dur -
ing the Lettermen concert at
the Student Activities Building.
According to former IFC
President Max Richburg,
fraternities balloted last night
in chapter meetings to choose
the new goddess from among
13 candidates nominated by
each of the campus sororities.
Richburg said that fraternities
should be sure that
their vote tallies are at the
IFC office no later than noon
today. The ballots may be put
under the door if the office
is closed.
Campaigning for the top
spot began last week. Cam-
(see page 2, column 4)
Youth Film
To Play Here
A five-day showing of' 'The
Restless Ones," a Billy
Graham film, will be sponsored
by the churches of Auburn
March 31-April 4 at the
War Eagle Theater.
The film will run three
times daily beginning at 2
p.m. with the exception of
April 1. The film will begin
that day at 1:30.
".The Restless Ones" is
a feature-length film with the
accent on youth. The film
deals- imaginatively and dramatically
with the crisis a-mong
youths. It has been
called a hard-hitting, bold
approach to "our social
problems" by critics.
'Face To The Wind' Speakers And Panels
Outline Modern Greek Problems, Future
FRATERNITY FORUM KEYNOTER DRAWS QUESTION FROM CHAIRMEN
Leftto right are ftmie Sledge, Sigma Nu, Keynoter William C Bauer, Judy Hall, Kappa Delta
For Religious Affairs Conference . . .
Top Theologians To Discuss
Man's Search For Meaning
Dr. George Arthur Bit-trick,
editor of "The Inter
prater*s Bible" will keynote
tne annual Religious
Affairs Conference April
9-11 in the Union Ballroom.
Tne conference topic will
be "Man's Searcn Br Meaning."
Joining Dr. Hittrick in
the conference will oe Dr.
WalterR.Courtenay, author
and pastor of the First
Presbyterian Church of
Nashville, Wesley A.
Kuhrt, Director of Research;
United Aircraft Corporation,
Dr. Bittrick, editor of the
12-volume commentary on the
Bible, will open the Conference
April 9, at 7:30 with
a speech on the conference's
topic, "Man's Search For
Meaning." He is professor
of preaching at Garret Theo-
Humphrey And Foy: A Chin To Chin Confrontation
Accepting a plaque for Auburn's record breaking blood drive and his own personal
donor record, Dean of Student Affairs James E. Foy juts chins with Vice-President
Hubert Humphrey. Auburn was honored by the American Red Cross last Thursday in
a Birmingham regional meeting at which the vice-president spoke. Dean Foy reportedly
answered Mr. Humphrey's congratulations with a resounding "War Eagle." Auburn will
attempt to collect 4,000 pints in the drive scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday to
break its own record set last year.
logical Seminary, in Evanston
111. He has served pastorates
throughout the nation.
In 1939-1941, Dr. Bittrick
served as president of the
Federal (now National) Council
of Churches of Christ in
America.
CROSSROADS
Father Ricelik. who will
speak on "Man at the Crossroads"
Tuesday at 1, re-received
his B.S. degree from
St. Thomas College in St.
Paul, Minn, before attending
the Pontifical University of
St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome,
Italy where he received his
STL and Doctorate.
Father Pucelik has served
as head of the Campus Pastors
at the University of Nebraska.
He also taught modern
languages and philosophy at
John F. Kennedy College in
Nebraska before taking his
current post at the Catholic
University of America. He is
now teaching a course in preparing
for Christian marraige
and the church today.
Dr. Cburtenay was graduated
from Princeton Theological
Seminary in 1932.
ACCEPTABILITY
Dr. Cburtenay, who is the
author of several books on
religion and a regular contri-butor
to religious and secu-lar
publications, will speak
on "Ways of Becoming
Acceptable."
"God, Science and Tech-noloev"
will be the subject
of Kuhrt*s address.
The director of reasearch
for United Aircraft has received
experience in thermodynamics,
nuclear power for
aircraft, and plasma physics,
and has been granted patents
for inventions in these areas.
Presently Kuhrt is responsible
for the United Aircraft
central research organization
in support of the
technical activities of its
seven operating divisions.
The Research Laboratories
employ 1,200 people, 500 of
(See page 2, column 3)
DR. BUTTRICK
The Auburn Fraternity
Forum, saluted by the National
Interfraternity Council
as the finest program of
its kind in the nation,brings
three days of conference to
a close.today in the Union
Building.
An address by Louisiana
State University Director of
Women's Housing Mrs.
Helen Gordon, three panel
discussions, and a final dinner
will end the third annual
forum entitled "Fraternity
1967-A Face To The Wind."
Mrs. Gordon will discuss
"Fraternities and the Wind
of Change" at the final
general session this afternoon
at 1:15. Following her
address and a short coffee
break, forum participants
which include Greeks and
non-Greeks, can choose between
three panel discussions
beginning at 3:15.
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Tuesday night, a capacity
audience in Langdon Hall
heard William C. Bauer, vice-president
of operations for
Southern Bell Telephone Company,
keynote the forum. His
address, "How Fraternities
Can Help Their Members In
Later Life," included a discussion
of general fraternity
and sorority problems on the
modern campus.
Yesterday afternoon the
conference got under way with
the first general session.
W.R. Hauser, dean of Athens
College, delivered the principal
address, "Candlelight
Ritual and the Daylight
World," dealing with effectiveness
of the ideals on
which modern fraternities are
based.
Following the general session,
forum participants divided
into three discussion
groups, Membership and
Ritual, Influence of Ritual
on Day to Day Living, and
Our Founders Spirit in 20th
Centurv Fraternities.
FREE DISCUSSION
Forum planners expect the
discussion of the role of
Panhellenic and the Interfraternity
Council to be very active.
"We're throwing this
topic out for completely free
discussion," commented forum
co-chairmen Jamie Sledge and
Judy Hall. "We want to
know what Auburn fraternities
and sororities expect of
these central organizations."
Active discussion is also
anticipated on the other panel
topics "Junior Colleges and
the Future of Fraternities"
Corrections Being Made
For 'A' Grade Mix-Ups
A number of "A" students
received ' 'G" grades for this
past winter quarter. * iThe
grades are being corrected
as quickly as possible," said
Dr. Wilbur-Tincher, director
of educational services.
WITHIN TWO WEEKS
"Students involved can expect
a corrected report within
the next two weeks. A corrected
list will be sent automatically
to the proper dean,
ths idean of student affairs and
the dean of women."
As yet there is no way of
By SUSAN FOY
estimating if the mix-up was
widespread or limited.
' 'All classes in which a
misreported grade was brought
to our attention are being
checked by the registrar's
staff," Tincher said
Students with legitimate
reason to believe they were
to receive an A instead of a
C should check with the Registrar's
Office.
Dr. Tincher explained the
process by which grades are
recorded.
Names and grades are
called out from the professor's
grading list and recorded
on a card. Cards receiving
A grades are placed in a.bin,
cards receiving B grades. in
another, and so on.
BIN MIX-UP
The bin is then taken to
the key punching machine to
be punched. It seems that a
bin of A cards were punched
as C cards.
' 'A new system which will
eliminate such errors as this
will be used in the future,"
Tincher said. .
and "University Atmosphere
and Fraternities."
The principal speaker this
afternoon, Mrs. Gordon, is a
native of Mississippi and an
alumna of Chi Omega Fraternity
in which she has served
as a national officer. Until
last year when she assumed
her present position, she was
LSU Dean of Women.
NATIONAL OFFICIALS
Two national officials, an
Auburn faculty moderator, and
an Auburn student will serve
on each panel.
Discussing fraternities and
junior colleges will be E.
Garth Jenkins, assistant
executive director of Pi
Kappa Alpha Fraternity and
former Auburn advisor to fraternities;
Mrs. Thomas G.
Graham, former national director
of collegiate membership
development for Alpha
Chi Omega Sorority; moderator
Bert Hitchcock of Sigma
Nu Fraternity, assistant Auburn
admissions officer; and
(See page 2, column 1)
AUBURN FAVORITES RETURN WITH NEW SHOW
For Full Details on Lettermen See Story on Page 2.
•=:>:>•¥
Candidate Plx Due
Pictures of candidates for
the spring election must be
submitted to the Plainsman
no later than April 3. The mug
shots will be used for the special
election supplement to
published April 12. There
will be no extension on the
deadline.
Pictures should be turned
in at the Plainsman Office,
Langdon Hall, in appropriately
identified envelopes.
If there is any difficulty
about the pictures, please
contact Kay Donahue or
Bruce Nichols at the Plainsman
(ext. 4131).
loveliest Of The Plains
Of Sprief And Blossomed Beoety
Spring is a time for fresh new images of life: smiles,
soft blonde hair, brown eyes, dogwood blossoms. She's
Lynn Buckner, a bona fide turner of young men's fancies;
and she's heralding warm weather, shirtwaist prints,
bermuda shorts, sunbathing, ice cream cones, and all
the other elements of the Auburn spring. Lynn is a
member of Chi Omega sorority, a resident of Montgomery,
and a freshman in Science and Lit. The attractive harbinger
of spring is a resident of Dorm A.
2-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30,1967
Continued From Page One . . .
Confabs Lead News
Greek forum . . .
Miss Betty Stewart of Alpha
Delta Pi Sorority, secretary
of the Auburn student body.
The panel examining the
purposes of Panhellenic and
IPC will include Mrs. J.
Rodney Harris, director of
projects for Alpha Omicron
Pi Sorority; Robert J. Miller,
executive secretary of . Phi
Delta Theta; moderator Mrs.
Sam Turnip seed of Alpha
Delta Pi Sorority, Auburn
Panhellenic advisor; and
Lettermen End
Greek Week
With Concert
The popular singing trio,
the Lettermen, will bring
1967 Greek Week activities
to a close at 8:15 tonight
in the Student Activities
Building.
Tickets for the show,
sponsored by Panhellenic
and the Interfraternity Council,
will be available to students
and faculty in the
Union Building lobby today
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. , according
to Ebby Oakley IFC
chairman for the concert.
The admission price is $1.50.
At intermission, 1966Greek
Goddess Dale Hays will
crown her successor, elected
by fraternity men, from a
field of 13 sorority-sponsored
candidates.
Jim Pike, Bob Engemann,
and Tmy Dutala, The Letter-men,
established themselves
in the music world with the:
first big hit single "The Way
You Look Tonight." Since
then, they have developed
their style into what music
critics call the "unique, richly
woven blend of folk-lore
ballad harmony and popular
"interpretation" which has
made them one of the most
popular recording groups in
America today.
Among their numerous recording
album successes are
"The Lettermen in Concert,"
"Once Upon A Time,"
and "A Lettermen Kind of
Love."
The trio has made recent
television appearances on
the Dean Martin Show, the Red
Skelton Hour, and the H>lly-wood
Palace. They also perform
regularly in night clubs
and on college campuses
•throughout the nation..
former Auburn IFC President
Max Richburg of Phi Gamma
Delta.
Examining the university
atmosphere and fraternities
will be Mrs. John Shoemaker,
national rush director for
Transfer Penalty
Cancelled
A penalty of additional
hours required to graduate
will no longer be imposed
for curriculum changes, according
to Wilbur Tincher,
director of educational services.
Prior to this change, a
student transferring from
one curriculum to another
requiring fewer hours had his
graduation requirement in the
new curriculum increased in
proportion to the number of
quarters completed in the
prior curriculum.
The new policy deletes
this requirement penalty for
students who change curri-culums.
The change became
effective this quarter and
may effect students who are
eligible for graduation soon.
Students affected by this
policy change who are near
graduation are urged to
check with the registrar as
to their present status,
Tincher said. This includes
potential June graduates who
have already had a final
credit check.
Delta Delta Delta; Sidney F.
Boutwell of Kappa Alpha
Order, Vanderbilt Univdrsity
Dean of Men; moderator Lt.
Roger Coates of the Naval
Science Department and advisor
to Sigma Alpha Fpsilon
Fraternity at Auburn; and
Plainsman editor Jerry Brown
of Alpha Gamma Rho Fraternity.
