*-rj._-i*Mw.--• — - • - - v « f i r -
What was Auburn's college life like 'back then? Find out on page 3.
Qfte^uburnPlainsman
Ninety-three years of serving Auburn students
Beware of all enterprises
that require new clothes.
—Thoreau
Volume 93 N u m b e r 28 Thursday, J u n e 25, 1987 Auburn University, Ala. 36849 12 pages
Reprimands
for Auburn 11
By Rhonda Goode
Staff Writer
President James E. Martin sent letters, dated June 1, reprimanding
the 11 Auburn students who violated University rules winter quarter by
protesting in the Open Air Forum after specified hours.
The action was recommended by the University Student Discipline
Committee, and Martin accepted the proposal.
"We expect our students to conduct themselves in a manner as to
reflect credit upon themselves, as well as Auburn University," Martin
said in the letter received by Michele Malach, 06 SC.
"I trust that in the future you will conduct yourself in accordance with
the expectations of this institution," he said in the letter. Two of the
"Auburn Eleven ,"Max Worlund, 04 FLTG, and Malach, said the written
reprimand was what they were expecting. Both said if they were
again faced with the decision of whether to protest similarly, they
would not act differently.
"The whole point of breaking the rule was to get it changed," Malach
said. "We tried going the University route (to get the rule changed) and
got no cooperation. We talked to people in the University Senate, where
the rule came from,and got nowhere."
"Nobody was targeted by this," Martin said. "After the (Student
Disciplinary) Committee makes its recommendation on any case, I
send a letter regardless of the outcome."
The disciplinary action was routine for the type of offense, Martin
said. . .
"I see it as an exercise in self-government," Martin said. "The University's
primary concern is education, and its educational atmosphere
must not be disturbed in an unpleasant manner.
"The rule was made by faculty and students, not by the administration,
and the administration alone could not change the rule," Martin
said.
Change could be made only through a recommendation by the SGA
or through the University Senate, he said.
The protestors have not decided whether to proceed with a civil action
suit against the University, Malach said. Their request for a restraining
order to postpone University disciplinary action was denied May 18
by Federal District Judge Truman Hobbs.
Last year the Supreme Court voted 7-2 that the First Amendment
does not fully protect the speech of students on a school campus, according
to a UPI report. It ruled that a Tacoma, Wash., school acted legally
when it suspended an honors student for giving a speech containing
sexual innuendo, the report said.
n
Charles and Thelma Dixon
Conference Center
UNDER CONSTRUCTION - The Auburn Hotel and Conference
center, shown is t h i s rendering by contractor Algernon
Blair of Montgomery, will be completed by Sept. 1,1988. The
$20 million conference center will include a 250-room, six-story
hotel and a 35,000 square foot continuing education
•facility which will be leased by t h e University.
Trustees approve campus housing cost increases
for dorm renovation and construction projects
By David Sharp
News Editor
Auburn students will be paying
more to live on campus next fall
after the Board of Trustees
approved a recommendation,
made by University Director of
Housing Gail McCullers.
The increase, which ranges
from $10 to $20, will help cover
the costs of major dorm renovation
and construction, McCullers
said.
However, the 3 to 4.5 percent
increase is "still in line with other
SEC schools" which range from
from zero to 12 percent increases
next year, she said:
The housing increase and a $21
million housing bond issue presented
earlier this year will pay for
renovation of the Hill Dorms, fixing
new chapter rooms for displaced
sororities and building
.two to three new dorms,
McCullers said.
Renovation of the dorms will
take about four years, and the
new dorms, which will be located
behind the present Hill Dorms,
will be completed by fall of 1989,
she said.
Campus housing will have
about 800 fewer spaces next fall
resulting from the renovations
and the razing of Mag Dorm,
McCuHers said. But this will be
eased somewhat when the new
dorms are completed, she said.
Proposal - no F zone, seniors D zone
The blue a r e a s indicate proposed change in parking for underclassmen
9 Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, Seniors
A Graduate students
By P a t t i Colegrove
Editor
The Parking and Traffic
Committee recommended to the
administration that all freshmen,
sophomores, juniors and
seniors receive D zone stickers
starting fall quarter, Dr. Dennis
Marple, chairman of the Parking
and Traffic Committee, said.
Dr. George H. Emert, executive
vice president of the University
said Marple presented the committee's
recommendation to
Rhett E. Riley, vice president for
business and finance; Jack Walton,
University police chief; and
himself, the second week in May.
He said Marple's recommendation
is "being processed" and is
"under consideration from the
president."
"I have not received formal
acknowledgement of its approval,
but it looks like this is the
way it will be this fall," Marple
said.
The change would make C zone
parking for graduate students
only, D zone parking for all
underclassmen and eliminate F
zone parking, Marple said. The
present A and B parking zones
would not be changed.
"This is an effort to simplify
things," Marple said. "Looking at
the parking map, it seems unrealistic
to have a multicolored map
where the (student parking) spaces
don't really differ," Marple
said.
"It's not really a (distance)
change in parking, just a change
in the color of the decal," Walton
said.
"We are adjusting the present
zones so more (spaces) will
become D zone," Marple said.
Marple estimated the parking
zones to change as follows:
—A zone — 1,288 spaces...no
change.
—B zone — 1,689 spaces...no
change.
—C zone — 335 spaces...799
less than the present 1,134
spaces.
—D zone — 6,025 spaces...801
more than the present 3,368 D
zone spaces and 1,856 F zone
spaces.
The C zone lot on Donahue
Drive west of the stadium, a C
zone lot west of Plainsman Park
and C zone street parking along
Donahue Drive west of Plainsman
Park would become D zone
parking, Marple said.
All F zone parking would
become D zone, Marple said. The
R zone would remain for sophomores,
juniors and seniors who
live in University dormitories,
but the C and R zone lot on
Donahue Drive,across from the
Food Service Building, would
become C zone only, Marple said.
The simplicity of having only
one zone sticker, Marple said, will
decrease the overall cost.
Walton said changing to the
new system would be easier for
University Police than having
separate classifications for students.
He said the system would
be cheaper in the long run.
The initial cost of changing to
this new zone system could not be
obtained.
"Everyone has an equal right
to go to class and everyone needs
to get to class," Marple said. "We
recognize we have severe parking
problems. Hopefully, it will
become easier to get a space. We
hope to be getting the areas
paved by the Coliseum. We regret
that it has not been done," Marple
said.
The Parking and Traffic
Committee consists of faculty,
staff and students. It is their job
to make recommendations to th<;
administration regarding ways
that might improve parking and
traffic conditions, Marple said.
f CELEBRATING MOVE TO
REAL WORLD - (1-r) Sheila
Kidd, Amanda F. Hayes, Teri
Elsea and J o a n M. Fanucci,
graudates from t h e School of
Nursing, were among the
1,506 s t u d e n t s to receive
degrees during spring commencement
June 10. There
w e r e 1,391 b a c h e l o r ' s degrees,
91 master's degrees
and 23 doctorates awarded.
An honorary doctorate was
given to t h e president of West
P o i n t P e p p e r e l l , J o s e ph
Lanier. I
What's inside...
C h a r l e s Barkley returned
to Auburn this week
to speak about life, school
and basketball. Barkley
talked about topics ranging
from drugs to retirement.
See page 9.
Bloom County
Classifieds
Editorials
Entertainment
Sports
5
6
4 ,5
11
9
i ^ d B
page 2 Ebt Suburn IHainsmafi Thursday, J u n e 25, 1987
Trustee board has
hew face, old name
r" Gov. Guy Hunt's first appointee
to the University Board of
Tirustees, William "Jimmy" Samford,
attended his first meeting
Jjine 1, continuing the Samford
family's Auburn tradition. ^
> Samford, a Montgom%*y attqlg
riey, began his 12-year terrrtaftaifc
rjeing appointed by Hunt and
confirmed by the state legislature
lijst January.
J The 37-year-old Opelika native
vjas active in ROTC while at
Auburn and graduated with a
political science degree in 1972.
• After graduation, he spent
tfcree years in theAirForce before
attending law school at the University
of Alabama.
*In 1978, Samford began work
for the Federal Deposit Insurance
(3brp. in Washington D.C. and
served a one-year term on the
Alabama Public Service Com-rjission
in 1980.
•Samford also served as the
senior legal advisor for Gov. Fob
.femes from 1981-83 before
beginning a private law practice
vftth the firm; Pappanastos and
SJamford of Montgomery.
ijSamford Hall was named after
Stamford's great-grandfather,
(jfov. William J. Samford, and his
father served as the University's
general counsel for 17 years.
vThomas D. Samford III, Sam-fijrd's
first cousin, has served as
IJniversity counsel for the past 22
yfars, and his cousins Frank P.
Samford and Frank P. Samford
J*, have both served on the Board
eff Trustees in the past.
Construction
& approved
i>y trustees
FJy David Sharp
News Editor
iThe Auburn Board of Trustees
approved more than $21 million
f§r building and renovation at its
rrjeeting June 1, which was presided
over by Gov. Guy Hunt for
tRe first time.
^Resolutions were passed which
ajlow the University to proceed
vnth plans for an athletic facility
a*jd an addition to the Harbert
civil engineering building.
Also approved were several
building renovations and a diagnostic
imaging center for the College
of Veterinary Medicine.
The athletic facility was
requested because of recent
expansion in men's sports
program..
t h e $9.63 million facility will
hoiase the football program and
administrative offices. The cost
will be funded entirely by a 1987
athletic bond issue and private
donations.
t h e addition to the Harbert
building is phase two of the building's
construction which will be
used for aerospace engineering.
It;will also include a separate
building with classrooms.
The $7.5 million cost of the
addition will be paid for by a 1985
general bond issue.
A budget of $4 million also has
been set aside for renovation of
several buildings on campus and
an expansion of utilities.
This includes $1.5 million for
renovation of the animal science
building, $1.5 million for replacing
the roofs of several buildings
inpluding Haley Center and $1
million for utility expansion.
The diagnostic imaging center
for the College of Veterinary
Medicine wuT-eost $700,000.
Of the costoSfor the center, half
will be paid w^th Physical Plant
fujads, and half will be paid by
donations.
In other business, the Board of
Trustees—
—;approved Peat, Marwick, Main
arid Co. to conduct the Auburn
arjd Montgomery campus'
annual audit for the fiscal year
ending Sept. 30,1987, for the sum
of:J>59,000 plus expenses.
— Approved Peat, Marwick, Main
arid Co. of Birmingham to again
audit the University as required
evfcry two years ending June 30,
19$7, by federal regulations, for a
sirm of $27,500 plus expenses.
—;!changed the name of Farm
Road between Donahue Drive
arid Wire Road to Morrison Road
in! honor of John Lemley Morrison
who has served Alabama as
Chairman of the Alabama Foundation,
Chairman of the Board of
Dairy Fresh Corporation and
was active in developing the Alabama
4-H Youth Developmental
Center.
—ihamed the University's small
animal clinic in memory of Dr.
Benjamin F. Hoerlin who served
as' department head of small
animal surgery for 20 years and
helped form the Scott-Ritchey
Research Program in the College
of .Veterinary Medicine.
In a telephone interview from
Montgomery, Samford said,
"Auburn has meant a lot to my
family." But He said, "I can't sit
back on what my ancestors have
done."
"I appreciate the confidence
.that has been placed in me,"
Samford said. "Now it is up to me
to make sure that confidence was
well-placed." 'Jimmy" Samford
New student code
By Laura C. Barnwell
Assistant News Editor
Auburn students are now governed
by a revised code of student
discipline which went into effect
the first day of summer quarter.
The revised code will be published
in the 1987-88 Tiger Cub,
the University's student handbook.
The Tiger Cub will be
available early summer quarter.
According to Grant Davis,
assistant dean of student affairs,
the student senate, the University
senate and the administration
have approved the code.
The original code was adopted
in June 1972 and was last revised
in August 1976, according to the
Tiger Cub.
The code is part of the Student
Government Association's code
of laws, which only applies to
Auburn students.
The code's age and the 1986
revision of the student academic
honesty code led to the revision,
Davis said. The academic
honesty code and the student discipline
code "need to complement
each other," according to Davis.
The code of student discipline
defines areas of disciplinary concern,
sets up the University Discipline
Committee and outlines
disciplinary procedures.
Much of the new code simply
expands topics mentioned in the
1976 revision. The expanded topics
include the procedures for
pressing charges, hearings, disciplinary
actions and appeals.
