AUBURN PUINSMMI
To Foster The Auburn Spirit
Scarbrough for President
As a matter of "national
necessity," Plainstran editorial
columnist Lyn Scarbrough
announces his
candidacy for President
of the United States. For
platform, running mate and
campaign details see page
VOLUME 96 AUBURN UNIVERSITY AUBURN, ALABAMA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 81, 1968 NUMBER 7 12 PAGES
ODK Honorary selects 37 campus leaders
Thirty-seven junior and senior men have
been selected for membership in Omicron
Delta Kappa (ODK), national men's leadership
honorary.
The initiates were tapped at a breakfast
held in their honor early this morning and
will be formally initiated at a later date.
All initiates into ODK must have a 1.5
overall and amass the organization's required
number of leadership points. Categories
for points include scholarship,
athletics, student government, publications,
speech and drama, military, social
and religious activities.
Those selected were: Stephen W. Adair,
3 TM, Squires, Campus Drives Co-Chair-man,
SEIFC Treasurer, Kappa Sigma Vice-president;
John Spencer Allen, 5AR, Dorm
President and Soccer team captain at
Emory University, School Senator; Michael
D.Anderson, 4SED, Phi Eta Sigma, Plainsman
sports writer. Law Society Treasurer,
Phi Gamma Delta; Michael O. Bedwell,
4EE, Phi Eta Sigma, Scabbard and Blade,
Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu; Jim Bene-field,
4AS, Squires, School Senator,
School of Agriculture President, Alpha
Gamma Rho; Larry C. Blakeney, 4BA,
varsity football and baseball, "A" Club,
Plainsman sports columnist, Sigma Nu.
John L. Can, 4AE, Tau Beta Pi, Scabbard
and Blade, 1967 All-Intramural football
team, Alpha Tau Omega; John T.
Crowder, 5VM, 1967 All-Intramural soft-ball
team, Large Animal Clinic resident
intern, Alpha Psi secretary; Atley (Joe)
Davis, 4BA, Who's Who, IFC summer vice-president,
Pi Kappa Phi President; John
A. Drummond, 4PM, Superintendent of
Summer Jobs and Student Travel, Tiger
Cub Business Manager, Sigma Nu Vice-president.
Michael C. Farrow, 4PL, Squires, Law
Society Treasurer, Pi Kappa Alpha IFC
Representative; James L. Fillmer, 4BA,
Phi Eta Sigma, Arnold Air Society, Scabbard
and Blade, AFROTC Brigade Colonel;
William Harper Gaston, 3PD, Squires,
Blainsman circulation, advertising and
route manager, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Vice-
President; Charles Bruce Gilliland, 3AE,
Pi Gamma Tau, Plainsman news editor
and summer managing editor, Auburn Engineer
Editor, Delta Sigma Phi.
James M. Hines, School of Business
Vice-president, Glomerata sports copy
editor, and assistant editor, Pi Kappa
Alpha pledge trainer; John A. Irvine, 4BA,
Who's Who, Spades, Public Affairs Seminar
Board Chairman, IFC Treasurer, Delta
Chi; James M. Johnson, 4BA, Delta
Sigma Pi, Scabbard and Blade, Army
ROTC Brigade Colonel; Winston T. Lett,
4PL, Who's Who, Phi Eta Sigma, School
of Arts and Sciences President, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon Secretary; Patrick R.
McGivaren, 5VM, Veterinary School Honor
Council Justice, IFC President's Commission,
Alpha Psi President.
Jack P. Mills, 4EE, Greek Week Publicity
Chairman, Greek Games Co-Chair-man,
Phi Gamma Delta pledge trainer;
Richard C. Morrow, 3PM, Phi Eta Sigma,
Freshman basketball team, Phi Gamma
Delta rush chairman; Daniel H. Mikos,
4AA, Auburn Union Superintendent, Arnold
Air Society, Lambda Chi Alpha social
chairman; James Wayne Murrah, 3ME, Pi
Gamma Tau, Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi,
Phi Gamma Delta, Lewis (Rusty) Murray,
4BA, Freshman track team, Kappa Sigma
Treasurer and President.
Jonathan C. Neely, 4EE, Phi Eta Sigma,
Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu, Pi Gamma
Tau Secretary-Treasurer; Travis Wood
Parker, 3EE, Phi Eta Sigma, IFC Secretary,
Steerage, Sigma Nu President; Robert
S. Payne, 4JM, Ford Motor Company Scholarship,
Auburn Players, Plainsman news
editor and managing editor; Michael T.
Peace, 4EC, Squires, Superintendent of
Organizations, Beta Theta Pi Secretary;
James E. Shiflett, 4EC, Army ROTC Captain,
Sigma Pi rush chairman and pledge
trainer.
Robert E. Sims, 3PL, Squires, Stein
"Outstanding Sophomore" Award, Cheerleader,
Plainsman news editor, Lambda
Chi Alpha; Howard D. Sutterlin, 3PL, Phi
Eta Sigma, Spirit Committee, Sigma Pi
Secretary; JosephC. Thomas, 4BA, Freshman
tennis team, Arnold Air Society,
Lambda Chi Alpha Vice-president; William
F. Vann, 3PD, Freshman golf team,
Thanksgiving Drive Co-Chairman, IFC
newspaper assistant editor, Lambda Chi
Alpha scholarship chairman; William C.
Wear, 4BA, Board of Student Publications.
Auburn Law Society, Glomerata advertising
manager, business manager and
assistant editor; William C. Willis, 4EE,
Phi Eta Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, Phi Gamma
Tau, Eta Kappa Nu; Robert A.Wills, 3PL,
Squires, Phi Eta Sigma, varsity basketball,
School of Arts and Sciences Vice-president
and David E. Young, 4BA,
Squires, Blood Drive Committee Chariman,
Freshman football team, Sigma Alpha
Epsilon.
Trustees approve study
enlargement
CLIFF HARE STADIUM IN 1975?
Homecoming, 1975, could find the north end zone enclosed
Study to determine feasibility;
enclosing north end zone likely'
By BOB PAYNE
A study of the feasibility of enlarging Cliff Hare
Stadium was approved by Board of Trustees in their
quarterly meeting Friday.
Pres. Harry M. Philpott was authorized by the Board
Beard, senate group
discuss seating problems
By JAMES THORNTON
Will guest tickets be eliminated in all stadium sections
including blocks?
Will the number of seats in all block sections be set
at a certain number for all groups?
Will the consideration of not splitting block sections
by aisles and runways be stopped?
Will fraternities be rotated in their block sections
by games instead of seasons?
Will coeds be requested to buy their own football
tickets?
These were some of the suggestions discussed in a
two-hour meeting Tuesday by Jeff Beard and Bill Beck-with
of the Athletic Department and Rob Hicks and
George Burch of the Senate public relations committee.
The proposals were brought up as a result of recent
controversy over student seating at home football games.
No plans are definite at this time, however. Hicks
plans a further study of other university football seating
plans and will meet again with the Athletic Department
after the football season.
"Our two main problems are these: guest tickets and
block section," said Beard. "The whole seating structure
has been based on trying to help the students and
we will do anything that is mechanically possible to
give students the best seats.
"We reserve seats for individual students which is
something no other school does and we think this is the
best system," said Beard. ;
"We want our students at the football games," he
added.
A suggestion was made by Hicks to move the students
more into the center of the stands.
But Beard said, "We must consider our opponent's
seating in this respect. We have to guarantee them seats
too. There is also the faculty and alumni to consider."
"We're getting the first tinges of the problems which
the Big Ten schools have faced for years," said Beard.
"They have gotten so big that they can't swap opponent
(See page 2, col. 1)
loveliest of the Plains
to "employ architects, en
gineers and consultants as
may be necessary to develop
a feasibility study,
schematic designs and cost
estimates of the proposed
additions to Cliff Hare Stadium."
The Board also instructed
Dr. Philpott to develop a
plan for financing the cost of
such additions.
Pres. Philpott said, "This
expansion will likely consist
of enclosing the North
end zone. It is also possible
that a second deck will be
added to the East stands.
The study will determine which
method is most feasible."
In the resolution approving
the feasibility study, the
Inside
I Homecoming..
j Editorials...,
i Registration..
| Sports.......
] Tom and Jerrj
Entertainment
Horseshoeing,
Pg. 3!
I l l
121
k bewitching sight
Loveliest Barbara Randolph prepares for takeoff on
her Halloween flight over Auburn. A good little witch,
Barbara is a freshman in elementary education from
Gordo. The 18-year-old brown-eyed brunette is an independent
and livens in Dorm K. She enjoys sewing, dancing
and tumbling.
Sen. Rodney to moderate
campaign discussion Monday
By BOB PAYNE
State Sen. Tom Radney
will moderate a panel discussion
on campaign issues
at 7:30 Monday night in
Langdon Hall.
Sponsored by the Student
Body, the program will feature
four Auburn professors
discussing the major issues
facing the American people
in this ' 'unpredictable"
election year.
Dr. Charles P. Anson,
professor in the School of
Business, will discuss labor
problems and a guaranteed
annual income. American
Foreign policy will be the
topic for Dr. Donald E. Hay-hurst,
professor of political
science. Richard G. Eaves,
assistant professor of history,
will discuss campus unrest.
Civil rights will be discussed
by Dr. Edward C
..Williamson, associate professor
of history. '
The panel members will
each discuss their topics for
15 minutes. Then the discussion
will be thrown open for
questions and comments from
the floor. Sen. Radney will
introduce the speakers and
moderate the discussion. Radney
gained prominence as a
delegate to the Democratic
National Convention in Chicago
this summer for his support
of the proposed nomination of
Massachusetts Senator Ed-
The "Gig the 'Gators'
noise rally will be held at §
7:30 tonight in Cliff Hare
Stadium. Guest speaker
will be assistant football
coach Claud Saia. All
noisemakers are urged
! to attend.
ward Kennedy.
Following the question and
answer period, Sen. Radney
will present closing remarks
on Alabama and the presidential
election. The Program will
be followed by a reception in
the Bradley Lounge of the
Union Building. The War
Eagle Girls will host the reception
for Sen. Radney and
the panel members.
Richard Roselle, coordinator
for the program, said,
"This discussion is not a
political forum. Rather, it is
to inform the students and
townspeople about the issues
facing America in this election
year." The program is
open to all interested persons.
The Public Affairs Board,
which allocates $10,000 from
student activities fees to
bring speakers to the campus,
allotted the money to bring
Sen. Radney to Auburn.
Board said such action was
"due to the continued increase
in student enrollments and
the demand for football tickets
at home games."
Pres. Philpott presented
his annual report to the Board,
giving the developments of
the past year and projections
for the next ten years. The report
included expected enrollment
figures, expansion of
curricula, projected faculty
needs and building requirements
for Auburn and the
Montgomery Branch.
Projected enrollment figures
indicate that 21,000 students
will attend Auburn's
main campus in 1978, plus
5,500 at the Montgomery
Branch. During the next decade
Auburn expects to add
10 bachelor's, 17 master's
and 15 doctoral degree programs
to the curricula.
Anticipated faculty needs
for the next ten years total
1,695 faculty and staff posi-tions-
an increase of about
600 over present figures.
Auburn's projected building
requirements over the next
decade top $100 million for|
the main campus plus about.
$33 million for the Montgom-ry
Branch.
The President's report also
predicted that student
fees would be raised 25 per
cent twice during the next
ten years to "make student
fees more compatible with;
accelerating instructional
costs."
NORTH END ZONE BLEACHERS
Aged wood collapsed at Homecoming
Bleachers collapse;
two girls injured
By BEVERLY BRADFORD
Two girls, one an Auburn co-ed, were injured at Saturday's
Homecoming game when one of the seats in
tne wooden north end zone stands collapsed.
The misnap occurred about three minutes before the
half on the sixth row or
Section 37. Ann Chambers,
3EED, and Dale Summer-lin,
a student at the Birmingham
Baptist School of
Nursing, were standing on
the seat cheering for the
Tigers when it cracked.
Miss Chambers fell eight or
ten feet to the ground and
was later treated for bruises
and minor cuts.
Miss Sumirerlin was caught
before falling to the ground
and was not seriously injured.
Tickets held by persons
seeking entrance to the north
bleachers were checked by
police to avoid exceeding
the seating capacity.
Athletic Director Jeff
(See page 2, col. 1)
Thanksgiving
Clothes, food drive scheduled
By MARGARET HESTER
The Interfraternity Council
and the Student Body
All-Campus Fund Drive
Committee will co-sponsor
a Thanksgiving clothes
and food drive for needy
families in the area.
Collection boxes for food
and clothes will be located
on campus at student church
centers and at various points
in the city and surrounding
areas from Tuesday morning
through noon Thursday.
"Drive D»v " i« set for
Nov. 23 f • to door collection
in the city by sorority
and fraternity members, "^he
city will be divided into 27
geographical areas; sorority
pledge classes will be divided
and paired with fraternities
for canvassing.
Following Thanksgiving
holidays, the drive will resume
from Dec. 2-4.
"The drive will continue
after the Thanksgiving holi-
Senior rings
I Senior rings may be or-1
Idered at the Rings Office |
I in Union Room 307 from
19-12 a.m. and 1-4 p.m.
1 Mondays through Thurs-
1 days.
days, because we feel if we
urge students to bring clothes
back from home, the drive
will be more successful,"
said Bill Vann, IFC representative.
Lists will be mailed to
fraternities and sororities indicating
the types of foods
necessary.
"It will be much more
practical if basic 'everyday'
foods are contributed, such
as canned goods, sweet
potatoes, grits, rice, corn
meal and flour and especially
powered milk," said Mrs. Joy
Peak, superintendent of
health for Auburn City
(See page 2, col. 2)
/
r 2 - THE AUBURN PUlMSMMI Thursday, October 31, 1968
Continued from page one
hotall seating
problems discussed
The misuse of student
identification cards in gaining
entrance to football games
was also discussed. Beck-with
suggested that some
Senate action to set a penalty
for the misuse might help
alleviate the problem.
Here, Burch also suggested
that the girls might buy their
own tickets, which would
have no seating stipulation
and they would sit with their
date.
' 'The student on campus is
not the problem," said Beck-with.
"It's the on-campus
student who wants to take a
non-student to the game."
"If everybody would use
their I.D. cards in the right
way, there would be no problem,"
said Beard.
Stands....