The forum chairmen urged
all Auburn students, members
and non-members of the Greek
community, to take advantage
of the forum opportunities today.
"Panhellenic and IFC
have invested much time and
money in the program this
year. We are fortunate i to
have a fine group of speakers,
but if students don't take an
active part, then the money
and effort have been wasted,"
commented Sledge.
A dinner for invited guests
following the afternoon's activities
will feature a summary
of the forum by the Rev.
James Woodson of the Trinity
Episcopal Church in Auburn.
The Lettermen concert and
crowning of the 1967 Greek
Goddess at 8:15 in the Student
Activities Building will
climax activities of the 1967
Greek Week. (See related
stories.)
Religious Affairs . ..
whom are professional scientists
and engineers.
Kuhrt is a trustee of Bar-rington
College, a member
of the advisory committee to
the School of Engineering,
University of Hartford, and a
member of the American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics
and the Scientific
Research Society of America.
Greek Goddess . ..
paign tactics consisted primarily
of speeches and appearances
at fraternity houses
during the meal hours.
Present Greek Goddess
Dale Hays will tap the winner
from among the nominees who
are Marsha Argo, nominated
by Delta Zeta; Ginny Bender,
Delta Delta Delta; Nancy
Brown, Alpha Chi Omega;
Ellen Bruce, Alpha Gamma
Delta; Janna Carruth, Alpha
Delta Pi; Carolyn Colvard,
Kappa Delta; Darlene DuBois,
Pi Beta Phi; Mary Carolyn
Gruber, Phi Mu; Gloria Huber,
Kappa Alpha Theta; Carta
Lauruhn, Alpha Omicron Pi;
Joan McCohnell, Zeta Tau
Alpha; Becky Page, Chi O-mega;
and Marilyn Whitaker,
Kappa Kappa Gamma.
ODK Alumni
All faculty and staff g
| members of ODK and Blue |
:•:• Key honoraries are invited g
Sto an alumni banquet on g
f: Monday, April 24. The eve- %
:•; ning will feature a talk by §
S Federal Judge John God-|
;j:bold. If interested in at-x
£ tending, contact Lt. Roger g
•:•; Coates at Extension4365 org.
| Dean Howard Strong at Ex-i;:
1: tension 4302. £
Annual Village Fair
Becomes Workshop
ByROYSUMMERFORD
A workshop to establish and improve junior college
student governments will replace Village Fair this year.
Top students from each of the state's junior colleges
have been invited to attend the workshop April 15.
"We hope that a by-product of these meetings will
This week Associated Women Students installed officers for next year. Seated from
left are past president Frances Tully; Corinne Ham, president; Laurie Cater, vice-president;
Genie Lee, secretary. Standing from left are Ginger Van Hooser, social
chairman; Anita Bridges, AWS contact; Caroline Sprague, town representative; and
Carol Carter, treasurer.
ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING
CERTIFIES
THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING
-SPECIAL-Every
Wednesday
AT
GLENDEAN SHOPPING CENTER ONE-HOUR
MARTINIZING
MIDWAY PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER
ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING
OPELIKA ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING
110 S. 8th St.
STUDENT AND FACULTY MEMBERS
WITH I.D. CARDS SEE AND TRY
THIS FABULOUS OFFER:
Long Garments Beautifully Cleaned and Pressed
each 96c
Short Garments each 48c
3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE OH REQUEST
Shirts Laundered and finished 5 for SI.10
A LITTLE EXTRA FOR HANGERS
AT ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING
SWDMS AHD STAFF JHHUfRS
To take advantage of our Wednesday Special, you must
show your ID. 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 theregular price. We will
not change the price on our ticket.
PARKING NO PROBLEM
Don't fire until you see the
whites of their eyes-William
Prescott
'Tis not the drinking that is
to be blamed, but the excess-
John Selden
Marriage is a desperate
thing-John Selden
O brave world, that has
suchpeople in't!-Shakespeare
spring classic
The print is flowers, small but clearly
recognizable, firmly themselves,
scattered with decorative
initial letters. The
cotton dress is a well-known
LADYBUG, tucked in
front, pan-collared,
hopsack-belted, crisp but
graceful. Baby Blue,
Candy Pink, Fresh Green.
Buttercup. 3 to 15. $19.95
Also: Swiasiits, Skirts,
Nrnadis, Tops
flank town and country
fashions
Hmmm*»»»Hom
The tantalizing aroma of smoked hams loosed the
purse strings at the Block and Bridle Club's second
annual country cured ham sale, held here March 23.
Spirited bidding ran the grand champion ham to $80, the
reserve champion to $53, and the average for the 38
passed $31. Tony Otts, left, from Graham in Randolph
County, cured the 18-pound ham that was judged grand
champion of the show, andCharles Rowell, right, Southern
United Life Insurance Co., Montgomery, bid the top
price of $80. Reserve championship went to Roger Hand,
Block and Bridle Club president from Heflin. It was bid
in at $53 by Hooper Stockman's Supply, Montgomery.
be to interest these top
students in Auburn," said
Jimmy Fuller, project
chairman.
Village Fair was abolished
last fall as it did
not seem to fulfill its purpose
of reaching potential
students. The workshop will
provide a more informal pro^
gram aimed at the increasing
number of junior college students
who plan to transfer
toother schools later.
"The program will consist
of registration of guests,
introductory remarks by student
government officers, a
luncheon and open discussion
of junior college and university
problems. The visiting
students may also attend
the Alpha Psi Roundup and
the spring concert also
scheduled for April 15.
"We experimented with a
program similar to this last
year, and we were able to
offer some aid to some junior
colleges that were trying to
draft student constitutions.
When Village Fair was cancelled,
this seemed like a
good alternate program,"
gaid Fuller.
Dean of Student Affairs
James E. Foy, who has
actively supported the junior
collegeprogram, gave reasons
for the University placing
more emphasis on junior
college transfers. "If the
trend continues, transfer
students will far outnumber
freshmen here. Auburn hasa
limit of 2,500 entering freshmen,
but no limit on the number
of transfer students we
may enroll."
New School Of Business
To Open Next September
By ED GOUEDY
News Editor
The School of Business will be added as Auburn's
10th undergraduate school in September, according to
President Philpott.
The school will incorporate the present department
of economics and business
administration and related
areas in an attempt to provide
a more comprehensive
curriculum in these
areas.
The University foresees no
immediate problems for students
who will be transferred
from Science and Literature
to the new school and expects
everything to go smoothly
next fall.
"Actually, this has been
in the planning stages for
some time," President Philpott
said Monday. "The
recommendation was made in
1963 that we add a School
of Business, both by University
people and sources outside
the University. Right
now we have a good program,
but not a professional program."
MORE COURSES
There are a number of areas
in the economics department
that are not as complete as
they could be. For example,
the University at present offers
only one course in either
banking or advertising. With
the addition of the new school
more courses could be offered
in both these areas.
Ironically, the delay in setting
up the school was itself
a matter of economics-or more
precisely, money.
GO AHEAD
"When I came here in 1965
it was estimated that it would
cost an additional $200,0(55
to set up a new school,"
Philpott continued. "Now,
with the additional appropriation
from the Legislature,
we can go ahead with our
plans.
"Until now we just haven't
had the money."
SEEKDEAN
Dr. Philpott appointed Dr.
Wilford S. Bailey, vice president
for Academic Affairs, to
work with Drs. Harold E.
Klontz and Raymond W. Rit-land
in making recommendations
for the new dean. Klontz
and Ritland were selected by
the faculty of the department
of economics and business
administration.
NO LIMIT
"These men have no limit
on whom to look at or where
to look," Dr. Philpott said.
"We just want the best man
they can find for the job. If
necessary, I hope they'll go
all over the.world."
The new school will eventually
be housed in Thach and
Tichenor Halls, which presently
house the Schools of
Education and Science and
Literature. Those two schools
will move to the new Haley
Center, currently under construction
near Cliff Hare Stadium.
Dr. Philpott stressed, how
ever, that these are all tentative
plans, since Haley will
not be completed for a couple
of years. Right now the most
pressing problem is finding
office space for the new dean,
whoever he may be.
Science and Literature,
the largest school on campus,
is expected to lose: about
1,500 students to the new
school when it becomes operational.
Amendment
On Ballot
An amendment to the student
body constitution will be
a part of the ballot for
spring quarter elections. The
addition to the duties of the
student body president resulted
from the new charter
for the Board of Student Allocations
which was approved
by President Philpott last
quarter.
The addition will be inserted
in the place of the
present article 15 and article
15 will become article 16".
The proposed amendment will
appear on the ballot as
follows.
Student Body Constitution
Article VI—Executive
Branch
Section 4. The President of
the Student Body shall have
the following duties andpow-ers.
(15) Call a meeting of the
outgoing and incoming
student members of the
Allocations Board to
to discuss the procedure
of the board. The
president shall invite
the "dean of student affairs
to advise and
discuss the procedures
and budget for
the coming year.
Sport Coupe—comes in convertible version, too.
SS396
Suddenly, you're elsewhere
One drive in an SS 396 and you'll find yourself
committed to a new way of changing the
scene. Chevrolet took its spirited new 325-
horsepower V8 and teamed it with a special
3-speed full-synch transmission, put it all in a
sleek Fisher Body . . . and there it is: Quick-
Size departure from whatever's been boring
you.
CHEVROLET
OF EXCCUCNCf
There's a 350-horsepower version available
for that extra kick and, as you'll quickly discover,
the Turbo Hydra-Matic is the most
advanced transmission Chevrolet has ever
offered. Shift it yourself, or put it on "D" and
forget it.
SS 396. Wastes very little time getting you
where you'd rather be.
Try it now during Chevy's Bonanza Sale at your Chevrolet dealer's
3-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
Philpott Names Two Department Heads
President Harry M.
Philpott has announced
the appointment of two new
department heads in the
School of Science and
Literature.
Dr. John Hunter Peak
has been appointed to head
the department of foreign
languages and Dr. Thomas
Jack Carrington has been
named the new head of the
department of geology.
Both appointments become
effective August 1.
Dr. Carrington is presently
chairman of the geology department
at Birmingham-
Southern College where he
has been a member of the
faculty since 1961. He has
additional experience as a
consultant to industry.
A native of Amarillo,
Texas, Dr. Carrington holds
the B.S. and M.S. in geology
from the University of Kentucky,
and the Ph.D. in geology
from Virginia Polytechnic
Institute.
Dr. Carrington has served
with each of the three military
branches, most recently
as a member of the
U.S. Army Counterintelligence
Corps.
Cliff's Notes can keep
you from fallingbehind
and failing to understand
classic literature.
ForJuliusCaesar,
and all of Shakespeare's
plays, Cliff's
Notes give you a complete
explanation and
summary of every
scene - in language
you can understand.
Don't worry about your
literature grades - let
Cliff's Notes help you
improve them. OVER
125 TITLES covering
frequently assigned
plays and novels.
Iat your bookseller
or write for
free title list
JM CUFFS NOTES, INC.
' Jbj t tav •• t•t'h" •innyy Saitaattiioenn Luinnccoi ln, Nibr. 68505
CliffS .Holes.
< C O « ' 0 « « t | D
The author of several publications.
Dr. Carrington is
a charter member and past
president of the Alabama
Geological Society. He is
presently the chairman of
the membership committee
for that organization as well
as for the American Institute
of Mining Engineers. He is a
member of several other professional
and honor societies.
He is married to the former
Ethel Clare Moss of Nichol-asville,
Ky., and they have
two children, Mary Emily,
5, and Robert Moss, 3.
Dr. Peak, who has served
as chairman of the department
of foreign languages and
professor of Spanish at
Eastern Kentucky University
since 1964, will assume his
new position on August 1.
His selection was with the
assistance of a five-member
screening committee author-
Dr. Peak Dr. Carrington
DAMES CLUB
Student wives are invited
to play bridge with the Dames
Club at 7:30 p.m. in the Union
Building Cafeteria. Dr. Carl
Rehling, state toxicologist,
will talk on ' IThe Wonders
of Crime" at the Dames' regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
April 12 at the Social Center.
