Wat fttlltoD Betas

Transcription

Wat fttlltoD Betas
Wat fttlltoD Betas
NO MENDACITY; NO BOWDLERIZING
VOLUME, IX, NO. 12
LaGRANGE COLLEGE, LaGRANGE, GEORGIA,
JAN. 10, 1967.
Fifty-Three Named
To Fall Dean's List
LaGrange, Ga.--Fifty-three
LaGrange College students
earned academic honors for the
Fall Quarter.
Dr. C. Lee Harwell, academic
dean, listed the students who
took 12 or more quarter hours
of work and earned grades averaging 3.5 quality points per
hour.
Twenty-two students earned
perfect 4.0 (all-A) records during the quarter in their academic courses^ They are:
Jane Louise Ale: inder of Atlanta, Jacqueline Ann Beasley" of Atlanta, Jeanne Marie
Blackburn of Jacksonville, Fla.,
Penny Marie Calhoun of Waycross, Mrs. Connie Lawson
Crawford of West Point, Marilyn Gail Dunn of Pine Mountain, Gilda Sue Ellis of Dalton, Gloria Jean Foster of
Columbus,
Catherine
Lee
Funke of East Point, Virginia
Johnston Glover of West Point,
Mrs. Elizabeth Smalley Guyton of LaGrange and Atlanta,
Daphne Lee Murph of Greenwood, S. C.,
Sara Louise Perkerson of LaGrange, William Joe Phillips of
Douglasville, Jack Allen Pirkle
of Dacula, Kathleen Anne Plawin of Orlando, Fla., Bailey
Brooks Shelhorse Jr. of Columbus, Julia Blanch Smith of Palmetto, Mrs. Merilyn Johnson
Smith of LaGrange, Sheri Stokes
of Atlanta, Alexis Dorothy White
of West Point, and Andrew Jackson Hinton Jr. of Columbus
(special student).
Other students included on the
Dean's List are:
Mrs. Sharon Crawford Alford
of LaGrange, Bettie Jeanne Bollinger of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
Peggy Anne Bowen of Dalton,
Paul Marvin Cook Jr. of Ellaville, Janet Shirley Dameron of
Pine
Mountain, Ella Joy
Dorough of Chickasaw, Ala.,
Linda Louise Dowling of Jacksonville, Fla., Mildred Runette
Freeman of Glenn, Brazzilla
Ann Gifford of Decatur, Carolyn Louise Griggs of McCaysville,
Douglas Richard Hatch of Decatur, Mrs. Jerrilyn Jiles
Holmes of LaGrange, Sylvia
Diane Jones of LaGrange, Wanda Elizabeth Lybarger of Columbus, Barbara Kay Maeser of
Newnan, Mrs. Gloria DeLayne
Poole Morgan of LaGrange,
Fred Alvin Padgelek of Waycross, Roger Fredric Presnell of Augusta, Nancy Elaine
Preston of Macon, Mrs. Shirley Cole Pritchettof Pine Mountain,
Antoinette Puglisi of Elmont,
N. Y., Mrs. Doris Lankford
Richmond of Newnan, Sandra
Lee Roberts of Newnan, Connie
Mae Robinson of McDonough,
Sandra Jean Rigsby of Graves,
Suzanne Tapley of West Palm
Beach, Fla., Neal Taylor of
West Point, Philip Gerald
Thacker of Smyrna, Charles
Edward Whalen Jr. of Gainesville, Luta Margaret WiUiams
of Newnan, and Mrs. Rachel
Faye Worrell of LaGrange.
"Mister Roberts"
Promises Laughs
The comedy-drama, "Mister
Roberts," written by Thomas
Heggen and Joshua Logan will
be presented by the LaGrange
College Speech and Drama Department as the second production of the season. The performances will be presented in
Dobbs Auditorium on both Friday and Saturday nights at 8:00
p.m. under the direction of Dr.
Max Estes.
