October 10, 1980 Eastern Illinois University

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October 10, 1980 Eastern Illinois University Eastern Illinois University The Keep October 1980 10-10-1980 Daily Eastern News: October 10, 1980 Eastern Illinois University Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1980_oct Recommended Citation Eastern Illinois University, "Daily Eastern News: October 10, 1980" (1980). October. 8. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1980_oct/8 This is brought to you for free and open access by the 1980 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in October by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Daily Friday, Oct. 10, 1980 will be sunny with highs in the mid 70s. Tonight will be fair and colder with lows in the low 40s. Saturday will be sunny and cooler with highs News in the upper 50s or low 60s. Eastern Illinois University I Charleston, Ill. I Vol. 66, No. 34 / 20 Pages / 2 Sections arvin addresses AB; xplains July memo Becky Suprenant group has the best knowledge and Speaking to the Apportionment closest activity with the group which d Thursday evening, Eastern the AB has chosen to fund,'' he added. ident Daniel E. Marvin said in the "Groups have false expectations nt past, there have been several that once a budget is approved they ters which he resolved but should have responsibility," Marvin said. been handled by the AB. Any requests for money which are Marvin was present at the AB made after the budget must be ting to answer questions approved by Student Body Financial erning a memo he sent July 30 to Vice President Todd Daniels. Alt In addition, Marvin asked how new. subcommittee was then formed in programs are begun and who decides r to answer questions raised by whether a program can ask for funding in's memo. support. "I ·have no preconceived notion of In his memorandum, Marvin t I want from the committee," proposed the possibility of separating in said. the publications from· AB funding. "There was a controversy over "When a group shares respoosibilty ing of organizations and the the relationship between these two · ion was not mine to make," groups changes," Marvin said. in said. "f was involved a great "I don't know if splitting the more than I should have been,'' he Publications Board is the best way, but that is how I would do it," he added. e Vehicle, Model U.N. and the "If the AB indicates they want to el State Government were separate publications from AB then I ssed last year. When the AB was will be willing to approve that," rtioning money, they said one Marvin added. and the Student Senate said Marvin said he recognizes that the ther, Marvin added. publications are an important part of 'I was responding to the situations the institutional program· of ey arose last year," Marvin said. journalism. ere was no rational or consistent "The Daily Eastern News is a lab for rn to my actions," he added. jou·rnaltsm and I am committed to the arvin added it was not his program," Marvin said. "I want the· lion to raise specific questions by publications to be a:s good, strong and· memo. stable as possible, "he added. arvin said any group which has a "There is no great hurry for the nt-faculty board should have the answers to my questions but I would It'll grow back sight responsibility of their like to have them before the AB starts Graduate assistant Jim Borschel gets his head shaved Wednesday to benefit get. to apportion money," he added. the Charleston Big Brothers. Thomas Hall residents donated $50 for Borschel's 'The student faculty board: of any haircut at the benefit auction. (News photo by Karen Allen) Blood drive goal niissed by Dru Sefton The American Red Cross campus blood drive missed its goal by 16 pints, Jeff Fahrenwald, drive chairman said Thursday. The drive goal had been 1,700 pints, Fahrenwald said. Total pints collected during the fo ur-day effort were 1,684. Fahrenwald said it is the first time since Eastern has had the semiann.ual blood drive that the goal has ·not been reached. The last blood drive at Eastern, which ran from March 10-13, brought Stanley Rives Donald Lauda Margaret Soderberg in 1,727 pints, 227 over the 1,500-pint goal. This time the weather played a role in the short count.