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Food?
High prices spawn substitutes
By Debbie Price
Asst. Features Editor
Had a beaver burger lately? Or maybe some
soybean hot dogs or peanut pudding? Products
like these may be the answer to the high
food prices that are now soaring even higher.
For many years the Auburn Department of
Agriculture has been working to discover
ways to improve the quality of foods and, at
the same time, to stretch that "food dollar" a
little farther.
One of the better known possibilities that
has been worked with is the soybean. The soybean
has a 38 per cent protein content so it has
excellent potential as a meat extender. Dr.
Dale Huffman in Animal and Dairy sciences
has worked extensively with the use of soybean
meal as a meat substitute. "Soybean
meal works very well with all types of beef and
other meats," said Huffman. "In fact, a little
soybean meal makes a more nutrious and
better tasting meat product."
In Huffman's research he experimented
with soybean burgers, soybean hot dogs, and
other meat products mixed with varying
amounts of soybean meal. Almost anything
can be done with soybeans as a meat extender
or substitute—there's even soybean pizza
meat. These meat products (soybean meal plus
meat) taste just about the same as meat products
without the meal if the proportions of
meal are right.
The only problems are the soybean's
"beany" flavor and the fact that more liquid
has to be added than for beef because soybean
(See BEAVER, page 14)
THE AUBURN PUINSMMI
Vol. 79S No. 5 Auburn University Auburn, Al. 36830 Thurs., July 26, 1973
Male visitation
Proposal to be refiled
YOU'VE GOT TO BE KIDDING
•Beaver meat is now being substituted for beef
By Annetette Norris
Plainsman Staff Writer
The trial male visitation program
in women dormitories
which was vetoed early this
quarter by Pres. Philpott will
be resubmitted this fall, Susan
Whaley,4SED, member of the
Student Health Center not
using ambulance for summer
By David Williams
Plainsman News Editor
"Well, we are sort of half way
without an ambulance unless
someone from the security office
goes along because the
Alabama State Board of
Health requires two appropriately
trained individuals
on board when an ambulance
makes a run," said Dr.
4nside
today-wniiam
B. Turk, former Acting
Director of Student Health
Services and, "we only have
one qualified driver for this
summer quarter.''
Dr. Turk further committed
that it is hard to keep trained
emergency medical technicians
from quarter to quarter
with all of them graduating
or looking for employment
elsewhere, but Auburn will
have four drivers when fall
quarter begins.
Randy Norred, operator of
AAA Ambulance service, said
that training sessions are
regionally coordinated
through the State Health Department
and that his service
has been fortunate in the fact
that some of these sessions
have been in Opelika although
several of his drivers
have had to travel to other
locations to obtain their training.
"We have a working agreement
with the student infirmary"
said Norred, "that
when they call us to make a
run we treat it like any
emergency and the infirmary
handles the expense."
According to Norred, AAA
Ambulance service has made
(See AMBULANCE, page 5)
SGA Student Welface Committee
said at the .Monday
night Student Senate meeting.
Whaley talked with Minna*
Roth, President of AWS, who
said that last spring's survey
was not representative of the
majority of the girls, because a
similar, less precise survey
had been conducted three
weeks earlier and refused by
Social Life because of ambiguous
wording.
Jimmy Powell, GPO, of the
Student Welfare Committee
reported that the committee
was studying women's rules
on other campuses and the impact
of the 18-year-old legal
age upon them.
Powell suggested that the
Senate "should find out what
the girls want" before more detailed
study.
Jim Gibson, 3AE Chairman
of the Student Welfare Committee,
reported on seating at
Cliff Hare Stadium. He said
that possible negotiations to
rearrange student seating by
shifting visitor's seating could
not be considered until 1976,
when present contracts expire.
Mike Wilson, President of
the Senate, suggested that the
Student Welfare Committee
meet with Dr. Ted Little and
Dr. Don Adams, campus
lawyers, to discuss the legal
implications of the 18-year-old
legal age.
Plans for a curb-side book
drop for returning library
books were discussed at the
joint meeting of the Library
Committees of the University
and Student Senates, reported
Stuart Schoppert, 6BA, Chairman
of the Student Library
Committee.
The book drop would be located
on the south side of the
library in the parking lot, and
would be some type of incline
chute connecting the outside of
the library to the basement,
allowing students to return
books at any hour without
leaving their cars.
Schoppert said that the idea
was submitted to campus
planner William Guerin and
that the committee expects tentative
plans for the book drop
in about two weeks.
Schoppert also reported that
the Library Committee had
studied a number of other library
problems and suggestions.
Schoppert said that
the 24-hour library operation
idea was "feasible, but not
practical," and that the sub-
(See SENATE, page 5)
News: What campus changes
will occur as a result of the approval
of the Academic Grievance
Committee?Staff Writer
Susan Hodges surveys the
situation on page 3.
Features: Bob Nicholson,
4AM, discusses the consequences
of swallowing a
diamond ring. Features Editor
Jack James has the story
on page 13.
Arts: Staff Writer Thorn Bots-ford
takes a look at B.B.
King—the performer and the
man—in an exclusive interview
on page 16.
Sports: LSU tops this year's
"Most Wanted" list for the gridiron
Plainsmen. See Sports
Editor Charlie Rhodes' story
on page 9.
Ordinance passed to control stray dogs
By Curtis A. Mauldin
Plainsman Staff Writer
A comprehensive dog ordinance
was passed Tuesday night by a unanimous
vote of the Auburn City
Council.
The ordinance is an effort to get a
person to provide for the control and
care of his dog, according to Eugene
E. Stanaland, president of the council.
The ordinance is for the protection
of dogs not against dogs, he said.
It will not become effective prior to
October 1, 1973.
All dogs within the city limits must
be licensed and under the restraint of
a responsible person at all times, according
to the ordinance. Any dog
may be impounded by the city if it is
not wearing a license tag or properly
restrained. Owners are responsible
for the proper care and well being of
their dog and shall not permit it to become
annoying or disturbing.
At its regular semi-monthly meeting,
the eight members present, made
several changes and amedments to
the original proposed ordinance
which was read for the first time at
the July 10 meeting. They listened to
comments from approximately 60
people present at the meeting.
The changes were made as a result
of comments made by various
citizens, who made their feelings
known to the council members after
the first reading and at the meeting.
(See DOGS, page 5)
MAKE YOUR VISITS ELSEWHERE
.Local resident tired of "calling cards'
THH AUBURN PlAtNSMMJ Thurs., July 26, 1973 page 2
Could be poisonous
Botanists discourage wild mushr
Three scientists in Auburn
University's Department of
Botany and Microbilogy
recently collaborated to
answer the recurring question
of whether a so called "magic"
mushroom is to be found growing
naturally in Lee County.
Dr. Gath Morgan-Jones, a
specialist on the identification
of fungi who* recently joined
the faculty, teamed up with Dr.
Norman Davis and Mr.
Ronald Wagener to determine
the truth of such reports.
Mushrooms of the type
reported by some to be the
"magic" mushroom "psilocybe
mexicana" were collected on
field trips and identified to be
"psylocybe cubensis." This
species has hitherto been
known to scientists to occur
only in Florida. Both the locally
collected "Psilocybe" and its
near relative "Psilocybe
mexicana" are hallucinogenic.
Both are said to be used
by Indians in Mexico to produce
hallucinogenic effects.
ThHs, there appears to be no
reason to doubt the accuracy of
"street" claims that Psilocybe"
mushrooms can be collected
in Lee County and that
they are hallucinogenic.
Having resolved the question
as to the identity of the
mushroom of interest, Morgan-
Jones and his collegues
are quick to emphasize the
potential danger accompanying
attempts to collect and eat
Rennovation
planned for
Mag
The Campus Planning Committee
has approved four requests
for additional rennovation
s and construction of facilities
to Magnolia Dormitories.
The plans, which were approved
on Monday, will
become final when approved
by President Harry M. Phil-pott.
The new Director of Magnolia
Dormitories, Dr. Charles
Schroeder, said "I don't anticipate
any difficulty in getting
the final approval".
The plans will create a new
study lounge with a computer
tie-in for residents of the dorm
in engineering curriculums, a
w ash ateri a near the dorm cafeteria,
an enclosed lounge area
in the main lobby with a bar-beque
area, and removal and
reconstruction of the cashier's
office to create an additional
resident roonr
THE AUBURN PUINSMAN
... has offices located in Langdon
Hail. Second class postage paid at
Auburn, Ala. Subscription rate by
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4 per centstate tax). All subscriptions
must be prepaid. Please
allow one monty for delivery. Circulation
is 7,300 weekly. Address
all material to The Auburn Plainsman,
P. O. Box 832, Auburn, Ala.,
36830
these or any other mushrooms.
For example, in the
same fields in which "Psilocybe
cubensis" was collected
a variety of other mushrooms
were present in close
proximity. Several of these
were possibly quite poisonous.
One species believed
poisonous could very easily be
confused with "Psilocybe and
possibly lead to tragic results.
The eating of wild mushrooms
is always risky. Often, the
poison cannot he destroyed by
cooking, freezing or drying. It
should also be noted that eating
the "Psilocybe" itself is a
dangerous pursuit. A small
overdose could be poisonous.
An excess is know to have produced
permanent insantiy.
Dr. James A. Lyle, Head of
the Department of Botany and
Q
G
Microbiology, observes that he
is contacted periodically concerning
cases where children
have eaten, or were thought to
have eaten, mushrooms that
they found in their yard or play
area. He says that in such
cases one should always contact
a physician immediately.
Several locally occurring
mushrooms are known to be
posonous and treatment must
be obtained within a short time
to avoid disaster. In at least
one situation, treatment is of
no avail if delayed for more
than a few hours. Lyle also
cites a local problem of timely
interest. Fairy rings of a particular
mushroom are presently
of common occurrence on
lawns in Auburn. This mushroom
is a common cause of
mushroom poisoning responsible
for many ill-nesses each
year according to at least one
expert. Interestingly, another
author states that this mushroom
is good to eat and that although
it is poisonous to many
people he has eaten it for many
years. When dealing with
mushrooms, one man's meat is
truly another man's poison.
Mushrooms can be deadly and
often are. To quote one author
"There are old mushroom
hunters and there are bold
mushroom hunters,,but there
are no old, bold* mushroom
hunters."
-K-pol
I u- teh
since 1937
Uo ur IDonderful World oF rashio n
proudly announces the opening
• Second Store*
ino op our
in the Village fTlall
Qugust 1,1973
Student grievance hearing
committee gets final okay
THE AUBURN PUINSMM Thurs., July 26, 1973 page 3
By Susan Hodges
Plainsman Staff Writer
The long-awaited Student
Academic Grievance Committee
has been approved by Pres.
Harry M Philpott, reported
Dr. Eugene Stanaland, President
of the University Senate,
at what he termed "the
shortest senate meeting on
record"lasting from 4:00 p.m.
to 4:05 P .M. July 17.
Stanaland also reported that
notices have been sent out to
student groups and to the University
Senate asking them to
nominate members to the committee
which is expected to be
operative by this fall.
The Grievance Committee,
which will consist of three student,
three faculty, and one
administrative member, is for
the purpose of correcting
"unfair academic treatment"
by teachers to students. The
proposal went to Dr. Philpott
last March after it passed the
University Senate by a substantial
majority. The seven
members will be named by Dr.
Philpott at a later date.
Ed Milton, president of the
Student Government Association
(SGA) said that he has
"put out feelers" to various student
groups to determine who
they would recommend for the
student members to the committee.
Milton says that he is
looking for persons who are
"beyond reproach" in character
and experience for the position.
Both Milton and Stanaland
believe that there will not be a
great influx of grievancesfrom
students because they think
that as professors and students
become aware of the
committee, problems will be
handled between the student
and professor in question or
not arise at all.
Some of the malpractices
that the committee will be able
to consider include: failure to
announce grading and teaching
policies at the start of the
quarter; failure to grade and return
work within a reasonable
length of time; the lowering of
a grade because of class attendance,
or committing "capricious
or arbitrary actions
which intimidate students and
failing to recognize properly
authorized excuses for absence."
" We just don't know," says
Milton about what will happen
when the committee
becomes operative,"but we
hope that it (a flood of grievances)
doesn't happen."
Milton says that he expects
immediate improvements in
communication between students
and faculty. Professors
are already aware of the code,
Milton says, and the SGA
pi ans in the fall to publicize the
means by which a student can
make an academic grievance.