Girls will give up college kicks for a career. Boys for men. But there
are some things they refuse to give up. Like a casual they can count
on. Smart and assured styling. Faithful craftsmanship and comfort.
That's why they never give up their love for Oldmaine Trotters. If
/ou're a girl who won't give up, see our nationally advertised
:ollection of Oldmaine Trotters. And give yourself the greatest.
The Bootery
Antrum's Most Cnmpletp Shoe Center
North College Street Phone 887-8411
Open all day Wednesday
CIRCLE K
Circle K Club will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. in Room
213 of the Union Building.
All interested in becoming
members are invited.
ized to recommend nominees.
A native of Richmond,
Ky., Dr. Peak has held teaching
positions at Kentucky
Military Institute, the University
of North Carolina,
Davidson College, and the
University of Kentucky. He
has additional experience in
public schools.
now in paperback
Definitive Book
on the
Kennedy Years
• Pulitzer Prize-winning
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• Winner of National
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"The book we have all
been waiting for."
—Tfce N»w York Timet
Wherever paperbacks are sold
-only * i . e s
Fawcett Publications, Inc., Greenwich, Conn.
From 1955 to 1958, Dr.
Peak was director of three
binational institutes in Peru
and Argentina under the
direction of the U.S. Information
Agency. Out of this
and other work, he has
developed anumber of articles
and lectures. He is also the
author of "Social Drama in
Nineteenth Century Spain,"
published by the University
of North Carolina Press.
Dr. Peak holds the A.B.
degree from Hampden-
Sydney College, and the M.A.
and Ph.D. from the University
of North Carolina. He has
also studied at the National
University of Mexico.
He is president of Richmond
IrbTch Club and holds membership
in numerous professional
and honor societies.
YOUR BEAUTY
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AUBURN
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OPELIKA, ALABAMA
THE AUBURN PUINSMMI
Jerry Brown
Editor
Hazel Satterfield
Business Manager
ACP Rated 'All-American'
Associate Editor-Peggy Tomlinson; Managing Editor-Bruce Nichols; Assistant
Managing Editor-David Housel; Editorial Assistant-Susan Foy; News
Editors-Lyn Scarbrough, Lee Sentell, Ed Gouedy; Copy Editor-Ann Hollings-worth;
Features Editor-Kay Donahue; Technical Editor-Jim Lord; Sports Editor-
Guy Rhodes; Assistant Copy Editor-Taffy Wallace; Assistant News Editors-
Pam Peartree, Roy Summerford; Assistant Feature Editor-Linda Newton; Assistant
Technical Editor-Barbara Holt; Art Editor-Terry Hull; Assistant Sports
Editors-Bob Buisson, Jim Dykes; Advertising Manager-Ray Whitley; Route
Manager-Allen Reed; Circulation Manager-Harper Gaston; Business Secretary-
VirginiaTherrell; Photographers-Roger Hull, Curtis Roberts.
The Auburn Plainsman is the student newspaper of Auburn University. The
paper is written and edited by responsible students. Editorial opinions are those
of the editors and columnists. They are not necessarily the opinions of the
administration, Board of Trustees, or student body of Auburn University. Offices
located in. Langdon Hall. Entered as second-class matter at the post office in
Auburn, Alabama. Subscription rates by mail are SI for three months and S3 for
a full year. Circulation 11,000 weekly. Address all material to The Auburn
Plainsman, P.O. Box 832, Auburn, Alabama-36830.
Waiting For Wallace
We join with the nation in baited
anticipation of what Governor Lurleen
Burns Wallace will say to the Alabama
Legislature tonight.
Her speech, which will be carried
on state-wide radio and television,
will be in response to the most sweeping,
most unprecedented, federal
court ruling in the history of the integration
question.
After hot summers, sit-ins, and
attempts to quietly integrate Southern
schools, we have finally come to the
granite core of the dilemma: will the
federal government take over completely
to enforce the Supreme Court
ruling?
The federal judges, in effect, have
taken over the local school systems,
made them fall, under the state department
of education, and generally
over-stepped every boundary in seeing
that the order to integrate the schools
is carried out.
Because the heart of this great
crisis is more than the emotionalism
of the past, Governor Wallace has the
opportunity to assume an unparalleled
role of leadership in championing the
rights of the state in the face of the
most threatening edict in recent U.S.
history.
Her message and actions that follow
will have to be strong and stable:
they cannot be wild Wallacisms thrown
fruitlessly into political winds. We
have had too much of that already.
If Governor Wallace expects to
gain the leadership of the South and
the attention of the nation, her message
must first have a breath of
American loyalty. She must present a
plan to cope with the integration
question in some way that will legally
satisfy the Negro and, at the same
time, be a small confession that
some Wallace moves in the past have
not been in the best interest of the
colored citizen.
But that should be as far as she
goes.
Her message, if it is to be a historical
one, should also sear the
federalists who are trying, with unconstitutional
tactics, to bend the
states into a national whole that
seems a mere dictation of limited
national interests.
It is, to be sure, asking for fire in
ice. But it can become a compromise
without a concession and a rallying
point for a pendulum swing back from
excess federal control.
Mrs. Wallace-if she takes over as
head of the state school system and
serves as sole state spokesman-can
make a strong case for the states,
and individual rights.
And if she speaks with honesty
and maturity she can attract the
sentiments of a sizable portion of the
American people.
A Good Greek Glance
In days when the Greek system is
being so readily damned, the Fraternity
Forum and annual Greek Week-now
in session-are good showcases
for Auburn fraternities and sororities.
Dispelling "images," the Greek
groups have gone out of their way to
enlighten the campus on the merits
of their systems. They have made
mistakes, surely, but for the complete
picture-no parties, beer, or irrespon-sibility-
this week's conferences are
providing talks, entertainment, and
inside discussions which are also
aimed at helping the Greeks themselves
over stormy seas.
Proven by years to be constructive
in preparing young men and women
to meet the demands of society,
Greek organizations can continue to
serve as laboratories for growing up.
Give them a good looking over.
You'll probably like what you see.
The Great Grade Error
The easy mistake of a tray of "A"
cards being punched by the computer
as " C ' s " is ample reason for a plea
to the Academic Council to request
that professors post final grades.
If students care enough to check
before leaving, then they, at least,
will know enough to claim their rightful
grade. In this case, most people
were fortunate that the "A" was exchanged
for the " C . " If it had been
only a one grade deviation, most
people would have shrugged it off as
a poor grade on the final test, and
never have known that they really
made one grade higher. Another point
this time was the widespread mistake-one
or two people would never have
known.
These are crucial draft days when
every grade counts.
The Student Senate, and the Academic
Council, should begin a move
to require professors to post final
grades as insurance against such
mistakes.
The UHor S g t r t l . . .
The Slow, Sad Death
Of Charley Brown
By Jerry Brown
There was a time-back when Elvis
Presley was singing "Love Me Tender"
Indthe 1954 school mix decision was confined to Little Rock-when
a now meaningful facet of the American conscience was
in its embryo stages.
Charley Brown, now a venerable saint of the American
people, was just beginning
to rear his balding head in
the comic strip "Peanuts."
At first, the poor little
fellow was scoffed at. Nobody
loves a loser, theysaid,
and Charley Brown lost at
everything. Before long, the
whole country was beginning
to quietly accept Charley as
an undeniable part of their
egos. He had become an
identifying mark, and as
much a part of our everyday
lives as Sunday school, the
girl next door, and apple
pie.
The average American
could get a message from
Charley Brown-not a high
flown sermon or a bitter editorial-
just comfort in knowing
that we're not really
alone in being losers. After
the tribulations of our often
ant-like existence, Charley
Brown's sterling pitching
record, the pure hell in Lucy,
and even Pig Pen's cloud of
dust come to have a strong
meaning.
Snoopy, too, has gained
aplace as number one Beagle
in the hearts of "Peanuts"
lovers. His epic rise to fame
has centered largely around
his exploits with the Red
Baron-that symbolic dastard
who is real in the minds of
almost every Walter Mitty
American who nurses a
grudge against a mean boss,
a hateful neighbor, a campus
bully, or an ideological
villain.
Snoopy blended well with
the whole set of Peanuts
characters to give Americans
something they had never
had: a mirror for the everyday
American, no matter what his
background-from Ph.D.'s to
ditchdiggers.
But for all his reflecting on
life in these United States
and for all the comfort he
and his friends provide us
common folk-Charley Brown
is becoming a victim of those
same people-and it seems
that the little fellow is being
innocently swept over the
brink.
A recent article in Life
magazine says that Charley
and Snoopy have finally won;
but they've really finally
lost-or begun to lose.
You can see the murderers
of Charley on the sweaters,
hear them on the ' 'Red Baron"
record, find them in the
books Shultz has poured out,
and see them in the crass
clamor of image builders who
have flung the comic strip
into every sort of commercial
cranny. Like Davy Crockett,
Elvis, the hula . hoop, and
Milton Berle, Charley and
Snoopy will take their places
on the American shelf.
There is no ample antidote
for overdose-and that's what
the American public is getting.
When Charley fades so will
something that once had a
meaningful essence; in his
own words we can only say:
"Curses" "Good Grief" and
"Rats."
And leave it at that.
Daydreaming Ron, Enjoying it less?...
Professors, Classes,
And Sleepy Students
By Susan foy
The professor leaned back in his chair
and read his lesson quietly to the class.
The sound of his voice wavered over his desk to the front
row where a girl was busily writing-a letter to her boyfriend.
By the time it reached a certain boy on the second row, it
had dwindled to a muffled drone.
This boy dropped his pen. structed tests that if a stu-
He looked out of the window
at a truck that was driving by.
He remembered how interesting
the course had
sounded in the catalogue.
He decided his mistake must
had been in not checking
out the instructor before he
signed up for the course.
He glanced around the
room. The empty desks reflected
the number of students
who decided sleeping at
home was more honest than
sleeping in class.
His eye stopped at the
girl he had talked to after
class that first day.
"Don't worry about coming
to class, his lectures aren't
on any tests," she had said.
It had turned out that she
was right. The boy picked
up his pen again and started
doodling on his notebook. He
began to list the good teachers
he had had over the past
few years.
There was the one who
sang ballads to the class,
the one that paced up and
down the rows as he lectured.
There was the one who,
when the class interest
seemed to lag, told fascinating
tales about his personal
experience, and the
one who was so full of his
subject that his students
often wondered if he ever
stopped lecturing long enough
to breathe.
There was the teacher
who gave such well-con-dent
studied the lectures, he
could do well in the course.
And the one who didn't
have to force his students to
come to class, because none
of them would have missed
his humor for the world.
But there had been poorer
teachers, too.
There had been at least
one who thought he was
smarter than his students
and seized every opportunity
to prove it. He squelched
interest in his subject by
answering questions sarcastically
and disagreeing with
timidly submitted opinions.
There was the teacher who
told his class the first day
that he didn't really want to
teach the course, so not to
worry about class too much
and everybody would get a
good grade, but not to tell
his colleagues he was doing
this.
There was the one who
simply couldn't teach and resented
his students for the
fact. He was the one most
fastidious about cuts and
lateness, too.
There was one who had
been a stimulating lecturer,
but whose tests had been
more like guessing games
than serious efforts to see if
his teaching was effective.
Suddenly the bell sounded
through the boy's daydreaming.
He picked up his books
and sighed.
Tomorrow he would sit on
the front row and try again.
CAMUS UNDERCURRENT
University of Alabama
football fans get pleasure
from a joke saying that Paul
Bryant called Ralph Jordan
at 7 a.m. once finding that
Jordan was not in the office.
This indicates, according
to the Tide fans, that Auburn
doesn't take their football
seriously.
