Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

August 1965 Daily Egyptian 1965

8-19-1965 The aiD ly Egyptian, August 19, 1965 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_August1965 Volume 46, Issue 208

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, August 19, 1965." (Aug 1965).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1965 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in August 1965 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SIU Students Strain at Academic Leash, Set Break as Goal S:mthern's student body, When. asked what plans he Sally A. ·Galliher. a senior the home of ber roo mate. on housing construction "like right now, is not unlike a Sun- h::..d for the break, Ron Sereg, from . Metropolis, plans to Iran L. Neidorf. afreshman I did last summer:' day school class that knows the a sophomore from Rock rest, and work in the high from 'Berwyn, is planning to "Oh, yeah,"-wastheanswer min~.'ter is about three words Island; said, "I'm going to school business department. earn some money by driving given by Brenda 'Carson, a away from the final amen of Cape Cod for two weeks of She also plans to spend two a truck for a landscaper. freshman from Fulton, Ky., the benediction. Everybody pure relaxation and sleeping weekends at Kentucky Lake Bob McGuire, a junior from when asked if she would enjoy is looking for the quickest until at least noon." and one weekend at Peekskill. N. Y.. will work the time spent in her home m~~",: of ;.~~:~.. between town. . summer and fall terms will ID!~Ij}~lly Dodie Bales, a freshman be roughly three weeks and ~JJ EGYPTIAN from Jacksonville, plans to most students plan to make spend a week in Knoxville.and the most of it. then stay at home the remain- Many are simply going home EXTRA der of the vacation. for a good delll of relaxation. S h LlZ. • T T.. Students plan to visit friends sleep and home-cooked food. v they haven't seen for three Others will hop on Hondas or out ern lnolS nlverslt'"'J months, make a little cash in cars to visit some area for the coming fall te:.. m, and during their time of cooling VoluM • .f6 Carbondal., IIII.ols Thursday, August 19, 1965 Numb., 208 try to get rid of that tired, off and soothing jagged nerves. run-down feeling Gemini 5 Ready for 9 a.m. Launch UJ:c~.r . - . S(;C~;~R~,-~~Y~S Astronauts Set Frosh* Urged * ~ AUG 2~ 1965. For a-Day Trip CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (AP) To Register -With their spacecraft at the ready. the two Gemini 5 astro­ nauts were set Wednesday By Aug. 27 night for today's blast-off and eight days in space. Due to the rapid closing of general studies classes and A worrisome power system the filling of classroom space, problem that appeared to the Registrar's Office is urg­ threaten the mission Tuesday ing freshmen to advance night faded away to a mere register before the Aug. 27 ghcst in the morning light. deadline. Space agency officials pro­ Herbert W. Wohlwend, as­ nounced all systems ready for sistant registrar, said there the expected 9 a.m. Central is no assurance that addition­ Daylight Time lift-off "and al freshmen will be registered the crew is ready to goo" on Sept. 22, the beginning of Astronauts L. Gordon the fall term, regardle! , of Cooper Jr. and Charles­ whether they are new or re­ Conrad Jr. went through the turning students. last-minute routine Wednes­ Should registration get to day as flight officials cleared the point that no courses are the last barrier to their flight. open or no classroom space Things looked dark for a is available, the students will while when elJg=ne~rs found a not be allowed to register. problem with a power system Should these people be at the St. Louis, Mo., plant entered, restrictions may be where the Gemini spacecraft placed upon what courses was built - a duplicate of the could be taken duripgthe term. , one in Gemini 5 - and there Therefore, a freshman stu­ were some immediate worries dent might not be able to en­ that pe r haps the capsule's roll in the necessary general system might be going sour studies courses too. The last day of advance .­ Involved was some deeply­ registration for graduate stu­ "OUCH" - Astronaut Gotdoa Cooper, command installation of receiVing instruments in his space frozen hydrogen that powers dents is Friday. pilot for the Gemini 5 space flight, grimaces as a helmet. The instruments fit inside the astro­ the new and tricky fuel cell Students who have been ad­ plastic mold is placed in his ear by Dr. Charles naut's ears when he puts on the helmet. system. The fuel cells are mitted to the University since M. Beny, director of Gemini medical operations. (AP Wirephoto) being used for the' first time July 13, but who have not as The mold was taken of Cooper's ear to guide the in Gemini to produce yet registered for courses, electricity, replacing much have received letters from the Summer Moving Time heavier batteries. Enrollment Center telling them that they may register Numerous SIU Office Locations Face Shifts; In the fuel cells, oxygen. at one of the Edwardsville and hydrogen are combined, centers immediately, if they producing water, and allowing wish to do so, or may register Campus Changes Require Reassignments a harvest of electricity from at the Carbondale campus on surplus electrons in the September 20. Affair's director Paul Isbell chemical reaction. Both the Late summer is moving ent Health Service to another oxygen and hydrogen are time at SIU. Space reassign­ residence at 202 E. Pearl St. from barracks T -40 into Gal­ Talk on Morocco Slated ments have been announced by The old house will be removed legly's old space. stored in well-insulated tailks in a sort of slushy snow at Kurt Shaffer will discuss John S. Rendleman, vice pres­ for 'new construction at Uni­ General Studies and Liberal his experiences as an irriga­ ident for business affairs. versity Park. Arts and Scien<:es Advisement (Continued on Page 6) tion engineer during his [1;1'0 Immediate changes sched­ Health Service and Phar­ from two temporary buildings years with the Peace Corps uled for completion by the macy to the Small Group north of University Center to in Morocco at 8 p.m. Friday time school begins in Housing area. If possible, the remodeled space in University Gus Bode