New rights for accused students
have been added to the
code. The new code includes "the
right to have sanctions deferred
until completion" of the disciplinary
procedure.
The interim regulations on
advertising and speech/demonstration
have been replaced. The
interim regulations have been in
effect for "approximately three
years," said Davis.
The speech and demonstration
regulation extends the hours of
the open air forum from 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday
and 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday
and Sunday. This change
was recommended by the student
senate, said Davis.
The advertising regulation,
which sets guidelines for on-campus
advertising, is the same
as the interim regulation.
GOVERNOR CONDUCTS BUSINESS
Gov. Guy Hunt attended his first board meeting J u n e 1
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Haley bells
ring back
tradition
By Vicki Vessels
Staff Writer
The bells in Haley Center are
back after almost two years
thanks to a few dissatisfied
professors.
"We had a lot of complaints
from Haley Center and we felt
like we should get Haley Center
back on," said W.O. Webster of
the Physical Plant.
The complaints came mostly
from professors teaching the
larger classes according to Dr.
Gordon Bond, head of the history
department.
The bells provide a definite
signal for the beginning and end
of class for the students as well as
the professors, Bond said.
Without the bells, it is difficult
to call two and three hundred
students to order, Bond said. In
addition, students coming in late
and trying to get to their seats in
the middle of a row is a common-distraction,
he said.
"At the end of the hour, we have
maybe 10 or 15 percent of the
class, all of whom have their
watches set. Their alarms start
going off and, according to the
professor's watch, you still have
three minutes. Well, in a history
class, that could mean three
hundred years," said Bond.
With the re-establishment of
the bells, the large classes are
becoming more under control, he
said.
The bells were never deliberately
turned off, according to
Bond. The physical plant started
the year before last with what it
considered an upgrading of the
electrical utility system. They
started putting the overhead
power lines into an underground
duct system.
The bell circuits ran on poles to
the different buildings. When the
power was put underground, the
bell system was done away with.
Repairing the bells in Haley Center
involved moving the master
clock there to get just those
working.
Haley Center is the only building
on campus that has bells.
"We haven't figured out a way_yet
to get the bells operating in "the
other buiMings," said Webster.
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By David Sharp
News Editor
One thing brought toge
Auburn graduates of different
backgrounds and eras at the Uni-
Reunion 1987 last
/ere reaiirAuburn fans,
always have been," said Ted E.
French of the class of 1957.""
"It's great to be home," said
Margaret Segrest, class of 1967.
"We've loved Auburn for along
time," said John Taylor of the
class of 1940. His twin brother,
Wilson Taylor, merely points to
the button on his shirt.which
says, "I love AU."
These four people represent
varied experiences from three
vastly different decades, but their
common bond of Auburn spirit is
still there.
French, who graduated in business,
now works in sales and
investments and resides with his
wife and 11-year-old daughter in
Lillian, Ala.
Segrest graduated in home
economics and lives in Ft. Walton,
Fla., where she sells real-estate.
~..."-
Wilson and John Taylor live in
Decatur, Ala., with their respective
families. Both, graduated in
agriculture science.
Of the Taylor brothers; thi*
was Wilson's fourth reunion, and
it was John?s~third. There were-only
1,800 students, at the Alabama
Polytechnical Institute
(API) when they began school in
1936.
Both of the 69-year-old-Awins
are avid motorcycle enthusiasts.
At the last reunion they attended
five years ago, they rode their
motorcycles from Decatur to
Auburn.
Wilson Taylor's Honda and
John Taylor's BMW motorcycles
were packed for the trip to this
reunion, but rain forced them to
come by car, they said.
The two worked the Taylor
Brothers' farm for 20 years before
selling the land to General
Motors to build the Saginaw
Steering plant, John Taylor said.
After closing the farm, John
Taylor worked in the Peace
Corps, and in 1976, at the age of
58, he spent 18 months in the Philippines
teaching agriculture
techniques.
However, he said, "I learned
more from them than they
learned from me."
Wilson Taylor has served on
the board of directors of Central
Bank since 1970, and he served
on the board of National Bank for
15 years before it merged with
Central Bank.
French, who won the jitterbug
contest with his wife at Saturday
night's ball, said there were 6,000
students when he started school
at Auburn in 1953.
"I'll guarantee you everyone
knew 50 percent of the students
by name," he said. "It was just
like being home."
The Atmore, Ala., native
hunts, fishes and watersides on
Perdido Bay with his family during
his free time. One of the first
words his daughter learned to
say was "War Eagle," he said.
French said he made good
grades his first year at Auburn.
"Then I discovered beer and
women, and that was my downfall,"
he said.
The organized burning of the
controversial 1955 Glomerata
occured while French was here.
"They burned them all, but I kept
mine," he said.
A member of Alpha Tau
Omega fraternity, Arnold Air
Society and an active member of
intramural sports, French said
he had a good time.
Once while living in Mag
Dorm, French and some buddies
took a dorm resident who had
imbibed too much outside and put
his bed on the roof of the dorm
cafeteria to sleep for the night.
Another time, French threw a
smoke bomb into a dorm and
"cleared the whole place out," he
said.
A decidedly different view of
Auburn is offered by a woman's
perspective.
"Things have definitely
changed since I was here," said
Segrest, who was the original
War Eagle Girl in the spring of
1965 and a member of Kappa
Kappa Gamma sorority. "But I'm
glad I was there when I was/'
People were not as rebellious at
Auburn as they were at some
universities during the mid-sixties,
Segrest said. "There were
no drugs at Auburn. It was
rumored that there was this one
guy on campus who smoked pot,"
she said.
"Of course, the guys drank, but
'proper' ladies didn't drink," Segrest
said. "Our housemother
would smell your breath when
you came in the door on
weekends."
Women were not allowed toiive
off campus, Segrest s<
could not wear short8 or pants on
campus. But ladies were allowed
to wear slacks to the drive-in, she
said. *
Women had room inspections
and had tosign out to leave the-dorm,
Segrest said. "We couldn't
get away with much."
If you broke the rules, your
housemother might put you on
restriction, or she could send you
to see Dean of Women Students
Katharine C. Cater, Segrest said.
"We used to put on our rain
coats over our night clothes and
go to the cafeteria. We thought we
Were really getting away with
something," Segrest said.
Segrest was at Auburn when
the first blacks were integrated
into the University in 1965. The
state troopers were there, but
there was no problem, she said.
The four Auburn graduates
expressed excitement about
returning to their alma mater,
and they were positive of the
changes they saw.
"I think it (the construction) is
great," Wilson Taylor said. "I'm
pleased that progress has been
made."
"1 hated to see the fraternity
houses torn down," Segrest said.
"But you've got to do all those
things."
French said, "It's quite an
improvement; it's progress." But.
he said, "Auburn is still the
friendliest college in the state."
"The Auburn experience still
exists," John Taylor said. It's
"refreshing," he said. There is a
certain "empathy and warmth"
at Auburn, he said.
"I wish more people had come,
but I've really enjoyed it," French
said.
"I came here not sure I really
wanted to come. But since I got
here, I've had a great time," Segrest
said. "It's definitely a feeling
of being at home. It's not just a
spirit; it's an essence."
Photography: David Montague
KIDS AT HEART
Reunion-goers enjoy barbecue at "welcome" banquet •
Reunion '87 held
By David Sharp
News Editor
About 350 alumni and families
attended Auburn's Reunion 1987.
which began Thursday and
ended Saturday night with a
semi-formal ball, according to
Betty M. DeMent, associate
director of alumni and development
The eight classes involved
began with the 10 year reunion
of the class of 1977 and went back
in five year intervals to the class
of 1942, DeMent said.
Auburn head coach Pat Dye
met the alumni at a "Welcome
Barbecue" Thursday evening,
and* Auburn: Mayor Jan M.
Dempsey proclaimed the week
"Reunion '87 Week"
University President James E.
Martin attended the ball Saturday
night escorting his wife, Ann
Martirfy who was attending the
reunion with the class of 1957.
At a luncheon Saturday, Executive
Vice President George H.
Emert spoke about today's
Auburn, and keynote speaker
Photography: David Montague
JITTERBUG CHAMPS
Ted and Margaret French take break from dance floor
Photography: David Montague
BIKERS?
Twin brothers John (L) and Wilson (R) Taylor discuss old times
MSim
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821-4200
David Housel, director of sports
information, spoke on the reunion's
theme, "Auburn: It's a family
affair."
Many alumni stayed at Dorm
3, and others stayed at various
hotels during their visit, DeMent
said.
DeMent, a 1971 Auburn graduate
who-received her master's
degree from the University in
1979, said-planning for the reunion
began a year ago.
The planning was done by
DeMent with help from two
assistants and the alumni office's
secretarial staff, she said.
About 75 people also helped with
the various events, she said.
This year the Alumni Association
decided to have the reunion
at the beginning of summer quarter
instead of in the fall as in the
past, DeMent said.
"The campus and the city are
less crowded in the spring,"
DeMent said, "making the dorm
and hotel rooms available. Also,
the schedule is not dictated by the
football game," she said.
"It has been very hectic,"
DeMent said, "and yet I feel that
we were prepared for it and
organized."
The appreciation which the
alumni show "makes my job
worthwhile," DeMent said. "It
has been a rewarding experience
because of the compliments," she
said.
As for the alumni office, they
did not receive a break after the
reunion. They critiqued the reunion
Monday and began planning
for next year's reunion, DeMent
said.
Thursday
Roast Beef
3 X « ^ > ? rt,. S2.lv
Cheese, lettuce* :'•
and tomato extra
Limit 1 per cust. Expires 7/30/87
coupon
Saturday
•i'-JSSES*".-
reg. $2:55
Ham, salami, bologna
and American cheese
Umit^^Ut Exphe.7/30/871
Monday
$139
reg. $2.55"
Ham, salami, turkey and American cheese
on pita with Italian Dressing
Limit 1 per cust. Expires 7/30/87
coupon •
Wednesday
Smoked Turkey
$1-29
Cheese extra, lettuce A tomato extra
Limit 1 Per Cust.
oupon Expires 7/30/87
Friday
Veggie Rider
99c
reg. $1.49
Lettuce, tomato, cucumber, radishes
sprouts, muenster cheese, mushrooms.
Limit I per cust. _ .
coupon Bxptres 7/30/87
Sunday
Momma's Love
-reg.»$2.55
Roast beef, ham, smoiced turkey
muenster cheese on seeded bun
HaaMevaejaWBlVMBaiaaaaaaMasBaM
Tuesday %
Bull Rider
$1.59
reg. $2.55
Roast beef, smoked cheddar cheese on
pita w/barbeque sauce
Limit I per cust.
coupon
Expires 7/30/87
Afternoon Delite
Pitcher of Beer $2.49
Mon.-Sat. 1:30-8:30 reg. $4.50
What's So Special About
Ware's Loose Diamond System?
Forty years ago Ware'* LOOM Diamond System was tntred-uced...
to our knowledge the first of R's kind In Alabama. Over thirty
years of perfecting the Ideal way for a person to intelligently shop tor a
diamond. May wo explain what wo tbkjk to apodal about this system?
1.What'*soepeclal?ltsac^dieattoraHWareJewelef«totakethetlme
lo explain diamond*, answer quostlons, show exampt*s...ln short. It's
a system of taking a person who has never before needed lo know
anything about diamond*, and giving them a working knowledge.
2. What's so special about Ware's Loose Diamond System? It's being a
member of The American Gem Society, having tH the equipment
needed lo property grade diamond*...*Howrng you to use our price
charts lo check price.
3. What's so special? It's having a selection of mounting* from *H the
nationally known companies...Orange Blossom,; Jabot Diana, Art
Carved, Columbia...200 style* from which to select for your Were*
Loose Diamond.
4. If* special not only to h*ve tray after tray of mounting* but having full
time trained diamond setter* with a total of over SO years experience...
to make your ring Juat like you want It.
5. Having a certificate with every diamond-showing the weight, color,
and perfection grade value...a chart oiroech atone aa It appear* In the
"Diamondscope". (This chart Is the lines! protection for your diamond
In the future for It I* a positive way to Mamiff If In the future).
you should buy
also beUeveH you
use diamond price
would never try to
or wrKneaw •
beet value you can
6. What's so epeclal about Ware's prices?
where you can gel the best value lor your
understand grades ol diamonds and ini
charts you can truly tell where your best vi
confuse you with claims of being a '
Grado for grade, we believe we can
flnd...for wo do not buy our diamond* from middlemen... whether they
csH themeetvee discounters or wholesaled * » buy direct from over-
Mas cutters.
