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October 1978 Daily Egyptian 1978

10-16-1978 The aiD ly Egyptian, October 16, 1978 Daily Egyptian Staff

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TIle V.III latenlltll_1 hrty•• VIPPIES, .,...arM a , ..oIIH ... prof ., Monday. October 16. 1978···Vol. 60. No. 41 f.Ikert.... liA ...... ~rij .. _ laWi Frida, a' ...... _, ...... Pase 3 •• I&.-y .1Id plio.. , Traveling opera comes to Shyrock By Marcia H..-ou In siotting tlpera, WaUace said that the E.IiertII ...... EdJt.. singer IS not merely showing off his Afler Mary Elaine Wallace and her range or skin but that "any good traveling opera sillgens returned from performer has a certain ego about them. their tOW' of grade schools last ~ar with jUst bee a footban player has to have a "Beauty and the Btout," the director certaiB drive. You c:ou1d say the same rec:eived a piJoo of Ietten from children. thing about a champion swimmer or a One was ~JaUy amusing: "You want gymnastics team. They're certainly to Im,rw the part I liked best?" wrote the showing off their skills. Why not marvel child. "The hole play!" at the skiU 01 • singer?" Another child wrote: '" thought this Wallace will be taking "DOh was going to be a drag, but I enjoyed it Pasquale" OIl tour on the "Opera on ~"hl"els" program after the Shryeborah SdIwatJ act one's age. is takii,g over for Univers~ty Choir Wallace said the opera's music is as director Robert Kingsbury, while he is "light and frothy as the S\ory." She said there Is an espe«:iaUy beautiful love duet sick and a preview 01 • graduate voice to to benKom Norina and EmestCJ, recital wesent the faculty that The music is also very indicative of tbto morning. an hour before tbe group characters. "There's crying musk when leaves for K,.nkakee. they cry and sneaking music when So alf Wal~ and her troupe of opera they're sneaking." singerJ wiu go 0.., tour to ~ate both Though some ~y eom~in of ~h clU!iireD and 9dulb that opera is not .just "a lot of (at peop~ ~inginp high note!o .. ~liccooventlons. Wailace pointed lis PaabeW', livel, .,. ·ra. "0. P~." &be I.n.... NGriDa (DeWall 'JUt th.1t an actor can be more emotional They too may find, as another child who Schw.b, .... El'IIHto IR•• da .. Black ••re ,.... by Dell P ..._ie eDarid .n Singb~ a love duet than in simply wrote wallaCe a letter did,that 'it was Sackaa.... lite tell) .,AI Dr, Mataeests eStevea Ke8iJllki), ..)~g 'I love you.' super~" Lead guitar carries City Boy show

By Micltael l1Ireicb third song. "Moving in Circles:' a piece Monda, Editor thai took Stamer's ~itar throu~ some The band eaUed CIty Boy hails from rock pac 5 while harborin, a ~sant th~ in~ustria! city of Birmiiigham, vocai duet irom Mason ano Brougn&on. England, a hundred miles from London. In the midst of their show, City Boy cid an area with a traditioJr•. ?f producing their !~IO hit in Britain 12'.'tb in the ROOd British bands like Trarfic, the U.S.) "S.7.0.5 .... sung by City Boy's new Moody Blues and most 01 Led Zeppelin. drummer, Roy Ward, an ex.,oosive bloke City Boy opened for' Hall,Oates show who likes w wear hats with firecrackers at the Arena Thursday night .iUl a s!1ow in them. The verse or L'Us my-baby-ain't that, altbough rumored to be plJnk. bume-when·I-c:aU·her~·tbe-teJephonP turn~ out to be good 'lIe ErtgJisli rock numoor barks bac:k to vocal harmor"es with ..i' the U .... trieal -madings of the starte\1 by and the Everly music .i1, Brothers. and later ~ed by Badfinger. And :avemous music hall it was at "Dinn" .. at the RItz" brought out the An .' as City Boy :)Iayea ~ore the singer-soogwriter Muon in bis SllMlking smaU c. ~ as they would of 1Jiayed jadl.:l~"" ~roughton iii eveniDl clflthes, before the thousands they c:an expect eventually coming down into the crowd when they play Olicago's Amp.;u~ter to sing the refraio of "pleased to meet later this month with U.F.O. your acquaintance... Slamer duek;d with City Boy would have beeu stwming in bassi,t Chris Dunn, ending WIth an • smalL.,. hall, 011 the strength of Mike instn~mental fat'e"/ell that included :;:aUla'S guitar pla.:iiig aloc.e, but _ it snatl!tles oi UIe seatles' '0i>ay TnJooel'," wa.'t, their sound diffused into the lW' of ~-ix and "Over the Rainbow." 1be the Al-ena, especially' the vocals. The frenetic "cigarettes" was sung l.'Y band was sustained by lead g\ftitarist drummer W~1'd. wbo c:oncentrates more S1amer. who stayed out of the s~ on bis ~i~ :,u" playq the skim. and created tbe buv:>, electrIC tone Slamer came up to play u=~er stage for behind the singing 01 S;eve Broughton his INd 0Ii this on one, witt. a quiet. and Lowell Mason, Sl"mer bas iDter.. solo that showcaSl'!d his ability. developed his own style and ~ Br~ton a~ that the band after beina heavily iDfIuaeed by Deep .as eveful n« to break eam.,.. rules Purple's llitcllie Blaekt-ore. aDd is agaiJr.It tiriDking. 10 they were smoking ready ror a spotlight aU It.is own. 'lbe bud fouml their ,.-oove by the (Conti",," on Poge 2) Poet's work hased on her private life 8y J._ Vito ...., need for understanding by others was so separation from her hIBband; hoNever. SUff Writer great that she hop!"d that if peopko would there is a few happy poenI$. like British litl!rary critic A.Al.-arez once not understand her in life, they might in "Yellow"; Whfll they ta... <e _n !aid that art and life cannot be d· 11th. oa agala I'U pla.t cllUdrea separated. Such was the case with WIder it. I'U light ., my soul Americ:an poet An~ Sexton, whose loth 'I'M first St'Ction of the book is 'nil) last seeti4"'fl of poems is entitled volume of poetry ,"Words for Dr.Y" was previously unpubl ished pot'ms written "SC'Orpion, Bad Spitrer. Die." Sexton recently published by Houghton Mifnin from 1960 to 1970. They are written to her returns to the stnet meter form that Co. psychiafrist, Dr.Y.• as she tries to teU characterized her earlier work. These 14 "Words for Dr.Y'· not only is Sexton'S him of her dilemna with life and death: poems are based on daily horoscopes 10th volume. Her daughter Linda Gray Sexton r~ in newspapers. Sexton is her editor and literary Dr.Y executor. Anne Sexton began writing I IIftd a tlaJa hot wire. The last seelio,,, of "Words for DrY' poetry in 1967 at age 29. S;~ was one of year Resc.e. 11M". Yoke contains three stories Sexton wrote. the leaden of the "confessiOlll,1 school" to slntell me eat Thetitles are "The Ghost, .... The of poets. which included Sylvia Plath. to keep me frem lobi, uderfooC Vampire" and ''The bat." These $lont'S 'I'bes&> POets' work was based on events aael , ....l1Ig stiff are fiction based on events in her life in their personal lives. such as as a yardstick For instance. the narrator of "The marriage. suicide, personal '~rs and Ghost" is great·aunt of Sexton·s. One desires. Thus the term "conlessional." Dn< partic:ular particularly borrible scenario Sexton's work is centered around I lIHCiyoar hOC Mea .. IS when the aunt decides to punish t..:!" themes of madness. sex. blood and my bide. flag", lit &he " ..me niece. suicide. She struggled with depression two rretins SUla4lin" at my un. and madness the first 20 years of her IisteDiDg for tile rop rar Dea< "Words for Dr. y" is a transitional life. Her poems !WeIned to be a form of IIIftd my litlle addkdoa .. yea volume of work because it contains catharsis, in which she communicated L..--Aaae Sell_· ~ poems written in a sbid mctric:al fcrm her thoughts to her readers, Sexton as compared to her to the looser, fr.... ~ death <)f\ Oct. 4. 1974, at the age of 45. Sexton also uses interesting similies, found many a kindred spirit; her work "Words ."'or Dr.Y" was another such as saying t:-.!I' doctor was "as brave verse style of her later work. became popular.with her first book "To attempt by s,"Xton to teU her readers of as a motorcycle." and personification as Bedlam and Part·Way Bac:k" (]96O' that her fears of life and death. Throughout she speaks of being put under electric This is a book f'Jl" persons w~ are ~It with her experience in a mental her work. she seemed to search for the schock trea tment as being' 'tossed like a familiar with Sexton's work and hospat'll, core of her personal problems. rose under the SUD." appreciate her style. It is not a book for a Sexton won the Pulitzer Prize for According to her daulZhler'S preface in person who never read any of her work, poetry in 1967 for her third book "Live or the book, Sexton bad set aside the first The second section also contains because some of the pot'ms are not first· Die." She was a professor of English at group of poems in "Words For Dr.Y" for unpublished poems ~rittt!fl from 1971 to rate. nor characteristic of her best work Boston University from 1971 until her posthumous publication. Perhaps her 1973. These poems talk of her impending This is. however, an interesting book) SGAC Concert CODlnlittee on road to 'rf~covery'