at the main picnic dome just September: . old Health Service building Center, second floor. Student n ... rth of the Lake-on-the­ Latin American Institute will be retained for office Work Office will go into one Campus boat docks. from a house behind the pres,. space. The Pharmacy building of the vacated buildings (T -65) will be removed. and the otber will be assigned Faculty Club from Harwood to Chemistry for more office Fuller Geodesic Dome to ~ouse Avenue to 1000 S. Elizabeth space. The old Student Work St. Old building to be displaced office barracks to be removed SIU Exhibit at Du Quoin Fair by Harwood Avenue widening for Harwood project. project. The SIU display at the Du used in the dome are being Education Advisement to Registrar from barracks at Room 110,' Wham Building. Quoin State Fair-will be housed made by the Woodwork Pilot the end of Harwood Avenue to in a geodesic dome designed Plant at VTI. Advisement centers for other tbe former Data Processing major academic divisions will by Buckminster Fuller. The dome will be open every and Computing Center space The dome will contliin wood­ day of the fair, according to be at present administrative north of it. Offices of Data sites of those units. en panels dealing with the Rex Karnes, communic.ation Processing manager Thomas fields of study, the student media service division; from Purcell ilnd programmers . Other early fall moves will activities and tbe enrollment 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Two members from old space to Wham Edu­ be linked with the Harwood situation at SIU. A scale model of the faculty will act as hosts cation Building. project and widening of Mill of the Edwardsville campus for tbe display. They will Purchasing into the space Street, a cooperative .job be­ will also be on display. One band out brochures containing formerly occupied by the tween SIU and the city of Car­ area of the dome will be used information on the Carbondale Registrar's Office. bondaJe. Work on Mill is sup­ for an exhibit on moveable campus. Treasurer Robert GaUeg­ posed to begin in October. Gus says all those new pill­ parts by the School of A guest book will be in the fy's office from barracks at These moves are: boxes on the corners dOn't Technology. dome for all visiting SIU the end of Harwood Avenue to The office of the National mean a revolt, just pedestrian The benches that will be Alumni td sign. 904 S. Elizabeth St. Business' (Continued on Page 5) refuges from motorbikes. Page 2 DAILY EGYPTIAN .... ugu •• 19. 1965 Anti-P,overty Plan Directed by Rea / James. F. Rea of Chris- assistant director and secre­ topher, consultant with Com- tary in each county. Rea will munity· Development Service, reside at Parkersburg. has obtained a leave of absence With Community Develop­ until March I [0 serve as m(.nt Service since 1962, Rea area director of a multi- has assisted with the SaUne­ county anti-poverty program. Gallatin counties. Goreville. Rea will direct activities of Smithton. and. Enfield com­ the nine-county West Central munity action programs in West Virginia Community Ac- Southern Illinois. tion Association. He said he Anothe~ Community De­ would develop various type~ velopment consultant. Bailey of programs on a regional Williams of Carterville, is approach under ,provisions of spending 12 weeks this sum­ the Anti-Poveny,Act. He mcr at Northern Michigan will have a program director, Un i vcr s it y. Marquette, rcaching VISTA trainees. VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) is a civilian pro­ ject based on the program of the Peace Corps. Prior to going to Michigan, Williams was engaged in a five-county pilot project in Edwards. Richland. Wabash, Lawrence and Wayne counties.

Shop With DAILY EGYPTIAN Advent.en KENNEY HONORED - David T. Kenney (cen­ c. Addison Hickman (right), professor of econo­ ter), who is returning to full-time teaching as an mics, who also served as acting dean of the associate professor of govemment after II year Graduate School for a year, and Charles Tenney, as acting dean of the Graduate School, was vice president for planning and review, are shown honored at a recent luncheon bv his colleagues. chatting with Kenney before the luncheon.

Hands Behind the S~enes . ..•. ,,;,~.-,.,,~.{;~ ~ •~',+ .... '+' '" Seamstresses, Costu,mers Stitch Together Fast Changes for 'Sound of Music' Troupe COMIINATION POUCY A needle and thread, in the "These children have stage setting together. Al­ 'Oll CYCLES UNDER 125 CC hands of an expert, can per­ enough clothes to carry them though they won't be seen on . .,., $10,000/20,000/5,000 UAlILITY _Jr.'-for_ form wonders. In "The Sound through any occasion," Miss opening right, the make-up • --TrAIL _ I'VIUIISHID • CHICIIO DaIGffT (ATlIll of Music," this weekend's Christensen said. director. props director, CJS­ • _ SCIHI( ""'ILl ... $25 DEDUCTlIU COLUSION SCIUnIIIUI ILL_ AND flU • TNIFT Summer Music Theater pro­ Boss, a graduate student in tume director and all the duction, many needles, spools the Department of Theater, others who work "behind the HALF DAY-ALL DAY $55.00 12 MO. 0 of thread and working hands has designed a wedding dress scenes" are an integral part DVEJ.:NITE have created a wardrobe for for Maria Trapp, in addition of this musical. a stage family. to a wardrobe of dresses for Tickets are avallable at $1 549-4588 The seven Trapp children the Baroness Elsa Schraeder. and $1.50 in the Summer Music FRA"NKLIN in this Rodgers and Hammer- Boss recently received Theater office ill Shryock GIANT CITY JVSURANCE stein musical will have no less second-place honors in cos­ Auditorium. STABLES Il '" than seven changes of clothing, tume design in a nationwide AGENCY with seven people backstage contest sponsored by the Lyric Opera Company of Chicago. MEXT TO 703 S. Illinois Ave. ~~:~Jsth~:r'tiit:.a~~~l~trofst~i~~~ In addition to designing and Today's wedding dresses and playsuits making the wardrobe for the ;:~=G=I=AN=T=C=IT=Y=S=T=A=T=E=P=A=R=K=~===P:ho:n:.:4:5:7:.446:::1 ===. are just a few of the costumes lead characters, the costume that have been designed by crew is also responsible for Weather TODAY - FRIDAY Roxanne Christensen and 28 nuns' habits and dresses. VARSITY S.... TURD ....Y Richard Boss. The cast for "The Sound of "_~PI IIJ!!!!!I.... Music" numbers approxi­ DAlLY EGfPTLI.N mately 65 and each member Publt-l'hed In ttM: 04rp3ttP1em of Journalism daily c"c~P' Sunday and Monday durln[ill fa: •• has been outfitted by the crew. whuer. tlprln[ill and elghr-week 1Iummer term "The Sound of Music," run­ execpl: durin. lInlversUy v3carton periods. t!'ltam,nation we-ekR. and Ieg:al hoHdays by ning Friday through Sunday at Snuthern illinois Unl.. er~lty. Carbondale. 