7. What's M special about Ware'a Hnanclng?JfcsesuM we are etrong In
the diamond market... we finance our own dlaassnds. No bank or commercial
credit on Ware'e diamonds.. .even though we can offer up to 1S
months to pay. Let ua explain our plan Including M days Interest tree.
S. What's M special about Ware'e LOOM Diamond System? Something
must be.last year Ware'e eofd diamond rtnysJe customer* from over
129 cities In 27 states. There sure must be something epecurl...do you
think they would purchase from Were* H they could have done belter
elsewhere?
This Is your invitation to talk to one ol Wave's trained diamond
expert*...Downtown Village Mall Store or Perkway, Opeirka. ft may be
the best time Investment you wW ever make.
Downtown Auburn Village erell Pkwy. Opelika
i^iaaejlSi
g ^ ' f ^ R ? * " ' *??v »awr Tff^^f^fW^^P-. "••''^"•^'•""•'ij,'*^
t~r*<-
--=:-
page 4 £br fluburn Jlauwman Thursday, June 25, 1987
fW; Colegrove, Editor
smm
Volume 93
ai
Number 28
Bring them home
There are several of them that we
know about. There could be more.
Some of them have been there for
days, some have been there for
years. We need to go get them and
bring them home.
Last week, a new name was added
to the list of the hostages who seem
to be forgotten. Charles Glass, a
journalist like some of the past and
present hostages in Lebanon, was
taken captive. What will be done to
get him back?
Sadly, it seems nothing will be
4one to get any of the many American
hostages back.
Is it because they weren't captured
in a huge number like the Iranian
hostages from the Carter administration?
Is it harder to have "Day
713" for one hostage and "Day 135"
for another?
Counting the days may not have
played a major role in the return of
the Iranian hostages, but it showed
that the whote' country was concerned
about where they were and
when they were coming home.
Do you know where the hostages
are? Does the government?
What do the hostages think of
America now?
Will several Americans wear yellow
ribbons when Terry Anderson
comes home?
When is the last time you heard a
hostage update on the evening
news?
However, The Hunts ville Times
on June 16, 1987, said, "Defense
Secretary Casper Weinberger said
U.S. vessels in the Persian Gulf protecting
Kuwaiti tankers will be
allowed to use force 'in the face of
attack or hostile intent indicating
imminent attack.'"
Sounds like the government is trying
to show that America can't be
pushed around.
The P l a i n s m a n thinks the
government should show the kidnappers
of the American hostages
the same thing.
First come, first served
First come, first served is the way
we have to park in the real world. It
seems realistic this is the way all
underclassmen should have to park.
A proposal is being considered by
the administration that would eliminate
separate parking zones for
underclassmen.
With the exception of color, the
present zones offer no real deal to
the seniors. Red (seniors and graduate
students) and blue (sophomores
and juniors) zones are approximately
the same distance from
classrooms.
In addition to eliminating confusion
and the extra cost of printing so
many different tags, freshman girls
living on campus will no longer
have to walk so far in the dark to get
to the safety of their dorms.
Giving freshmen, sophomores
and juniors the same parking privilege
is fair. But The Plainsman
thinks seniors should receive some
benefit for their four, sometimes
five, years of study.
Despite this small problem, we
think the proposal is good, and we
hope the administration approves it
because it shows organization and
an attempt to save money where
possible.
Returning seniors may be angered
at the loss of the coveted C zone
sticker, but we think students will
realize this will benefit us all.
Happy hunting!
Ringing again
After two years of silence, the
bells, or at least some of the bells, toll
again.
For those of you who thought that
ringing noise in Haley Center was
your head, here's news for you — it is
the heralded return of the school
bells.
Because of a wiring malfunction,
the bells that ring on the hour and at
10 minutes past the hour were not
functioning for two years. Finally,
after several teacher complaints,
something was done to get them
ringing again.
It's about time.
However, the bells do not ring in
all quadrants of Haley Center. Nor
do they ring on the hour and at 10
after the hour. Sometimes they ring
at four minutes after, sometimes
seven.
So, which is better — no bells, or
bells that ring at the wrong times?
We think the bells should work
c o r r e c t l y , or be turned off
completely.
And furthermore, do students
actually welcome the return of the
bells? If the bells are not going to
ring on time, they could cause a distraction
to the students and
professors.
The Plainsman thinks the bells
are great — only if they will work
correctly without spending lots of
money to repair them.
The Auburn Plainsman is the student
newspaper of Auburn University. The
Plainsman is produced entirely by students
and funded entirely by advertising revenue
and subscriptions. Office space is in the
basement of the west side of Foy Union and is
donated by the University. The phone
number is 826-4130.
The Plainsman is published nine times a
quarter, including summer quarter. The
summer editor of The Plainsman and the business
manager are chosen by the Communications
Board. The faculty advisor is journalism
professor Ed Williams. The editor and
business manager choose their respective
staffs. All students interested in working for
The Plainsman are welcome to apply, and
experience is not necessary. Staff meetings
are held at 5 p.m. each Thursday.
Editorials
Unsigned editorials represent the views ot
the editorial board of The Plainsman, which
consists of the editor, managing editor, all
department editors and assistant editors.
Personal columns represent the views of the
individual author.
Errors of consequence will be corrected the
following week, along with an explanation of
how the error occurred.
Letters
The Plainsman invites opinions to be
expressed in letters to the editor. As many
letters as possible will be printed. /Letters to
the editor must be typed, double-spaced and
turned into The Plainsman before 5 p.m.
Monday. Those of more than 300 words are
subject to cutting without notice, and the editor
reserves the right to make any copy conform
to the rules of standard written English.
All letters must be presented with a valid
Auburn University ID card. Unsigned letters
will be accepted for publication only under,
special circumstances.
Advertising
Campus Calendar is a service of The
Plainsman for all University-chartered student
organizations to announce their activities.
Announcements must be submitted on
standard forms available at The Plainsman
office during regular business hours. Deadline
is 5 p.m. Monday.
Classified ads cost 25 cents per word for
non-students and 20 cents per word for students.
There is a 14 word minimum. Forms
are available in The Plainsman office and the
deadline is 11 a.m. Tuesday.
The local advertising rate is $4.25 per
column inch with the deadline at 5 p.m.
Friday.
The Auburn Plainsman
Managing Editor-Stephanie Warnecke; News Editor-David Sharp; Sports Editor-Alan demons;
Entertainment Editor-Tracy McCartney; Features & Copy Editor-Janet Jimmerson; Photography
Editor- Russ Austin; Art Editor-Lee Lipscomb; Technical Editor- Sumarie Bass; Assistant
News Editor-Laura C. Barnwell; Assistant Sports Editor- Selena Roberts; Assistant
Entertainment Editor-Laure Bell; Assistant Copy Editor- Tammy Trout; Assistant Photography
Editor- David Montague.
Advertising Coordinator- Monique Earl; Layout Coordinator- Jenny Chuang; Layout
Specialists-Charlotte Turner, Christine Paine, Tracy Edge, & Brad Cross. PMT Specialist- Carla
Fricks; Advertising Respresentatives- Monique Earl & Hank Freeman. Circulation Route-Mike
Arasin; Typesetters- Kathleen Morgan, Jennifer Carpenter, & Jennifer Dawn Woolbright
mmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmammmmm
i Speak out or hold your peace
• _ • . . . •
Before you throw this newspaper in
the garbage, wrap your fish in it or rip
it into little pieces, please take a few
minutes to read the following few
inches of copy.
It is your, yes, your turn to speak out.
Believe it or not, I want to know what
you, the average Auburn student, have
to say about important and not so
important issues.
Please find a writing utensil and
write your responses in the enormous
blanks provided. Then, find a pair of
scissors, cut along the convenient dotted
lines, and send or bring it to me at
The Plainsman office.
•What section of The Plainsman
do you read first?
a. front page
b. editorial pages
c. sports pages
d. entertainment pages
e. I don't read this trash
f. other
•In one word, what is your opinion
of The Plainsman?
•What can we do to improve The
Plainsman?
•In one word, what is your opinion
of our campus radio station,
WEGL?
•What do you think about asking
the athletic department to build a
new Haley Center?
Patti
COLEGROVE
•What do you think of Auburn's
present parking system and the
proposed system?
•What do you think about the city
of Auburn and its relationship
with the University?
•Without looking them up, if you
know who the following people
are, put a check by their name:
Grant Davis
Harold Melton
Pat Barnes
Patti Colegrove
Aubie
Warren Brandt
Tommy Smeltzer
David Bivin
Chris Roush
Shelly Murphy
Robert McGinty
Stephanie Warnecke
•In one word, what is yOur opin- J
ion of the administration?
•Do you want Auburn to be on I
the quarter system or the semester I
system? Why?
-r- *Do$Ou listen to WEGL's "On the I
* h - s g | w ?
•How many tickets have you
received from University Police?
•Should Gary Hart have resigned?
•Should girls ask boys out on
dates?
•Do you think drinking is a
serious problem on campus?
•What is the most serious problem
facing students?
a. AIDS
b. alcohol
c. drugs
d. money
e. dateless nights
•What do you do for entertainment?
Patti Colegrove is editor of. The
Plainsman.
Wayne Gretzky- The man, the legend
There was a time in my life when I hit
an all-time low. I was possessed by such
hedonistic drives that devour men's
souls and cripple their minds. I was buying
a one-way ticket to hell. I am glad to
say that my past is behind me now. I
have found inner-fulfillment that was
unimaginable to me ever before. I am
now a born-again Gretzkyan.
Before I opened my eyes to The Great
One, I had never experienced the tranquility
that one achieves only when they
pursue a pipe dream. Before Wayne
Gretzky, I thought that in order to survive
one must think. In order to exist,
one must engage in semi-intellectual
discourse. But now that I know Wayne
plays hockey so the rest of us don't have
to, I now can accept the relief of putting
blind faith in another man.
I no longer have to struggle in making
choices. I now have my conscience on
automatic pilot. It's sort of like going
through life step by step with a Time-
Life "How to..." book. I used to find it
difficult to defend my rationale to anybody,
but now all I have to say is so
sayeth Gretzky and I don't have to
worry about getting into a discussion
where I might have to think. You see, if
God says something, who's to say he's
wrong?
Now that I've shown you the inner fulfillment
of jetisoning free will, let me
show you the undeniable signs of Gretz-ky's
greatness.
To start, we need go no further than
his sport — ice hockey. Skating is an
integral part of Gretzky's game. And,
what is ice anyway? Frozen water.
Gretzky is one of the greatest at walking
on water that I have ever seen. Some
may be skeptical but I'd like to see Jesus
handle a stick half as well as The Great
One. You may call it coincidence, I call it
providence.
Gretzky is also the only man in hockey
to wear the number 99. The dreaded
number of the beast is 666. Totem worship
is represented by the number 66.
Clearly, Gretzky is the opposite of any
such demon and his jersey clearly elicits
that. Providence.
Furthermore, you can see signs of
Gretsky in nature. The dogwood flower
could bloom at just about any time, but
God has it bloom right around Stanley
Cup time. You may not find this to be
important until you take a close look at
the petals of the dogwood flower and
recognize that it looks exactly like the
Edmonton Oilers (Gretzky's team)
insignia. Providence.
Even the press is starting to recognize
His glory. The January 9,1984 edition of
Time magazine notes that, "it is now a
documented fact that next to Gretzky is
next to godliness." USA Today has
called Him God as well (Dec. 27, 1983).
Other places have written about His
resurrection into the Stanley Cup finals
and how He has exorcised demons from
past seasons. How can anybody deny
the spiritual foundation when there is
such a consensus? Providence.
Finally, Martin Marty, a columnist for
Christian Century magazine writes in
the Feb. 3,1982 edition (p.159) that only
by using "Gretzkyite vision" can we survive
the threat of getting suckered by
new fads. It's ironic that the only new
fad that is mentioned in the column is
the "New Christian Right." Providence.
Providence. Providence.
If you still aren't convinced that
Gretzky is our savior, I can do no more
but tell you that you are bound for a
place with unseasonably warm winters
unless you open your heart (and lobo-tomize
your brain) and accept the Great
One. Praise Gre*tzky! Amen.
Randy Glazer is columnist of The
Plainsman.