Milton adds that Philpott's
approval of the committee is a
"culmination of 22 years of
effort," and that it was accomplished
through the "determined
effort of many students
and the cooperation of the
faculty members." He pointed
out that it was not until it was
brought up by the committee in
the faculty senate headed by
Dr. Ruth Galbraith that the
grievance board was even considered.
"We were very fortunate
that the faculty was behind
it,"Milton says.
Stanaland says that he does
not expect a great influx of
grievances because the existence
of the committee will
"inform a lot ot people of
what's already there.'" A process
already exists whereby a
student can take his academic
grievances to the professor, to
the department head or to the
dean of the school in which the
subject is included.
Stanaland adds that he
hopes that the existence of the
committee has a long-term
effect on student-faculty
relations. He pointed out that
"how it is used has got to have
some effect, too." He states
that he is glad that the code
specifies that it will only be in
effect for one year. "The following
year will be a trial period
and we'll see how thngs go
and then make adjustment,"
Stanaland said. I
—Brent Anderson
CONSTRUCTION BEGINS ON BIKE LANES
. . .Workers prepare for concrete pouring
Editorial Page Prices going to keep rising
Page Four Thurs., July 26, 1973
Ho ambulance
The Student Health Center ambulance is sitting idle
during the summer months. According to Health Center
officials, there is no one qualified to drive the new ambulance,
which was acquired less than one year ago. This is
a regretable situation.
Accidents can happen to summer students just as
readily as they can happen to regular-year students;
perhaps summertime with its increased activities offers
even more chance for accidents to strike. Yet the University
does not see fit to inconvenience itself enough to find
drivers for the summer quarter.
Indeed, there is an ambulance service in Opelika (a
good one at that) which is covering for the Universiy
ambulance at no extra cost to the students. But it's going
to take precious minutes longer for an AAA ambulance to
come from Opelika on an emergency call than it would
for an ambulance already on campus. The extra minutes
might even save a life.Probably such a situation will
never arise, but if it should, those minutes and the life
would be lost while the Health Center ambulance sits
getting rusty.
As long as the ambulance is there, the Student Health
Center should use it. It makes good sense medically and
financially.
THE AUBURN PLAINSMAN
Pay close attention, now, because
I'm going to start off
with an admission that is rarely
found in newspaper
columns. I am going to begin
this piece by honestly confessing
that I don't know beans
about my chosen topic^the
economy.
True, my formal training in
the realm of financial workings
is limited to two sophomore-
level economics
courses, and I didn't even enroll
in them by choice. Like
many Americans, the only
thing about money I know for
fact is that I never have much.
However, and again like many
Americans, I am receiving a
crash course in economics
thanks to rampant inflation.
(Lesson one, rampant inflation
means prices are going
up—as if they ever go down.)
The United States economy
is traditionally based on a free
market, or free enterprise,
which means "you charge
what you can get." This has
worked well enough in the
past, I suppose. Starting with
no special favors, the U.S. now
has more automobiles, bathrooms,
water skis, German
shepards, and more just-about-
. any thing-you-care-to-name
than any other country. It
can't be a bad economic system,
not all bad anyway.
But the system may be working
too well to suit folks. As
Americans became wealthier,
they became better equipped to
pay higher prices. As business
began to charge those higher
prices, they were capable to, in
turn, pay higher wages. Thus,
as working America became
wealthier, they became better
equipped to pay higher prices,
etc. etc. ad infinitum. It is immediately
evident that this is
elementary economics and a
simplified view of the in-flationery
cycle, but as I
Jimmy Johnson
warned earlier my understanding
of economics is the
simplest.
The present cycle finally got
to a point where the price rise
became disturbingly apparent
to the consumer. Still, his end
of the cycle was holding up,
and he suffered little actual inconvenience.
Automobile and
television sales did not
diminish because of the price
of food. Their prices increased
also, and so did their sales. But
while a big investment such as
an auto or TV was an infrequent
thing, groceries had
to be procured each week,
reminding the shopper at each
purchase of price increases.
The government, pressured
to "curb inflation," tried with a
series of various "phases" of
governmental price-tampering
which just would not work
in a free economy. It is like expecting
an umbrella to stop a
rainstorm. As each phase of
control was lifted, the cycle
took off again, only then with
renewed vigor necessary to
make up for lost time.
The point of this rambling
column is to say: I'm afraid
high prices are here to stay.
But surely someone can prove
an amateur economist like me
to be wrong. I hope so.
Rules entertaining-a flick review
Jimmy Johnson
Editor a3 Bob Witt
Business Manager
Managing Editor, Don Morgan; Sports Editor, Charlie Rhodes; News
Editor, David Williams; Technical Editor, Nancy Franklin;
Photographic Editor, Tom Bunn; Features Editor, Jack James.
Assistant Sports Editor, David Storey; Assistant Technical Editor,
Bo Brugge; Assistant News Editor, Don Chambers; Assistant Features
Editor, Debbie Price; Assistant Photographic Editor; Brent Anderson.
Assistant Local Advertisung Route Managers, Chip Stilwell and
Lynn Helmes; Advertising Layout Specialists, Merry Leigh Giarra-tani
and Karen Holt; Circulation Manager, Tim Lowe.
The Auburn Plainsman is the student newspaper of Auburn University.
Editorial opinions are those of the editor and columnists, and are
not necessarily the opinions of the Board of Trustees, administration,
faculty or students of Auburn University.
"It's stupendous! How a cast
of thousands can go through
such deprivation is beyond
me" Scot Tape—Movie review.
"The direction is superb.
Philpott and Cater use every
cinema creating trick known
to manipulate the totally female
cast into one solid working
body of 'Little Bo Peep'
images" -Burmuda Schwartz,
Cinema Scope.
Everyone is simply raving
David Williams
about the lastest M.G.M. release
entitled "Restriction."
Set around a sleepy town in
Alabama which has the misfortune
of having a nationally
known college campus
propped against its door step,
"Restriction" offers the true
story of women cast from their
homes into the Dosawful world
of college without protection
from the evils of the male
population and of how the college
administration sets itself
up as mother, father and
dauntless protectorate.
star, Gail Goodstuff, tries to
sign out for a weekend with her
boyfriend, Earl Enthusiastic.
This epic motion picture
runs for a total of five and one
half hours with a majority of
the film taken up when the
Gail dynamically throws
question after question at Earl
who in turn racks his brain for
suitable answers to appease
the all-knowing house mother,
played by Nancy Nosey.
"Okay," says Gail, "What's
your full name, last name
first? How tall are you? What
do you weigh?"
"Where are we going to be on
Friday from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.?
Where are we going to be on
Friday from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.?
Where are we going to be on
Friday from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.?"
This extraordinary dialogue
continues on until Gail
finally reaches Monday morning
at 8 a.m. Then she starts in
on phone numbers where she
can be reached and the phone
numbers of local police departments,
fire stations and at
least three local general
hospitals.
Intertwined with this
suspenseful plot to steal away
for weekend are the exploits of
Freda Freedom, palyed by
Chromo Somes. Freda her cohorts
constantly badger the
administration for a laxing of
existing rules, so that they
may be free human beings.
Freda continually finds herself
serving time on weekend
in her dorm room due to infractions
which she has incurred
for not being in on time
for, not signing out properly or
for leaving her room in a disorderly
appearance.
Not the typical sex anr
violence filled motion picture
"Restriction" offers the viewer
a refreshing look at
authority over individualism.
Backlogged
T H E AUBURN PMIN«MMI Thurs., July 26.1973 page 5
Lower legal age far from reality
Several weeks ago, The
Plainsman printed a story concerning
an amendment to
the Alabama Constitution
which would bring the state's
18-21-year-olds into the realm
of legal adulthood.
Governor Jere Beasley.
In The Plainsman article of
June 28, Beasley was credited
with the comment that he
could foresee no opposition to
Don Morgan
The headline on the story
was "Legal age may be lowered
this week." That was four
long weeks ago.
What happened? Well, as of
last week the amendment had
not even been put on the Senate
calendar according to Lt.
the bill. Beasley further commented
that the bill would
have passed in the 1971 session
had it not been for the
backlog of bills in the legislature.
Senate
from page 1
subject was being dropped.
The library is making an attempt
to locate all microfilm
materials, Schoppert said, and
hopes to centrally locate all
films on the first floor.
Bill Berry, 4VW, Chairman
of the Bookstore Committee,
reported that he was negotiating
with APO about the potential
expansion of the student
book exchange. He also said
that the Student Services
Incorporated had promised
some financial support for
some student bookstore idea.
Mike Vann, 4LPO, Chairman
of the Student Health
Committee, reported that he
and Mike Wilson met last week
with Dr. Garth Jarvis, New
Director of Student Health,
Mr. Charles Bentley, Business
Manager, Mr. William Guerin,
Campus Planner, and Mr. Earl
Peacock, architect for Lancaster
& Lancaster health
facilities..
Vann reported that Jarvis
and Peacock were to discuss
plans and proposed a monetary
figure, submitting these
plans to the Health Committee
of the University Senate.
The campus ambulance is
not in operation this summer,
Jarvis said, because of the lack
of a certified driver. In case of
emergency, a AAA Ambulance
is called..
Bill Thrasher, 4BA, President
Pro-Tem of the Senate,
met with Dean Taylor
Littleton, Vice President Academic
Affairs to discuss
"experimental learning," the
possibility of giving academic
credit of two to six hours to students
participating in such
activities as Student Senate,
WEGL, and The Plainsman.
Littleton also heard suggestions
concerning a proposed
Black Psychology study in
Education, Thrasher said, but
no decision was reached.
The senate passed a motion
by Jim Gibson proposing that
the senate draft a resolution to
Dean Littleton endorsing the
Balck Psychology studies.
John Decker, 3PL Chairman
of the Public Relations Committee,
reported that his committee
is studying ways to acquaint
the student body with
the workings of the senate
andthe SGA.
Jim Gibson introduced a motion
to post the time of every
student meeting on the board
in front of the Union, which
carried unanimously.
Mike Trapini, 4SED, Chairman
of the Athletic Committee,
reported of the site for the
new tennis courts. Campus
Planner William Guerin said
that tests were being made to
determine the suitability of the
side northwest of the Auxiliary
Gym, parallel to the south side
of the parking area, extending
almost to the intersection of
Roosevelt Drive and Wire
Road.
Trapani also reported that
this was the first year that the
Athletic Department had.
given full academic scholarships
to all minor sports at Auburn.
Susan Whaley, 4SED, Chairman
of the Campaign
Precedents Committee, reported
that previous campaigns
had brought up the
question of restrictions placed
on the types of materials to be
used in student elections. She
said that her committee was
considering this question, and
was open to suggestions.
The next Senate meeting
will be Monday, July 30, at 7:00
in Comer Auditorium, and is
open to the public.
All too familiar as it seems,
the bill is backlogged again.
While the erudite old men of
Alabama spend days arguing
over whether morticians
should be assessed for some
new tax, the 18-21-year-olds of
the state are no closer to being
legal adults than a year ago.
Alabama is bordered on all
four sides by states that have
already adopted the 18-year-old
legal age. It would seem unlikely
to suspect that the Alabama
Senate is waiting for
other states to lead the way
into 18-year-old rights.
Now I must admit that, morticians
is rather a suitable subject
for men of their age, but it
seems that the rights of the living
should have priority over a
glorified "body tax." Therefore
I feel that the Senators
just aren't motivated enough
to quit sucking on their mint
juleps and get down to the
serious business at hand.
Even though the Senate is at
fault, it is not alone in its erring
ways. Motivation for
legislative action rests
ultimately with a legislator's
constituents. If constituents
want a certain piece of
legislation acted upon, they
should make their feelings
known.
Residents of age 18 and over
now have the power to vote in
Alabama, and all legislators
that I am familiar with got
their positions through election.
A few irrate letters sent to
the right people might just
cause a few Senators to put
down their juleps and do a little
work for some concerned
voters.
Tr^
&UM>Y, <AN YOU SPARE A FEW FRAN<$ FOR AN OLD LIBERATOR?"
Students upset
about eagle cage
Editor, The Plainsman:
Since fall quarter of 1971,
Alpha Phi Omega has collected
almost $6,000 from students
and spectators at the
football games. At the time
they stated that the money
was to be used to build a cage
for War Eagle IV. It has been
almost two years and there is
no sign of its construction.
We as Auburn students are
concerned about the progress
and would like to know what is
going to be done and when we
can expect to see the realization
of their plans.
Wild Willie is convinced the
Alaska Pipeline is a good
thing.
Why, look what it's already
done. They haven't even
started to build it yet—but
when it passed through Congress,
all the oil company folks
quit talking about a gas shortage.