8 p.m. in Shryock Auditorium, IIllnoiJl. Published on Tuesday and Frld3!i of each weelt rot [he tlnal rhrH weetfr also features several settings of the Iw~"'c-wcet summer rerm. Second which have been designed by cia" poRtage paid al the C.arbondale Post Office under the act of March 3. l879. Darwin Payne and Robert Policies or the Egyptian art: the respon­ Pevitts. The convent back­ Considerable cloud! ne s s slbilUy of the editors. Statements pubURh~ here «» nor necessarily reflect the opinion ground will be seen With a With several periods of of the administration or any depanmenr 9-foot statue of the Madonna. showers and thunderstorms. Qf, the llniverslty. EdlfOrI.aI and business ontces JOCal~ In A bedroom scene has anelabo­ Locally cooler with showers, Bulldlng T -48. :FIscal omcer. Howard R~ rate bed with ruffling around otherw:. ~ little temperature L""S. Phone 453-1354. the spread to match the huge change, and a high between backdrop. 85 and 90 degrees. Record Thirty backstage crew high for the day is 106 degrees, FRI. - SAT. NITES members have been working set in 1936, and record low is AT 11.00 P.M. for three weeks on painting, 52 degrees, set in 1943. ac­ hammering and nailing-all cording to the SIU Climatology Tile ladie~ the ,!Ob'L:. required to put a Laboratory. 0/ Paru play the Petrt.leum uGa"u~ ../Lm'f'·' Products Automotive Accessories WWPRICES

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"COU~TRY MU~I~N BROAOWAY" l4tfS O~ ~~, WITH .... LL THE " .;£:J - ,., .. _•.... S:~~~~.O.~"lH~ .. ~~~~N,~,~Ll?,O'P.Rl... , .. ,., .... , .... , L!____ =____ ==;;;;;;;;;~ Au ..st 19, 1965 DA!L., EGYPTIAN Page 3 Activities Excursion Planned Education Workshop, To Muny Opera An excursion to see the Ler­ ner and Loewe musical Drama odoy "Camelot" at the St. Louis Slated T Muny Opera is scheduled sat- . The Basic Adult Education present "The Miracle urday. Workshop will meet at Worker" at 8 p.m. in the Cost of the trip is $3.00. 8 a.m. in Room 326 of the Playhouse. which includes transportation Wham -Education Building The Southern Players will and ticket. The bus will leave and again at 1 p.m. in Room have a display from 8 a.m. at 4 p.m. from the University 319 of the Wham Building. until closing in Room H Center. of. the University Center. Arabic lessons offered by the Those interested in at­ Organization of Arab Stu­ tending must sign up in the dents will begin at 6 p.m. Editori~l Comment Student Activities Office in in Room 102 of the Home the Center before noon Fri­ Economics Building. WiU Be Broadcast day. "Camelot" will mark the The Rehabilitation Institution Editorials from leading end of the summer session Summer Workshop will American newspapers will be of the Muny Opera. meet at 7 p.m. in Muckelroy .read on "Page Two" at 2 Auditorium. . p.m. today on WSIU Radio. Miller Will Judge The Bal'tist Student Union will Other programs: meet at 7 p.m. atthe Baptist Mississippi Hogs Foundation. 10:05 a.m. " Howard W. Miller. assistant The Interpreters Theater will Pop Concert. professor of animal indus­ meet at 7:30 p.m. in the tries, is judging the Missis­ Morris Library Auditor­ 12:30 p.m. , News Report. sippi State Market Hog Show ium. at Jackson today. The Southern Players will 1 p.m. Miller. a swine production Reader's Corner. specialist. joined Southern's Dewey Research faculty in 1961, and receIved Is Seminar Topic 3 p.m. his doctorate in animal nutri­ Concert Hall: Piano Sonata 'Strange Interlude' by O'Neill tion from the· University of Mrs. Jo Ann Boydston, in C minor by Haydn, Sym­ Kentucky in 1962. He also assistant director of the co­ phony No. 2 by Gounod and served on the University of operative research on Dewey "Giselle Ballet Suite" by Will Be Telecast Over WSIU Tennessee faculty. He is a Publications will lead a Adam will be played. native of Moline. III. seminar discussing the Dewey Clark Gable and Norma Sp.m. Research Project at the Shearer will star in "Strange What's New: The develop­ 6;>.m. Interlude," a tragedy by ment of the harpsicord. Faculty Club luncheon and Music in the Air. seminar today. Eugene O'Neill, on "Film GLAMOUR , Classics" at 9:30 p.m. today 7 p.m. The luncheon will be held 7:3dp.m. on WSIU-TV. Metropolis: The discussion in the River Rooms of the Sing Something Simple: The - Other programs: is, "What Is It Like to Be ~~~TfAGE University Center. Noreser­ Adams Singers. a Negro in a Big City Like vations are required. 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia? .. ~ ~ 8 p.m. Industry on Parade. Marx Brothers Voices on Campus. 8 p.m. Beauty Salon 'Crack in the Mirror' Passport 8. In Movie Friday 8:30p.m. 519 S. Illinois Chamber Concert: Con­ Is Saturday Movie 9 p.m. The Marx Brothers star in certino in F minor by No appointment necessary the Cinema Classics film" At "Crack in the Mirror." You Are There: The end Pergolesi, Sonata in C by starring . Ju­ areall 457-5425 the Circus," a 1939 produc­ Hindemith and Septet in E of the Dalton Gang in 1892. tion illustrating the comedy fiat major by Saint-Saens. liette Greco. and Bradford style of the times. Dillman, will be the Movie Hour presentation at 8 p.m. . The movie will be shown at 11 p.m. Saturday in Furr Auditorium. 8 p.m. Friday in Browne Au­ MoonUght Sex-enade. ditorium. Admission is free Admission is 40 cents for with activity cards, 50 cents Midnight students with activity cards without. and 60 cents for those with­ News Report. out. :-.:<~-.:«<~ ~ ~ ~. ~. ~ ~! ~ ~ f.~ ;t\ BILLIARDS f. ,."~ S NOW OPEN ~. ~; I ;~ § ~.: ~ NEW FALL LOOKI ~ SU:.'S".,~,,::,!:.~~ 499S ":: I Sportcocts :'. TWEEO. HERRINGBONE, & HOPSACK ¢.. 9S All W-~ •.ll 24 -:: I ~bt v-. a Open 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. daily ,: ~quirr ~hop I.tb~ '., MURDALE SHOPPING CENT~R ~ Free Parking at :CampusShopping Center '.;~.,q_¥JOI!O.lO'_~~" •••"''' )II l'O&::.:~.~.x.