*&& SEOUL OLYMPICS
NEW EVENTS: &m 50 METER
BRICK
TOSS
SWICHRMUZEP W g &
CIUBBIN6 Pl"&" 21
uurrspfwrutf-aou.
WATER CANNON TEAR GAS
P0C0 V/0LC5V
Writer disagrees with editorial
While you and I were away enjoying a
brief respite, a few repairs reduced our
beloved Haley Center to Haley Hell.
Yes, it was with a rude awakening
that I returned Thursday morning to
find a nerve shattering barrage of bells.
It is an unnecessary assault on the auditory
system and a distraction for classes
lasting longer than an hour.
There are also some professors who
like to make a few additional comments
when the hour has ended. These are
usually valuable points, and one might
like to hear them. Before the bells were
repaired, these same professors would
warn students of the time and some
would offer the student the choice of
staying or leaving. The majority stayed
in my classes.
If a professor exceeds his allotted time,
Janet
JIMMERSON
it is often for the benefit of the student,
and if not, he or she is free to exit. It
seems to me that the silence of
clocks installed in each classroom is
preferable to these periodic disturbances.
Those professors that inconsiderately
keep their classes overtime will
probably ignore the bells just as they did
the rolling eyes and flashing watches of
their students before the return of the
bells.
I can think of no other valid reason for
the obnoxious things.
We are adults, are we not? We have
watches and we can tell time. We are not
in high school and should not need these
reminders. Part of the discipline
involved in the college experience is
responsibility — taking care of yourself.
My fellow staffers at The Plainsman
have expressed an opposing opinion in
this week's issue, however, I feel there
are many other "Haley Hermits" out
there who are just as disturbed, disgruntled
and disgusted with this unwelcome
arrival to our hallowed halls •
For whom doth these bells toll? Not
for me!
Janet Jimmerson is copy/feature editor
of The Plainsman.
Thursday, June 25, 1287 Z\\t Auburn $Unuf man page 5
Plainsmail
Citizen vs. Criminal
Editor: The Plainsman
A jury in New York City declared that
Bernhard Goetz acted reasonably in the
subway shooting of four black- youths
two years ago. Although most New
Yorkers agreed with the decision, some
organizations have alleged that racial
considerations affected the jury's
decision.
Dr. Benjamin Hooks of the NAACP
has charged that the verdict would have
been different had-their skin colors-been
reversed. Was the Goetz aquittal an
endorsement of racial vigilantism or
was it an indictment of the New York
City justice system? '
Was the Goetz shooting an act of
racial violence? The facts do not indicate
so. Goetz, a previous mugging victim,
legitimately believed he was endangered
by the four young men. The fact
that more than 38 felonies a day occur on
the subway could only add to his perception
of danger. Feeling that he had no
other way out, Goetz lashed out at his
would-be assailants.
Contrary to what Dr. Hooks alleges,
the same verdict is returned when the
race of the litigants is reversed. In 1980,
Austin Weeks (a black subway passenger)
shot and killed a white hoodlum
and was subsequently aquitted. But it
seems that returning not-guilty verdicts
in self-defense cases is the only area of
consistency in the New York City justice
system.
In New York City, felons have a one-in-
10 chance of being caught and a one-in-
50 chance of doing time. While Mayor
Koch likes to point out unsafety in other
cities, he is not excused from allowing
unsafety in his own.
When the government can no longer
protect the citizen, the government has
—broken its social contract With the citizen.
The Goetz and Week* trials show
that the system is failing to protect the
individual and the individual must now
protect himself.
What oganizations like the NAACP
refuse to admit is that the conflict in the
Goetz trial was not black vs. white, but
citizen vs. criminal.
To make a racial incident out of an
attempted mugging is foolish and serves
no constructive purpose. The real issue
is not racism, but how New York City
will improve the safety of its subway
system and its streets.
M. Andrew Mantler
03 EC
HE ASKEP MS FDR W 0ORRBCT7WE..A(0(XPr MflgMk?
Seathelts=-whose choice?-
It is great to live in a country whose
government is "of the people, for the
people and by the people," especially
when that government shows real concern
for its people.
The government shows concern for
the public in many ways. One way is
warnings. The medical profession, the
general public and anyone who has a
brain cell left agrees that smoking
tobacco products is hazardous to your
health. There is a law that requires
tobacco products and their ads to warn
consumers of the possible dangers
involved in using these products.
Another way the government guards
us against harm, be it accidental or self-inflicted,'
is to pass laws to protect us.
Some states make people who attempt
suicide wards of the state and commit
them to mental hospitals. All states
have made it illegal to drive under the
influence of alcohol or drugs. It is also
illegal to use, possess, buy or sell certain
drugs that the government has concluded
are harmful to us.
The government passes such laws for
our benefit, not theirs. How considerate
of them.
These protective laws are needed, but
who draws the line between protection
and infringement?
Walking on the streets of downtown
Atlanta at 3 a.m. on a weekend night
certainly has potential for hazard.
Why are we allowed to consume alcohol?
Alcohol is a drug that is harmful to
your health, yet anyone over 21 may ,
drink until he or she passes out.
Why doesn't our caring government
make laws to protect us from harming
ourselves with alcohol? Why don't they
make laws to keep us off the dangerous
streets of big cities? Could it be that our
government thinks we are big girls and
boys with enough sense to know the consequences
of our actions? I don't think
so.
The people in charge of making the
laws feared for the safety of the motorcycle
rider. "Make them wear helmets,"
. fthey said.. And it was.
~1_ They feared for the safety of the conv
mon motorist; "Make them wear seat
belts," they said. And it was.
They feared for the safety of the promiscuous
people; "Make them wear condoms,"
they said. And it was.
Wait a minute, those last two aren't
laws here in Alabama. They aren't yet.
The seat belt law may be soon, and the
way this AIDS thing is going, who
knows, they may make condom usage
during sex a law.
Making cyclist wear helmets is fine.
There is not one situation where upon
having an accident, the motorcyclist
would benefit from not having a helmet
on his or her head.
What about the safety of a motorist?
They have already warned us of the
benefits of driving with a seat belt on.
Those dummy commercials are great.
Those people who never really thought
that driving without their seat belt on
was dangerous are given notice, it's
kind of like the surgeon general's warning
on cigarette packages; a warning as
to the possible hazards to your health.
Since we are big boys and girls, don't
you think we should be able to decide for
ourselves whether to drive with our seat
belts on?
Sure, driving with a seat belt on has
saved many lives, but driving without a
seat belt has saved a few lives also. I
don't think anyone believes that the
number of saved lives from not wearing
a seat belt comes anywhere close to the
number of lives that have been saved by
wearing them, but shouldn't that choice
be up to you?
I've known two people who were
thrown from their car when struck head-on
by another car. Experts say they both
would have died had they been wearing
their seat belts. One of them has a few
old scars on his head, the driver has
scars also, mental scars left from the
death of the driver of the other car, who
was wearing his seat belt.
I think seat belts are a great safety
device, and I'm thankful for the awareness
commercials, but in this free country
of ours some choices need to be left up
to the people.
Jim Hutchinson is a staff writer o/The
Plainsman.
|f
PLAINSMAN DEADLINES
CAMPUS CALENDAR MON 5 p.m.
CLASSIFIED ADS TUES 11 a.m.
DISPLAY ADS FRI 5 p.m.
ETTERS TO EDITOR MON 5 p.m.
LETTERS TO SPORTS EDITOR TUES
Campbell
Editor, The Plainsman:
Caine Campbell, acting dean of the
College of Liberal Arts, deserves an
explanantion from the head of the selection
committee for the dean .of the
college.
Although approved by the vote of the
committee 10-8 and overwhelmingly
approved by the department heads, the
chairman of the committee rejected the
selection of Campbell as permanent
dean.
Whose opinion should determine the,
final decision? Department heads will
actually work with the dean. They^will
vote according to how they thing th*
candidate will help their respective
departments. Members of the search
committee will vote dti whether tfcteB§i*£
didate will help the college overall;
Both groups voted in faVor of C
bell. Yet the voice of the ch
though not a member of the college, was '
heard above the voices of many.
Apparently, Campbell's wishes- to
enlarge graduate*/ programs in libera 1
arts^decrease the student-teacher ratio
and improve trSfndfiSrs program in
order to attract moie,'-"National. Merit
Scholars and superior .students aren't
acceptable to the chairman. I
s K < ' '"••••• •• *---•; • '
T-Campbell and thef radents deserve an
Sanation". .Campbell would have beeh
xcellent dean.,. '?-? —'
A. S. Hen<Jon
02 CHE
Auburn 11-face up t# Ihe music
Editor, The Plainsman:
The article on the front page of last
quarter's Plainsman concerning the
Auburn Eleven caused me to notice a bit
of hypocrisy in the actions of these 11
people.
When these 11 were initially confronted
by the University Police and
asked to move their protest to the Coliseum,
they refused. Their actions did not
go unnoticed by the media, and they
appeared in the newspaper and television
expressing their views.
When one of the 11 was asked if they
would move their protest, he said they
would "remain where they were." and
not allow University regulations to
stand in the way of their protest.
W- • .<'.'•'... afc
attempting to sue the.University to have
the rules changed so they will not have
to answer for their actions.
They had their chan)cje,to obey thclaw
They must not believe so strongly in a*»d now it's too late to change their
their cause because they are no longer .minds. They should take responsibility
willing to stand up for it if it means it^fff t h e i r actions and stand up for what
might entail some sort of punishment. *hey "believe" in. ,:..
They do not want to be held accountable i<*; If they truly believed in the cause $h<|y
for their actions and have decided that ^hnrbke the law for,' then they would rjaye
they do not want to face the University ?the,guts to accep|^he!eqnsequence§''rbr
Disciplinary Committee. their actions anc
In an attempt to get away with break- flanfe excuse afte
ing the law, they decided the Univetsity1,|l'%in8 the price,
regulations concerning "free speech" y
were unconstitutional. They ar^M
j.i up with some
e fact, to keep ffbtn
Shan Mcgee
03MBI
:
>age6
TP— halt's Seafood—* ""!
Thursday, June 25, 1987.
Now Leasing for
Summer and Fall
Check on Special Summer Kates
j All types of seafood... Snapper Oysters Flounder |
Crab Gumbo Lobster Mullet
Seafood Buffet-All You Can Eat
Wednesday-Saturday $10.95
Hours: Tuesday-Friday 3-10 p.m.
Saturday 1-10 p.m.
Closed on Sun. & Mon.
We sett oysters by the bushel & Vi bushel
1703 Columbus Parkway
I
i
i
i
i
i
i
j
749-0070 |
Enjoy Florida's Gulf Coast
#
> Apartment Hunting?
r
Let Us Drop A Few Names
They're really the only names
you'll need when looking for
and apartment in Auburn
Office open Saturdays 10:00-2:00
Evans Realty, Inc.
821-7098
AUBURN UNIVERSITY
m :F*
IMMER
"Reg: S65 Single/S69 Double/S6 Extra Person Kr\l tj r*vJI\
STUDENTS • FACULTY • EMPLOYEES
Take advantage of this "AUBURN UNIVERSITY SPECIAL" rate
to find your spot in the sun at Florida's beautiful Perdido Key
Just show us an AUBURN UNIVERSITY I.D. card and enjoy...
• Great Beaches and Spectacular Sunsets
• Spacious Rooms • Outdoor Pool/Indoor Whirlpool
• Patio/Grills/Playground • Free Continental Breakfast Daily
Make \bur Reservations Now...
CALL COLLECT-(904) 492-2755
Jusr a 4 hour drive from Central Alabama
Take US 29/US. S9/US. 98 or (-10 to Pensacola FL
, „ Then South On S.R. 292 (Gulf Beach Highwayl I
13585 Perdido Key Dr. toPerdidoKey
Pensacola, FL 32507
BASED ON SfMCE AVAILABILITY RECOMMEND ADVANCE RESERVATIONS. NOT VALID COMBINED
WITH OTHER PROMOTIONS.
SUNRAYS
OF
AUBURN
Summer Special !!
"Come everyday Monday-Friday
for only
$35.00 a Month
Summer Hours
11:00-1:00
3:30 - 8:00
Monday-Friday
Call for Appointment
821-5556
CLASSIFI Classified advertisements are 20c per word i25c for
non-students), with a minimum charge of 14 words Ads
must be placed in person in our office in the Foy Union
basement Deadline is Tuesday at 11 am For further
information caM 826-4130
f RENT |
Two-bedroom, 1 bath apartment.