If only some smart scientist
could find a way to ship beef
cattle across Alaska in a
(Names withheld by request) pipe.
Dogs
from page 1
The Community Relations
Committee, chaired by
Herman D. Alexander, held its
monthly meeting July 12,
1973. This gave each citizen
the opportunity to voice his
opinion and present his argument
to the council.
The changes made in the
ordinance were: To eliminate
the difference between. male,
female, and spayed' female
Ambulance
from page 1
two runs this summer for the
infirmary. One involved a
motorcycle accident and another
to the Home 1 conomics
building where a man had
fallen down a flight of stairs.
Norred further committed
that the Student Health Center
isn't really pressed during
the summer for ambulance service
or for that matter during
the regular school term. The
working agreement between
AAA Ambulance service and
the Student infirmary also
calls for AAA to back up the
Auburn ambulance when it
may be tied up with another
run.
As far as Norred knows,
"Auburn is the only campus in
the states of Georgia, Florida
and Alabama that has it's own
ambulance service."
Dr. Garth Jarvis, recently
appointed director of Student
Health Services, said the campus
ambulance is used for
university personnel and will
make calls off campus when
students need its services.
"The ambulance would go to
Montgomery if a student
needed to be transferred there;
I see no reason why we
wouldn't take them. For anything
involving students, we
will be glad to use the ambulance,"
Jarvis commented.
dogs; to delete the definition of
a spayed female dog; to increase
the boarding fee from $ 1
to $2; that the results of any
quarantine be reported to the
individual bitten and the attending
physician; in order to
conform to state law, a dog is
required to wear a collar or harness
when it is inside a private
building but the license tag
and rabies tag does not have to
be easily seen.
This has been the most controversial
issue to come before
the council other than the liquor
ordinance, according to
Walter C. Giddehs, councilman
from Ward 2.
Almost half of the three hour
meeting was taken up by members
of the council answering
the questions and explaining
portions of the ordinance to
those present. By the actions of
those in the audience, it appeared
that most of them
favored the ordinance. There
was applause several times
when something was stated by
a citizen supporting the ordinance.
Opposition was voiced
against the definition of
restraint, and the penalty for
violation.
The ordinance defines restraint
as being under the immediate
and effective control
of a responsible person. "Immediate
and effective control
shall be construed to mean
that a responsible person must
be in a position to see and control
the dog, must be in a position
to be seen by the dog and
both such person and dog shall
be readily visible to any third
person in the vicinity of
either."
Violation of any provision of
the ordinance will be considered
as a middemeanor and
upon conviction the guilty person
may be fined not to exceed
$200 or 30 days in jail or both.
A dog must be on a leash
when it is in the central business
district, which is defined
as the area of the city bounded
by the following streets: Gay
between Thach and Magnolia,
Magnolia between Gay
and Burton, Burton between
Magnolia and Glenn, Glenn
between Burton and Wright (if
Wright were projected from
where it ends to Glenn), Wright
between Glenn and Magnolia,
Magnolia between Wright and
College, College between Magnolia
and Thach, and Thach
between College and Gay.
Each dog owner must obtain
a license from the City Revenue
Officer at a cost of $2.50
and must show proof that the
animal has been vaccinated
against rabies. The license tag
must be attached to a collar or
harness which must be on the
dog at all times.
T H E AUBURN PUIN&M\N Thurs., July 2«, 1973 paso «
the pill box
How do you dotect tuberculosa?
Question: How can a
person tell if he has
tuberculosis and how can it be
treated?
Answer: The test commonly
given in the U.S. is the
tuberculin test, to see if a
person is hypersensitive to
tuberculin (a bacterial protein).
The test involves the
administration of small
amounts of tuberculin to the
arm. If the individual so tested
ishypersensitive to tuberculin,
inflammation will develop at
the test site within 48 hours.
This constitutes a positive test
and further examination is
indicated.
A positive tuberculin reaction
may indicate several conditions:
active tuberculosis, arrested
tuberculosis, or a
previous or present infection
with a related bacterial
species.
Since false positive tests are
relatively common. Further
testing must be carried out be
fore definite diagnosis can be
made. Further tests involve X-ray,
in order to ascertain the
presence of lesions in the lung.
Sputum samples (spit) are
taken from individuals with
suspected tuberculosis and
treated with strong alkali
(which destroys the other
bacteria present but not the
tuberculosis bacteria.)
Immunization against TB is
not a widely adopted procedure,
although the vaccine is
available. Individuals treated
develop tuberculin sensitivity
and have been shown to have a
somewhat increase resistance
toTB.
The major advance in the
treatment of tuberculosis came
with the development of
chemotherapeutic agents. The
first antibiotic found to be
active against the tubercle
bacillus was streptomycin.
More recently, other drugs
have been discovered that aid
the patient in recovering from
TB.
Question: When one refers
to being addicted to a drug,
what does it really mean?
Answer: Addiction is
physical dependence upon a
drug. Its scientific definition
includes the development of
tolerance and withdrawal.
As a person develops tolerance
he requires larger and
larger doses of the drug to produce
the same effect.
Then if the use of the addicting
drug is stopped abruptly,
the period of withdrawal is
characterized by such distressing
symptoms as vomiting
and convulsions. A compulsion
to repeat the use of the
drug temporarily solves one's
problems and keeps the withdrawal
symptoms away.
Drugs other than narcotics
can become addicting. They include
barbiturates and certain
tranquilizers. Stimulants in
very large doses are also addictive.
Whether the person is
physically addicted or abuses
drugs for psychological reasons,
he is dependent of drugs.
Drug dependence of any kind
is a serious problem for the individual
and society.
If you have a question
concerning drugs or
related topics, write "The
Pill Box," care of Phi Delta
Chi Pharmacy Fraternity,
School of Pharmacy, Auburn
University. You need
not include your name. All
questions will be attempted
to be answered in
The Plainsman.
More letters...
Wss Alabama thankful to God'
Editor, The Plainsman:
I am writing in reply to Mr.
Warren's editorial concerning
the new Miss Alabama's state
ment that her victory was part
of God's plan for her life. I do
not think that it was a "hint of
arrogance" or a "question of
an ego out of hand." I noticed
that it seemed to be an act of
showing her thankfulness to a
loving God.
God does have a meaningful
plan for each individual life.
This plan was expressed
through Christ who said, "I
came that they might have life
and have it abundantly."
(John 10:10). But God has
given us a choice of saying yes
or no to His plan. So the only
thing that can keep a person
from experiencing God's love
and plan is his own indiffer-
. ehce to God. However God has
given us a provision for forgiveness
of this indifference to
Him - Jesus Christ, who said,
"Come to me, all who are
weary and heavy laden, and I
will give you rest." (Matt
11:28).
Before constructing a building,
the architect observes and
studies the blueprints. Should
we not consult the Great Architect
of life as we build our lives?
Intellectual assent to Christ's
claims or an emotional experience
is not the answer. Entering
into a relationship with
Christ involves the surrender
of one's will to One who loves
us more than we love ourselves.
This relationship be
gins when one responds to
Christ's personal invitation -
"Behold I stand at the door of
your heart and knock; if anyone
hears my voice and opens
the door, I will come in to him
and will dine with him, and he
with me.; (Rev. 3:20).
Mr. Warren posed the question,
"If Jane had lost would
she have blamed it on God?"
Many times losing is God's
will for one's life. Some things
happen which we don't understand;
but often through faith
in God, the hard times and
trials benefit our lives more
than the successes. "And we
know that God causes all
things to work together for
good to those who love God, to
those who are called according
to His purpose." (Rom.
8:28).
If at any time Jane Rice was
arrogant or boastful, as Mr.
Warren projected, then I agree
with him that this sort of attitude
is wrong. This was an opportunity
to be thankful, however,
and it seems appropriate
to me that one should be thankful
to God.
Bill Thrasher, 4MT
APPLE
It TREE
State needs working
ethics bill, not farce
Kditor, The Plainsman:
During the last legislative
session, it could only have
been an optimist who would
have conceived the passage of
an ethics bill. Hut not this session!
The passage of an ethics
bill is eminent. Senator K. C.
Foshee's committee is now
meeting and forming legislation.
The question to be resolved
is the quality of that legislation.
Will the people of Alabama
be presented with "window
dressing," and meaningless
legislative act, or will they
be offered a working measure
which will preserve a system of
checks and balances? And
that is precisely why Common
Cause and its efforts at
articulating model legislation
are at this time so useful to the
State of Alabama.
The attention of the nation is
on "Watergate" and corrupt
practices in federal campaign
management. Any ethics bill
on a state and local level —
good or bad — will reflect this
national interest' But only an
ethics bill which resolves the
question of what a conflict of
interest is, which does require
financial disclosure and does
set up an independent ethics
commission will be coming to
terms with the moral issues of
good government. Will Alabama
simply mirror the national
morass or will legislative
machinery best up to do
the job of establishing an
ethical climate in govern-
4etters
to the editor
ment? We hope our senators
and representatives will not let
us down. We don't need a
cynical legislative act at this
time, but one which will work
to protect the interests of the
people of Alabama. Surely,
fair and open government is in
the best interest of the people.
Conrad Ross
Associate Professor
Art Department
Member—Common Cause
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T H E AUBURN PLAINSMAN Thurs„ July 26,1973 page 7
Vet, Pharmacy schools may escape cutback
There's hope yet that Auburn
University's Schools of
Pharmacy and Veterinary
Medicine may receive capitation
grants under the Comprehensive
Health Manpower
Training Act equal to the
amount they received for the
last fiscal year.
Under President Nixon's
cutback, these funds applying
to health "profession schools
were reduced to 50 per cent of
the amount allocated for last
year. At Auburn, this
amounted to a cut in veterinary
medicine from $618,996
to $269,959 and in pharmacy
from approximately $177,000
to $88,885 for the current year.
Colleges of podiatric medicine
and pharmacy, challenging
the cutback, have won the
first round in a Federal court in
Washington in their effort to
force the Administration to
spend appropriated funds for
capitation grants in the current
fiscal year. U.S. District
Court Judge George Hart
ordered the funds to be
obligated so that they will be
available if the courts
ultimately rule in favor of the
colleges.
Auburn University Pharmacy
Dean B. F. Cooper Jr.,
said he is hopeful for a final
settlement which will result in
releasing the full amount. "In
estimate, we have a good case
which, basically involves a
moral obligation to support an
increased number of students
who are now in school."
The first capitation grants
were awarded in 1972 and
made it possible for the schools
to increase.enrollment, update
curriculum and provide educational
training aids.
Pharmacy schools were also
required to implement clinical
training programs in which
pharmacists work with other
health professionals for better
patient care.
A reversal of the Washington
Court's decision could result
in some serious cutbacks
AU geb grant
for courses in
social woik
Auburn University has received
a grant from the State
Department of Pensions and
Security for the purpose of
instruction and training in the
field of social work, according
to Chester C. Carroll, Vice President
for Research.
Dr. Eugene Griessman, Department
of Sociology head,
said that the $45,258 grant will
be used to expand and enrich
undergraduate studies in social
work. The program will at-empt
to coordinate and increase
learning opportunities
in related courses already
being taught in various departments
on campus.
Joining the project as staff
members in September will be
Prof. Gary Mooers as Director
of Undergraduate Instruction
and Prof. Frances Taylor, who
will direct field placement.
in the programs started at
Auburn under the plan, officials
here say.
"Of course we always miss
this kind of money," said
Pharmacy Dean B. F. Cooper
Jr., who just this month assumed
his new position at Auburn.
"This will affect us primarily
in new programs we have
been in the process of developing
and need to continue to develop.
One of these is the
clinical program which involves
the training of students
in a clinical environment such
as Lee County Hospital.
"Another area is the instructional
improvement and student
learning resources. We
are developing a new audiovisual
program for assistance
to faculty and to provide new
learning techniques for students
of pharmacy. We hope to
continue this, but will not be
able to make as much progress
with the reduced funds," Dr.
Cooper stated.
A third area which would be
affected by the cutback is the
acquisition of equipment for
the school, according to
Cooper.
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Sports EA'for
Auburn vs. Alabama
Auburn vs. Alabama. A common topic of conversation in this
state. If you grow up in an Auburn family you learn that the
enemy dresses in crimson. The rivalry grows as you do and
then the day comes to decide at which school you will spend four
years of your life.
This Auburn vs. Alabama rivalry is usually a friendly but
often intense situation among students of both schools, but perhaps
the athletes from the universities feel the tradition and
•desire to win a little stronger than others.
