Inside Today
Beauties Pg. 2
Women's Rules Pg. 3
Letters Pg. 5
Stakes High Pg. 6
Linkletter Pg. 9 THE AUBURN PUINSMMI
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
The Sage Reports
Jerry Brown has returned
from an expense paid trip to
AFEES. See report on page 4.
VOLUME 94 AUBURN UNIVERSITY, AUBURN, ALABAMA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11,1966 18 PAGES NUMBER 8
Tickets Available
As 'The Tempest'
Continues Fall Run
By LEE SENTELL
News Editor
Shakespeare's "The
Tempest" has come to
full, colorful life on the
campus as the Auburn
Players' fall presentation
opened to enthusiastic response
Wednesday night.
The two-hour comedy
will run through this weekend
and Wednesday through
Saturday next week at the
Players* Theater. Tickets
are available for most performances
at the drama office
in the Music Building Annex.
Colorfully authentic costuming
and vivid set direction
of the enchanted island setting
highlight the visual
imagery as the curtain is
raised on the exiled Duke of
Milan (portrayed by Bill
Orensky). The Duke is conducting
a magical tempest
which results in a ship
wreck, much to the displeasure
of his daughter.
Prosper©, also called Duke
of Milan, uses the talents of
his delightful servant spirit,
Ariel (Vandy Smith), to perform
his magic works.
Prospero tells his 15-year-old
daughter, Miranda (Ann
Morrow), how they came
to the island. He claims
he is the rightful Duke
of Milan, who entrusted
his dukedom to his brother,
Antonio, while devoting himself
to the study of magic.
Antonio (Frank Hallman)
staged an insurrection and
seized power of the dukedom.
Prospero was shoved off in a
leaky tub of a boat without
rigging, alone with his three-year-
old daughter.
A noble of the Neapolitan
court, though appointed to
dispose of Prospero, saw that
they had proper food, clothing,
and other necessities.
They were blown up on
the shore of an island, which
is the setting of the play.
Now by the strangest accident,
all his enemies have
been brought together within
his power on one ship. Here
the action begins.
Others in the cast include
Larry Stafford, Jay Morrow,
James Formby, Anne Trucks,
Marilyn Murdock, George
Hames, Herb Smith, Ron
Cleghorn, Ed Smith and
Michael Church.
Frosh Cake Race
Slated Thursday
8y ANNE JOHNSON
Competitors in the annual
Omicron Delta Kappa-Wilbur
Hutsell cake race will be
off and running at the crack
of a gun next Thursday. The
race is traditionally entered
by male freshmen and will
begin this year at 3:30 p.m.,
after registration for the race
at 3:15 p.m. in the field house.
A trophy and kiss from
Miss Auburn awaits the first
freshman to cross the finish
of the 2.8-mile course. A
cake will be presented to
each of the 25 fastest contestants,
and the fraternity
with the most representatives
finishing with top times will
receive an award.
After the competitors line
up in front of the field house,,
the race will lead up Thach
Avenue to College Street and
proceed to East Glenn Avenue.
It will turn east and go
to Burton Street, then turn
south to Magnolia Avenue.
It will proceed to South Gay
Street, go south to Samford
Avenue, and run west to
Donahue Drive
. The race then turns north
down Donahue for the home
'stretch. The contest will
conclude with a lap around
the track in Cliff Hare
Stadium.
Dean's excuses will be
issued for the participating
freshman men, except in the
case of laboratory classes
and one hour courses.
The first Cake Race, held
in 1929, was organized by
Coach Wilbur Hutsell. He
has been in charge of each
race since that time. Last
year the race was the largest
in the history of the event,
when 749 contestants completed
the course.
The race is a joint effort
between Omicron Delta Kappa,
men's leadership honorary,
and the Spike Shoe Club, an
organization of varsity track
members.
John Schell, chairman of
the Cake Race, said, "The
race is an integral part of
the Auburn spirit. I urge
everyone who is eligible to
take part. This is our school
and our tradition. It's success
will depend upon student
participation and support."
Shug Gets First Copy Of football Supplement
A smiling Ralph (Shug) Jordan, Auburn head football coach, looks over the first
copy of "75 Years of Auburn Football,,,a special supplement in this week's Plainsman.
Sports Editor David Housel (Left) and Assistant Sports Editor Roy Riley presented
the first copy of the orange and blue tabloid section to Jordan.
War Eagle Day
Revived Today
NATOAdmiral
To Speak Here
Admiral T.H. Moorer
Coming To ACOIA
Admiral Thomas Hinman Moorer, supreme allied commander
of the Atlantic for North Atlantic Treaty Organi-aztion
(NATO), has accepted an invitation to address
the Auburn conference on International Affairs,, according
to chairman Charley Majors.
He is tentatively scheduled to speak at lp.m., Feb. 9,
PRESIDENT SIGNS PROCLAMATION
Jamie Sledge, Jerry Lowery Observe Decree
• : • ; • : • : •
Invitation to Faculty, Staff, and Students
Remodeling of the President's Office in Samford
Hall has been completed, and I am inviting the
faculty, staff, and students to see the offices
at an open house (at your convenience) on Friday,
November 11.
Harry M. Philpott
President
8jg;3a:iS^:a:|&::S&%a
By PEGGY TOMLINSON
A smile and a friendly
greeting in passing are gestures
that can make today the
most successful. War Eagle
Day in years, says a spokesman
for Squires, sophomore
men's honorary who sponsors
this day.
The day is set aside to
emphasize and encourage the
Auburn spirit and the friendly
atmosphere on campus, says
Jamie Sledge, chairman of
the day.
Gov. George C. Wallace
brought the statewide spotlight
into focus on today's
activities by officially proclaiming
War Eagle Day
throughout Alabama.
Plans to boost spirit include
booths set up in various
places on campus to issue student
name tags. Cards with
the Auburn Creed and the
Alma Mater printed on them,
•gMfMe a l s o b e i n g g l v e n o u t a n d
pe3|| freshmen are asked to wear
their rat caps, says Sledge.
"War Eagle' fight song is
being played over a loudspeaker
from the Union Building
between classes. War
Eagle, symbol of the Auburn
spirit, will be perched on his
stand in front of the Union
the entire day.
The cheerleaders and War
Eagle Girls are wearing their
uniforms to class today. The
cheerleaders will lead yells
between classes, says Sledge.
Majors said. Topic of the
1967 ACOIA is "The U.S.
And Its World Alliances."
In addition to his command
of NATO's Atlantic
theater, Admiral Moorer has
three other areas of command.
He is commander-in-chief of
the U.S, Atlantic Fleet, com
mander of the {Atlantic Unified
Command which includes all
branches of service in the
Atlantic area, and commander-in-
chief of the western Atlantic
for NATO.
With two UJS. and two
NATO commands," Majors
said, "Admiral Moorer is one
of the most powerful navy
figures in the world. We < are
pleased that he has agreed
to address the conference. We
feel he will be able to give
us candid, valuable insight
into inner workings of the
NATO alliance."
The success of the conference
has been assured by
his acceptance," Majors
added.
Moorer was born in Mount
Willing, Alabama, completed
his high school education in
Montgomery, andlater attended
the U.S. Naval Academy.
When the Japanese attacked
Pearl Harbor in December,
1941, Moorer was a pilot with
loveliest of the Plains . .~
the Fleet Air Wing Two. His
plane was later shot down
during the Dutch East Indies
Campaign in 1942. He was
subsequently awarded the
Purple Heart Medal, the Silver
Star Medal and the Ribbon
for the Presidential Unit
Citation.
He also received the Distinguished
Flying Cross for
his "extraordinary achievement
and heroic conduct"
during an attack on enemy
positions on the Island of
Timor in 1942.
Toward the end of the war,
Moorer served as gunnery and
tactical officer on the staff
of Commander Air Force in
the Atlantic. He earned the
Legion of Merit in the capacity.
In 1955 Moorer was ordered
to the Navy Department to
serve as aide to the assistant
secretary of the Navy and
Air. He was later appointed
assistant chief of Naval
Operations and in 1964 promoted
to commander-in-chief
of the United States Pacific
Fleet.
The. White House announced
Admiral Moorer's appointment
as commander of NATO's
Allied Command, the Atlantic
Command, and the United
States Atlantic Fleet in
February, 1965.
Admiral Moorer
Looking Back
Loveliest Jo Anne Felder, a senior from Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, pauses to look back over her four years at
Auburn. The 5'4" blue-eyed blonde is an independent
and lives in Dorm H. She is an art student majoring in
visual design.
Relations
Meeting
Planned
The Auburn-Alabama Better
Relations meeting will
be held at the University of
Alabama Tuesday. The
annual conference this year
is set to promote friendly
relations in the football
clash between the two rival
colleges.
Twenty-eight student leaders,
accompanied by Dean of
Women Katharine Cater and
Dean of Student Affairs
James E. Foy, will represent
Auburn at the conference,
which begins with registration
at 11:30 a.m.
Following a luncheon,
committees will meet to discuss
rules for pep rallies,
stadium decorations, and the
pre-game and half-time activities.
A parade in Birmingham
will also be planned
and policies concerning publicity
will be discussed.
Since the organization's
policies have been treated
lightly in previous years,
this year's conference will
stress compliance with rules
governing activities. Everything
possible will be done
to insure that the competition
will remain friendly, said
Auburn's Student Body President,
Phil Hardee.
K&%SSSS&SSffi%¥:¥S^^
Glomerate
:•:•: Graduating seniors who 8
| desire a copy of the 19671
g: Glomerate may reserve jij:
gone by coming by thefe
f: Glomerate Office, room|
$314 of the Union, between g
12 and 5 p.m., according;!
I to Editor Ron Mussig. |
| A charge of $3.75 fori
| postage will be required, |
She said. »
| . Deadlines for reserving g
8a yearbook is November!;:;
hue Drive. W1U uepena upon stuaent $ r i « l u w " :g cheerleaders win leaa yeus —"* "*°° *" """" "• u"° *° «•» «"" MUUC1" majwuug w ^"3300 . t
e race then turns north participation and support." fe^^ss^^ classes, says Sledge.) visual design. _____ I %teimmm$mxmK
ADPi's Squeak By Ws: No Petticoats Or Powder Puffs, Just Great Football
Shake It Up, Baby
She's getting her shakers ready for thebiggame. Apprehension
marks her delicate figure. In other days "she"
was Jimmy Harris, but today she's a cheerleader.
K D Snogs Pi Pass
Mighty number eight is outjumped as a Kappa Delta
mugger swipes an Alpha Delta Pi aerial and races toward
the Pi's end zone
L
She Stole Our Ml!
. . .an ardent ADPi fan grabs a Coke, assumes the
familiar "Bear" Bryant one "point" stance and screams
for her sisters to halt the scampering thief...
Corner On Grid Tih
. . . .the comer is successfully maneuvered and the interception
good for a KD touchdown. The effort is in vain,
however, as the terrors of Dorm E outstride theKDs, 21-20.
/•
2-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November It, 1966, p f l f flQ^J (| ^ ^ ^ ^ Bj John WIBon and Jerry Wild en
/wei^Tacwr <s THE
[ DAY FOR T»e CHIEF'S
V. AWNUALSPeeeH...
FRieNos,ROMANS.catrmtMeti... FOUR. scoRe
AND SEVBW YfARS AGO, OUR P»ReFATH©f?S
SAID/SP5AK SOFHY AHO CARRY A 816 STICK/..
A SCALP SAVED IS A SCALP EARNED...
...SO WEST, YOUN6 MAW... I HAV€ WOT
Y e r SesyV To F I S H T ... mYo,SiLVEr?
.. AND IW COA/CLUSlOA/, WHAT THIS
RESeRVATlOA/ NEEDS IS A
SOOD 54 STOGIE-
.. SREATiST SfteECH
X EVER HEARD.
/ I ©, Wl(.5oN/w/U06W^
The free Union movie,
Sylvia, will be shown Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday at 7:30
p.m. in the Union Ballroom.
Carol Baker and George
Maharis star in the black-and-white
drama.
Nothing is so good as it
seems beforehand.-George
Eliot.
The reward of a thing well
done, is to have done it.-
Emerson.
TIGER THEATRE
SS¥S*S
THE THINGS A "SWINGER" DOES. Sizzling Ann-Margret is
a girl with many charms. In the new George Sidney production,
"The Swinger," she gets a chance to display a good many of
them, and has an absolute ball in doing so. Ann-Margret does
everything from motorcycle to strip in the hilarious new comwly
" T e " " * ° ' " Starts Saturday
Chamber Music Debut Features Quintet
The current season of the
Auburn Chamber Music Society
opened with an appearance
of the New Chamber
Quintet. This evening marked
the Quintet's first appearance
following a debut concert in
New York.
The Quintet contains two
husband-wife teams: Joanna
and Scott Nickrenz, piano
and viola; and Paula and
Robert Sylvester, flute and
cello. The fifth member is
Donald Weilerstein, the
violinist.
The program on Nov. 1
was the same as the one
played earlier at the New
York debut, and was made
up of relatively early compositions
of Mozart, Beethoven
and Brahms. The Mozart
flute Quartet in D, K 285
JANUARY TO AUGUST-UNION'S 'BEAUTY A MONTH' CLUB
Susan High, Jeanie Muse, Julie Archer, Ellen Brace, Marsha Lowry, Bonny McGinnis, Amelia Chatham,
and Carolyn Colvard.
Beauties Presented At Calendar Pageant
The naming of eight Auburn
coeds as Union Calendar
Girls climaxed the Calendar
Girl Pageant held in
the Union Building ballroom
last Thursday. The winners,
selected from a field of 30
semi-finalists, will each represent
one month from
Januray through August.
Each girl will serve as
official hostess for the Auburn
Union and will be pictured
in the calendar girl
showcase in the Union lobby
during her respective month.
PAGEANT HIGHLIGHT
Highlighting the pageant
was entertainment provided by
Andrew Gainey, Sylvia Hutche-son.
Susan Moncrief, Rodney
Miller, and Amos Hudson. The
group performed selections
from several Broadway shows.
Jim Murphy served as master
of ceremonies. Murphy is
president of the Georgia
Broadcasters Association and
• / • • • •
It's New! Ifs Fun!