$360/month. Close to
campus. Call 887-8374.
One luxury condo left! Court
Square. Two-bedrooms, two
baths, completely furnished.
Washer and dryer, pool. $160
per person with four person
occupancy. Free water. SUN
Properties, 826-1200.
Apartment for rent. Assume
lease. One bedroom at Patio II,
8-C. Call manager at 821-2512.
Thanks.
Great deal! Rent one person
apt., Patio II. Pool, Jacuzzi, ten-nis.
$200/mo. Call Donie,
887-8589.
Court Square condo. Clean,
mature Christians. 4 guys or 4
girls. $160/mo. Share utilities.
W/D, pool. Tim, 821-4357.
1 to 4 residents needed to
begin leases for fall, with all the
comforts. Pool, W/D, dishwasher,
2 baths—big rooms.
$165/mo./person. All inquiries
are welcome. Call today, 749-
8224, ask for Carol Leeth.
The Folmar Realty Co. has
Auburn's best selection of one,
two and three-bedrom cottages,
duplexes and houses.
Call 887-3425.
Hearthwood Apartments,
close to campus, W/D, dishwasher,
cable, microwave,
fireplace, 3-BR, 2 ba. from
$425-575 per month. Call Alabama
Land Locators, 821-
8210.
Leasing for fall: Spacious two
bedroom apartment in quiet
neighborhood. No pets. Centra)
air and heat. Kitchen fur-n
i s h e d . $ 3 0 0 / m o n t h.
887-3824.
For rent. Pool front Court
Square condo near A&P, walking
distance to campus. 2-
bedrooms, furnished for 4 stu-dents
W/D, microwave.
Occupy Sept. $165. Call 826-
1212, ask for B. Moore properties
or call collect 881 -2208.
Luxury duplex available fall—
Quick access to campus to vet
school. Two people can have
their own private bedroom for
$175/each. Two large bedrooms,
one and half baths, fully
carpeted, all electric. Kitchen
w/refrig., stove, dishwasher,
garbage disposal, yard maintenance
furnished by owner.
Unfurnished. Single family or
two students. $350 per mo.,
three students $135 each, or
four students $110 each. Call
821-8074 after 5 p.m. or leave
message.
RENT J FOR SALE MISC. MISC. JOBS
Fall Leases: Large one bedroom
apartment. 4 blocks from
campus in quiet neighborhood.
No pets. A/C. $215-225/
month. 887-3824.
For rent, available immediately,
several houses and
apartments. Others beginning
Fall. Pets allowed. 887-3605.
Close to everything.
Yet away from it ail
i lodge
APARTMENTS V
Live in a quiet country setting
at Ski Lodge Apartments.
They are the perfect blend of
close-to-everything and
away from it all. Our 1-2-3
bedroom apartments have
patios and/or balconies, fully
equipped kitchen, lighted
tennis courts, pool, water,
cable TV, sewage & pest control
furnished. Visit our newly
renovated apartments. Short
term leases available. Sorry,
no pets.
3051 Birmingham Hwy. Opelika
745-5739
For rent: Poolside Court
Square condo near A&P, walking
distance to campus. 2-
bedroom furnished for 4 students.
W/D, microwave.
Occupy Sept. $175. Call 826-
1212, ask for B. Moore properties
or call collect 881 -2208.
Townhouse, 3-bedroom, 2Vz
bath, furnished, washer/dryer,
dogs allowed. Tenants needed
starting fall quarter. Price
negotiable. 821-7734.
New duplexes, one mile from
camus. Two large bedrooms,
furnished kitchen, central heat
/ a i r . SUN P r o p e r t i e s.
826-1200.
Wittel Dormitory offers traditional
housing for Auburn University
women. Now leasing at
205 South Gay Street (one
block east of the library). Or call
821 -7024 for information.
Sofa: No room. Must sell. Nice
beige sofa. ASAP. $125. Call
826-1172.
1983 Spirit mobile home, 2-BR,
1% ba., central air, skirted,
daughter graduating, must sell.
Lot 501, Gentilly. Call
205-297-2873.
Commodore 64, disk drive,
modem, disks, books, $250.
Commodore Plus 4 with thermal
printer, $150 neg. 821-
5475 after 3 p.m.
1980 Yamaha 400XS, good
condition. $600 .or best offer.
Brent, 821 -6905.
1983 Pontiac 1000; 49,700
miles, sunroof, alloy wheels, 4
speed, stereo, new tires, excellent
condition, 40 mpg, $2,800.
826-3273 or 826-2374.
For sale: Car equilizer 50 watt
booster, Home speakers
Panasonic thrusters, $40 a
piece. Call 826-0941.
For sale: Wilson staff Irons 3-
pw, never been hit. Price negotiable.
Cali 826-3712.
Cockatiels for sale, very tame,
hand fed. Greys, lutinos, pearls.
$50.00-75.00. 826-6477 after 6
p.m.
Trimline Wal-Pak Fitness Center.
Never assembled, never
used. Folds away when not in
use. Great for limited space.
$175 or best offer. 821-6125.
Beautiful spacious condo for
sale; Available fall, 1987. East-brook,
#156. Corner of E.
Thach and S. Ross. Appointment
only. 821-9520.
Georgia-A labama
Mensa
cordially invites you
to join us for
drinks, dinner, &
conversation
Friday, June 26th
6:00 p.m.
Darnell's
122-B Magnolia Ave.
For further information
please call
Nancy Hunt
826-0172
Typing-Editing
College English
Teacher 8/ Writers
Typing $2.50 ds-pg
EHA Courses: $4.00 ds-pg
All work includes spelling, punctuation,
grammatical & word choice
corrections; IBM-compatible
Computer; Letter-Quality Printer
Proficiency Exam
Tutoring
Editing, Proofreading,
Writing Assistance $20/hr.
887-6333
(anytime)
WordShop
STEREOS
Learn To Fly!!! Summer quarter.
Low rates and flexible
hours. 821-9417 CFI. 887-
2616.
Typing: Professional quality,
reasonable rates. Includes
spelling corrections. Call 821-
1109. Ask for Jean.
Get your Pilot's License this
summer with Americair in Tus-kegeel
Low rates, quality
instruction, friendly atmosphere,
personal attention; stop
in soon, or call 727-PROP
today!
Accurate Typing! $2.00 per
page. Resumes and rush
orders welcome! 821 -7483.
Complete component stereo:
Ultrx direct-drive quartz turntable
with strobe, Marantz gold
series SR-220 receiver, Sharp
cassette deck with Dolby &
Metal Realistic separate channel
5-band equalizer. Audio-
Acoustic speakers, cabinet-
$275 or best offer. 821-6125.
FOR SALE
MISC.
Ibanez Artist electric guitar
with Les Paul case. Excellent
condition. 887-3502, evenings,
weekends.
IBM Personal Typewriter:
Great IBM quality; not your
usual portable. Will stand up to
business use. Has carrying
case. New price was $790; Will
sell for $500. Kim, 826-4307.
The Write Place for professional
typing, word processing,
writing, resumes, dissertation
support and editing. 821 -7181.
Typing service. Experienced
secretary will do yourtyping for
you. Fast, efficient service,
reasonable rates. Electronic
spell check. Call 826-8320.
Typing Service: Call 745-4540
between 7 am. and 9 p.m.
Professional
Resumes
& Cover Letters
Complete Services
Preparing, formating, typing
IBM-Compatible Computer
Letter-Quality Printer
12-mo. Free Storage
for Revisions
$30.00-$70.00
Multiple mailings
(priced separately)
887-6333
(anytime)
WordShop
Guitar
Shoppe
* New & used fretted
instruments
* Amps, P.A.'s accessories
* Professional sound
equipment sales & rental
* Discount prices
* Layaway - repair
* Guitar & bass lessons
Th* Guitar
Shopp#
"For AH your Pickln' Needs"
Across from the Auburn Depot
(205) 821 -6818 113 Mitcham Ave.
M-F 10-6 Sat 10-4
Cocktail waitresses needed,
must be 21 and over. Apply in
person. Ask for Kim, 4-9 p.m.
Rusty's Too, Market Square,
across from Village Mall.
Counselors needed, Weekend
Camp. A rewarding experience
awaits you. We need
counselors for our Lee Coutny
Children's Camp, July 24-26.
This camp, which is at Camp
ASCCA, serves children from
economically deprived families
in our area. The rewards of
working with these children
during this camping experience
are great! Applications
may be picked up from the
Presbyterian Student Center
office, 123 E. Thach Avenue or
the First Presbyterian Church
office, 143 E. Thach Ave. Apply
immediately.
Accountant/Secretary for
local company. Background in
accounting and typing skills
both essential. Three years of
experience in double-entry
bookkeeping required. Call
(205) 821 -9424.
Assistant Office Manager:
Enthusiastic, responsible individual
wanted full-time. Opportunity
to advance. Must type 60
wpm accurately and have previous
office experience and
training. Send resume and
salary history to Manager, P.O.
Box 2516, Auburn. 3
LDST&
FOUND
Found Magnolia and Donahue
area: Morris-colored long
haired cat. Front paws are
declawed. Call 821 -0254.
Have you found a cat who
chews his tail? Ferdinand is
black with white chin, feet, and
stomach. Reward. 826-7307.
Missing: Black cat, female,
white spot under chin, from
Pinehaven Apts. May 8th.
Reward. 887-6343 or 887-
3616.
PERSONALS
Adam, I'll miss you desperately
these next 10 weeks. Keep me
in your thoughts, because
before long I'll be back in your
arms again. You're my love and
my life...for now and forever.
Visa/Mastercard! Get your
card today. Call 1-619-565-
1522, ext. C1004 AL 24-hour
For your application.
Get ready to "Split The Dark"
this weekend at a club near
you!
T.J. and Chris, whether you
like it, or whether you don't like
it, take a good look at it,
because it's the best you are
ever gonna see. See ya'll in
Atlanta. Whoooo! Ric Flair.
Canoeing is fun. Come canoeing
with Sandy Beach Canoes.
We provide upstream transportation
on our Tallapoosa River
run. Reserve your canoe today.
821-3979.
Congratulations! James Tread-well,
Paul Harris on your Private
Licenses and Jeff Boso-netto
on your Instrument
Rating from Americair!
Thursday, June 25, 1987 Zht 9uburn JHainsman page
mmfmmm':
I- i^ri
V
Weekly
Campus news
N e i l l Ray Gonce, 25,
drowned June 5 about mid-light
near Young's Landing on
Lake Martin.
Gonce, who was last enrolled in
he summer of '86 as a junior in
visual arts, was apparently try-ng
to swim to an offshore island.
HEis body was found June 6 at 9:25
.m. by Jackson Gap and Alex-inder
City rescue squads.
He was the son of Randolph 0.
once of Gonce Road in Steven-ion,
Ala.
fay H. Foster, 04 EE, was killed
n a traffic accident June 6 about
;hree miles outside his hometown
)f Monroe, Ga., according to the
jeorgia State Patrol.
The accident occurred at
ipproximately 7:15 a.m. at the
ntersection of Pannell Road and
Pleasant Valley Road south of
Monroe.
The 23-year-old was working
spring quarter with Georgia
Power Company as part of the
Jniversity's co-op program.
Foster was the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim C. Foster of Route 5, Box
188, Monroe, Ga.
Local news
Auburn resident Charles L.
[sbell, one of the oldest
lewspaper columnists in the
Jnited States at 98 years old,
lied Tuesday only hours after
lompleting his final column.
Isbell's final column was pub-ished
Tuesday in the The
\uburn Bulletin on the same day
is the story of his death.
The Marshall County native
etired from the University in
959 after serving as head of the
lepartment of horticulture. He is
redited with developing several
'arieties of fruits and vegetables
yhile at Auburn.
In 1956, Isbell was named Man
f the Year by Progressive
'armer. "He was a sparkling
nan in every way," said the Bul-etin'B
publisher Paul Davis. "He
tad promised to continue his
olumn until his 100th birthday.
Ve were all for it."
shell's funeral was yesterday at
Memorial Park Cemetery in
)pelika.
Alabama news
Former Attorney General
Charlie Graddick is facing
allegations that he used electronic
surveillance during the
past governor's race.
The accusations involve a particular
incident in which a
woman allegedly wore a "body
mike" into a Birmingham phone
bank that was believed to be
financed by his Democratic
opponent, Bill Baxley.