B;. Jolm Cart.ff irom ia.OOi) to $1U.000. whije- tie- e • ., Staff Wriwr ra;'l'ly pay more than J:i.GCli. That 13.000 Two yearc; ago. the SGAC ':oncert vtVj is where a lot of the most popular Committee was !lounderini. Poor talent comes from. but Katsis thinks he manallement and financial misiortlDle may have found a solution. were r:Iining whatever reputation the By booking two well·known bands to committee had. Last vt'ar's committee pt'rform two shows on ooe night, Katsis was preoccupied with mending their will bring prestige performers even reputation and recovering the budget. though he has had to ~.• ~p the entire ThIS yt'ar's committee is concentrating budget into it in the mt'antime. He SiOO on music. that this sort of arral'lfilement has ne<1ft' "We want to bring in the acts that been tried before. The show is sdledWed students ,.·ant," Concert Committee for NO\'cmber 11th. Katsis promised that Cbainnan Pete Katsis said. "And at the ,t would be a good one. but would not same time we want to get acts that are release the names of the anlsts. professl!Y1aL (hal have something new On first glance. this might seem a to offer. and that are hot now, not two risky manuever. Big talent gets big \"ears later." money and if someone bombs, the . ThOlq!h not a particularly simple task. committee goes to work washinl old the comnll!tee is working on it. With a ticket·sell marquees. But Katsis is Si6.Otfu budget and the extra revent.!{ confident that hiS e:ttertainment from ticket prices that have gone up a ahernatives will be accepted by dollar, Shryock has been bosting better students. bands rore often. It is not a co; .lcldence. Katsis' c;)nfidence co,nE'S from "We're trying something nt'W. getting experience lilt Northern Illinois bigger act" than Shryock is t'niversity and SlU I and a surVE'Y that a,custmt' med to.·' Katsis. i senior in the committeE' circulated to some 900 film produ...'hon said. students !.:isl :·ear. It asked participants Since ft'W could afford a Dvlan ticket if to name the acts that they would pay he were to play Shryock. the committee for, and so fal' it bas been quite accurate. is focusing on bands that drift apan Leo Kottke pl,lced No. 2 on the survey from the mainstream of TO«'k music. and ~ sold IJU~ in one day. Sea Level Katsis said that the Arena is doing a C'lme in tl1!i"d ant: they sold out in one good job booking bigger·nam{' bands. day, also. Katsis said that Albert King freeing him to look for blues, ja7.Z am saga ,.'8S an entirely different story. even reggae performers. Cony Siegel, who alone .. old 800 One problem, arising when the Arena U'-"ets t)r his performance in the Pece KaPis Roes for mainstream talent and Katsis Student Center ballrooms last vear for the more specialized, is costs. Arena cancelled. Then, on the third day of But as the committee was losing its was on. acts, Katsis SOlid. demand anywhere ticket sales, seats for Dylan's concert shirt on King, it was saving as much They1. keep coming, too. Katsis said. went on sale. On that day, two tickets to money with the booking of Sea Level and if the committee can overcome the King King were sold and Katsis abandoned Jan Hammer. Katsis said that by setback, there will be an aU-campus 'Daily Fgypcian ''fishing for a date"' he caught the treat coming UJ.> in the spring. ~~~~J~C:: a~fu:ee~:!. /::~~ groups 00 an off·nigbt, savlDg the "The goal of e~ commIttee I have ever been on is to have eDOI1gh money at Published dao.., In .... J...... m and E9\'ploon lost $2,000. committee some $3,000. Shryock was loiJoroto. Amencan marijuana instead. ochool days and they had been writing years !like Boston. Foreigner.) Th...... ·s 331 1. V.. ~nn A Slone liKol cHic., . City Boy stopped in Carbondale in the songs together for ten years before more things to write about than sex and Subs<:ro"'",,, ra_ ..... ·,"2.,.. w.... 0< S7.50 10. mi~t f)If .. f,..!,,-m~tl! t('OJ!' th!!t W!)I.!!rl becominll CilV Boy four years ago. drugs and rock n' roll. But one thing is ... mon,hs In Jocloson au' ...... nd,ng c .... n".... send them to West Lafayette, l'ldiana by As for-the 'music scene in Er.gland. that America is more a(fluent than II) _ ,_r .,.. sa 5(' '0# ". _ .... WI."'".... bus immediately after the show. punk rock used to be ~ar out DOW England and Europe, so there's hope in Un.ted SlOt'" and S20 :- yeo< 0# I II for ". "...., Leadsinger Lowell Mason. looking not seems to have died down. letwing only that beIng bP.re you have the opp«tunity to listen to whatever you want. .. ~~~:::~ (~;::.~~odmon, A'lO(lOt~ EdtfOl unlike an Englist. "~n 8elushi. said that the good punk bands. according to of As for Ammca. Mason said that if he ."... ,,_. ~E".tOl" ~oIo.Ulre.ct{E"i_ ...1 he considers CIty Boy to be part of the Mason. Contemporary forms rock, P_ ~.... Ed l_,nen. N~ Editb«K. "oI",col Ed"a< Marlo P..... · remain nameless. You know woo they tastes havea't varied and d!er're Iock« picked the Dodgers. are."' into an accepted rock format that'. been "At least I'd put my money Oft ·em." Page 2. Doily Egyptian. Oc~aber 16. 1978 Hundreds gather for slnoke-in protest B, Kit. IUkld John Tary. chairmllP of the coalition, Although the speakers presented Wall and State Streets. According'o Staff WriWr said the smoke-in was successful in researC'hed cases. the crowd was I('ss police, Stender was observed. by ".. roar of roclt m\1l!ic anti t .... !!mokf.' bringing persons out to openly protest than enthusiastic to their presentation plainchoti>t's off cers hlling a pipe. from thousands of marijuana cigarettes the current marijuana laws. The smoke­ ''They seemed longwinded," said one smoking from it :md paSSing It to the filled the autumn-like air as the in had been planned enbrely from the crowd member. "We really want crowd. he wa~ cha,-ged with possession "Autmnn Harvestrest smoke-In" for the local level and reaeved no support from music." of cannabis under 2.S grams. legalization of marijuana took place in national marijuana reform groups, he the Free Forum Area Friday afternoon. Carbondale police estimated the said. ~re'm~:::~:! ~~r!:s~ :z; parade crowd at SS marchers. OU·er The smoke-in, sponsored by' the ~ation St., tt.'!ft "We recieved no from the Grand AVt' to Wan north on than IIIP arrest. police said the mart'~JerS Carbondale Coalition for Mal'1juana YlPPIES oe NORML.' Tary said. "The Wall St. to.he Eastgate SbOJlloing center. werp. pea.'oful and I!ooperatf'Il1ore in libertll arts. was Br'NSted which is scheduled for noon. Sa':!rd.ay, by smoke-in leaden_ The crowd seemed to appreciate the by Q.rbondale police .at the comer of Aug. 28, at the Free Forum Area. Si~ With such slogans as "Free efforts of the group. Pot, • ."Free the Heads and Jail the ''This is fantastic. It great wt.en we t_' -,' '¥- "it MEG" and "Free the Marijuana 30 can get people together to get high and ....~ .'.. . Million" marked the perimeter of the fight for a cause," Jan Zimmer, ~ior in smoke-in area. Spanish, said. "U's good that we can use a legitimate -..;/..1 af~ .:::v!:e:tJ~;y;'S=r. open rrotPSt to st- oor vttwS on the started playinc songs by Z.Z. Top, Frank laws,' another partit-ipant '.i3id. ''This is being more Of·'" r.nd socially =. ai~er;::t~ .=end~~~ accepted. Yoo can tell by walking down playin.~. coalition leaders threw the streets nowadayS anf.·seemg people marijtu.na "joints"into the crowd. smoke pot in public." . "Many ~I(' brought their own," a Virgil Trmnmer, SIU ~~e chief. said ,:~lition s)lOkesman said. "But we police had no problrms with crowd suppl:e«f 30CXI .ioints for the crowd. made contro;. He said tbree J,lainclotht'l6 from five poond!l of 'home grown' pot." officers We!e in the crowd, ltut were rot The festive c,,-..d was [!lade even there to make arr.. sts for marijuan.-, lal1:Jer by curious persons who s~nt sm('king. their lunchtime watching the actiVities "{lur major con~ern is for from the upper level of the nearby disorderlinl!S\," Trt:mmer said at the parki~ deck. smoke-in scene. "We're just hl!1'f! to "I'm suprised they're actually observe and to '.we everything is .:alm... smoking the stuff," one observer sa:~ The crowd thinned down as the Althoogh the majority of the crow'.i afternoon wate on. By 2 p.m., crowd ., I was smoitinll ooenIv. manv DIlrticiDllnts estimates W'a'e down to about 200. .\Iter &heir pretest in &he SIL' Free F ..... area Friday, tile YJPPIEs ..an,," expressed a -paranOia of tJeing iden'tified Three sppakers talked to the crowd Ie Eastgate SIIoppiag C ..eer. iIro ~ ...stallt eKCWt ~ C.ub_Ib..... Polite. T1Ie by the press. about mr.r1juana law reform and a ..arc.1ters .elll dow. Grand Aveaw .. Wan Street. &H ",.~" ill Jr.I 01 "I don't want my parents to find out "home rule" referendum for College Stl'ftl, WHft YIPPIE _eft said tile poti« _n qllic:ll to ~1IrTY I'm dointf this," a student said. 1ega1iTAtion of marijuana in Carbondale. &he .. v.-,. (Staff pIIoto ~ Mike G ...... , sm has IO-year history of controversy over pot By Ra, Valek Egyptian story said the use of Enforcement Group (MEG) was crea;ed and religious greups. However. Staff Wrieer marijuana doubled between 1~,", and in IWi .. to stop illegal drug traffIC. 1ne r~.iOeb' Warren rsrandt supported the Friday's smoke-in at the Free ~ arum 1969. By this time marijuana was within group consisted of eight fuU-time sbr'jy as a Rep to stop drug abuse. area, and the foUCJIlrinI marcb througb easy access of SIU students and about 20 undercover age.:ts who used itubin intended to conduct the Carbondale in prOt.lI~ of .., arijuana penent 01 81U IIluden&a _okeel pot .... llUl'Veillance and infiltration tactics in research "1 payinl male volunteers 120 la.... was just the latest in a long line 01 regular basis. Jackson. Williamson and Perry counties a session to .. moke government-supplied c:ontroversies concemiIW pot that bave Students inter\tieWed in 1970 agreed to discover illicit drugs. The group std: rr.ar;.JU8Il8 and watch erotic films while an i.Ilustrious bist!l"Y. at stu. that drugs were no longer limited to the cooperates with local police authoritieo•. electronic dev:~es measured their Baclt in 1961.. a Dady Egyptian special stereotyped "loog-haired freaks" but MEG was criticized for its use of paid oovsical response. He said he had report addressed the drug usage were uSed by "straight" looking dormitory informers last year. In 19':7, p..inned to study if there was any truth in problem at SJU. A related story called students, faculty anll staff members. a controversy surrounded SIU's suppori the popular notion t .at smokiDg marijuana tl1e ~;ggest problem. In 1971, John Paul Davis. assistant fur of MEG by contributing salaried police enhances sexual behavio, . "Marijuana SHa.. to be the biggest ~ affairs to SIU-E Chancelloe John S. officers. The Board of Trustees rejected Rubin later lost the federal grant in druB in circulation 01\ the SIU campus at ilendleman, called for the a request l.) Student President Dennis May 1976, and blamed the 1068 to the present time," Jack Hazel, chief 01 decriminalization o! marijuana. Adllmczyk .0 withdraw University sensationalized news coverape of his the carbondale Police Department in C. Lowell -AlUthern, head of the personDPI from MEG. In 1m, Harris sex-pot study. He said he thought the 1968, said. "So far, the past year and a narcotics division of the Dlinois Bureau B. Rubin, associate professor in the SIU news coverage of the sttKIy ~"'ayed a key half, we have bad about 12 arrests of Investigation (1BI>, said Carbondale School of Medicine, received a grant role in the House of ReJ'resentatives dealilll with its usage by sttKIents here." and SIU comprised one of the major from the National Institute of Drug decisioa to revoke the project's federal Later that year, Clyde Weatherby, a druB traffic centers in the Ur.ited States. Abuse to study the effects of marijuana grant after some $40,000 oe 150,000 had representative of the Division of Whi1e some were calling for the on human sexual reponse. The NIDA been spent. Narcotics Control i:: ~ringfield. saici decriminalizatioa of marijuana. federal, recommended $49.500 in fun

"No penaa in the United States shall, on the basis of sell. be excluded from participation in. be denied the beaefits 01. ar be subjef'ted tu discrimination lDuter. aDJ ea.ation program or activity receiving federal fmandal assistance." Title IX Federal Education Amendments 011972