The Plainsman may have
discovered a far more serious
flaw at the University at
Tuscaloosa. An 8 a.m. phone
call to one of Alabama's top
administrative aides got only
the comment that he would
be in the office at 9. President
Philpott and his aides
get to the office at 8 a.m
maybe the people at the University
of Alabama don't
take their education serious-iy-
Roadblocks...
%& Student-Advisor
Dealings Need
Much Change
By lyn Scarbrough
C R A P GAAAE-Sincerily
. • •
Rusk At Tuscaloosa—
The Common Touch
By Brute Nichols
As he crossed the Foster Auditorium
stage-moving with the strangely timid,
womanishly soft steps that reflect his low-pressure manner
and bely his personal power-Secretary of State Dean Rusk
warily surveyed his applauding Alabama audience.
Outside, he had encountered the demonstrators which dog
him everywhere. Now, inside,
and part of a more pleasant
environment, he visibly un-tensed,
and the characteristically
relaxed, rye expression
known to television
audiences crossed his face.
Minutes before, he had
come down into benighted
Tuscaloosa County, and moments
after his participation
in the University's "Emphasis
'67" foreign affairs
program, he would be jetting
back to Washington for a
governor's conference and departure
for Guam shortly
thereafter.
But he displayed little
wear or impatience from the
pressures he endures. When
this busiest of U.S. cabinet
officials finished his remarks,
he stood courteously,
ingratiatingly answering
questions put to him by
fuzzy faces backed too often
by uneloquent minds and
fuzzy reasoning. Some quiz-zers
were so caught up in
the spot-lighted grandeur of
their moment that they rambled
on not expecting, and
not wanting, any answer from
the secretary.
These questioners and
demonstrators stole the headlines,
but the most fascinating
happening of the evening
was this Rusk manner-in
action in the flesh.
Many have written about
the Ruskian air, and his
television appearances have
not been bare of it; but these
previews do not lessen its
impact on a fresh eye-witness.
To be sure, the Georgia-born,
North Carolina-educated
secretary enjoyed a largely
sympathetic audience in a
familiar atmosphere on the
University campus. Everyone
knew his positions on
the issues and the ammunition
which he uses to defend
them, and mostlargely agreed
with him already. Of course,
his logic was sterling; but
his powers of persuasion
went beyond words. Rusk is
an appealing personality.
To begin with, he looks
benign and approachable,
like a favorite uncle. The
pomposity which characterizes
many eminent public
officials is absent, and his
speech and actions are almost
shy.
He seems very much an
ordinary man who has risen
to extraordinary heights without
losing the common touch,
and he very successfully
communicates sincerity, a
quality which the administration
has neglected. Rusk
is very credible.
That is not to say, however,
that he is not a smooth
politician. Like an old pol,
he patted and smoothed the
reputations of Congressman
Selden and Senator Sparkman;
and with a graceful bit of
humor, offering to allow the
two to shake a finger in
his face if it would help
them politically, he embarked
on a 45-minute rambling over
U.S. foreign policy.
He had no text prepared.
He spoke from a small piece
of note paper and he completed
his pacification of
the audience when he said,
"I want to speak informally,
as if we were gathered for a
bull session."
He is. this pleasantly
curious mixture of the urbane
and the ordinary. But the
common touch in this sophisticated,
working intellectual
is his most striking quality
and his most effective rhetorical
tool. Secretary Rusk is
a walking testimonial to an
old verity: the truly extraordinary
man is truly the
ordinary man.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
Uncertainty surrounding
the student-advisor relationship
at Auburn is unfortunate
and in many cases unneces-.
sary. Too many roadblocks
stand in the way of the student
wishing to get cooperative
administrative advice.
Although difficulties arise
in only a
small roinor-nity
of
cases,steps
should be
taken to
remove their.
cause.
Students in
s e v e r a l
schools do
not know
who to talk to about future
schedules, course or curriculum
change, or probable
date of graduation.
In some cases when students
inquire at the proper
office, they are met with a
lack of courtesy from thelady
behind the desk, an unable
to talk to anyone, and leave
even more confused than before.
When they are able to
speak to someone, theirpleas
often fall on totally unsympathetic
ears.
These conditions have
caused students to miss their
proposed graduation date or
have to remain in school extra
quarters to take additional
courses.
In several schools there is
no specific advisor or dean'
to whom the student is assigned.
In many cases he
must talk to a different person
each time. Unfamiliarity
with the individual thus becomes
a burden.
Of course, it isunderstand:
able that in a university with
13,000 students it is impossible
for advisors tc spend a
great deal of time with each
individual. Consultants cannot
be expected to remember-each
student's problems.
Also, we can't forget that';
an equal responsibility rest s i
on the student. If he has a^:
non-sincere attitude or in-1
quires for the sole reason of t"
creating chaos, then he has ;
no gripe.
But if he goes to his dean's !
office with a reasonable
problem, whether once a day;
or once a quarter, he deserves
a warm welcome and.
fair treatment.
It would be a good idea j
for each school which has j
not already done so to assign 1
a certain number of students j
to a specific advisor. Al- ;
though a large student-ad- ;
visor ratio would still exist, \
some of the doubt would be j
removed from students, and I
the advisors would be able I
to give a more concerted ef- j
fort toward assisting with
difficulties.
If students periodically re- •
ceived confirmation of their I
standing in relation to grad-1
uation and back courses I
which must be taken, this j
would alleviate some of the -
problem.
If many staffs are unuer- •
manned then it could be pos- •
sible to employ additional •
help to clear away much of I
the trouble.
The situation is not as de- •*
plorable in some places as
in others. But the case of;
the few rotten apples spoiling
the whole barrel should
not be allowed to develop -
here.
This is not intended to be
a complete condemnation of *
of the dean-advisor-student
relationship. It should again j
be noted that the problems '•
arise in a minority of cases I
and that the vast majority of I
faculty and staff members 1
are understanding and fair, j
However, there should be I
the realization that the uni- X
versity system operates for I
the expressed purpose of stu-1
dent education. As long as a'.
student has an honest, sin- I
cere problem and seeks as- *
sistance at the proper place, '
he should be met with a help-1
ing hand.
The road which the unsure \
student should take must be I
made explicitly clear and I
free of cumbersome diffi- I
culties.
5-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
letters Discuss Riley, Defense Of Infirmary, And Teacher Evaluation
toy Riley's Column
Criticized By Vol Fan
Editor, The Plainsman:
In reference to Mr. Riley's
sports column on March 2,
1967 containing various comments
and observations on
the University of Tennessee
basketball team, we think
certain facts have been ignored.
The article reported in
an accompanying clipping from
The Montgomery Advertiser-
Journal March 5, 1967 emphasizes
a few of the facts to
which we are referring.
Mr. Riley referred to the
Vols and Coach Ray Mears as
being ' 'bush league." According
to Webster's New
World Dictionary, bush league
is defined as "...a small or
second rate minor leagus..."
With UT leading the SEC,
does Mr. Riley mean the SEC
is a bush league? SEC
coaches gave Ray Mears
three votes as best coach in
the league. Does this prove
Ray Mears is bush?
Mr. Riley criticized Ten
nessee's poor hospitality to
opponents. What about Auburn's
hospitality when
Coach Mears had to send
Widby and Buerwinkle to the
dressing room before the game
was over for their own protection?
Riley made reference tc
"near riots" involving Tennessee
teams in the past two
years. We think a closer investigation
would reveal the
Florida and Vanderbilt "mis-unde
rstandings" occurred-not
in Knoxville-but on the opponents'
court. These were no
doubt results of the home
crowd at these games.
The recent Tennessee-
Auburn gams could be des
crjbed as a near riot. We wonder
how many times Auburn
has been involved in similar
near riots on their home court.
Riley called Ron Widby
bush. In the LSU gameT tton-nie
scored a record 50 points
and also set records for most
points scored in Tennessee's!
fieldhouse, most field goals
attempted in a game. He also
increased records he already
holds for most points scored
by a Vol in one season and
in a varsity career.:
He also led the rebounding
that night with 17, before
being taken out by Coach
Mears with 3:59 left in the
game. He has been All-SEC
in basketball for the past two
seasons.
Is it bush when this samei
man has been among the top
punters in the nation-not only
this year-but for : the past
three years?
Is it bush when this man
who has been mentioned on
various All-American teams
in both football and basketball,
also has lettered and
excelled in baseball and
golf?
We think that the Auburn
spirit is admirable, but should
the Auburn spirit be degraded
in compensating for a loss?
Mr. Riley was. supporting
the Auburn spirit-but was unnecessarily
degrading when he!
wrote the article about Vols.
We feel that the facts we
have presented prove Tennessee
basketball, Coach
Ray Mears, and Ron Widby
are definitely not bush.
Bill Testerman
U. of Tenn. '65 2 VM
Richard Daugherty
U. of Tenn. '66 2VM
Infirmary Is Defended
By Freshman Coed
Editor, the Plainsman:
I think it is time for someone
to speak out in defense
of Drake Infirmary and its
staff. It was with a great
deal of apprehension that I
entered the infirmary this
week. I had heard so many
stories and complaints about
the infirmary that I was'ac-tually
afraid to go. _
I was, however, pleasantly
surprised to find that throughout
my stay I was treated
with kindness, understanding
and the utmost care. At no
time did I find their services
in any way deficient.
Those who expect a luxury
filled holiday will, of course,
be sadly disappointed. I'll
be the first to admit that
John Hodges Drake Infirmary
doesn't quite equal one of
the Hilton hotels.
But students who come
simply to be treated for their
illnesses will, I think, be
satisfied with the results.
I certainly was.
Margaret A. Hester
1 SL
Speech Class Urges
Stronger Evaluation
Editor, the Plainsman:
We feel that the present
system of teacher evaluation
needs to be strengthened in
order to use more efficiently
the opinions and suggestions
of the students of Auburn. .
We feel that most students
and teachers have a negative
attitude about the present
system. This attitude is an
obstacle to constructive criticism
and teaching improvement.
This negative feeling
can be attributed to several
disadvantages which have
reduced the efficiency of the
teacher evaluation system.
Some of the obvious disadvantages
of the present
system are:
(1) The evaluation is not
compulsory for all teachers.
(2) The results of the evaluations
are not made readily
available to staff and
students.
(3) Often, the evaluations
are disregarded by the teacher,
and no action is taken
based on the results.
(4) Some students fear that
grade in a course will be
affected by the way in which
they evaluate the teacher.
After carefully studying
the disadvantages of the
present teacher evaluation
system, we have formulated
a possible, solution.
(1) Teacher evaluation
should be made compulsory
for all teachers.
(2) A board made up of both
students and teachers should
be organized to design the
questions that are used in
the teacher evaluation (at
the present time a committee
composed of only a few
students are working on
this problem). >
(3 > After the teacher evaluation
questions have been
designed, each teacher
should be given an opportunity
to offer suggestions
for improvement of thel system.
(4) The actual student-evaluation
of teachers should
be] a required par t of pre-registration,
and the results
should be compiled by the
computer.
(5) Next, a board in each
school made up of students
and school officials should
consider the results of the
evaluations and offer suggestions
to the Office of the
Dean.
(6) Finally, based upon the
evaluation results the top.
You have to
look for the
"W" because
it's silent.
Mr. Wrangler
for wreal sportswear.
The famous silent " W " : you
don't pronounce it, but you
must look for it if you want
sportswear that looks wright,
fits wright, feels wright. Made
wright, too—many in no-iron
fabrics treated with the wre-markable
Wranglok® permanent
press finish. Mr.
Wrangler sportswear is
here, on campus, in your size.
teachers in each school
should be published in the
Plainsman each quarter.
We feel that the plan outlined
above will make the
teacher evaluation system
more efficient. An efficient
teacher evaluation system
can be an invaluable aid to
both Auburn students and
teachers alike.