'." •. _ .•.•.•.._. '." -. ".' •• '-" ••••• , •• I •••••• It., ••••• , • .' .. • - ~ •••• "'". t" ...... """" l ) •• , •• _. -. -- ",- - -.-.-,'••••••••••••••• " ••.••. - •.-~",'" ..... ,...... , •••• , ...... , •... J ' Par" DAILY EGYPTIAN Daily Egyptian Editorial Page ~i~' W as Mars 'Hospitable'? By Frank Macomber around in space. Now it has was commenting are great Copley News SerYice cleaned up a lot, as chunks crevasses which indicate of planers broke off and sifted upheavals of the earth which SAN DIEGO, Calif.-While down perhaps to other also could have occurred on the Mariner IV pictures dis­ planets. So Mars might be the red planet. courage the hope of findirg cleaner than it used to be:' Ehricke says 1979 would be life on Mars, we. won't be Ehricke explains it this way: ~he first good year flJr men certain until men land on the "Mars probably got the to make the 64 million-mile red planet. says a scientist same jolts the earth once re­ trip to Mars. who has made Mars one of ceived. This must have added "We would need more his chief study missions. some pratty deep scars to its shielding of the spacecraft of The scientist is Krafft surface. It might also have 1979," Ehricke said, because Ehricke, director of advanced hag a heavier atmosphere than of sun storms or what we call projects for the Convair di­ we know it now has-l to 2 solar flares. Actually. 1986 vision of the General Dyna­ per cent of the earth's. would be the best year to go mics Corp. here. "There is a trace left in to Mars with people, because Ehricke won't be counted South Africa which indicates we estimate in that year there out on the Martian life con­ that life could have been wiped will, be the lowest activity of cept by the Mariner IV piC­ out there a million years a!W. the sun:' tures, even though he praises as it may have been on Mars," them highly. he explains. "Our wounds on earth are healing. It Is One of the happiest ~ngs "I'm certain there are no in the movies is when the guy little green men with orange possible that those on Mars are not. in front of you finishes his noses lurking up there:' The formations in South sack of peanuts.-Cherryvale Ehricke said in an interview. Africa about which Ehricke (Kan.) Republican. "But let's not rule out tha fact that there still might be life on Mars. PREACHER'S JOB - TO TEACH PEOPLE TO LOVE ONE "The atmospheric and hu­ ANOTHER midity conditions of Mars, as we know theM now from the Mariner IV pictures, aren't conduCive to any proof that 'Why, Hit's Right Thar life exists there." However, Ehricke said, life may have been prevalent on In Slack {and Whitel" Mars a million years ago and By Arthur Hoppe again. But I say we got to be dead now. San Francisco Chronicle bow our heads to the "Conditions on Mars might inevitable. With, of course, , well have been different a mil­ "Evening, you all. It sure my Colored friends, gladsome lion years ago, or even several does make me right proud to hearts. millions of years ago. Mars see my many, many old White "Now I know for a fact, might have been what we now friends here tonight. And my my Colored friends, that call a 'hospitable' planet mil­ many, many new Colored there's Commie agitators lions of years ago. And noW friends, too. With your going around saying I wasn't it might be a 'hostile' planet, support, I know I'm goin' to your friend till you got the where there is not enough be returned to the hallowed vote. Why, the monuments to atmosphere and moisture to balls of Congress for the 16th my friendship are all over sustain life. BIU ..eClan ..... Dal1 •• Pt ... time. And I'm countin' on this here district. Who' do "Millions of years ago all "TODAY'S SERMON WILL BE DELIVERED BY LAY BROTHER you think got the money to sorts of debris from many McSNIVETT SINCE OUR REGULAR MINISTER IS OUT OF STATE build you all your own drinkin' planets probably was floating TAKING PART IN A STREET DEMONSTRATION SIT-lN." fountains, your own rest rooms. your own schools? Who fought tooth and nail to preserve your own waiting IRVING D.U..ARD Chlcaco'e Amerleaa rooms, your own churches aTJd your own seats on the buses? Modesty forb',ds me namin' myself• Dirksen vs. Douglas Vote •, And who do you think's The JDOSt Important actioas taken 110 far faction of seeing both their senators vo te been fightin' for your rights? Now a man's got heaps of In the 89tb Coogress? Ce:1IaiDly everyooe uphold to the Supreme court's IDterpretatloD rights and I alone couldn't would say these Include BOcll notable Iegi5- 01 the Constitution that people, DOt COWl aDd fight for them alI. But you, latiOD IS that providing hospitalizati08 for trees, should be the basis for legislative rep­ my Colored friends, are til'! elderly CI!ru soclal • resentation. These stales included IIIdiana, citizens of this great State. curity and that guarantee. W'ISCOIISin, Michigan, New York, New Jer­ And I'm proud to say I been Ing votiDg rights for a 11 fightin' for your State's rights eitizensregardless of colOI'. ey, Conoectic:ut" and Maryland. FourteeD man and boy for 30 years. Yet it might just be true states, among them DIinois, PeDllSylvaDla, "But let us not dwelI on the that the JDOSt Important cast ODe vote yes and ODe no. happy past. For the future action of an was the de­ ODe of the strangest aspects of the voting HOPPE looks black. (No offense to feat of an ameDdme!lt to was the lineup of the two parties. The J)em. my Colored friends here.) And the bill to designate the oc:ratie senators voted by a ratio oi II to 5 you, my White and Colored I say to you White folks to­ period from Aug. 31 thru to support the Supreme court. Republicans friends, equally. SelJarately night that now more than ever Sept. II as "NatioDal Amer· voted 10 to 1 against the decisions handed but equalIy. you all need an experienced ican Legion J>.aseball week." down by Chief Justice Warren. OoIy three "Now there's some who say statesman in Washington to weet," Republican senatoB-Javits IN. Y.], Case I haven't done much for my deal with them Damnyankee If that aeems an extrav· [N. J.], and Boggs [Del.l-upheld the "ODe many, many Colored friends, Colored-folk lovers up there. agant statement, just keep ...... DI..