"..~ words made it illegal for public schools and mOllt c:olIeges and universities t() discriminate agamst eitbe!' sex in such areas as a~imissions. study and atbletic programs. industrial c:!asses. vocational ~ng services. scbolarships. i.lnd awards. They also outlawed sell bias in the reCl"litment, hiriru(. firing. salaries. benefits. and promotion of all employees, from janitors and secretaries to teadlen and administrators. nUe IX was har.1 won. It became the law of tht' land only after a determined campaign by women's rights argaaiJations and a round of ht'arings. conducted by The findings of "Stalled at the Start" were Guide to Ending Sex Bias in Your Scho.')Js." former Congresswoman Edith Green, which .revealed bt>adlined in the press. and the current dlrectJl' of instituticlnalized discrimination against girls and (KR. Dnid Tatel. told rt'porters thaI PEER's '~!'bf. idea of the kit," says Clelia Steele. who -.- lbruughout American educaUon. assessment "largely rent'C'ted" his o\\'n. Hf' p~..mist'd fltIpet .: ed its production. "is to assist citizens' groups But there is many a jag belween a law and its that everyont' concerned with "~~uring and in mon;coring implementation of Title IX in their loclli fulfiUmenL Three year!' crawled boy before the U.S. protectint! the civil rights of women" would shortly SChOOlS, and then to show them how they can work in a Department of Ht'aI tt•. Education. and Wt'lfare, the 5E'e a "firm commitment to. and results from, OCR's constructive way with the school board and !K"hool ageoey charged with enforcing Title IX through its Title IX initiatives." officials in achieving local solutions to problems." Off.:e 01 Civil Rights IOCR), issued the rt'gUlations But deep into .978 PEER remams strongly More than 7.000 copies have !lOW been cirndated. that would spell out how the law was to be interpn-h'd. dissatisfied with HEW's commibnt'nt to Title IX. Title IX. said Martin Gerry. OCR's director through not only 10 .:ommunity monitors but also to school "HEW's long sil~ on how it is going to interpret 1976, WItS subject to "both ir.~ffided and unintended administrators who want to know what the former an> DeI{Iect.. •• Title IX in specific situations is disturbing," says up to. "And that's without pro..... otion... Ms. Steele Knox. "In the year and a half of the Carter says. "We also kno.... a lot of people clre duplica.1ing Iht' Against this display of federal footdraru;!ift";. the Admiilistration, only four new rulings have been kit. I don't mind, so long as it is beinJ( used ... National Organization of Womt'n Legal Dt'ferue and issuetl. Cast'S havt' been piling up for months now. F..ducation Fund in 1974 founded the Project of Equal Clearly. to many people "Cracking the flip.58 awaiting actioo bf HEW Secretary Cabfan:) on Slipper" is a revt'lation. One HEW staff la""ler E.d;ratWn P..igh= !PEER}~ m \\'ashingro.-" D.C .• to important points of law. As of JWle, iii fa.::t, is;).:ass admiUed that reading the guide had helped .,js kt'eP an ~Ie eye on HEW's t'nforcemt'nt 01. and the were languishing in Washington. It talres an average ~ scbooi's compliance with. Title IX. A research. understanding of probif'ms confronting OCR. A mll!n of eight months before a dt'cision is reached, a~ this from Kentucky called Knoll to say he had not rt'alited :=~ df!tiV!==.af;E:ER:g!r~ai~~o~m:.r is after a full investigation and ~he regional how much the state's f'ducational institutions. investigators have drafted a preliminary finding." staff 01 Sl'Vt'n. has contributed hand..'lOITIt'ly to including his own. discriminal~ altalDst womt'n. whatever progress Title IX has made. Cynthia Brown. the agent,'s dPputy r.irector ~or PEER's direc->.or Holly Knoll, and its associate compliance and enforcemt'nt and an adive supporter Steele. who spends part of het' lim" ~ I~ road direcW CleJia Steele. acquired their skills as attending trairung workshops conducted by local adYOc:ates from 1000g experit'nce in public life. Knox. a monltoring groups, is convinced that more and more Wellesley gnduate. worked as a legislative speocialist "A eouple of J'POI'I ago equality Americans are ready, willipg. and eager to fight for in HF.;W, and served her final 20 months there as a equal ri,hts in the schools. "I see Ulis surging of special assistaa;! to ~ ageno~'s deputy assistant public inle1.~t as I tra",d around the country." she Siloy5. "I see It. bo.Jt Washington does not. It i8 just secretary for education before coming to PEER. in ,he tehoou ams fWrf'eir~ I c:ructa1 that the pollet' mak~rs "«ome aware of ~ Stee~'s background was in c-lmmunity organizing is happening." . and s.!ate pollti<.-s. (Lynda Weston, the third key stafrer, heads up the Project's research arm.) a..~ a rodkal L'I8ue. A couple of years ago equality in t~ schools was In Novembt>r d 1m. after an exhaustive year-long preceived as a radical issue. But now It has entered study that had mort' #na" 60 PEER-trained (he mainstream of acceptable. nonthreaterung SOCIal "monit(>~" ~!::omining the fi).'S ,,' HEW's 10 regional Bul nOll' it htu en,erm IdeaS. People are waking up to ~ injusti~ dt'ait offices. PEER released a 79-poage report aptly t'ntitled tht'm or their children because of tt-- .• wll--tn]usbces .. Stalled at the Start: Government Action of Sex Bias they would not have considered S\o-. .Jefore." in the Schools." It bluntlv characterized the !!;,! mairulrmm of occepkJbk~ Holly KnOll concurs: "You find a lot of fathers goiru( government's enforcemeilt program as to bat for their kids on the sports issue. A daughter "lackadaisical" and its accomplishments ;u wants to play soccer, or get on the school team. Maybe combatting sex bias as "nl"g1igible." non-,hrmwning lOt'ia' iJms." it is because men were .aised knowing the value of Solid facts were marshaled to support their sports. but a surprising number 01 the people who f:le charges: Out of 871 complaints filed with OCR during complaints on thal issue and are trying to change their the four years following tht' adoption of Title IX. only of women's rights. agreed that, "Progress has been local schools are fa·!1ers." 17~r 21 percent-had been investigated and slower than ail of us would have hoped. But we .. re Numerous complaints stem from sex stereotyping resolved. Only 61 of thest' cases~ 7.1 percent-had improving our pt'rformance in the Title IX area ... Jn in job-related counseling and education, according to bt'en investigated and resolved within six months of the next few months we will issue a number of KnOll. "There are rt'ports from part'nts about OC"R's having received the complaints. while more dirt'Ctives. and I think the momentum will build up." frustrating \:'Hwersations with school officials who tell than one-tbird of the complaints filed as rar back as At least once. in PEER's ... iew, HEW made an iD­ them their dou.p.ter cannot take shop and who treat 1974 were stiD awaiting action three years later. considered dt'cislon. vnder T·lle IX. the nation's them like lrooblemakers. That kind of thing." PerhaDS more tellinll. the Ilovernment had ~ cut 16000 school districts an> r?qUired to set up Unit! a few ye:!~ ago separate !(;ori~ !ir--t!-ri~ off fuDdS from a si~g1e school district where it had coeducational physical traini!;~ classt's. Then. issued a finding of Illegal dlscnmlllatJon. for girls. blllf' for boys-were wiaely u<>""O an unexpectedly. HEW this sprirotl gr~nted schools the vocationa!-intt!rest tests. "so that the alllSWers coui<.l PEER's monitors IDlcovered stacks of dust-<'overed rigut to establish sex segreg.tted cIass..'$ for students be interpreted difft'reDI!y," :.,qys Knox. This is now objecting on religious grounds to coei!ucational complaints, most of them t'~ploym('nt rt'lated but a against the law. Yet. in an enlightened jlDlior illgh courses. The ruling presumably covered only ~ysicaJ substantial number concerning student athletics and school in Ann Arbor, stlldents were giVt'n a series (l{ education, but it did not speocifv that. access to courses. In one junior high school in the interest and aptitude leu. Two students comparing West. washing t.1!e boys' football aud baskt'tball PEER was rocked by the development. Says Holly notes realized they had respondt'd with virtually uniforms was pal-t of ohe gi··s' home t'Conomics Knox: "Ending sex segregation in physical educatioo identical answers. Both were infarmed they had curriculum. In a Lob!!liaM pub:.c school system. lIo1th is the only .... ay girls are ever going to have an equal ~te bigh schools for girls and boys. tht' boys were marked aptitude for and strong interest in medicine. chance in sports. I am afraid that people who are was the a oIf. ~ math and Latin. the girls were not. The boy advised to become a doctor. girl merely uncomfortable with ~ !4eW idea will be tempted nurse. "Same answers. but sell-based d II .. j',,-geies. moreover. a high ~