"Mister Roberts" is about
the men on a cargo ship far
from the battle zones during
World War n. Lieutenant (j.g.)
Probation Figures
Show Slight Decrease
Probation figures for this
quarter show an improvement
over Winter Quarter of last
year. There are seventy-five
students returning on probation this quarter as compared
to almost ninety last year at
this time.
However, the figure seventyfive is somewhat misleading and
requires a breakdown. Fiftytwo are on probation for the
first time. Six of the fiftytwo are new students. Seven
more would have been on probation for the first time had they
returned. Thirteen returned on
continued probation and ten
more are here on their option
quarter. Three students who
would have been on continued
probation did not return and
two others did not return who
would have been on third quarter probation. Those on probation for the first time will
be able to remove themselves
more easily than the others.
There were thirteen students
suspended and five were permanently excluded this quarter.
This figure is also lower than
last year's. One figure was
unusually high. This was the
number of incomplete grades.
Dean Harwell commented that
he was more concerned with
the numberofupperclassmenon
probation than the freshmen.
The reason for this being that
an upperclassman's
gradepoint average is more difficult
to puU up than an underclassman's. Dean Harwell said also
that the number on probation was "high but not disturbingly high." He ventured no
guess as to what was the cause
behind the number of students
being on probation.
On the social side, the number of students eligible for fraternity or sorority bids was
lower than most students expected. Seventy-eight girls and
forty-eight boys are eligible.
This seems low since there
were over 200 new students this
year.
As a reminder, the quarterly
grade-point average required to
stay off probation is 1.3 for
freshmen, 1.5 for sophomores,
1.7 for juniors, and 1.9 for seniors. A student must have a
cumulative grade-point average
of 1.5 for forty-five hours of
academic work, 1.7 for ninety
hours, 1.9 for 135 hours, and
2.0 for 180 hours. A student
LaGrange CoUege is to parmust also pass sixty per cent
of the work attempted to re- ticipate in an exchange lecture
program beginning with an
main in good standing.
assembly program on January
11th.
Other participants in the program are Berry College, Piedmont CoUege, Shorter College,
and the University of Georgia.
These lectures are desupport from non-tax sources.
A. Lewis Jr. of Pittsburgh, signed to recognize beyond their
Pa., chairman of the Gulf Oil own campuses the talents of
Corporation Foundation's edu- outstanding teachers in several
cation committee, said that no colleges. They give the colleges
restrictions are placed upon an opportunity to expand the culuse of the grant so that it may tural and intellectual actibe employed most ef'ectively vities on their campuses
In meeting the needs of each through mutual exchange. They
college's program.
also provide one limited way in
Nichols said that other phases which a few colleges can share,
of Gulf's educational assistance even briefly, some of their
program, in addition to direct strengths.
grants, include capital grants,
Dr. Charles Franklin McGulf merit scholarships to chil- Cook, head of the Department
dren of employees and annui- of Religion and Philosophy, will
tanta, employee gift- match- be LC's representative to the
ing to colleges, departmental schools listed above on the folassistance grants, graduate fel- lowing dates:
lowships,
and
grants for
January 9 -PiedmontCollege
special purposes such as reMarch 7-UniversityofGeorsearch.
eia
LaGrange Receives
Unrestricted Grant
LC has received a $2,000
grant for unrestricted use from
Gulf Oil Corporation.
T. J. Nichols of Macon, district sales manager for the
Gulf Oil Corporation, and I. A.
Berry, area distributor of Gulf
oil products, presented the
grant to Dr. Waights G. Henry
Jr., LC president.
Nichols said the LC grant is
one of 150 such awards totaling $300,000 that Gulf will distribute this year as unrestricted grants to universities and
colleges under Its aid-to-education program.