- man, one vote" basis of representatiCll. That but that's just not so. Why, And let me add for the benefit in mIIld that the matter voted OIl had JlOtb. is a strange way for the Republic:aD8 to 30 years ago there wasn't of my Colored friends here ing to do with baseball, the American Legion, win themselves needed favor in the PUPil­ a single Colored voter in this that I'm just the man to deal the first week in September, 01' any other lollS metropolitan areas! here district. But in the past with them because I'm a sport, veterans organization, or week of year alone that figure's Colored-folk-Iover myself. the year. Beafen by Douglas jumped 50 per cent. Yes • 'How'm I goin' to do it, The entire natiOD owes a debt of gratitude sir, today 50 per cent of the you ask? Why, firstly, I'm Slid Dirlcsen ~oye to the leader of the fight agaiDst the Dirk­ voters in this here district's going to get all them half­ That amendment WIS merely the .1 i c k sen amendment and he was DOne other than Colored. And I can't tell you way so-called Civil Rights maneuver of Sen. Dirksen to detour arolllld Dirksen's senior c:oIleague from Illinois, all heretonigltthowthatmakes bills repealed. Yes "'ir, I'm the Senate judiciary commlttee. which wu Paul H. Douglaa. Calling the outcome a me feel. That I can't. goin' to get us a new Federal deadlocked OIl his resoIutiml to override the "vote for the American people," be gave "Course, part of the credit law banning all discrimina­ Supreme court's "one mmJ, CIle vote" declo special credit to two fellow senators, Prox· goes to President Turncoat tion anywhere any tim e. moos. mire [Wis.] and Tydings [Md.] who were Johnson's Votin' Rights Bill. (T!.J.ank you, my Colored ColUlting in the three senators who were major aids.. But it was Douglas who car­ But just let me say to my friends, for your applause.) paired and who therefore also declared ried the brunt of the battle over the weeks Colored friends that I spoke Unless local officials deem their positions, the SeDate division WIS 59 and months and, answered every argument - for five days and four nights otherwise. (Thank you, White to 40. That means the Dlinoia. Republican's painstakingly time and again. Valiant work on the hallowed floor of Con- folks, thank you.) effort to protect "rotteD borough" legisla­ was done nationally by the Committee for gress about that ~ere bill. "Your cheers tonight give tures was defeated by III!'II!Il votes. Most Fair Representation, headed by Lawrence And just let me say to my White me confidence that we can of the vateE for the DlrbeD ameadment Speiser. friends that reprints of what march forward together, I had to say about it are still White and Colored alike, under came from IOUtbem or other iura! states Now Jet'. make sure the victory is not avaUable. this year's new banner of like KaDsas,Nebruka, IIIId fowL UDdermfned lIJ the SCM:alled state petitions Thirteen states, including many of the to ,eaIl a COIISlitutiCllaJ convention-or by an­ "But anyway. the bill got our beloved State Democratic passed. Them Damnyankees Party: "White Supremacy most populous, bad the distiDdion and san. other DirItsen maneuver in the senate. rammed their notions down Forever-Regardless of Race, o~ ,f!l.~, '. ,1?9~*ern ,thr~t,f1., G~eedo~.,C:;,o~C!r.l.'.:, ,.. , . I Augusfl9 1965 Pog. 5 Dropout eoe. to College sm OffiCers Get Miner on Night Shi New Locations (Continued fro. Poie 1) Outdoor Education Associa­ To Get SIU Degree tion from the corner of Mill Street and S. Illinois Avenue More than 20 years ago, he heeded the call of "good to 606-606 1/2 S. Marion St •• Russell W. Rose of Harris­ money" and- quit in 1941 to along with the department of burg, dropped out of high work in the mines. Recreation and Outdoor Edu­ school to work in the mines. "Three weeks after I quit cation, now at 801-803 S. Today Rose is a candidate for I knew I had done the wrong Washington Ave. MovJ.ng into a bachelor's degree from SIU, thing," he said. "But it was tbe two houses on Washington earned while he worked the early in World War II and the will be the History Department night shift at a coal mine money they were paying looked Annex now on Harwood. That and attended classes by day. good. Like all kids reared building goes when Harwood "It's been tough, real during the depression I wanted is widened. tough:' said a 42-year-old the material things." An art annex now on East grandfather of twin boys. Rose Rose married in 1943, and Park Street Will he displaced presently is working the when the baby son, now thp. i by University Park expansion second shift