Page", Doily Egyntion. October 16, 1978 Lyri('s conjure im8~""Y 'Bloody Tourist' marks transition Vocals mar best overall Stel(~art m I.JI-' While the first of th~ statements could be disregarded as thE' work of an for 10cc rockers overzealous public relations man, the latter statement makes the album sound like the second commg of (,hrist. In By Gordon Engelhardt short, it takes a Jot of damn gall to Staff Writer describe something as l"iSSSIC the do\-" it lOcc's lates. album, "Bloody Towist." is released. ' c:I~arly marks a transition period for tilt' But enough nil'pit'kIng about the !:~~i~~ a label change from Mercury ad\'f't"tisIng racket, let's st'e what the f\t"W messiah has to of( "r Graham Gouldman, who. penned fo'rom the beginnin~ it is apparE'l1t that nu'nerous hits for the yardbtrds and Stf'Wart is indet-d I! man of ext ",me P.l'rman·s HermIts among others in the vision and enonnous ima~in. ", His oilS, and Eric Stewart. formerly of the lyrics are uniformly e"cellent and M Indbentkrs , ., A Gromy Kind Of conjure up much of the Vil.-id imagt'ry Love .. ' "Game nf Love"', teamed with pop music has bt>en missing since thE' Kevin Godley and Lol Cl't'IDe in 1973 to demise of the BeaUes. form IOcc, a band wilb unlimit"d In fact. if this a lbum had bt>en childhood: satirical and humorous instincti molded recorded in the mid-60S instead of the Tim4' runs through your ringl'rs, into nowin~: catchy pop mel~. . late-70s. it wouid have been described as Younc~£r hold It at alluntJ: Ifs gOfll,' ~fter: fo". albums and two U~. bits, a revolutionary {'oncept album, even . . . "1 m :-':01 In Love" and "Art For ,~rt's though, as with "Sgt. Pepper," there is Some fragments Just Itngff with ylM." Sake'" Godley and Creme left to explore really little conCt'pt involved. Like snow in the spring hanging on ~Ji=~~!:!~~. ~ I~u'! ~::".:~~ Stewart's vocals. as usual. are reminescent of any of a dozen laid·back If tht>re is an over-rIding therr.e 10 the are they now. 5cc" remarks, GouIdman European folkies, mana~ng to sound material, it is. as the title su~ests. and Stewart released "Decepti\'e like everything from Paul McCartney Stewart's preoccupation with the Bends .. ' which spawned tht' hit "'11Iings minus some of the powt'r. to Cat Stevens passage of time One of the fT. .JSt We Do For Love." The album was a with a little 1.!SS of a vibrato edge to his powerful lyrics on the alhum. --Palact' of WIndfall for IOcc fans, because the only voice. llsu!iIly, however, he sings in a Versailles," dl'als with the Frl'nch thIng that seemed to be missing from the style very similar to that populanzed by Revolution and could e,'en be album was Godley and Creme's .,.ert Donovan. What is tru Iy amazing is ~~t interpreted as an attempt to revitalize silliness. he manages to create these vocal ~ revolutionary SpInt In that country: iIIusiOl;s without changing his singing delivery to any great extent. Herein lit:" The JUtost of I't'\'olution- the alt.um's greatest Oaw. Still prG\\'ls the Paris stre-.:ts, Stewart has never passessed a AI S&ewart [)own all the restless centunes' !'8rticularly vt'rsatile vo1Ct', but hE' ~;; It wanders iocomplete alw.,~ s managed to sound pleasing to the 8,· Mikto Rm ear. In this, his mO!lt lllghlv produced "Life- :;: ilnrk Watt'r."' oddly t'nough. siaff Writer and generally best all,around album, his tt'11s of being stranded a lone in a Tile first thing I notn."tld about AI voi<:~. while never be'u'lg bmiro. ~ tc subn.. ri~e v.'ith a 5OO.:;c~r s::-1~' c! Stewart's new album. "Time be repetib.·e enough to ignore in favor of iood, whIle thl' FM favorIte. ..~ on Pas.'I8!t"." was that it had one of the his masterful band's work. This is the Radio," dl'als with :!.'1ydreaming most ImaginatiVe! album covers I've espec:iaUy disheartening considering the about lost love. Sf"'m in ye-IU'S. F:'om the viewers vantage lyrical excellence of the recording. ProdlK'er has r.lanagPd point ~lind a large window, a full-size No song on "Time Pa.c;sa~es" stands to ·"kE' a tightly meshe-d group of camper is shown being swaDowed by the out with the possible exception of the m!JSicians and display each of their title cut, and in tum each of the songs talents "';thou~ detracting from the earth. Because tile band was switdting The second thing I noticed about the are strong enough to stand on their own. alhum. whit'h l?malllS totally Sh'wart's labels, Ml'f('ury released a t~ alJum was a distracting red slicker Stewart's vision spans a broad EspeCIally rewudmg are the spectrum and his tales are as di\'t'rse in performances of Renwick and Pl'ter live set hopmg to milk aD the salts they 1oI.itich accompanied the cover and n.n could before the band's defectioa, It proclaimed the diSC as" 's subject matter as couid be imagined. White on guitar a~td Phil Kenzie on alto failed to stt..'Ct!ed, It simply proved that ';sionary nf'W album." If that wasn't "Almost h!-:Y" deals with a girl fieeing sax. This is defir,ately a good album. It is tocc L a studio band only, 1be live enough. the llelf·righteous sticker ~t album iid feature the talents of tile new on to hail two of the songs contahled ~~ :~. ~hi~e ~~ef~ ~~i~ possi~iy -'11 a great alb\',ffi, but the within as "classics," .. an attempt by Stewart to r.!CaU his second C'iming-no way. band ~"emhers. drummer Stuart Tosh, gultan.. t RIck fo'enn and keyboardist I.. P is pot"r pop garbalfp l>'Jncan Madtay. "Bloody Tourists" features tbe band's strong ~ints-inveDtive vocal harmon:es, cl.oruses tbr.t become Styx latest lacks 'blood and thunder' embedded in t ... listener'!> mind. and e"quislte product\~. It also Iacb the ThE' first son~ .." side ODe. "Great ~f11:ri'::arty diveHl~ of mODt of their prnious White H~yc'-' is blar.;nl(, boring. BI the time you read this, chatr.eS are 'llbums ~::; love songs dominate. you ve heard the radio .i for Styx's raucous. repetitive, st,-etched-out, Howev'='I", it does offer us the supposed It is latest album, "Pieces of Eight." ,H so, shouted-out and gaudy. the essence reg~e hit· DreadJock Holiday" and the of Styx. you probably noticed that while the voice btin beat of ~t'wn Rochdale to Ocho in the ad urgf'JI you to rush out and spend Side two isn't any better. Rios, " l14l.ess you totally appreciate $4.98 for t!Jis sophomoric collectIon of It begins with the second vocal ,;1JIl2 ~. these :nUSI;": genres these cuts are pt:'Wer pop. the album's title track Shaw."BlueCollar Man lLong NightSl" simply wastN vinyl. playing in the background cries out and while the ly:-ics are better than moSt Another disb-essiug change is thai on Utis album. :.hey are !lC'reamed rather a~t the search for the money tree and many of the songs contain a flmil beat, hew we should!; 't trade our freedoms in ~ sung. and are DGlcked up by more obviously hoping to cash in .. the ((lr gold, I'IOtSe than ~ be produced in a stt'el dreadea disco craze. Well, isn't ''lat considerate of them. factory, '!'~ i~ sounds like this song "For You and I" and "Shock OR the wa... recorded. ~nce money is the root of all evil. Styx is Tube lDon't Want Love)" fare the best willing to take it off our hands. The next 1IMg. "Queen of Spades." is. among the love songs. ''Shock 011 the "hi!ces of EiJlht" is bound to seD like wiD admit that the old blood and thunder as hearts players would say, a real bitch Tube" beglDS WIth layered vaices, hotcakes among the second generation JUSt isn't on ttus aibum. Or if it is. the and is noi worth the space it wouid take changes to a iunk beat, becomes -.xk fans who cried real tears when blood is anemic and the thwvler over the In describe it here. ttptempo via a driving piaDD, and goes Deep P-..!!'P'P broke up and who like to horizon somewhere. "Renegade,"is next and deserves through the same changes apiD. 'iII:C IS some credit because. as on 'Sing for the amonl{ the best in the business at writing lister: to m~ with their heads pinned "Lords of the Ring," the last song Oft betwe 11 a pair of miUion-watt speakers, Day." 1M vocals are actually sung. The love songs with a catcby book, but side one. is preceded by "The Mt uage." hannonic vocal lead· in is catchy and the U's bad enough that Styx insisted 00 spends too mut'h ~ the album exploring v.ittdl is a minute or so of synthesizer rest of the song bounces along quickly t.!us sty!!- re'ncarnating the !M.'W1ds of bands that noise that probably does wonders for and sharply , A~ain, give credit to Shaw, were better Mt burit-d: those of Uriab The album lacks one rocbr that one's head if properly inebriated, he wrote it. Heep, Deep Purplt! am: '-he later albums Otherwise it sounds like synthesizer compares to the "WaD SL SI:mIIe." "Second Sitting FortbeLast~"or of JetJo.1'O 1'ull also turned to the Wbicb brings us to "Pieces of Eight."' Strx noise. "Modem Man Blues." The Iiterar~ world for ,'aSpiration and came the title track that Ib as mushy as a banil. ~ for the bucks, whic:b is indicated by lIrJ up with a song II~ J.R.R. Tolkien's But the third song on side one. ''Sing mOWltain of marsh mellows. Singer· •'Lord of the Rir.gs." for the Day," deserves some praise. songwriter Dennis DeYoung tells us changing styles. Singer-songwriter Tommy Shaw set tmrt: "Pieces of Eight. can't buy you However, it must be realiJled u.t the The tiUe of the song is "Lords of the album has 12 5ClIIgS and aJmaat 50 Ring." and you'll notice that the "s" has his electric guitar aside for this one in =~ Don't let it tum your heart favor of a mandolin from which rings minutes of music:, so a few tIJrowaways bPen placed after the word "Lord." expected. The balImarIt books and sweet, soft notes. r~o blood, no thunder, DeYf)UJlg should take his cwn advice are rather than "Ring," probablv to avoid a harmonies still abound. and the allium just music. and not jet the "search for the money lawsuit from Ballentine 800k6, Tolkien's does seem to get better after flIICb publJ.it.ea. loe ae.:-ur.d =: s:...~ Q!!e, "I'm tree" tum his writinll to stone as it· sv<. seems to hav.. done. ' :ista-aii".g-afta :he ilia-iii :.a hiD Like most of the songs on this album. O.K .... while not really offending the recoverec1 f~ tt.a initial shock. "Lords oj the Rinlf' is full of the blood listelWt with blood and thunder. does so The last song on the album, .• Ak ... and thunder bashing of sticks against with svrupy lyrics that make one wonder Aku." sounds so much lilt:!' a cut from skins. picks against strings and of why Sb::~ doesn't handle more of this Pink Floyd's "Darll Side of the Moon." COUI'W. ~ high-pitched barmonized band's songwriting, He wrote oo1y three Ilial r expected to hear subdued British All rPf'or3s "hook" choruS that has been the selling sonllS on the album. AU others were fa~ in saying ". don't Imow, I was. poinl of this band since they h1t wntten::'y James YOWIg and or Dennis really drunk at the tiJDe." courtpsy-of Otic:ago's boogie ban in 1964. DeY OI~ and depends upon the old ta-ta­ It would have bf!en fitting if St-.·x did Rmtember "Laaaaaaadd~" dum, ca-ta-'tum-ta-da-daaa to book tile put tha.' phrase !no It probably explains Hpgpwisch Rf'€Of"fls and "kH'a-liiiiieeeeee Iet·s liiiivnve?" listener. To say it doesn't work is to put it bow thIS ,;loom got put to-Hts; Debate. "Evolution or f'reation." 1 p.m .. Student Center ballrooms. sponsored by Students for Jes,",s: :\Iarjorie Lawrence Opera Workshop presents TIII01B IIIIE [)omzetti·s "Don Pasqt!ale." 8 p.m .• Shryock Auditorium. admissiM free; Southern Players prt"Senls "Incident at .11 SOUrl11111GIS Vichy." 8 p.m .. Umversity Theatre, S2 for students and 53 for adults. repeating Friday and Saturday; vI'llc-J'il.i!I. SIU vs. l:niversity of lIIinolS-Chicago Circle. of p.m .. Da.i~!l 4..iym Deep Pan Pizza hy the Slice or by the Pie. FRIDA Y-SGAC films pl"t'Sents "Jackson County Jail." 7 and 9 p.m.. Student Center AudittJrium. rl'peatlllg Saturd"y; Celt'brity Series ··Mr. Jack Daniel's OJi~ina! Slh·t'r Cornet Band." 8 p.m .• Shryock AU'iilorium. stuClt'llts 53. $4. IS. publiC 14. 15. $6; School of Music concert with Blair Woodwind Quartet. 8 p.m .• Old Baptist Foundation Chapel. admission free. RICHARD DREYFUSS SATl'RDAY -Art E'Xhibition p.'ld auction. 6 p.m. to mllinight. Ballroom D and river rooms; SGAC Consorts the Committee prt'Sents "Billy CobhalTl with Bn.nd X." 8 p.m., S1rvock Auditorium. ao:!mission 54.7~; School Of Music New MuSic Concert. 8 p.rn .. Old Baptist Foundation. admissirol1 Bigtq free: cross COlJ!itry. illinoIS Intercoilegiates. 11 a.m., 4:45 p.,"- show on'" '1.25 Midland Hi!~; girls' fi~:-! hockey. SIU VS. Indiana Slate...... tIcry.4:4' 7:. t:15 Sili-C vs. Sir-E. 1 p.m .• \vhal1' Field; football. SIU vs. Arlta~lSas State. 1:30 p.m .. l\-~cAndrew Stadium.