Come In And Join Us
TRY THE SOUTH'* LARGEST MODEL RACE TRACK
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Open 2 to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday
2 p.m. to Midnight Friday
10 a.m. to Midnight Saturday
2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday
SUPERVISED RACES:
OPEN RACE: Tuesday 8:00 p.m.
STOCK RACE: Thursday 8:00 p.m.
JUNIOR RACE (Ages 16 and under): Saturday 1:30 p.m.
OPEN RACE: Sunday 3:00 p.m.
BRING YOUR DATE!
(On Thursday nights your date runs FREE with car and controller furnished!)
If You've Never Tried It, Come In And Ask For Free Demonstration.
Auburn Raceways
144 South Gay Street Across from 'Big Bear'
By LEE DAVIS
manager of a West Point, Ga
radio station.
Judges for the pageant were
Virginia MacMahon, alumni
secretary of Birmingham
Southern College; Gordon Ta-tum,
assistant editor of the
Mobile Press-Register and a
former judge in the Junior
Miss Contest; and Robert
Weaver, head of the Talladega
Christmas Carnival and director
of the Talladega Chamber
of Commerce Reviews.
Miss January, Susan High,
is a freshman in elementary
education and is an Alpha
Delta Pi pledge.
Jeanie Muse, Miss February,
is an independent and a sophomore
in secondary education.
Julie Archer, Miss March,
is a sophomore majoring in
home economics and a member
of Phi Mu Sorority.
Miss April, Ellen Bruce, is
a freshman in elementary
education and a Alpha Gamma
Delta pledge.
Marsha Lowry, Miss May,
is a sophomore tin elementary
education and is a member oi
Kappa Delta Sorority.
Miss June, Bonny McGinnis,
is a sophomore in elementary
education, and a Kappa Delta
pledge.
Amelia Chatham, Miss July,
is a senior in secondary education.
She is from Guntersville
and is an independent.
Miss August, Carolyn Colvard,
is a Kappa Delta pledge
majoring in secondary education.
Among the 15 finalists were
Connie Blanton, Jeannie
Clayton, Beverly Golson,
Carol Kincaid, Susan Norred,
Gail O* Bryan, and Pam
Stewart.
opened the evening. Mrs.
Sylvester was featured in
this piece and was a recent
winner of the 22nd International
Music Competition.
The evening concluded
with the Brahms piano Quartet
in G Minor.
Cowards die many times
before their deaths, the
valiant never taste of death
but once.-Shakespeare
Boots For Girls
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THESE STORES WELCOME YOUR
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THIS LIST GROWS EVERY DAY.
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AUBURN
The Clothes Rack
Munford Store
The Record Shop
The Squire Shop
Tabb Fabric Shop
Feinberg Shoes
Flowersmiths Florist
Quys Appliance
Herbert Music and Electric Company
Hills Jewelry
Jockisch Jewelers
Kings Clothing
Munford Store
Olin Hill Men's Fashions
Parkers Department Store
Scales T. V.
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Tabb Fabric Shop
Easterwoods Shoes
Feinberg Shoes
Guys Applainces
Hollingsworth, Norman & Stern, Inc.
I.J. Scott Building Supplies
Jans Town & Country
Lee - Ann's
McClains Variety Fair
Miller Music Company and Record Shop
Opelika Pharmacy
Opelika Hardward
Peyton Auto Service
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Tuckers Jewelers
Turner Tire Service
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_A-
ATTENTION DECEMBER
GRADUATES
Reservations for caps and
gowns must be made at the
University Book Store (Union
Building) between Nov. 7-18.
The cap and gown rental fee
is payable when measurements
are taken.
Sylvia, starring Carol Baker
and George Maharis, will be
the free Union movie shown
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
at 7:30 p.m. in the Union
Ballroom.
INDUSTRIAL ARTS
SOCIETY
The Industrial Arts Society
will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
in Thach 202 with James E.
Foy, dean of student affairs
speaking. For further information
on the society, call
Michael Thomas, president,
at 887-9183.
GUERRILLA WARFARE
EXHIBITION
The Auburn counter-guerrilla
company, Army ROTC,
has arranged for members of
the rangers department at
Fort Benning, Ga. to present
instructions in unconventional
guerilla warfare here Saturday.
The program, from 8 to
11 a.m.,will include hand-to-hand
combat and rappelling-
SLACKS TO SLUING M:
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Better Things for Better Living . . . through Chemistry
13-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11,1966
AWS Council Reviews Rules
BRENDA AND CYCLE-AN AUBURN FIRST
Motorcycle—Riding Coed
Solves Traffic Problem
By BETTY McLAIN
There is one motrocycle
that stands out from all of
the others whizzing around
the campus. This particular
cycle is owned by Brenda
Golden, a freshman pharmacy
major from Autaugaville
Recently Brenda became the
first coed to register a motorcycle
at Auburn. Brenda, however,
is not the first girl to
ride a motor-powered two-wheeler
on campus. Several
years ago a married student
buzzed around on a scooter.
Brenda explained, "Some-
"»k Cental AUUm. fW->i s^cA. ,
!.- .-
f
#
4 o .V £
\P AUBURN
n » « %
LEE COUNTY HOSPITAL
JAN'S TOWN & COUNTRY
OPELIKA
<fu
DrtLLAS
VnroP CfP tf? 0"
1908 PEPPER ELI. PARKWAY town and country
fashions
OPELIKA, ALABAMA
times I get a few stares because
everyone thinks it is
very unusual to see a girl
riding a cycle, but I really
don't care because I just
love to ride."
Brenda can not understand
why people make such a big
deal about a girl riding a
cycle. She does not see any
difference between a girl
riding double and a girl riding
single.
Brenda had never driven a
motorcycle before she got her
own. She said it is very easy
to learn, and that it is a
thrilling experience. "Riding
a motor combines the smoothness
of riding in a car with
the openness and freshness of
riding a horse." She also
added that it is a lot better
than walking, and it saves
time.
"My mother wanted me to
get a scooter, but my father
said a cycle would be much
better for long trips." Brenda
and a friend drove home and
back to school in one day
which was a distance of about
95 miles. Of the trip Brenda
exclaims, "It was marvelous,
and we didn't get tired at
all."
Brenda thinks she may have
started a fad. Several girls
have told her they want a
"motor" but their parents
object because of all the
serious motorcycle accidents.
She only hopes Auburn does
not pass a rule against girls
riding their own cycles.
As more and more cars
overflow the campus and
parking places decrease, it
is quite possible other girls
will do what Brenda has done-give
up walking and take up
riding-a "motor."
How can AWS prevent
exaggerated rumors of its
rules from sweeping the
Auburn campus?
How can AWS rules be
changed to better fit
Auburn's social needs?
These two questions
were discussed in Associated
Women Students (AWS)
legislative council recently.
"The fact that rumors
have spread like wildfire
over this campus indicates
some failure in communication
between the council and the
students," said Judy Jones,
vice president of AWS.
Efforts to inform the individual
student of AWS
action concerning co-eds
include a weekly report in
the Plainsman, and the weekly
posting of minutes by
dorm representatives.
Constructive suggestions
for changes in AWS rules
are welcomed, said Miss
Jones.
Suggestions may be submitted
to Miss Jones by
anyone who sees a need to
change the rules in the
Co-etiquette book. These
suggestions will be considered
by the AWS rules committee
this fall.
If the committee supports
a suggested change, it will
present the change to the
dorm representatives in AWS
workshop next spring.
Also discussed at the
meeting were dress rules for
football game weekends.
Dress rules for the Georgia
game weekend requires that
no shorts, slacks or rolled
hair be displayed in public
from 7 p.m. on Friday until
noon Sunday.
Girls should also remember
the rule that no guest may
sign under a coed with a
restriction. This rule has
been violated during recent
weekends when, for example,
a guest signs in under a
coed on restriction but she
refrains from entering her
host's room until her restriction
is over at 1 a.m.
Russian Authority
To Talk At Langdon
The world-shaking Lenin
Revolution of 1917 will be
given new insight by one of
the few remaining eye witnesses
here next Monday.
Dr. Boris Stanfield, Russian-
bora authority on the
Soviet system, is scheduled
to speak at Langdon Hall at
7:30 p.m. His appearance is
sponsored by the fine arts
Committee.
Speaking on "The Russian
Revolution after 50 Years-
How Did Lenin Succeed?,"
Dr. Stanfield will tell of personal
experiences during the
fateful year 1917.
Stanfield knew personally
Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin and
other leaders of the Bolshevik
party. He spent the entire
year in Petrograd in the "eye"
of the social hurricane.
Born and reared in Tomsk,
Siberia. Stanfield received
his doctoral degree in politi-cal
economy at the Imperial
University of St. Petersburg in
1916.
Witness and victim of the
revolution, he was obliged
to leave Russia at the end of
the civil war in 1920. He
spent several years in Germany
and later became advisor
on Soviet affairs to Averell
Harriman.
Dr. Stanfield accepted an
appointment as professor of
economics at Columbia University
in 1931 where he remained
until his retirement
in 1957. He became a citizen
of the United States in 1937.
Dr. Stanfield has served as
visiting professor at the University
of Puerto Rico since
1958.
if she doesn't give it to you...
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THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
Jerry Brown
Editor
Hazel Safferfield
Business Manager
PRESS
ACP Rated 'All-American'
Associate Editor-Charley Majors; Managing Editor-Peggy Yomlinson;
Assistant Editor-Susan Foy; News Editors-Lyn Scarbrough, Lee Sentell, Barbara
Thomas; Copy Editor-Anne Johnson; Features Editor-Kay Donahue; Technical
Editor-Jim Lord; Sports Editor-David Housel; Assistant Copy Editor-Ann
Hollingsworth, Assistant News Editor-Laurie Scott; Assistant Features Editor-
Linda Newton; Assistant Technical Editor-Barbara Holt; Assistant Sports
Editors-Mel Pulliam, Roy Riley; Advertising Manager-Ray Whitley; Route
Manager-Allen Reed; Circulation Manager-Harper Gaston; Business Secretary-
Virginia Therrell; Photographer-Roger Hull.
The Auburn Plainsman is the student newspaper of Auburn University. The
paper is written and edited by responsible students. Editorial opinions are those
of the editors and columnists. They are not necessarily the opinions of the
administration, Board of Trustees, or student body of Auburn University. Offices
located in Langdon Hall. Entered as second-class matter at the post office in
Auburn, Alabama. Subscription rates by mail are $1 for three months and $3 for
a full year. Circulation 11,000 weekly. Address all material to The Auburn
Plainsman, P.O. Box 832, Auburn, Alabama-36830.
The Danger Of Politics
Education seems constantly near
the controlling clutches of politics.
An incident at Troy State College last
week makes the threat clearer.
The president of the college offered
a rebuttal of a student vote
which gave an edge to Jim Martin saying
that the poll did not represent the
average Troy student. He pointed to
another poll, taken in the band, which
gave Wallace an edge.
The president may have been perfectly
correct in pointing to the failure
of the poll to represent Troy
State, but as an administrator he was
talking out of school.
It is wrong for a college official,
we contend, to take the open torch
for any candidate, particularly when
he shows an unquestionable degree
of partisanship. He should never
stump, even in good faith, because of
the danger it poses to the open-minded
academic well-being of his faculty
and his student body. Subtle threats
to personal freedom are often the
most dangerous.
The proper thing for him to do was
to keep quiet and let the winds of
politics blow as strong as they would.
Troy State has nothing to fear,
even if the student body did make a
blooper, and nothing to defend or
apoligize for.
Long-Range Welcome
It is noteworthy that Admiral Thomas
Hinman Moorer is the first speaker to
be announced for the 1967 Auburn
Conference on International Affairs.
Covering four command's in the
Atlantic, two for the United States and
two for NATO, Admiral Moorer is
most qualified to shed constructive
light on "The US and Its World Alliances."
Chairman Charley Majors has succeeded
in adding an unprecedented air
of prestige to the conference by obtaining
the admiral.
But the presence of Thomas H.
Moorer at ACOIA will be more than the
addition of a qualified speaker. His
life alone is worthy of attaching the
label of "greatness."
He was born in the sleepy Lowndes
County community of Mt. Willing; he
finished high school in Montgomery;
he was a star football player at Annapolis;
and he was the youngtst four-star
admiral in the history of the navy.
Despite all this power and acclaim,
Admiral Moorer is one of the nicest,
most cordial men one could meet. For
a student group,: there could not be a
better all-around man to talk about
alliances with both warmth and knowledge.
We share a degree of jubliance with
the ACOIA committee over Admiral
Moorer's acceptance of the invitation
to speak.
We encourage students interested
in foreign affairs to keep the admiral's
coming in mind.
Admiral Moorer will arrive in Auburn
February 9 with his personal aide and
flag lieutenant Commander Kenneth
Knoizen. We extend a long-range formal
welcome to both.
Sunday In The Park
Sunday the condition of Samford
Park was embarrassing. A woman was
taking one group of young children
on a tour of the campus landmark and
the litter-hamburger wrappers, Jack's
sacks and drinking cups-was around
every bench and marred every lawn
section.
The children looked on with the
concern kids usually show. They'd
probably seen Susan Spotless on TV
saying "Please, Don't Be A Litter-bug."
It is clear that students and the
hamburger establishment on the corner
across from Samford are both to blame.
When the initial controversy arose.
over the hamburger company last year,
it promised to do everything possible
toprevent littering. The establishment
could do much more than they're doing
by having an attendant keep the
wrappers from blowing across the
street on to the park; and they could
provide some corner trashcans.
Of course, students are to blame also.
The incident Sunday showed that
too many aren't very careful.
Samford Park is Auburn's one austere
showplace. Old buildings which
portray its history, well-kept grounds,
and diagonal walks make for a quiet,
stimulating college environment.
Trash from the hamburger joint
doesn't fit the decor.
Counsel To The Council
Students who have made the "dean's
list" are entitled to unlimited cuts,
(luring the following quarter, except
for announced examinations,according
ing to a rule stated in the Tiger Cub.
But some faculty members, either
through personal motives or ignorance
of the rule, are failing to extend this
privilege.