at Orient No. 4 father of twin boys, was born.. and that space has been re­ mine between Johnston City any ideas of a college degree assigned to East Stoker Street, and Pittsburg in Williamson would have been cast aside by along with a workshop for the county. the average working man. But University Galleries, now lo­ "If I really didn't love to Rose decided he wanted a col­ cated in the Allyn Building. go to" school and learn, I lege education and began The Allyn Building space will don't belive I could have made studying. In 1958 he received be turned into a classroom. it," he said. "I needed the a GED (General Education The first phase of convert­ encouragement of my family, Development) "high school ing most of the first floor of my employers, my fellow­ diploma from SIU's University O!d Main for the SIU Museum workers, and my teachers:' School and. began taking South­ will begin next spring. The Despite the tough schedule ern's extension courses taught Museum will take over most Rose's grades have been out­ in Harrisburg. of the first floor, although his­ standing. He has maintained When Southeastern illinois tory department offices and a an approximate 4.75 grade College, a two-year com­ language laboratory will re­ average in college studies. munity college, was started in main. The music department R(\se, 6 feet 5 inches tall Harrisburg four years ago, will get the old museum space and weighing 235 pounds, is Rose was one of the first to in Altgeld Hall for a rehearsal slated to receive his bachelor enroll, taking regular day room and offices. of science degree in Education classes and keeping his coal at Summer Commencement mine job at night. Lauchner Named Aug. 27, a night he'll take off After two years at South­ To Committee from work. His area of spe­ eastern he tranllferred his Julian H. Lauchner, dean of cialization is secondary credits to SIU, where he has the School of Technology, has education with a major in been taking a slightly lower been named to an illinois En­ social studies and a minor than average load of approxi­ S1UDENT MINER - Russell Rose of Harrisburg gets ready to gineering Council committee in English. He plans to con­ mately 12 hours a term and descend into Orient No.4 coal mine. The 42-year-old grandfather on professionalism. tinue graduate work toward a going four terms a year to has been working a regular night shift while working toward a The appointment was an­ master's degree, "but I'll classes While working. degree at SIU. He will receive a bache1or's degree in <=Iiucatioo nounced by Norman Miller. teach when the right oppor­ His 93-mile a day schedule this summer. Chicago, council president. tunity comes along." calls for him to drive to A coal miner for more than Carbondale about 8 a.m. each 20 years, Rose was employed day for classes, then leave at Sahara, Dering, and Pea­ SIU by 3 p.m. to get to work body coal mines around on time. Starting at 4 p.m., Harrisburg before going to he workr:s until midnight and Orient 4, where he works gets home around 1:30.a.m., underground as a machinist's only to arise in time to leave helper. around 8 a.m. for Southern Rose was born in Harris­ once more. burg and "reared south of Car­ "I bet I'm the only college Cheeseburger rier Mills. After three years student who takes a miner's in Carrier Mills high school lunch to school with him, only I don't eat it there," Rose Discussion Today commented. He puts his lunch ~-." .... \ ... > and "Shake in an iced cooler and brtngs it to Carbondale. Then he On Rehabilitation takes it to the mine, Where he A panel discussion on "Re­ eats it at 8 p.m. on a break /~;-.. ~:"; .. 5~~;.~",:·~ ',_ "... " Th~all campus habilitation in Action" will from his work. highlight today's program, the '"':-":~::~0:~~.:f. favorite at SIU A fourth day of the 12th annual Institute -for Rehabilitation Personnel at Thompson Point. j 100% pure sirloin Members of the panel are Herman Weiss, physician; cheeseburger, cou­ Hildegarde Myers, nurse and physical therapist; Jeanette Taylor, social worker; Wil­ pled with a big. thick liam Kir-Stimon, psycholo­ gist; Clark Sabine, occu­ shake. Budget priced pational therapist; Irene Osthoff, vocational counselor. The two-week: !"o.ltute is a but extravagantly genp!";;l orientation p:l:'ogram designed for professional prepared. workers engaged in giving direct service to disable-! per­ sons or in developing and coordinating the community resources dii"ected to the needs of the handicapped. As the day progresses, stu­ dents will hl:!ar a series of talks dealing with Rehabili­ (Open: tation Emphasis in Public As­ sistance, followed by a group 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. disculJsion. owointment Oil the finest in shoe-repair Wa~kL fj\_S~~IJ;ce (Work done while you wait) "MO.;~.~ND""·-" "-C_~lCle~ Settl emoir' s Across from the Varsity BEAUTY SALON ~~~;:,~~L·~·-:-:\.Jost:-,'O~f:"Ccimpus Ph. 457-8717 .. ' ._.::-.h.... l~ ~ ]i~ ~!"i~;.~: :~'it~ ~;~~~'."': ~. We dye SATIN shoes! 2U W. 'RIEMAN DAILY EGypnAM Au",st 19. 1965 A 'meri~an$" Biggest Viet Battle'­ Raging on Van Tuong Peninsula DA NANG, ~outh Viet Nam "We're notthroughcounting machine guns. knocked out two (AP)-U.S. Marines, warships yet," the general said. Marine tanks and one antirank ;~f...~!$:"'~-W';~:I'l~j.