Sl NlJA Y -SGAC films pr6ents "Padre Padrone." 7 and 9 p.;ll .. Student Center A'.4itorium. admission 51...... , WItMr8utI_ c:one- West __ ~Iice overrun ~Iouse Colony

AK."ON. Ohio lAP) - What has Annabel Lifobell. director IJI tllP .w.;;u.~ f~t. squt'aks a lot and ,eta a colony. is a professor of anatomy at sheriffs 1!!I('0n' Rootstown. SlIP became invoh'ed JODDIIIIB The 5.000 mice in tllP Kirsdlbaum ..ith the colony ..hen she began a job ~emonal Mouse Co.Iony, lbat·. as a res.rch _lSlant at abe whaL Vnivenity 01 11" __ ======LIIB======The furry I"l!IIe8r'c:h CftatUl'f'S w~ movE'd m dllnatically rontrolled valIS from tllPir II COICBB~l~_ ~=f~;et~tth~~";:= WIN A WEEK'S home at :-.;,rtheastem Oluo WORTH OF tDfl&lU8I11 to lOUD t:ruverslttes Colle~ of ME'dictne in Rootstown Township WHOPPER Tile mice a~ not ...liinary mice. They a~ not ordinary mice Tiey SPECIALS a.-. tllP descl!\1danl5 of tho· aritonal EACH DAY A saturday mouse l'Olony staned in 1r.33 by Dr. Mthur Kirschbaum at tllP WINNER AT l'ruvenity of Mlnnescu TIIP BURGER KING November 4, 1978 • 8PM inbr~ng allows K'lentlSlS to control genetic differences. Thfoy ended up in Ohio becaU5e Dr SIU Arena All seats Reserved 510.00/57.50/55.00

Tickets On Sale

SIU Arena Special Events Ticket Office

SIU Student center central Ticket Office

CURT AIN TIMES: _____""". II Dally7:15 t:H good time •••• ____.. Sun. 2:15 4:t1 5:40 7:15 t:. SIU A~ENA·!1&t=:~,

Pag4 6. Dorly Egypt;,,": OCI~r' fa.' i978; CirrlU '0 perform Unbelievable Savings (9ampus 'Briefs at Neuman unter CALCULATORS & STEREOS

8y Donna K_bt (;ale.laten The Office of International Education is offering an scarr Writ« __ ~ HnnzrrlHlClU&llD Autwnn Color Tour to the "Gardfon of the Gods" in the 'nK' Royal I.ichtmstein. ~ant'r· Shawnee Naliooal Forest on Saturday, Oct. 21. lnm-ested Ring. S&dewalk cirrus ..111 make its WAS SAL. WAS SALII persons should sign up by Wednesdily. Oct. 18. at Woody fifth annual aPlK'llrance at the n.s. R1.e ... .0 .. '" HaD C·llO. III_man Center Wf!dnesday. n.s. 1'21 'lIZ.e ".1M: Sl1S The hour· long program. c:o· T\.57. ••- ••• ... " •• -- 5p)1I!IO~ by the Newman CI!''lt1!!" , ..·ac ...!13UI - "Houst CaD," an original one-act play written by Ken ... ;u§ -- and Student Governmt"nt Adlv.tes ....~ - ,. 'IR • "·Re ..... RoIJbins. graduate student in theatre. wiu ~ presented free ,~ .- . ,.-31E Counal. will be held at II a.m. on the -150 131. ,. ,',- of charge Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 16 and 17 in the lab • 21 ...3ft .. Newm.n Ci!'ntt'r Lawn. .... I. ...s_ ~.eatft in the Communications BuiJdiq at 4 p.m. IS-.ct circus _ill include '21n .. '11M! .....- 1$._. .- .,. s_ balaocing. hoop jullgJing. tIghtrope '''0 .,.. .. -1$.25 '21e Ita ~ Carbondale Business and Prof~ Wom/~'S Club walllin&- fino-eatinl and magic: acts. -- ...- 'w_ l:..s 1,:"5 -- will bc.!fj a buffet dinne.'- at the Carbcndale Elks Club. 220 W. Ringml''-'"!1' Ihe world', 1$.''''' ." 0' ~_a_ .. II. .... Jackson S,l at 7 p.m. 'J'Uesday. Orth 17, as part 01 National smallest C'.iUB is Nick Weber. a ...... - Jesuit prie,1 who has devoted Ilis ..... !!~FOR5I.•• •••• -- Businesswomens' Wef1I~. Ptat-dinner speakers wiD be' Pat -. -- RAyfield 01 Fashion ('abrio Judy Trager- of Patchworks; ::.~to.;;;r!n,l.he w:-,:= --- f . ...,.."",.."GIZIOV~. ... uc ..... ~.~c.a~ !WI Kay DefOey 01 Mary Kay Ctametics. David Pennar. the c:inUI which .. based out of San __ attorney-at-law, will speak CIa the legal aspects 01 starting Jose. Calif. MItch Kinl:anncn. • 2 M ___ ,...... _,.....,.~ your own business and Celeste Wright wiD provide musical c1_n·nlime. .nd two other S &'"*- e_' All ..... _. __ .. _ ...... entertainment. performers make up the circus CO.D. 4...... ~Atltlt:l. ___ ... ft., __ _ The sm chapter of the Public: RelatilJDS Student Society ~ truupe's format .. rapid­ _Md"'_...-a 01 America (PRSSA) will meet in the Student Center peced cin:UI. non-stop mm..cly and 5. FIIST DEU1II"IWSUAltAlfTUD..,.,_IlO _.....,.... ,.",.. Mackinaw Room nudnille entertainment. The MODday at 7 p.m AU memben sbouJd dl'all .. stYled after the I.... ian of ---~ ...... - ...... IlrinI their dues payments. - 19t11 CfDw,y taasi.. t'1owfts.. USI' _ AccordWI. 10. Bill Arckinson. The Saluki Swingers beCinaina 1l!U8'" dance dub will _u._ UST_ program' '.coordi.lator at thp dance Moaday. Oct. 16 frotn 7 to 9 p.m. in the Studmt Center ..."'l.a~ 1.-..&At tus__ sm_ _ Newman Center, tI".e circus will - I­ ... ___ Roman Room. Round danc:ing wall be8in at. p.m. perform 0"11)' _ -'- before an ... _sa..I'W movq on toanotberdty. The SJU chapter of Phi Betta Lambda, a professional -­ _1:Jt3 ...... 1.-_ ...... ___ business fraternity for men and women.. will meet Tuesday, ... lo,,,. ---.... __ .M:_.. -­.... -- - I'• Oct. 17, in Room ZI 01 the General Classrooms Blildmg. oI'IC_'W--.M:_ -~_1.S-8 ...... ,. __ _ ...... - .M:_ ... - -.,.- The Leisure Ex~oratton Ser:ice is plarning Leisure .---- Workshops open to all SJU students. For informatloo caD Mediterranean food • PHONE 0ADeRS ACCEPTED-- SEND 536-2030. 0f0Il.'f WITH I HOT DOG, FRIES I CREDO" CAADS CZl FOR WIDP', King Bblcuit F10wer Hour will present Jolumy AND COKE FOR __814-237-5990 Iorc..-c...-.. FREE "'inter in c:oneert Monday at 10 p.m. I I CATALOGUE • ONLY" • Peta" J. Bukahti, chairperson in Cinema and I ·With This Coupon- • Phototo'aphy. delivered a ..per titled '-rile HL~ of STEREO WAREHOUSE • Ad good tfwu SuniJay 10.22.78. 110 NEW ALLEY, STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16101 Professionals by Film-Video ~rtments: ProIpects and 1~1.I':~ ___~-!r.J1 • Problems," to a ~erence on FIlm-Video as an Artistic:, Professionai and Academic: Dilcipllne bejd at the University 01 Southern California Aug. 16-19.

A sUPI)(>." lIfoup wiD meet at the Womens' Cf'"ter, Q W. Freeman St., Monday from • to 10 p.m. AU interested women are il'lVited to attend .

.nJNJOR ACHIEVEJINET

STAMFORD, c-. (APl-~ quarter-million 1bIden.. lit .,... 10-12 partic:ipeted lb.. rast Kbool oua "VICI IS yur ID '.000 JuniGr Ac__ t ,lilt Nmpllfties. ThouNnda of adult NOW 8Ei.u advlI« volWlteen abo tGok part in AM'lUK TICKETS thullDU8l prIIIJ'lUB desilMd to Ii"e 541-73C7 yooftl people a practk,,1 ID­ troduc:tion to the busiIIeu world.

~tjl Ozawa ~ads t~ Boston Svrnph0l1Y Orchmra. ~tsts and tM Tan~~ Festival EYeaiag Chorus In Act I of Beatrf~ t't at B«med'ct. ~rtloz's comic opera SJDlpboay ba~ on Shakrspe&re'sMuch AdoAboul Nothing. Toaigbt ChaDn e16 TICKETS OX SALE Tl"ES. OCT. 17TH STCDEXT CEXTE L-__at~~ 8;00 ______------J ... . DaiIyEtrtptian.Octd?er 16. 1918. P~.7 "7' • -.' ',l .: ~ . 4,' .( Pot disputes ~+++++++++++ aren't unusual in SIU history ~~,~~ ! Continued .rOn'l Page 3 t for pooo-_ion of tbe drug. 'rile Is ... s han not ~n paSSl'd bKause many !etislators feel tbe t );;~=%:'::It'?~--;.,:~ 1 T + T short· and long·term effeets of "otr,...... •. -tl\G""S" marijwaDa are not known. Norman > Doorenbol. tbr dean of the ('oI~ge PRESENTS TONIGHT - + of S<:Wnce and PIGll~r marijuana + - resealTher. said last year thaI marijuana is "surprisingly dangerous." He said chemicals + McDANIEL +1 whkh cause taOCff are muc:h higher in marijuana the in C:igaretles. but marijwana smc*ers dar't smc*e as + 0 + many JOints. + (NoCover) BR s. (NoCover) + "'I'M tr'lll-ic thi.. is tJu.. many. perhaps m ...t. marijuaDa smallen also smoke c:igareUes. and irs ~ r * DAILY SPECIAL * ) + c:ertain liYol thai combinaUOD is bad rrws." he said. l6:00 • 9:00 25C DRAFTS ~ "Some studies have shown that marijuana r~uces the ability of lung hssue to proteet itself from + ++++++++++T bac:leria. II has been shown that marijuana smoklD& can lead to bronchitis and emphysema. Marijuana abo affects rne.-ory," said l>oorenbca. I------~ Bill . CraveD. Midwest region coordinator for thtt National Organization for the R.form of i J(utPitiDn I Marijuana Laws INORMLt said le8isJatiaD wiD _ illtroduc:ed in the next Uhnais General AaemblJ that I ~. ~lldlfullPt&S I will caD f. a muilftllm $lClO civil fiM r. ~ who poueu up to I The most complete stadt d natural I _ 0UDCe of marijuana. I foods and vitamins in Southem Illinois I Eleven slates have decriminalized Jrutrijuana I 1~~1~.~ I '(1, ":1/';1£1 ~ Sunday All arty ....iq rid~ from tb~ Quads to campas cae lie • I 12 10 5 Pta. 549-1741 I «GOd way to ibid _~ peace ud quiet as Ibis saadNt , .... .i!H~",11;" 4j"/tt. .. oat while _ ~ .ay to a •• a.m, cia... (Stall ph.... Ity 0- 1 SOFT fROZEN YOGURT I Priester) . :Jlfl~ltt' 1 In a cup or cone I Hair Shaping Alf the fun of Icle ~ .. 0DCId ttIInQI cI Y'IlUUf1 I $9 1 HigI'l In taste. _ in fat. Natural h..... n.-s and Ilow Style 1 F_ DIIImcln quality. I nlOrcJl:t Mdfqw McGrad\,; "" 5 · I This coupon and lOa ..,ti~ beorw I dt'".44:1<)33 11 vY pecIc toGNg. OI9or~ofDANNY·O. 1114W MaIn 1 Coupon good thrv Nov, 15. 1978 I .------~ Monday Is Happy Day at the Dugout Drinks for Happy Hour Prices ALL DAY LONG 110nofty Don't Forget Tuesday i. Quartf"'· Beer Nisht ALL THE SPAGHETn YOU CAN EAT... S2.05 HAPPY HOUR Monday-Friday '-6 p.m. "Sondwiches & Free Peanuts ...

Change of Pace

Choose from a wide selection 01 the finest wines and relax in an atmosphere with a uniqueness and charm aU its own•

...... tlons now ...1 .. 4ICCepte4 for SIU HomecOMing W ......