The rule's purpose, we believe, is
to give extra freedom to students who
have proven they can excel-freedom to
spend more time in the library, or in
extracurricular work, or any other
area of interest. The rule is important
because it grants a courtesy to students
who have exhibited responsibility.
(Most go to class regularly
without any prodding.) It gives the
student a valuable license to think
on his own.
Leading the infractors are those
faculty members who think that a cut
class is an insult to their integrity.
So they call the roll day by day, scowl
at those who cut, and follow the textbook
verbatim.
Since dean's list scholars are in no
position to complain for themselves,
we'll complain for them. The Academic
Council should consider identifying
all dean's list students on the registrar's
roll which comes to the faculty
later in the quarter.
It would definitely strengthen the
rule.
The Editor Speaks. ..
Dogface College Men:
With Love(?) To AFEES
By Jerry Brown
This is the story of forty frustrated
'boys who left Auburn to serve their country-briefly
and involuntarily.
The forty represented that fair face of youth and the lady
at the Opelika local board shuddered at the thought of calling
them "draftees." She preferred "selectees."
The lady explained that physical felt first emotional
she was sending the boys
to AFEES (Armed Forces
Entrance and Examining
Station) in Montgomery.
She pronounced it "Afis"
and one boy balked. He
hadn't understood the code
name and Afis was his
mother's name.
AFEES is a run-down
looking old warehouse in
the outskirts of Montgomery
that looks as bad inside as
it does out. .The decor was
dirt and almost every "selectee"
spoke of AFEES
with the foulest language
ipossible,
They had good reason.
The attitude of the hundred
sergeants and medics approached
that of tyranny.
They gave orders beyond
the authoritative-they commanded.
And they didn't
miss any opportunity to be
as ugly as possible. But
that's the way it has to be.
There are other aspects
of exposure to the masses.
The instructor had told the
boys to check the list as
to whether their fathers
were in good health or deceased.
But one selectee,
with a furrowed brow asked,
"What if he's dead?"
This boy wasn't from Auburn.
The forty weren't exactly
like Ali Ba ba's cronies but
a few were anxious to steal
their freedom away from
Uncle Sam. The physical
was about as cursory as the
"mental tests." After the
usual run through, the forty
were either disqualified-permanently
or temporarily-or
they were reclassified
1-RTF. (ready to fight).
All the frustration and
agony of the trip seemed to
change gears and the boys
began to slow down their
bitching about the sorry
state of AFEES and to
think about themselves.
Those who passed the
rumblings of a soldier. It's
easy to be patriotic and
throw platitudes on paper;
but somewhere, like Dos
Passos' writing on the Ail-
American boy who became
the Unknown Soldier, different
images shot through
the mind.
Jack Jones. Grew up in
Slocomb, or Birmingham, or
Monroeville. Fought a bully
in the third grade. Broke
his arm playing Little
League footbalk Was elected
"Most Likely to Succeed"
or "Best Athlete" or didn't
get elected to anything but
everybody liked him and
then he went away to college.
Jack Jones. Getting Ready
For Viet Nam.
There was another Jack
Jones. He flunked his
physical. He couldn't help
it if he had a bum knee,
couldn't see too well, had
a hole in his ear drum, was
too fat. He'd get a nauseating
ache in his stomach
when he saw the ships
leave, with the boys in
green. Sometimes it's hard
to be a "coward." Breaks
of the game.
The forty milled on the
warehouse's sunny ramp
waiting for the Greyhound
that would take them back
to Opelika. They smoked
cigarettes, read the notes
"draftees" had left on the
wall: "Jack Palmer, Drafted
July 26, 1966, Gone But
Not Forgotten."
The bus pulled away with
the sun glinting off its
windshield and forty un-frustrated
boys yelling "War
Eagle" and wanting to come
home.
It was only a two-day
trip and somebody was
waiting for them in Auburn
and back home. Maybe a
girl, or a professor, or a
local board.
Breathes there a man
with soul so dead...
Choice Of ttjw ?
Will South Rise Again
After Handle Waving?
By Charley Majors
Well it may all be over but the shouting
and the waving of the axe handles. Yes, the
people of Georgia have succeeded in a magnificent Job of
boosting the state into the national spotlight of humiliation.
As a voter in the "grand and sovereign" Peach State, I have
failed to see the voting logic of all factions. The white backlash
wanted to protest against
of the most indicative pictures
of Maddox's true nature
shows him picketing the Federal
Building in the state
capital.
So then a different light is
shed on the election. Maddox
sweeps the run-off for the
Democratic nomination, leaving
the liberals and the Callaway
supporters with jaws
agape. Since that time, the
state has been in a condition
of political chaos.
The people of Georgia
had a real choice in the
general election, regardless
of what the more liberal elements
said. The real question
was not conservative versus
liberal. This had already been
settled. The issue was the
election of either an experienced
governmental official
or one whose governmental
experience consists
of unsuccessfully running for
mayor and lieutenant governor,
the election of a responsible
conservative or the one
who could yell "nigger" the
loudest.
The real question was
whether the people of Georgia
would vote for the best man
or for the Democrat.
The returns show that more
voters preferred Callaway for
governor than Lester Maddox.
This was not a majority, however,
thanks to those people
who voted a protest write-in
rather than for the best qualified
of the two. Now the election
must go to the legislature.
The right of this group
is now being questioned in
court and may well be tied
up for months. Meanwhile,
LB J and the civil rights movement.
The conservatives
wanted to show resistance
against the "Great Society"
and unlimited governmental
spending. The moderates
wanted to have a good governor.
The liberals wanted to
purge the Democratic party of
the segregationist influence.
Before the Democratic primary,
it was predicted that
the darling of the Georgia
party Bo Callaway, would
easily defeat the expected
Democratic nominee, Ellis
had developed an image of
conservatism while serving
in the U.S. House of Representatives.
But the people of Georgia
were not satisfied with this.
Bo Callaway is a Republican,
which still evokes memories
of the Republican Reconstruction
in the rural counties of
Georgia. "My father was a
Democrat, as was his father,
and his, and his,, . ." is the
comment of the great majority
in my home county of Charlton
in the depths of South Georgia.
Enter extreme stage right-
Lester Maddox. With his
"vast experience in government
and administrative
offices, he was able to convince
the voters in the Democratic
primary that he was
the best qualified in a field
which included a former
governor, a former lieutenant
governor, a state senator,and
a former Democratic state
chairman. His executive
ability was convincingly exhibited
when he directed the
distribution of axe handles
in his Atlanta resturant. One
VVet-L, PIP TW P&PT 8CN& TAKE YtPtl.HENlEY.Ge AM J
60IMC? TO HAVE TO PUT UP WITH Y^HTH RpST OF TH T&Qtf"
literal Arts 9 • • •
Don't Count Sandwiches
Until You've Eaten'Em
By Lee Sentell
Last Tuesday night after watching the
Callaway-Maddox clash in Georgia on the
tube, I dragged my bleary-eyed self up to an all night Deanery
with the intentions of grabbing a quick snack and then footing
it back to my apartment and getting plenty of rack time before
journalism class at eight.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Soldiers'Pay...
— . _ . ~——'————___
Quiet Thoughts
On Patriotism
Br Kiel Fulliam
The rumble of drums and
guitars did not break my
train of thought as I searched
and questioned for more information
about a southeast
Asian war that has fast
become too big, too soon for
many college men.
Three soldiers
had
come from
Fort Ben
ning with a
w e e k e n d
pass to an
Auburn fraternity
party,
and one
of the OCS
candidates
had seen the war firsthand
He was a gunner in one of
the helicopters, which seemed
fairly safe compared to some
Viet Nam duties, but not in
vulnerable either, from a
layman's point of view.
"Our ship went down
twice, the native from Delaware
said. "Once it was because
of engine failure over
Da Nang. We were sniped'
the other time, but were
evacuated in five to ten
minutes by another 'copter
in the convoy."
The 21-year-old fighter
had three battle scars that
he brought home with him,
compliments of the Viet
Cong. The first time-in his
words, "We were on a routine
mission and a slug from
groundfire hit me in the
groin. I was grounded for a
month. They told me I was
going home, but I never did
make it."
Shrapnel caused another
wound. It hit the 'copter
door and a piece of metal
went through his bicep. The
Cong were almost fatally
successful another time when
they mined a jeep he was
in, but he was lucky add
only received a heel cut.
At the party, the soldier's
knee was swelled so that
his khakis were taunt around
the joint. His buddies had
to help him into the room.
"I got it in a football game
this afternoon. Our tech
sarge promised us a weekend
pass if we won. It'll be ;<>f
right. I can't drop out of
OCS just because of a little
sprain."
He was put in a hospital
shortly after returning to the
base, has stayed for six
weeks, and is presently
waiting to have cartilage
taken from his knee. "... Just
a little sprain."
The soldier danced, or
rather limped, through two
dances with a borrowed partner
before he returned to
talk some more. "The trouble
with this war is that you
don't know who you're fighting."
He echoed the oft
heard statement that national -
leaders are fond of making.
But his words took on special
meaning. He was "over
there." He had been through
it.
This soldier is typical
of many in Viet Nam. He
joined up right after high
school, planned to get his
service over, and return to
civilian life and college.*
He felt that we were doing
the right thing, staying in
Viet Nam.
And in defense of the
college student who's been
accused of dodging the
draft, or trying to, he said,
"I think, the deferrment of
college men is right. We
need future leaders and col-legs
is where you're going
to find a large majority \
of them."
To appreciate the young
men in Viet Nam is sometimes
hard for college students
unless you know them.
I found that out. Tests,
study, the worries of everyday
college life leave little
time to stop and reflect just
what a Viet Nam veteran has
gone through.
He is just like we college
men are. He wasn't jumping
for joy when he received his
orders to go to the "Nam."
He went, though, and did
his job.
Seeing a man with his
body scarred for the rest of
his life, just two years older
than I, makes me stop and
re-evaluate my view of the
patriotic values that I hold-and
readjust them.
Samford tolled its maximum
as I entered the sparsely
populated establishment. An
old man at the far end of the
counter was skimming through
a newspaper and three fraternal
gentlemen had apparently just
left a bacchanalian feast,
honoring victorious Lady Lur-leen.
I fingered a familiar menu
while waiting for the lone
waitress to acknowledge my
presence. The uniformed
Amazon behind the counter
cooly ambled past me and
slung a bowl of steaming
chili at one of the frat men
growled "twenty-seven" at
the quakingTheta Chi pledge.
He quickly produced the required
coins and grabbed a
spoon from under the counter
when her back was turned.
One of my several loud
coughs was awarded an annoyed
glare by the big girl
(she sported a dainty name
pin: Louise) and a glass of
iceless water was plopped
before me, sending missiles
of colorless liquid all over
my once clean jacket.
"Two scrambled egg sandwiches
with lettuce and an
order of sausage,"my hungering
mouth pleaded. Shewaddled
oa'ck toward' her position at -
the grill.
The whiskered old man
several stools down from me
made a feeble grab at her to
get her attention and hoarsely
begged for his "burger." He
added that he had been waiting
for an "awfully long
time." I swore I detected a
slight sardonic snicker in her
voice as she told him that
they didn't sell them no more.
An expression of utter dis-pair
rose on the brow of the
old guy dressed in a blue
uniform and he muttered something
about". . .nor sleet nor
dark of night..." as his head
slowly sank, resting his fuzzy
chin on his chest.
Eons passed.
A rumbling deep within my
innards prompted me to check
on the progress of my order
and I peered over the milkshake
maching and saw Louise
delightfully engrossed in a
well worn copy of "Modern
Romances."
"Good God!." my mind
screamed as another abdominal
rumbling ensued. "Hey!" I
shouted. "How's my sandwich
doing?"
Without looking up, she
hollared, "It ain't ready,"
and licked her thumb to turn
the page.
Having read all the signs
in the place, I revolved my
stool around to check out the
newspapers in the racks on
the sidewalk. I noticed that
the Montgomery paper headlined
"Auburn Postmaster
Still Missing; Search Goes
Into Third Day." I hadn't
heard of his disappearance
but the adjoining picture of the
elderly postman wasstrangely
familiar.
The dozing old guy, obviously
suffering from malnutrition,
stared into space
and moaned, "I only wanted a
hamburger. His slack body
then slowly leaned back and
he fell helplessly onto the
floor.
I panicked. My mind reeled.
"That can't happen to me,"
I cried.
"Give me food," I screamed!
Give me food!''
No response from the She-creature.
In desperation I
spun around and looked longingly
at the closed pizza
parlor. Nothing.
"Get it yourself," she
screeched at me.
Sensing that I was about to
be engulfed by the lurking
shadow of Starvation, I darted
out the door with a roaring
howl of laughter at my back.
The forerunners of daybreak
streaked the sky above me
as I trotted down Gay Street
and a recurring thought haunted
me: Will Mr. Burnett be understanding
if I sleep during
his journalism class this
morning?
Campus Undercurrent
Do all Auburn coeds really
need therapeutic "cold
showers" after 11 p.m. on
week nights? Someone seems
to think this is the case because
there is no hot water
at all in the dorms after
closing time. It makes things
a bit rough on those who have
11 p.m. permission and still
like to be clean. Is it a
dirty
some
idea? * „
Permission
communistic plot or
clod's money- saving
* *
time goodbyes
outside some women's
dorms are more "entertaining"
than any late show
could ever be. Some of the
displays would be censored
from a movie before it could
show in Auburn. Take heed,
coeds.
Letters Poky
The Auburn Plainsman
welcomes all critical,
complimentary, or informal
letters to the editor.
the state willbesufferingfrom
the empty chair. When it is
all settled, it is reasonably
sure that the mob willbe given
to Maddox by the predominantly
Democratic General
Assembly.
So save your wooden
nickels, your axe handles and
your picket signs, the South
will rise again. t
No letters of more than
250 words will be printed.
Letters should be typewritten
and triple spaced,
and must reach The Auburn
Plainsman, P.O.
Box 832, Auburn Ala.,
no later than the Sunday
preceding publication.