Beard said, "The stands
will be inspected and repaired
before the next home
game."
The wooden bleachers were
built in 1952 for the south end
zone and were moved to the
south stands were constructed
in 1960.
Clothes drive...
Schools.
The Drive Committee,
working in conjunction with
Mrs. Peak and county and
state welfare departments, is
presently conducting surveys
to determine which families
in the area are indigent or
otherwise need assistance.
Indigent families are those
earning an annual income of
less than $2,000.;
Students interested in working
on any of the four drive
subcommittee s-di strib u 11 o n,
collection, publicity or art-should
contact Bill Vann or
Steve Adair at the Student
Body Office.
Straw poll, machines
bring record vote
A record turnout of 37%
of the student body voted
in last week's Homecoming
election. The 5126 voting
was the largest number of
students to vote in a campus-
wide election.
All seven proposed amendments
to the Student Body
Constitution were passed by
a six to one margin in the
election. The amendments
give graduate students the
right to vote in campus-wide
elections and to elect officers
and a senator from the Graduate
School. Provisions were
also approved for counting
votes in Student Body elections
with voting machines.
Other amendments require
candidates for senator to appear
before the Studfent Body
Board of Election Qualifications
of their School Official
Board of Election Qualifica-
1
Plainsman staff
schedule meeting
Interested in doing something
for Auburn? Want to
see your name in print? Can
you write, read or draw a
straight line?
The Plainsman, Auburn's
award-winning student newspaper,
has a place for you.
There will be a meeting of
all persons interested in
working on The Plainsman
at 3 p.m. Sunday in Room
108 in the basement of Lang-don
Hall.
Reporters, writers, proofreaders,
secretaries and
people interested in technical
work and advertising are
needed. For further information
call 826-4130.
Nothing astonishes men so
much as common sense and
plain dealing. ;
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
tions. These boards will be
appointed by the President
of the Student Body and the
Superintendent of Political
Affairs.
The increase in voting participation
was . attributed to
the straw polls, to the use
of voting machines and to
the fact that students were
not required to go to their
school and vote. Jim Bar-ganier,
superintendent of political
affairs, said that voting
machines were used because
"We wanted to make it
as convenient as possible
for students to vote."
Barganier said that the
machines worked very well
and would be used in the
spring elections. He suggested
that a few machines be placed
oh trucks to be more convenient
for students all over the
campus. - .
All educated Americans,
first or last, go to Europe.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Heroism feels and never
reasons and therefore is always
right.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Don't lose your head
Trick or treat, anyone? This unknown
spook wandered into Photographic Services
with a slight problem this week.
After locating his missing cranium, he
went to Drake Infirmary for minor surgery.
By the way, this spook is not the ghost
picker for 'Out on a limb' in the sports
section.
Murphy named Coliseum head
Donald Wayne Murphy
has been appointed manager
of the new Memorial Coliseum
effective Nov. 15,
Pres. Harry M. Philpott
announced.
The 27 year-old native of
Tallassee has lived in Auburn
since 1964 and head
served until recently as head
of the P.E. department and
head track coach at Auburn
High School. He i s presently
working for a building supply
firm in Auburn.
"We are fortunate in securing
the services of Wayne
Murphy for this challenging
and important position,"
said Dr. Philpott. "He
brings to the management of
the Coliseum the vigor and
imagination which will be
need to develop programs and
uses for the facility to insure
its maximum benefit to
the students, faculty and
staff:" '•• .•"'- •'•
Murphy attended Troy State
University, transferring to
Auburn where he received
B.S. and Master's degrees in
Physical Education. He has
completed enough hours for a
Master's in School Administration
and has done additional
work toward a doctorate.
While track coach at
Auburn High, his teams won
the State AAA title on three
different occasions.
In fulfilling his duties as
Coliseum Manager, Murphy
will report to the Director
of Athletics in the preparation
and administration of
budget matters. An advisory
committee, composed £ of students
and faculty members,
will recommend policies and
programs for the Coliseum.
Antiqued, for your
leather wardrobe I Slick
and slim in Patent
...or with a soft crush
on you I Just three... s e e them ail!
$16.00 t017.00 in Brown or Black
Parker's
Shoe Hut
America -- fa dream land'
to Qashou after two years
By LINDA GREENE
"A dream land, filled with opportunities
for research, education and advancement"-
that's the mental picture Mohammad
"Mike" Qashou had of the United States
-even before coming to America from his
homeland of Jordan. His "picture" remains
unchanged after two years here.
So intense was Mike's desire to study
in the United States that he worked and
saved his money for seven years in order
to pay for his journey and his education.
"My father could have paid for my education
in Jordan or anywhere in the Middle
East, but I wanted to come to America,"
said Mike. "He said I would have to earn
my own money if I wanted to come; so I
did."
Mike said that students in Jordan study
English as one of their basic requirements.
"The press and American movies
present a picture of America to Jordanians,"
he said. "We see America as the
top industrial nation in the world. It is a
land of opportunity filled with the best of
everything."
When Mike graduated from high school
in 1958, he began working for an American
oil company in Kuwait.
Although Mike was sure he wanted to
study in the United States, he was unsure
of where. He wrote to several northern
universities where some of his Jordanian
friends were attending school, but received
no replies.
"I happened to meet an American lady
one day while in a taxi; her husband was
a former professor at Auburn," said Mike,
who had not previously heard of Auburn.
"I wrote to Auburn and was accepted in
less than a month, which really surprised
me."
In Jordan, according to Mike, only a
small percentage of the high school graduates
go on to college. "Women don't go
to college," said Mike. "They stay at
home as housewives and mothers."
Mike came to Auburn in January of 1966
to study mechanical engineering. He has
maintained a 2.M overall thus far. He
said Dean Howard Strong, assistant to
dean of pre-engineering, and Haneil Jones,
MOHAMMED "MIKE" QASHOU
Jordanian enjoys Auburn
assistant to dean of engineering, had been
a tremendous help to him since coming to
Auburn.
Mike has always liked to travel. Before
coming to the United States, he had visited
Egypt, Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Syria and
Lebanon. "I enjoy traveling in America,"
he said. "I like to find out what is going
on everywhere else. There is more to an
education than just books. I learn when I
travel."
Mike also learns by participating. He is
past treasurer of the International Relations
Club, a member of the American
Society of Mechanical Engineers and a
member of Pi Tau Sigma and Tau Beta Pi,
engineering honoraries.
Mike has not been home since h e came
to Auburn in 1966. "I do not plan to return
to Jordan for at least another four
years," he said. His immediate plans
call for graduate school and possible a
Ph.D.
Mike's family lives in Tulkarem, Jordan,
which is presently under Israel, occupation.
"There are five generations of my
family living in the same village," said
Mike with a glow of pride on his face.
"My grandmother is about 100 years old. I
am the fifth of eight children."
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A
Thursday, October 31, 1968 3-THE AUBURN PUIN**UN
Homecoming ' 6 8 - color, spirit, people, victory
SMILE, COACH!
Jordan accepts plaque
PIKES AND DATES BUILD A WAR EAGLE
Float wins third place in contest
ALABAMA'S GOVERNOR ALBERT BREWER SHARES SMILE WITH HOMECOMING BEAUTIES
Miss Homecoming '68, Marilyn Martin (left), Connie Blanton, '67 Miss, pose prettily
DWIGHT HURSTON GIVES AUBURN TWO-TOUCHDOWN LEAD WITH SECOND QUARTER SCORE
Tiger bench goes wild as Miami is vanquished
TRAFFIC JAMS SIGNAL ARRIVAL OF VISITORS
Parents, old grads pack Auburn
FREE! FREE! FREE!
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35% COTTON
Color Selection:
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LAMB'S WOOL $15.00
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Color Selection: Red, White,
Navy, Olive, Yellow, Orange,
Brown and More
SIZES S-M-L-XL
SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION
CLOTHING FOB THE TRADITIONAL MALE
A VICTORY KISS FOR SHUG
Marilyn wishes coach good luck
STUDENT VOTES FOR MISS HOMECOMING
Machines used for first time
SAE'S WINNING FLOAT LIES AT ANCHOR IN 'THE LAKE'
True to form, Miami's Hurricane fizzled out
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN Nixon best...
David E. Housel
Uftor
Guy N. Rhodes
Baskets Manaq*
ACP Rated 'All-American'
1967,1968 ANPA Pacemaker
The Auburn Plainsman is the student newspaper ol Auburn University; The paper
is written and edited by responsible students. Editorial opinions are those ot 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 91.50 for three months and 94 tor a. full year. Circulation
13,500 weekly. Address all material to the Auburn Plainsman, P.O. Box 832, Auburn,
Alabama-36830.
Editorial Page Coordinator-Lyn Scarbrough; News Managing Editor-Bob
Payne; Production Managing Editor-Joe Lehman; News Editor-James Thornton;
Sports Editor-Richard Wittish; Features Editor-Pete Pepinsky; Exchange Editor-
David Hill; Copy Editor-Margaret Hester; Photographic Editor-Curtis Mauldin;
Technical Editor-Jim Dembowski; Graphics Art Editor-Chip Holland; Lively Arts
Editor-Lyn Babb; Assistant News Editor-Shirley Karstens; Assistant Sports
Editor-Jim Parker; Assistant Feature Editors-Katie Jones, John Reynolds?
Assistant Technical Editor-Skip Hightower; Advertising Manager-Charles
Reed; Route Manager-Winton Watkins; Circulation Manager-Ed Nicks; Associate
Business Manager-Taffy Wallace.
Liquor store advisable
Auburn's municipal government is
embroiled in a controversy over the
possible location of a state liquor
store within the city limits. State law
requires that such an establishment
be located at least one mile from the
campus boundary.
One faction of the city government
contends that a liquor store would
bring about $15,500 in additional tax
revenue from the state Alcoholic Beverage
Control Board into the city each
year. Opelika, which is located just
outside the Auburn city limits, receives
$31,000 a year in alcohol tax.
es. Auburn currently receives $14,000.
The liquor store is opposed mainly
on a moral basis. Many citizens believe
that a liquor store would offer
an added temptation to the city's
youth. They also oppose any in increase
in alcohol consumption within
the city limits.
A third liquor store in Lee County
would only slightly convenience the
Auburn University students who drink.
An additional store would help to
alleviate possible crowds at the other
stores during rush hours. University
students might realize benefits from a
state store in Auburn in the form of
increased city services which would
begin when Auburn received the alcohol
tax increase.
Even if the store is secured for
Auburn, practically all students would
still have to find transportation to the
location since it would be located at
least one mile from campus. There is
already a state store located just inside
the Opelika city limits. Transportation
to a store on the fringe of
Auburn would be not much different
from transportation to a liquor store
on the fringe of Opelika. It would be
difficult to reasonably apply the
moral issue to the Auburn student body.
Location of a store here would not
greatly affect alcoholic consumption
by the student body. Those who partake
of the spirits are more concerned
with getting the bottle rather
than who gets the tax money.
Truth and the Auburn way
In recent weeks, The Plainsman has
been verbally attacked because its
critics say some stories "have put
Auburn in a bad light."
The Plainsman believes it is fulfilling
its duty to the student and
the Auburn idea by printing the facts
fairly and factually.
The Plainsman has confidence in
Auburn, the students and administrators
who head organizations and compose
policy making bodies. Student
government, the Interfraternity Council,
Panhellenic and Associated
Women Students are all instrumental
in improving Auburn. We believe these
organizations and others seek concrete
improvement for Auburn, not
just nebulous image improvement.
Concrete improvement is based on
truthful facts. As Dr. George Petrie
said in the Auburn creed: "I believe
in honesty and truthfulness, without
which I cannot win the respect and,
confidence of my fellow man." The
Plainsman will print the truth and
let the readers draw their own conclusions.
No organization, • such as student
government or the Interfraternity
Council, and no student or student
leader has been or ever will be singled
out for personal attacks. But the
right to print the news factually and
fairly will not be inhibited.
News stories will be handled in a
straight-forward manner. Personalities
and rumors have not and will not be
considered in reporting the facts. The
Plainsman will deal only with the
facts, all of the facts, as any responsible
publication or individual would
do.
The Plainsman desires a better
Auburn. We will cooperate with anyone
who has that objective as a goal.
Is Brewer making a move?
Gov. Albert Brewer's recent disclosure
that he will not accompany
former Gov. George C. Wallace on any
of his national campaign tours during
the closing days of the presidential
campaign has sparked considerable
political speculation in Alabama.
Brewer rejected Wallace's invitation,
saying he would be too busy within
the state. Some political observers
speculate that Brewer might be preparing
the groundwork for his own
gubernatorial race in 1970. Even
though Wallace has stated he will not
seek office in Alabama again and aides
to the former governor have denied
that one of Wallace's two brothers
would oppose Brewer in 1970, some
kind of Wallace-Brewer confrontation
seems likely, and Brewer may be
serving notice that he intends to
chart his own course at least until
1970. Wallace and Brewer have worked
together closely the past few years,
but Alabama political circles may not
have enough elasticity to encompass
them both.
Wallace is currently riding the
crest of popularity, > but Brewer, in
his short term as the state's chief
executive, has become one of the
state's most respected men. The
prospects of a Wallace-Brewer confrontation
are intriguing. Both men
are astute campaigners. It could be
an interesting race in 1970.
No major candidate
adequately fills needs
By David Housel
By midnight Tuesday Richard : Milhous
Nixon, barring an unlikely upset, will be
well on his way to becoming the next President of the United
States.
It will be the end of a long road for Nixon and the American
people. The race started seven months ago in New Hampshire'.*
Mi c^Ca&rthy^ pSollead f alSmoSst ^5 0 Presidential finaUsts is real- l y t h e m a n ^ U n i t e d S t a t eg
per cent of the vote in a
protest against President
Johnson's Vietnam policies.
Richard Nixon, in that same
primary, garnered a big vote
of confidence after his opposition,
Michigan Gov.
George Romney realized the
futility of his efforts and
withdrew.
After New Hampshire,
Senator Robert F. Kennedy
and President Johnson reassessed
their positions.
One entered the race. The
other withdrew.
Vice-President Hubert
Humphrey, almost without
choice, joined the fray to uphold
die reputation of the
Johnson administration.
And George Wallace? He
had been running since 1964
when he made his first abortive
attempt at the Presidency
needs.