Institutions eligible for unrestricted grants are those which
are privately operated and controlled, and which obtain a major portion of their financial
Roberts wants to be transferred other leading characters, is
to a warship. The captain who played by Jerry Wynens of Mahates Roberts and others like con. Thomas Ritter of Reading,
him refuses to have Roberts Pa., plays the part of the ship's
transferred. "MisterRoberts" doctor.
is considered to be one of the
Some of the other members
best comedies to come out about of the crew of the AK-601 are
World War n.
played by Neal Morgan of NaSophomore "Butch" Millerof perville, 111.; Robin Foley of
Clarkston plays the role of Philadelphia, Pa; Bill Hardy of
Lieutenant Roberts. "Butch" Tampa, Florida; Robert Prahas had much experience in ter of Dallas; Mike Timmons'
acting in the productions given of Omaha, Neb.; Fred Padgeby the Speech and Drama De- lek of Waycross; Don Hutchepartment since he has been at son of Macon; Jim Menge of
LC. Another veteran of the LC Jacksonville, Florida; Bill Kistage is junior Noble Shrop- ser of Cartersville; John Watshire of Cartersville. Noble is son of Orlando, Florida; and
cast as the hard-boiled captain. Larry Outland and Ned WhitJeanne Marie Blackburn of ner, both of LaGrange.
Miss Marilyn McKay, who diJacksonville, Florida, is the
only woman In the 20 member rected "The Taming of the
cast. She plays an Army nurse Shrew," is the technical diwho comes onboard the ship rector and set designer for
for a brief time while it is in "Mister Roberts." Margaret
port.
Lunsford of Elberton is the
Ensign Pulver, one of the assistant director.
L C To Participate
In Lecture Program
April 4 - Berry College
April 5 - Shorter College.
To speak here tomorrow, as
part of the exchange program,
is Dr. C. Robert O'Neal, Professor and head of the Department of English at Berry College. Dr. O'Neal's topic is to
be "Stuffed Shirts and Raised
Eyebrows: The Stereotype of
the English Teacher."
Other participants in the program who will be visiting the
LC campus are Dr. Louis
Schulz, Professor and Head of
the Department of Sociology
at Piedmont College, Dr. Robert G. Gardner, Professor and
Head of the Department of Religion at Shorter College, and
Dr. Cameron Fincher, Professor of Higher Education and
Associate Director of the Institute of Higher Learning, from
the University of Georgia.
The lectures in each college have been chosen either by
a committee of their colleagues
or the entire faculty.
PAGE 2
THE HILLTOP NEWS
JAN. 10, 1967 •
Have Girls Changed?
Toamfiub ^atendab
I have often heard people complain about
STUDENT POLL
the apparent fact that girls are losing their
femininity. They seem to become stronger
and more aggressive as each day goes by,
What is the one thing you
would like to see improved
virtues which are by no means feminine.
at school this quarter?
The logical questions that follow are: What
Jimmy Bailey - My GradesI
exactly has changed about girls, if anything,
Spudzy Asher - More Activiand why has it changed.
ties during winter quarters so
There has not been a considerable change
$ It won't be so dead.
Randy Whatley - My grade
in looks for girls. As a matter of fact, as
average!
far as the eye can tell, girls are more
Larry Conner - When you are
feminine today than they have ever been,
on probation you aren't allowed
perhaps because there is more to see of
to take chapel cuts.
them. The change, then, if any, is not to
Ted Burgess - People on probation can't attend anything.
be looked for in outward appearances.
Steve Brown - More Social
It is more likely that girls have traded
activity - like a dance after a
in their old standards, or set of values,
basketball game.
for some new ones. Whereas the girls of
Ken McKay - A new policy on
eligibility for fraternities.
the past were content to humbly obey their
. Robert Prater - The heat to
"better halvee", and lead a life hidden
stay on all night long.
away in the background of a kitchen or nurPeggy Cobb - No room resery, the girls of today are not content
strictions absolutely
with such dreary routines. They are chalMike Jenkins - Unlimited
chapel cuts.