Marcus Hickson
Instructor, Speech 253
It's New—It's Fun
IT'S OPEN NOW
Auburn's STOP & GO
Automatic SOi Car Wash
Hagedorn's Dept. Store, Opelika
Hall's Men's Store, Opelika
Fair Dept. Store, Alexander City
Daniels, Tuskegee
B . • t % I _g_
3&£f
ALSO AVAILABLE:
Two boys for hand operated
car wash: 5 minutes, 25c
NEW: Spray wax for either
unit—25c
You remain comfortably seated in your car as Automatic
Car Wash makes two revolutions around car spraying
hot sudsy water under controlled pressure. Now, with
car washed, it makes two additional revolutions with warm
rinse water. Two minutes and you are out . . . and that
car looks great... all for only 501.
STOP AND GO
Auburn's Automatic Car Wash
364 W. Glenn Ave. —Across From Delta Chi Fraternity
HI UHH
TUI MW fOlK, iattrihai as • "fresfc, eicitief itw seead
!• fori mask," will oppoer f f ffte Sfedeaf Activities leifdiae
Meaday, April 3, i t 7:30 p.m. rickets at e • • $•/• ia fit
(kite leitfief; oderissfoa is $1.00.
Tie a reap fees erado several eppe areects fa reef iter ffte
Hid wit, aad era eider ceafracf fe Werd' Recent s of Caaada
aad 'Viiscoeaf' Hataiis ia ffte Veiled 5fates. Cerreaffy fftey ere
feariaf' ffte Seeffteesf, aad ftave appeared ftefere ttamis ef
1,500 ef F.5.U.; 2,000 ef f • • • • • City; aad 5,000 at Dayfeaa
leacft.
Tftis f reap ef eifftf cefleae sfedeafs freer ffte Uaharsitf
ef fliaaesefe aai Ce/erade Vaiversify will fte la Aeftera this
Meadey aifftf fe praseaf ffteir defifftffalfy differea f wares;
yeewoa'f waaf f a aafss iff.
6-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
Auburn Eyes Georgia To Break Slump
mmmv m - . .,.*»*"••. .*=.""-,. His! I
Hot, Cold Hitting Main Auburn Weakness;
Wins Over Georgia Key To Title Hopes
By LARRY MATSON
In their poorest start
since 1963, the Auburn
Tiger baseball team evened
its record at four wins
and four losses last Monday
against Alabama.
Jim Blauser, the victim
of poor scoring support,
was charged with his third
defeat of the season in the
Tigers' 3-0 loss to the Tide.
In an appearance against
Florida a week prior to the
Bama game, Blauser pitched
a three-hitter as Aubum
dropped a 3-1 decision to
the Gators.
The Tigers have been a
hot and cold hitting club in
rolling up twelve and thirteen
runs against FSU and Spring
Hill while dropping a 1-0 decision
to the Seminoles in
addition to their close losses
to Florida and Alabama.
When questioned about the
Auburn offense, Blauser
said, "It's just a matter of
the team getting together:
We've got the club that can
win it all. The team just
needed a kick in the pants
and the Alabama game may
have done i t . "
The Tigers opened the
season with an extended road
trip-the first such trip in
seven years-and now have
some of the more pivotal conference
games coming up at
home. The split with the
University of Florida in
Gainesville looms as an asset
in the Tiger title chase.
IMPORTANT GAMES
This week Auburn plays
Tiger
Topics
By GUY RHODES
Asphalt Jungle . . .
A few disgruntled student voices have been heard
recently concerning the lack of tennis facilities on
the Auburn campus.
But students are not the only ones sounding their
complaints. Tennis coach Luther Young has been
unable to hold an organized practice for the last
five weeks and feels that his team will go into their
opening match tomorrow "unprepared."
During construction of the new courts there has
been no place for the team to practice except for
two courts at the Auburn community center and some
in Camp Hill 20 miles away.
There is one consolation for the tennis team, however.
They will have matches at Mercer and
Florida State before their first home match next
Wednesday. Perhaps these matches will be enough
preparation to open the home season on a successful
note. In the meantime the netters can make their
daily jaunt out to the asphalt courts at the community
center to practice.
According to Buildings and Grounds superintendent
Colonel Funchess, the old courts were torn
down and their backstopping was moved to
the new courts before green topping was laid on them.
With this plan in effect the old, as well as the new
courts,have been unavailable for even varsity play.
The varsity-courts were to have been completed
yesterday, weather permitting. Courts, which will
be available to the student body, are scheduled to
be completed next week.
The new courts will be lighted and will be used
for recreational and intramural purposes at night.
Killer Schedule . . .
The Auburn basketball team finished with a fine
record of 17 wins and 8 losses, a record which
ranked with some of the top teams in the country.
A recent study entitled "Killer Schedules vs.
Pushover Schedules" shows that Auburn achieved
this record while playing the 27th toughest basketball
schedule in the nation.
Gordon White, professor of marketing at Wright
State University, authors the schedule ranking study.
The ranking does not consider the record of the
team involved but is based on the degree of toughness
of the team's schedule.
Professor White analyzed the schedules of 430
colleges and universities so that his study would
encompass a national cross section.
Southeastern Conference members faced the
strongest schedules of any area in the country,
with the exception of the Missouri Valley Conference.
Kentucky, perennial SEC champions, faced
the second toughest schedule of any team in the
nation.
Georgia is fourth, LSU eighth, and on down the
line to Mississippi's 32nd ranking.
These schedules ranked far ahead of such national
powers as North Carolina, Texas Western, and
Princeton.
The SEC teams have basically the same schedules
next season, and should continue to rank high in
Professor White's system.
With SEC football already recognized as perhaps
the toughest in the land, the strong schedules and
equally strong records could project SEC basketball
into recognition on par with the football program.
Georgia in single games on
Friday and Saturday in
Plainsmen Park. The Georgia
games are expected to
have a large bearing on the
SEC race. Auburn coach
Paul Nix feels that Gerogia,
'Florida, and Auburn are
the top teams in the Eastern
division and home victories
over Georgia could put
the Tigers off to a good
jump over the Gators and
Bulldogs for the division
crown.
Q.V. Lowe, an all SEC
selection last season, will
be back on the round for
Auburn against the Bulldogs,
Lowe has appeared in
only one game for the Tigers
this season and picked
up a win in that one stint.
(Photo by Roger Hull)
ALABAMA SLUGGER RAPS HIT IN 3-0 VICTORY OVER TIGERS
Sports Spectacular...
(Photo by Roger Hull)
Sports Spectacular Teresa Wise heads for the golf
course, rain or shine. The brown-haired blue-eyes Teresa
seldom breaks par, but she always has a large following.
She is a senior in Home Ec from Kinston. A member of
Kappa Alpha Theta, Teresa lives in Dorm 4.
Three Star Cagers Sign Pacts
Three top high school
basketball players from
surrounding states have
signed scholarships with
Aubum.
They are Jimmy Walker
and Joe Sigur of Atlanta
and Mike Scott of Clearwater.
Fla.
"We've been real lucky so
far," said Bill Lynn, head
basketball coach. "If we sign
(Continued on Page 8)
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OLIN L. HILL •DuPont trademark
SS®*SSft:S:ft:ft:.:ft:.:'"-:>-*>
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Wood Will Join
Dooley's Staff
Richard Wood, former Auburn
and professional quarterback,
has joined the University
of Georgia staff as an
assistant freshman coach*
Wood's duties will include
work with the varsity quar-.
terbacks.
Tiger Record At 4-4
After Extended Road Trip
With seven straight road games behind them, Auburn
finally returned home to start a three-game series with
Alabama and Georgia. The Alabama game marked the
first time that the two schools had met each other on
the diamond since 1960.
Prior to Alabama's game,
the Tigers had split with
Florida-winning the first
game 4-3 behind pitcher
Q.V. Lowe and losing the
second 3-1 despite the 3-
hit pitching of Auburn's
Jim Blauser. This split
could figure largely in the
SEC race, since this was the
first time in 4 years that Auburn
has been able to gain
a split in Gainesville.
Moving on to Tallahassee,
the Tigers routed Florida
State 12-7 with the help of
two home runs by Johnny
Straiton and one each by
Pete McKenzie and George
Simmons. Then Tuesday their
booming bats were silenced
1-0 which evened the Tigers'
record at two wins and two
losses.
MOBILE WEEKEND
Wednesday the team lost
to Springfield (Mass.) by a
6-3 margin and returned
home for practice and classes.
Last weekend in Mobile, the
Tigers blasted Spring Hill
(Continued on Page 8)
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7-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
Delta Chi, PJ's Capture Intramural Titles
DELTA CHI, CHAMPIONS OF THE INTRAMURAL FRATERNITY LEAGUE.
Pictured from left to right are starters: Harold Morgan, Otto Gaylord, Barry Hillmeyer,
Doug Cowart. (Photo by Roger Hull)
Career Opportunities
In All Phases
Of Marketing
• Advertising
• Sales Management • Merchandising
• Sales Promotion • Market Research
Join Sauter Laboratories, Inc. Program for Career
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Seniors Permanent employment. Gain extensive
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Juniors Summer employment. Get a head start
on your career before graduation. Gain valuable
sales and marketing experience.
Both programs provide car, good salary and pay
all expenses seven days a week.
Contact your Placement Director for full details.
Interviews on Wednesday, April 5, 1967.
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AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Europe is waiting for you—
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European Jobs
Luxembourg—American Student Information
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10th year of successful operation
placing students in jobs and arranging
tours. Any student may now
choose from thousands of jobs such
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etc. in 15 countries with wages
up to $400 a month. ASIS maintains
placement offices throughout Europe
insuring you of on the spot help at
all times. For a booklet listing all
jobs with application forms and discount
tours send $2 (for overseas
handling & air mail reply) to:
Dept. M, American Student Information
Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,
Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg.
By JIM POOLE
In the final intramural sports action of the winter
quarter, a fired up Delta Chi basketball team came from
behind, taking two victories in a row over heavily
favored SAE, to take the fraternity basketball championship.
The playoffs, which included the top two teams in
each of the four leagues,
started with a single elimination
round consisting
of four games. The winners
advanced to take part in a
double elimination
tournament,
while
the losers
were eliminated.
Winners in
t h e first
round were
Theta Chi,
Alpha Gamma
Rho, Delta
Chi, and SAE. Billy Biles
scored 24 points and Tommy
Brown added 20 as Theta
Chi nipped Sigma Nu, 61-60,
in a first round victory. Allan
Oakes was the big gun for
SN as he hit for 21 points
while Johnny Robertson added
14 and Bert Casey scored
8 before he fouled out early
in the fourth quarter.
AGR OVER OTS
Benny Hitch dumped in 17
points as he led AGR past
OTS in a thriller, 61-60.
Henry with 22 points was the
big man for OTS. Delta Chi
won an easy 69-57 victory
over ATO as Otto Gaylord
scored 22 points while Barry
Hillmeyer and Harold Morgan
POOLE
added 13 each.
Buster Williams, Tommy
Fisher, and Robert Sasser
all scored in double figures
to put SAE by Kappa Sig,
51-47.
In the first round of double
elimination play SAE defeated
AGR, 58-52, and Theta Chi
downed Delta Chi, 61-55. Jim
Kranzusch and John Broderick
were the leading scorers for
SAE as they had 17 points
each, while Benny Hitch
scored 15 for AGR before
fouling out in the fourth
quarter.
TOP SCORERS
The big guns for Theta
Chi in their win over Delta
Chi were once again Billy
Biles with 22 points and
Tommy Brown with 19, while
Doug Cowart was high man
for DC with 16.
The losers of these two
games, AGR and DC, then
met each other with Delta
Chi winning easily, 78-49.
This gave AGR two losses;
therefore, they were eliminated.
SAE rolled to a surprisingly
easy victory over Theta Chi,
65-45, to advance into the
finals without a loss on their
record since the finals last
year when they lost to OTS.