~'):;;'~ and aircraft sought Thursday "I bave never seen a bener vehicre":j. the opening hours to. wipe out an entrenched Viet coordinated attack. ,. of the-battle. (r,Qng regiment already American casualties offi­ Helicopters and jet planes bf6Qdie,d in a peninsular battle cially were Cescribed as light, bombed and strafed Red em­ tb~.an American briefing of­ but no figures were disclosed placemeDj:s. Napalm at times ficer termed "the bi~est and unofficial sources in Da helped' [o"'burn out Viet Cong thing we've ever had" in Viet Nang said the Marines took strongpoints. With more than Nam. substantial losses. 100 craft involved, Marine U.S. 7th Fleet warships pa­ Walt himseH witnessed the officers salCl they dropped 64 trolled in the night in aneffon fall of two men of a detachment tons 0(" bombs, six tons of to prevent the guerrillas from tbat hit the beaches from land .. rockets and four tons of escaping by sea. Ashore, Ma­ ing craft. Helicopters brought napalm. rines kept watch against any in other Marines and a dozen A flotilla from the 7th Fleet. move of Viet CO!lg in hills to of these machines were dam­ including the cruiser Galves­ the west to reinforcetheirbe­ aged by Viet Cong fire. In all. ton and the helicopter-carry­ leaguered associates. the Leatbernecks made up a ing assault ship Iwo Jima, "I predict we'll have some full regimental landing force backed up the operation. ~"',..,.ra. tough fighting," said Maj. Gen. to cope with a Red enemy "We made great use of naval Lewis W. Walt, the commander estimated up to 2,000 men. ~ .. nfire," the briefing officer of Marines in Viet Nam. In many places, the Viet Cong said. Walt told newsmen Wednes­ waited in camouflaged con­ Walt reponed the Galves­ day night that Viet Cong crete bunkers and opened up ton's guns wiped out two Viet RIOT WIPED OUT rus BUSINESS - Sy Block, owner of a cloth· casualties from heavy contact only after Marines had passed Cong companies trying to flee ing store which stood on E. l03rd Street in the heart of the Los during opening American as­ them. a village. Two companies Angeles riot area, inspects what's left of his busine::;s. It was saults on the Red-occupied "Seventy-five pel' cent of might mean 200 men. The his first opportunity to find out what happened since arsonists Van 7uong peninsula, about 60 our' casualties were people general said be counted 17 put the torch to the store last we~k. (AP Photo) miles south of Da Nang, will who got shot in the ba~k, .. Viet Cong hodies, all in uni­ run into the bundreds. Walt said. "It is very, very form. in one rice paddy. treacherous terrain." In Washington, Gen. Wallace Unofficial sources said the M. Greene Jr., the Marine Viet Cong, well-armed with Corps command~nt, com­ mortars and recoilless artil­ mented that "this is really a lery as well as rifles and full-scale battle." ~ go tothe BIG ONE and SMILE~ Fighting in Kashmir IGA Tablerite Hal~ Peace Efforts NEW DELHI, India (AP)­ by Indian troops Sunday across lb. Prime Minister Lal Bahadur the 17-year-old cease-fire CHUCK ROAST 45( Shastri called off the Thurs­ line in divided Kashmir as day visit by Pakistan's foreign essential to India's security. Beef minister as new fighting flared The Indians wrested three in Kashmir and elsewhere Pa.'dstani out-posts in tbe c along the India-Pakistan Kargil sector of tbe Himalayan lb. frontier. state. Shoulder Roast 69 Shastri canceled Foreign BbultO bad been invited to Minister Z. A. Bhutto's trip New Delhi to discuss tbe >to New Delhi under pressure cease-fire agreement for tbe from members of his own Rann of Kutch, a border waste­ C&H Sugar Congress party and other land 800 miles southwest of Indian political groups de­ Kashmir where Indian and with 5.00 urchase manding stern action against Pakistani forces battled in the guerrillas in Kashmir. April and May. The cancella­ In Parliament. Shastri said tion eliminates any possibility c Bhutto had been asked not to of expanding the Kutch talks ISA Flour 5~ 49 come beacuse of the serious to cover the I Kashmir d e t e rio rat ion i n India­ fighting. Pakistan relations. "Our The Indian Defense Ministry c army will take any further said the fighting had cost at 15A Salad Dressing·~at 39 steps it considers necessary least 352lives-230 guerrilla£:, to defenci our borders," he 67 Indian soldl~rs and 55 warned. K ashmiri civilians and police­ Shastri defended the attack men. Gemini 5 Ready for Launch

(Conti~~ frO.1II Page 1.~... \." aJ.Id·~dep~ting the fuel for the bundreds of degrees below electrical svstero. zero fahrenbeit. "If it~ were n'ue in the ····························.···60z.cans Flight offici111s. keeping .a:' hydrogen :ank in St. Louis. IGA Lemonade 11 for $1.00 careful eye on> the system, they· reasoned, it might also NATURE'S BEST were concerned that the be' true, 'Of the lank in Gemini hydrogc!D might thaw too 5. It coUld have meant a delay Strawberries ...... 100z. pkg. 4 for $1.00 rapidly. escaping as a gas of 10 days or so to replace r------. the tankage. NATURE'S BEST But after hours of checks and rechecks. they announced Orange Juice ...... 6 oz.cans 6 for $1.00 the system was operating perfectly-and gave t.he mission a go-ahead. IGA Ice Milk ...... 2 half-gallons SSe Command pilot Cooper, an Air Force lieutenant cohnel. SPEED WASH and rookie pilot Gonrad. a ~. Navy lieutenant commander. SPECIALS Cleaner• .