The country desperately
needs a leader-a man who
can inspire the masses to
great efforts, a man who
can gain the people's trust
and give them hope, a man
who can say "Hell" like
.Harry Truman used to and
really mean it. In short, America
needs a leader and a
hero, and there's no such
man on Tuesday's ballot.
Nixon seems to offer the
country the best alternative
to the present course which
has gotten the United States
nowhere. He will have a different
version of the programs
which have already
been tried, but he doesn't
have the charisma needed
now.
Humphrey, mainly through
RUNNING MATES
Up in smoke...
Cigarettes-
I will quit
. . .someday
By James Thornton
.One night last spring
picked up a cigarette anc
decided to smoke it. T said
to myself, "What the heck,
man. Try it just once."
And so I did. A friend ol
mine lit that long weed foi
me and slowly but cautiously
I inhaled,
| Cough,cough,
cough, ugh.
Whew!
My body
must have
been trying
to tell me
something, as
the commercial
says.
"You got
to get used to it," my friend
said. Try it again.
And so I did. I inhaled a
tiny puff of the grey colored
smoke. The tar and nicotine
rolled down into my delicate
lungs and socked it to me
again.
After more coughing and a
few more puffs I became
After thoughtful and careful consideration dizzy. I didn't know one could
1 of all the major Presidential candidates- get drunk from smoking a
Nixon, Wallace, Humphrey, Pat Paulsen, Alfred E.Neuman, c i g a r e t t e . By the time I
Snoopy and the Esso Tiger-I have decided that there is not a finished the cigarette, which
dime's worth of difference between them all. took a total of 30 minutes, I
Therefore, as a matter of conscience, patriotism and na- couldn't stand up. The feeling
was exhilarating.
tthhee" "*sslLa*utua *" PPrreessiiddeenntt," " wmats, wwiiUll" tthhee> "AAmtneerniccaann nUeJojDgjlT bbPe ^announce my candidacy for Russia. Then federal mar- Little did I know it but office £ p r e s i d e J t of s n a l l s w i l l * sent to the after years of abstaining I
chosen? rresiaent tne U n i t e d g t a t e g We m u g t baCkwoodS( c o a l m i n e s and was on my way to becoming
In his short time in the Unfortunately, there will be h a v e , a ° ^ a t e from the ghettoesi to round, mthese•«gjjgfctocigarette^
race, Kennedy had captured no great change in the coun- *%&*- • „ „ „ „ . , f° l k S ; N<>t °Dly W * * 5 A " - « £ "You'd betterstopfnZ
the allegiance of many peo- try's political course. The You will ask, why should inmate our poverty, but it while you can,"they said. But
pie, but he had also alien- same problems will plague I vote for Scarbrough? Let will also extend Russian wel- : t o l d m y s e l f r j. c a n ^ ^ ^ y.
ated many others. He was us, the same faces and the me present my platform on fare lines out into the Baltic t h i n g if j p u t m y m i n d t 0 it>
one of the most loved and same solutions will be con- the major issues of this cam- Sea. And I continued to smoke,
most despised men in the sidered but only in a different paign. Vietnam War-Ignore it. But I began to like smok-nation.
form- Law and order-Like my 0 p e n H o u s i n g_I t i s a b s u r d ing. It calmed my nerves,
Following Kennedy's fun- The p^^can voter should °PP°nent?: * h a v e a s u nPl e to assume that solely be- especially while studying or
eral, held near his brother's feel cheated when he casts a n s w e r - Thete 1S n o n e e d to cause a home owner has writing. Slowly but surely I
grave on a warm June night, his ballot. For seven months change the recent trend of w o r k e d a l l yg l i f e to build became trapped in the cloudy
the campaign resumed, minus and more, he has listened to ignoring law authority. Nei- h i s possessions, he has the c l a 5 s rf C1garette smoke
Stand up for Auburn..
Scarbrough presents
Presidential platform
By lyn Scarbrough
The voters were all settled last gasp campaigning will
for a long, hard hitting, ex- probably finish second, with
citing campaign but early in Wallace a distant third.
June, the nation was shocked, The three men have bar-almost
beyond belief, when raged the United States with
Robert Kennedy, brother of their ideologies, but where " ^ L ™ 0 ® ^ 8 1 ^ ! ^ ? ^ ^
the slain President, was '**"" *"
felled by an assassin's bullet.
one contestant.
Senator George McGovern
entered the Democratic, competition
and the Republican
slate was completed when
Nelson
the country's problems dis
cussed, but no definite solutions
have been offered.
But this is politics and
maybe four years from now,
ther is there any need to ^ H , , s e l l i t a s h e s e e s . T " ? d *» <*ut? Sure, every-
'" good money solving fit> s t r i c t e r l a w s a l o n g ^ day. Smoking has become an
ots-ofthe problems, line are compulsory expensive, bad habit and I
line are compulsory. re r e t p i c k i n g up t h a t first
I will introduce legislation Cigarette.
requiring that every third Everytime I see a com-me
waste
the "roots
The answer is obvious.
When elected President, I
Rockefeller and in 1972, there will be new will simply register an crim- hou~s~e~ owed by a Japanese me^alcf&Axnltieal cZ-Reagan
launched solutions and new faces. May- inals and outside agitators Methodist, be sold to a one- c e r Societv it makes
tn%tnn R»*arH be it will be Hatfield, Percy, at their local city halls and ! L o r p L , „ „ , T J L , „„„ ^ L u iety' " makes
Lindsey, Ted Kennedy, or brand them on the forehead.
Edmund Muskie. | Maybe one" Then I will relocate all the
of them might be able to give residents of Idaho in another
As conventions neared, the country the change of state and give Idaho to the
the issues crystalized. The pace it needs. criminals for their very own.
war, domestic troubles, the Maybe one of them will be Gun Control-It would be
Nixon. Harold Stassen
just to be running.
ran every fourth apartment rented Someday
by Arabs to be given to Jews, someday.
Image of America-Our re-
I will quit....
spect around the world is at beat away from the White
an all-time low. The main House, as has been too often
Pueblo incident, welfare, and able to restore real idealism extremely dangerous to allow _reason is Uncle Sam. Why pointed out by one of my op- hon]d w e exDGCt „_,,__„ t o agents rhP viro nresidPnt z&xzr *-* i i r r sag sasa&ssss f a s t i s? a s « s
--ass c-kss ^xsxrsr* ^ M F^«K^|5?^K£
nnipv ™ L 7 k , ™™«7 elections and democracv are ? snooting. so my s h a v e S - He mn De replaced tional prominence. Following
tily*t Z?EL£LiS?& aU Stout democracy a r e opponents are approaching b a ^ to a b l a c k t h i s »mm of t h e o t h e r
s
v Z im and B H T S w S " • • ?1 S « T f r ° m ^ ' T 8 '****** " * *»teat l e a t h e r ties, I have chosen Willard
Sen"inagd a^Tw Inxtous" I feften DOfev I S H S i A± S W ^ *ots. Smirtz of Pynxsutawney, Pa.,
moments near the start of
the balloting, won the Republican
nomination.
Now, as the campaign nears
its end, Nixon is once again
concerned about Humphrey's
recent rise in the polls and
his own decline, but he is
still confident of victory,
and rightly so.
But when all of the shouting,
voting, and politicking
is over, the American people
might wonder what has been
accomplished by it all. Very
little accomplishment is evident.
Not one of the three
Protest is a right...
The Auburn Plainsman
welcomes all critical,
complimentary or informative
letters to the editor.
Letters of more than
250 words will not be
printed. All letters are
subject to standard editing.
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.
boots
suggested, we need to stop Stadeat Tjnrest-We all know as my running mate,
manufacturing bullets. those w i l d k i d s a r e n o t n i n g After considering my plat-
We will then go one step but Commies, pseudo-intel- form, running mate and exper-further
and require all knives lectuals, hippies and yippies ience I urge you, for the good
to have rubber tips, all poi- ^ are up to no good. We of the nation, to write in
sons to be sold with anti- wm require all students to Scarbrough for President,
dotes and all Molotov cock- read only nice articles, sing Due to the late hour of this
tails to be alcoholic. the national anthem before announcement, my name will
Poverty-Although all of meals and hear only evange- be printed on none of the
our money has been wisely ii s t s o n campus. ballots. However, nothing can
spent on poverty programs in Qualifications for Presi- stop our write-in movement,
the 1960's, there is no need <jent-We will change the law sweeping the grass roots of
to expand the Humphrey War to auo w anyone over age 21 America.
on Poverty or increase jobs t 0 nin for President. This i s Your support is needed,
and education as Nixon plans. s o my campaign will not be Correspondence should be
I will introduce legislation illegal. sent to Scarbrough for Presi-making
poverty illegal and Vice-President-Since the dent, Langdon Hall, Room
punishable by deportation to vice-president is only a heart- 108, Auburn University.
|4 University • lasting reform comes by due process
Ed. Note:
This is one of a series of editorial
articles reprinted from other publications.
The following column,
written by Ralph McGill, publisher
of The Atlanta Constitution, appeared
in the October 17 edition of
The Constitution.
What is a "university?"
More important, what should a
university be?
Morris B. Abram, recently inaugurated
as president of Brandeis
University, grappled boldly with this
question in his ritual of acceptance.
It was a probing, profound address,
too occupied with searching to try
for eloquence. Yet, the eloquence
was in its honesty.
"The university is truly at the
vortex of the crisis of our time in
the United States, in France, in
Mexico-everywhere..;"
This was the beginning of his
theme.
It is a compliment to education
that men in this time of trouble
should crystalize their attention,
anxieties, frustrations and even
angers on the university. In effect,
they are saying, frequently in unacceptable
ways: 'Our society is
in deep trouble. The university has
the capacity to redeem or reform
society if the university has the
will and is itself reformed'...the
critics are saying that the university
is more important than its supporters
say it i s ."
Before him was one of the nation's
more learned and competent faculties.
. .also one of the more questioning.
It may be assumed that all
faculties, save the hopelessly obtuse,
are themselves trying for
answers.
It is inescapably true-faculties
being human-that many have been
frightened by the student rebellions
and by the occasional violence in
which the leadership often is from
off campus. (The hardcore non-student
forces, dedicated not to
reform but to destruction, are
frightening.)
But the intelligent faculty knows
that many student objections are
valid-especially as protests are
related to teaching.
Universities, of great quality,
have, of course, learned scholars
whose research is itself instructive.
They are not there to teach-but to
learn and to allow others to share
in that learning.
But, Abram said, speaking of the
search for truth: "The innermost
truths in some social sciences may
be not only in textbooks but also in
the laboratories of life..."
"A university..,is not a church
or a political party. It does not itself
vote. It should be crammed with
people who think, vote and participate
in every level of life, including
politics... I applaud those
who feel special obligation to speak
out because they are learned and
influential men. Nevertheless, the
university must not be a dogmatist.
It must be a free and open place.. .it
should provide the forum for individual
and group study and experience.
. "But, a university politicized-radicalized
or conservatized-is a
university doomed, as the lessons
of German universities under the
Nazis proved... A dogmatic institution
is hospitable only to those
who support its dogmas...
"I am willing," he said, "to
examine and re-examine every substantive
opinion, including those to
which I am most committed. However,
I am not prepared to reject the
liberal methodology of fair play,
civil liberty and due process as the
only way in which a civilized society
can pursue truth, prevent the encrustation
of error and insure the
fulfillment of man's creative talents
and inclination.
"The right of students to protest
seems to me to be a right and not a
privilege... The right of students,
faculty or anyone else to disrupt
this learning process is no right at
all.. .it is wrong."
There was a proper tribute to
"this generation of youth." It is a
great one. It is disturbed by a society
in which reforms are necessary-socially
aid educationally.
Abram clearly articulated what a
university should be-and, also,
delineated its failures in teaching
and yet, as firmly, declared that
lasting reform comes by due process.
wnwmnwnM
Thwsdav. October 31. 1968 5- THE AliBUBN PUlNttrUN
Winter registration
schedule
Currently enrolled and former students, including those;
changing schools, will prepare course request forms for
the winter quarter by schools according to the following j
breakdown:
Agriculture-Oct. 29-Nov. 5
Students will be notified by mail of date and time for
completing course request forms. Students who do not
receive a letter should check with the dean's office.
Architecture and Fine Arts-Oct. 28-Nov. 7
Students will report to departmental offices to complete
course request forms.
Arts and Sciences-Nov. 1
Students will report directly to their departmental offices
and complete their registration with them, except that
PD, PM, PV, GC, and GBI students will report to the
dean's office in Mell Hall. Students should pick up their
materials in accordance with the following schedule:
Nov. 1
A-F- 9 a.m. O-R-l p.m.
G-J-10 a.m. S-V-2 p.m.
K-N-ll a.m. W-Z-3 p.m.
The above schedule is intended merely to provide pick- j
up dates for registration materials. Students are urged to
go back to their rooms or other convenient locations to
fill out their course request forms. They should return \
with their forms for final approval within two class days,
or not later than Nov. (5.
Business-Nov. 4-7-Tichenor Hall
Students should report to Tichenorll6 beginning Nov. 4 -j
Nov. 7, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to obtain registration j
materials and approval of request forms.
Education-Oct. 28-Nov. 7
Students will check with the appropriate departmental |
secretary to make necessary appointments with advisors |
for completing course request forms. |
Engineering-Oct. 28-Nov. 7-Ramsay 104
See Pre-Engineering for PN 1
Students will register from 8 a.m»-3:30 p.m. according to
the following schedule:
A-C-Oct. 28-29 M-N-Nov. 1-4
D-F-Oct. 29-30 O-R-Nov. 4-5
G-H-Oct. 3U-31 S-T-Nov. 5-6
I-L-Oct. bl-Nov.l U-Z-Nov. 6-7
Home Economics-Nov. 5-6-Home Economics Building
After consulting their advisors, students should report
to the dean's representatives for final approval in the
lobby of the Home Economics Building on Nov. 5-6.
Pharmacy-Oct. 28-Nov. 1-Miller Hall
Students will register according to the following breakdown:
5PY-Oct. 28 2PY-0ct. 31
4PY-Oct. 29 lPY-Nov. 1
3PY-Oct. 30
Pre-Engineering-Oct. 28-Nov. 7-Ramsay 104
Students will fill out course request forms from 7:45-
11:45 a.m. and 12:45-4:45 p.m. according to the alphabetical
breakdown below:
A-B-Oct. 28 M -Nov. 4
C-D-Oct. 29 N-R-Nov. 5
E-G-Oct. 30 S -Nov. 6
H-J-Oct. 31 T-Z-Nov. 7
K-L-Nov. l
Veterinary Medicine-Oct. 28-Nov. 7
Students will report to the dean's office to complete j
course request forms according to the dean's instruction.