Libelous and vulgar
material will not be
printed. All letters must
be signed, but publication
of names will be withheld
on request. All names
will be certified.
i
s^asssssasssasa?: SSfSSS::*::**:^^ SW*:*?:::::::::^^ 5-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11, 1966
| ffTTFRS TO JHllDITOR . ..
Students Discuss Voir', Bank Hours, Philadelphia,.
"Open House' Replacing
I UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Abolished Village Fair
Editor, the Plainsman:
An Open House for high
school and junior college students
will be held this spring.
This letter is to clarify any
misunderstandings that may
have arisen concerning the
headline in the Plainsman
last week-VILLAGE FAIR
ABOLISHED. Following is a
memorandum the Senate has
sent to Dr. Philpott and to
Dr. Bailey, chairman of the
"The Student Senate on
October 31, again evaluated
the usefulness and necessity
for Village.'Fair. The Senate
heard and appreciated the
recommendations of the Academic
Council. However, the
the Senate voted unanimously
to have a day set aside for
high school students and
junior college students to
visit Auburn University in the
spring.
Although the activities of
the day may differ from those
of the past, there will be an
Open House. At this time, a
"big-name" entertainment
group could be presented to
the students. The Senate feels
that any participation by
individual schools in recruit-
The Academic Council sent
these recommendations to Dr.
Philpott for his decision. He
referred the matter back to the
Senate for a final decision
because he feels it is a student
project and because he
has seen only one Village
Fair.
Village Fair as it has been
known in the past with school
exhibits will be abolished at
the recommendation of the
Academic Council, but an
open house will be held for
all high school and junior
college students.
Kay Ivey
Student Body Vice-President.
Presiding Officer of the Senate
4SED
Yes, Marilyn, There
Is A Philadelphia
Editor's Note: We are making
a special case by running
this letter in French in answer
to Marilyn LeVine's letter
last week.
Editor, the Plainsman:
Where do we take our children
on Sundays? This plaintive
plea from a concerned
mother echoed my sentiments
Adam (se couchant encore):
C'est a toi, mon petit pain
au lait. Ce n'est pas mon
affaire. Le fretin est ton
fils.
Eve: Mais, ma petite sala-mandre,
ici en Eden nous
n'avons pas Nd'avantages.
II n'y a rien a faire pour les
pauvres enfants. II n'y a
aucune chose culturelle a
visiter.. .pas de musees, de
concerts...
Canne: Sacrebleu! Fichez-moi
les concerts!
Adam (furieux): Je tedonnerai
des coups de canne, Canne.
Canne: Sapristi! S'il me faut
danser, papa, je saisirai ta
machoire!
Adam: Ecoute, femme, comme
il mal embouche!
Eve: Eden ne me plait pasj
Moi, je vais me reculer a
Mont-Aere Occidental ou se
trouve la tranquillite, la
fraternite...
Canne: Zut! Fichez-moi la
fraternite! Va t'en maman!
Eve: Adam, mein Kleiner pin-son,
que faire?
Adam: Idiot! Fiche-moi la
paix! Ou est la bouteille?
Eve: D'ac, 9a colle! Vive le
vin!
,, precisely. Recognizing the
ing students on this day should question's archetypal quali-be
completely voluntary.
However, the Senate feels ities, I conducted an exhaus-thatthis
would be an excellenttive research on the subject.
opportunity for such a program.
"The Senate also voted to
leave the planning of this
event to Jimmy Fuller and
his .Village Fair Committee."
Several committees com-
My efforts were rewarded
The following prerabelaisian
farce best illustrates this
situation eternelle.
LE JEU D'EVE
posed of administrators andL e . ge levantv. A d a m ma
students have evaluated, p e t i t e f i g u e c>est d i m a n c he
une fois encore. Qu'est-ce
que nous pouvons faire avec
notre fils, Noodnik, aujourd'-
hui?
Village Fair as the present
student body knows it. These
committees submitted recommendations
pro and con
to Jimmy Fuller, chairman of
Village Fair. The Senate
voted last spring to have
Village Fair and even established
a date.
This fall, Fuller asked the
Academic Council for their TO pince oiaBsinod Advertising in
. . m, . j ; • The Auburn ri.-iinsm;iii, come by the
Opinions. Ine ACademiCi IK-IVHIUIIMT nttiVr in l..im;ili>ii huso-
Council, composed of the| X^^TES £!tL W?l.£
nine deans, unanimously, £tC^^c^"^,.^!.
VOted nOt tO have Village (Commercial line rate quoted nn re-
Fair. They feel that: (l)The —
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
Classified Ads
primary objective of a dissemi- Complete
nation of information about "
Auburn to high school students
can be achieved more effectively
in other ways. (2)The
benefits of the program are
no longer worth the time and
effort required by faculty and
students in its preparation.
The Council agreed that
individual schools or departments
should have the privilege
of conducting "open
house" programs for special
groups of high school or junior
college students.
ASSOCIATION for
SECRETARIES
The National Collegiate
'Association for Secretaries
will meet Tuesday night at
7 in Tichenor 4.
PHI ETA SIGMA
The Phi Eta Sigma picture
for the Glom will be
taken next Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Photographic
Service in the " L " building.
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For Sale: Tropical fish, plants,
and accessories; good selection.
Call 887-3584, 1443 East Glenn.
For Sale: 19-inch RCA Portable
television; good condition; $60.00
Call 887-3559.
Lost: Chocolate brown undipped
poodle, missing since Sat. .Oct.
29 in Terrace Acres Vicinity.
If found, please call 887-8185.
REWARD!
Really, Charlie Brown, you
blockhead, where do we take
our children on Sundays in
Aub.?
Name withheld by request
Student Favors Banks
Open Fridays 3-6 p.m.
Editor, the Plainsman:
The problem of business
hours of the banks here has
long been a source of inconvenience
to the students and
faculty due to university
working hours. After investigations
and interviews with
the banks' officials, we propose
that the most acceptable
improvement in the banking
hours would be to open the
banks on Friday from 3 to 6
and to close them on Saturday.
We further support our position
with the fact that organizations
on campus such as
fraternities, sororities, •service
clubs, social clubs, professional
organizations and
church clubs, which have
accounts in the banks, would
like to see a change in the
banking hours.
The personnel of the banks
are in favor of staying open
on Friday afternoons and
closing on Saturday. This
in effect would give them a
longer week-end. The president
of one bank is in favor
of this proposal. The only
problem is that the two banks
cannot agree on the proposed
changes. Both banks must get
together before any improve
ment can be made.
Walter M. Rush Jr.
3BA ^ mmh mm^^m^
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OLIN L. HILL
The 23rd national convention
of Alpha Psi, veterinary
medicine fraternity, is being
held here this weekend.
Dr. J.E. Greene, dean of
the School of Veterinary Medicine,
will welcome the delegates
from the 13 chapters of
Alpha Psi throughout the U.S.
at a business meeting Friday.
Registration for the delegates
will begin at the Alpha
Psi house. The convention
will adjourn Saturday for the
Auburn-Georgia football game.
The convention delegates
will also elect their national
sweetheart. Dinah Armstrong,
representing the Auburn chapter,
was elected last year's
national sweetheart.
Nov. 11-Conference
on Surveying and Mapping
Union Ballroom, 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
Nov. 11-12,15-19-"The
Tempest," 8:15 p.m„
Player's Theater,
Nov. 11-13-Free Union
movie, "Sylvia," Auburn
Union, 7:30 pjn.
Nov. 15-16-National
meeting for the study of
breeding soundness,
McAdory Hall.
Nov. 16-The English
Hour, 4:10 p.m. Bradley
Lounge in the Union,
Dr. James R. Woodall
speaking on "William
Morris."
< -
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Si
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kw
6-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11, 1966
r
1,1 lilni I IW '•
Auburn and Georgia
played the first football
game in the Deep South
and when they renew their
75-year-old rivalry Saturday,
more than beating
an old rival will be at
stake.
Georgia is tied with
undefeated
Alabama for
the SEC
lead and a
win over Auburn
would
A "W^ I Sive Georgia
f^L "^P^w|at leas,; a
^ « • • tie for
RHODES ference top
laurels. A loss to Auburn
would put Alabama in undisputed
first place.
Auburn's stake in the
match is also high. Auburn
has not had a losing season
LORAN CARTER (IN WHITE) FIRES A PASS WHILE STATE DEFENDERS RUSH FREDDIE HYATT (88) MAKES GRAB FOR TIGER TD J
Tiger
Pause
By David Housel
LOOKING BACK
:$ You know it doesn't seem like eight weeks since Tom |
i Bryan threw that fullback pass to Freddie Hyatt and ;j:
!| boosted Auburn over Chattanooga. Time does fly, and it i|:
$ seems to be flying faster as the season goes along. >:
Looking back on the Tennessee game, we find it hard
to believe that the same Auburn students who left Legion
Field so early were yelling "WAR EAGLE" late into the
night on Thursday prior to the Kentucky game.
And then after the Wake Forest game, everyone began
to think that Auburn had won its last game. . .man anybody
.that couldn't beat Wake Forest but eight points just
hadn't got it. , .but time has proven them w r o n g . , - . . . , ,.
Then came the mud bowl against Tech when a great
Auburn effort wasn't quite enough. TCU was tough, but
they fell. . .You know we've often thought about how
Bruce Alford, the TCU place kicker, felt when he missed
the extra point. It was a long trip bad to Ft. Worth, we
imagine. >
Then came the Florida game. . .man that was a game. ..
you don't see games like that every year. . .A super
human effort fell short, but you've got to hand it tothe
Tigers. . .they did their best, and that's all anyone can
do. . .When you can look yourself in the mirror and tell
yourself that you did your best, that's all you have to
worry about. . .And Auburn could do that after Florida.
This week Mississippi State could get only 29 yards
rushing against Auburn and fell 13-0.
Only Georgia and Alabama left. . .two mighty big ones
if we can get them. Both will be tough spelled with a
capital T-O-U-G-H, but with a lot of hard work, they
can be taken. . .Yes, even Alabama. . .but first and foremost
come the Georgia Bulldogs. . .let's worry about
them. . .then get to the puddle splashers, or water walkers.
When die 1966 season began, the coaching staff was
bothered by all kinds of problems. . .sophomore quarterback,
defensive secondary, youth, injuries, and many
others. They apparently thought that they had the problems
of overcrowded sidelines solved when they restricted
side line passes to photographers and athletic
personnel, but such was not the case. . .ask Coach Lee
Haley.
About midseason, Coach Haley was busy on the sideline.
Suddenly, out of the blue came a hard elbow to his
chin. The action of the field had been far away from the
coach, but he had received a good lick. It seems as though
manager Paul Nix had become overjoyed as Auburn made
a key first down and leaped into the air. As he did, his
elbow caught Haley on the chin.
Apparently no hard feelings though. . .Nix was still on
the sidelines the Mississippi State game.
ONLY A GAME
Nix hit Haley in midseason, now there are only two
games left. Before too long, the 1966 football season will
be in the record book for football historians. The long
runs and plays will be forgotten as Auburn students
huddled in overcoats, head for the sports arena to see the
Auburn basketball team. It only goes to prove it's all a
game...
But wait a minute. . .if it's all a game, why the devil
is so much fuss being made about Georgia and Alabama.
The 1966 football season is far from over. The best part
is yet to come. Let's wait a while before we bury it. . .
let's stamp out Vince Dooley, and then see what we can
do about the ole Bear. . .then, and only then can history
have 1966.
So come along friends, with Alabama 7-0 and Georgia
7-1, the show has just begun to get interesting.
Gusty Out Talks Referee;
Tigers Scuttle State
Gusty Yearout will go to
any extreme to get the football.
In fact, he disguises himself
and gets the ball.
He appeared to be a defensive
back when he intercepted
a pass against Wake
Forest. And just to really
fool everybody, he posed as a
halfback when
he sprinted
for a 91 yard
TD with a
ff umble against
Florida.
Just in
case someone
might
have discovered
his
true iden-dity,
he posed as a referee
last Saturday and had a ruling
RILEY
By ROY RILEY
Assistant Sports Editor
changed.
SWAYS OFFICIAL
His successful attempt to
change a referee's decision
resulted in a Jimmy Jones'
field goal that iced a 13-0
victory over Mississippi
State.
Bobby Beaird had intercepted
a Don Saget pass at
midfield and Auburn took
over. . .when a referee's flag
went down. The referees
called Auburn for illegal procedure
as the teams changed
offensive and defensive units.
"It was a case of ball
possession," Yearout^ said.
"When the ball changes hands,
a team can substitute 11 men
without having to report to the
referee.
"We sent 11 men in, but
one was a little slow and when
the referee saw him, he (the
GUSTY YEAROUT (69) WINS DISCUSSION WITH REFS
referee) thought the substitute
was a single substitution, and
was coming in without reporting
properly."
After a brief conference
with the officials, Yearout
had made his point and the
ball remained in Auburn's
possession.
The game saw the emergence
of junior fullback Lee
Kidd and sophomore quarterback
Loran Carter. Kidd ran
well all afternoon and Carter
tossed a 33-yard scoring pass
to Freddie Hyatt for Auburn's
only touchdown.
Jones kicked one extra
point and booted field goals
of 40 and 47 yards.
JORDAN PRAISES
Coach Ralph Jordan had
praise for the entire Auburn
team as it took its first SEC
win of the year.
"I thought the defense was
outstanding," he said. "Roy
Tatum played well at defensive
tackle. . .as did Robert
Miller, and Bobby Wilson at
safety."
It was a team effort, and
little extras like Yearout's
escapades last week won it
for the Tigers.
If what appears to be a
lovely majorette starts streaking
toward the Georgia goal
tomorrow, get ready to cheer,
for it might be Yearout. . .
the master of disguise.
-•-•.•-•.•.•.•.
:•: 'Best Sports Coverage :|
In The SEC |
Amoco Chemicals Corporation
Has
Opportunities For Engineers
In
New Plant
Our representatives will be on campus November 15th and 16th to interview
candidates for MS and BS degrees in any of the following curricula: ChE, Me,
GE, EE. We are seeking engineers for our new petrochemical plant in Decatur,
Alabama which is expected to go on stream in 1987. Positions offer excellent
growth potential in an expanding organization. Amoco is a wholly owned
subsidiary of a major oil company and features competitive starting salaries
and an outstanding employee benefits program.