Often athletes from high schools in Alabama weigh offers
from both of the major universities before choosing one while a
high school teammate chooses the other side of the state.
Most of the boys have accepted scholarships by the time of
the high school all-star games in late July. Many future stars
for both Auburn and Alabama will play against each other for
the first time in the games. Pat Sullivan played with Terry
Beasley for the first time in this game after their high school careers
had ended. Also on that team was a running back named
Johnny Musso.These three greats would play on the same field
with each other four more times but they would never play
together again.
On August 2 there will be a match-up in the high school All-star
game that could be repeated several times in the next four
years.
In the less publicized all-star basketball game two outstanding
college prospects, one signed by Auburn and the other
destined to play his ball for the Crimson Tide, will meet head to
head.
Player of the year
T.R. Dunn, the all-everything fromBirmingham's West End,
turned down offers from virtually every major basketball
power to play for Alabama. Experts expect the high school All-
American to step in and help the Tide as a freshman this year.
Auburn's representative at the game will be Bill Wallace from
Tuskeegee. Although Wallace has not received as much publicity
as Dunn, he has managed to capture several honors himself.
Wallace decided to stay near home and attend Auburn,
while over 100 other schools asked him to consider their programs.
While T .R. Dunn was winning Ail-American honors,
Wallace was receiving the Birmingham Post Herald's Class 3-
A award as the best basketball player in the state.
According to Wallace's coach, Ernest Washington, "Bill is
ready to go up against T .R. He is confident that he is just as talented
as T .R. and he considers it a real challenge. I think that
Bill is as good a ball player as T .R ."
Coach Washington will have as good a seat as anyone in Alabama's
Memorial Coliseum to see the duel, as he will be
coaching the South squad.
Washington had more comments to make about his outstanding
guard, "Bill is the best basketball player I've worked
with in eight years. He can penetrate as well as anyone.
Although he is just 6'3"he is an excellent leaper. Bill averaged
19 points a game his senior year but he could have scored much
more. Heusuallydidrit play but about three quarters because we
had a good team and usually had a big lead. I don't think that
Bill scored less than 12 or 13 points in any game this year. He
also has a real soft shot and he established himself as a real
team leader."
Future rivalry
If Bill Wallace has so much basketball talent why hasn't he
received the publicity that T .R. Dunn has? Coach Washington
had an easy answer for that one,"Bill only played his senior
year at Tuskeegee, although he is originally from Tuskeegee he
played basketball from the ninth until the eleventh grade at a
Catholic High School in Maryland. It took a while before everyone
started noticing what an outstanding basketball player
Bill was. Everyone would see him play and ask, "Where did this
boy come from?"
By the end of the season people associated with basketball in
Alabama knew who Bill Wallace was as he was named to the
first team all-state team. Auburn was the fortunate school to
sign the star player, and his future here looks bright.
Wallace's coach doesn't think there is any question about
Bill's future at Auburn. "I think that Bill can start as a
freshman and really make a contribution at Auburn. This is
what Bill has been striving for ever since he started playing
basketball to play for a major college."
Undoubtably T .R. Dunn and Bill Wallace will be seeing a lot
of each other in the next few years. The high school all-star
game may give an indication how this latest Auburn-Alabama
rivalry will develop.
Auburn signees to compete
in high school all star game
By David Storey
Assistant Sports Editor
No less than 13 of the 1973
Auburn football sign-ess—
nine playing for the
North and four for the South,
will confront each other
August 3, when the annual
Alabama High School Athletic
Association All-Star football
game is held at Denny Stadium
in Tuscaloosa.
The Friday night game has
just recently lost a bit of its appeal
to Auburn fans when
what would have been a classic
confrontation between two
of the Tiger's top quarterback
signees from the state was
wiped out with the resignation
of prep Ail-American Chris
Vacarella from the game.
Vacarella, who was to lead the
South team against a squad
directed by Auburn signee Phil
Gargis of Colbert County,
withdrew from the game only
last weekend. The 6-2, 196
pounder from Ramsay High of
Birmingham, was quoted as
saying in his withdrawal that
he felt his prospects of playing
for the Auburn varsity
next season was a strong possibility
and that he did not
wish to chance any possible in-jury
stemming from the game.
Vascarella also pointed out
that the decision to withdraw
from the game was his own,
coming after Auburn's coaching
staff has pointed out his
chances of varsity duty next
season.
Quarterback Gargis, who led
Colbert County to the State 3-A
crown last fall, will be joined
on the North squad by Auburn
signees Mike Henley of
Oxford, Jim Patton of
Oneonta, Danny Maze of
Arab, Phil Jennings of
Athens, Bubba Holland of
Woodlawn of Birmingham,
Robie Elms of West Morgan,
Jeff McCollum, of Coffee High
of Florence and Rick Chenault
of Decatur.
Patton had 36 touchdowns
in four years at Oneonta High.
14 coming by the way of receptions
while Maze had 1.200
yards rushing at Arab High
his senior season.
With Vacarella out, the
South's offensive load could
now fall on former Jeff Davis
(See ALL-STAR, page 9)
—THE AUBURN PUINSMMI- -Thurs., July 26, 1973 page 8-
sports_
'FAST BREAK' BASKETBALL COMING TO AUBURN
. . .Young players to play key role this year
Davis plans aggressive basketball
By J o h n Duncan
Plainsman Sports Writer
"Mean, but clean" is the way
that Auburn basketball coach
Bob Davis likes to describe his
style of play.
"By saying that I like to
teach aggressive basketball
doesn't mean that I endorse
dirty, underhanded methods,"
the former Georgetown (Ky.)
College coach was quick to explain.
"I never intend to have
my players injure any of our
opponents.
"Instead, it means that our
boys are going to play with a
lot of desire and hustle. Whenever
I see a loose ball on the
floor, I expect to see my players
scrambling to get it."
Davis, is a strong advocate
on the issue of building more
basketball camps in Alabama
since he was responsible for
starting the first one in the
Bluegrass State.
"I think that we could use at
least 100 more summer programs
of this sort in the state.
We ran ours for 10 years at
Georgetown, and it did a tremendous
job in helping to promote
the sport among the high
school teams around
Kentucky."
The man who was hired to
revamp Auburn's weak cage
program is realistic on the
amount of time it will take him
to produce a winner.
"It's going to take us awhile
to get our program underway.
Orienting our youngsters to
our new offense.enlarging our
booster club, and building up
the recruiting program—all of
these are going to be things
which will take two or three
years to build.
"I know that this sounds like
a pretty long time, but I don't
believe in trying to build a program
of this sort in a fly by-night
manner. That would be
like building a house on sand.
The more caution that you
exercise, the stronger your program
is going to be."
What can Auburn fans expect
as far as Davis's offense
and defense are concerned?
"Next year we'll be running
a controlled fast-break type of
game which is very similar to
the University of Kentucky.
It's a real flashy kind of offense
which I think the fans
will enjoy.
"When we get in in gear, I
hope we can score over a 100
points at least seven or eight
times during the year.
"On defense, we'll run like
crazy to press the other teams.
I'm not sure what kind of defense
we'll employ, bufcl won't
be ashamed to use anything
just ns long as it. works."
What kind of ball player
does Davis like to recruit?
"I like the rugged type of
individual who is a real go getter—
one who doesn't mind
having to work in order to
win."
So far this year, the Auburn
coach has signed six of his
eight alloted scholarships. The
new Tiger signees include: Ray
Woodard, 6-8, from Corner; Bill
Wallace, 6-3, from Tuskegee;
(See DAVIS, page 9) -
T H E AUBURN P U I N S M U I Thurs., July 26,1973 page 9
Pulliam joins athletic staff
as spoils publicity assistant
Super Sully
Former Auburn great will accept
award Friday night at College All-Star
game in Chicago. Sullivan will receive a
portrait of himself honoring him a s the
MVP in last y e a r ' s game.
LSU on Auburn's 'wanted' list
by Charlie Rhodes
Plainsman Sports Editor
When two unfriendly Tigers
get together the result is
usually a heck of a fight. The
Auburn L.S.U. game this
year looks like a typical Tiger
fight. Most of the opponents
Auburn faces this year will be
seeking revenge against the
Plainsmen, but when L .S .U .
comes visiting Auburn October
13, the Plainsmen will be
looking for a little revenge
themselves.
While Auburn was out beating
the world last year there
was one team that stopped the
Tigers from going all the way.
Most teams can't claim much
success against the Tigers in
the past few years, butL .S .U .
is the one exception.
The Bayou Bengals have
beaten Auburn the last three
times the two teams have met.
Two of those losses came
during the Sullivan era and
the third was last year's
shellacking at Baton Rouge.
That game was never close as
L .S .U. rolled to an easy 35.7
win.
It will be a team hit Hard by
graduation that will come to
Auburn. The Bengals lost nine
starters from last year's potent
offense. Gone are All-
American quarterback Bert
Jones and he took the entire
backfield with him. The only
returners for the Tiger's offense
are guard Tyler Lafauci,
and center Logan Killen.
The defense was not hit quite
as hard but will have to find replacements
for five starters
who played out their eligibility.
Outstanding linebacker
Warren Capone, a senior this
year, will lead the usually
strong LSU defense.
The kicking game should be
sound as place kicker and
punter Rusty Jackson returns
to handle those chores. Jackson
was the second leading
punter in the conference last
year behind Alabama's infamous
Greg Gantt.
Some of the top players for
the Tigers will include Capone,
defensive back Mike Williams,
tailback Brad Davis, a
hard running junior who averaged
4.9 yards every time he
carried the ball last year.
Junior tight end Brad Boyd
pulled in five touchdown
passes last year. 234 lb. offensive
guard Tyler LaFauci, a
senior, will anchor the
offensive line. On the defensive
side of the field, junior
Binks Miciotto, a defensive
end, will lend strength to that
unit.
Bengal football
Overall Auburn-LSU Series Record:
Auburn LSU
8 12
Offensive Starters Returning:
Defensive Starters Returning:
Ties
1
4
6
Standouts Returning: Warren Capone, LB; Brad Davis,
TB; Rusty Jackson, PK; Al Coffee, SE; Brad Boyd, TE; Mike
Williams, CB; Ken Addy, FB; Steve Cassidy, T;
Spike Shoe Club honors F. C. Brendle
By Gordon Cone
Plainsman Sports Writer
In brief ceremonies following
last Saturday's Selma All-
Comers Track and Field Meet,
Montgomery businessman F.'
C. Brendle was recognized by
the Auburn Spike Shoe Club
for his support of Auburn's
athletic programs.
Paul Comarato, who served
as Auburn's track captain for
1973, presented Mr. Brendle
with an engraved plaque reading:
"To F.C. Brendle, in appreciation
for his continued
support and dedicated interest
in the Auburn Track Program.
Presented by the Auburn Spike
Shoe Club-July 21, 1973."
"This was really a shock and
a thrill for me," Brendle said,
"but I am very grateful for this
great honor." "I hadn't
dreamed that they had this
thing planned."
Brendle has recruited for
Auburn for several years and
will continue to do so "for as
long as they'll let me."
In addition to his recruiting
duties, Brendle also promotes
track and field in and around
Montgomery, and sponsors
teams for many meets each
year. His team took first place
honors in the Selma meet Saturday,
scoring over 100 points.
"Mr. Brendle not only helps
us with out program," said AU
assistant Jerry Smith,"but he
also goes out and encourages
young athletes around the
state to develop their skill."
"We are proud to have him
associated with our program,
and with Auburn University."
Brendle's son, Kit, is a former
member of the Auburn track
team and served as a graduate
assistant
Rosen's
season.
for Coach
Tigers this
Mel
past
Davis
from page 8
Ken Bolden 6-8, from Talladega;
Eddie Johnson, 6-2,
from Lake Weir, FL; Roger
Jorgenson, 6-8 from Oconto,
WI; and Dale Deschamps, 6-7
from Chicago, IL.
Although four of the six recruits
stand at 6-7 or more,
Davis still isn't satisfied.
"We still don't have the
strength we need because we
don't have the one strong big
man you need in a successful
program. I'm not necessarily
looking for a tall man, just a
strong one."
With the determination that
the former Kentuckian has
shown so far in going about his
new job, no doubt he'll get him.
Mel Pulliam, former student
assistant in the athletic publicity
office, has been named
full time assistant sports
information director at Auburn
University, according to
an announcement by Athletic
Director Lee Hayley.
A 1969 graduate of Auburn,
Pulliam worked a s a student in
the publicity office for three
years. In addition he was
basketball manager for two
years and wrote sports for the
Plainsman for four years. Pulliam
was a Plainsman sports
editor and also served several
daily newspapers as a sports
correspondent for three years.