Buster Williams led SAE in
Intramural Basketball Stars Named.
r
Top Independents, Greeks Selected
By JIM POOLE
Tne Plainsman in conjunction
with tne coacnes
of the different fraternity
teams has named 12 men to
the 1967 Fraternity Basketball
All-Star Tfeam. First
At 9:45 P.M. EST on February 27. a Pan American
Boeing 727 jetliner with 98 passengers on board
made a fully-automatic landing at John F. Kennedy
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Sperry Phoenix Company participated as a
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team members are: Theta
Chi's Billy Biles who averaged
22 points a game and
was a near unaminous choice
for Al-Star honors, AlphaGam-ma
Rho's Benny Hitch who
averaged 15 points a game,
SAE Buster Williams with a
15 point average, Sigma Nu's
Bert Casey with a 14 point
average, and Marvin Campbell
of Phi Gamma Delta who
averaged 16 points a game.
The Plainsman in conjunction
with the intramural
s sports director has chosen
the following men as
1967 Independent Basketball
All-Stars: Barry Stephenson,
PJ; Alan Webb, Air R»rce;
Chuck Smith, Swishers;
Mickey Dunnaway, Baptist
Student Union; and former
freshman team player Jim
VanPelt, Walker Hall.
THE 1967 FRATERNITY BASKETBALL ALL-STARS AWAIT REBOUND.
Theta Chi's Billy Biles looks to bucket. Other members are SAE's Buster Williams,
Fiji's Marvin Campbell, AGR's Benny Hitch and Bert Casey of Sigma Nu.
(Photo by Roger Hull)
this game with 18 points
while Tommy Brown scored
15 for TC and Biles had his
lowest game of the season
with only 7 points.
SEMIFINAL ACTION
This left DC and TC both
with one loss so they had to
meet again to determine who
would play SAE in the finals.
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The game was a real thriller
with Delta Chi coming out on
top, 62-60. Otto Gaylord had
20 points and Harold Morgan
had 22 for DC while Brown
had 21 and Howie 20 for TC
In order to win the championship
Delta Chi had to
win twice over previously
unbeaten SAE. The first game
ended with DC winning by
6 points, 56-50, as they had
four men (Hillmeyer, Gaylord,
Cowart, and Speegle) scoring
in double figures. Williams
was high man for SAE with
15 points.
It was a fired up Delta
(continued on page 8)
On Campos
{By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",
"Dobie Gillis," etc.)
with
MaxQhulman
WHO'S GOT THE BUTTON?
I'm sure it has not escaped your notice that underlying
the adorable whimsy which has made this column such a
popular favorite among my wife and my little dog Spot,
there is a serious attempt to stay abreast of the problems
that beset the American college student.
Many a trip have I made to many a campus-talking to
undergraduates, listening to their troubles, hearing their
grievances, reading their buttons. (Incidentally, the second
and third most popular buttons I saw on my last trip
were: "WALLACE BEERY LIVES" and "FLUORIDATE
MUSCATEL." The first most popular button was,
as we all know, "SCRAP THE SCRAPE" which is worn,
as we all know, by Personna Super Stainless Steel Blade
users who, as we all know, are proud to proclaim to the
world that they have found a blade which gives them
luxury shave after luxury shave, which comes both in
double-edge style and Injector style, which does indeed
scrap the scrape, negate the nick, peel the pull, and oust
the ouch, which shaves so closely and quickly and truly
and beautifully that my heart leaps to tell of it. (If perhaps
you think me too effusive about Personna, I ask you
to remember that to me Personna is more than just a
razor blade; it is also an employer.)
But I digress. I make frequent trips, as I say, to learn
what is currently vexing the American undergraduate.
Last week, for example, while visiting a prominent Eastern
university (Idaho State) I talked to a number of
engineering seniors who posed a serious question. Like
all students, they had come to college burning to fill themselves
with culture, but, alas, because of all their science
requirements, they simply had had no time to take the
liberal arts courses their young souls lusted after. "Are
we doomed," they asked piteously, "to go through life
uncultured?"
I answered with a resounding "No!" I told them the
culture they had missed in college, they would pick up
after graduation. I explained that today's enlightened
corporations are setting up on-the-job liberal arts programs
for the newly employed engineering graduate-courses
designed to fill his culture gap—for the truly enlightened
corporation realizes that the truly cultured employee
is the truly valuable employee.
To illustrate, I cited the well-known case of Champert
Sigaf oos of Purdue.
When Champert, having completed his degree in wing
nuts and flanges, reported to the enlightened corporation
where he had accepted employment, he was not. rushed
forthwith to a drawing board. He was first installed in
the enlightened corporation's training campus. Here he
was given a beanie, a room-mate, and a copy of the company
rouser, and the enlightened corporation proceeded
to fill the gap in his culture.
First he was taught to read, then to print capital letters,
then capital and small letters. (There was also an
attempt to teach him script, but it was ultimately
abandoned.)
From these fundamentals, Champert progressed slowly
but steadily through the more complex disciplines. He
was diligent, and the corporation was patient, and in the
end they were well rewarded, for when Champert finished,
he could play a clavier, parse a sentence, and name
all the Electors of Bavaria.
Poised and cultured, Champert was promptly placed in
an important executive position. I am pleased to report
that he served with immense distinction-not, however,
for long because three days later he reached retirement
age.
Today, still spry, he lives in St. Petersburg, Florida,
where he supplements his pension by parsing sentences
for tourists. # * # © 1%7. Mtt, shum™
Here's a sentence that's easy to parse: Subject—"you."
Verb—"double." Object—"your shaving comfort when
you use Burma-Shave, regular or menthol, along with
your Personna Super Stainless Steel Rlades."
d—
8-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
soccer Team Meets Builds; H o w a r d ' s Job 'Beats Working9
Blanked By Tuskegee
By RHODES SHELL
• The Auburn soccer team
journeys to Athens, .Ga. Sunday
to tangle with the Georgia
Bulldogs in the first soc-er
meeting between the two
squads.
The Tigers opened their
season with a 7-0 loss to
Tuskegee.
"Our team gained valuable
experience in the game," said
Tiger Coach Sandy Purdon.
"We realized we made certain
mistakes and plan to make
appropriate adjustments."
The Auburn squad was hampered
by a lack of practice
before the Tuskegee match.
Ed Jackson, Tuskegee
coach, said, "I could tell Auburn
hadn't had much practice.
They will improve as
the season progresses." He
continued, ' 'We were at an
advantage in that all our boys
are foreign and have been
playing all their lives."
Tuskegee was led by Jamaican
Fran Chang, who scored
two of the seven goals. Halfbacks
Francisco De Gobbi,
Dennis Allen, and John Michel
played well for Auburn.
"We should be ready for
Georgia," Coach Purdon said.
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BOOTERY
By BOBBY BUISSON
Auburn trainer Kenny Howard would rather be exactly
that than work.
"I didn't know when I graduated from Auburn what I
wanted to be," he said. "I had been student trainer when
I was a student here and when the trainers job opened
in 1948, I felt like it was a good opportunity."
"Anyway, it beats working," he said.
But if Howard doesn't think his job is work, then he^
is the only one around the Auburn Field House who
doesn't.
TOP REPUTATION
"He has a national reputation for being one of the
finest trainers in the country of which we are all very
proud," said Athletic Director Jeff Beard.
"He has passed what I consider to be the real test
of a great trainer," added Beard. "He has earned the
respect and the confidence of the boys and the coaches.
He's so conscientious and loyal-he just does a grand
job! We think he is the best."
"One of the most enjoyable things about my job,"
says Kenny, "is the pleasure of working in close contact
with the athletes and meeting so many different people
and personalities.
"My job never gets boring because about the time I
begin to get a little weary of one sport, the seasons
change and I'm involved in another," he said.
"Of course, football is my most active season, because
there are more athletes involved and more ankles
to tape and so forth."
GREATEST THRILL
"One of my greatest thrills here is seeing a boy
become a man," he said. "It's a fcood feeling to see a
Tournament...
(continued from page 7)
Chi team that met SAE the
next night for the championship.
At halftime, DC had a
20-point lead. They increased
the lead to 22 in the third
quarter but SAE began to
close the gap in the fourth
and the final score was
Delta Chi-58, SAE-49.
INDEPENDENT PLAYOFFS
In the Independent playoffs,
darkhorse PJ won the
championship over favored
Air Force.
This tournament was single
elimination between the six
league champs (Walker Hall,
PJ, Air Force, Baptist, Student
Union, Bricks, and
Swishers). Air Force and BSU
had first round byes while
Swishers defeated Bricks,
60-57, and PJ downed Walker
Hall to advance to the second
round.
AIR FORCE OVER SWISHERS
In the second round Air
Force won easily over
Swishers, 65-36, with Glen-boske
leading AF with 12
points and Smith leading
Swishers with 15.
Fuller scored 20 and
Jacobs added 13 as PJ defeated
BSU, 64-51. Mac
Watson was high scorer for
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-ARROW-BSU
with 18 points.
This left AF and PJ to play
in the championship game.
Barry Stephenson scored 27
points as he led PJ to a
close 67-65 victory and- the
title.
DORMITORY PLAYOFFS
The four league champs
that played in the Dorm Playoffs
were Divisions A,T,P,
and V.
In the first round P defeated
V, 58-48, and A downed T,
39-31, leaving A and P to
play for the championship.
The leading scorer for the
tournament, Division A's
Tingle led his team to a
47-39 victory to take the
title.
Baseball...
(continued from page 6)
College 13-3 on Friday and
6-5 on Saturday.
In Saturday's contest,
Greg Golden singled in the
ninth and Frank Baldasare
followed with a triple to
drive across the winning run.
This put Auburn's record at
4 wins and 3 losses going
into their home stand.
The biggest surprise this
season has been the power
hitting of second baseman
Pete McKenzie. Pete hit
three home runs in his first
three games and drove in five
runs against FSU in one game.
As a sophomore, McKenzie
made All-SEC and hit .340.
Last year he hit .313 but had
only one home run during
those two seasons.
"I am most pleased with
the performance of my young
pitchers on the road trip to
Florida and plan to use them
at any time against any team
THE AUBURN PUIN*MJW
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PLAYBOY SUBSCRIPTIONS
$ 6.50 1 yr.
$ 12.00 2 yr.
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Call or write campus representative-
Mike G. Thomas, 835 West
Magnolia, 887-9183.
FOR SALE: Hotpoint 9" TV
set (made by General Electric)
with antenna.. .$35. Call Ernie
at 826-4331 after 8 p.m.
Trailer for Sale: 2 bedrooms,
storage room, washer, air-conditioned,
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FOR RENT: Furnished room
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TRAINER KENNY HOWARD ON THE JOB
young man gain poise, dignity, and confidence in himself."
Kenny, as the players call him, enjoys the travel
his job affords.
"I've been on just about every college campus in the
South," he said.
Of the many teams he has seen at Auburn, he reserves
a special place in his memory for the 1954 Auburn
football team.
"Auburn's 1954 team got off to a slow start, but by
the end of the season they were the best football team
that I have ever seen," said Howard.
He named 1954 stars Joe Childress, Frank D'Agostino,
George Atkins, and Bobby Freeman to support his view.
TOP FOUR STARS
Those four players were also on the list of names
that Kenny considers to be the greatest that he has
seen. Others are Travis Tidwell, Red Phillips, Ed
Dyas, Tucker Fredrickson, and Tom Bryan.
Howard is married to the former Jeanne Barnhart and
has three sons: Stephen, 16; Richard, 13; and Mike, 3.
"Steve is the student trainer at the high school here
in Auburn," says Kenny. "But he has no hopes of taking
my job in the future. He seems to have his mind made
up that he wants to study medicine."
"I don't push my boys into anything," he said.
"Steve and Richard are not real active in sports as one
might expect them to be.
"I feel that it is a great thing to be an athlete because
an individual can learn so much from participating. But
I know that it takes extreme sacrifice, drive, and enormous
love to be willing to spend so many hours out on
the practice field.
"I don't think that anyone who doesn't want to be
there should be forced into it."
Signees
(continued from page 6)
the other boys we are after,
it'll be Auburn's best recruiting
year ever."
An all-state performer from
Headland High School, the
6'3l/2" Walker hit 77 per cent
of his shots during the Georgia
state high school tournament.