"I want to reiterate the fact that
I've done nothing wrong," Graddick
said. However, two of Grad-dick's
campaign workers have
said they may cooperate with the
i n v e s t i g a t i o n if granted
immunity. "~
Lee Hale, an attorney who was
Graddick's Mobile campaign
coordinator, said-he knew of the
surveillance. "If I knew what was
going on...Charlie Graddick
knew also," he said.
International news —
President -Ronald Reagan
c h a l l e n g e d - S o v i e t leader
Mikhail Gorbachev to tear
down the Berlin Wall, built 26
years ago to stop East Germans
from fleeing to the West. "If you
seek peace...come here to this
gate...tear down this wall," Reagan
said.
Anti-American protesters
demonstrated before Reagan's
arrival. Recent polls show most
Europeans think Gorbachev is
more of a man for peace than
Reagan.
Gorbachev later mocked Reagan
in the Soviet's news service
Pravda saying that Reagan must
have mistaken the Berlin Wall
for the Weeping Wall of
Jerusalem.
American journalist Charles
Glass was kidnapped June
17 in Beirut, Lebanon, along with
Ali Osseiraan, son of Lebanon's
Defense Minister. Syria said it
would not wait long for the
release of Glass. It is unclear
what action the Syrians will take
to free the men.
South Korean President
Chun Doo-Hwan met Wednesday
with anti-government leaders
who wish to oust him and
change the presidential selection
process.
For the past two weeks there
have been violent clashes
between student demonstrators
and South Korean police.
National news
The House-Senate committee
and Lt. Col. Oliver North's
lawyers have reached an agreement
that could allow North to
testify at the Iran-contra hearings
in early July-. The proposed
pact, if approved by the panel,
will allow him to testify in private,
but possibly not under oath,
before the committee. He would
testify in public later.
Bernhard Goetz was aquitted
by a jury last week of the attempted
murder of four teenagers on a
Manhattan subway train in
December 1984. The verdict,
found after a seven-week trial,
cleared Goetz of 12 of the 13
charges in the indictment
against him, including 10 major
ielonies.
Fred Astaire, famed for such
big-screen numbers-as "Dancing
Lady" and " You're-fche Top," died
Monday of pneumonia at the age
of 88. He had been in Century
City Hospital in Los Angeles for
10 days.
Accident backs up 1-85 SAVE SAVE
By David Sharp
News Editor
Traffic from Interstate 85 was
diverted through Auburn for
approximately three and a half
hours Monday afternoon following
a tanker spill at 2:49 p.m.,
according to an Auburn city
police spokesman.
Jimmie Dawkins Jr., 29, of
Union Springs, was taken to East
Alabama Medical Center and
treated for possible back injuries
after his Chevron tanker, carrying
2,600 gallons of diesel fuel
overturned, the spokesman said.
Dawkins was treated and
released from the emergency
room about 5:30 p.m., said hospital
Public Relations Director
Lucy Pennington.
The accident occured one mile
north of the Highway 29 exit on
1-85, and traffic was stopped for a
10 mile stretch between the
Highway 29 exit and the Airport
Road exit of 1-85, the police spokesman
said.
Dawkins had pulled off the
interstate to help another motorist.
When he tried to pull back
onto the interstate, the tanker
became stuck in mud and overturned,
the spokesman said.
Three loads of sand were used
to contain the diesel fuel leaking
from the tanker into a ditch running
parallel to the interstate, the
spokesman said.
The Aubdrn Fire Department,
along with- the Opelika Fire
Department and the Southwestern
Lee County Volunteer Fire
Department, were on the scene to
spray foam on the tanker and
guard against possible explosion.
Traffic was detoured between
" the Highway 29 exit and the Airport
Road exit, the spokesman ,
said.
Two wreckers were required to
right the tanker, the spokesman
said, and the fuel spill was
burned away by the fire departments
after the tanker was
removed.
"Now open in
Opelika"
745-PIES
Shorts-
Duckhead Pleated
$18.95 ~
Duckhead Unpleated
$15.99
» - » ^ » » » » »
T-shirts
$2.98-3.50
Sunglasses
&
Ray Bans
$3.98 up
STAN'S TRADING POST
(formerly Army Trading Post)
147 N. College 887-8851
10-5 Mon. - Sat 10-1 Thurs.
EXPERT TYPING
426 East Glenn
Auburn, AL 36830
887-3110
MEtfJ SP& c\^v
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• NEWSLETTERS WORD PROCESSING • TRANSCRIPTION
For your clubs and Dissertations
organizations: All Theses
your writing, format- Senior Projects
ting and printing B & P Papers
needs. Term Papers
Technical/Scientific
• PROOFREADING
(Cassettes & Micros)
Correspondence
Legal Briefs
Class Notes /Lectures
Church Services
Books/Manuscripts
• EDITING
(/) ^
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• LASER PRINTER COPIES
All you can eat Mexican Buffet
Mon. - Fri. $4.7510-2
T - Th. $5.75 5-10 p.m
Monday Night Special
Buy 1 Get second one
1/2 price of equal
A or lesser value
820 Opelika Rd.
Lunch 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Mon. - Fri.
12-2 p.m. Sat
Dinner 5 p.m.-10 p.m. Mon. - Thurs.
5 p.m. - 11 p.m. Fri.
826-7259
w 3
^TlS
ATTENTION: SERIOUS- MINDED
STUDENTS WANTING A QUIET
SETTING
The Pine Haven Apartments offer you a
Secure Setting!
featuring:
1 & 2 bedroom, turn. & unfurn. apartments
Most spacious rooms in Auburn
Auburn's largest pool & deck sunning area
Only 1 mile to campus
Efficient "Rheem" heating and cooling
Landscaped grounds with plenty of trees
Parking at rear of apartments
Secure setting at end of N. Ross St. (dead end) and fenced on three sides
Pest control, water, sewer, garbage and T.V. Cable furnished
Laudromat
Dishwasher, disposal, tile bath, full carpet and tele-cable included.
Resident manager (couple) on premises
Loud noise and parties controlled to provide a quiet setting for serious students
No children or pets allowed
Cable T.V.
and Water Furnished!
I
12 month leases only
1 BRTfurn. from $ 2 5 0 (unfurn. $230)
2 BR furn. from $ 3 3 0 (unfurn. $300)
Two units available for summer
See at 650 N. Ross St., Auburn
George Pridmore Agency
Contact: 233 W. Glenn
887-8777-.
or
Resident Manager C-l
821-3828
All Summer Long
2-item 12"
plus 2 cokes
$6.99
2-item 16"
plus 4 cokes
$9.99
2-item 20"
plus 6 cokes
$13.99
"Just Ask"
SAVE SAVE
. -ir-.-: ' '' • • • -'-*•••-- —
ML* page 8 Cbr 9uburn JMainsman Thursday* June 25, 198
!)
i I
i
h
Suicide rate high for first offenders
By Karen Hastings
Staff Writer
A young man hiding in a garage
was arrested for trespassing.
Nine days later while in a local
jail he committed suicide.
Suicide among first offenders
in jail for minor offenses is the
subject of research by Dr. Allen
K. Hess, associate professor of
psychology at Auburn.
Prompted by interests in both
criminology and suicide, Hess,
who earned his doctorate from
the University of Kentucky,
wrote "The Self-imposed Death
Sentence," featured in the June
issue of Psychology Today.
When a person is arrested and
put in jail, he experiences a major
disruption in his life, Hess said.
The person may feel guilty,
ashamed and out of control, he
said.
The person often has no experience
with incarceration, Hess
said, and therefore has no knowledge
of the resources and services
available to him.
If arrested while intoxicated,
the person may experience withdrawal,
disorientation or feelings
of desperation, Hess said.
The problem is multiplied by
efforts to de-institutionalize
inmates as society attempts to
cut drastically the number of prisoners,
Hess said. As a result, the
mentally incompetent are being
sent to prison instead of being
institutionalized, he said.
Just as a parent is responsible
for the care of his child, the jailer
>»»»»»»»»*»»—»»»+»»»»»—»»»»»*»»»*»»**»»***»»—*»**—*—*^f
a
v
i
Introducing...
The Auburn
'Chippendale*
Man
is also mandated to provide certain
standards of care for the prisoner,
Hess said. If an inmate
loses control, the jail system must
assume control, he said.
When mental health care is not
provided, the jail system risks
being sued for violation of the
Eighth and 14th Amendments,
which protect against cruel and
unusual punishment and guarantee
due process and civil
rights, he said.
Hess, editor of Criminal Justice
and Behavior magazine, said he
has been asked to testify in three
such cases, one as near as Mobile.
Hess offers suggestions to prevent
inmate suicides. Primarily,
Hess said, jail systems must realize
that mental health care must
be provided.
This can be done by training
jailers to provide mental health
care or by hiring a mental health
professional as part of the staff,
Hess said.
Sgt. Wilbur Brown of the
Auburn city police said there
have been no suicides or attempted
suicides at the Auburn City
Jail in his seven years with the
department.
In the Auburn City -Jail,
inmates are processed by jailors
who are trained for two to four
weeks, Brown said.
In the process of searching,
finger-printing and locking up an
inmate, the jailer assesses the
inmate for suicidal tendencies,
Brown said.
A psychologist is on staff to
counsel inmates immediately
upon the request of the jailer, he
said.
821-0349
Reservations
WE TREAT
EVERY UAY
A
SPECIAL WAY
Art: I.anna Middleton
PINEWOOD
PROPERTIES
MONDAY
ITALIAN BUFFET
Salad, Pizza, Pasta,
Lasagne, Chicken Cacciatore,
Garlic Bread.
Pay what you think it's worth
$2.75 minimum
5:00 - 8:00 p.m.
now in our
family of
characters.
114 Magnolia Place 826-7766
jjjjjffjj>fffrff«Trfrr*********"****""******ffrr*****f ««-«««««
CROSSLAND DOWNS MOORES MILL PLACE
TUESDAY
TEA ON TUESDAY
Our famous Long Island Tea
$2.50
4:00-9:00
Try our new frozen drinks
Over a dozen varieties
WEDNESDAY
BUD & JAZZ
$2.75 Pitchers 7:00-9:00
Jazz - sometimes?
the Auburn Tradition
^ ^
Historic
ras»J ad .-;>; *;9 :
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• * M W M I M H M M
The Auburn Plainsman. B-lOOFoy Union
M M
vf—e ,>-—'. ^;-7_^^^;.
&te2g i5»r
page!
* Alan
CLEMONS
Rugby not casual sport
for fainthearted wimps; a
blast for others* though
Just what is rugby?
When I got back in town a few days ago, I was
watching late-night television with a friend, the
Unknown Redneck (who will be appearing from
time to time and will be known as UR). Being a
Sunday night though, the quality of after prime-time
broadcasting had fallen into television hell.
We watched NFL Symfunny, where someone
picks the funniest moments in pro football and
combines them into a film, complete with stupid
music. Okay, so that wasn't top. had.
Next was drag racing from somewhere in Louisiana,
the Cajun Nationals or something like that.
There were some people in some cars on some
track with some fans and some pit crew members.
Some excitement.
Yawn, my adrenalin hit rock bottom. Show
some LSU cheerleaders or the Cajun Chef every so
often and the Nielson rating might grab another
half point
After drag racing, the program selection hinged
on two things: 1.} the choice of a crummy movie, or
2.) rugby. Please, don't twist my arm.
Now, before all you rugby people out there start
coming out of the woodwork to berate me and call
me a lazy sot who couldn't score a goal, let me
defend myself and say that you're right.
I couldn't score a goal if the thing was in front of
me and someone pushed me across in a Kroger
grocery cart.
The thing is that I wouldn't want to score a
goal, or make a conversion, or get me brains
beat out 6' me head, mate.
Jus' pass me a pint of ale and I'll watch the game
on the telly. Cheerio.
Yeah, all that stuff and more. Getting back to
the game, UR and I decided to watch the World
Cup Rugby Championship from Sydney, Australia.
The Aussies were battling the Irish team, naturally
decked out in green.
The boys from down under went up 6-0 on two
field goals and then did something we missed.
Then a conversion and the score was 12-0.
Well, it took a few minutes and another goal for
| us to realize and figure out the scoring system.
Four points for a goal (a touchdown for football
fanatics), two for a conversion (the extra-point)
and three for a field goal.
The Aussies beat the green out of the Irish, racking
up a 33-0 score before Ireland scored a couple of
goals and a field goal. Final score: Australia 33,
Ireland 15.