A native of Berry, AL, Pulliam
has worked the four
years since his graduation as
head basketball and assistant
football coach at Auburn Junior
High School.
"We are delighted to have a
young man with Mel's knowledge
of sports join the athletic
staff," say^ Hayley. "Mel was
an outstanding student assistant
in the publicity office
and we know he will be an asset
to our entire athletic program."
While working under Buddy
Davidson in the publicity office,
Pulliam travelled with the
basketball team for two years. ,
His senior year he edited the
basketball brochure and program.
In addition, he worked
full time the summer after his
graduation selling football
program advertising.
While coaching at Auburn
Junior High Mel has continued
to work as a statistician,
scorer, and free lance
sportswriter covering Auburn
atheltic events.
"Mel was the first student
assistant to work for me and he
really caught on to the total
aspect of publicity and public
relations. He has an Auburn
sports background and he already
knows the people in the
sports media," says Davidson.
While in high school Pulliam
was twice an All-State
basketball player. He also lettered
in football and baseball
five years. He was elected the
Most Outstqnding Senior at
Berry and represented his
school at Boy's State.
Mel will start to work August
1. He is also currently working
on bis Master's Degree in
Education.
All-Star
from page 8
of Montgomery star, Sullivan
Walker, another Auburn
signee for 1973. A fullback,
Walker gained 1,368 yards
rushing last season as a
prepster and tallied for an incredible
26 touchdowns.
Other Auburn signees slated
for action for the rebels are
Lynn Johnson of Dozier, a
fullback who averaged 5.5
yards per carry for three seasons
in high school and will
probably be seeing action as a
lineman in the game, and a
pair of Jeff Davis of Montgomery
linemen, Bill Evans
and Johnny Pummer.
Share in the Proud Heritage
of Our State!
OFFICIAL 1973
ALABAMA GOVERNOR'S
BICENTENNIAL MEDALLION!
I in Solid Sterling Silver and Antique Bronze
ft wl
Sure to become a treasured family heirloom! Our State
Bicentennial Commission has designated this beautifully
struck VA" diameter medal as the Official 1973
Alabama Governor's Bicentennial Medallion. It is the
first in a series of four to be based on the winning
designs chosen from the Annual High School Scholarship
Contest to be held each year through 1976. This
may be your only opportunity to own the Official
1973 Governor's Medallion, so don't delay — complete
and mail the official order form on the back today)
I M P O R T A N T Your purchase will help support the
activities of our State Bicentennial Commission.
New on talc at the University Bookstore.
T»F AUBURN PUINSMJW thurs., July 26, 1973 page 10
Six teams unbeaten in softball;
Cage tourney slated for tonight
—Brent Anderson
PEOPLE'S CHOICE ROLLS OVER DAY HOUSE
.People's Choice remains undefeated with 4-0 record
Six teams finished up the
fourth week of softball actction
with unblemished records but
with only three more regular
season games to be played, the
competition for playoff berths
should prove interesting.
People's Choice ran their record
to 4-0 as they nipped
AVMA, 12-11, while the Brads
exploded for 17 runs in a 17-8
conquest of the Reefers and at
the same time running up a 4-0
mark for the season. The Day
House continued their winning
ways as they bested the
Nads, 10-4, as did the Grads,
who are also unbeaten, in ripping
the Buckwheats, 19-15.
The Slowpokes remained a
contender by beating ETC, 8-3,
while the I .E .'s punched out
an 8-5 victory over KP.
In another contest, the up
and coming Thach Apts. team
won their first of the season, a
forfeit victory coming by the
graces of Mag one.
In cage action last week, the
Old Timers continued to win,
but were pressed in doing so, as
they pulled out a 59-55 win over
the Happy Hookers. Behind by
two at the half, 24-22, the unbeaten
O .T .'s used a 24 point
third quarter surge and limited
i
Intramurals
with
David Storey
the Hookers to only 14 during
the frame to record their third
win of the season. For the Old
Timers, Waid had 18 points
while Eliot matched this point
production, totaling 18
markers for the losing
Hookers.
The AT's surprisingly made
a game out of it, but the unbeaten
AVMA proved too
tough in winning 43-41 in more
action on the courts last week.
AVMA had to come from a one
point half-time deficit to win
their fourth game of the season
against no losses.
In other scores, the
Busarchelecs handed the
Daddywags their first loss, 37-
32, while the Shady Oak
Bombers with Jones contributing
25, recorded a 68-41 win
over the Showboats. The Late
Arrivals kept their perfect record
intact, as they conquered
the Zig Zags, 66-45.
All participants who have
already registered to compete
in the Two on Two Basketball
Tournament are requested by
the Intramurals Department
to report to the Sports Arena
tonight at 6:45.
And for those fans who are
nostalgic of the old backyard,
two on two basketball games,
we suggest you be on hand tonight
to view the action in this
tournament.
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
*MT our Host Convenient Bookstore - Located in Haley Center.'"
Phone 826-4241
7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
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Bradley, Devon, Pykeftes, Rosanna,
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lets you do your own thing with selected styles from the country's top designers. See our great
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VILLAGE MALL
Don't forget- Grand Opening August 1st - Many, many door prizes
T H E AUBURN P U I N S M M Thurs., j u i y 26,1973 page 12 It's never too late to learn
By J a c k James
Features Editor
At the age of 61, John B. Pig-gott,
a 1941 graduate of
Auburn, is back in school.
Piggott arrived in Auburn at
the beginning of the 1973 summer
quarter and has since been
sitting in on some veterinary
classes and visiting old
friends.
"Just trying to pick up a few
crumbs of knowledge as they
fall off the table," Piggott said
of his return to Auburn. He
spoke in a mild but distinct
haven't you had any history;
that's where Lee fought one of
his most victorious battles of
the Civil War."
He seemed quite disturbed
that someone in college and
especially in journalism had
such an apparently inadequate
background in history.
It became more obvious as the
conversation continued that
education of any kind was
priceless to him—that is with
one exception .Herea prejudice
leaked through his personality
quite frankly.
"Of course the reason you
probably don't know about
Leesburg is beause those
"DOC" PIGGOTT
.Alumnus visits AU, s i t s in on classes
—Tom Bunn
tone of voice and his dialect
was far from being "country"
or "twangy". However, the
manner of his speech and surfacing
philosophies were obviously
rooted in an old
fashioned, farm-boy conservatism.
"I came to Auburn in 1938 to
study veterinary medicine,"
Piggott said. "I grew up on a
farm in Virginia and had
looked at the back end of a
mule for so long I finally decided
I wanted to learn something
about it."
Upon first meeting Dr. Piggott
in the hall of the Sigma
Chi Fraternity house, where he
now lives and is commonly
known as "Doc", his right arm
was draped with a towel and in
his right hand were shaving
articles. He was headed upstairs
to the shaving room.
On the way up he announced
he was from Leesburg, Vir-ginia.
To ask where that was
near was the ultimate insult, a
stupid careless mistake on the
part of one who had the slightest
knowledge of Civil War
history.
"You don't know where
that is?" he asked with a frown
on his forehead that mocked
the question. "My God boy,
Damyankees wrote the history
books, and a Yankee
education is as good as no
education at all."
Now he was lathering up his
face with shaving cream as if
that's what he did everyday at
four o'clock in the afternoon
regardless of whatever else
was happening or who was
visiting. Looking at himself in
the mirror and carefully
smoothing the shaving cream
about his face, he worked and
reworked the lather that now
covered over half his face and
neck.
The subject of the conversation
had changed, and Piggott
was reminiscing about his
days at Auburn. He picked up
his razor and began executing
long careful strokes up the
neck. "Back then the boys
wore pants, now they wear
those damn shorts; you never
did see anybody going barefoot
back them, either. If you
did, it's because someone was
too poor, but even if you were
poor, you somehow managed
to get a pair of shoes on your
feet."
He didn't have much to say
about what the girls wear
nowadays, but did mention the
effect short dresses and
"skimpy clothing" was having
on business. "It's hell on
the cotton industry," he said
matter of factly.
Though he declined to say
whether or not he liked the
girls' manner of dress these
days, in place of any opinion
he may have had, he offered up
a rule he had been taught from
an early age. "Ever since I was
six years old," he said gesturing
with his hand to show his
approximate height at that
age, "I was taught to respect
the ladies. I was always taught
to respect the ladies and to
never say anything against
them. Anything you say
against a lady will come back
against you ten-fold."
That's all he had to say
about that; he was now
leaning over the sink toward
the mirror to scutinize the
movement of the razor as it
very carefully crossed over the
chin and around the corners of
his mouth. There was a break
in the conversation as "Doc"
concentrated on his efforts. In
a. brief silence he was finished.
his gaze on the floor as the
razor in his right hand froze
near the sink.
"Most of the time we were
studying; the students then
lived one weekend at a time, because
studying was the most
important thing." He was
thinking more seriously now.
"We had dances about every
two weeks and the Auburn
Knights would play most of
the time," Piggott said. "We'd
all meet in Graves Theater,
dance with the girls and hold
hands in the moonlight."
Piggott recalled some of the
performers that came to Auburn:
"Russ Colombo, Jack
Teagarden, and Hal Kemp."
He washed the remaining
shaving cream off his face and
suggested that it was cooler
downstairs.
When "Doc" Piggott
graduated from Auburn he
returned to his home in Virginia
and went to work as a
dairy farm inspector until 1946.
He's been back to Auburn
three or four times since graduating
and now he says he's
back mainly "to visit old
friends in the world. Besides
that, I'm just watching to see
what's going on."
He said each time he comes
back he learns something
new, and he always sees
improvements in Auburn that
"are too many to mention."_
Tomorrow he would be leaving
for Virginia in his '49 Plymouth.
"It got me down here
and it's done a good job of
taking me everywhere
else—that's all a car is, transportation.
Most folks think
that if they haven't got a new
car, they're not going anywhere."
The conversation was near
its end and "Doc" was
returning to his favorite subject—
learning. "The best way
to learn is to listen and try to
catch some knowledge. Keep
quiet and listen and try to
learn something." That was
RELAXING WITH FRIENDS
.Dr. Piggott visits friends in Auburn
•Tom Bunn
What was Auburn like back He never married but stayed in the advice he would leave be-then;
what did you do for enter- Virginia and continued hind and apparently that was
tainment? working in veterinary medi- the simple philosophy that he
He turned his head and fixed d n e un*» Ws retirement. had lived for 61 years.
SUZUKI OF OPELIKA I
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5110 FREDERICK ROAD
OPELIKA, ALABAMA 36801
PHONE 745-6357
"We're here to serve you
with 28 years of experience
complete parts and service"
(AUBURN
fo$f Glenn
GLENN-DEAN
SHOPPING
CENTER
Student swallows diamond ring;
suffers occasional indigestion
T H E AUBURN P U I N S M I N Thurs., July 26,1973 page 13
By J a c k James
Features Editor
The average human body is
worth about 98 cents—at least
that's the price tag that
scientists place on the human
physical form after it has been
broken down into its basic elements.
Bob Nicholson's body is
worth over $500. Bob is a student
currently enrolled at
Auburn who walks, talks, and
thinks a lot like the average
Auburn student. Originally
his body was worth about 95
cents (Bob is shorter than average)
but in the time it takes to
swallow, his body increased in
value by 52,630 percent. He
swallowed a diamond ring.
On Tuesday night, July 17,
Nicholson was lying on a
couch reading Time Magazine.
Absorbed in his reading
Nicholson began to subconsciously
run the little finger of
his right hand across the front
of his teeth. A diamond ring
near the end of that finger had
slipped from it's normal
position.
In the same room, a friend
was on the telephone talking to
someone about a date for the
weekend. Then the phone conversation
ended and Nicholson
was jolted from the world
of printed word by the unmis-takeable
sound of the telephone
receiver finding its resting
place on the hook.
Jumping up from his relaxed
position on the couch with his
ring still against his teeth he
began to ask about the conversation.
"Wh-a-a-a-"—he never
finished the question; he had
swallowed his diamond ring.
"It just slid off my finger, hit
the back of my throat and went
on down in a second."Nichol-son
later recalled. He pointed
to the white spot on his little
finger—proof that a ring had
been worn on that finger —
as he talked about the ring his
father had given him.
