Clemson University TigerPrints Football Programs Programs 1970 Auburn vs Clemson (10/10/1970) Clemson University Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms Materials in this collection may be protected by copyright law (Title 17, U.S. code). Use of these materials beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. For additional rights information, please contact Kirstin O'Keefe (kokeefe [at] clemson [dot] edu) For additional information about the collections, please contact the Special Collections and Archives by phone at 864.656.3031 or via email at cuscl [at] clemson [dot] edu Recommended Citation University, Clemson, "Auburn vs Clemson (10/10/1970)" (1970). Football Programs. 90. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms/90 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Programs at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in Football Programs by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Stevens-Urica® No-Iron Sheets They don't just make beds. They make bedrooms. Official Program Published By ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT CLEMSON UNIVERSITY Edited By BOB BRADLEY Director of Sports Information Assisted By JERRY ARP Ass't. Sports Information Director Represented for National Advertising By SPENCER MARKETING SERVICES 370 Lexington Avenue New York. New York 10017 Photography by Jim Burns, Charles Haralson, Tom Shockley, Hal Smith, and Bill Osteen of Clemson; Jim Laughead and Jim Bradley of Dallas, Texas IMPORTANT EMERGENCIES: A first aid station is located LOST & FOUND: If any article is lost or found, under Section A on South side of Stadium. please report same to Gate 1 Information Booth. Trained nurses are on hand all during the game. Should a doctor be needed, ask any usher. Each CONCESSION STANDS: Concession stands are usher has been informed the seat location of doc- located beneath the stands and can be reached tors. Ambulances are located at Gates 2 and 10. by exit from any portal. A concession price list is published on the back page. TELEPHONES: Telephones are located at Sta- dium Ticket Offices at Gates 1, 5, 9, 11 and 13. EMERGENCY CALLS: Emergency calls are re- ceived over the telephone located in the press PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM: The public ad- box, the number of which is listed with the op- dress system is intended primarily for the in- erator as Press Box, Clemson Memorial Stadium. formation of spectators concerning the game. Please do not request the use of the public ad- NOTICE: Possession or consumption of alco- dress system to make social contacts at the holic beverages are prohibited by Act No. 550 of game. the General Assembly of South Carolina, 1967, and rules of the Alcoholic Beverage Control RESTROOMS: Ladies' and men's restrooms are Commission in this stadium and the surround- located beneath the stands and can be reached ing area. By order of: S. C. Alcoholic Beverage by exit from any portal. Control Commission. T imes when so many things seem My thoughts of the moment are completed an administration to be coming unglued are disquiet- not on the stresses and strains that building and clock tower that still ing tim(>s. These are disquieting are causing things to come un- dominate these Blue Ridge foot- times. glued, nor are they on the merits or hills with a timelessness and se- It alwavs intrigues me how demerits of why the stresses exist. renity that impart inspiration and nearly any specific condition of 1 have thought about them — and strength anew each time they are nearl\ any specific time can find will again — but tonight my thoughts looked upon. somi> application in a book that, are wandering through these up- There's something in these hills essentially, was handed down to per South Carolina hills that shel- that has endeared itself to an us by word of mouth through cen- ter the University that forms a com- endless procession of administra- tury after century. mon bond for many thousands of tors, teachers, students, secretaries 1 believe it says somewhere, people who have studied here, or and workmen. Hundreds of names "I will lift up mine eyes unto the taught here or worked here. pass through my consciousness, hills from whence cometh my There's something in these hills names of people who gave self- help." that has touched every one of lessly of themselves to build the Tonight the TV tube is dark and them, something that has rubbed institution nestled here and who quiet. I am cuddled in my favorite off on them in varying degrees, at one and the same time mined "writing chair" as a cold wind something that has built within the priceless something the hills pounds helpless raindrops against the breasts of all Clemson men contain and returned to them the windows. and women an enduring spark akin still more of it. A ridiculous coal-black French to an eternal pride. 