& Laundry sat in on mission review meet­ ings and received a repon on 214 S. Uni'ftlrsity Ave. the countdown for the Iceberg LeHuce - 2heads 29( mammoth Titan 2 rocket that QUALITY SHIRT SERVICE will propel them into space. r 11:'___ • 0'___ AH__ L Seedless Grapes 15( lb. • Shirt. reiumecl in r_ u...... wuo,;ft; '1 !Iolles or on hangers. Red Ripe Watermelons 49...~ ea. n' • Mendabl. teors Wt.ULaughingMalterAGRINION. Greece (AP)- will be ...ded. Medical examiners said Wed­ nesday that Nicbolaos • Dalllapci or lost Vlachos. 18, died of a heart ~ bu ...... replaced. attack caused by excessive BO~EN'S ~ FOODLINER SPEEDfo~ASH :!f~~~wni~aid~ coffa~r;:~ ..."""."" .... _> .... _ .... _~~_ ..~_ .. __ :_~._~_ ...__ :~- ....-.~-~_~_E_E_T-'!"_CA_~_~O_.N_.,D_ .. ~_,.~_.,>._~~_ .. ~_~_~_:._ .... _.... _ ..o_.~_ ..~_.~_ .."'!'~.:_.~_ ... _=_.~_,~oo_ .. _... _.~_.. _.. _.~._.~_.~_T_. __...... __ F_"_t ... _d..,....;..._._ .. ~_ .._~._I~_.~_~_~_.~_~~_. -'> .... ~~~~~;~~.. ;!.~~~~~~~.~~ ..~~ .. ~, DAILY EGYPTIAN Search for Wrecka.ge Of Jetlin~r Continues CHICAGO (AP)-The U.S. "All we have had is floating ~a'yy put, subsurface deteqion . ~ebris:' deyj,ces

:~Y;·'ni8ht ."by. ":t::rUSfUntll""·tlne' ;;Maintenance Crew 20-6. " ;~ The Huqs ,usecfl;tw,o big : .,innings, a ~ven-run. tllf,rd and ··a nine-run seventh, to put the AJto & McmW Scoot ... :.game QUptf:r~ach.·-<. ".. ~ . -I~ ;. Dan::MagaJiif 1:he~'game's ·,only home" run, a line drive F:inaneialResponsibility Filings :.downthe right-field line. . Jim Flynn went the distance EASY ~AYMENT PLANS fo"r.· "the Huns" and scattered. '3,6 ar lZ Month.: _ , . iline hits. George Connell FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY took the loss. POLICIES The Huns will "now meet the . Thompson Point All-Stars for FRANKLIN the intramural softball cham- " pionship. INSURANCE Score by innings: AGENCY R H E 703 S. Illinois A"e_ Huns 127 010 9-20 18 2 Phone 457·4461 DON SHROYER Maintenance 200 400 0-6 9 3 Tulsa, Cincinnati Grid Foes Include" MVC Title Favorites By Joe Cook George Karras, who warns, Southern will play three "We'll be tough." The The variety of food you Missouri Valley Co.lference Shockers are led by Jim teams in football this seas<;n, Waskiewsicz, 227, talented see advertised here and two of them are favorites centerlinebacker who is rated is geared to the student a top prospect by pro scouts. for the conference champion­ budget. Be sure and take ship. Louisville, Southern's op­ The University of Tulsa, ponent Sept. 25, is expected advantage of these AG buys. Southern's Homecoming op­ to be improved, but not enough ponent Oct. 3D, and defending to escape the basement. c'lampion University of Cin­ Southern, which has been cinnati, are the pre-season seeking membership in the favorites. conference for some time, BABY BEEF SALE! W;chita State University, a could have a strong talking team Southern will play Oct. point if it fares well against ROUND STEAK,..... lb.69t 23, and North Texas State these three teams. University are also highly Southern defeated Louis­ rated and are expected to ville 7-6 last year, but lost CLUB STEAK ...... Ib.69C cause conference trouble for to North Texas State 14-13 Cincinnati and 1 ulsa if they and Tulsa 63-7. GROUND BEEF .... ,2~b.98t don't solve their backfield Coach Doll Shroyer has problems. hinted that he would like to Tulsa's problem is the knee see Southern in a conference. T-BONE STEAK.... lb.79t injury suffered by tailback .. It creates rivalries and gives Bob Daugherty. the nation's the team a little more incen­ No. 7 pass receiver and a tive," Shroyer said. strong, swift runner. SeWlOn'. La.t Dance Cincinnati's worry is its Allnut MAXWELL HOUSE quarterback, Mike Flaherty, Set in Roman Room AGTOMATO a University of Detroit trans­ The Summer Programming Peanut fer, who is a fine passer but Board will soonsor the last COFFEE is still bother by a leg broken dance of the su-mmer from 8:30 Butter JUICE in mid-season last year. to II :30 p.m. Friday in the Glenn Dobbs, Tulsa's foot­ Roman Room of the Univer­ 09 00 ball coach, predicted before sity Center. 1Y2 #-S 5' 3 lb. Can - $2 4 ~. - $1 Daughertv's injury that he Music will be provided by would gain 1,000 yards rushing the Castaways, all SIU stu­ and 0500 passing this season. dents, A.G. SHUR FRESH "I WOUldn't be surprised to see Tulsa win its fourth straight national passing title RECORDS BISCUITS d~spite the loss of Jerry ALL TYPES SHORTENING AG FLOUR Rhome," Dobbs said. Rhome broke 16 national passing and total offense ePop -LP's c c C marks in 1964. eFolk e45'8 3 Ib.- 69 5 Ib.-39 3eans -19 Tulsa, which finished the year with a 9-2 record in­ eClassies' cluding a victory over the Uni­ LYDIA GREY KRAFT CAMPBELL versity of Mississippi in the Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston, NEEDLES MIRACLE PORK & also has split end Howard FIT ALL MAKES Twilley, who broke two na­ TISSUE WHIP BEANS tional receiving records, and a eDiamon'!:l strong interior line led by eSapphire Qt. c t. c tackles Willie Townes, 270 10 ~~~~ 69' 49 4 49 pounds, Tom McGuire, 248, and center John Osmond, 236. Williams Store Wichita is expecting a S. ILLIHOIS A.G. PINK BEAUTY C & H POWDERED comeback under its new coach, 212 EAST GATE CATSUP SALMON SUGAR c CLEANERS & SHIRT SERVICE 2 120Z·35BlLS. 7 1I.m. to 9 p.m. daily 1:. -59' 2 ~ 29' :I~O~:E] 7 o.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday FAST Service - Dependable Core For Your Shirts, Loundry, Cleaning PICK'S A.G. EAST GATE SHOPPING CENTER