Bob's father had bought the
ring in 1949 while serving
overseas in Germany. He had
presented the ring to Bob on
his sixteenth birthday along
with an explicit order, "Don't
lose i t"
Bob was concerned about
getting his precious ring back
but he was equally concerned
about what the ring might do
to his precious insides. A diamond
when pushed across a
piece of glass with a little pressure
will leave an impressive
scratch on the glass and a
diamond with a little grinding
action from the stomach might
conceiveably leave an impres:
sive "scratch" on the stomach
lining. Lucky for Bob the diamond
in his ring was inset.
Nicholson got in a car with
some friends and calmly drove
to Lee County Hospital." The
people at the hospital weren't
too concerned." Nicholson
said, "they had other emergency
cases and I guess they
didn't think that a guy who
had just swallowed a diamond
ring was that big a deal."
He decided he might get better
attention at the student
health center. "People at the
health center were a lot more
concerned," Nicholson said.
"They gave me a bottle of some
kind of mineral oil and told me
to come in the next day for x-rays."
X-rays showed that the ring
was still in Nicholson's stomach
the next dav and he was
beginning to think that it
would take an operation to get
the ring out. Though that was
a possibility, personnel at the
health center thought that
"everything would work out all
right," an operation would not
be necessary.
Nicholson said that the ring
brought him discomfort only
when his stomach was empty.
He attributed this to digestive
juices which, meeting with
little success in chemically
breaking down the ring would
begin to "break down on the
stomach lining surrounding
the ring."
Over the following weekend
Bob engaged in a activity that
pushed the ring further into
his digestive tract—he went
skiing, or rather "inner-tubing."
"I was being pulled
along in the innertube behind
a boat and there was a lot of
pressure on my sto-mach,"
Nicholson said."I knew
it was going to move the ring
around."
On the following Monday
morning the x-rays proved
Nicholson was right. A nurse
who had examined the x-rays
later told Bob, "It looked as if
the ring was in your pocket."
SWALLOWED RING
.X-ray shows r i n g in Nicholson's stomach
Bob was told he could expect
to get his ring back around
Wednesday of this week. As of
this writing the ring hasn't
been retrieved, but when it is
Bob will be his old 95 cent self
again and will probably long
remember this most "enriching"
experience.
On Wednesday, August 1, we' re opening
our new branch bank at the Village Mall
Shopping Center.
Come to see us.
Eddie Hinson, our branch manager, and
his staff will be there to greet you, and, if you
wish, show you how many extraordinary
services Farmers National can offer. (After
all, it is extraordinary what we can do for you
if you let us.)
And while you're there, don't forget to
register for the $500 Shopping Spree we're
giving away to some lucky person — $500 for
you to spend any way you like at the fine new
Village Mall stores.
Register * anytime from Wednesday,
August 1, through Friday, August 10. *e EARMERS NATIONAL BANK
OPELKA/VLLAGE MALL
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Evelyn OIT
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•Drawing will be held Friday, August 10. You need not be present to win. Sorry, registration limited to persons 18 years of age or older.
T H E AUBURN PUINCMIN Thurs., j u i y 26,1973 page 14
The art of cycling
By J im Meigs
Plainsman Staff Writer
Picking a line through a
turn, feeling and then finding
it true, leaning the bike into a
curve and holding it there at
sixty or seventy miles per hour
is one of the most satisfying aspects
of motorcycle riding.
Growing into a national pastime
rather than just a sport
for a few, motorcycling has
changed greatly in the last decade,
and has taken on a new
aura of respectability for the
people who participate. The
image of the motorcycle rider
has progressed from the
"outlaw" figure to more of a
family type of image.
AT THE RACES
.One way to enjoy cycling
Auburn students are participating
in this growth and
change, as evidenced by the
growing number of motorcycles
seen on the campus. According
to Chief Dawson,
Campus Security office, there
were 275 motorcyles registered
in 1971, and the number
has risen to 442 in 1973. More
students are turning to motorcycles
as a cheap, dependable
mode of transportation and as
a great way to spend free time
out of doors.
Basically, there are two
types of motorcycles to choose
from. While some riders prefer
the road bike, others turn to
the thrills to be gained by
owning a bike setup for dirt
and back-country or compete-tive
riding. Each has different
types of fun to offer and most
riders usually like to try both.
The road biker on tour
becomes an independent unit,
his whole being centered
around his motorcycle and
gear. The camping tourist
loads everything into a few
cubic feet of space and leaves.
While ridmg he is isolated
from easy sources of
assistance and has to be able
to maintain himself, his
machine, and all his gear.
Never in a hurry, the tourist
still executes a wide variety of
skills, day after day.mile after
mile, in a relaxed and concentrated
manner. The sense of
independence and freedom
gained by this type of riding is
one of the most satisfying
feelings to be had by the motorcycle
tourist.
Dirt riding, on the other
hand, is fast paced and involves
competition aganst
Beaver from page 1
meal absorbs much more
liquid. In order to still have a
moist meat one must add a little
more liquid to the soybean
burger.
The soybean appeared to be
a practical way to stretch the
family food budget until
recently. Because of bad crops
and other forces, the price of
soybeans has jumped almost
$9 from last fall to this June.
"If the prices would drop, we
would use all the soybean meal
we could," said Huffman.
Other vegetable proteins
have been investigated besides
the soybean defatted
flours made from peanuts and
coconuts have been very successful.
Hubert Harris, who
had done research with peanuts,
stated, "Protein suppli-ments
are finding their way
into industry, and if taken up
commercially they would be
less expensive than meat."
l i k e the soybean, the flours
made from peanuts and coconuts
are good as meat
extenders. These flours have
also been incorporated into
cake and cookie mixes, pudding
mixes, and many other
pre-packaged products. They
arc high in protein, keep as
well as the regular mixes, and
there is not much difference in
flavor. Bread can • even be
made by combining coconut
and wheat flours, and following
basically the same recipe
as for all-wheat flour.
If you prefer "real" meat to
the vegetable substitutes but
still don't want to pay the high
prices, you might consider
game meats. Ed Hill in Wildlife
Research has done research
with many types of
game meats. One suggestion
was beaver meat as a meat
suppliment in the winter
months.
Farmers often have problems
with beavers damming
up streams and destroying
crops. Since the beaver's
natural predators are not as
numerous now, the beaver
population is higher than ever.
If the beavers on one's
property have to be removed,
why not eat the meat instead of
wasting it? Beaver can be bar-bequed,
roasted, or fried and
makes a very tasty meal. "It is
also an excellent control for
the over-population of the
animal," said Hill.
"Any kind of game meat
would be a good way to stretch
the family budget," Hill stated.
Among the better game meats
he mentioned venison (deer)
OVER THE HUMP
Cross-country cycling i s great for touring
time, yourself, or other riders.
The skills involved in dirt
riding are somewhat different
than those used in road riding,
but that concentration and
precise execution of the skills
is still present. The margin for
error is less, because of the
quick turns and competitive
spirit, but the confident rider,
who is well disciplined in this
type of riding, finds himself enjoying
every minute of it.
Riding a motorcycle for
pleasure or competition
always involves an element of
danger. There is still the intricate
art of leaning at high
speeds and miles of pavement
or dirt. The punishment for
error is always present,
waiting for the undisciplined,
indifferent rider, who allows
his concentration to waver.
mm
and rabbit. "They may have a
little different flavor, but
they're very good."
Treatment of game meats is
the same as for beef. There are
certain cleaning instructions,
which are now almost considered
a "lost art," byt they're
not that different. After the
meat is cleaned, it can be made
into burger, hot dogs, sausage
and even salami. "Most any
meat counter will grind up the
meat and will charge about 10
cents a pound for the beef fat to
go in it," said Hill.
The only other thing to
remember about game meat is
that it's all lean meat and no
fat. The meat will dry out while
cooking, especially if roasting
or barbequeing, so some kind
of fat should be added or wrapped
around the meat to keep it
moist. Recipes for game meats
can be found in special cookbooks.
There are even a few in
the university library.
Beaver burgers, venison
sausage, and coconut and peanut
flours are practical though
unusual methods to beat today's
food prices. And if the
price of soybeans drops to a
former level, it too will be a
way to stretch the "food dollar."
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THE AUBURN PuwsrvnN Thurs., July 26,1973 page 15
Bonds overcome bad environment
NEW RIDERS
Guitarist shows his style
By David Williams
Plainsman News Editor
Man is definitely a victim of his environment.
It controls his actions, emotions, and
reactions.
Two, very talented bands, brought all their
electrical and emotional forces together to try
and overcome the poor environment of the Auburn
University Coliseum, Tuesday night,
with some measurable success.
The environment consisted of the rear
5,000 seats of the coliseum with the stage set 20
yards from the wall and armed policemen prohibiting
persons from entering the floor area
in front of the stage.
Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen
and The New Riders of the Purple Sage
knew that a crowd of warm receptive human
beings was somewhere in the coliseum, but
they couldn't see them. How can a band react
to what's happening when they can't even see
the crowd?
Commander Cody could tell an audience
had come to hear them so they flooded the air
with boogie, rock and roll, and several songs
from their album "Truckers Favorites", an
enter-mixing of country, rock, and ballad
styled music.
Naturally the commander had to ease away
from his piano to do the two songs which are
probably known to all top-Forty listeners,
"Hot Rod Lincoln*" and "Smoke, Smoke,
Smoke that Cigarette."
The distinction of performing the longest
before an Auburn audience has to belong to
the New Riders of the Purple Sage. Starting at
approximately 9:20 p.m. and playing until
break time at 10:30, NRPS bounced right back
on stage after a twenty minute rest to boogie a
thinning crowd until 11:45.
Undoubtedly a different style of country
rock that was heard earlier from the Commander
and his gang, New Riders possess a
style all their own.
It's a style that needs listening to where the
words are a major part of understanding the
music. Unlike other groups which jump out at
you with muffled lyrics and a catchy beat,
New Riders convey a message equally superb
to their unique sound.
'Pretty Maids'
is free flick
for this week
This weekend, Spectra's
Free Movie is "Pretty Maids
All in a Row," showing at 8
p.m. Friday and Sunday in
Langdon Hall and Saturday
on the lawn of Carolyn
Draughon Village, if weather
permits.
Rock Hudson, Angie Dickinson,
Telly Savalas, and John
Carson star in this satire on
American manners and
morals. Hudson is a high
school football coach and
guidance counselor who practices
couch therapy on the pretty
maids lined up for instruction
in physical education. Advocating
physical fitness,
Hudson helps the frustrated
virgin Carson by recommending
another teacher, his female
counterpart. Meanwhile,
in an intrigue with three coeds,
he deals with a disapproving
amateur detective.
"Pretty Maids All in a
Row," an "over-17"
comedy, concludes with the
coach handing down his
professional secrets and counseling
methods to a protege to
carry on his practice.
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I THE HIP-EST HEIST IN HISTORY!
VM^IN6G,
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They're in control
They're out of
sight...They're
back...for the
hip-est heist
in history!
• Stalling the Original Dobsiman Gang Q
CHARLES KNOX ROBINSON TIM CONSIOINE - DAVID MOSES CLAUOIO MARIINE2
MISS I0AN CAUIFIELD
I HE AUBURN Pi J M N S M M I Thurs., July 26, 1973 page 16
BJB. King calls man 'God's gift'
By Thorn Botsford
Plainsman Staff Writer
If any dogmatic feminists are B. B. King fans,
they must never listen to the lyrics of his songs.
"A man is God's gift to a woman," he shouts to
audiences from coast to coast.
"A man provides for the family; a woman takes
care of the home. If I ever get married again, I want
my wife to take care of me, the house, the dog—whatever,"
he told a group of friends backstage at the
Atlanta Jazz Festival a couple of weeks ago.
The fact is all too plain: B. B. King, the most
popular blues artist in the world, is a male chauvinist
pig—an old-fashioned gentleman, if you will—a
bard of the masses who, for the most part, have
never heard of the Equal Rights Amendment.
B.B. really couldn't be any other way. His music is
so rooted in the common experiences of everyday life
that a cop-out to women's lib would render it sterile.
So he continues to sing of two-timing women and
adulterers in cadillacs, of a wife's ingratitude and a
husband's revenge, of love unrequited and hope unfulfilled.
His audiences love every last line of songs like
"Don't Answer the Door," "Worry, Worry, Worry,"
and "How Blue Can You Get?" Indeed, the latter features
a dialogue between husband and wife in which
B.B. mimics the wife by placing his hand on his hip
and literally nagging the blues in burlesque, falset-.
to fashion. It goes something like this:
Husband: "I gave you a brand new Ford. . ."
Wife: "I want a cadillac. . ."
Husband: "I bought you a ten dollar dinner. . ."
Wife: "Thanks for the snack. . ."