If you are interested in a challenging assignment offering immediate and
long range growth potential, make plans now to interview with Amoco.
Amoco Chemicals Corporation
Decatur, Alabama
"An Equal Opportunity Employer a
A uburn-Georgia
Stakes Are High
Spurrier Says I
Cliff Hare I
Tiger Advantage!
Florida quarterback •!§
Steve Spurrier, a prime f£
candidate for the Heisman |j
trophy, foresees a close $
game in Saturday's Au- :§
burn-Georgia clash. Spur- $
rier has faced both Au- •:•:
burn and Georgia the past :g
two successive week- :•:•
ends. •;•:
"Both clubs are real j |
sound. Georgia is a team :£
that takes advantage of j |
the breaks while Auburn jiji
is a club that seems to ig
get up real well for a big ;§
game. Playing in Cliff §•
Hare Stadium should be $
to Auburn's advantage,"
Spurrier said.
By GUY RHODES
since 1952 and a loss to
Georgia would make the
Tigers 4-5 and a win over
Alabama would be mandatory
to keep the record intact.
FEW BULLDOG VICTORIES
Georgia coach Vince
Dooley, who played under
Auburn's Ralph Jordan at
Auburn, has not beaten his
old coach in two tries. The
Bulldogs have beaten Auburn
only twice in the last
13 years.
Coach Vince Dooley* s high
ranking Bulldogs knocked
Florida out of the undefeated
ranks last week with a 27-10
victory. On the season the
Bulldogs have dropped only
one game-that being a
7-6 decision to Miami.
On the other hand the
Auburn record is much less
impressive, but two wins in
the last three weeks has
evened the chart at 4-4.
Last week's 13-0 win over
Mississippi State was the
top game of the year.
State managed only 29
yards rushing and never
entered Auburn territory
until the final minutes of
the game.
JENKINS FUMBLE
Last year Georgia fullback
Ronnie Jenkins fumbled
on the Auburn one yard
line with four minutes left
in the game, preserving a:
21-19 Auburn win.
Georgia is led by middle
guard George Patton, an
All-American pick last season
and a strong bet to repeat
this season.
Safety Lynn Hughes, who
intercepted two Steve
Spurrier passes last Saturday,
leads Georgia's defensive
backs. The Bulldogs lead
the SEC with 20 interceptions^
~
•
Men's
Weekend
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-ARROW-
Intramural Scene...
Greek Loop
Champs
Named
By JIM DYKES
The intramural action last week saw three fraternity
league championships decided and two independent
league titles claimed.
In the fraternity circuit, OTS took the title in
League 1 with a 13-6
victory over PKT. The
veterinarians still have
one game to go, but have
cinched the title.
AGR grabbed the League
3 title with a 6-0 squeaker
over SN in a dramatic match.
ATO claimed the League 4
championship with a 39-0
drubbing of SPE. R-l, with
a 5-0 record, took the title
in independent League 4
with a hard fought win over
R-2.
The only other independent
title which has been decided
is League 2, which was won
by the all-winning Hustlers.
DC, who beat BTP 41-0,
andSC, who beat AP in overtime
8 yds to 24 yds,will meet
in a crucial game to decide the
League 2 title. X-l holds the
inside track to the independent
League 3 title, but must
get by J and C in order to
win. The X-l warriors out-scored
N 19-6.
The Vultures kept their lead
in League 1 with a 7-0 win
over Newman 34-0 to keep
their title hopes alive. Forestry
is still in the running with
a 2-0 overall.
PLAYOFF SCHEDULED
The Fraternity League
playoff begins Monday Nov. 14
if a double elimination setup
is used. If single elimination
is used, the playoffs will be
Nov. 15-17. The Dorm League
championship will be Nov. 14
and the independent league
playoff will be Nov. 14-15.
In the remainder of the football
action, KA outlasted
TKE 6-0; LCA dropped DSP
14-0; PKP Beat PDT 6-0;
PKA dropped SP 12-0. Navy
dropped AVA 2-0 in a close
one; Tuffs won over AEP via
the forfeit route; P outgained
L in overtime 4 yards to 2
yards and BK also won by
forfeit at the expense of D.
PGD won in overtime 17
yds to 0 yds for SAE; KS
belted DTD 41-0; TX put
down DU 23 yds to 0 yds.
S, FG, and PG all took forfeit
victories over C,J, and the
Mustangs. AF waited until
the sudden death period to
win over Wesley 6-0; DCS
plastered CP 42-6 while FB
dropped JB 13 yards to 2
yards.
VOLLEYBALL
On the volleyball front,
PKT leads league 1 with a
4-0 record; ATO and PKP are
tied for tops in L2 at 3-1;
DC holds the lead in L3 at
4-0; and DU at 3-0 has the
lead in L-4.
APO holds the top spot in
LI independent with a 4-0
mark; AFIT and BSU are tied
at 4-0 for the LW lead; League
3 has a three-way tie for the
lead between M, W-2, and
P-2 all with 3-1 marks while
P-l and K-l are tied for the
LR lead with unmarked records.
With a lot of action coming
down to the wire, there will
be some hard fought contests
in the next two weeks which
is indicative of the strength
of the intramurals program.
The strength of the Auburn
program is the result of its
fine administrator, R.K.
Evans. Until next week. . .
Spalding Classics are above all the
w'favorite camous casuals . . . from jr. high to the highest degree.
Crafted by masters with just-what-the-doctor-ordered comfort, Spalding casuals
are designed to turn the head of any bachelor. Available in a variety of
smooth and grained leathers in a wide choice of colors, they can
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A-F SHOES
GAME
Georgia-Auburn
S. Car.-Alabama
SMU-Arkansas
Notre Dame-Duke
Tulane-Florida
Kentucky-Houston
Mich. St.-Indiana
LSU-Miss. State
Pitt.-Miami
Missouri-Okla.
Princeton-Yale
TCU-Texas
Ole Miss-Tenn.
F&M-Muhlenberg
Season Record
'Out On A Limb'
PULLIAM OLD PRO HOUSEL RILEY BROWN GUEST
Auburn
Bama
Ark.
ND
Florida
Ky.
State
LSU
Miami
Okla.
Princeton
TCU
Tenn
F&M
64-21
Auburn
Bama
SMU
ND
Florida
Ky.
State
LSU
Miami
Mizzou
Princeton
Texas
Tenn
F&M
62-23
Auburn
Bama
Ark.
ND
Florida
Ky.
State
LSU
Miami
Mizzou
nrinceton
TCU
Tenn
F&M
59-26
Auburn
Bama
Ark.
Duke
Florida
Houston
State
LSU
Miami
Mizzou
Princeton
TCU
Ole Miss
F&M
57-28
Auburn
S. Car.
Ark.
ND
Florida
Ky.
Indiana
State
Miami
Mizzou
Yale
Texas
Tenn
F&M
Auburn
Bama
Ark.
ND
Tulane
Ky.
State
LSU
Miami
Okla.
Yale
Texas
Ole Miss
F&M
45-40 58-27
The great Roy (Rusty) Riley, illustrious assistant sports editor of the Plainsman,
got on his horse and left the rest of the pickers in the dust last week, coming out
with one of the best records in recent weeks, 11-1. Missing only the Muhlenberg
game, Riley picked the upsets of Florida and UCLA. It all goes to prove that a blind
horse occasionally picks up an acorn.
Muhlenberg fell again, this time to Lycoming, 31-12. This week's opponent is
designated only as F. and M. in Muhlenberg's football brochure, so we'll "tune in"
and see if we can pick up the game. This is the Mules' last home game and will be
"Freshman Parents' Day."
1967 ACOIA Chairman Charley Majors, while visiting the State Department in an
attempt to get speakers for the conference, is reported to have received the inside
dope on this week's games.
Majors, this week's guest had one special selection NATO 14, DeGaulle 1.
The site of this game has been moved from Paris to Brussels.
SEC PRf W W • • • 7-THE PIAJMSMAN.
Friday, November 11, 1966
Tennessee Battles Rebs
As Old Rivals Collide
This must be interstate
rivalry week.
The biggest SEC games
are between old rivals that
hail from different states.
In addition to the Auburn-
Georgia game, Tennessee
will host Ole Miss and LSU
will "entertain" Mississippi
State in Baton Rouge.
The Vols almost blew the
whole show last week against
Chattanooga, but recovered
in time to whip the Mocs,
28-10. Ole Miss took the
week off in preparation for
the annual Vol-Rebel clash
and should be primed.
The Rebs whalloped LSU,
17-0 in their last outing.
ONE TOUCHDOWN
LSU, 21-0 losers to Alabama
last week, has scored
but one touchdown in the last
three weeks and the Maroons
have scored only one in the
AUBURN'S LOUIS PREISTER (20) MAKES BIG PLAY
State's Louis D'Avignon Downed In Frosh Game
Jones Says Freshman
Gridders Improving
By HAL LEE
Auburn freshman football coach Tom Jones said that
the Baby Tigers were an improving team after the Maroons
clipped Auburn 7-0, Monday afternoon.
"I believe we are a much improved team and would say
our kicking game was the
best it has been," he said.
State was able to contain
our ground game and we had
to take to the air."
A defensive battle all the
way, teams were evenly
matched. Auburn threatened
late in the fourth quarter
when the running and passing
of Raymond Weaver and company
moved the ball to the
State one-yard line. Auburn
was not able to score, although
they ran four straight plays
inside the State five.
The winning score came
late in the fourth quarter on a
23-yard Dan Pierce to Louis
D'Avignon pass from the Auburn
23. John Hale kicked the
extra point.
Ted Key was the leading
ground gainer for Auburn with
25 yards on 15 attempts.
Auburn led the punting
category with Connie Fredrick
booting seven times for a
44.9 average. State's Sammy
Milner kicked six times for a
37.5 yard average.
Don Webb was Auburn's
leading pass receiver with two
catches for 92 yards. Mike
Shows was second with five
grabs for 53 yards.
Auburn's next freshman
game will be Nov. 19 with the
undefeated Alabama freshmen
in Tuscaloosa.
HERBER1
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,2. •tthany Station Lincoln, Nebr. 68505
JULIUSCAESAR
Ga©Tf[lS
By ROY RILEY
Assistant Sports Editor
..ist two weeks.
The Bayou Bengals did
give Alabama's offensive all
they could handle Saturday,
but the Tide defense accounted
for all the scores in one
way or another.
South Carolina travels to
Tuscaloosa to play Alabama
Saturday. Alabama is not as
strong as they were without
the deposed Les Kelley, but
they should be stronger than
South Carolina.
Tulane, which mustered a
moral victory in a 10-10 tie
with Miami last week, gets
a look at Florida, Saturday,
in Gainesville. The Greenies
have improved since their j
SEC days and could give
the Gators a rough battle.
Florida > will not be too
happy after losing to Georgia,
27-10.
Other games on tap tor
SEC clubs include Houston
at Kentucky and Navy at
Vanderbilt.
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ENGINEERS AND SCIENTISTS:
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WHERE THE ACTION IS!
You and your ideas are needed to help fulfill our many
and varied programs.
F-111AandBFB-111
RF-111 • F-111K
MARK II AVIONICS
ADVANCED PROGRAMS
• SPACE SYSTEMS
• MISSILE SYSTEMS
• BORON FILAMENT
• OTHER R AND D
ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
November
14 and 15
SEE YOUR
PLACEMENT DIRECTOR
GENERAL DYNAMICS
Fort Worth Division
8-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11,1966 Kickers Sport GlobalPunch
(Photo by Roy Riley)
(L-R) ORLANDO HEILBRON, SANDY PURDON, JOHN ALLEN MAKE GAME PLANS
If the United Nations ever
needs a team to represent
them in an athletic contest,
they might use Auburn's
Soccer Olub.
In its fourth year of competition,
the team includes
foreign players from as
far away as Hong Kong.
Orlando Heilbron and Juan
Bonilla are
from Costa
Rica. Heilbron,
vice
president of
the club,
Cross Country Team Beats Bama
After Placing Third In Region
Auburn took third place
in the NCAA regional cross
country meet and then beat
Alabama, 26-29 in track
action last week.
The NCAA meet was in
Callaway Gardens, Ga.,
and the Alabama clash was
The most
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Campus are
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By RALPH BYRAM
in Tuscaloosa. The Tiger
runners beat every SEC team
except Tennessee in the
NCAA meet.
William and Mary won the
meet.
Auburn will enter the SEC
Cross Country Meet Monday
at the Roebuck Country Club
Golf Course, Birmingham.
Tennessee, last year's
winner, is the favorite.
The Auburn team will be
Kelley, McWaters, Foster,
Williams, Von Herrmann, Ralph
Blaine, and Scott Murray.
Taking the top individual
honors in the NCAA meet
was Duke's Eddie Stenburg,
who toured the long 5.1 mile
course in 24:49. Second was
Auburn's Vic Kelley. Kelley
beat all SEC runners and,
according to track coach
Mel Rosen, Kelley should be
be a favorite for the conference
championship.
55 MAN FIELD
Also finishing for Auburn
in the 55 man field, was
captain Glenn McWaters,
(15th), Dixie Foster (23).
Ralph Blaine (35), and Lewis
Von Herrmann (36).
Rosen said the team was
not quite up to par with the
way they ran the rest of the
season, but that they still
did a fine job. The competition
was tough for one thingj
and the course was unusually
long; with many hills. Rosen
said the experience gained
was very important in preparing
for the upcoming conference
meet, which he feels
is the highlight of the season.
FRONT RUNNING KELLEY
Kelley was the front-runner
at Tuscaloosa, charging
over the course in 19:08,
the sixth fastest time ever
run on Bama's 3% mile distance.
Second was McWaters.
Morris Williams placed
fifth for Auburn while Foster
was sixth. Topping the
scoring for Auburn was Lewis
Von Herrmann with eighth
place.
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111 E. Magnolia Ave.
played at the
University of
Costa Rica.
Gabriel Vil-
T — lasenor hails
MURDOCH from Mexico
where he played on the intramural
championship team at
Institute lux Gufnajuato,
Mexico.