School of Graduate Studies-Nov. 5-7
| Students will report from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. to complete|
I course request forms.
I
Men Who Expect The Finest Wear
HIGGINS SLACKS
FEATURING BLENDS OF FORTREL* COTTON
Notes & Notices
The Plainsman is happy to print meeting
ments. Notices should be limited to 50 words and should
be in the Plainsman office, 108 Langdon Hall, no later
than Friday preceding the desired publication date.
SAM MEETING
Society for the Advancement
of Management (SAM) will meet
Tuesday night at 7 in Tich-enor
106. Guy Raymond of
Sperry Rand, New Holland
Division will discuss "Management
Opportunities."
Students interested in the
science of management are
urged by the club to attend.
BLOCK AND BRIDLE
Block and Bridle Club will
meet tonight at 7 in 203B
Animal Science Building to
discuss final plans for the
Ham Show and the Little
International Livestock Show.
A Glom picture will be taken.
ATTENTION
DECEMBER GRADUATES
Any Senior expecting to
graduate in December (this
does not include student
teachers) who has not had a
final credit check this quarter
in the Registrar's Office
should report immediately!
November 4 is the last day_
diplomas may be ordered
for December graduation.
ATTENTION
DECEMBER GRADUATES
Cap and gowns for December
graduation may still be
ordered with the payment of
a late fee. Any senior who
has not ordered a cap and
gown should take care of this
immediately. •
ENGINEERING COUNCIL
The Freshman Engineering
Council will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. in Commons 301. AIL
pre-engineering students are
asked to attend.
AUBURN ENGINEER
Subscriptions to the Auburn
Engineer will be sold in the
lobby of Ramsey Hall Monday
through Friday. Subscriptions
are $1 per year. ;
RELIGIOUS
AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
The Religious Affairs Committee
will meet Nov., 7 at
7 p.m. in Union Room 213.
PHI ALPHA THETA
Undergraduates with a 2.25
average in 18 hours of history
and a 2.00 overall and graduate
students with a 2.50
overall and 15 hours in history
are eligible for membership
in Phi Alpha Theta, history
honorary.
Interested students who
meet the requirements should
contact the history department
at Samford 305.
ASCE, ASME MEET
ASCE and ASME will meet
jointly Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Textile Auditorium, first
floor. Howard Lowery of
Chicago Bridge and Iron wih
speak. _
Aire
Auburn Institute of Industrial
Engineers (AIIE) will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. in
Dunstan 301. Members should
wear coats and ties for the
Glomerate picture. Officers
will be elected.
ENGINEERING BANQUET
The Engineering Banquet
will be held in the Union
Building Nov. 14 at 7 p.m.
The speaker will be Ben
Gilmer, president of AT&T.
Tickets are available in the
Dean's office in Ramsey Hall.
OUTSTANDING
ENGINEERING GRADUATE
Students interested in being
interviewed for outstanding
graduate in engineering,
pick up an application in the
Dean's office in Ramsey Hall.
AWS TUTORING SERVICE
Associated Women Students
(AWS) is offering tutoring
service. Interested students
should contact Betty
Hughes (826-4274).
READERS' THEATRE
The Baptist Student Union
is presenting a production of
James Weldon Johnston's
"God's Trombones" at 7:15
p.m.; Tuesday in the BSU
auditorium.
PHI ALPHA THETA
Phi Alpha Theta, history
honorary society, is conducting
a membership drive lasting
until the end of the month.
Qualifications for undergraduates
(juniors or seniors)
are: a minimum of 18 hours of
history with, a 2.25 grade
average for those courses, with
a 2.0 overall grade average.
Graduate students should
have a minimum of 15 hours
in history with a 2.5 grade
average. ;
Anyone meeting the qualifications
and wishing to join
may apply with Phi Alpha
'Theta by leaving a note list-;
ing name, classification,;
address and telephone number
with the secretaries of the'
history department.
letters to the editor
Mortar Board to refund mum money
Editor, The Plainsman:
As a representative of Mortar
Board, I would like to explain
the late delivery of our
mums for the Homecoming
game. We were responsible
for taking flower orders from
dorms, sororities and fraternities.
Much to our disappointment,
the flower shop which
agreed to fill our orders was
unable to deliver our flowers
on time.
All flowers were to be delivered
to Mortar Board members
Saturday morning at
8:30 a.m. for distribution.
Speaking for myself, I was at
the flower shop at 11:30 a.m.
helping make the corsages.
We wish to apologize for
this unfortunate situation.
Please let your Mortar Board
representative know if you
had paid for your flowers and
wins debate
tournament
Vanderbilt University
won the championship
round in the Plainsman Invitational
Debate Tournament
here recently: as
their negative team defeated
the affirmative team of
David-Lipscomb College on
the topic, "Resolved that executive
control of the United
States foreign policy should
be significantly curtailed."
The three schools winning
the most rounds were University
of Alabama, University
of Florida and Vanderbilt;
with Miami-Dade, University
of Georgia and Samford University
ranking highest in the
Junior Division.
"We feel the tournament
was very successful in terms
of the quality of the debating.
There were many outstanding
teams, and Vanderbilt* s was
especially fine," said Sid
Hill, debate coach.
The Auburn Debate team,
host to the tournament, was
not eligible for awards.
Two hundred thirty-five
students from 54 Southeastern
schools participated in the
Tournament, sponsored by the
Interfraternity Council which
donated $1000 toward expenses.
4 years on campus, 510 trips to the library, 10 happenings, 6 walks to the Dean's office, and 1 long Commencement march
s. _ _ _ • BassWeejuns
did not receive them. We will
refund your money.
Again, we apologize for
any inconvenience the late
delivery may have caused you.
Linda Greene
4JM
Freshman claims
Plainsman 'prejudiced'
Editor, The Plainsman:
To come right to the point,
the Oct. 17 issue of The Plainsman
was rather prejudiced! I
know everyone is entitled to
his own views, but I feel your
comments about George C.
Wallace and his supporters
were completely uncalled for.
I personally hold a lot of
respect for a man who had
enough foresight to prevent a
lot of trouble and possible
deaths by his stand a t the
University of Alabama campus.
Not to mention the fact that
he's one of the few leaders in
this country whom I feel is
really trying his best to clean
up this country and win the
war in Vietnam in the only
way it can be won.
By God, it's good to see
someone's got the guts to
stand up for what he believes
in!
William C. Dunbar
1FY
Muskie concerned
for college students
Editor, Trie Plainsman:
I would like to point put
the significance 0 f gd Muskje
in this national campaign^
He is a candidate concerned
with the people. Muskie listens.'
to the college students*
with their feelings about Vietnam.
His background is one oj
accomplishment, not of getting
praise by playing orr
people's prejudices.
Susie Williamson
2EED
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6- THE AUBURN PUINSMIN Thursday, October 31, 1968
AU eyes'homecoming' win
By BILLBEEMER
So far this season the
Auburn Tigers are 2-0 in
homecoming games, • and
they have a chance to
make it 3-0 this weekend.
To do so they must whip
l'a Florida Gator team that is
much stronger than its last
two games indicate.,Despite
losing to North Carolina,
22-7, and tying Vanderbilt,
14-14, the Gators are a powerful
team, and they will be up
for Auburn.
The Tigers defeated Clem-son,
21-10, earlier in the year
to dampen the South Carolinians'
homecoming ceremonies,
and last week Auburn
. celebrated its own homecoming
. with a 31-6 victory over Miami.
The key to the Florida
' offense is fullback Larry
'Smith.
COMPLETE PLAYER
"Larry is the completet
football player," says his,
coach, Ray Graves. "He is'
exceptional at every phase
of the game."
Smith led the Southeastern
Conference in rushing as a
sophomore and has averaged!
4.1 yards per carry in his
two years of varsity action.
In addition to his running
ability, Smith is an excellent
i — — <
Smith injured, out
Florida fullback Larry
Smith will not see action in
Saturday's game against Auburn,
according to a United
Press International story released
Tuesday.
Smith was reported to have
a badly bruised right side.
It was said that the great
Florida runner "suffered a
badly sprained right foot,
knee, shoulder and neck" in1
last Saturday's tie with
Vanderbilt. Smith left the
game in the first quarter.
According to TJPI, "Dr.
Edward Kissam, the team
physician, ruled Smith out of
the homecoming game against
Auburn and said Smith might
not even be ready to play
Georgia in the Gator Bowl at
Jacksonville the following
Saturday."
Tiger Topics
By Richard WiWish
Sports Editor
Move over, Packers
Speculation as to Auburn's football chances for the
remainder of the 1968 season began changing in the
second quarter of last Saturday's 31-6 homecoming victory
over Miami, then snowballed with the final gun and
throughout the weekend.
Most people saw little hope for Auburn after the
Tigers' disastrous 21-20 loss to Georgia Tech. After
all, the Tigers faced five murderous opponents in their
remaining games, starting with then-ninth ranked Miami.
But as Saturday's game slipped happily along into the
fourth quarter, the gloomy speculations changed to
visions of victory. Uncertain first quarter cheers of
"Beat Miami" gave way to a resounding fourth period
chant of "Beat 'Bama."
In the Cliff Hare Stadium press deck Tennessee head
coach Doug Dickey and a host of Southeastern Conference
scouts called Auburn "the best team" they'd
seen "all year."
"They (Auburn) had the best day of any team we've
played so far including Southern Cal, the nation's No. 1
team," Miami head coach Charlie Tate was quoted as
saying.
"We could have beaten Notre Dame the way we
played today," said a friend of mine, who was slightly
drunk. But he had a point.
Other speculations
And there were other speculations.
"We'll win all the rest of our games if we play like
we did today," and "We could have beaten the Green
Bay Packers Saturday," were some comments heard
following the upset.
All this may very well be true, but, being the pesse-mist
that I am, I'll settle for a victory against Florida
Saturday in Gainesville.
Admittedly, the Gators have looked bad the past two
weeks, tying weak Vanderbilt and losing to even weaker
North Carolina, but Florida is always tough at home in
Florida Field, the beautifully groomed pit.which affects
the Gators like Cliff Hare affects Auburn.
Added to this is the fact that Saturday is homecoming,
time for Gator Growl, the pep rally that draws 50,000-
plus and is one of the great spirit builders in college
football.
Although the Gators have never beaten a Ralph Jordan
coached team in Auburn, Florida holds a 6-2 record
against Jordan's Tigers in Florida Field.
The last time Auburn won in Gainesville was in 1960.
That was also the first time I saw Auburn play.
I was about 14 at the time, a native Floridian and a
Gator fan through and through. I spent l Saturday afternoons
listening to Florida radio announcer Otis Boggs
describe Gator football, playing touch football in the
street during halftime. I ate Sunday dinner in the living
room, watching Florida head coach Ray Graves relive
the glories of Saturday on his post-game television show.
Ghrious Saturdays
And there were some glouous Saturdays for Florida in
1960. The Gators were 4-1 going into their game with
Aubum, 3-0 in the SEC and destined, I hoped, for their
first SEC crown ever. It was an unbelievable team, a
sophomore team coached by a rookie head coach and
led by a young quarterback named Larry Libertore, who
had to be the greatest 138-pound football player in
America.
This was "next year" for Florida, just as every year
following 1960 was to be. The Gators were headed for
the top of the Conference. Auburn, also 4-1 and with an
SEC loss to Tennessee, had similar aspirations and
different ideas concerning Florida's success.
The Gators gave the game all they had, which was
quite a bit, but not enough for Auburn defense men like
Ken Rice and Dave Edwards, who clawed the Florida,
offense to pieces, and fullback Ed Dyas, who won it for
the Tigers with a 31-yard field goal.
Auburn went home with a 10-7 victory, and I went home
hating Auburn.
That was before I knew about War Eagle and Dean
Strong's boxers and the L Building tunnel and all the
other stuff that makes up Auburn. Back then Auburn was
a bunch of big guys in white uniforms who went around
(See page 9)
blocker and a fairly good
passer on the option.
Florida has another tough
runner in tailback Tom
Christian.
Smith is- currently the
leading rusher in the Conference,
and Christian is not
far behind. Smith has scored
six times on the ground, and
Christian has tallied four
time s.
The remainder of the
(Florida offense is by no
i means impotent, although it
has sputtered recently. Quarterback
Larry Rentz is a
passer of the first rank and
is also able to run with the
ball if necessary. Auburn
fans will likely remember
last year's game when Rentz
nearly brought the Gators
back from a 26-7 deficit.
Should Rentz be unable to
move the Gators, Jackie
Eckdahl is a very able assistant.
He was the Gators'
first string quarterback last
year until sidelined with an
injury.
BIG TARGET
Tight end Jim Yarbrough
will be the main target of the
Gator quarterbacks. At 6-8,
258. Yarbrough has no trouble
carrying tacklers with him
after he gets his hands .on
the ball. He also has good
speed for a big man. Assisting
Yarbrough at the receiving
slots will be split end Gene
Peek and flanker Guy Mc-
Theny.
Although their main claim
to fame is a potent offense,
the Gator defense is far from
being a pushover. Their defensive
line averages around
215 pounds per man and they
are all strong. Defensive tackle
Jim Hadley is a prime
example. At 6-6, 237, Hadley
is easily big enough to get
into the enemy backfield, and
his three years as a starting
center on his high school
basketball team is a tribute
to his agility.
TOUGH PASS DEFENSE
The Gator pass defense is
tough also. As a unit, the
Gator secondary picked off
some fourteen passes last
year, and they show a nose
for the ball again this year.
Overall, Florida is an extremely
potent football team.
They are in range of a touchdown
from just about any-where
on the field. . j
Lineman of the week
Auburn junior David Campbell was named Southeastern
lineman of the week by the Associated Press for his
rugged play at defensive tackle against Miami last Saturday.
Campbell dropped Miami ball handlers for losses
on numerous occasions during the 31-6 rout.
Double-duty frosh meet
Ole Miss at Oxford
By CURTIS MAULDIN
Auburn's freshmen one-two-
three punch will be
playing both offensively
and defensively tomorrow
when the Tiger Cubs meet
the Mississippi freshmen
in Oxford, Miss.