Husband: "I let you live in my penthouse. . ."
Wife: "Oh, it's just a shack. . ."
Husband: "I gave you seven children, baby, and
now you want to give 'em back."
These lyrics and others like them thrilled small
black audiences for 20 years before B.B. made the
big time. He was still playing in clubs like "The
Bamboo" in Opelika for pennies a night when Mike
Bloomfield, Eric Clapton and the Beatles told their
fans about "the King of the Blues."
"He's the chairman of the board, the greatest
blues musician ever," said Bloomfield. Suddenly,
B.B. King could afford to buy cadillacs.
But becoming "hip" overnight hasn't changed.
B.B.'s essential style and message. In his mid 40's,
he still a master of the common touch. He is to the
blues what Louis Armstrong was'to jazz and what
Johnny Cash is to country music: basic, down home,
ruggedly rooted in his heritage yet anxious to turn
on the many musical virgins who have never heard
or understood his music.
Sex is the key to most of his blues tunes since it is
the factor behind so many fold depressions. I'm certain
that Freud would have delighted in an analysis
of B.B.'s music and life style although B.B. himself
would have just a certainly thought Freud quite
crazed for probing into what was so obvious.
On stage, the "King of the Blues" is a woman's
he says—and B. B. is a master of her body. When he
reaches for those highly-pitched shreiks of pain and
delight—the climatic blue notes—"Lucille" comes to
life, glistening in the show lights, gleaming in the
eyes of the audience. When he suddenly brings her
down to a subdued mellowtone, "Lucille" seems to
sigh and swoon in his arms while the audience, wet
and limp from countless rounds of applause, gasps
for breath.
Backstage, he's still woman's man. I watched him
ask one female fan for a piece of Dentyne gum to relieve
his breath of the odor of onions, collards, and
beans with fatback—his dinner that evening. She
smiled coquettishly and offered him her token.
"Women always bring something that smells good
or tastes good," he chuckled,
man. His guitar is a woman—"her name is Lucille,"
He likes his women tender and sweet, it seems. If
he expects to be served by a woman, he knows she's
gotta be treated right. And for B.B., that means
"throwing your arms around her" and "telling her
that you love her."
"Don't go beating her up fellas," he warns, "if
she's been playing around." Treat her nice and
tender and she'll be your lady, he says.
If B.B.'s world of men and women seems
primitive, he has modified it somewhat to conform
with his humanitarian ideals. "I was born in Mississippi
and taught from an early age that people
should be loved," he says.
Career women, he reasons, shouldn't be tricked
into quitting work after marriage. "If the man
wants her to stop work, he should tell her so before
he puts the ring on her finger, not afterwards. And if
she does keep working, she should get the same pay
as a man doing the same work."
But most women belong in the home, B.B. believes—
and his blues bear it out. In that context, women
are "God's gift to men," he says, as well as the
other way around.
Second summer show
Cast set for ^Barefoot' ran
The cast has been selected
and rehearsals have begun for
Neil Simon's "Barefoot in The
Park," the second production
of the Auburn University
Theatre's Summer Theatre
Workshop, to be presented in
the new Telfair Peet Theater
August 8th through the 11th.
The play concerns Paul
Brattler, a spanking new lawyer,
who has just finished a
six-day honeymoon and also
has just won his first case (six
cents in damages), and his
young bride, Corie, who have
just moved into the new, high-rent
apartment that she has
chosen for them. But the difficulty
is, in order to enjoy the
charming character of this
apartment one has to climb six
wheezing flights to get to it.
And not only that, but the
apartment is absolutely bare
of furniture, the paint job came
out all wrong, the skylight
leaks snow, there isn't room for
campus
calendar
Thursday, July 26
Mrs. Auburn Pageant, 8 p.m., Student Activities Building.
Friday, July 27
Free Spectra Movie, "Pretty Maids All in a Row," 8 p.m.,
Langdon Hall.
Saturday, July 28
Free Spectra Movie, "Pretty Maids All in a Row," 8 p.m.,
lawn of Carolyn Draughon Apartments.
Sunday, July 29
Free Spectra Movie, "Pretty Maids All in a Row," 8 p.m.,
Langdon Hall.
Wednesday, August 1
Spectra Contract Bridge Club, 7 p.m., Haley Center
Lounge.
a double bed, and an outlandish
gourmet, named Victor
Velasco, who lives in a loft on
the roof, uses their apartment
an window ledge as the only
access to his padlocked premises.
The situation is enough to
break the heart and burst the
lungs of any stylish young
lawyer; and indeed it does, on
the night he flatly refuses to
join his wife in a barefoot walk
through the snow in the park.
She kicks him out, but he
comes back—not for reconciliation,
but because he figures
that since he's paying the rent
she should be the one to go.
A really fun show, "Barefoot"
is considered one of Neil
Simon's best. Included in the
cast are Menelle Head, 3TH, as
Corie Bratter, Greg Folmar,
3MU, as Paul Bratter; Jules
Davis, 3GEH, as the
Telephone Repair Man; Steve
McCloskey, 2GC, as the Delivery
Man; Janet Price, 4GSC,
as Mrs. Banks, Corie's mother;
and Michael Young, 3LPO, as
Victor Velasco.
Tickets for "Barefoot" go on
sale beginning July 31 at the
Theater Box Office, or, for
twenty-four hour reservation
service, call 826-4154. Box
office hours are 12:00 Noon to
5:30 P .M. weekdays.
Unloading time at the
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Wed thru Sat August 1-4 • 9:30am-9:30pm
32 beautiful stores Now Open
The Village Mall merchants invite you to discover
the incomparable pleasures of having a beautiful new,
totally enclosed shopping world right in your own
neighborhood.
Thirty-two exciting stores, all opening onto the
beautiful, temperature-controlled Mall. Each one
contributing its own special delights to Village Mall's
complete shopping convenience.
SEARS. ROEBUCK A COMPANY. Department Store
SEARS SERVICE STATION. Auto Service
J. HOWARD, LTD. Men s Clothing
FORD SHOES. Family Shoe Store
GlNGISS INTERNATIONAL. INC. Formal Wear Sales & Rentals
* DIMENSIONS. Ladies 4 Mens Apparel Shop
CLODFELTER A CUNNINGHAM. Mens Specialty Shop
G.C. MURPHY CO. Junior Department Store
ORANGE BOWL. Fast Foods Service
MOTHERHOOD MATERNITY SHOP. Maternity Clothes
DIANA SHOPS. Popular Priced Ready-to-Wear tor Ladies.
Children & Infants RECORD BAR. Record Shop
VOGUE. Ladies Sportswear JAN'S T O W N * COUNTRY.
Ladies Fashions GAVFER'S. Fashion Department Store
WARE JEWELERS. Jewelry Store POLLY-TEK. Ladies-
Fashion Specialty HARWELL'S. Mens Clothing Store
BUTLER'S SHOES. Popular Priced Ladies Shoe Store
ZALES Jewelry Store BASKIN-ROBINS Ice Cream Shop
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF AUBURN. Complete Financial
Service APPROACH GIFT SHOP. Gilts lor Ml Occasions
TIE CASTLE. Ties i Mens Accessories MORSE SHOES.
Popular Priced Family Shoe Store PANTS CWCUS Ladies' &
Mens Ready-to-Wear ELLIOTT M U G S . Drug Store
GATEWAY BOOKS. S o r t and Card Shoo
JACKS'. Fast Foods Service * MORRISON'S CAFETEMA.
* SUPER FOODS. S u p e r ™ , * * • KMALFY S iaa.es fashions
* Opening at a later date
And there's much more! Mood-making decor.
Artfully designed landscaping. Acres of all-around parking
and Mall entrances galore.
Don't dare miss the Grand Opening excitement
and just-in-time Fall Values starting Wednesday at your
Village Mall in Auburn.
YOU'LL FIND IT
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ALL AT • •
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T H E AUBURN PUINSMJLN Thurs., July 26,1973 page is
AU, Tuskegee funded for doctoral program
Auburn University and Tus-kegee
Institute have received
funding for a Cooperative Program
to Strengthen Depelop-ing
Institutions which will
bring to Auburn 15 doctoral
students from 12 developing
institutions throughout the
Southern region.
Funding is provided through
a grant of $108,000 from Title
III, Strengthening Developing
Institutions, of the 1965
Higher Education Act. The
grant award was made to
Tuskegee Institute, the coordinating
institution. The
program will be conducted at
Auburn University through a
sub-contract from Tuskegee
Institute.
The program, which will begin
this fall, was announced
this week by Tuskegee Institute
President L. H. Foster
and Pres. Harry M. Philpott.
Dr. Foster, commenting on
the program between the two
neighboring institutions, said:
"This is a splendid opportunity
for Auburn and
Tuskegee to extend their joint
efforts in advancing the
qualifications of faculty in
developing institutions; and
we are confident that the doctoral
students will benefit
greatly from their experience
in this program."
Dr. Philpott said: 'We look
forward to this cooperative
endeavor with Tuskegee Institute
and other institutions
which will be represented in
the program. This is an excellent
example of how institutions
of higher education can
mutually benefit by sharing
their graduate resources, and
we are pleased that Auburn
has the opportunity to extend
its facilities and faculty for
this purpose."
The Cooperative Program to
Strengthen Developing Institutions
has several distinctive
features. It establishes a
relationship between a large
university and 12 smaller
developing institutions,
whereby the strengths of the
university are used to
strengthen faculty and staff of
developing institutions.
It is also interdisciplinary in
nature, allowing faculty and
staff from the developing institutions
to study in any department
offering the Doctor
of Philosophy or Doctor of
Education degree.
In addition, exchange
faculty from Auburn will go to
the developing institution to
take the place of the faculty or
staff member studying at Auburn
where such an arrangement
can be made.
Program participants
selected thus far come from
such developing institutions
as Prairie View (TX) A & M
College, Alexander City Junior
College, Jackson State
(MS) College, Alabama State
University, Tuskegee Institute,
and Albany (GA) Junior
College.
Recipients will be awarded a
stipend of $4,000 for the
academic year. All registration
fees are also paid. Participants
were nominated by
their institutions and are expected
to return to their institutions
subsequent to completing
study at Auburn.
The program will be directed
by Dr. Mark E. Meadows, Professor'
and Head, Counselor
Education Department, Auburn
University. The Associate
Project Director is Mr.
Frank E. Cyrus, Assistant
Dean, School of Education at
Tuskegee Institute. Others
from Auburn who played a role
in developing the program
were Dr. Paul F. Parks, Dean,
Graduate School: Dr. Truman
M. Pierce, Dean School of
Education; Dr. Chester C.
Carroll, Vice President for Research.
From Tuskegee Institute:
Dr. J. H. M. Henderson,
Director of the Carver
Foundation; Dr. Courtney J.
Smith, Dean of Special Studies,
and Dr. William A.
Hunter, Dean of the School of
Education.
AU works chosen
for world art tour
—Brent Anderson
"BOLD INTRUDER" HEADED OVERSEAS
. . . Detail of work to be displayed in embassy
By Curtis A. Mauldin
Plainsman Staff Writer
The work of five Auburn artists
will be displayed around
the world by the United States
Information Agency. The
artists were presented checks
from the USIA Thursday after
the selections of their work
was made in Washington.
The young artists are:
William C. Baggett, art instructor;
Calvin L. Foster,
graduate assistant; Philip M.
Fitzpatrick, Jr., art instructor,
Robert H. Rivers, Jr., 4VD;
Lyda Hale, 3FA.
Each of the prints selected
will be part of the USIA's exhibit
program overseas After
being part of a touring display,
they will be hung in
American embassies, USIA
headquarters, information
centers or binational centers.
Two prints by Foster were
chosen for use and each of the
other four winners had one
selected for display. Each of
the impresssions consisted of
an edition of ten prints.
According to Maltby Sykes,
art professor and director of
the project, prints consist of
silk screens, lithography,
intaglios (etching and engraving)
and photo-mechanical
processes. "We had a problem
of getting a clear run of identical
prints," he said.
There were no restrictions on
the subject matter but USIA
suggested that it should reflect
American life and current
art movements.
Foster, a painting major,
submitted three prints and two
of them were selected for submission
to the USIA. "I felt
they were two images that
would be something appealing
just to look at and not controversial
or make a statement,
the artist said of his
prints.
Hale was taking a print
making course at the time
work was being done for the
competition. She put "something
out of my head" in her
sketch book and polished the
ideas. She submitted a portfolio
often prints to the judges.
One of her prints, an intaglio
entitled The Miser, was selected.