Noori Saidi and Carl Nas-seri
are from Iran.
Having traveled the greatest
distance to enter Auburn,
Mic Fong from Hong Kong,
adds his talented toe to the
effort. Fong is working towards
degrees in both radiology
and electrical engineering.
He was captain of the Hong
Kong Technical College
Team while getting his under
graduate diploma.
SYRIA SAM
Sami Saadi came to Auburn
from Syria, and is noted for
his hard shot from his right
wing position. He is in pre-engineering.
Other players on the team
are Pat Wagoner, John Allen,
Dennis Allen, James Buck-waiter,
Santiago Gangonena,
Floyd McRae, Leroy Shelton,
Billy Gibbs, Norman Wiley,
and Sandy Purdon.
In its fourth year as an official
organization on the Auburn
campus, the Auburn
Soccer Club has overcome many
handicaps to reach its present
position.
OFF TO GOOD START
In the words of Dr. J.R.
Howes, who oversees the
club's activities, "This
year's team has the best start
and has progressed farther
than any team in the past."
Howes, a long time player in
England, says that he- has
left the running of the team to
the officers of the club and
team members.
All scheduling, game planning
and field conditioning is
left to team members.
The club plays games during
fall and spring quarters with
Sports Spectacular...
By MARTHA MURDOCH
two tournaments in the spring.
Under the helpful assistance
of Dr. Arthur Fourier, head
professor of physical educa
tion, the club is provided with
goals, nets, and a field to
play on.
' SUCCESS STORY
"But a success story such
as this starts, at the foundation
of the team-the players
themselves," said club president
Purdon. "We are having
more fun playing this year
than ever before because we
have finally matured to a
close-working team-on and
off the field."
Purdon, who doubles as
the player-coach for the team,
praised the other players,
saying, "I have never enjoyed
playing more than with these
men."
Purdon, a Marine Corps
NESEP student majoring in
Aerospace Engineering, knows
what team play is like. He
earned ten varsity letters in
soccer, ice hockey, and lacrosse
(captaining the latter
two) at Lenox Prep School in
Massachussetts. He was on
the New England all-scholastic
lacrosse team and was sought
after by both Trinity College
and the Naval Academy.
STRONG POINTS
"I think one of our strong
points is in our halfbacks,"
Purdon said. "Both John
Allen and Dennis Allen are
(Photo by Roger Hull)
Xheck Under The Hood, Sir?'
Working in the pit area at the race track can be grueling
work. This week's sport spectacular, Janna 'Carruth,
does not seem to mind though. An ADPi pledge, from
Fairhope, she lives in dorm 6. Janna, a freshman in Science
and Literature, certainly makes life on the other side of
the track.
The
Colgate
by
If ever a suit rated a cheer from
the IVY set, it's the great new
Colgate by University Seal.
Vests are "in" for fall, and the
Colgate's got a dandy. It's
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to a snazzy new suede look! The Colgate is the
traditional 3 button coat. It's all yours in 100% wool
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highly skilled players who
show the rest of us how to
hustle. Also, Noori Saidi is
very adept at setting up plays,
so we use him in the center.
"At fullback we use our
three strongest players; John
Wall, Juan Bonilla and Mic
Fong," Purdon continued.
"The position of goalie is
filled by two very capable
players, Dennis Yarman, and
Pat Wagoner. Our goalies are
so evenly matched that we
let them flip to see who plays
each quarter."
' •'•'"••*•>.'•:•-•:•• ' . . i . ' ^ ; / * > : / . -
PURDON IN ACTION
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For free estimates
I Call 756-6454 or 756-6455
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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-H0UR SHIRT SERVICE OH REQUEST
Shirts laundered and finished 5 for $1.10
A LITTLE EXTRA FOR HANGERS
AT ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING
STUDENTS AHD STAFF MEMBERS
To take advantage of our Wednesday Special, you must
show your I.D. card when you bring in your clothes, NOT
when you pick them up. If you don't show your I.D. cards
as you bring them in, you will pay the regular price. We will
not change the price on our ticket.
PARKING NO PROBLEM
Anything goes when you use IT'S CRICKET.™ Exceptional men's toiletries.
After-shave, 4 oz. $3.50. Cologne, 4 oz. $4.50. Gift sets from $8.00.
Available in drug stores and cosmetic departments of department stores only.
Another line product of 3Jj Kayser-Roth.
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB
The Psychology Club will
-meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in
Thach 301. Dr. Jack Turner
of the psychology faculty
will speak. His topic will
be "Little Known Facts of
Little Known Value." The
meeting is open to all interested
students.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM
The physics department is
holding a colloquium today
in Commons 213 at 4 p.m.
Dr. Charles E. Melton will
speak on the "Molecular
Orbital Theory as a Tool in
Research."
•I
KAPPA DELTA PI
Kappa Delta Pi will meet
Tuesday at 4 p.m. in Room
212 of the L Building.
ENGINEERS' WIVES
The wives of Auburn En-1
gineers will meet Tuesday
at the Social Center at 7:30
p.m. Bring sewing, knitting
and letter writing as the
meeting will be an old fashioned
sewing circle.
THE GENTLEMAN'S SHIRT
The Purist® Button-Down
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lean, tapered body . . .
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in his traditional wardrobe.
Shirtmanship at its
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LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
- LINKLETTER LAYS IT ON THE LINE
'Old Enough, Rich Enough To Speak His Heart'
Linkletter Relates
Political Opinions
OLIN L HILL
DRIVE-IN
DIAL
887-5281 OpellKxx
Thursday-Friday-Saturday — Double Feature
DOUBLE FEATURE
'1,000 EYES OF DR. MABUSE'
— PLUS —
'RETURN OF DR. MABUSE'
Sunday-Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
MATT HELM
SHOOTS THE WORKS
IN HIS FIRST
ADVENTURE!
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents
mTiiras MATT HELM
SILENCE
M P M n w STELLA STEVENSDAUAH LAVI-VICTORBUONO
ARTHUR O'CONNHiROBERTWEBBER-JAMES GREGORY
ROGER C.CARMELIBEVERLV ADAMS -CYO CHARISSE as LOVEY KRAVEZIT
On the night of elections
throughout the country, Art
Linkletter, well-known TV
personality and businessman,
tossed out his political
opinions to an overflow
crowd here.
Linkletter spoke Tuesday
night in the Union ballroom,
estimated to seat
1,500 which was running
over with students, faculty,
townspeople, and small frys.
Looking down on the cluster
of children sitting on the
floor in front of the stage,
Linkletter said, "I've heard
that college students were
getting younger every year,
but this is ridiculous."
Answering a question on
the Alabama gubernatorial
campaign, Linkletter said that
the blatant and calloused way
in which Wallace was running
his wife for governor was a
direct refutation of the con-sitution
and a "cynical
disregard for the moral aspect
of law and order." "Such as
this is the most dangerous
thing we have to face in politics
in our country today,"
he added.
Linkletter spoke on the
advantages and disadvantages
of an actor running for public
office, referring to the Ronald
Reagan-Pat Brown clash in
California. He said that entertainers
were no longer
gypsied or third-class citizens.
He added that he thought
there would never again be a
By BARBARA THOMAS
News Editor
major political figure elected
who couldn't sell himself to
the public on TV.
Linkletter blasted the political
tactics of Brown in the
California gubernatorial race.
"The whole tenor of Brown's
campaign is that actors are
really idiots. He even has
some actors saying it-which
proves that some actors are
idiots," he said.
He said that Ronald Reagan,
newly-elected California chief
executive, would be a "fresh
breath of air in machine politics."
9-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11, 1966
'LgT£ KeZf OU|2 EY££ OH OUK. OWN PAFBr?, fEU-A."
New Art Needs Depth,
Negro Professor Says
Dr. Nathan A. Scott, professor of theology and literature at
the University of Chicago, told an Auburn audience last week
that the only answer to leak of depth in current art forms is to
"draw away from abstractions."
Dr. Scott, the first Negro to lecture at Auburn, spoke to a
Linkletter singled out an
example of what he said was
bad taste in Brown's campaign
tactics. Brown, according
to Linkletter, was filmed
talking to a small Negro girl
in a supermarket, telling her,
"Remember, little girl, it
was an actor who killed Abe
Lincoln."
Linkletter said, "This is
true, but I say he was a
non-union actor."
He then told of boycotts
and blacklists against actors
who "stick their necks out"
in political campaigns.
He briefly touched on the
question of lowering the voting
age to 18 because, he said,
"If an 18-year-old is old e-nough
to fight for his country,
he surely is old enough to
vote. Today's 18-year-olds
are more educated than young
people in the past." he said.
At a press conference earlier
in the day, Linkletter said that
he did not approve of women
running for election of chief
executive because "they just
don't have the aggressive
core to conquer the tremendous
physical and mental problems
confronting a chief executive."
Casually perched on the
edge of the Player's Theatre
stage, Linkletter answered
questions put to him by students
interested in an acting
career.
Linkletter was visiting the
Auburn campus on a leg of his
tour of U.S. colleges for the
Royal Crown University'
Series. Auburn was the 12th
college he'd visited in the
year and one month since his
series began.
After leaving Auburn, he
will speak to students at
Tuskegee Institute in Tus-kegee,
Ala.
SATURDAY
THRU
TUESDAY
PARAMOUNT RCTURES warns
bunniesr TONY
fate * year!
She
rofning m
s*/ung
GCORGE « - _ . • < : • . . ^ ^ M M W ^ "\*~ PARAMOUNT
SHOW TIMES: 2:00, 3:50, 5:40, 7:30, 9:20
Next Wednesday and Thursday
is Harper
LAUREN BACALLJUUE HARRIS-ARTHUR HILL-JANET1EGH
FAMEIA TIFFIN-ROBERT WAGNER- SHELLEY WINTERS V
SHOW TIMES: 2:00, 4:15, 6:45, 9:00
A G£RSHWWK*STNER Production
THE
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capacity crowd in Langdon
Hall last Monday on "Art and
the New Radical Style."
He said new art movement
rejects the "old myth of
depth" and mistakes the abstract
for the concrete.
Contemporary art forms, he
said, are "mere skeletons of
steel and glass and large white
fields bearing strokes of
black."1
Employing a quote from
Goethe, Dr., Scott said, "It
is the better part of human
nature to try to bestow upon
the concrete the honor of the
idea." The abstraction rests
in the obscurity of ideas.
"The real danger" in the
current forms," he said, is
that "a scientific culture will
foster on the imagination-arid
abstractions. It is possible
that there will be an enclave-
Disgrace is not in the
punishment, but in the crime.-
Alfieri.
ment to the analytical function
and thus obscure reality."
A writer in the areas of
theology, modern literature,
and religion, Dr. Scott is the
author of 13 books and contributed
to numerous periodicals.
He is also a priest of the
Episcopal Church, a Kent
Fellow of the Society for
Religion in Higher Education,
co-editor of the "Journal of
Religion" and book review
editor of "The Christian
Scholar."
Dr. Scott was presented by
the Religious Life committee
in conjunction with the Auburn
Ministerial Association.
SEA TO MEET
The Student Education
Association will meet Mon-at
7 p.m. in Thach Auditorium.
J.L. Loworn, principal
of Auburn High School, will
speak on the characteristics
of a good teacher.
•*¥iKN
IT
THIS PICTURE
IS RECOMMENDED
FOR ADULTS
MEMBERS OF NEU'S«HiELSiF«EMC[.cttnMH
LATE SHOW FRIDAY A N D SUN-M0N-TUE
Doritsay
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TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY
THE ARCHITECTURE AND ARTS COUNCIL
PRESENTS THE SECOND ATTRACTION
OF THE FILM ART FILM SERIES
FLAMINC PASSIONS and VIOLENCE IN LUSTY. LAWLESS ROME t j
| x | All hail the most honored picture of the
I year... nominated for Academy Award I
MGM present* William Shakespeare't
JULIUS CAESAR
Starring
MARLON BRANDO
JAMES MASON
JOHN GIELGUD
LOUIS CALHERN
EDMOND O'BRIEN
and
GREER GARSON
DEBORAH KERR
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Sunday-Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
Violent
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begins
Southwest
to
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TECHNICOLOR*
From Sidney Furie, director of "The Ipcress File*
10-THE PLAINSMAN FHday, November 11,1966
SYLVIA
Starring Carol Baker
George Maharis
Friday, Saturday,
Sunday
Union Ballroom
7:30 p.m.
SHAKER MAKERS
Shakers for the Auburn-Alabama
game will be made each
Monday and Wednesday at 4:30
pjn. on the Union lawn. The
game will be telecast in color
and the Spirit Committee is
asking everyone to help make
10,000 shakers by the week of
the game.
VAiV UEUSE1\ "417"
TRAVELS WHERE THE ACTION IS!
It's not so much a shirt... it's a way of life.
Van Heusen tailors shirts and sportswear
for men to live in. Like this lively button-down
in permanently pressed Vanopress...
just one of a collection of solids, stripes
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the unmistakeable look of a leader.
for Hint added dimension wear
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» Z5S «•••••
The Villager celebrates the forthcoming fes
tive season with a collection of lighthearted
clothes for rejoicing. They are not,however,
bedizened with tinsel. Their festivity is
evident in a gayety of color, a lightness
of line, a freshness of fabric. But no
nonsense. Come in and see..,
4/K. « dresses,shirts, skirts,
l/lUC/ sweaters, slacks.
Midway Plaza
Between Opelika and Auburn
is a brand new
shop dedicated to
the casual, understated
look of today. Visit us soon
and enjoy a soft drink or a cup
of coffee in our patio—it was designed
along with our clothes -with you in mind!
Revolutionary Remembers
Bloody Budapest Bays
By LINDA NEWTON
"What will happen to us?
Is there no freedom but in the grave?
No answer. There is only blood
And the tears of the mourning. . ."
This verse, a poet's tombstone placed on the grave of
the Hungarian revolution which was drowned in blood about
this time ten years ago, was written by a native poet
who was executed after the first rebellion. He did not
live to recall the violent upheaval which was felt by all
of Hungary's people-but another did.