Sigur was also an all-state
selection from Georgia. He is
a 6'5" forward, who is considered
by Lynn to be an exceptional
ball handler.
The tallest of the new recruits
is the 6*7" Scott. More
than one hundred colleges
were interested in signing the
second rated high school
player in Florida.
we play," said Coach Paul
Nix. He was referring to
sophomore Rodney Wallace
and freshmen Gene Collins
and Tommy Smith. This trio
allowed only one run in eight
innings in four different
appearances.
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TOOLS Of THE TRADE !
Yes sir. Mr. Student — You have a contract with
Mother and Dad to build yourself an education.
How well you by ild it, and how long it will stand the
voyages ot tine depends largely on yon and the
tools you select to do this job.
HERE WE ENTER THE PICTURE!
We want to supply the tools. You have the plan-You are to become an
Engineer, Chemist, Teacher, Architect. To accomplish this goal you need
us-and We certainly need you.
Step-by-step detail requires planning and should be set down with pencils
(Shaeffer) and our paper (National). Enlightment to word your goal calls
for books on the subject, Webster's Collegiate Dictionary being a must
for all courses.
Other tools to bring the objective out to a better focus being a Slide Rule,
Drawing Instruments, Loose Leaf Notebooks, Eaton's Fine Letter Paper
(You must write home at lease once a week!)
There's a Play-Time tool
Read a good book of your choice, -Something you desire to read.
Give a Gift! Play a Game!
Get a Sweatshirt!
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But get all of these things
where you're always welcome.
BURTON'S BOOK STORE
Something New Every Day
Tournaments Fill Debaters' Agenda 9-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
DEBATERS TO TRAVEL THIS SPRIHO
The Auburn Debate team travels to battle on two fronts
this weekend. Bill Shealy, Bill Edwards, Michael Peace
(standing 1. to r.) and Lewis Page (not pictured) left
yesterday for Detroit and a national meet at Wayne State
University. Judy Walton (seated), Jane Hall, and Bill
Hilburn (not pictured) leave Sunday for Little Rock and
the Southern Speech Association tournament.
Wreck Kills
Auburn Student
Grant Gustav Johnson, a
junior in business administration,
was killed March 18
in a head-on collision on
Highway 82 near the Dawson
city limits, according to the
Georgia Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Johnson was
killed instantly when the
small sports car he was driving
crashed head-on with
another car.
Funeral services for
Johnson were held at Dupree
Funeral Chapel and he was
buried in Cedar Hill Ceme-tary.
Johnson was a member ol
Phi Delta Theta.
GRANT JOHNSON
By KAY DONAHUE
Features Editor
Auburn's debate team has
a national tournament, a human
relations congress, and
a debate with inmates of the
Atlanta Federal Penitentiary
this quarter.
Bill Edwards, Lewis Page,
Mike Peace and Bill Shealy
will represent Auburn at the
National Delta Sigma Rho-
Tau Kappa Alpha Tourna-at
Wayne State University
today through Saturday.
They will debate six rounds
on the national debate topic:
"Resolved: That the United
States should substantially
reduce its foreign policy
commitments."
Teams from virtually every
state are expected to attend
this invitational tournament,
according to Mike
Lipe, assistant debate
coach. This is the first time
Auburn has had the resources
to accept the invitation
to this national tournament,
Lipe said.
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Jane Hall, Bill Hilburn
and Judy Walton will attend
the Debate Tournament and
Student Congress of Ithe
Southern Speech Association
at Little Rock, Ark., April
2-8. They will be joined by
representatives of colleges
and universities from a
dozen Southern and Southwestern
states.
The debate tournament
will be held the first days
of the meeting. It will consist
of six rounds of debate
for each team on the national
debate topic. Also included
in the tournament will be
competition in extemporaneous
speaking, interpretative
reading and oratory.
The Congress of Human
Relations will be the concluding
section of the meeting.
Both high school: and
collegiate representatives
will take part in the activities
of the congress. Awards
will be presented for effectiveness
in the various
aspects of the congress.
Auburn totaled more awards
than any other school last
year.
The debate team's final
spring activity will be a debate
tournament at the Atlanta
Federal Penitentiary.
This tournament, held in
conjunction with the rehabilitation
efforts at the prison,
will include about a dozen
collegiate teams as well
as the inmate team.
DIAL
887-5281
U / U V DRIVE-IN
Thursday-Friday-Saturday, March 30-April 1
DOUBLE FEATURE
ALL NEW! FOR THE FIRST TIME ON THE
MOTION PICTURE SCREEN IN COLOR!
ADAM WEST AS BATMAN AND BURT WARD AS ROBIN
TOGETHER WITH A I L THEIR FANTASTIC
AG. ECONOMIC CLUB
The Agriculture Economic
Club will meet April 10 at
7 p.m. in Room 204 of Comer
Hall. Fred Woods, specialist
in Public Affairs of the Extension
Service, will speak on
minimum wage law changes
for 1967 . The club invites all
agriculture economics and
business students and other
interested persons to attend.
ATTENTION
JUNE GRADUATES
All candidates for degrees in
June (other than practice teachers)
will be notified to report
to the Registrar's Office
for a final credit check. This
will be done alphabetically.
Please report immediately
when notice is received.
There is no cure for birth
and death save to enjoy the
interval-George Santayana
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Wear a Grand Slam Golf Shirt and improve your looks
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Making the most of your irons
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10-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
Want Unusual Pen Pal?
Find One On The Beach
Vacationers heading for
the beaches during spring
holidays will be interested
in knowing that beachcombing
can lead to adventure.
Consider the case of a
sunbather at Panama City
last Labor Day who found a
bottle with a message inside.
The story might have ended
there, but the note was
written in a foreign language.
By succeeding coincidences,
an Auburn professor
found himself a part of the
episode. A letter containing
a photostatic copy of the
note was forwarded at random
to Auburn in care of the
"department of linguistics."
Since Auburn has no department
of this name, the letter
was delivered to the speech
department where it finally
landed on the desk of Dr.
Edward C. Hutchinson.
NOTE TRANSLATED
In a spirit of cooperation,
and to settle his own curiosity,
Dr. Hutchinson managed
to get the note translated
for the person who sent it to
Auburn.
"It looked like Russian,
but I wasn't sure," says Dr.
Hutchinson, who teaches his
his speech therapy classes
in plain English. "So I sent
it to a friend of mine in
Washington at the Center for
Applied Linguistics for translation."
The note reads as follows,
with parentheses by translator:
"Comrades! I request whoever
fishes this bottle (out
of the water) to inform (me)
when, where, and by whom it
was found. (My) address is:
USSR, Krasnodarskij Kraj,
g. Taupse, GPTY-9, Koblevu,
X.C Dispatched for the dischargers
of the group of
74-73 sailors, 1966. This
paper was thrown (in the
water) on April 10, 1966 in
Gibraaltar'skij Straits (Straits
of Gibraiter) 0 t/x " Moscow
Festival." Please do not
turn down my request. (Signed)
Malakov, Litvinov."
8,000-MILE JOURNEY
Was it the work of a
prankster? Dr. Hutchinson
considered that possibility,
but discounts it. A study of
the currents would indicate
the bottle could have made
the 8,000-mile journey in the
150 or so days from the time
it was launched overboard,
UCLA's Alcindor
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Alcindor greets you with a
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month's Sport Magazine
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UCLA red tape and gets to
the heart of the man.
Pick up Sport and focus in on the real Lew Alcindor,
the NCAA Finals and 17 other authoritative in depth
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he concludes.
"I've figured that it would
have been necessary for the
bottle to travel about 50
miles per day. But this would
have been possible, since
the currents over the routes
I've checked are between
36 and 72 miles per day,"
he says.
There are two possible
routes the bottle might have
taken, Dr. Hutchinson points
out. The one he thinks most
likely would have • sent the
bottle west from Gibraiter,
then south to the Canary
Islands. Here it would have
been picked up by the North
Equatoral current and carried
south of the West Indies.
This would have delivered it
to the Carribean currents,
which would have brought it
to the Yucatan currents and
into the Gulf.
Auburn
Receives
Grant
Auburn has received
$68,106 from the National
Science Foundation for
support of its 1967-68 program
of graduate traineeships,
according to Dr. Ben T.
Lanham, vice president for
research.
This is the fourth annual
program at Auburn with all
grants to date totaling
$188,232. Traineeships established
through the first
three programs are still ongoing.
The new program provides
for the first time at
Auburn three summer trainee-ships
for graduate teaching
assistants over periods of
six to 12 weeks for the summer
of 1967, according to
Dr. W.V. Parker, dean of the
Graduate School which administers
the programs.
The full year traineeships
may be awarded by the University
at any time prior to
Sepjtjember 1, Dean Parker
pointed out.
TERRELL-DINING HALL IS HER NAMESAKE
Dining Half Named
for Miss Terrell
By PEGGY TOMLINSON
Associate Editor
The Alabama Legislature
last week approved a move to
name the South Women's
Dining Hall for Mrs. Lelia
Avary Terrell, a pioneer
resident of Auburn and a
counselor and advisor to
Auburn students for more than
50 years.
The legislature's resolution
cited Mrs. Terrell for the
50 years she roomed and fed
Auburn students in her spacious
home, serving as
counselor and advisor to
them.
Mrs. Terrell, who lives at
311 North Gay St., celebrated
her one hundredth birthday
last year with her belief that
"your body may age but you
can stay young at heart."
Moving to Auburn in 1902
after the death of her husband,
Dr. Early Walton Terrell,
she raised three children
here, Mrs. CA. Basore, the
late Mrs. Charles Hixon, and
h.i.s gives tradition
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Phillip Avery Terrell.
Mrs. Terrell kept Auburn
students at her home until
shortly after World War II.
"boys" still
her and many
at Christmas
Her former
come to see
remember her
each year.
One of the better known of
her former students is Auburn
President Emeritus Dr. Ralph
B. Draughon.
Birch Society Founder
Attacks 'Misguided' Profs
"Misguided economics
and philosophy professors
are the major sources of
Communist influence on
southern campuses," tne
founder of the Jonn Birch
Society told tne Plainsman
recently.
Robert Welch said that
young, idealistic instructors
who "really don't
know what they are talking
about" spread seeds
for the Communist society
in this area. In the interview,
tne Harvard law graduate
declined to answer
questions dealing witn
Alabama colleges specifically..
The conservative spokesman
made his remarks after
How come 44,000,000
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Mostly it's because our customers
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Metropolitan Life 1 INSURANCE COMTANY
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By LEE SENTELL
speaking to about 2,000 per
sons in the Birmingham Muni
cipal Auditorium.
' ' It is almost impossible
to keep up with the degree of
influence in all areas of the
conspiracy, especially when
little evidence comes to the
surface." He cited Berkeley
and North Carolina as universities
where Communist
influence can be readily seen.
In his speech, ' 'The Truth
About Viet Nam," his theme
of "why should we fight the
reds in Viet Nam and help
them everywhere else" led
to many attacks on the Johnson
administration's handling
of the war. He spoke mainly
on American trade with Communist
satellite countries.
Welch traced the steps of
American trade with Communist
countries and charged,
' 1 Every bullet that rips into
the back of a young American
fighting man has the brand of
LBJ on it."
Parents of the late John
Birch from Macon, Ga., were
on hand to greet those persons
attending the address.
Birch was killed immediately
following the end of World
War II and dubbed by Welch
as "the first casualty in the
third world war."
Unless of course it's a box of Hollingsworth's candies. Any
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We help teach them to think bigger.
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1967 Glomerafa
To Be Released
May 17-19
The 1967 Glomerata will be
distributed in the Recreation
Room of the Union Building
May 17-19.
The yearbook will be free
to students who have paid an
activities fee for three of the
last four quarters. Other students
must pay a $1.50 fee
for each quarter they have not
paid an activities fee, with
the maximum charge of $4.50.