Quarterback Pat Sullivan,
split end Terry Beasley and
halfback Paul Scott, stars
of Auburn's 40-18 victory
over Georgia, will join Larry
Hill, Jim Tyler, Sammy Oates
and Jerry Colley as possible
two-way operatives.
As a result of injuries
suffered in the Oct. ;21 Georgia
game, two of Auburn's
starters, defensive end Bruce
Blysma and sideback Chuck
Gravat, will miss the Ole
Miss game.
BLYSMA RECOVERING
Blysma is recovering from
an ankle sprain, and Gravat
is ailing with a knee injury.
The extent of the damage
to Gravat's knee is not yet
known.
"We should know in a few
days whether or not Chuck's
knee will require surgery,"
said freshman coach Tom
Jones.
Randy Smith, who replaced
Blysma following his injury,
bruised a shoulder in practice
Monday and his current
playing status is doubtful.
Tight end Colley is expected
to fill in for Smith if the need
arises.
Oates, Sullivan's backup
at quarterback, will also see
action in the defensive back-field.
;
Auburn will be facing an
AUBURN SHARES LEAD
The Auburn Tigers share
the Southeastern Conference
lead. Auburn and Louisiana
State are tied at the top with
2-0 records.
Ole Miss team which has defeated
the Alabama freshmen.
"Ole Miss has some big,
strong players," said Jones,
"and they will be up for us
after boating Alabama."
LORAN CARTER HAS ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD TO THROW AGAINST BATTERED HURRICANES
Al Giffin, Bucky Howard handle Hendricks while Tom Banks, John McDonald.Dick Pittman, Larry Ellis guard
Tigers murder Miami,
neglected nationally
By RICHARD WITTISH
The Auburn Tigers found
out Tuesday that mutilating
the ninth-ranked team in
the nation doesn't necessarily
open the door to
the nation's top 20.
Although Auburn ripped
Miami, 31-6, last Saturday
before a Cliff Hare Stadium
homecoming crowd of 45,000,
the Tigers were neglected
in Tuesday's wire service
top 20 rankings.
Auburn could but garner a
few votes in the Associated
Press poll and none in the
United Press International
poll, while teams with similar
4-2 records were ranked.
Notre Dame:, beaten last
Saturday by twice defeated
Michigan State, was ranked
12th by AP and 15th by UPI.
Alabama, a two-time loser
with a narrow weekend victory
over Clemson, was chosen
18th by UPI.
Auburn slipped a knife into
Miami early last Saturday,
just as they had done the
proceeding weekend against
Georgia Tech.
But Auburn let the blade
slip out of the Jackets, blowing
a 14 point lead and losing
by one. Against the Hurricanes,
however, things went
differently.
Against Miami, the knife was
twisted.
"We got ahead and were
able to stay with our game
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plan," said quarterback Loran
Carter. "We wanted to throw
the ball, and we were able
to do this."
-And pass Carter did, throwing
15 completions in 28 attempts
for 274 yards.
The twist which doomed
Miami came on Carter's longest
heave of the day, a 62-
yard beauty to split end Tim
Christian for a touchdown.
The strike came in the second
quarter, with Auburn off
to a surprising 14-0 lead.
Miami had punted, and on the
first play following the kick,
Carter threw the bomb.
COVERED TIGHTLY
"Tim came back and told
me his man was covering
him tight on a curl pattern
after he ran it the first time,"
said Carter. "Our receivers
have the option to go short
or break long on this pattern.
"When Tim went out of the
huddle, he said, 'Watch me
deep.' He just gave the man
covering him a little head
fake and ran right by him."
The score followed a 36-
yard pass interception return
for a touchdown by linebacker
Bobby Strickland, and a 22-
"Si***
BOBBY STRICKLAND LEAPS, INTERCEPTS
Alert Tiger then speeds to a score
yard pass-run score from Car- Strickland shocked a capaj
ter to tailback Dwight Hurston. 3ity Cliff Hare Stadium crowd
(See page 7 for story on Bob- and Miami quarterback Davicj
by Strickland.) (gee page 9)
A beauty parlor
you can take
back to school.
In many ways the Norelco Beauty
Sachet is just like a beauty parlor.
It manicures, pedicures, massages,
applies facial creams, buffs
and files nails, and stimulates your
scalp and muscles.
But in another way, it's more
than a beauty parlor.
It also shaves your legs and
underarms. And it shaves underarms
as close or closer than a blade in 2
out of 3 shaves as tested in an independent
laboratory. (As does the
Lady Norelco 15L on the right.)
The Lady Norelco is a shaver
that has two shaving edges. One for
legs, and one for underarms.
It also has a 110/220 voltage
selector for easy travel use.
And it's not at all expensive.
Even if it shaves like it is.
/vore/c
the close, fast, comfortable ladies' shaver
- _~~/'
© 1968 North American Philips Company, Inc., 100 East 42nd street, New VorK, New York 10017
Thursday, October 31, 1968 7-TllE AUBURN PUlNSMAN
Ike it is
Dressing room
scene of action
By LARRY BLAKENEY
Of the Auburn Tigers
It's been suggested that
I reveal to the readers a
behind-the-scenes description
of pre-game, halftime,
and post-game activities
in the Aubum dressing
room.
•• The team usually arrives
at the dressing room about an;
hour and a half before game
time. This allows trainer
Kenny Howard and his aides
to tap ankles, knees and forearms.
After everyone is taped and
settled, the coaches begin
last minute checks on all
phases of the game plan.
This is followed by a few
final pre-game words by coach
Ralph Jordan, after which he
and his assistants usually
leave the dressing room, allowing
the players a minute
to themselves before going
to football war.
Usually, the captains make
a quick request of the players
at this time, then allow other
'players toadd what they wish.
This final little pep rally
ends with a loud burst of
shouting and clapping as the
captains preceed the team
from the dressing room onto
the field.
Halftime is an important
phase of the game. This 15-
minute period not only gives
the players a rest, but gives
the team a chance to regroup
for the second half.
Then everyone reports to
his respective coach for a
briefing on first half mistakes
and ways to correct them. The
quarterbacks are shown plays
that are going best, along
with different formations and
the reactions of opposing defenses
to them. This enables
the quarterbacks to see the
various plays which should
be tried in the second half.
After the group meetings,
Coach Jordan once again
calls the players together to
give them encouragement. On
a signal from the coach,
everyone jumps to their feet
and returns to the playing
field.
As to the dressing room
following a game, a blind
(See page 9)
Strickland follows non-scholarship script
'SIX-POINT* STRICKLAND HEADS FOR TD
Bobby scores against Miami
Soccer Club falls in Birmingham
By JAY HAGEN
The experienced Bir-
\ mingham Soccer Club out-ilasted
the Auburn Soccer
! Club Sunday, 3-0.
Ray Gamem, • Pete Pro-i
per, and Harry O'Bierne
scored the goals for the
winning Birmingham team.
Auburn held Birmingham
0-0 until the second half.
Coach Gabriel Villasenor,
said that his Auburn team
"played well individually,
but showed no teamwork."
Villasenor said that
"Birmingham's team was
rough, out-played us and
had better moves than Auburn
due to their experience."
Auburn will play
Tuskegee Institute Sunday
at 2 on the field behind
Cliff Hare Stadium.
By JOE FRIDDLE
These must be the years
for non-scholarship football
players to come to
Auburn and make good.;
Following in the footsteps
of 1968 graduate and
ill Southeastern Conference
linebacker Gusty Yearout,
current rover Sonny Ferguson,
and placekicker John Riley
is sophomore Bobby Strickland.
All were originally noa-scholarship
players.
Strickland, from Grand Bay,
Ala., is Auburn's first team
strong linebacker. He broke
into the Auburn starting lineup
after Auburn's first game,
a 37-28 loss to Southern Methodist.
WITHOUT A SCHOLARSHIP
A year ago, Bobby came to
Auburn without a scholarship,
but with the intent of trying
out for the football team. At
Grand Bay he had lettered in
four sports, football, basketball,
baseball, and track. He
was the first athlete, in his
school's history to letter in
the three major sports, being
all-conference in each. He
also placed fourth in the
state low hurdles in his spare
time.
A high school quarterback,
Bobby was offered a partial
scholarship to Mississippi
Volleyball action gets hot
By CHARLOTTE WALKER
In volleyball action last
week, Alpha Gam defeated
Auburn Hall (15-9, 14-6,
15-8). Other games had Chi
0 II winning over Dorm 5
(15-3, 15-9); Crockett-
Genelda I smashing Gamma
Phi Iv (15-1, 15-2); KD waiting
it out as Noble I defaulted
for the second time, and Dorm
C taking an easy win over
AOPi I (15-6, 15-3).
Alpha Chi I coming from
behind to beat AOPi II (12-
15, 15-5, 15-6); Dorm 2 winning
by default over Dorm 10 I; Chi
O I taking it easy as Tri
Delta I defaulted; KAT I
fighting it out to beat Dorm
6 I (8-15, 15-13, 16-14), and
Crockett-Genelda II struggling
to beat Dorm B-Commuters'
in the best game of the week
(15-10, 14-16, 15-9).
KAPPAS SQUASHED
Pi Phi I squashing the
Kappas (15-2, 15-8); Gamma
Phi II soundly whipping Dorms
F-A (15-0, ,15-9); BSU overcoming
ADPi I (16-18, 15-13,
15-8); KAT II winning over
Dorm E (15-2, 4-15, 15-7);
Dorm J II coming back to beat
Noble H (10-15, 15-1, 15-8),
and ZTA II stunning Pi Phi
III (15-6, 15-5).
Other games included: DZ
II over Alumni. I by default;
Dam 9 over Dorm J III (15-10,
15-8); Dorm K I over Dorm D
(5-15, 15-12, 15-9); Gamma
Phi III over ZTA I (15-1, 15-
2); Alpha Chi H over Chi O
III (15-9, 15-11), and Alumni
II over ADPi II (6-15, 15-13,
16-14).
Dorm J I over Dorm 6 II by
default; Dorm 12 over Tri
Delta II (13-15, 15-11, 15-0);
KAT HI over Dorm 10 in a
very close match (15-12, 15-
13); DZ I over Dorm K II (15-
6, 15-8); Phi Mu over Noble
ffl (15-3,15-2), and Gamma Phi
lover Pi Phi 11(15-1, 15-11).
CO-REC VOLLEYBALL
In Co-Rec Volleyball, AOPi-
Fiji beat AOPi-PiKA (15-10,
15-13); Dorm J II Theta Chi
beat Dorm J II-Theta Chi (16-
14, 15-0); Chi O-Sigma Chi
beat Pi Phi-NROTC (15-4,
14-16, 15-12); Alpha Gam-
ATO over DZ-Betas (15-6,
15-7); Chi O-Independents
over Dorm J-Theta Chi (7-15,
15-10, 15-6).
Table tennis continued with
Fox-Graham of Genelda over
Everly-Douglas of ZTA (22-
One HOUR "mmimiins: CtftTIFIES
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WEDNESDAY "l.D.
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ALTERATION SERVICE AVAUILE
24, 21-9, 21-12); Strickland-
Bennett of ZTA over Watson-
Albright (21-9, 23-21, 21-16);
Smith-McDonald of Alpha Gam
over Ballard-West of Gamma
Phi, and Hughes-Ivey of ZTA
over Lambert-Nix of KAT by
forfeit.
Smith-Johnson of Gamma Phi
over Barnes-Williams of Tri
Delta (21-19, 21-11); Jehle-
Allen of Chi O over Kidd-
Whitney of Kappa (21-9, 11-
21, 21-19); Partridge-Wing-field
of KD over Swope-Gordon
of AOPi (21-15, 21-10), and
Lamb-Williamson of Dorm K
over Jehle-Allen of Chi O
(21-10. 21-14).
SINGLES
In table tennis singles the
results showed C. Carter of
Gamma Phi over Sam Whise-nant
of Chi O (21-12, 21-18);
Sue Smith of Gamma Phi over
Nancy Moore of ADPi (21-12,
(See page 9)
Tiger Recreation Center
North College St.
'Your pleasure is our business'
EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 31ST
EIGHT BALL 10C PER GAME
ROTATION L5C PER GAME
NINE BALL 51 CUE
SNOOKER 30C 10C EACH ADDITIONAL RACK
All other games such as bank, straight, pair, one-pocked are on time at
the rate of 900 per hour for two players and 30$ for each extra cue.
Open from noon to midnight Monday through Saturday.
Couples and groups always welcome.
L
Good for one
free game of
Eight-Ball or
Rotation
Compliments
Bill Wingard
Owner and Manager.
State. A broken leg caused
them to retract their offer.
So Bobby came to the Plains.
"I liked Auburn," says
Bobby, "and I thought I might
have a chance to play football
here, more than likely on
offense, since I had been a
quarterback. But mainly, I
just wanted to play.
STUCK WITH FOOTBALL
"I stuck with playing for a
year. Coach Paul Davis and
coach Sam Mitchell gave me a
lot of moral support. They
told me not to give up, that I
would eventually get my
chance."
Strickland's chance was a
while in coming. Bobby spent
his football playing time last
year running scout plays in
practice for the "hamburger"
team against the varsity,
playing quarterback to help
Auburn's starting defense
learn their assignments.
Bobby's chance came last
spring. He went out for spring
practice and worked up to
second team rover behind
Sonny Ferguson. As a result,
he went on scholarship this
season.
This fall, he moved into
the first team strong linebacker
slot, replacing Al
Giffin, who was thrown into a
gap created by an early-season
injury to would-be first
teamer Tommy Yearout. Giffin
is presently running at tight
end.
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8- THE AUBURN P U I N M U N Thursday, October 31, 1968
Cougars go prowling
for Bulldogs in Athens
By MIKE ANDERSON
The Houston Cougars are prowling, out for a fresh kill,
but Georgia's Southeastern Conference Bulldogs, although
they may be running a little scared, have no desire to be
Cougar meat again, as they were last year in Houston's
Astrodome, 15-14.
This year's Houston-Georgia game will be played Saturday
in Athens, but this is small comfort for Georgia,
since the 'Dogs face the same man who ate them alive
last season.
Around the SEC
In that game, fullback Paul Gipson ran wild over the
Astroturf and Georgia as he scored on a 25-yard jaunt
and ran for the game-winning two points following a 57-
yard Houston touchdown pass.