1 have my names and tonight poodle called Inky has squeezed There's something in these hills. 1 see once more the faces and in almost under my left hip and It was here when a handful of feel again the beloved person- tiny orange and blue flames are fledgling faculty members greeted alities that go with them, tf you playing hide and seek between the a relatively small band of 446 stu- will but close your eyes and drift mixture of pine and dogwood logs dents more than 75 years ago. That awhile, you, too, will recall the in the fireplace. was shortly after convict labor had names and faces and personal itic.'S 'There's Something oi tho'^r who iiH'iint tlic most to ot o\ vv nin(>ty .ind .1 bo\' of' imder thing that m.ik(>s .t m.m or .1 woman yoLi whiliMlu' t)rivik'^(' ot lx"ing twenty, somc>thing th.it h.is given st.md t.iller, feel IxHter and say amoni; thrm \\ <is \ i JLirs, them common grounci on which to with high pride to all within ear- Tlicrc's something in tlicsc hilU st.md and .i start tow.ird bridging, shot, "I went to Clemson." cind tiom thcMii wo htuc drawn ihc .md eliminating, any ga[) (U .iny There is something in these lulls powor to tr.msccihI tlic stn-ssfs stress or any str.iin that might try that you .ind i can't define .ind and str<uns tfiat ii\\a\' to make to mak(> unglued whatev(>r they others ( ,in't underst.md. A w.ive ai thin,i4'^ I'oiiK' hii^IikhI m tlu'se dis- seek tor themselves .is they move w.irmth alw.iys surges through mo qiiictin.u times, the power to cut out ot these hills into the moun- when "outsi(iers" s.iy, "I don't know through sucli nio(l(>rn concepts — tains, the pl.iins. the oc e.ins, the what it is .ibout you Clemson peo- and such niod(>rn tacts --as gen- forests, the skills .md the storms ple, but your etndying love tor Clem- c (>rati()n ga()s, onimunic ation gaps of lite. son is admired by everyonf} I ktiow." and idc-ologic al ga|)s. We have all drawn from th(>se There's something in these hills — \Vlit>ri' is the gencMiUion gap hills something tc) suggest to youth and 1 suspect that's what it is when an .ikuTinus who spcnit tour that those ovi>r thirty can be trust- the ability of an institution through years in these hills before the turn ed <in(i to indicate to those over the unending dedication and great- ot the century says, "Next to my thirty that the qualities of youth ness of its people — its administra- church and my home, I love Clem- are as sound today as they ever tion, its faculty, its staff, its stu- son University beyond .ill other were. dents and its alumni — to impart to institutions this side ot Heaven" There is something in these hills all it touches a respect, an admira- and when a grackiate-to-be says, that brings together and binds to- tion, an affection that stands firm [ xc epting only my parents, Clem- gether and holds togeth^'r men and in discjuic^ting times when things son has meant more to me and women <^f all persuasions, of ai! around it give impressions of com- don(> more tor me than anything heights, si/es, weights and cultural ing unglued. that has touched my lite"? backgrounds — something that cuts Yes, there's something in these There's something in th(^se hills across every difference, spans every hiils wfiere the Blue Ridge yawns that has bound together a man gap, ptMK^rates every wall —some- its greatness. by foe Sherman In These Hills Director of Alumni Relations BOARD OF TRUSTEES Life Members Sen. Edgar A. Brown, President Barnwell Dr. James F. Byrnes Columbia Patrick N. Calhoun Charlotte, N. C. Dr. Robert R. Coker Hartsville Capt. Frank J. Jervey Clemson Dr. Jam.es C. Self Greenwood Winchester Smith Williston Elected Members L. D. Holmes Johnston E. Oswald Lightsey Hampton A. M. Quattlebaum Florence T. Kenneth Cribb Spartanburg Senator Edgar A. Brown. President, Clemson Board of Trustees W Gordon McCabe, Jr. Greenville Paul Quattlebaum, Jr. Charleston CLEMSON THEATRE CLEMSON. S. C. 1970 BOARD OF VISITORS Robert J. Moseley, Manager Adm. H. J. Kossler Charleston Dr. Hem-y F. Frierson Orangeburg 1^ Thomas A. Evins, Esq. Spartanburg The Theatre of Fine Entertainment William B. DePass Rock Hill Dial 654-3230 for Current Attraction Dr.
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