lenging the males for supremacy. As a consequence it seems possible that some
day in the not too distant future we will
ELEVEN COMPLETE
find that the old comedy routine which
PAM BURCH
STUDENT TEACHING
we have all seen so often, in which the
domineering woman sits around in the living
room while her "hubby" is washing the
January 8Eleven LaGrange College sedishes and taking care of the kids in the
February 2 Art Show in Hawkes Gallery, niors who are preparing to enkitchen has come true. There are already
Norman Keller
ter the teaching profession have
some indications to this effect. The new January 10
Academic Advisory Council completed the student teaching
phase of their preparation.
generation, which is supposed to become the
meeting
The student teachers - eight
January
12
Faculty
coffee
"backbone of the world" has shown us
in
elementary school, one in
Community
Concert
Series,
signs that the males are indeed becoming
junior
high, and two in high
LaGrange, Irene Callaway,
weaker. The fact that the males are letting
school - have worked for apSoprano, and Peter Harrower proximately eight weeks under
their hair grow down to their knees, have it
Bass Baritone
set, use hair spray and all other sorts of
the direction of experienced and
"beauty aids" on themselves is in itself January 12-14 Winter Quarter special testing certified teachers in LaGrange.
Gradually the LC seniors asdates
an indication that the male is trying to
sumed
more and more teaching
January 13_ 14 Winter Play
identify with the female sex.
responsibilities in their reWhy would any male try to identify with January 17 Red Cross Bloodmobile on
spective classes.
the female sex?
campus
Dr. W. M. Shackelford, proMeeting of all students
fessor of education and chairIn answer to this, the old saying "il January 23
interested in teacher educaman of the college's Education
you can't beat them, join them" seems most
Division,
directs the student
tion
fitting.
Girls have changed because the
teaching
program.
He is also
Faculty
meeting
males have let them change. Does this mean January 24
coordinator of the secondary
that the males are tired of running the
education program.
January 26 Central Administration
affairs of the world, or does it mean that
January
they are afraid to take on the responsibility?
Thp mutop News
EDITOR
Nick Flaskay
BUSINESS MANAGER
James Bishop
THE FRIENDLY BANK
WITH FREE PERSONAL
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
FOR LC STUDENTS
PEOPLES BANK
—OF LA GRANGE
STUDENTS!
his Sunday Try
"Cafeteria. Service
or
Steaks, Chicken, or Seafood served ala
Carte every evening at popular prices.
Make this your meeting place
PLANTATION
131 BULL ST.
LCHAS
NEW PROFESSOR
LaGrange, Ga. — A new history professor will Join the LaGrange College faculty In January, President Waights G.
Henry Jr. announced today.
Steven R. Smith, a native of
Macon, wUl hold the rank of
assistant professor of history,
effective at the beginning of the
winter quarter.
»
The new LC professor received his bachelor of arts degree in history at Mercer University in 1961 and earned his
master's degree in the same
subject at the University of
Georgia. He has done additional study at Georgia State College.
Smith is now on the faculty of
Somerset Community College,
a division of the University of
Kentucky at Somerset, Ky.
Previously he taught on the faculties of Lanier Junior High
School In Macon, the University
of Georgia Center in Gainesville, and Brenau College.
He Is a memberof the American Historical Association and
is a Presbyterian. He is also
in the United States Army Reserve.
While In college, Smith
served as both vice president
and president of Kappa Alpha
fraternity.
WUVARA
TUVA HA
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by TUVACHE
PAUL COLE
DRUG CO.
DIAL TU 4-7373
LA GRANGE. GA.
129 MAIN STREET
JAN. 10, 1967
PAGE 3
THE HTT.T.TQE-NEJSES.
One Man Exhibit
Has Virile Works
— Sculptures ile, masrnline—-no matter how
of steel, brass, iron, bronze small or delicate they may
copper and stone are featured appear. I hesitate to use the
in an exhibition of work by Nor- term 'abstract' in describing
man Keller, a young North works of sculpture—which are
Carolina artist-teacher, which inherently concrete—but Kelopened at LaGrange College on ler's work is not naturalistic."