This year he continues to aide Houston make shambles
to the opposition. Take last week's game with Mississippi,
for instance.
Gipson scored two touchdowns on runs of 18 and 30
yards while gaining 210 yards in 33 carries...pretty devastating.
Though Texas tied the independent Cougars, 20-20,
only one team has stopped Houston in 1968, and that
was Oklahoma State by 21-17.
HOUSTON POWER
Gipson and company have powered over Tulane, 54-7,
Cincinnati, 71-33, and Ole Miss, 29-7.
The Houston attack also features some passing. The
Cougars gained 210 air yards against Mississippi under
the direction of quarterback Ken Bailey.
Houston's defense has not yet rated 10th in the nation,
as it did last year, but with such an offense, who needs
defense?
And what of Georgia? Well, everyone in the SEC knows
of the Bulldogs, as they have in their own way done
quite well this season, 5-0-1, the tie with Tennessee
becoming ever increasingly famous and important.
Though the 'Dogs boast of no Gipson, they have a
(See page 9)
Out on a limb
wrfn Hie Plnitsmon staffers and their guests
GAME
1 Auburn-Florida
1 Miss St.-Alabama
1 Mich, St.-Ohio St.
1 Houston-Georgia
I Ole Miss-Louisiana St.
1 Clemson-North Carolina St.
1 UCLA-Tennessee
SMU-Texas
1 Pennsylvania-Harvard
1 Swarthmore-Muhlenberg
1 LAST WEEK
SEASON
3EEMER
AU
Ala.
OSU
Ga.
LSU
Clem.
Tenn.
SMU
Harvard
Muhl.
6-4
35-15
PARKER
AU
Ala.
OSU
Ga.
LSU
Clem.
Tenn.
SMU
Penn
Swarth.
7-3
35-15
RUZIC
AU
Ala.
OSU
Ga.
OM
Clem.
Tenn.
Tex.
Harvard
Muhl.
7-3
35-15
WITTISH
AU
Ala.
MSU
Houston
LSU
NCS
Tenn.
Tex.
Penn
Muhl.
7-3
3R-15
HOUSEL
AU
Ala.
OSU
Ga.
LSU
Clem.
Tenn.
SMU
Penn
Swarth.
7-3
32-18
OLD PRO
AU
Ala.
OSU
Ga.
LSU
Clem.
Tenn.
Tex.
Harvard
Muhl.
7-3
32-18
GHOST
AU
Ala.
OSU
Ga.
OM
Clem.
Tenn.
SMU
Penn
Muhl.
5-5
29-21
YOU
A four way tie for first place dominates the scene in
the fumbling football forecasting. Sports editor Richard
"Nice Guy" Wittish, assistant Jim "Porky" Parker, Ed
"L.O.T.P." Ruzic and Bill "Bruin" Beemer all have
35-15 season records.
Editor David "Happy Hippo" Housel and the Old Pro
are sporting 32-18 marks and the guest trails the field
with a 29-21 record.
Ruz Intramural News
Tom and Jerry at it again, this time in football
By ED RUZIC
When two people are
identical twins they usually
live pretty identical lives
during their younger years.
Thus was the case with
Tom and Jerry Crowder
during their high school
days when it came to studies,
social life, football.
Especially football,
they both were pretty fair
country football players at
Lee High School in Montgomery,
Tom being all-state. But
when they came to Auburn
last year, Tom and Jerry decided
to break up, with Tom
joining Pi Kappa Phi and
Jerry pledging Phi Gamma
Delta.
TOGETHER AGAIN
But this past Tuesday the
twins came together again,
this time on the football
field, and the only way you
could tell them apart was by
their different jerseys. The
game had been played up by
both fraternities during the
week, and even Mr. and Mrs.
Crowder were on hand to see
the game to determine the
League 4 champion.
Jerry had helped lead Phi
Gamma Delta to a 4-0 record,
while Tom had coached his
team to 1-1 record. If Pi Kappa
Phi could win it would put
the league in a three way tie
for first, while a Phi Gamma
Delta win would almost certainly
give them the crown
with only one more game to
play.
In the end if a winner had
to be determined, I guess Phi
Gamma Delta would get the
decision. The score was 13-0
in favor of the Fiji's, giving
them their third victory in a
week, but it was one of those
games in which every muscle
in every player was hurting.
As Jerry, who caught two
bombs, said, "There wasn't
too much brotherly love in
for that game."
It seems like I'm just not
going to be a predictor again
this year. Last week my first
adventure out on a limb ended
in disaster as the KA's lost
to the Delta Chi's, before my
choice even appeared in the
paper.
NICE GUYS
I guess that old saying
about nice guys finishing last
was true, because the Southern
Gentlemen just fell down
dead when they came up
against the Red Bandits.
Wayne "The Kid" Stanfield
scored the first touchdown and
extra point. The "Kid" is
the "other player" on Delta
Chi, following Otto Gaylord.
He doesn't receive as much,
attention as Gaylord, but he
usually receives as many
passes. Jeff Gilmer, Eddie
Gaylord, and Bland Williams
also deserve a lot of credit
for Delta Chi's fine showing
this year.
TOUGH.LEAGUE
There has got to be a tough
league every year and League
One is that league this season.
Four teams, Beta Theta
Pi, OTS, Sigma Nu, and
Sigma Chi, have lost only
one game. Each of them has
a chance to win, but I would
not be crazy enough to try
and pick a winner.
The Beta's have been
sporadic all quarter and if
they're having one of their
good days they will be impossible
to beat. The Sigma
Nu's have found a quarterback
in Wood Parker, and
last year's champions are
starting to get stars in their
eyes again. Jimmy Ballard
looked good last week, but
today will tell the story as
the Betas and Snakes meet
in the biggest game of the
week.;
BOUNCING BACK
The Sigma Chi's bounced
back after their loss to OTS
by wrecking the Beta's undefeated
season last week.
Frank Cox, Bob Starkey, and
Calvin Sanders helped bring
the winning derby home, but
Rick Stafford's 10 interceptions
for the year have got
to be one of the best things
the Sigma Chi's have going
for them.
In an earlier harvest, OTS
was cut down by the Beta's,
but coming down to the finale,
the Oates are still growing.
Don Steen and Lee Izen will
try to carry their crop over
the other three contenders.;
WRAPPED UP?
In League 3, most people
are convinced that ATO has
wrapped things up, but Theta
Chi whipped undefeated Lamda
Chi last week to move them
up into the race. Bo Griffin
caught two Wayne Garner
passes for TDs and six of
Stan Bryant's Lamda Chi
passes were intercepted to
set up the Theta Chi victory.
*And then she said/Wow,
what's that after shave
you're wearing?'"
We keep warning you to be careful how you use Hai Karate® After Shave and
Cologne. We even put instructions on self-defense in every package. But
your best silk ties and shirts can still get torn to pieces. That's why you'll
want to wear our nearly indestructible Hai Karate ^______^__
Lounging Jacket when you wear Hai Karate Reg- ' ** "/*'''1>
ular or Oriental Lime. Just tell us your size (s,m,l)
and send one empty Hai Karate carton, with $4
(check or money order), for each Hai Karate
Lounging Jacket to: Hai Karate, P.O. Box 41 A,
Mount Vernon, N. Y. 10056. That way, if someone
gives you some Hai Karate, you can be a little
less careful how you use it. o^, Hai Karal. loungiBB Jo,k.i it
practically rip-proof.
Allow 6 weeks for dolivery. Offer expires April 1,1969. If your favorite store is temporarily out of Hai Karate, keep asking.
Fraternity Standings and
Scores:
League 1: Won Lost
Beta Theta Pi 3 1
Omega Tau Sigma 3 1
Sigma Chi 2 1
Sigma Nu 2 1
Kappa Sigma 1 3
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 0 4
Scores: KS 13, SAE 6; BTP 12,
OTS 0; SN 19, KS 12; OTS 12,
SAE 0; SC 12, BTP 0.
League 2:
Delta Chi
Kappa Alpha
Delta Tau Delta
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Alpha Psi
Delta Sigma Phi
Scores: DC 27, DSP 2;
KA
DTD 0; TKE 7, AP 6; DC
KA 0; AP 18, DSP 6; DTD
yds, TKE 10yds.
League 3:
Alpha Tau Omega
Lamda Chi Alpha
Theta Chi
Pi Kappa Alpha
Delta Upsilon
Theta Jfi
Chi Phi
Scores: ATO 21, PKA 6; LCA
over CP by forfeit; TC 26, TX
0; PKA 12, DU 2; TC 14, LCa
0; ATO 12, TX 0; DU over CP
by forfeit.
League 4:
Phi Gamma Delta
Sigma Pi
Alpha Gamma Rho
Pi Kappa Phi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Phi Kappa Tau
Phi Delta Theta
Scores: AGR 6, PKP 2; PKT
17 yds, SP 0 yds.; PGD 6, PDT
0; PGD 7, AGR 0; SP 13, PDT
0; PGD 6. SP 0; SPE 12, PKT 7
4
3
2
2
1
0
3
3
2
2
1
1
0
19.
13,
11
0
1
1
1
2
3
A:
0
2
1
1
1
2
3
o
m
< m
GO
o
a
CfO
W
t *
W a
Independent Football Standings
and Scores:
League 1:
Navy
Campus Inn
Rejects
AVA
C&C
Walker Hall
League 2:
APhiO
Wesley
BSU
Cathloic
Westminister
AEPi
League 3:
Div. G
Div. U
Div. DO
Div. F
Div. LUN
League 4:
Div. P2
Div. PR
Div. AK
Div. KJ
Div. S
Div. M
Won Lost
2
2
2
2
1
0
3
3
2
1
0
0
League 5:
Blues
A&G
Hawks
Air Force
Rebel s
Math
3
3
2
1
0
0
0
0
1
2
3
3
TIPIT...TAPIT...
ONE DROP FRESHENS
BREATH INSTANTLY.
3
2
2
1
0
0
3
2
2
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
3
3
0
1
1
2
2
3
Ghost picker for this Halloween week is a local spook.
His name will be revealed next week if he scores high
enough. Rumor has it that the spook used stump water
and wolfbane to make his special prognosticating brew.
This week Muhlenberg takes on the swarthy Moors of
Swarthmore. Will they win? Tune in next week, same time,
same channel for the next thrilling installment of 'Out
on a limb.'
ATTENTION
SENIORS!!
Con You PassTnis Simple Test?
i. Why is it important to have your insurance counselor be a
full time insurance man?
2. Why is it important to have your insurance with a company
that has offices from coast to coast?
3. Why is it important for your insurance counselor to be familiar
with the tax problems concerning your insurance program?
4. Why is it just as important to know what your policy will
not do in comparison to what it will do?
5. Why is it beneficial to wait until the later part of your senior
year to buy insurance?
6. Why is it important to buy insurance before you graduate
froir. college?
If you do not have an answer to any of the above questions,
why not call a collegemaster counselor and get the answer.
Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company
College Master Division
Suite 206, First National Bank Building
P.O. Box 294 Auburn, Alabama
887-6541 sstP J
- .
CONFUSED?
Do Mid-Quarter
Exams Have You
All Mixed-Up?
SHOP For The
Many Study Aids
And Outline Series
l at the
"in the Auburn Unionrr
Complete School Needs ...
For Auburn Students
and remember...
We have a complete line of
Auburn Novelties and Souveniers
J
Volleyball action mounts
Thursday, October 31,1968
(Continued from page 7)
21-19); Jane Williams over
Jennifer White (18-21, 21-
17, 21-17); Cherry Williamson
of Dorm K over Cindy Moncus
of Dorm F (21-13-21-6); Babs
Welch over Susan Brock (21-
19, 21-15), and CaroIAmber-!
son of Dorm J over L. Ray of
Gamma Phi (21-8, 21-4).
Karen Bennett of ZTA over
Carolyn Berryhill of Dorm 3
(21-19, 21-15); Pam Allen of
Chi 0 over Caroline Fowlkes
of DZ (21-19, i 21-17); Ann
A^QTb,
AUBURN-OPELIKA HWY.
PHONE 887-5281
Opens 6:30, Show at 7
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
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WAY-OUT \n\
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SEARCHING
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Gordon of Dora C over S.
Walker of Gamma Phi (21-19,
21-13); Sharon Young of Alpha
Chi over B. Watson of Gamma
Phi (21-3, 21-4), and Pat
Taylor of Dorm 3 over Robin
Carstens of Pi Phi (21-18,
21-19).
Linda Nunnelly of Alpha
Chi over Barbara Cooper of
ZTA (21.13, 21-10); Paula
Heilig of Dorm J over Judy
Jehle of Chi O (21-7, 21-4);
Dale McNabb of Dorm K over
Karen Cook of Dorm 10 (21-
16,- 21-14), and Adele Allison
of Commuters' over Sue Hawkins
of Gamma Phi (21-15,
21-10).
SHUFFLEBOARD
Shuffleboard also continued
this week with Anita
Bridges of Chi O over Julie
Kunneke of Kappa (50-30,
46-55, 54-9); Jean Bidez of
KAT over Mary Nell McCor-quodale
of Chi O (57-35, 40-
63, 60-45); Carol Eidschun
of Chi O over Karen Cook of
Dorm 10 (58-35, 61-16);
'Chuck' Walker of DZ over
Lee McCorquodale of Chi O
(51-37, 50-46). The only
doubles match played last
week resulted in Allen-Jehle
of Chi O beating Cathcart-
McMillan of ADPi by a forfeit.
;
The Girls' Track and Field
Meet will be on Nov. 12, on
the Cliff Hare Stadium track.
Girls signed up by Friday may
enter three events. Girls who
have not signed up may not
participate.; The meet will
start at 3:45 p.m.
There will be a W.I.A.
meeting at 5 p.m. Monday in
Thach 204. All representatives
are expected to attend.
In Tiger dressing room
(Continued from page 7)
man could easily tell if a
team has won or lost by
standing outside.;
If you win, everyone is
shouting, hugging, shaking
hands, congratulating each
other, and generally having
a wonderful time. The alumni
begin to enter with congratulatory
remarks for coaches
and players.