And who says Australia is nothing but koala
bears? That former European penal colony turned
out something good.
Now what we couldn't figure out was why the
person running the ball, after scoring a goal,
would set the ball on the ground in the "end zone."
Is that a rule? Evidently it is because that's what
happened every time a score was made.
Another thing, why do both teams all get in a
big crowd, arms around each other and then bash
heads when the ball is thrown on the ground under
them? I saw one guy come out with his head all
mangled, looking like he got into a fight with a set
of ginsu knives.
We finally picked up the name for the crowd of
head-bangers, a scrum. It looked like some of the
guys had been scrummed with two-by-fours while
they were growing up.
" Whut th' heck are they doing?" UR said. "Why
don't they just kickoff or throw it in the air and
take off with it. I wouldn't want to get my head
beat in."
Talk about violence. People cry and bitch and
moan and say that boxing is stupid because two
people get in a ring and beat each other's brains to
a pulp.
Well, that may be true, but Mohammed Ali has
enough money to keep servants around when he
can't tie his shoelaces anymore.
Rugby isn't for the faint-hearted. Maybe 30
seconds had elapsed in the contest when a guy got
closelined and high-lowed all in the same motion.
One Irish guy hooked him in the neck and then
came across with his body while one of his teammates
wiped out the Aussie at the knees.
The guy laid there for several minutes in pain,
then got up and staggered across the field. Later
on there were several fights, a few more mashed-up
heads and numerous bumps and bruises.
These guys don't wear any pads either. No
helmets or mouthpieces. Toothless grins aren't
uncommon. UR and I had a good time watching
these guys get smashed all day.
"Aye, we've just played a toughie today," says a
participant. "Pardon me while I go find me teeth
and right earlobe."
Right. Another round of ale for the house, mate.
Former
speaks afeoilfelte; retiitffient
TIGER AT HEART
Charles Barkley led Philadelphia to NBA playoffs, only to lose to Milwaukee
By Alan Clemens
Sports Editor
Charles Barkley came to
Auburn an unknown tinhorn,
immature' in many ways and
• with ideasof his own. During his
collegiate career, a fluctuating
weight problem that rose like the
national debt earned him the
nickname "the round mound of
-rebound."
With his strong rebounding
abilities and flashy style of play,
Barkley helped start a tradition
for Auburn eager* by leading the
team_to>the NCAA Tournament
his "final year. Jumping to the
National Basketball Association
after his junior season, Barkley
signed with the Philadelphia
76ers.
After an NBA title in 1983, the
team lost some of its earlier luster
and looked for someone to help
re-establish its former place in
the upper echelon of the strong
Eastern Conference. Barkley
accepted the challenge, and has
become one of themost dominant
players in the league.
A native of Leeds, Barkley
returned to Auburn this past
week to speak at a women's basketball
camp. The attentive
crowd of 2602300 young ladies listened
to him talk about basketball,
school and life in general.
"The only way to achieve success
is to have God in your life,"
Barkley said. "Each of you ladies
have talents just like I have, but
you have to work hard and go the
extra little bit to make the best of
them.
" I have found that the only way
to be successful in whatever you
do is to have God in front of you at
all times," he added. "Money and
all that doesn't matter unless you
have Him in your life to help
yeu."
Barkley grew up in Leeds and
has always been part of a close-knit
family, according to his
mother, Mrs. Chancey Glenn.
"Oh yes, we have always been
real dose," she said. "When he
went to Philadelphia were were
afraid for him because of the sudden
change to a bis; city. Charles,
just like myself, was raised here
in Leeds, so we were worried
about him at first."
The oldest of the three Barkley
brothers, Charles made—the
adjustment to big-city life easily,
according to Mrs. Glenn. "The
people in Philadelphia are nice
and have accepted him quite well.
I know he likes it there."
Barkley signed an eight-year
contract with the 76ers last year,
averaging $1.8 million per year.
During question time at the bas-ketball
caafcp Monday afternoon,
he spoke ttt retirement after the
contract runs out
"I've gotfeven years left on the
contract, and I'm thinking now
that Lerill probably retire after
that," he said. 'Til be 31 years old
then and wgl probably be ready
to b«-with my family and get on
witniiu'iBstsjhig else."
Barkley attfd -he was unsure
whether he%ould want to get into
coaching or go into some sort of
business venture after retire
men*. .. -,*. •
Acccording to his mother,
Barflsa life matured "a whole
lotfl iff theptat few years. "The
first VesriieVas in Philadelphia,
he bought a Porsche," she said.
"You know how teen-agers want
fast cars and all that.
"Last year he told us he was
going to buy a new car and get
away from the fast sporty look,"
she added. "We noticed he was
growing up in more ways than we
realized. Charles has been more
responsible on and off the basketball
court."
"He didn't talk back to the officials
as- much last season," she
added with a laugh. Barkley had
fewer.teehnical fouls in 1987 than
in 1986.
Barkley also has a mature, but
simple attitude toward drug use
and people who take drugs.
"I think that anyone that uses
drugs is stupid," he told the
audience of basketball campers,
who clapped loudly when hearing
this. "I do not use drugs or
drink hard liquor, but I do drink
beer.
"I have smoked one marijuana
joint before, just to see what it
would do for me," he continued,
"and it did nothing. I haven't
See Barkley, page 10
Ford, White wait long time
for word on draft selections
By Alan Clemons
Sports Editor
"...the waiting is the hardest part,"—
Tom Petty
For Frank Ford and Gerald White,
Monday afternoon might have been the
longest day of their short lives.
The backcourt duo that helped the
Tigers to four consecutive NCAA Tournaments
were drafted in the late rounds
of the annual NBA draft Monday afternoon,
going to the Los Angeles Lakers
and Dallas Mavericks, respectively.
The afternoon turned out somewhat
disappointing for Ford, who was projected
as a possible late second- or early
third-round pick. Chosen by the world
champions in the sixth round, he was
the 158th pick overall.
"I guess the type of player I am might
have scared some teams off," Ford said,
adding that he was happy to be drafted.
"I'm not the type player that is a dominating
scorer or dominating rebounder.
My whole career I've been a role-type
player and I guess teams weren't looking
for that this year."
Ford was a mainstay for Tiger head
coach Sonny Smith at the guard position
for four years. His senior season
was slightly diminished by the loss of
sidekick White, who was injured for the
first half of the season.
Smith said during the season that
Ford and White were a team in themselves,
and "when one of them is out of
the game, you can notice the difference
in the other."
White was taken in the seventh round
by the Dallas Mavericks, who made the
NBA Western Conference playoffs this
past season. Hampered by an aggravated
back injury and ankle problems
during his senior year, he said he
expects to be 100 percent when he tries
for a position on the Mavericks.
"After I hurt my back my name was
nowhere to be found on the draft list, so I
think I've come a long way just by being
drafted," White said. "I'm going to make
the most of it whatever happens."
White could possibly join former cross-state
rival Jim Farmer on the Dallas
squad if both make the roster. Farmer
was the 20th pick overall, going in the
last part of the first round. The Mavericks
also took guard Steve Alford, who
led the Indiana Hoosiers to the NCAA
Championship this past March.
Ford said he thought the Lakers might
have selected him for his defensive
skills. "They have a lot of great offensive
players but the only great defensive
player you ever hear about is Michael
Cooper. I'm a pretty good defensive
player, but I know to make the team I've
got to show them I can score, too."
BURGER m?
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186 NJDonahue £fc>S$dfA''s^ftfflOtiue
• Auburn, AL ^.-s1u1B1 i-y UyMN=JAW. i ^ 826-1716
Sandwiches A Salads
Iron Bowl rescheduled for television: • • • • - - • " - • • >;
The annual Iron Bowl clash
between Auburn and the University
of Alabama has been moved
to the Friday after Thanksgiving
for the next two years, the
athletic departments of both
schools announced recently.
At the 14th annual Alabama
Sports Writers Convention held
June 14-15 in Montevallo, officials
from both schools said the
game will be moved from Saturday
to Friday after CBS Sports
guaranteed a two-year contract.
The game for the 1987 season
game is scheduled for Nov. 25.
Kickoff time for both games is set
for 1:40 p.m.
CBS Sports presented the contract
during the first week of June
and both schools readily worked
out the agreement The sum of the
contract was not revealed.
In a prepared statement,
Auburn head football coach and
Athletic Director Pat Dye said
that it "is a great opportunity for
Auburn, for Alabama and for the
Southeastern Conference.
"The Auburn-Alabama game is
will be on Nov. 27 and the 1988 always a classic, and it has come
to symbolize the style and brand
of football played in the Southeastern
Conference," he added.
"The fact that CBS would give us
a two-year commitment shows
how important our game has
become to the national viewing
audience."
Though no settlement has been
reached on the current dispute
between the two schools on the
contract agreement, Alabama
could technically host the 1988
game in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson
Tide's home field, Bryant-
Denny Stadium, is being
enlarged and renovated, which is
forcing the Tide to play its home
games in Birmingham's Legion
Field this year.
The dispute centers around the
termination of the contract
between the two schools as to the
location of the game. Auburn
officials want to host the game at
Jordan-Hare Stadium and say
the contract runs out after this
season.
Capstone officials disagree
though and maintain that the
contract runs through the 1991
season.
ANT
FOOT IMG
SALAD
ANY
FOOT-LONG •
SVBOR
SALAD *
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22 oz. soft drink-
•SUBffilW
• • • • • • - • ^ . » . - ' * ^ • > : • " • • • • • •
186 N. Donahue
7/1/87 mm
• • • •
826-1716
«
W *(. •**'-JSt Sf ~ ' -''•v-^"JI"*'fi»>^-*3*3B 'TIS" '
Ji
AU grad
Auburn graduate Brad Davis
has been promoted to the position
of sports information director by
the University-,of Kentucky
athletic department. m
In a June 1 release by the UK
StD office, Davis was elevated to
the head position of sports infer-.
mation after former SID Russell
Rice was named assistant to the
athletic director.
done anything since then. I just
don't need it. I don't need marijuana
or cocaine to help me."
Barkley seems to have realized
that nothing can help him in life
except himself and. what he can
do with his talents. Still academically
listed as a junior, Barkley
is back in school to try to earn his
degree in management.
"The way I'm going, I ' l t b s ^
by the time I graduate," he said
in> Birnringhamr far one jrears-before,
accepting a. position aa
assistant sports' Erector rat-
WKYT-TV iff Lexington; Ky.
He agenttw«c yews?thwa anar
then moved on to.
i ORC rTOKuenfins* i
worfnng- closely ,wi& the
athleticscsne. SavWaccepted the
JOB?01 assistant sporvs.iniorma.- -
trontfirecttiratDKin 1984, where
he earned several irattionah
a wards from the College Sports:
Information Directors of America
for his publications. He was-recentiy
selected, to. serve on the: -
NCAA. OTen'a Bagkatnan Media
Coordination'Cojnnnttsc
pagef^
with aarniik'Tdo realhe that an
educatibniksomething thai I will
have to have when basketball is
over, .thtfuglK-Marty peopleonly
plan:olLjiaj^tb8il.for.theTisBtof
By Alan Clemens
Sports Editor
Fornrer Tiger baseball players
Rock Wilson and Trey Gainous
realized, the: dream: of many
ytung men when they recently
withmajor league teams.
Bpthijjlays* outfield tia. head
coacfcjkl Bajftl while at Auburn
and*elpe«leWthe Tigftrs to the
third round olth#NC*ASouthI
Reginn.basefoall.tournament last
month.. Auburn: completed the
season with a 42-18 record overall
and missed:, winning: the Southeastern
Conference chi
-sriip by a halfcgame,
second to Georgia.
-.Wilson* from Huntsvilfev inked
aigact with:the Oakland Athlet.
ic* and was sent tor the Glass: A
ffirttf, team-r in MedfordV Ore.
City Royals andis playing fbrthe
Royals Glass A team inEugene,
•OrSP- V" -K.'--. •- $< :.'.-•> '
Wilson was named to.the.Aea-.
demic /AU^SEG squad for the
third year in a rowand was also.