• t. 51 Sewen 1It11 .. north of CClrItontIal...... t~ons 867.9363 206 South WaD Street. Carbondale

,oge 8. Daily Egyptian. October 16, 1978 Ilome Box Office service offers I~------204 off specials for CATV subscribers I Our rich, meaty chili co.:~ Bv Mike R ...... fint user of domes~ic satellite will s!.ar in the science· fiction I Coupon good thru Oct. 22nd .eIf wri.... 'r.namllS"lII for nabonally c:amedy ··Barbarella". LableVlSion MaricJa.Ca1'bonda1e IS trRYlsed pI'OIlrammiol· ID t~ _ prugram "Upc:Ime:' I~~~~~~~~.I __'_~~~.-I-. Gflerinlr a _ aero ,ce called Horne Besides presenh... such evftl~ as viewers will Ill"' lOme reveahng BoaOrrl«'. atertainment specials feat...... IooU al four of the l"ntertainml"nts I For a monthly r...... generally Ray Charta. ~ Mania. ~ 1Justnsa' moat celebrated talents­ I ranging betwftn sa .nd It& HDO Carlill...d David ~. HBO al80 Woody Alk!o. Diue Keaton, Jolin vIewenI are .bIe to _Ida a Iully· prnents IUCIt ..,orting events as top Travolta IIJId Oliva NewlOll-Joiln. I formated pk~oIlRGVie..,rts collegiate basketball and same-clay HBO ~3n operaUnl in and mt'flammt'lll IIpl"ciaIs. &'OVerage 01 Wimbledon tf"lllllS. Novl"mbel' 1m with:.::· subKnben. HDO il the Iargl'St prodlKl"r 01 Oc:tGber's motion picture oIfers Today its pnIIrslllS are fed 10 oftr include Clint Eastwood in "The 'lIIO via Sl!lelill". =:-~.=~~:~~= G_tJet." AmI-Marpel in "Jc.eph Mlii:.tes provide delivery to Andnws" andGeorp Bums in "Ob. 1U'.JIKriber homes and are sw;:rr::: :: ::ble television God!" l'elpCl8Sibie for sales. installatioo. afO liate5 m.fl slates. HSO was tbr Later in tbr IIIOIIth Ja~ Fonda c:ust.omer services and btJhna. Cobham to play minus Brand X Bv Mib t.1retdI Cobham win bring witb him oftIy M._, E4it« _ band membel' who play"'" on hill [)-.Je 10 visa orob!ems. the Enldi!lll newest album. "Malie." ba~ band Brand x' wiD lid .ppear with player L!'dy Jackson. Also SOlE. Walnut Billy Cobham a' Shryock Auditorium as IdIeduW Oct. 21. :h.:~:' ~ :..:= atWal; The SGAC Concert Committft sliD Carbonclal. bopl"S to reschedule Brand X for a ::t;": r.:~:~:': performance Noor _II lIIat COIIlmiUee .with SaIlUna·.mc:e 1·1rIf. third -Jbum. on ~boards. Alld.= of chairman ~te ltalSlS ~ to aJUJV. Oft drums. _ III the most be his IIIOIIt ambitious c:anc:ert this respected and incredible of ye:and X had to c-.eel the first contemporary drummers. Billy liYe abows on their U.s. taar. 0Ibbam. including datos at Chicago's Park West. 8elinnin\lls iD suburban Schaum~ and their CDfICft't wiI!I Cobham at Shryodt theater. The SGAC Concert Committee anQOWlt'eCl that ~ wiD lower EARN OVER $650 MONTH from SS.7!'> to 14.15'or A tidlet pnces the Cobham concert .nd that Cobham will pia, Ion«er than If Brand X were on ttle __ bill. Tickets wiD go on sale "'-lay- The Bii.iy CcIiIMm nncert ill • RIGHT THROUGH YOUR logical ellt_ion of tile Jan Hannnert-Sea ~ show in lIIat Cobham pIa~ with Hammft' for lb. Mahavishna Orc:bestra that brpn tbr _ftIMIIt ...... jazz- SENIOR YEAR. fusion. . "Cobham .... bas a studio t.d(lJ'UQDd with jazz legend MIles Davis.... worked widl Miles on and :'id~Xr!. ~liD~,.:-tn:-; If you're a junior or a senior majoring in math, physics or Iram him than f..- ~ ebll" _blMd. I learned tolerance. how .. ..an with people.nd _.,. afraid engineering, the Navy has a program you should know about. of any ~-=~ -r~.! It's called. the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate­ ::.T::" pre-Davill work was done With soul artisU James 8",,",- Sam Collegiate Program (NUPOC-C for short) and if you qualify, lind Daft and F.sther Phtllips. til" would lIIIter worIl With juz pianit'lts you can earn as much as $650 a month right through your BlDy ',.-:..ylar lind Horace Silver. saaophanlst StanIeJ Turrentine and the jazz-rod!!P'OUP Dreams with tM senior year. Then after 16 weeks of Officer Candidate School, a.dlft" brothers. Cobham was born in Panama in you'II receive an additional year of advanced technical I!M4 into .. mlllical family wheft bill father pla~ the piano. his mother education. This would cost you thousands in a civilian school, saRI and his brodter played the ttumpet. '!'bey came lilt the U.s. but in the Navy, we pay you. And at the end of the year of ,11m little Billy was S-:rs1'lHkl and ~t;t'e::na",:.1:r yorl~y:~ trP.dning, you'II receive a $3,000 cash bonus. 16. The Mabrvillilma Orchestra It isn't easy. There are fewer than 400 openings and only feakftd JCJba Mc:f.A1II!hJiD l1li lead guilar. Jerry GoocImU ... vlohD. one of every six applicants will be selected. But if you make Jan Hammer l1li IIeyboanIs. RJdI Laird ,'a basil and Cobham ... drums. 'J'heoy were ·credited with it, you'll have qualified for an elite engineering training bringjI1I _ mNning to the label "jazz- roc:k" with a~. bighIy- program. With unequaled hands-on responsibility, a $24,000 ~'J:'as-:=ti ...... ~ Cobham of saIcuy in four years, and gilt-edged qualifications for jobs :-=-..:.nu::r=~It:: in private industry should you decide to leave the Navy inlersted ill it. But there ..a let 01 egotlstica! problems. a lot 01 later. (But we don't tbinkyou'll want to.) cmflict. It was ~ in the mll!ri(" tll 50me dfogr..-e." Ask your placement officer to set up an interview with a ~...... , .., ...... ') 1 AHMEDS 1 Navy representative when he visits the campus I Fantastic I or contact your Navy representative at 800-841·8000 ( toll-free). 1 Fa lafll 25c 011 1 '" ttIIOct.l·1 If you prett'r, send your resume to the Navy Nuclear Officer 1 Factory 1 Program, Code 312· B537, 4015 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, I.SS.H~""_. 1 Va. 22203, and a Navy representative will contact you directly. 1'- C'·>~ SI The NUPOC-Colleciate ProIrram. It can do more than helD '- i you finish college: fi can lead~to an exciting career opportwrlty. 1"OrtIIMI...:-4 ...... t 1 SHAW'RMA-Cort1S0 I '- VlfNNA HOT DOGS I 1 WHOLfWHfATPfTA .. 1 KIFTAKAS08 I NAVY OFRCER. 1 BACKLAWWA I 1 NO()N.3 in the morning 1 1 S~"l I IrS NOTJUST AJOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE. iI! Ttyau- PtA TfS ~ .--...... ~. DoHi Egyptian. ~ 16, 1978 Page 9 SG.-\C to sponsor art exhibit \n art ... xhiblt and au('tion _ .....id Jolin Miller. who', in QUICHE s .. OI1!IOrt"d by tI!t.' SGAC Fine Arts dial'll'" of advertiaq for the art Committ...... itt C'GI1jundion wrth commit ...... Parll Wf'St Gitlhories. wtli 0" held at 1'-win be a benefit nhibi.ion D~ .•n;:..~,~~rh:!:~ FOR thf' Student ('..-er OrUI·22. and aDdion held on Saturdav. Ort. .. ~ra.inls. U.S.A.... ~itchell Parll West Gala-s. Iot-alt.'d ill 21 ill Ball,..""", V in the Student Detroit. New \'or!l aad Atlanbl. it Center.The bf'nefit will pro'" area ~:::~mG~r.:y: ~~~ LUNCH tI!t.' _Id', fOftlllOlll "10&111" plJery I'I!!Sidenta with a IJI'"it.'W of Pari! p.m .• WeKdays. 1:30-4:38 p.m .• in 1M lIS. Thf'y ~ a wardwiuse West's wide ftriety of art. Sandays that holds a mtllicJo..dollar iIIvenlorJ Re(reshrnf'IIIs wiD be aened a' 1 liJpba Phi Om.,.. mf'f'littl. 7-10 Murdal. tJ7-4313 of cont... mporary lirt. Includin, p.m. with the 1Ud_ following at. works by Pic8llllO. Cbagali and Dan. p.m. Admission to the Saturday ~~~s!!:':,.~~nmg. ... Marl! Parlier. dlairper...la of tI!t.' night auctiOll wiD be em III advance p.m., S:tnt Cf'nter Roman Rm. SGAC fIn... Arts Committee. Science fiction Club. mHtJng. II emphasiZed tM fad dlat thia it the =:::; =C a.m.·2p.m .. Student Center Thebes ,,-::=Will be Mid 011 Sunday. Oct. II with Rm. first 111M 1M committee has had thP opportunity 10 preHnt an ... xh ,bitiOll an exhibition III 1 p.m. and .. Science Fiction Club. meetinI HI and aUdIOd involvq a profftSionaJ ~ followint at 2 p.m. Tickf'ts p.m .• :;.~ Cent..... Ad : .... D. MONDAY, OCTOBER 16 oraaniZaUClll. will be a"'ilable at the door at Tau Beta Pi. mf'f'lil1l. tl .... m.-2 "Thll wiD prove to be au Ballroom D of 1M Student Ceater. important soc:ial "Nt for art Price of admiAioa to Sunday', show I.~~:F~~I~:~~P~:': patroN in the Soutbera IlliDoiI itll Student Ceat.er Ad. Rm. C. PIIiKappaTeu. mf'f'liJ1l7:304p.m .• Student Ceater MiaaiIIsippi R.R. IS THE LAST DA Y Studett Smate. IDt.'f'tin8. HI p.m., Student Center Video LcJunae. 1londay's Puzzle Studett Senate. mfttillg. 7-11 p.m .• Student Center Ad. Rm. C. Free School "'inch Tf'If'.ilion TO DROP A CLASS Production. 7 p.m•• Student Center ACROSS • ::::51 god- .....,.....,,-.-, ..- ..___ .'~A"'l"''''''D--r---r~ Video LoIanIe· 1 Noah', son Free School Basic Hebrew•• 7:30 • Step f,.p,.TaOPI All 5 Ben.aVf' bad­ p.m .• Hillf'lFlJU"ldalioft. FOR THE FALL ly 2 words Df'Ibi Upsilon. mf'f'linl. 8:304 p.m .• 10 ...... th"ll :~::trnenl ;::~''':~:.l~:: Student Center Kaallastie R.B. SoIl_atd is- 14SIarChy L·" • • ... C M A'S' ( roolSloc" land '_0." _MO.' lOT 15 Oossonance 58 Shrunll SEMESTERe S.OO 00-' 1ft MIsllmas/l 61 Chop .. ,," " •• 'N 1 •• l 17 Cartoonls, 62 Robert Of _ 1. 1 0 t T'. .". _ Q l f The jobs for IhICIeat p ... ,er - A~ ·~.IO" ... rolJowintr worIIera tisted the 18 Fall InlO ruIn 13 JOIned LIV G f" • PI. ,. U I bave been bf 20 Bushed .. laceratIon .. "N_C ... D II G I Office 01' StudeDt Work a§d 0" FiDanriai Aasisutnre.. Placed by _aeoNs. _.. lstratIOft n Man's mck· 16 "'f'gO,oale .,'.' Ie ...... ·• name ..,H.IS •••~. T" •• 'IID..'! n furorean 67 European 12 Food Prefl. to -- ~al" en;:~~::'=a~ I.!!e capItal 13 Gardener 42 Orin"", ACT Family financial Stat..-.n4!llt Oft 14 Monarcn DOWN 19 Small land .. Elfe fjlf' with the OfflCf' of Student W«k :s Everyone 1 Depots body • Human and Fillancial Auistance. 27 e.plaoned Abbr ?1 MelodY 47 BouI_Nt Applkationa shouJcI be maM Ia PICTURE DISCS 30 Sanch'.ed 2 Instrument 15 Instructions • Alaskan City tt.~.S:::h!~ OffICe. 34 Cltmbs 3 Sea btrd 26 Wllere Ban" 50 FISh e::::; Job8 a",lIabie as 01 Oct. 13. Yardbirds - Hits 3~ Llab.ltly 41oj'9"",me .s 51 A - In one .16 Pub prOduCT .....nt 27 Confronts ~ Time -- (2-rec set) $9 98 37 RanI 5 Plu' ?II Ehm.Mle half ~~t.lt!::~ ~':~ !~ clear vinyl • 18 Hu... S Wound 29 '.~ sawCuek S3 Cargo carner three at times .., be arranged. to Mus.al or 7 Floor *ork­ 30 PaIlf'1 SS Contends Food ~ice-four opelllnl!S in the Alan Parsons Proiect "',k'1a man 31 Lueller 56 Endrng lor mornings. 111M' in the aftf'rnoon. U CvmP8SS PI a VedIC dawn 12 AIr an· eom Of con Janltorial·onf' oPf'19101 in tbe 42 labO' gOCdt.'S5 lelope 57 Wal ... ,., morning. two in tho. afternoon. Tal•• of My.tery 4l Renounc ... 9 Energ~ 33 HollOWS Comb. fOtm MiSct.'Ilaneous-rour CIpftIings lit the I1ICII'Ilinp. be ~ leclurf>S 10 Moek-ups 3S Pigeon lIN 58 Ve.. fIVe .., arraJJ8ed. (gold vinyl) $7.49 47 Be.clles 11 SpIn! 3t Pronoun 60 Dental aeg NOVELI.8T HONORED Steely Dan - Ala (gold vinyl) $7.49 NEW YORK CAP' - Canadian writer TImothy Flndl ... y has received the Govemor General's Devo - (marble vinyl) $ 7.49 Litf'rary A.an' ' .. IUs novel 01 1M First World W • "Tile Wan." plus Styx. Who, Frampton and Beatie. In color vinyl