Sunday afternoon, Jan. 8.
Her added, "I guess Keller's
The one-man show opened sculpture is not abstract,
with a reception fro^ 3 to 5 either, for when I asked him
p.m. in the college's Hawkes how to get his work back to him,
Hall gallery and the public is he said, "Just tell them to go
invited.
home.'"
Keller, an Instructor of
The sculptor said of his work,
sculpture at East Carolina Col- "1 like to think of what 1 prolege In Greenville, will be rep- duce as concrete, tactile maniresented by works ranging in festations of communications
size from six inches ("coat- on a visceral and instinctual
pocket size") to 40 Inches and level rather than on an intellecweighing 40 pounds.
tual one."
Henry Her, assistant profesKeller said that it is diffisor of art and acting head of cult to define what is necessary
the Art Department, said that to achieve the above concept due
some 40 pieces will be in the to its very nature. However, he
exhibition. The*show also will uses a Spanish Gypsy Term,
feature a number of working "duende (literally, spirit or
drawings of sculpture.
ghost)," the "feeling of truly
The work of Keller has been meaningful flamenco," to deshown in two annual exhibitions scribe this necessary ingreof the Southern Association of dient of any good art form.
Sculptors, and twice in the
"There are other terms I
Southeastern Annual Exhibi;ould use—presence, identity,
tion, His sculpture also has essence, soul, music of the
been included several times in spheres, ad absurdum; but they
annual shows of the Association have lost their power and meanof Georgia Artists, and at Ball ing through overuse," he conState College in Indiana.
tinued. "I prefer 'duende.'"
In addition, KeUer has exhiKeller said his small scale
bited his sculpture in various pieces, in the main "are either
shows in galleries in Georgia, three-dimensional sketches or
North Carolina and New York. experiments done to facilitate
Several private collections also a quicker analysis of result.
feature his work.
The larger pieces are conA native of Hollywood, Calif., sidered as final results and as
the sculptor began his studies such, it is hoped whatever spirat Georgia Tech but received it they achieve has an auboth bachelor's and master's dience."
degrees in fine arts at the
The exhibition of Keller's
University of Georgia.
sculpture will continue at LaProfessor Her described Grange College through Feb. 2,
Keller's sculpture as "vir- Her said.
Xrs Cr«<zt-But VVi/( It La£>t????
6M
Thirteen Receive
Degrees In Fall
Thirteen LaGrange College students completed requirements
for bachelor of arts degrees during the fall quarter.
Dr. C. Lee Harwell, academic dean, said the 13 seniors will
have the rights and privileges usually accorded to all college
graduates. However, they will not formally receive their degrees
until the college's 136th annual graduation exercises in June, 1967.
The LC graduates, their hometowns and major fields of study
are;
Jane Louise Alexander of Atlanta, elementary education; Ella
Joy Dorough of Chickasaw, Ala., mathematics; Virginia Johnston
Glover of West Point, elementary education; Barbara Ann Greene
of LaGrange, history; Andrew Armstrong Hunt of Marietta,
mathematics; Edwin Williams McTureous of Umatilla, Fla.; speech
and drama; Jack Coulter Mayo of LaGrange and Phenix City, Ala.,
history;
Daphne Lee Murph of Greenwood, S. C., elementary education;
Donald Ludene Newberry of LaGrange, mathematics; Janet Estelle Pierce of Atlanta, business administration; Hugh Edward
Stephens of LaGrange, business administration; Sheri Stokes of
Atlanta, English; and Alexis Dorothy WMte of West Point, elementary education.
"Hortense Helps," a weekly
feature last quarter, will reappear with our next issue. For
quick and efficient solving of
your problems, write to Hortense right away.
The Hilltop News Staff'will
meet tonight at 6:00 p.m.