This refugee of the revolution is Sandor Szilassy. He
is head of the Science and Technology Division in the
Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
At the time of the outbreak of the rebellion Dr. Szilassy
was a lawyer in a small college town in Hungary. "The
Hungarians were dissatisfied with communist rule," he
said. "Students, workers and intellectuals demonstrated
on Oct. 23, 1956, for the restoration of democratic freedom."
"After secret police, known as the"AVO," had opened
fire on a crowd gathered at the state operated radio station,
Russian troops arrived in Budapest under the pretext
of restoring order. The oppressive regime collapsed
within three days, ahd revolutionary councils took over
the administration of cities and counties all over the
country."
REVOLUTIONARY COUNCIL
Dr. Szilassy was asked by his fellow lawyers to represent
them on the revolutionary council in his city. The
Russian supported governments had fallen apart and their
officials had vanished. The Hungarians found themselves
at the head of their own government.
During the days of the rebellion, Dr. Szilassy visited
the student revolutionary headquarters and saw a magazine
which was composed solely of revolution pictures.
"The students," he said, "were at the heart of the
revolution. Unlike their elders, they were not resigned to
the fact that the communists were permanent residents of
Hungary.".
In the young people hope flourished for the intervention
of the United States and the United Nations. But their
hope turned to disillusionment, for no help came. "The
Hungarian revolutionary government sent a protest to the
United Nations Nov. 1 on the re -entry of Soviet troops into
Hungary, but it was in vain.
RUSSIANS MURDER THOUSANDS
"Newly organized and poorly equipped, armed groups
could not successfully resist the Russians. On Nov. 4.
the attacking forces murdered thousands of my countrymen,"
recalled Szilassy.
"There were barbed wire lines on the border with
guard towers approximately every 1,000 yards. But at
11 a.m. we crossed over to the flat, forested Austrian
side. We were unhappy with the situation in Hungary,
we had to leave."
Two hundred thousand persons like those in the
Szilassy family fled Hungary in the days following the
re-entry of the Russians. More than 40,000 of these came
to the United States, the majority of whom were young
people.
The Szilassys were fortunate enough to find an Indianapolis
lawyer to serve as sponsor (one who would
vouch for the integrity and good intentions of immigrants.)
After living in Indiana, he and his family came here.
Dr. Szilassy has seen the take-over of his government
and the wholesale killing of his countrymen. He has seen
the pot of revolution reach a slow boil then suddenly
spew over the rim-and he feels that the brew could
erupt again. "A revolution can break out when time is
ripe for it," he said grimly.
SOCIOLOGY CLUB MEETS
The Sociology Club will
meet next Thursday in Tiche-nor
106 at 7 p.m. Rev. R.W.
Woodson of the Trinity
Episcopal Church will speak
on the "Playboy Philosophy."
We can do more good by
being good, than in any other'
way.-Rowland Hill.
HELP WANTED
Part tine student shoe
salesman
Some selling experience is
required
Call 887-8411
THE B00TERY
m
Dr. Sandor Szilassy
8
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from 1 to 6
This Afternoon
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$1.00 per Car
Sposored By
Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority
i
i
THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
Wishes to interiew seniors interested in
SALES and SALES MANAGEMENT
We will interview seniors in any school, but we are
primarily interested in senior class members of the
Business School, and the School of Arts and Sciences.
Please arrange an in interview for Monday,
November 14, with your Placement Office.
The represent of hes will be:
J. R. t fneridge (Memphis St ate)-Memphis District Manager
D. B. McMuffi'n (Pr'meton)-Birmingham Unit Manager
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1.95
6.95
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THE AUBURN PUINSMMI
WAR EAGLE
75 Years Of Auburn Football
2-A-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11, 1966
From J . .To 1966
AUBURN'S FIRST FOOTBALL TEAM
Standing-Back row: Professor Atkinson, Sponsor(mascot), Dr.
Petrie, Coach. Second row from back: Richards, Herren,
Buckalew, Boykin, Cullreath, Graves, Green, Wilson, Smith,
McRae. Seated-Second row: Stevens, Smith, H.H. DeBardela-ben,
McKissick, Culver, McLendon. First row: Hare, Barnwell,
Dorsey, Going, Lupton.
THE 1966 FOOTBALL TEAM
Shown above is the first wave of the AuburnTigers as
they take to the field in the 20-6 opening game victory over
Chattanooga. Leading the way are Charlie Glenn (71), Tim
Christian (85), Dwight Hurston (20), and Richard Wood (62).
THE RIVALRY: GLORY, LEGEND, TRADITION
The South's oldest football rivalry,
the Auburn-Georgia series, is steeped
in the tradition, legend, and glory of
the 75 football seasons between 1892
and 1966.
The first Auburn-Georgia came about
as two college classmates, Dr. George
Petrie of Auburn and Dr. Charles
Herty, each fielded a team and met in
Atlanta in February, 1892.
Auburn won the first one 10-0, but
Georgia evened her record for the year
with a 50-0 victory over Mercer.
Petrie's Auburn club had a 2-2
record beating Georgia Tech 26-0 in
addition to Georgia. Losses came to
Trinity 34-0 and North Carolina, 64-0.
By DAVID HOUSE L
Sports Editor
This year's Auburn-Georgia game has earned,
also matches two friends, Ralph Jordan
and Vince Dooley. Dooley was
one of Jordan's first qua rterbacks on
the Plains, and started the Tigers
on the victory road that would lead
to the national championship in 1957.
Dooley has tried twice to beat his
Over the years, Auburn and Georgia
have met 69 times. Auburn has won
32 times and lost 31. Six contests
have ended in ties.
NEW ERA
The fans, students, and just plain
curious spectators who gathered in
old coach, but has yet to succeed. Atlanta's Peidmont Park that September
day in 1892 may not have realized
that they were witnessing the beginning
of a new era in southern
living. . .the introduction of football
to the South.
Football was soon to become the
most popular sport not only south of
the Mason- Dixon line, but all over
the United States, and Auburn and
Coach Jordan beat his protege 14-7
in 1964. and 21-19 last year.
There have been many thrilling and
exciting games between Auburn and
Georgia. The 1942 Auburn victory,
over Georgia's Rose Bowl team, the
Georgia win 14-13 in 1959 to clinch
the SEC championship, are only two
of the many great ones each school
Auburn and Georgia would be in the
forefront of its establishment.
If one of the "thousands" who
witnessed the first game 75 football
seasons ago could be at Cliff Hare
Stadium Saturday, he might not recognize
the game, the color, or the spectacle,
but when the "WAR EAGLE's"
and the "Go You Silver Britches"
begin to ring across the turf, he might
feel a deep sense of pride because he
was a part of this when it was nothing
but a small athletic contest.
Now football is as much a part of
southern life as "Dixie."
The South is football country and
football is Auburn and Georgia's
game.
fflSSSSSmsmm A February Day In Atlanta-Victory JSSSSSSSS
sss&s&sssssss
The following account of the first Auburn-Georgia game
cones from "War Eagle, A History of Auburn Football 1892-
1951."
February 20th, Piedmont Park in Atlanta, Ga., was the
scene of Auburn's first regularly scheduled football game,
when it met the University of Georgia. The press described
the game as the greatest athletic contest ever played in the
South. Auburn won, 10-0. A crowd of 3,000 witnessed the
game. /
According to the press accounts, "thousands packed every
inch of the immense grandstand and hundreds of splendid
equipages surrounded the field presenting a brilliant spectacle."
SPECIAL TRAIN
A special train was run from Montgomery which consistedof
an engine and two coaches. Starke School of Montgomery occupied
one coach, while the Auburn team and students were in
the other.
The senior class of Auburn came out in a splendid tally-ho
wagon.
Details of the game are very meager, but it appears that the
first half was scoreless, although the majority of the game was
played close to Georgia's goal.
In the second half, Georgia started off with the "V" formation,
but soon Auburn took the ball and steadily drove down the
field for a touchdown with Frank Lupton scoring. He also
kicked the goal. Auburn 6, Georgia 0. (TD's counted four
points.. .Ed.)
Later in the game, "Culvar seized the ball near the center
of the field and ran for a touchdown, being well guarded by
his men." Lupton missed the goal. Auburn 10-Georgia 0.
Professor Atkinson assisted Dr. Petrie in coaching the
team. Neither received any compensation. The student body
purchased two gold-headed walking sticks to present them, but
President Brown refused to allow the professors to accept
gifts from students.
THE LINEUPS
AUBURN: LE, Smith; LT, McLemore; LG, Culver; C. McKissick;
RG, DeBardeleben; RT, Herren; RE, Stevens; QB,
Going; LHB, Lupton; RHB, Daroly; FB, Barnwell.
GEORGIA: LE.Fricks; LT, Nalley; LG. Shackelford ;C, Frey;
RG, Howell; RT, Halsey; RE, Lane; QB, Gramling; LHB.
Kimball; RHB, Herty; FB, Brown.
OR. PETRIE
3-A-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11, 1966 It Started With Two Profs
By SKIP O'DAY
Seventy-five years ago, give or take a few months, two
Doctors of Philosophy, Petrie of Auburn and Herty of the
University of Georgia, organized and coached the two first
college football teams in the Deep South.
George Petrie, while working* on his doctoral degree at
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, first observed football
in North Carolina and found it to his liking. Absorbing all
the gridiron rules and regulations he could find, he took his
degree and returned to his teaching duties at Auburn.
Sharing Petrie* s interest in football was Dr. Charles Herty
of Georgia. An agreement was reached that they would organize
teams and play a game.
IT BEGAN IN PIEDMONT PARK
Organization of th£ teams on the two campuses actually
began in the fall of 1891. Both coaches, however, were unprepared
to commit their teams to intercollegiate competition
so early in the school year. Finally on Feb. 20, 1892, the
teams were ready and the big game was played before a crowd
Of 3,000 in Atlanta's Piedmont Park. The result was a 10-0
victory for the fledgling Tigers.
Herty was listed in the starting lineup as Georgia's right
halfback. Possibly this was Dr. Herty, the coach, although no
initials or first name were given.
Auburn's oldest known living graduate, Dr. Charles Glenn,
class of '91, recalled as recently as Auburn President Phil-pott's
inauguration (May 13, 1966) that prior toPetrie's return
from Johns Hopkins, Auburn knew only the game of soccer as
football. Oddly enough, the alumni publication of 1913 mentions
that students were trying to re-establish soccer football
since rugby was proving to be such a popular sport.
ENTIRE STUDENT BODY PLAYED
Dr. Glenn said that often the entire 200-man student body
would play the game, kicking the round ball from one fence to
the other in front of the present Samford Hall.
Dr. Glenn recounted, "Dr. Petrie returned and football was
to his liking. He told us all about it. His interest and enthusiasm
were contagious. He offered to show us how the new
game was played and became the self-appointed coach without
salary."
It can he assumed that Dr. Herty coached without salary
at Georgia also.
Under Petrie's direction at Auburn, the huskiest men, both
students and faculty, were invited to come out for the team,
and practice was begun on the rough and stony surface of
what i s now the Ross Centennial Garden.
That, of course, was before the formation of the National
Collegiate Athletic Association; therefore, faculty members
could play without endangering the eligibility of their team.
Foster McKissick, professor of electrical engineering, played
center rush or center for the Tigers. Barnwell was another
active combatant, while Buckalew and McLendon were tutors.
According to Dr. Glenn, "Prof. McKissick was a mighty
big man. It was an awesome sight to behold the team thundering
down the field in the flying wedge with McKissick at its
point." .
Pictures still in existence show the team of 1892 and other
early Auburn teams using the knitted, ski-type caps for helmets.
Players allowed their hair to grow long for added cranial
protection. The current vogue of combing the hair forward
and at an angle over the eyebrows is nothing new as the old
pictures show. The team of 1893 presented a number of players
with "modern" Beatle hair styles.
Having organized and coached the team in its first year,
Petrie retained an avid interest in football during his 55
years as history professor and Graduate Dean. In 1893, however,
he turned over the coaching duties to G.R. Harvey,
D.M. Balleit and F.M. Hall. In 1895. John Heisman, ayoung
man whom fame awaited at Georgia Tech and later at Pennsylvania,
became Auburn's head coach. The much sought-after
Heisman Trophy is named for him.
As Petrie demonstrated his brilliance as a classicist in
history and languages, the first Georgia coach also distinguished
himself in the academic world, becoming the key
person in developing the process of making paper from south-em
pine.
m&MMmiSSt
n
ft&SSSSSffSSSSS
Coach
Dr. George Petrie
G. H. Harvey
D. M. Balliet
F. M. Hall
John Heisman
Billy Watkins
R. S. Kent
Mike Harvey
Billy Bates
Mike Donahue
Boozer Pitts
Dave Morey
George Bonier
John Floyd
Chet Wynne
Jack Meagher
Carl Voyles
Earl Brown
Ralph Jordan
TOTALS
AUBURN FOOTBALL, 1892-1965 |
Years Games W L T g
1892 4 2 2 6. 1
1893 5 3 0 2 i
x*x-xx-x-x-x-x-x*x-x
1894
1895-99
1900-01
1902
1902
1903
1904-22
1923-24; '27
1925-27
1928-29
1929
1930-33
1934-42
1944-47
1948-50
1951-65
74 Years
4
18
9
5
2
7
143
24
21
14
4
39
95
37
29
150
613
1
12
6
2
0
4
101
7
10
3
0
22
48
15
3
102
342
3
4
2
2
2
3
37
11
10
11
4
15
37
22
22
43
232
0
2
1
1
0
0
5
6
1
0
0
2
10
0
4
5
39
I
8
ss 1
8
1
Herty Was
'Pioneer'
At Georgia
Dr. Charles Herty was the
father of football at the
University of Georgia. After
graduating at Georgia he
studied at Johns Hopkins
University where he saw intercollegiate
football in its
infancy. When he returned to
Athens as a member of the
Chemistry faculty he introduced
the game to the students,
formed a team and
wrote to his old Johns Hopkins
classmate, Dr. George
Petrie of the Auburn History
Department. They arranged
the first game to be played on
George Washington's birthday,
Feb. 22, 1892, in Atlanta.
The Tigers won that
famous game 10-0, and thus
began the Deep South's oldest
and longest football rivalry.