S£--.v<* ?.'fc ' " '. • '-.-:".'_-^-' £ S
• M M i a ^ M M f e M l i M M I I
named Academic" All-American
by GTE. He led the Tigeisjwith a
.371 batting- average - sad had •;
seven triples to: head the. SEC
final statistics^ "
Becommended by HimmviBe
Stars manager: Brad' EScher,
WikoTrwmtsignaiBytheiA'siaf
formain»; in tha-tryroutftv'
"This is my dream,f Wilson
said. "Every ballplayer hopes for:
professional baseball and I'm no
different. This is. a dream come
true for me." •
Wilson was snubbed..in the
major, league draft, but' srorked
out, with the Stars'; during "the
second week of June. He. played
outfield, for Bairob darin^rhis
senior, year, bat hod^-played
shortstop, the prBvianer-threH
iseasomfe.:|_> v:> ••: jg*& •'••
Gainouaaras named Auburn's
Male Athlete of the Year at the
recent all-sport;•-, banquet. The
Cairo, Ga., nativfe posteda 30ff
then it will
is: verj?,
BrleverybhV'
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Thursday, June 25, 1987
HC
.4
The Auburn Plainsman B-lOOFoy Union 826-4130 page 11
Revolver
to play
on patio
By J o h n Varner
Staff Writer
"Old cover bands never die,
they just fade away." Revolver,
one of Auburn's most popular
touring cover bands, would like to
take exception to this adage.
With the combination of its
newly-released first album of
original songs and a more energetic
sound aided by new band
personnel, Revolver would like to
disprove this notion on June
29th, when it will perform on the
Foy Union Patio from 7 to 11 p.m.
Based in Birmingham, the
group has been playing clubs and
universities in Georgia, Florida,
Alabama and Tennessee since
1967.
Until 1985, Revolver played
predominantly cover songs. At
that point, the group underwent
major personnel changes, with
twin brothers Dannie and Van-nie
Warren being the original
members electing to stay; the
members who preferred the stability
of the strictly cover song
format departed to form other
bands.
Revolver's currjent lineup
includes Dannie Warren on keyboards
and vocals, Vannie
Warren on drums and backup
vocals, Allen Park on guitar and
vocals, Steve Bonds on bass and
Toni Carter on lead guitar.
Danny Thompson plays keyboards
when Warren does lead
vocals.
For a cover band to change
overnight to an original format is
unheard of, and fans of the
Revolver of old can find solace in
the fact that 75 percent of the
group's songs are the hits of other
favorites, including songs by Led
Zeppelin, U2, the Talking Heads,
INXS and, of course, the Beatles.
The band's first album, entitleo
Pictures of You, has experienced
problems familiar to most
regional groups_jvho record on
minor record labels. After
initially being received with
much enthusiasm in the Birmingham
area, the album has
gotten little airplay elsewhere.
The job of promoting the album
has been left up to the group.
Recorded by Poly Music Studio in
Birmingham and mixed in David
P Studio in Los Angeles, the
album was produced by Tom
Knox, formerly the producer for
Toto. David Paich, former Toto
keyboardist, plays on some cuts
on the album.
Revolver's release of an album
including -ten;- original songs,
after 20 years of playing cover
songs, possibly makes "Evolver"
a more appropriate name for the
band.
REVOLVER
Birmingham-based band will be here Monday
ing students back from trip
By Cara Clark
Staff Writer At
THE WALL
Photography: Michael Greene
Smith before "Wall of Death" at t h e Auschwitz concentration camp n e a r Krakow, Poland
The Auburn University Singers
and Concert Choir returned
Friday from a two-week concert
tour of Poland and the Soviet
Union. , ,
Thomas R. Smith, director,
said the 77 members were "very
well received" when concertSj.
were performed in Warsaw;!
Krakow and Gestochowa itf*.
Poland and Moscow, Kalinin and
Estonia in the Soviet Union. :
In addition to five scheduled
tours, an impromptu concert was*.'
also performed in Poland. ;'''
The concert tour was sponsored
and arranged by the Friendship
Ambassador's Foundation, an
organization that specializes in
sending American performing
groups to Eastern European
Z-i P.£-0
countries. "
Members of the tour met young
people in the cities of the Soviet
Union where they performed.-.
"We really enjoyed the relation-;
ship we had with the other stu- -
dents," said Smith. ? -
This concert tour marks the;
fifth time that choral groups from
Auburn have traveled abroad
and the second performance of,
University Singers in Poland
and the Soviet Union, which they
visited in 1977.
The Singers toured Romania in •
1974 and performed in Guatam-ala
in 1979. In 1984 the Concert"
Choir and the University Singers
toured several countries in West-ern
Europe.
June Jam a hit
By Russ Austin
Photo Editor
"It's a historical moment and a
great moment for the Oak Ridge
Boys," lead singer Joe Bonsai
told the crowd of 56,412 who
attended the sixth annual June
Jam benefit concert held in Fort
Payne.
The Oak Ridge Boys and Alabama
performed together for the
first time entertaining the crowd
who sat through a day of light
rain which lowered the temperature
to a cool 66 degrees. Bonsai
said, "They (Alabama) are the
greatest act that has ever been in
our business."
Other native Alabamians performing
at the 12-hour event were
Leighton native, Percy Sledge
who sang "Sittin' on the Dock of
the Bay," and "When a Man
Loves a Woman." Pat Upton
from Geraldine, near Fort Payne,
sang his million selling hit "1
Love You More. Today than Yej*
terday." Jasper's George "Goober"
Lindsey was also on hand to
greet the crowd and emcee.
Other performers at the Jam
were Sawyer Brown, Restless
Heart, John Schneider, the
legendary Carl Perkins and
Petra, a gospel/rock band.
For the second consecutive
year, the Jam generated more
than $1 million in ticket sales to
be given to charities, public service
organizations and non-profit
agencies in and around north
Alabama.
Photograph*': Russ Austin
OAK RIDGE MEETS ALABAMA
Randy Owen, left, and Joe Bonsai perform together at Jam*
OCA
STUDENT SERVICES, INC.
OFF CAMPUS ASSOCIATION
Offers Auburn University Students
#Rented VCR's by the quarter or year
& Rented Microwaves by the quarter or year
# Rented Refrigerators by the quarter or year
#And OCA memberships that eliminate costly
utility deposits
For off campus and on campus students
For further information call 821-8126or come by 116 Bragg Ave.
(across from Chi Phi House)
• tj*","
-SWI
:*£Sk ****** MlHI l-.-Jlw-f *'-Tf»n»--r;,
page 12 £bf Auburn plainsman Thursday, June 25, 1987
Collection
exactly as
expected
Various Artists
Sonic Defense Initiative
Imaginary Records
• *
Sonic Defense Initiative, the
latest and long-promised compilation
of songs by local bands,
has finally hit the streets.
Containing few surprises, it is
chock full of the shameless blues
and 1960's derivations that local
musicians and radio programmers
like to call "progressive
music."
The album can hardly be condemned
for a lack of enthusiasm,
however. Most of the bands here
give performances that approximate
the spirit of a live
performance.
The old college sense of humor
rears its head at least once. "Sur-fin'
Aliens," by Eb Arnold and
the Friction Pigs, consciously
and hilariously rips off the classic
surf sound as it tells of extraterrestrial
beach bums in their
quest to conquer Earth and its
waves.
Not all the ripoffs here are quite
so conscious, however. The Bon-nevilles'
"Heartbreaker Beware"
is straight from the sixties. A
friend of mine summed it up well
characterizing it thus: "It might
as well be Bruce Willis singing
'Secret Agent Man.'" The song is
tight and well arranged, though.
Except for a rough spot in which
the sax solo seems to be about
half & second removed from the
rhythm track, it is completely
professional.
The high point of the album
comes with Paul and the Quest's
"The Situation." The sound and
haunting Bowie-esque lead vocal
call to mind Todd Rundgren's
c l a s s i c "Can We Still Be
Friends." Furthermore, this cut
seems to be the least mired in the
college music tradition and can
be enjoyed by ^Unsophisticated
folk like me.
I think of this compilation as a
piece of Auburn history. While it
fails to represent many deserving
local bands, it is a good sampling
of what's in the clubs these days.
Furthermore, the life expectancy
of a college band is so short that a
few of the bands on the album,
such as Paul and the Quest and
Nothing Personal, didn't even
survive to see the album hit the
stores. This is a permanent
record of their contribution to the
Auburn music scene, for better or
Plainsman Reviews
3 literally raise hell
in Witches of Eastwick
worse.
The Witches of Eastwick
Rated R
Litchfield Cinemas
* • • •
The Witches of Eastwick is a
unique blend of supernatural
mystique, comedy and drama.
The film is set in a quaint, traditional
New England town.
Every Thursday night three
friends, Alexandra Medford,
Jane Spofford and Sukie Ridge-mont,
get together for cocktails.
The action begins one rainy
Thursday evening as the three
women start to feel the effects of
the martinis they have been
drinking. Each of the women
share a mutual problem, no husband.
Their casual talk turns to
facing the reality of their hus-bandless
situations. The scene
becomes three women fantasizing
about a man who could
change their lives.
Beware of the power of women.
Their dreams bring to Eastwick a
stranger. Is the charismatic millionaire's
showing up a coincidence,
or do these three women
possess some extraordinary
"gift" that has actually conjured
him up? The stranger, Daryl Van
Home, fits their desires in every
way.
The stranger, played perfectly
by Jack Nicholson, comes into
the lives of Alexandra, Jane and
Sukie, played by Cher, Susan
Sarandon and Michelle Pfeiffer
respectively, and stirs up the
women as well as the town.
Veronica Cartwright plays the
prophetic, almost possessed snob
Felicia Gabriel. Cartwright sees
the stranger as the devil and tries
to warn the town about him.
When tragedy strikes her, the
three ladies begin to argue about
what to do and if they are to
blame.
The women decide it is best to
break any contact with the
stranger they created. The result
is trouble. The girls try to stop
him, but things get a little out of
control.
When you throw in three
attractive women, a good story
and an ending that makes you
wait for a sequel, plus the always-entertaining
Jack Nicholson,
you're bound to have a great
movie that is well worth the price
of the ticket.
—Jim Hutchinson
-Tracey McCartney
REA ENTERTAINMEN
CONCERTS
Atlanta
The Omal
6/29 Madonna
Birmingham
ak Mountain Amphitheater
26 Eddie Money and The Truth
7/3 Steppenwolf with Alvin Lee
andRodMcKuen 6/27 Ziggy with Wonderbir
7/4 Night Ranger and the Out- Boomer
*/ field :
7/11 DanFogelberg
7/15 Crosby. Stills and Nash
7/25 Monkees
BANDS
Darnell's and Co., Inc.
6/25 Gypsy Heart
6/26-27 Wonderdog
7/1 Moondogs
Denaro's
6/26-27 Moondogs
" .• '•
Summer Bands
(Editor's note- ail
-rform on the War Eagle ratio
7 p.m. on the date given.)
ren of
a Lesser God
i no R 1,*, July 1-3-Cocoon
June29—Iwvolver , , ' - -, Verdict
July 2- Plaid Camels Julv 8 10-««dk W™rt«,
July 9- Harlequin Angel Jul> ' ^ " a c k
July 20 -New Boys
July 23~The Extras ,„,"' \v.-" « T
JJuullyy ;2iO7--TCehIieuvryidl e J u J y l^ll~t'J--
MAINSTREAM LP.
1. L.L. Cool J-Bigger and Deffer
2. The Outfield-Sangm'
3. MC Shy-DGotto be
4. Howard Hewett-J Commit to
;•• Love
B:Whitney Houston- Whitney
6 Poison-Look What the Cat
Dragged In
7. \J2The Joshua Tree
8. Motley Crae-Girls,
mTbs (tote-Kiss Me
10. Original Motion Pi<
Soundtrack- Secret
Success
Split the Dark
Kidd Blue
July 30 - August 1
Coming in July
The
Atlanta Rhythm
Section
TOIL AND TROUBLE
(L-R) Cher, Susan Sarandon and Michelle Pfeiffer
HEY
PLASMA DONOR!
Earn up to: $24 per week • $104 per month
• $208 husband &. wife •
call
AUBURN PLASMA CENTER
821-5130
--^ — _ _ _ _ « , _ « . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ -_-.-_-,___-,..._ — ___
Bring this coupon* Earn an extra $3.00 on
completion of first donation.
(zatmlke G?lnema 7 %^
MIDWAY PLAZA • 745-2671 * CARMIKE
Benji: The Hunted
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Ernest Goes to Camp
Rated PG Showtimes: 2:30, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30^,
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Rated PG Showtimes: 2:30, 4:45, 7:15, 9:3«!
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Rated R Showtimes: 2:30, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30
Spaceballs
Mel Brooks, John Candy
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