"I like it because it
seems to carry an idea and
makes a statement," the only
woman in the competition
stated.
Baggett said he was proud
that Auburn was selected for
the program and was honored
to be a part of it.
Four art department faculty
members selected the six
works of art from 18 original
Devenney
leads drum
major camp
Featuring nationally known
Jack DeVenney, the Heart of
Dixie All-Star Twirling and
Drum Majoring Camp opened
Sunday. DeVenney is an expert
in all aspects of drum
majoring, twirling, marching,
and rifle spinning. He assisted
Wetumpka's Shirley
Ross in conducting the camp
along with 20 other top instructors.
While here for the camp, the
drum majors and majorettes
had an opportunity to attend a
concert in the Memorial
Coliseum featuring the New
Riders of the Purple Sage and
Commander Cody and his
Lost Planet Airman.
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prints made by the five
students for the competition.
They were guided by appropriate
subject matter and the
quality of the print, according
to Sykes. "We did not want to
duplicate processes and
wanted to represent all
media," he said.
All of the work was done
within a four week period prior
to the end of spring quarter,
stated Sykes. Everyone was
working under considerable
pressure.
This is the first time the government
has used young artists
and paid for the work, according
to Sykes.
"Young people's work
always has more vitality than
professional work," he said,
"because they are younger and
their ideas are fresher. They
are not burdened as much by
past performances as professionals
are." There is power
and drive in youth and an
eagerness for new things, he
continued.
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Parents supporting
education funds bill
T H E AUBURN PUINSM&N Thurs., July 26,1973 page 19
A group of Alabama parents
attending the leadership
conference of the Alabama
Congress of Parents and Teachers
is urging by resolution to
Lt. Gov. Jere Beasley and the
State Senate a quick passage
of the education appropriations
bill.
The 95 delegates voted unanimously
for the resolution.
Their reasoning was that local
school administrators need to
know about their appropriations
abling them to hire teachers
and plan for the beginning
of school this fall.
ACPTA President Mr. John
Colvin of Akron said, "It is
imperative that action be
taken immediately in this matter
if Alabama's public education
is to improve at the rate it
can and should."
The resolution reads as follows:
"Whereas, planning for the
wise use of funds for the next
school term is as important as
the amount of the funds, and
Whereas,
That Federal funds are at a
premium now, not later in the
summer, and Whereas,
The school year is almost
upon us, Therefore, be it resolved,
That immediate action related
to the education appropriation
bill is imperative if
the maximum educational opportunities
are to be afforded
the youth of Alabama."
Dr. Walter G. Nelson, consultant
to Teacher Education
and Certification for the State
Deparment of Education, told
the ACPTA delegates that the
new pilot program for teacher
internships begins this fall.
Involved will be Auburn University,
the University of Alabama
in Birmingham and 16
local school systems.
"We are changing the title of
the program from internship
to the first year teacher program.
It will involve the two
universities, the State Department
of Education and the
local school system.
In a sense the program will
be a little similar to the student
teaching program that
the teacher fulfilled as a requirement
for graduation
when he or she was a student.
But three different sources will
be available to help that first
Jyear teacher through some
situations through which he or
she might have muddled
through earlier."
Nelson said that most first
year teachers are well prepared
when they come out of
college but are "diamonds in
the rough that require polishing."
Polishing is what the
intern or first year teacher program
is intended to administer.
"I don't see how the program
can fail if we really try,"
Nelson continued, "not only
will it benefit the first year teacher,
but it will be of value to
the students of that teacher as
well. Of course, the teacher will
already be certified when he or
she begins the first year pro-
, , ,,, J» gram.
Seven Auburn students from
the School of Education completed
their teaching experience
internships for this
past quarter by participation
in a new program that assigned
them to Bucaramanga,
Colombia.
The program began when Dr.
Carel M. Anderson of the University
of Alabama contacted
the laboratory experiences department
of the School of
Education winter quarter.
Anderson had been unable to
meet a request for teachers for
the Pan-American School of
Bucaramanga.
After the initial contact, the
request was evaluated and a
system to select internees from
Auburn was established. Interested
students were asked to
submit applications and from
the 25 that applied, seven were
selected and underwent
orientation for the program.
After all the necessary arrangements
concerning travel,
passports, visas and innocula-tions
had been made, the students
met in Miami on March
24 where they departed for
Bogota, Colombia.
After arriving, the internees
continued on to Bucaramanga,
situated high in the Andes
mountains. The students spent
the duration of their internship
period with families of the
community and taught at the
school daily.
Ginger Starling, 4GFL, and
Jane Veal, 4EED, were among
the student teachers at the
Pan-American School. They
described the school as "lacking
in learning resources" but
as being in a very beneficial
environment for learning. The
school, which is a private, upper
class institution, is arranged
so that every third
classrooms opens into a courtyard
which may be used for
open-air classes, the women
related.
Veal said "If I had stayed
within a 50-mile radius of Auburn,
I would have been observing
for six weeks and
teaching for only two. But in
Bucaramanga, I was placed in
a teaching environment on the
first day."
Both Starling and Veal
tor your
information-
The Auburn University
Summer Concert Band and the
University Summer Concert
Choir will present an informal
concert of Tuesday, August 7,
August 7, 1973. The presentation
will begin at 6:15 p.m. on
the Samford Park lawn and
the public is cordially invited
to attend.
The Auburn City Parks and
Recreation Dept. will hold a second
session for beginning
swimmers from August 6
through the 17. More information
is available by calling 821-
7143. Swimming for the public
is offered daily from 2-6 p.m. at
the city pool on the Auburn-
Opelika Road.
Payment of $10 graduation
fee is due by August 10 to the
Bursar; any late payments will
include an additional $5 late
fee.
A preliminary test to
evaluate fictious courses and
professors will. . be
Everyone
Owns A
Want Ad
Machine
€AP ARTMENTS FOR RENT
FOR R ENT For two or three boys. Air
conditioned, two bedroom
apartment furnished, Big— also
two bedroom air conditioned
furnished house trailer. Call 887-
3641.
?> C HOUSES FOR RENT }
FOR RENT Three bedroom big
house, furnished, air condition, for
three or four boys. Call 887-3641.
FOR RENT One bedroom apartment.
Air conditioned, private
bath, furnished. Call 887-3641.
c HELP WANTED 3
C MOTORCYCLES
FOR SALE 3
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE 1971
Yamaha 250 Enduro. Excellent
condition. $400. Call 821-8654.
New program gives student
teachers assignments abroad c
SUZUKI '72 6T-380. Three
cylinders. Hawaii green color.
3,100 miles. $600. Call 821-2606.
WANTED Folk guitarists for single
night performance in August. Inquiries
should be sent to S.C. Gray,
2301-65th Street, Longdate, AL
36864 or Call 756-2335 after 9
p.m.
WANTED Students to work part-time
or full-time. Shoe selling
experience preferred but not required.
Apply at THE BOOTERY, N.
College Street, Auburn.
c NOTICE J
PETS
agreed that the environment
greatly affected the teaching
methods they employed. "The
students were much more
eager and willing to learn English
from us than from a
Colombian teacher," commented
Starling. She went on
to describe the entire experience
as "a cultural exchange."
"There was never a moment
of boredom in our spare time,"
said Veal. "We were always
touring the area and other
parts of the country. The
families we stayed with kept us
busy during the entire stay."
According to Starling,
"Socially, women are looked
on as being inferior to men,
and if a male visits a young
lady more than once, that is
considered enogh to constitute
an engagement."
News from the states was
described by them as being extremely
blown up and over reported
by the Colombian newspapers.
HORSE PASTURE $ 10 monthly 864-
8166.
c AUTOS FOR SALE }
NEED ROOMMATES Four Bedroom
house on Wire Road. Across from
Tyson's Groc. Call 887-3196 after 5
o'clock week days ask for Buddy.
"The Cosmetic That's Mere Than A
Cover Up" Call to arrange
complimentary facial with instructions
in correct beauty procedures.
MARY KAY COSMETICS
826-4586 (days) 821-0153
(nights).
BUYER NEEDED for a green, 1971
Dodge D« m o n - Standard p R E G N A N T A N D DISTRESSED? Call
ransm.ss.on, 33,000 miles, and hf 821-8730 or 821-0523.
low maintenance costs. $1,400. "
Call 821-3842.
We care.
kllitdtellltwel..
Ms the easf
way to sell
_ EllhMWoodl,»
WM. S»totJ444
lonakdiu m1 :0S0h afitss , :T M waokdoyt,
t unit "hlpphn" hopping on •
TRAMPOLINE. If « '"in'Mo M
n," and all far only IU».J0 dollv-mi-
oto.
administered next week. Spon
sored by the SGA and ACM
(Association Computer
Machinery) the test is designed
to prepare students for
an actual Teacher Course
Evaluation to be given this
fall. The evaluation is to be a
more in depth study of courses
and instructors at Auburn.
Anyone interested in distributing
the preliminary
survey, type or key punchmay
contact Butch Noa (821-3838)
or James Darrah (826-4240) or
by contacting the SGA office
(826-4240).
DOIl- W? S««*d k.on* on* boa. $*». A#ar I tfiiWTir*1 jSh^wcrse?
, CUItS WW XM from, loaf
Elite Iran* woods, •arsalns,
a" " 2tas7lMt3lap
i "mPV&i 2
TERRIFIC d
boottl
......— for 7w fnoovts* u
•fr Sterncraft
»»
LETS FIX
oll'a•t "•«**&'
WANT ADS
T H E AUBURN PIAINSMIN Thurs., j u i y 26,1973 page 20
-Brent Anderson
Touche
Beth Hyche, Bessemer , AL, o f the McAdori High
School Majorettes, is shown during a practice session of
the Heart of Dixie Twirling and Drum Major Camp. The
camp began Monday and ends today as the 485 pack up
for their trip home. Participants came fron all over the
southeast and included 16 male drum majors.
Assistant Professor is
given Jaycee award
Dr. Albert Brunsting, assistant
professor of physics, has
been notified of his selection
by Outstanding Young Men of
America.
Doug Blankenship, chairman
of the OYMA Board of
Advisors and past president of
the U .S . Jaycees, forwarded a
personal Award Certificate to
Brunsting and indicated that
his full biography and record
of accomplishments will be recorded
in the 1973 awards volume,
Outstanding Young Men
of America.
Brunsting earned his D.A.
degree in 1967 from Hope College
and his M.S. in 1969 and
Ph.D. in 1972 from the
Adams assigned as Student
Legal Advisor for campus
By Annette Norris
Plainsman Staff Writer
Don Adams, a January
graduate of the University of
Alabama Law School, became
the new legal advisor for
students effective July 1.
Adams, a native of Gilbert-town,
replaced former legal advisor
Dr. Ted Little, releasing
Little to resume teaching
duties.
In reference to the duties of
the Student Legal Advisor, the
"Tiger Cub" states: "The legal
advisor advises and assists
students in becoming aware of
the role of the law in their relationship
with others. While not
representing the student, he
does help the student understand
the alternatives he may
pursue and the consequences
that may result from each."
Adams' interpretation is
that the Student Legal Advisor
is not an actual representative
in court but instead offers
"confidential legal advice;
to students with problems
and grievances."
Most of the problems
encountered since his arrival,
Adams said, involved land-lord-
tenant relationships and
Universitv of New Mexico.
His doctoral research was
done at the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratories. Sandia
Laboratories in Albuquerque,
N .M. provided additional professional
experience. His
present interests are in the
field of biophysics.
Among Brunsting's professional
society memberships
are the Biophysical Society,
the American Optical Society,
the American Association of
Physics Teachers, and the
American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
leasing problems. Other
problems included domestic
situations, minor traffic violations,
and minors in possession
of alcoholic beverages.
Adams said that he was
struck by the traffic in Auburn,
but he said Auburn seemed
"like a nice, friendly campus."
The office of the Student
Legal Advisor is located in
Mell Hall, at the corner of Mell
Street and Roosevelt Drive.
Adams encouraged students
to make use of this service,
saying that he may be
reached by calling 826-4744 for
an appointment
—Brent Anderson Sorry, guys
That headline on the front page of last week's Plainsman
was wrong. Women will not out-number men at Auburn
next fall. The ratio will be ten men to nine women
as reported in the story.
AUBURN HOSTS MAJORKTTE CAMP
. 485 attend twirling and drum major camp
—Brent Anderson
PROSPECTIVE AUBURN STUDENT
WELCOME TO A NEW
WORLD- WE WOULD
LIKE TO BE A PART OF
Johnstoii &> Malone