Dr. Herty handled the team
three years, then called in
the Bulldogs' first paid
coach, Glenn S. (Pop) Warner,
fresh out of Cornell. Pop
Warner began his illustrious
coaching career at Georgia
in 1895 and had an undefeated
team (4-0) in 1896.
He later became known as
"The Great Originator" as
coach of Jim Thorpe of the
Carlisle Indians, Pittsburgh
and Stanford.
Acknowekdgements..,
The Auburn Plainsman
wishes to thank the Athletic
Departments of Auburn and
the University of Georgia,
the Auburn News Bureau,
Auburn Department of Archives,
Photographic Services,
the *) Birmingham News,
the Montgomery Advertiser-
Journal, and Glomerate Staff
for their help in the publication
of this supplement
commerating the diamond
anniversary of southern football.
K^ssftyxSXftXKSiaisjssi
PEOPLE STILL SHOP BURTON'S
FOR THE NICER THINGS!!
SIGNALS: Formation " 7 5"
09-11-12-21-AL
THE PLAY: An End run to Burton's Bookstore
where a hearty welcome awaits you.
RESULTANT: A fine gain, for you will see the new
Sweat-shirt (sizes 2 , 4 , 6 , 8) with the
New Tiger that's going to chew the
Georgia Bulldog to bits. You will also
see the new Eagle Sweatshirt (sizes 10,
12,14,16) and that Eagle is going to
claw a certain 'West Alabama Team'
right off the top. Small fry will love 'em
>0INT AFTER:
of "Thanksgiving" to someone, ap front
yoi ire invited to see oar deliciois line of
Frail cakes, Nat Broads, aad candies.
Some are packed "Vacaam" aad will ship
readily. Fresh, free of bags, moist, ready
to eat. A favorite 'Cranberry Pecan Cake'.
One, two, three or foar to the unit. We wrap
for mailing.
INAL SCORE: BURTON'S
BOOKSTORE
4-A-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11, 1966
Snug Put Growl In Tigers
By DAVID HOUSEL
Sports Editor
In 1951, War Eagle was a dilapidated old bird.
The Auburn football program was deep in debt.
There had been only five victories in four years.
The Tigers had lost 10 straight games in 1950.
Football on the Plains was at its lowest ebb. But
all of this began to change in March of 1951 as the
Ralph Jordan Era of Auburn football got under way.
Approaching the end of his 16th season as Auburn's
head coach, Jordan looks back to 1951 and
says, "It was a frightening situation. The morale
was low, and the athletic program was unsound;
but I knew that Auburn people would respond if
they were offered a vigorous, enthusiastic program
dedicated to getting Auburn football on its feet.
We have yet to find that spirit lacking. Any time we
pick up the phone to call an Auburn man anywhere,
we can expect his full cooperation."
1932 GRADUATE
Jordan, a 1932 graduate of Auburn, truly returned
home in 1951. "I had never been more than
200 miles from home except for World War n. It was
like a hometown boy coming back. It was a real
happy occasion to return to Auburn and it was a
real challenge. I had coached and played center at
Auburn for 12 years prior to the war."
Jordan terms the reestablishment of Auburn
football as his biggest thrill. "I am real happy to
see Auburn football back in an accepted and competitive
position. We haven't won them all, but we
have been competitive."
The Tiger head man stressed that the resurgence
of Auburn football has not been an "I" job.
He gave credit to the many coaches, players, and'
fans who have contributed to Auburn's success.
FAVORITES
Going into 1966, Jordan had won 102, lost 43
and tied five.
One game stands out in Jordan's mind as his
most satisfying victory. Strangely enough, Jordan's
favorite victory did not come at the expense
of Georgia Tech or Alabama. It was the first game
in 1951, against the Vanderbilt Commodores-
Jordan's first game as Auburn head coach after
serving as a top assistant at Georgia.
Vandy came to Auburn with a first rate football
team and Bill Wade at quarterback. "Hardly any of
the 14 or 15,000 fans thought we had a chance,"
Jordan recalls, "but we won, 24-14. It gave us a
lot of confidence and it was a real big win for a
young staff."
Auburn's big winner calls the 1954 Auburn
squad his favorite. The early part of the season
was a disappointment as the Tigers dropped their
first three games. Midway of the season, Jordan
abandoned the X and Y two-team system that had
carried Auburn to the Gator Bowl the season before
and put his best eleven players on the field. Auburn
won its next seven games and trampled Baylor
33-13 in the Gator Bowl.
Close behind the 1954 squad came the 1957
team which won ten games and the national championship.
"Lloyd Nix, a slightly built quarterback,
led us to the best season in Auburn history," Jordan
said.
Jordan pointed out that Auburn's championship
team brought the first national title to the South
since Tennessee won the title in 1951.
Looking back over some of his great Auburn
players, Jordan named George Atkins, Bobby Freeman,
Bob Scarbrough and M.L. Brackett as the
most underrated players in his 16 years at Auburn.
Emphasizing that Auburn has had many great
players, Jordan named as some of the greatest
Frank D'Agostino, Jim Pyburn, Red Phillips, Zeke
Smith, Jackie Burkett, Joe Childress, Ed Dyas,
Jimmy Sidle, and Tucker Frederickson.
Commenting on Frederickson, Jordan said that
the All-America fullback would have to stand a
little taller than the rest. "He could run, block,
tackle, and do everything a great player is supposed
to do."
SHUG JORDAN SIDLE TELLS STORY; AUBURN 10, ALABAMA 8
Jordan noted that Auburn's players have excelled
in the classroom as well as on the gridiron.
He cited Nix, now a dentist; Dyas, who .finished
third in his class at Tulane's medical school, and
John Cochran, a recent honor graduate in engineering,
as examples.
One statistic that doesn't get much publicity
is the fact that over 98 per cent of the players who
have played football under Jordan have graduated.
"We encourage our players to graduate if they
still lack some hours when their eligibility is
over. One player who played his last year in the
mid-fifties and signed a pro contract came back to
school a year ago and got his degree. He graduated
nine years after his class, but he still came back
and got his degree."
With last year's five victories, Jordan became
the winningest football coach in Auburn football
history.
When asked if he dreamed of such a record when
he returned to Auburn in 1951, Coach Jordan replied,
"You've got to have a dream to have adream
come true. Coach Mike Donahue (the man who Jordan
succeeded as Auburn's winningest coach) was
a childhood hero of mine. He was the finest thing
that ever happened to Auburn athletics. Coach
Mike's record was a challenge, not a hope."
Jordan may say that Donahue was the best
thing that happened, to Auburn athletics, but most
people will disagree. They say that James Ralph
Jordan, the man called Shug, was and is the best
thing that has happened to Auburn athletics.
cIfiings
IjapperL-..
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Precisely what things depends on what you have in
mind. Whatever it is, Old Spice LIME can help.
Its spicy, lime-spiked aroma is very persuasive... but
so subtle, even the most wary woman is trapped
before she knows it! Worth trying? You bet it is!
Old Spice LIME Cologne, After Shave, Gift Set*. By the makers of original Old Spice.
'57 Team Finds
Room At The Top
5-A-THE PLAINSMAN FHday. November 11, 1966
$0&
When the 1957 college football
season opened, very few
Auburn fans were thinking
about a national championship.
On Dec. 10 of that same
year, the national championship
was all they were thinking
of.
As Ted Smits, Associated
Press sports editor, stood before
the packed west stands of
Cliff Hare Stadium on that day,
the cry "We're No. 1" was
was deafening.
SUPERIOR TEAM
What made this team No. 1?
Perhaps it was the same factors
that are found in all great
teams. . .superior coaching and
players, and above all, dedication.
There was Lloyd Nix, a left-handed
knuckle ball passer from
Kansas, Ala. who was a third
string halfback the year before
he quarterbacked the national
champions.
GREAT PAIR
Jimmy (Red) Phillips, named
to 21 All-America teams, and
Jerry Wilson teamed to form the
best pair of ends in the nation.
Halfback Bobby Hoppe once
said, "I'd rather block than
run." And block he did, so much
in fact that his running mate
Billy Atkins scored 82 points
to place third among the nation's
scoring leaders.
Tommy Lorino, a 165-pound
halfback, had been the nation's
leading ball carrier with an
8.4 yards per carry his sophomore
year. He was apre-season
All-America pick for the 1957
season.
Sophomores Zeke Smith and
Jackie Burkett led the nation's
No.l defensive unit. . .and what
a defense it #as. A mere four
touchdowns were scored on
Auburn, none by rushing.
The Tigers recovered 22
fumbles and intercepted 19
passes,as they held six opponents
scoreless.
In the opening game with
Tennessee, the Vols were the
5th rated team in the nation.
The year before the Vols had
soundly thrashed the Tigers
35-7. But 1957 was to be the
year of the Tiger.
Atkins' one-yard touchdown
plunge and a rugged defense
led by Burkett dumped the
Vols, 7-0. Burkett. making
his first varsity start, was
credited with being in on 35
tackles. This effort was only a
foreshadowing of Burkett's future
greatness as he later became
a two time All-America.
BAND DAY
The next week was band day
in Auburn. It was also banner
day for the Tigers. Six Tigers
figured in the scoring as they
romped to a 40-7 victory over
little Chattanooga.
By GUY RHODES
A rugged Kentucky club was
next on the Auburn agenda.
Atkins recovered a fumble on
the Wildcat 36 and six plays
later he scored on a six-yard
burst through the middle of the
Kentucky line. . .Final score.
Auburn 6, Kentucky 0.
A trip to Grant Field in
Atlanta awaited the Tigers.
Again it was Atkins who put
the Auburn points on the scoreboard.
Second team quarterback
Bryant Harvard led a drive to
the Tech 16 before the Yellow
Jackets stiffened and stopped
the Auburn advances. Atkins
came into the game with the
kicking tee. He had never made
a field goal in game competition.
The ball was placed down on
the 21, Atkins booted straight
and true. . .Auburn 3, Georgia
TechO.
VICTORY INSURED
Tech stormed back and drove
to the Tiger five. On third down
and goal to go, the Tech quarterback
dropped back to pass. As
he cocked his arm, All-America
end Phillips knocked the
ball from his grasp and Auburn
recovered to save a 3-0 victory.
After the game Tech coach
Bobby Dodd remarked that he
had never seen a finer Auburn
squad.
Houston fell by a 48-7 margin.
Nine Tigers helped put
points on the scoreboard. The
defense scooped up six Houston
fumbles and held the Cougars
to 99 yards total offense.
The Florida Gators had upset
LSU the week before they came
to Cliff Hare Stadium to face
Auburn in the Homecoming
battle. The alumni were not
disappointed as the Tiger defense
limited the Gators to 83
yards offense and recorded
16-0 win, their third shutout of
the season-all against SEC
foes.
TIGERS TRAIL AT HALF
The following week Mississippi
State scored the only
touchdown that an SEC foe
made against the Tigers as
they took a 7-0 halftime lead.
For the first and only time
during that season. Auburn
trailed. . .But only for the
half.
The Tigers received the second
half kickoff; 76 yards and
13 plays later, Atkins scored
and converted the extra point
to tie the game.
Later in the quarter. Smith
recovered a fumble on the
State 10. Again it was Atkins
for the TD and Auburn led,
13-7.
John Whatley, who replaced
injured Jim Phillips on the
3rd play of the game, caught
State's great quarterback, Billy
Stacey. in the end zone for a
safety to hike the final score
to 15-7.
FIFTH SHUTOUT
The Tigers recorded their
5th shutout of the season a-gainst
the Georgia Bulldogs in
Columbus, Ga. The winning
touchdown was a Nix-to-Phillips
pass with one minute remaining
in the first half. The final
score was Tigers 6, Bulldogs 0.
Florida States Seminoles preceded
the final encounter with
Alabama. The Tigers breezed
past FSU, 29-7 in anticipation
of the Crimson Tide. Atkins
provided the scoring punch with
two touchdowns and two extra
points.
Alabama found Auburn to be
a team on the verge of a national
championship and the final
40-0 Auburn victory indicated
that (he Crimson Tide could do
little to thwart the championship
hones.
ASSOCIATED PRESS CARTOON RECALLS 1957
| The 1957 Auburn football
Steam was not the only Au-
•i-iburn team to go undefeated.
$ The 1958 squad was un-
% defeated, suffering only a
§§7-7 tie with Georgia Tech.
:§:
The Tigers won the last
gfour games of the '56 sea-son
that ended when Ten-g:
nessee beat Auburn, 3-0 £
in the opener of the '59 sea-g
son.
Other unbeaten teams?
were 1893 (3-0-2), 1897 8
(2-0-1), 1900 (4-0-0), 1904 S
(5-0-0), 1913 (8-0-0), 1914 S
(7-0-1), and 1932 (9-0-1).
Congratulations
AUBURN and GEORGIA
On Your "75th" Year
Of Football!
UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
"in the Auburn Union"
COMPLETE SCHOOL SUPPLIES
- FOR AUBURN STUDENTS
Also
WE NOW MAKE XEROX COPIES
6-A-THE PLAINSMAN Friday, November 11.1966
'Tis Sweet To Win The Big Ones
Tech Rule
Endsln '55 By BENNY MARSHALL
Birmingham News Sports Editor
The picture is vivid, as real now as the day it happened
at Grant Field in Atlanta where Auburn had gone
15 years without winning a football game from Georgia
Tech.
They played in the third quarter, Oct. 15, 1955, and
Tech led again, 12-7, be- of Yellow Jackets swarming
JOYOUS AUBURN FANS CELEBRATE 1942 VICTORY OVER GEORGIA
Auburn Nips Georgia Rose
Selecting the greatest
Auburn team I have ever
seen on a given day was
an easy task. Those present
on that memorable
occasion will agree the
Auburn team that shocked
the nation with a 27-13
victory over Georgia on
Nov. 21, 1942 was a
power to behold.
Monk Gafford made All-
America that afternoon
running 21 times for 119
yards, returning three punts
for an additional 92 and
punting brilliantly. Zac Jenkins,
Ty Irby and Charlie
Finney, shifty, bardrunning
backs; and Jim Reynolds,