Service
DAVIS
PHARMACY
Specializing in
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REGISTERED PHARMACIST
ALWAYS ON DUTY
Davis Pharmacy
tO N. Court Sq.
Shop and Save
ff
at
LaGrange's Largest
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During our January Sale
Save in Every
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Belk - Gallant Co.
"LaGrange's
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Panthers Drop GS
Look For Shorter
Big Joe Philips blistered the
cords for twenty points and
Neal Chancey hit for thirteen
as LaGrange rolled past Georgia State College in Atlantalast
Wednesday to set the stage for
tonight's big battle with the
Shorter Hawks.
Shorter, a top conference
contender, will present Coach
Al Mariotti's Panthers with
one of their toughest assignments of the season in a game
which will bear heavily on GIC
standings.
In Atlanta last Wednesday,
LG broke a five game losing
string
against four-year
schools with a 65-55 conquest
of Georgia State. The shooting
of Phillips and the board work
of Sid Smith kept LaGrange in
the game during a nip and tuck
first half. The Panthers took a
4-0 lead at the start, but then
fell behind by four. Baskets
by Mike Rainey and Phillips
enabled LaGrange to rally and
take a 31-26 lead at intermis-
sion.
In the second half, the Panthers immediately took the offensive while holding GSC without a point for nearly five minutes. Phillips paced his squad
to a 19-point lead midway the
half but Georgia State started
hitting their shots and controlling the board to slowly catch up.
The Atlantans rallied to within four points at 2:15 of the game,
but a stall put on by the Panthers caused GSC to give up
free throws which LC gratefully
cashed in until the final tenpoint margin was attained.
Coach Bill Foster's Shorter
Hawks will bring an impressive
13-4 record to LaGrange tonight
and Mariotti states that his team
will have to be at a peak in order to contend.
Only two players are scoring
in double figures for LaGrange,
Joe Phillips 15.8 and Tom Duckett at 11.5
However Earl
Holmes and Sid Smith are close
tu the two-digit mark both with
Holidays See
Losses For LC
LaGrange's Panthers, during
pre-holiday activity, found itself on the short end of a fivegame losing string until the win
over GeorgiaState last Wednesday.
LC was victim to Oglethorpe
and Mercer in home games December 5 and 7 respectively.
In the Oglethorpe game, it was
just a case of the hot shooting
of the visitors. The Stormy
Petrels connected on 66% of
their field goal attempts, enroute to a 74-49 victory.
The Mercer loss was a heartbreaker. LaGrange led in the
game by as many as 15 points
until a sizzling comeback gave
the Bears a close 71-67 win.
Three days later, cold shooting
M
For That
Special Girl
At Home Or
At School
FUNK S
FLOWERS
PHONE- TU 2.3531
PAGE 4
THE HILLTOP NEWS
JAN. 10, 1967
spelled defeat for the Panthers
in a 70-56 loss to Huntingdon.
However, the'Cats rebounded
with a good showing in the Columbus
College
Christmas
Tournament held December 16
and 17. LaGrange and Huntingdon played in the tourney opener and the Panthers were
running the Hawks off the court,
holding a 15-point lead with only
eight minutes to play. But again,
a Huntingdon rally caught LC
off guard and the Hawks won,
70-64.
In the consolation the next
night, LaGrange revealed a precision, fast-break offense and
rolled up a 95-87 victory over
Norman College. Earl Holmes
was named to the All-Tournament team for his efforts
as he scored 44 points in two
tourney games. Neal Chancey
also contributed a good effort
with 19 points against Norman
as did "Razor" Tray lor with
14.LaGrange travelled to Atlanta on New Year's Eve and
fought Oglethorpe on fairly even
terms before the Petrels pulled
out a 75-65 win.
The 95 points scored by LC
in the consolation game of the
Columbus Tournament set a new
tourney
record for offense.
However, it didn't last long for
in the very next game, Huntingdon routed Columbus 109-88 to
take the tourney title —and our
record.
9.5 averages.