The class section of this
year's Glom will be larger
than it has in the past. All
photos from a five-year
file were matched with the
registrar's list by a computer
to determine which students
were still in school,
according to Ron Mussig,
Glomerata editor. "The
plans were developed by
Jim Gideon, our Computer
Systems Coordinator," said
Mussig.
Mussig also said that the
progress on the Glom had
been good.
"For all intent and purposes,
our work is finished
now. The pages have been
sent to the publisher, and all
that remains to do is check
the proofs."
11-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
GRAD. ENTRANCE EXAV
The Jefferson County Personnel
Board will give a
Graduate Entrance Positions
examination at 9 a.m., May 13
in Room' 302 of the Courthouse
Annex, Birmingham.
Applicants with a bachelor's
degree or those to receive degrees
can take the exam for
a $1.50 fee. All applicants
"who pass must submit college
transcripts. Interested students
should apply at the
Student Place ment Office or
301 Courthouse Annex, Birmingham.
May 8 is deadline
for applications.
As advertised this Spring in:
PLAYBOY
THE NEW YORKER
X
Half
your
friends
won't
know
the
difference
SiiWf'V
'why
let
down
the
other
half?
mm If everyone appre-y
\ I I ciated artful tailor-
X 11 %• ing— the millennium
would be here. Enough that
your discerning friends —and
especially you — know the difference
that Austin Hill makes.
Case-in-point: these 55% da-cron*
polyester and 45% wool
traditional glen plaids. Ah, such
tailoring finesse. For name of
nearest store, write: Austin Hill,
Ltd., 318 N. Front St., Baltimore,
Md. 21201.
AUSTIN HILL LTD.
•DuPont's registered trade-mark.
OLIN L. HILL
eniunff
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY W
THE PENNEY STORY
The only
thing that we
really sell...
By ROBERTA NASH
"The only thing we really sell
is satisfaction /'one of our store
managers told me recently.
We do everything humanly
possible to make sure you'll be
satisfied with the things you
buy at Penney's. Yet, once in a
blue moon, something happens
and you're not satisfied. What
should you do?
Please bring it back to Penney's
so we can make you satisfied.
Please? It's much more
important to us than it is to you.
We have such wonderful
plans for our future, and they
all depend on keeping you
satisfied.
TOWNCRAFT
SLACKS
that you
NEVER
IRON!
T A T T E R S A L L ^
Come on down and meet Penney's new Towncraft
color coordinates. They're a swinging group with a
great new style of harmony... variations on a theme
to mix or match the way you like H.
GREAT FABRICS!
GREAT VALUES!
Scoop vp He wonderfel-weigkt slacks...
65% DocroH 35% Cotton in ewer-easy newer iron
Penn Frost. Tumble tkem dry and yon never iron.
These wonderful Poplins look neat, stay nont
and fool so §ood... all ia university gmd style.
Available in the following shades:
Navy
Tan
Clay
Olive
Brown
Maize
Light Blue
Penn Prest Fortrel * polyester/cotton
Buttondown style, Lively tattersall 3.98
Get Yourself a Casual Wardrobe of Distinction ....At Penney's
12-THE PLAINSMAN Thursday, March 30, 1967
Viet Nam Duty Offers Unique Experiences
By LYN SCARBROUGH
Many students who walk
from class today in the
growing afternoon shadow
of Samford Tower also walk
in the lengthening shadow
of a short notice call
to the armed forces and
service in Viet Nam.
Clifford Maxwell Butler
has walked this way before
and is now back in school
after a year's duty in the
war-torn Southeast Asian
country.
Mac, a 23-year-old senior
in electrical engineering,
lost two years in school and
some 40 hours due to course
change during his military
service, but he gained a practical
knowledge that could
never be gained in the classroom.
BACK IN ROUTINE
Mac returned to school in
the spring of 1966. "My only
pull after returning to school
was getting back into engineering
calculations and school
routine," he said.
During his stay in Viet
Nam, Mac barely missed being
blown up by the VC on
two occasions, came under
fire by Communist snipers,
and had some unique experiences
which will remain in
his memory for a lifetime.
Mac, a Montgomery native,
never intended to go to Viet
Nam as an inductee. He entered
the advanced ROTC
program in 1963, but was rejected
because his vision
was not adequate for pilot
training.
In March, 1965, Mac was
one of 4,800 soldiers who,
with eight nurses, sailed
from Oakland, Calif., on the
30-day voyage to Subic Bay,
Philippines.
The trip over did not have
the luxuries of a scenic
cruise. "The ship's food was
terrible," Mac said. "I bet
it was 130 degrees in the
messhall. People were just
eating and sweating. A lot
of the boys would stay on
deck and eat crackers and
drink pop rather than go down
in the hold."
"We never knew where we
were going until we got
there," Mac said. "When we
reached the shore, they put
us off of a landing craft in
shallow water, each man
carrying 200 pounds of
equipment including machine
guns and hand grenades. We
then waded in to the beach."
WELCOMED
"We certainly felt use-less,"
Mac said, "when we
MAC BUTLER LOOKS BACK OVER VIET SERVICE
charged over the first hill GI's holding a big make-shift
with our battle equipment and sign reading 'Welcome 87th
were met by swimsuit clad Engineering.' Then we knew
Ends Today
SHOWN AT 2:301 8:00
Adalts $2.00 Ckildrti$1.00
"MIKADO"
FRIDAY THRU TUESDAY
Call him what you like...
AK00K...ANUT...
AN ODD BALL...
but that's
MORGAN!i
A CtMramnial
AMI MrtiM
Pictwr.1
BEST ACTRESS
VANESSA REDGRAVE _
2 : 1 0 , 3 : 5 0 , 5 : 4 0 , British Lion presents a Quintra Films Production
7*30 9:20 Vanessa Redgrave • David Warner
Next Wednesday Thru Saturday
AND NOW IT IS
EXCITING
ALL AMERICA
AS NO OTHER
PICTURE IN
OUR TIME!
W i t h a stunning international cast, {•tarrtetf in •i»h«»»tic»i oreJ«r)
JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO CHARLES BOYER LESLIE CARON
JEAN-PIERRE CASSEL GEORGE CHAKIRIS ALAIN DELON
KIRK DOUGLAS GLENN FORD GERT FROM YVES MONTAND
ANTHONY PERKINS SIMONE SIGNORET ROIERT STACK
MARIE VERSINI SKIP WARD • ORSON WELLES
SHOW AT 2:30, 5:20, 8:00
Starts Wednesday April 19th
where we were."
The 87th was assigned to
build the shipping port and
base at Camrahn Bay, but
their duties were not limited
to this. The men had to guard
outposts in mountain caves on
on the outskirts of the base.
"We had orders to fire if
we couldn't make contact
with any moving object,"
Mac said. "The VC might try
to penetrate our camp at night
and it was always hard to get
immediate identification.
"I remember one night we
heard a loud noise just outside
the cave. We shot flares
and when something jumped
we opened fire with machine
guns. Our victim turned out
to be a large tiger out for a
stroll."
Mac said that it was extremely
hard to distinguisn
between the Viet Cong, South
Vietnamese, and other oriental
peopled
iWINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
MEIRO-GaDWYN-MAYER m«m A CARLO P0NTI PRODUCTION
DAVID LEAN'S F I LM OFBORISPASTERNAKS
DOCTOR /Mil \< .(>
Wearing Austin Hill clothes isn't
the only way to make your friends
say "Ah." The Ah Pin also suggests
you're a devotee of fine traditional
skirts, slacks and walking shorts,
lust walk into your favorite store
and-/ust like that-ask for your
'Ah' Pin. It's gratis. You may find
it hard to resist looking over the
Austin Hill Spring showings. And
Ah! Eagle Shirts. For name of store
nearest, write Austin Hill, Ltd., 318
N. Front St., Balto., Md. 21201.
AUSTIN HILL LTD.
0LIN L. HILL
"We captured five frogmen
one day off the beach not far
from our base," Mac said.
"We thought they were VC
so we brought them in. They
kept talking to us in their
native language, but of course,
we didn't understand them.
To our embarrassment, they
turned out to be shark hunters
from a Japanese freighter."
Dec. 4, 1965, is a day Mac
will never forget. On this day
a Viet Cong claymore mine
and plastic explosives were
attached to a truck and exploded
outside the Metropole
Hotel in Saigon, a barrack for
U.S. officers. Twenty were
killed and over 170 injured.
"I was asleep directly
across the street," Mac recalls.
"The explosion was
so strong that it knocked me
completely but of bed. It
shattered windows and damaged
buildings all around."
This was not Mac's only
close call. "Our work detail
was fired on by snipers at
the Camrahn Bay airport
while we were working on jet
fuel tanks," Mac said. "We
were just lucky and no one
was hit."
Again Mac's group barely
missed death when a claymore
mine blew up a small
bridge over a stream shortly
after they had crossed.
"We could hear the explosion
behind us," Mac said.
"If that bomb had gone off
five minutes sooner, we
would have been right on top
of it."
One night the unit went to
a near-by town to get an ice
box to cool some beer for
celebration of a completed
job.
"We were on Viet Nam
Highway 1 when we heard
mortar fire," Mac said. "Then
our captain's jeep, three vehicles
behind us, was hit
and went up in flames. Again
we were lucky that no one
was killed."
Viet Nam duty wasn't all
work and danger. Mac was a
front row spectator for the
1965 Bob Hope Christmas
Show which featured Joey
Heatherton, Anita Bryant and
the 1964 Miss USA.
"They keep you busy over
in Viet Nam," Mac now advises
students who may soon
be sent overseas. "There is
not much time to think about
dying. Time will pass quickly
and you will be back before
you realize it."
"The greatest sound in
the world," he said, "is the
airplane tires hitting the runway,
letting you know that
you are back home again."
He is now resettled in the
school grind again and will
graduate in the fall of 1967.
But Viet Nam will remain a
vivid memory
"Cheer up, No. 51.
Anyone can trip
over 3rd base.
But thanks to your
close Norelco shave,
you looked marvelous
doing it"
"I guess you're right,
Miss Swinging Campus Queen.
Those 18 amazing rotary blades,
3 floating M icrogroove heads,
that sideburn trimmer, coil-cord
and on/off switch sure saved
the day for me!"
WAR EAGLE
THEATER
THURSDAY (Last Day)
7H,£WHOD//MiT
BREAK!
A FIRST IN MOVIES!
JUST BEFORE THE GRIPPING
CLIMAX, YOU WILL BE GIVEN
THE CHANCE TO GUESS THE
MURDERER'S I D L N I I T Y!
WE DARE YOU TO GUESS!
The Tripleheader 35T
— fastest shaver
on wheels.
The Norelco Rechargeable 40C. A single charge delivers
twice as many shaves as any other rechargeable.
Works withor without a plug. Shaves so close, we dare
to match it with a razor blade. Pop-up trimmer, too.
The Norelco Cordless 'Flip-Top' 20B (not shown)
shaves anywhere on just 4 penlight batteries. Now with
convenient battery ejector. Microgroove heads and rotary
blades. Snap-open wallet with mirror.
M>re/co- the close, fast, comfortable electric shave
^•1967 North American Phlltpt Company, inc., 100 East 42nd Street.Ngw York, Naw York 10017
SEVEN ARTS
PRODUCTIONS Presents
» OKIE'S
CLASSIC mm
TIM PEOPLE IRftPPED
Id HOUSE OF DEATH,
AND THEN THERE WERE
NWE...EISHT..
SEVEN...SIX...
FIVE!
HUGH O'BRIAN SHIRLEY EATON FABIAN
LEO GENN STANLEY HOLLOWAY
WILFRID HYOE-WHITE-OALIAH LAVI
SHOWS AT. 3.00 4.55 6:50 8:45
FRIDAY-TUESDAY
World Wide Pictures
(THE BILLY GRAHAM
ORGANIZATION)
PRESENTS
"THE RESTLESS
ONES"
TIGERS & TIGER TRAINERS
FOR CONTINUING TO MAKE J &M
HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL YOUR COLLEGE NEEDS
Co6*t4tOK & ffCottote Soc&itote