Here at Auburn, Dr.; Phil-pott
always comes by with
congratulations, and on some
occasions, the past weekend
being an example, a notable
person will come by. Last
Saturday, Alabama's Gov.;
Albert Brewer dropped by.;
If you lose, it's a different
story, one I don't even want
to talk about.
s- T H E AUBURN PLAINSMAN
COAGH RALPH JORDAN, BOBBY STRICKLAND GET VICTORY RIDES TO DRESSING ROOM
Two heroes are honored after Miami rout
CHRISTIAN COMPLETES TRIP TO END ZONE
Tim went on to break receiving record Tigers murder Hurricanes
(Continued from page 6)
Olivo with his steal and run.
The play set the pattern of
the game defensively for Auburn,
which held Miami to
minus 85 yards on the ground,
a Southeastern Conference
record.
Tackle David Campbell repeatedly
caught Olivo for
losses while the Miami senior
was trying to pass. Linebacker
Mike Kolen keyed on
tailback Vince Opalsky,
holding the leading Hurricane
rusher to minus four yards.
And rover Sonny Ferguson
garnered ' 'Headhunter''
awards with ten individual
tackles and three assists.
Auburn went to their half-time
dressing room leading
24-0, the three additional
points coming on a 22-yard
John Riley field goal.
Miami struck back in the
third period, with Opalsky
blasting four yards into the
end zone.
Auburn made its last touchdown
a record breaking
occasion.
Carter threw 24 yards to
Christian for the score, and
the reception, Tim's 35th of
the season, brought the
senior from Covington, Ga. a
single season school receiving
record. The old mark
of 34 was set last year by
Freddie Hyatt. Christian's two
touchdowns and 151 yards
receiving left him one score
and 89 yards short of two
more of Hyatt's single season
records. ;Tim has five touchdowns
and 464 yards thus far
this year.
A major reason for Auburn's
offensive success was the
blocking of the Tiger line,
especially against Miami
all-America defensive end
Ted Hendricks.
Hendricks managed to intercept
a pass but was neutralized
throughout a majority
of the game.
"We ran away from him
much of the time," said Carter,
*and Larry Ellis, our
fullback, did a good job
blocking him."
Miami mounted a potent
offensive late in the game,
mostly on the passing of
sophomore quarterback Lew
Pytel to flanker Hank Bellamy,
Cougars go prowling for 'Dogs in Athens
(Continued from page 8)
a passel of big, fine runners, with Bruce Kemp, Brad
Johnson and Steve Farnsworth taking turns leading the
team each Saturday.
Although Georgia's brutal defense may have lapsed
somewhat against Kentucky when the Wildcats' Dicky
Lyons scored on 92-and 30- yard passing bombs,i'Do"g
safety Jake Scott rectified things with a pair of interception
returns which he converted into touchdowns.
And, Georgia did hold the ?Cats~to 32 yards and no first
downs in the first half.
Despite the presence of Gipson, Georgia will win this
Saturday, as the 'Dog defense will be tougher than any
Houston has faced this year.
AROUND SEC
Around the rest of the SEC: Alabama's Crimson Tide
floods outmanned Mississippi State; Tennessee's Vols
defeat UCLA in a contest of intersectional interest; two
of the weaker teams in the South, Vanderbilt and Tulane,
battle it out in Nashville, with Vandy the winner; Kentucky
loses to West Virginia, and Louisiana State conquers
Mississippi in a great rivalry.
Who would be a man must
be a non-conformist.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Move over, Packers
(Continued from page 6)
kicking field^oals and knocking down people who weighed
138 pounds.
Things have changed for me since then, just like the
speculation changed last Saturday.
A lot of people I know say things like, "I don't care
if we lose the rest of our games, just so we beat Alabama."
Georgia and Tennessee fit in there equally well,
depending, I suppose, on what state you're from.
But with me, it's beating Florida that counts.
For a bullet spent and a dollar earned
HE WAS THE BEST
IN THE
ELLA
A I M
RICHARD TOM AS
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In llito Sv'jn^ COfmdedttt
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Thousands Were Turned Away the Last Engagement
VVKRB£L§ LATE SHOW
FRIDAY 11:15
who caught eight passes for
the day.
But by then the knife had
sunken too deeply for the
Hurricanes to do much damage;
CARRY IT.
MARTIN
211 SOUTH 8th ST.
PHONE 745-2671
O P E L I K A
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"A TALE OF TWO CITIES"
"A Tale of Two Grin," the mighty drama of the French revolution and the men
and women caught up in its turmoil recounts now how the love of Sydney Canon
for Lucie Manette grows while a mighty nation strains under tyranny and revolt.
The storming of the Bastille and La Force Prison, the revolutionary tribunal and
the Old Bailey trial are among the memorable scenes.
STARRING
Sydney Carton RONALD COLMAN
Lucie Manette ELIZABETH ALLAN
Thur. Only Two Showings
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T h e g r e a t e s t Othello e v e r by
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ANTHONY HAVELOCK-ALLAN and JOHN BRAB0URNE _,
TECHNICOLOR' PANA»ISI0N' From WARNER BBOS.-SEVEN M T S j g
io- THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN Thursday, October 3 i u m
Auburn students build church in Columbus, Ind.
* By KATIE JONES
Between June 12 and
Aug. 10, 15 unskilled student
builders, 13 from Auburn,
built a church in Columbus,
Ind., saving its
congregation approximately
$35, 000 in labor costs.
Most members of the team
"couldn't hit a nail square
on the head," but within one
week after their arrival they
had installed a truckload of
two by fours to hold up the
sub-flooring. Seven weeks
later they had completed a
handsome, modern brick
building, 5,100 square feet
in size.
"I couldn't even hold a
•hammer steady before going,"
said Vicky Rudolph, a sophomore
in biology. "And I got
BSU WORK TEAM PUTS ROOF ON CHURCH
Fifteen students worked seven weeks to construct building
so tired I fell asleep on the
job one time."
"Nevertheless, they worked
like professionals except they
didn't stop when it rained."
Senate approves
Thanksgiving Drive
At its Monday night meeting the Student Senate approved
plans for a Thanksgiving Drive and discussed
charters for Pi Gamma Tau pre-engineering honorary
and the National Collegiate Association for Secretaries.
The Senate also rejected
consideration for a faculty
representative to the Student
Senate. Discussion on
this issue centered around
the desirability and selection
of such a representative.
The final consensus was that
a faculty member could be
invited to appear before the
Senate to express the faculty
viewpoint on any matter.
C Sponsored by the Campus
Drives Committee and the
Interfraternity Council, the
; Thanksgiving Drive from November
23 through December
5 will collect clothes and
food_ for needy families in
Late Show Sat
11:15
Tiger Theatre
Relax!
It's only
a movie!
COLUMBIA PICTURES Proems
A MARTIN MANULIS Production Duffy
J A M I I JAMBS
MASON FOX
AND
JBANNA
YORK
Lee County and throughout
Alabama.
With the help of the Junior
I.F.C. and the Squires, sophomore
men's honorary, collections
will be made in town
and on campus.
Action on approving charters
for the Pi Gamma Tau
honorary and the National
Collegiate Association for
Secretaries was tabled until
the next meeting to follow
constitutional procedure.
In other action, the Senate
announced that John Mills,
Director of Faculty Relations,
will work with Campus
Ministers on a "oaft seminar.
Halloween Late Show
Tonight 11:15
Tiger Theatre
THE
said Walter Porter, director
of the Baptist Student Union
(BSU) and organizer of the
work team. Porter had conducted
two similar work camps
,'in previous years.
When the work team finished
laying carpet Aug. 10,
'a building which consisted
of an auditorium with a capacity
of 235 people, an educational
building with six Sunday
School rooms, an office,
'a library and a nursery were
;ready for dedication on the
following day.
The building is valued atj
S70.000," said Porter. Since'
the congregation was small,
only about 110 persons, they
could only borrow $35,000,
which was used to purchase
building materials and finance
the work group in the
amount of $4,500.
The original agreement was
that students would work
without pay, but there was
enough left in the $4,500 to
pay each student $6.50 a
week for incidentals. One
member of the group figured
their wages as construction,
workers averaged about 11
cents per hour.
Most of the students chosen'
'to spend their summer ati-the
work camp because it
gave them a chance to do
something challenging and
worthwhile. They all agreed
that it was a learning experience
unparalleled by any
they had ever had.
Charlotte Kainer, a petite
sophomore in elementary education,
said her most difficult
job was installing the
insulation in the ceiling.
"Since I was the smallest
member of the group, I had
to climb up in the rafters
and put the insulation in;
the fibers fell into my clothing
and made me itch."
The bathroom was our biggest
problem," said Mary
Elizabeth Gravlee, a gfad-
Vallery, Lowery address
Human Rights Forum
Two members of the Discipline
Committee, Dr.
Floyd Vallery and Jerry
Lowery, will address the
Human Rights Forum at 8
p.m. tonight in Commons
254.
Dr. Vallery, assistant to
Fres. Harry Philpott, is chairman
of the Committee and
Lowery, 4HY, is the student
member. According to Larry
Brooks, publicity chairman
for the Forum, the two were
invited to discuss student
discipline. After talks by the
speakers, the meeting will
be opened for a question and
answer period.
The Forum is also setting
up a tutoring program for students
at Drake High School.
"The program is designed to
assist students in their school-work
and help them adjust to
the high school environment,"
said Brooks. i
Public Affairs Seminar
Board allots money for
State Sen. Tom Radney,
Baroness Maria von Trapp
and Nelson Lytle, novelist
and critic, have been approved
by the Public Affairs
Seminar Board to speak
here.
Radney, who offered to nominate
Sen. Ted Kennedy of
Mass. for President at the
National Democratic Convention,
will speak here Monday
and Nov. 21.
Baroness von Trapp, whose
life story is portrayed in the
musical "The Sound of Music"
and Lytle are scheduled for
Later appearances.<
The Public Affairs Seminar
Board, recently formed to allocate
$10,000 to campus organizations
and academic departments
desiring to sponsor
speakers, unanimously ap-
Ask the people
involved in
highway safety
"—about JEtna.
p i ,red the nomination of Radney..
Mortar Board, senior women's
honorary, was allotted
$500 of a requested $l,000to
sponsor Baroness von Trapp's
appearance. The Board suggested
that the remainder of
the money be requested from
the Lecture and Concert
Series. "
Lytle was nominated by the
English department.
A bid for funds to sponsor
Dr. Carlton Beck, associate
professor of Social and Philosophical
Foundations at the
University of Wisconsin, was
channelled to the Visiting
Scientist Fund. ;If funds are
not available, the Board will
reconsider the request by the
Counselor Education Program.
Superintendent John Irvine
said that the board only disperses
money for scheduling
speakers but not for handling
any other arrangements. ;
uate student in counseling
and guidance of their accomodations;
"Our water was supplied
by a puchp which had
to be primed at regular intervals.
" T h e men had a separate
shower in the garage
where they slept, but one
commode served 17 people.
"Most of my time was
spent fitting insulation fiberglass,
and I bent as many
nails as I nailed in," said
Mary Elizabeth. She said her
hardest job was working as
"hod carrier." The hod carrier
carries bricks and water
and moves iron scaffolding
•"ound for the bricklayejg
stahd on.
MISSIONARY
Aerospace engineering
major Bill Simpson was working
as a summer nissionary
FHE AUBUBN ftintouN
Classified Ads
To place Classified Advertising
In The Auburn Plainsman,
come by the-newspaper office in
Langdon basement. Low rates
5« per word for each week. Deadline:
5 p.m. on the Friday preceding
publication (Commercial
line rate quoted on request)
in Gary, Ind., but transferred;
[to Columbus when the work'
camp was formed. Bill said
there were no accidents on
'the job, but there were some|
close calls, like an ax slip-:
Iping from someone's hand.
One of the girls broke her
finger playing volleyball,
and another student cut his
foot badly playing basketball,
but neither was deterred
in his work.
"Some of the girls cut the
men's hair and saved them
$2.50 a week," said Jean
Smith, a graduate student in
home management. She also
recalled a disturbing moment
when they heard that the carpet
would not arrive in time
to be installed for dedication.
"We went to see the
supplier, and he sent a special
truck to Georgia to pick
up the carpet. We worked all
day Saturday installing it
!for the Sunday service,"
Besides constructing
$70,000 building the students
also conducted four Vacation
Bible Schools and supplied
leadership for a mission
jchurch in Nashville, Ind.
WORK CAMP
Auburn students attending
the summer work camp were:
David Burks, 2 PN; John
Church, 4 BA; Susan Evans,
4 PG; Mary Elizabeth Gravlee,
6 AED; Hallie Ingle,
2 MU; Charlotte Rainer, 2 EED,
Vicky Rudolph, 2 GBI; Jean
Smith, 6 GMH; Don Stork,
4 BI;Madelynne Young, 2 CH;
Bill Simpson, 2 AE; Mike
Gipson, a graduate and Keith
Riser, who transferred. Two
students from the University
of Arkansas were the remaining
members of the group.
LOST: Old English Sheepdog,
female, black and white. Last
seen near Midway Plaza. Reward
Call 826-5311.
FOR SALE: Air-conditioned 10 x
50 New Moon Mobile Home with
additional 8x16 storage room-new
washer and dryer—call
887-5758 after 5 p.m.
CHESS SETS: Come in and look
at our chess sets. They make
excellent gifts.
APARTMENT: Lush apartment
at Dexter Arms MAY be for rent
winter quarter, $120. Must lease.
Call 821-2733.
. Learn about /Etna. Ask for "Your
Own Thing" at your Placement Office.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
and A Plans for Progress Company.
Death on the highways.
At ^Ltna we refuse to accept it as a fact of life.
We designed the first classroom driving simulator for
high schools. We helped found the National Safety Council
and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. And our
engineering people are constantly helping to improve the
driving records of the nation's car, truck and taxi fleets.
Because highway safety is everybody's job, we feel a
special obligation. Our business may be selling insurance,
but our concern is people.
.flLtna is the kind of place where you can do good
and make good, too.
OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE
LIFE & CASUALTY
TAPE PLAYERS:
tape players and
installation.
We sell car
can provide
FOR SALE: Guns, (all makes)
scopes, ammunition and reloading
equipment. Electronic game
calls and other shooting and
hunting supplies. Call 821-1801
after 6:30 p.m.