Also new firepower has been
found in Neal Chancey and Mike
Rainey. The performance of
these two players has been well
above average in games of late
and both may start tonight.
A possible cause of the team's
slow start this season is inability to control the defensive
backboards. Although the
heigth is. there, the rebounds
are not. Duckett leads the team
In rebounding with an average of
ten counters a game.
FG
7
3
1
4
1
6
5
0
27
Holmes
Fry
Chancey
Rainey
Hoyt
Totals
FG
3
4
6
4
1
2
0
20
GSC (55)
Copeland
Jacobs
Witter
Mullins
Wilson
Fain
Wolfe
Totals
FT
6-6
1-4
0-0
2-2
1-1
1-3
0-1
0-0
11-17
Ft
4-5
0-1
2-2
5-6
3-3
0-1
1-2
15-20
TP
20
7
2
10
3
13
10
0
65
TP
10
PF
2
2
2
1
1
1
3
2
14
PF
2
0
5
4
1
3
1
17
r
14
13
5
4
1
55
a 41-yard TD bomb to Skipper.
The play came after Pi Delta
had taken a 7-0 lead on a 6yard run by Larry Horton.
SHORTER
Further
excitement was
REVIEW
added at the game's end by an
outburst of temper which de-.
veloped into what resembled a
Shorter has lost only four drunken brawl between the
games this year, these com- teams.
ing at the hands of Albany State,
PANTHER POT-SHOTS
Oglethorpe (by one point), Asheville-Biltmore and William CaFor the benefit of those who
rey. On the other hand, the
Hawks have rolled up thirteen haven't already heard, Joe Philvictories and over the holidays lips and Sid Smith were married
won the Rotary Invitational over the holidays, thus joining
Tournament at Spindale, N.C. Nellie Hoyt and Glend Tray lor
and the Holiday Invitational In this department.
Tourney at Berry.
Earl "Frog" Holmes was
Last year, Shorter ran up a named to the All-Tournament
22-6 record, losing to Valdosta team in the Columbus ChristState in a playoff for the con- mas Tourney.
ference title. The Hawks later
Mike Rainey is at last back
fell to Georgia Southern in the with the team and he made his
finals of the NAIA district tour- presence known in a hurry by
nament.
hitting five of nine attempts for
Shorter presently has four 10 points against Georgia State.
starters scoring in double figures. These are DwightRainey
(a cousin of LaGrange's Mike
Rainey) at 14, Jim Chastalnand
Opening for part time employment as a sales repreDavid Simpson at 15 points and
sentative In each of the dormitories. For information
Dennis Childress scoring at an
contact:
11 point clip.
Coke
makes
your party
Sparkle
In games
last year, LaGrange lost to the Hawks by
scores of 67-46 and 67-59.
A top performance will be
needed tonight as the game will
have a heavy bearing on LaGrange's fortunes in the conference race.
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The passing of Snuffy Smith
to Mike Timmons and Mike
Skipper staked the All-Stars to a
19-7 win over Pi Delta to end
the intramural football season.
The All-Stars rolled up 174
yards passing as Smith turned in
a phenomenal performance, hitting 8 of 14 passes. Timmons
and Dick Lacher both made
spectacular grabs for touchdowns.
The game was also
highlighted by a fake-punt play
with Candy Forrester tossing
Holmes Rexall Drug Store
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LaGrange (65)
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WHITE SHOULDERS, AND REVLON.
NOT TO MENTION JADE EAST, BRUT,
ENGLISH LEATHER, TRESURE ISLAND,
JAGUAR, AND NEW "BARON" FOR THE
MEN.
SHOP US - "OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT!"
services.
M»bir F. D. I. C.
29 Sot* Cewt $<■«•
100%
Our reputation is on the
block every time we serve
a Burger Chef hamburger.
That's why we take the finest -100% pure beef and
cook it over open flames to
seal in the natural p.ices
and beef goodness.
Delicious
Still only 15°
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