~ ... f)(J/ ) /l.A- ...... ~

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f!{/'e JleUJ WO/ilc~i 501 E. Walnut· Across from Wendy's Covone's Salutes Cocktail Lounge The Chicago Bears . open at 4:00 p.m. with Piano Entertaln.. ent .~~ 4:30-8:30 Free Delivery ~ HapPf ~~~! 4:00-6:30 n.,rIenIT +J.,n ITrrW'Hn +,,"1n-hf. nee nors u oeuvres .A.J''-4' "6 ... r'~ 6U."'~ ... v""6' ...... aily .ew Yorker Special .S, Six Delivery men '"Carbondale's M()'i;t Sophisticated Call: 549-0718 Cocktail Lounqe." , serving you the fastest Mod.!wd 0.... Code No CUI "", 0< w.. delivery in town. 549-0719 ~~ 312 S. Ill. Ave. 549-0710 Page 10. Dally Egyptian•. October 16. 1978 Autlwr depicts tear degradations DAVID M. LANE. D. V M

in .an intimalte look into personalities A"""'OUNC£S THE OP£,..,fNG OF HIS Of:""'CE "COJ "THE CENf.RA,- PRACTIC£ 0" VF1'£RINARY ,.. .. C:C1NE Bv John rarm that INIve comt' and 110M it has only sian ,,·rtwr bo'-o derisjv.. in robbtn" us of som sJK'IIt advanc.ng over ROUTE' 3 Af''D outsel my apprehension toward 100 yards of plam to capture a small C"RBONDALE ILLINOIS 62901 .valuBlin, the m.r.1$ 0{ a book farr.a. or perhaps a villa. only to aboot war. I have no ellperiencl' MVt' it tuen back again withIn a:: Wllh war. flut ha\ing read th.s. !>our. In the meanhme, soldIers Wilham W;ards mother does not speak and c:annot Rome! dunng the springtime. There Tonight S¢ drafts Rome. Intl'lli~ had reporff'd lhe hold his hand. is sUll dP.atb. and the memOl'ies '" it path to be dear. Instead. the troova "The war is still upstairs. I can "What bealS me is that !IOml'body with every Bear touchdown Viaited on the beach. This delay hear ~ !!OI!liers," Woodruff wrote deliberately shot. the kldfro~ would allow ~ ~ans to teco~" through the \-yes 0( a small boy. "1 behilld.. And in the Spr·ng. from lhe initial shock of the will t~1l them I am Bernadette Woodruff wrote! near the end o( the Bears vs. Denver invasion. re-group and retaliate With Sapori and that I want to go to my book. such force that the Allied forces "What on t'8rtb has Spring Ifot to on Big Screen TV were. literaUy. nearly driven back ~".,'::I~e l~:'~a': r: ~~;:::::.'.~ do with it~ You've got ~ vicwry. into ~ !IN. The OIII"-b.lur drive to Woodruff writes 0( war. but hanlly haven't you~ Well. be satisi;""'t1; you (wifh our luek thtey'" seo"~ big) Rome (rom Anzio would take the 0( !IIra-'w,e: baltles ' there IS too can't ha"e a \'ic:tory WIt""·" a troc>~ four winter months to muc:h ~ to be covered He does not sacrifice. There's always got to l-. ~ con.plete. Woodruff &erVf'd 1ft the concern himself with victory. lall sacrifice .. Fitst British Infantry Division purpo&e is defeated,. but With the throogh ~ campaign'S entin!ty. "onfhct e"ch partic'pant must "Today was to be a ~isive day. endure and each's particular way 0( but like all the other decislft' days do,", it. N"er is the book lig~l' COVONE'S Piney Creek named presen-e FREE LAMI'BELL lit:..:.. ,A p, _. If .estcrn edge of tho Sh:w::ce DELIVERY Amerit:an Indians of hundreds of National Forest 0( Southern lUinoia. ~W'!I ago reappeared during thIS SPECIAL Indran Summer season, they might ~ preserve is on ~ Randolph recogruzr the roill" hills and rocky and Jackson ('Ol;nty Ii~ !IOUthwest OUtCropplO"S 01 what is now the of bl're. and olf~rs public: hiking. Pilley Creek Sature PTeserve. bird watchm, and photography Chedc out page" opJ-<)rlUrutles - bt:t nOC campng. Some UIO persons wandered the plant collectiDtl or fishing. brush)' 200-acre preserve Mar tblll ISouthern Illinois coal mining tommunity when state Conservation Director David Kenney dedicated it. Prevent Chimmney Fires i" ''The public wiD enjoy lIS teener)' • Full sweep service available ~C:-er.c~t=n': ~~~~ • Inspections offered .~. • Rebate plan But SCIentists will fiDCI it lasclnalin, at, well. peering into €bim-€bimmntp "Idence of tlfe passa,e of native bands long before theRttien eame "The significance rS tbis preserve ctbimmntp ~tuttP will continue to be rS ,rat .ao .. 10 "for the luck of • sw.ep call"••• 529-1 ... Southern Illinois University .:ienb5ts and rS va.. for scboIars all Oller ~ _try." he said. But for tile weekend adventurer. tile regim features nat... al works 01 NEXT ISSUE- art cut In a ravi~ by ~ passage 01 ' Piney Creek and hi,h sandstone bluffs. deep pools and • large variety 01 trees. So you're going college be ~Yf=dt!'J~~= o~ ~; to to $16.000 and an average price « $38$ per ac:re. brings to 17.400 ana the total Nabire Preserves System. a lepidopterist State conservation orr~iaIs said ~ Pi~y Creek preserve Contains several plant species. espeaally the yourlnsider,checkOtrtthe Shoruea! Pr~. \Ylill 'Iou Have The) said the tree is only found at shafr) new Fords for 79. Like ODe othet place in &be ILlIte: The A Job When You trte New Breed of Mustang Graduate? with dramatic new s~l.S MONDAYNIGMT You like catching. mounting car styling And Fiesta­ NNE. SPECIAL AT and cataloging butterflies, Is WUndercar. Fords fun iittle The there any reason for you to Import. You can bet Ford believe your career will take off h.:~ ~ust about everything ItHeij after you graduate? In the next you'd want to drive. issue of Insider -the free See if your college education Filet••• Mignon supplement to your college and career hopes are \N'Ofking or ne-vvpapef frvm Ford-college together, read the next Insider. Shrimp Dinner degrees ar.d careers they pre­ And check out the new lineup M." pate you fu wiil be discussed. of 79 Fords. They'll both put Nighl'fy Vegetarian Dinner 13." And while you're enjoying you on the right road. (watch the.** hors game cw Wcwld Series in our TV Lounge) Look for hsider- FORD THE BENCH fa'cfs conti'lu:ng series d college ~ SlJR)IemeIItS. FORD DIVISION CD