M
i m i m i m i m i m i H
STEER
| > ^ * STEIN
PRESENTS
THE ALL-NEW SOUND
\ln Mixed Company]
Friday-Saturday, Nov. 1-2 & 8-9 I
DINING 4 P.M. TO
MIDNIGHT
CHARBROILED CHOICE STEAKS, SHRIMP,
SANDWICHES, BEVERAGES
PM9€DIM<S
I i
i
i
i
j
i
m
I
I
I
I
I r I I f r- I / c 939 Opelika Rd., Auburn
9 P.M. TO
MIDNIGHT
FEATURING:
Carol Hoynes, Jenny Cain,
Wendy McGowen, Bill Hagler
and Sara Williams
WATCH THE FUCCI MARQUE
FOR DIFFERENT ATTRACTIONS
' / .
3tfa€h &*a&Ai<mb
Greafee
For The Latest In Hairs Styles
SPECIAL ON FROSTINGS
USUAL $22.50 NOW $15.00
Good through Sat., Nov. 2
Shampoo ami Stfk How Reavfarfy Priced of $3.50
Under New Ownership JoAnnChance
Candy Mantel will be at Hill's Hair Fashions also on Thursday
and Friday nights until .9 p.m.
FREE PARKING In Downtown Parking Lot
EAST MAGNOLIA—NEXT TO PAEKEE'8 PHONE U7-MM
Thursday, October 31, 1968 11-THE AUBURN PUlNSM&N
Remember those "little old ladies" checking students'
books at the library's exits. Automation, in the form of
Sentronic Security System, may turn those good women
"out to pasture." Michigan State University has introduced
a new electronic check system to prevent students
from pilfering from the library.
All undergraduate and reference books have been
equipped with electrically-charged metal plates. Any
book taken to the exit door that has not been properly
checked out will automatically set a buzzer off, lock the
turnstile and cause a red light to flash, signaling the
student to return to the circulation desk.
Properly checked out books are "deactivated" byre-leasing
the charge from the books' plates. Library personnel
recharge all returned books by passing them through
a machine called an octivator, before they put them back
on the shelves.
A master control panel keeps the system operating and
in a "ready-state." The turnstile may be automatically
locked if necessary to prevent, suspicious persons from
leaving. Merill M. Jones, assistant director of the library,
said, '^We adopted the system because it is more economical,
more convenient and less embarrassing to the students
because they no longer have to stop and show
their books.
Only one problem has been encountered with the system.
Innocent girls are occasionally embarrassed by the
buzzer and fanfare of a detection, because a hair spray
can in their purse started the alarm. The system can be
set off accidentally with a variety of metallic objects.
FRATERNITIES REFUSE
NON-DISCRIMINATION PLEDGE
Thirty-two fraternities at the University of Illinois
have been placed on "rehabilitative probation" because
of their refusal to comply with the I nterfraternity Council's
non-discrimination provisions.
The fraternities on probation failed to submit to the
council statements from their national organizations
granting local autonomy in membership selection.
The local chapters were also required to give a pledge
of non-discrimination, in addition to submitting a program
of implementation for "pledging and initiation" of all
prospective members on the basis of personal merit without
regard to race, religion or national origin.
PANTY RAID IN REVERSE
The University of New Hampshire witnessed a reversed
version of an old college prank recently. Several dozen
Bcoeds attempted to stern Stoke Hall, a men's residence
dormitory, in an apparent effort to retaliate for recent
raids on women's halls by Stoke men.
I Chanting "B.V.D.! B.V.D.!," the girls made their attack
at about 11:30 p.m. The attack ended rather abruptly
however, when a Stoke man pulled a fire alarm, sending
several hundred men out of the hall screaming "Go
get them! " Most of the coeds raced for their dormitories.
Girls had apparently been planning the raid for several
days. Signs appeared on doors throughout one dorm reading
"Jock Raid on Stoke Tonight."
One girl summed it all up, "It really wasn't a good
raid, because all the girls ran away when the boys came
out.''
BARBERS DISCRIMINATE
In a recent interview with local barber shops, a reporter
for the "Cavalier Daily," school paper of the
University of Virginia, found that eight out of ten barbers
in Charlottesville, Va. refused to cut Negroes' hair.
The eight discriminating shops had various reasons
for their refusal. Several shops feared that present customers
might be lost if the shop's policy was changed;
others feared a bad reputation if they served Negroes.
One barber even gave as his reason the fact that he
didn't know how to cut a Negro's hair.
Student reaction to this discrimination has been to
picket those shops which persisted in their stand.
STUDENT NIGHT
EVERY
TUESDAY
at University Motor
Lodge Restaurant
Dine by Candlelight
in the Garden Room
— Special for Students —
MENU
Fried Chicken
Fiesta Steak
(Your Choice)
Tossed Green Salad
Cole Slaw
Congealed Salad
Potato Salad
Green Beans
Creamed Potatoes
Corn
Bice
CAFETERIA STYLE
Iced Tea
or
Coffee
All for only *1 50 to students only
($1.85 for others)
Also Try Our Sunday Noon Buffet
ENTERTAINMENT AND
UVELY ARTS
tylynHkfc
Pharmacy editor
to speak tonight
BOBBY VINTON TO PERFORM
Recording star scheduled for Nov. 7 concert
Vinton to appear
Nov. 7 concert
Bobby Vinton, • popular
vocalist and performer, will
appear here Nov. 7 at the
Student Act. Building.
Tickets for the concert,
sponsored by the Popular
Entertainment Committee, are
on sale at the UB desk at
$1.50 per person.
Vinton is often on the na:
tional best-seller charts and
has received numerous awards
from consumer and music trade
publications. He has sung in
just about every top club in
the tinted States.
One reason for Vinton's
popularity is his unusual ability
to reach a public of all
ages. His special rhythm-styling
is in demand by both
old and young listeners, and
his versions of rock, ballads!
and blues are all danceable.
Vinton has been able to stay
on the top of the national
charts for many years despite
the changing fads in music,
because he has kept his
own individual sound.
Vinton is equally familiar
to television audiences. Ed
Sullivan, Lawrence Welk,
Joey Bishop, Danny Thomas
and Perry Como all have
hosted him on their shows.
He has displayed a talent
for acting, receiving good
reviews for his recreation of
Robert Preston's title role
in a touring version of "The
Music Man," and has signed
a five-year contract with
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Auditions held Friday
for 'Alice in Wonderland9
Auditions for "Alice In
Wonderland," the next production
to be presented by
the University Children's
Theatre, are being held
through Friday at 6:30 p.m.
in Room 108, Music Building
Annex.
There are 18 speaking roles
and several non-speaking
parts to be cast. Mostly college
students will be cast in
the production, but a few
children will be used.
"Alice In Wonderland" will
be directed by Rick Sparks,
a theatre arts major under
the supervision of Mr. Leo
Comeau, head of the University
Children's Theatre.
Following 13 performances on
campus, the production will
appear at several schools in
the surrounding area.
Irving Rubin, editor and
publisher of the American
Professional Pharmacist
will speak here tonight at
7:30 and tomorrow at 10
a.m. in the Union Ballroom.
Rubin, who has over 25
years experience as a
pharmaceutical editor, will
discuss developing trends in
pharmacy and how they relate
to the pharmacist's education.
Nationally known as a
writer and speaker on pharmaceutical
subjects, he has
served as a member of the
American Pharmaceutical
Association's House of Delegates,
as vice chairman of
the APhA's national convention
and as president of
its New York chapter.
Rubin received the 1968
Annual Achievement Award,
presented by Alpha Zeta-
Omega Pharmaceutical Frater-nity,
for "meritorious contri-bution
to pharmacy and its-allied
sciences."
The lecture program, sponsored
by Lever Brothers Co.
j under the auspices of the
National Wholesale Druggist
Association, is designed to
bring pharmacy students in
closer contact with prominent
personalities in the profes-
'sion.
Art sale
Plans for a student-faculty
art sale are being
made by the Art Guild, j
an art student honorary
society, for Nov. 22-24\
to obtain funds for an!
annual scholarship to be;
awarded to a worthy art
student. For more infor-j
mation, contact Bob!
Barks dale, Art Guild president,
at 821-3547.
Pengelly performs at coffee house
David Pengelly will continue to appear at the Down j
[and Under Coffee House through Friday night. According 1
| to Tom Roberson, UB program director, Pengelly was re- [
| contracted by the Coffee House due to his tremendous j
! popularity with the student body when he appeared onj
|campus last spring. The Coffee House opens at 7:30 p.m.
HARWELL'S MEN'S SHOP IS HAVING A SUPER
PRE-THANKSGIVING PROMOTION
They have just received a new shipment of fop grade small grain genuine alligator belts that
will be sold for $12.99 (they're cost). Black & brown, wide & narrow widths.
Also beautiful slide buckles for engraving to fit all size belts only $4.00.
A GREAT GIFT IDEA
Beautiful pure 100% cashmere sweaters by Lord-Jeff for only $23.99. Reg. $35.00& $40.00 sweaters.
Pants by Hubbard $14.00 to $19.00 now only $5.99 P.S. Harwell's has just received a great
Cole-Hann Shoes (lassies & buckles) 20% off ^T^^^J^^ , L
shirts with French cuffs. Also don t fail to
see there selection of unusal unusual cuff
links.
HARWELL'S
MEN'S SHOP
All Van Heusen Shirts 20% off
my, NORTH
COLLEGE ST
<*r- ^B6~^Gfcfe^^ljl»~-
Books of Pleasure
J & M
Annex
SF * \ & ssr
V * •
* • w m w
.o° ^
/ <P
Xerox Copies Made
Watch for Our Record Riot
in November
1 2 - T H E AUBURN PUINiMAN Thursday, October 31, 1968
Horseshoeing—a farrier pays for school
By LINDA GREENE
Steve Wilson, 20-year-old
pre-veterinary student,
went all the way to California
Polytechnic Institute
to learn the proper way
to shoe a horse and became
one of the few qualified
farriers in the U.S. who
remains active in this dying
profession.
Why the profession is dying
is a hard question to answer,
because Steve finds it profitable
enough to finance his
college education.
"There are only two colleges
in the U.S. which offer
a complete program in farrier-,
ing," said Steve. "I waited!
two years to be accepted to
California Polytechnic Institute;
they usually don't accept
students from out-of-i
state."
During the 12-week course,
Steve studied anatomy, physiology,
foot and leg struc-
Student directories available
Need to find out the
phone number of that girl
you met in English class?
Want to know where that
boy who sits beside you in
Zoo is from? All this and
much more can be found in
the 1968-69 Auburn Student
Directory.
The Student Directories are
being distributed now by the
Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity
at the Book Exchange.
They are given free upon presentation
of a student ID
card.
The directories contain the
names, hometowns, curriculum,
residence and phone numbers
FIGHT
FOR
CLEAN
THEMES!
Refuse anything but Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper!
Mistakes vanish. Even fingerprints
disappear from the special surface.
An ordinary pencil eraser lets you
erase without a trace. Are you going to
stand in the way of cleanliness?
Get Eaton's Corrasable today. In light,
medium, heavy weights and
Onion Skin. 100-sheet packets and
500-sheet ream boxes. At Stationery J | * ? | l i ^ t i * :
Stores and Departments.
Only Eaton makes Corrasable.®
EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND TYPEWRITER PAPER
Eaton Paper Company, Pittsfield, Massachusetts 01201
of Auburn students in addition
to the names and addresses
and phone numbers of staff
and faculty members.; The
floor plan of the new Memorial
Coliseum also appears in the
directory to serve as a reference
for students.
cure and overall conformation!
of a horse. Other areas of
study included the mechanics
of metals and faulty gaits of
torses.
Steve attended classes
eight hours a day, six days a
week. He said that the knowledge
gained during these
few weeks will help him with
his future career. He would
like to become an equestrian. ;
practitioner.
While in California, Steve
also worked a few weeks at
the Hollywood Race Track as
an apprentice, "mostly for
practical experience." He
also visited Caliente Race
Track in Mexico but said that
farriering techniques there
are 20 years behind those of
the U.S.
"Each horse is shod in a
different way," Steve explained.
"An average session
takes an hour and 20 minutes.
Gaited and walking horses are
shod differently from other
horses, which must be taken
into consideration.'' He said
that many people can shoe
horses, but there are very
few who have the training to'
shoe these special cases.
There are also certain types'
of corrective shoes that may
help correct or improve faultily
gaited horses.
Steve never has to solicit
business. "As soon as people
find out there is a farrier in
the area, I have phone calls
and inquiries most every
night," he said. "If I were
not in school, it would be
possible for me to earn about
|S100 per day."
Steve has a portable forge
and a full stock of shoes he
carries with him on all his
jobs. Most of his work is
oin the Responsibles
f
ALPACA
100% ALPACA WOOL
GUARANTEED MOTHPROOF
ENGINEERS
CIVIL. MECHANICAL. ELECTRICAL and ARCHITECTS
Interested in enq'neenng of industrial plant facilities
or field engineering on construction projects9 You
are invited to discuss your career opportunities with
The Rust Engineering Company.
THE RUST ENGINEERING CO. n
Our representative will be on campus November 5,1968
100%
ALPACA
Navy
White
Yellow
Green
Brown
November
Special
$15.00
Each
'done in Auburn, Opelika,
iMontgomery or Birmingham.
The only reward of virtue is
virtue; the only way to have
a friend is to be one.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Village Men's Shop
Mechanical, Electrical and Industrial
ENGINEERS
CAN YOU CONTRIBUTE TO THE
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN, DEVELOPMENT
AND PRODUCTION OF ADVANCED
NAVAL WEAPONS?
Get the facts on the positions we offer qualified
graduating engineers. Career Civil Service
offers generous benefits. Louisville has excellent
living conditions, cultural and recreational facilities,
plus opportunities for graduate study at
government expense.
REPRESENTATIVE ON CAMPOS
Thursday, November 7
For Interview, contact Placement Office
NAVAL ORDNANCE STATION
Louisville, Kentucky 40214
An Equal Opportunity Employer
HERE THEY ARE
MEN'S CAMPUS PAC CONTAINS:
HAN POWER DEODORANT ABS0RBMJR.
MCLEANS TOOTHPASTE GILLETTE BLADES
OLD SPKE BURLEY N0D01
GROOM AND CLEAN
ALL
BIGGEST
VALUE
ON CAMPUS
FOR 38* EACH
LADIES' CAMPUS PAC CONTAINS:
PONDS rmmm MIC «WW6«A SOAP
cmmt TAHPOH mms LOTION
Gllltm RIGHT GUARD DIPHM>0
MtUAMS TOOTHPASTE H0D0Z
AT
& 'TffalUlte 'Soo&ttoie