· ·"Monday; Wednesday, ·and eep choice to be named sooo Thursday we broke records,'' Fahrenwald said. "It was Tuesday that elinda DeVries academic affairs. have three candidates who are as hurt us. The weather was just too nice. tern President Daniel E. Marvin Marvin said he met with Rives and interested in the position and as well People didn't want to take the time to Wednesday he will decide within Soderberg Monday and Lauda qualified as the final three he is come in and give." next two weeks which of the three Tuesday and plans to meet again considering. Fahrenwald said another reason candidates for vice president for briefly with Soderberg and the search Marvin said that although he plans there were not more donors was that mic affairs will fill the position. committee before making his final to make his decision within the next many people were turned away due to a arvin said he has narrowed the five decision. two weeks, the candidate's name will low iron count in their blood. "dates presented to him by the Marvin said he is taking his time not be announced until the Board of "We had over 64 people turned rch committee down to with making a final decision .tobe sure Governors meeting Oct. 30. away for low iron Thursday alone," Donald Lauda, Eastern dean of he is selecting the best candidate. The vice president for academic Fahrenwald said. School of Technology; Stanley "It is difficult to make this decjsion affairs position became vacant after Fahrenwald said one reason for so es, Illinois State University because the search committee gave me Thomas Bond resigned this summer to many people having a low iron count . iate provost · and dean of such good candidates to select from," become the president at Clarion State could be because "last weekend was ction and Margaret Soderberg, · Marvin said.· University, Clarion, Pa.· Homecoming, and lots of people ern assistant vice president for He noted that it is a "luxury" to (See RLOOD, -page 7) 2 Friday, Oct. 10, 1980 The Dally Eastern News Missile fire claims highest (AP) · · __e__ wiiiiiiiiiiiiiii s__ s__ __ o__ r__ t__ s cas u a It y to 11 ever-1 ra n iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiN ,. h Carter tones-down attack on Reagan by the Associated Press attacks, reported major gains in the BAGHDAD, IRAQ-Iran claimed central sector of the front and WASHINGTON-President Carter went public with his softer, toned-down told Iraq fired missiles into two Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr Reagan on Thursda y, but independent John Anderson the attack on Ronald cities Thursday, inflicting the highest Tehran Radio, "Vfe are entering declared, "It's too. late," and insisted the president's chances of holding on to · casualty toll of any action in the war. final phase of the war." Revolutionary House are fading. the White Both sides were dispatching envoys in leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini 's rhetoric as mildttr as he began a two-day swing in Tennessee, while Carter � an effort to enlist support from other said victory was certain and Iran Reagan, in St. Louis, declared that "I am an environmentalist...I am fo r clean regime . countries. planned to replace the Iraqi air." But the Republican candidate renewed his attack on the Environmental in Iran, which claimed up to 180 killed with "an Islamic government" Protection Agency, which he said sometimes insists on "unreasonable and and 300 wounded in Iraqi missile Baghdad, many times untried standards" to clean up the air. Reagan als0 turned down an invitation by a Tampa, Fla. , telev1s1on stat10n for a "joint appearance" with Carter when both men are in Florida on Fri�ay. Carter accepted the proposal, in which he and Reagan would answer quest10ns End of the week from different locations, but Reagan's spokesman said there would be no deal unless Anderson is included. Special II SIU researches a new fuel source CARBOND'ALE-The corn stalks, cobs and leaves scattered across fields during the harvest have been mentioned as a raw material for fuel alcohol, but $1 � 7 5 Pltch.er's Southern Illinois University researchers say conversipn is difficult and expensive. · . on "At this stage of the game, it's not practical, but it offers some interesting possibilities," said agriculture professor . Walter Wills, noting that fuel Friday Afternoons availability eventually may be more important than price. Wills and a team of scientists at the Carbondale campus have been studying the conversion of corn stover to fuel alcohol for about · a year under a grant from the Illinois Institute of Natural Resources. From unsolved Heart murder cases 11 :00 a.m. to 6-:00 p.m. 11 BUFFALO, N.Y.-The mutilated body of a black man whose heart had been . r � �\ cut out was found near the Niagara River on Thursday, police said. He was the second black man slain in the same manner in two days and the Come celebrate sixth black man murdered in the area in less than a month. Edward C. Cosgrove, Erie County district attorney, said the latest body was the end of the weel<! found near the Niagara River in Tonawanda. at Marty's Just steps frortt the dorm Friday, October 17, 1980 .
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