Doily I!gy,tlen. Octobe"16. 1978. ~ 11 I Sou...... Electronics I Holtle & M41rtne Now ""'vicing Hondo corso This month·s special. $9.95 STEREO REPAIR tor oil & filter chonge. Call ffA' II)' .:1 appt.. osk for John. S49·8t14 The A.,410 tto.p.... I~ I Motorcycles Factory AuthorlzH Repair tor WAITRl-:SS WAST~:[)· APPI.Y In PIONEER fIHIt.Sf 1.HAIt i: I COME AND JOIN OUR r.-rson at Amt'T.can T·,p alter 1\ 311 SANSUI SHERWOOD ,18 So 1111110111 B21R2(' Alllhru October with TECHNICS J.V.C. countl'f' help Jo:xpE'Merll'e ht'lpful OtI - ~I hlcft _.11 HITACHI AKAI ~ I ~!.'~'~~ill.~~. ~~ ir.,:::: • ~. I C,. .... I".tocto KENWOOD ONKYO 21117(,oH -Spec-' ".y ..... - T£A.C DOKOROER -'-...-1... NIKKC CLARION F.."SY MOSJo:Y A~[) fret' meal n - .... '1AMAHA JACIln !lab""ittm~. n(')llble hours. da\ . wHh-""'...... FISHfIt TOSHIBA * , ... Shcwty He'_' with TAN8ERG SHARP ~;:::~~I~~~;lr.~~~ "tfJIJ.:~1 -".1...... SUPEItSCOPE GARRARD * SAV. _0""" ·n. & ." DUAL SANYO ~_MoIIe" 5 and more * SAVI_ S_lol Lot 01 S.I.U. ' ..I_I ...... CARLE T.V (TSTOMt:R C_and_usa' l'E'I'.rt'5f'fItali"p full or part tim .. SEE THEM TODAY AT our _location ":ation..-ildP ("ablf' T.V markl'lJr.tl SPIlDE 5ERYICI YAMAHA I ,...... ~Irm s ..ek!'l !!o .. \'eral hillhiy (oe, .... from .... S.. Iion) i motillatf'd ppnonl to !If'I1 cah/t' ''''til TV Excf'U.... nt cal'f'el' opportunlt" V01.Jf C~d. C.nr• .., S,ru.l' 19J8 I I Sl-:lW ..\ PI. AC 1':" Seat. J4t...... , hlllh ,nCf'ntlVf' package. ('ar (AIIBONOALE .~7 !>All.,. !>A'I.i>I •• furn;!lhed. t,,·o bfodroofT'!I. a.r ap.tt ct hU 6 'u.... thru So' ('OIlditionro. loX52 trailer Town II CountrY ~obtl .. Homt' Court Call ~~~~:~~upp~~I~~r04S7~1 all 54~17:;t; ;':llOpm.·II:OOpm. 2238C~1 _. ____ .__ . ____. ___ ~~.~c4., '76 TRH'MPH 750 8onnf'vill .. l-~~~R\~~~: al~<]!r~~ W A~TEO PERSON TO Ii\'t!' in and TI-Ml Jo:" ..... II.. nt.Io"· m.IE'S. di!lC'S' SE-rvicf'. 122 S illinoiS. 5049-1941 t>RIVACY FOR TWO in laflt(' twv hf'lp with IhrH children. Plmtv of Mast sacnf.Ct' 453·5&14 afll'f' 10:30 ._-_ - __ .. ___Is:!~~~ 'If'droom 12lI1iO mobile homf'. n_l\, frft' 11mf'. Hf'lp most nt"f'df'd' 3·7 pm 21 87Ac4 I carpe, ..d. ht"drooms opposlle pm. Mon.·I-'n. Room. board. and ---.- - --~~~.---.. --.- SPE("fAL SALE. Al.L IIt'w t!("A ..II.!;. .mmeJullf' occupancy. ular\' Rf'ply Ball $. Dally 1m H(I~[)A XL·250 Runs jUl'at. In. ,;e'" in sto-:!. ~10.00 ovt'r landed Iphone ;)49.;,;:.;,\ Sorry. no ~lS. • EllYpf.al. 2235C .... ._ . ._ ..8 ~9Bc-48 l oUf'!'~'''Wh'''''''''''K·''''·'_1 '>3-31lllO. 219OAc44 ~:U"'!'ti.~!~~ l~~f!'r't· !::',..(~ «;2'. --.------~------12' flY AC .... al,hrnl! mactJine. : 'n HO~1>A C845O. Front di!0.00 Phonf' 536-2087. days. 457-4488. l'Vf'II"!{.S. 2233Ag44 Roonmates I ~4J; 3R~~~~T; N~~Da:o I Pets & Supplies Quadra!'l!!''''' F.llM"if!, 1«81100 I Own bedroom. 549-&162. 2U9IBt"Il j I MATt'RJo: STI.'DElIiT DE..'iIRES! ~~'!J~~~es":,~a~ ;,~ ! ('aU SMnl. 542-42111. 211OBe41! -.- ---~--=---.------.- FEMAlE ROOMMATE Nt:fWEO i for tratler immf'dial.. ly, SlIG. M9- i 1000,SJ'H673or~7949 tt2SB...u! ROOMMATE WANTEDi IMMJo:DIATELY . furnlshf'd c 9 8 0 L D S l~ {) B I L E ~e!:!:. omroo ~~ ~!!.~ i Ml'RPHYSBORO. 19i']. 4 door UllhUeI, 549-&U1. 22268e4li hardtop. poYo'l'f'. air. new tirE'S. cll'.. n. one ownn. ('all fill4-2fiIIII arter 5pm 2218Aa43 WASTED TO Bt·y, bas ..bal1 ca rds 549-7696 l'Vf'II!..gs. 531\-2351 l\.~~~D'sA~. :IE:~!,~~ I Ulilitift st\aM OM-flfth available 1975l'.-\MARO. 350 \'-8. at tomatic. f'lIt 234 da)l$. l~f41 I 'mmedtate1y, call MH7IS Be+l! factory aIr. ~wf'r Stt't'\lf11l and 22sI ~ ~~~::S5 ~~.n'. VI~YII~I1~," DJo:SIGN YOl'R OWN carPf'l. HOUSEMATE WANTED. NICE ------~ --~- ~:~:;"fl~~;C~~~a~~ts hoUM', good location. Immedialf' c eactJ FilE Supply, 418 N. 14th St. ~i~~W. Sycamore~~~c 6114-3671 B2067 Af4llC Musical ()ILFl~~ACES AND tanks lor " Wanted to Rent sa~. S260GO-set. Cau bef~ 9 a.m. :.29-10112. 8:2197Af44

SEW'-WATE-RBE D I MA·ITRESSl-::S. lum! QUt't'n. !lm~If'. I 19i'3 CHEVY IMPALA. f'lIC'f'lImt Saleway hf'atf'l"!;l quahty framf'Sj I condition. air. power st.... nlll! ami bt"dsprf'ads. vlDralors PTlCf'O, niUtl ~7.Q113. 21iHAf47 brakE'S. 49.000 mllf'S. SlIoo.OO or ~-.------.---.~-- maltf' an offer. Book valu.. SI~.OO 15' CHRYSl.ER BOAT. 40 Apertmtnts 867·:zz..'" 22\4Aa41 ;:;:;U~:l~ If:~I:·.!;~~r{.c~ gas log. 549-0052. 2206AJ 41 CALL ROYAL RENT Abo Ml'ST SELl.' ~. 1m Kawasaki 2SO Enduro motorncle. Excell ..nt fOIl 'ALL CANCILLAT10NS I condllion. Garrard Zno 100 . EfticieflClfl: IUS/month I Proft'S510nal model turntablf'. Two 2 bedroom mobile home; ~~ay aIr SUSpen5I011 ~,:r:. ""'-:',..,. I 1m TOYOTA {'El.ICA. AM·F!Iol. air. 68.000 miles: PiorJetor SR·202W 4S7~22 I 1%8 STATION W."GON Hl'Vf'rb amp. (,lanon AM·FM car radiO. lr.1 Tnumph Bonne\illc S40C.:"'.t"irm. ';49-3765 after 5:00 CAMBRIA AREA. 2 bf'droom all I pm 22561.843 motorcyc~. S49-7696l'Vm~f~ f'ltdric:, S200 monthly. ~2M5 I tELP WANTED af\l'f' ;, pm. 2167B843 ~~~~~-~-;;-';-...,,-;; S. I. BOWL· ('ooCoo·s. \\ailrt"SSE'S om.~b~'ir;;;:;;~~j;.;.·A;';ifab~ ,I aJlplY In pt'nOn. t;veryday 12· j' Nov..mber I. QlIl 549-1257 aft.. r !l83-3'i5S BIi'35C-I3C COOL IT' REFI.HII\·E glaD IlOtJn~ Solar Conlrol and privacy 5:30 pm. 21818841 I W'-\ITRF.SSES. Fl'll OR'-'Pa-rt for homf'. vf'hlcles. and hUslfW'SS Call Sun·Gard of lHoSoto.I!67.2S049 . Parts & Services f'l'RNISHEO APARTMENT. \\r.':o:pply at Gatsby·B5 ...... ,Iii! .. .§; 1702E4IC f:GYF-TIA:"I Vt\N • R.V. Custom TWO ~r':.om. 2-4 Pf'I'5OOlI. clO8f' to ~~... van. truck and R V. interJOf'S and f:~r!i ~U~~sem"trr. OVERSEAS JOBS SUM'ME-R ~-iXpE.-iSiVE'-n'PEWRrn;R REPAIR· any makf'. modft cliP :~I~e5S0nf'5 MurphYLt;o~A~ MISS KITTY'S GOOD u,.. d 22018842 ~~:;:::.ntUstriiI~~~~a. l't~ouln thIS ad and attach to ty~riler furruturf' and antiqUf'S. RR 14!f. 1\ IM--t:-R-PH-'-·~-B-O-R-O-. -TW-·-O-ROO-. -M fields.'SOII· 11200 monthlv Call 437·lUJ3. 2006E51 ~~~f'II~~~ 't~~ ~~k;,.;r9 miles oortneast Of Carbondalf' apartment. Furaishf'd, utilities r:r~~!~~r~m:n"o ..~: SEED. A PAPERt~-I8M or ~7 -0421 R224Mb6OC ~:"2491. FI'O!e ~live~X:' plud, '150.00 per month. 6&H4S1 441IO.1>t!'pt. SG. Bf'!'kf'lf'\'. C" 9471.14 SE-lectrtC. Fa8t and al't"UJ'lIfe. ilfW S:OO pm. 22278842 'B2QJ2C53C' Reasonablf' ratl!tl. M9-l2S8. Page 12. Doily Egyptian, October 16. 1978 2039E51 i· PHOTOGRAPHER NEEDS COl'PU:S to take ~tCtures of for ~t. Can Tim al er 6 p~~:: A eTloN$... , SALES SAVEGASN

ANTIQUES GE~ERAL HAl'L1NG. LIGHT moving. attics. basements, Attention garagest'leaned.549-8I35. 2232E-M Art Collector. The Doily Egyptian classified ods can FOR "ImUR CASUALTY insunmn! M'E'ds. call me. George Keller. We have lust acquired save you cosh. When you are looking Miller's Mutual Insurant'e. 5~ a complete set of 1751 B22:JfiE45 Happy 20th for something that you need. check -~-.------Bessie P8099 Gutmon BOLEN Ft'RNlTl'RF. RI-:PAIR original prints. Came in to fhe D. E. first. ~~krn,.r!.~~:~ ~~~~ ond moke your seltK· brOken ptt'C't'!l with custom mad!'. StevenJ. parts. 337 Lewis Lan.. Carbondale Phone 457-4')24. B22.f3~1lOC ';0"7.. ::t d I Love You ANl1QUiS Donalyn CLASSIFIEDS 5~'6-3311 ABORTION·FISFSf MEDICAL Wft' Side Shopp,ngC",,'.' care. Immediate appomt:nents Counselinll to 24 weeks. 8 a.m. ·8 "vh' Mhtnd M, Tu.ed<> p. m. Toll free 1-801)-.438-8039. ,....'.. 2 22-1O~

NIID AeotI'hOM INFORMA noM' fo help you ,hrough ,his e.· uerience we give you com­ CInaIfIed Advertlalng Order Fom. ple,e counseling of any Daily ~tian dura~"'" b-fOl'e and r:h9r the procedure. 531-3311 .. -.-_.c..w'CALLUS Coli Collect J1~"1.'''' Or'o"F~ Name:______Date: ____ Amount Enclosed: ____ ....Uf ..... Address: ______Phone: ______

PYLAS TICKETS: "EXTREMf':I.Y·· eager to buy. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATE: lOc per word MINIMUM first issue, :::::.;~ J.'r673~nday· ~~~ Si.5U (any ad not exceeding lS words), 10% discount if ad runs twice, 20% ------discount if ad runs three or four issues, ~ discount for 5-9 issues, .tJ% for TRl:CKS AND CARS. Junkers. 10-19 SO% for 20. ALL ClASSIFIED ADVERTISING MUST BE PAID m~~: :r~. ~t!!t_;\s~~91O: issues, B2246F6OC IN ADVANCE UNLESS ESTABLISHED ACCOUNT HAS BEEN MAINTA'NED. Please count eve y word. Take appropriate discount. LOST DEADLINES: 12:00 p.m. day prior to publication. First Date NJ FIVE MOlliTH OLD male SIamese To Appear: ______cal. t.lt.t seen at cornPr 0( Poplar end Oak street. ~8se caD 457· 2607. We miss him' alli8G42 Mall 10: Dally EgyptIan For Daily Egyptian Use OnIV: LOST. BLl'E PLASTlCloiderwitb-- important papers in Communi- ConmunIcdona Building Receipt No_------cauons BI~. on 10-...11. If found Amount Paid ______r.!::..e cal Fanny at S4\1·616S. SouUwm 1IIInoia Unlveralty ve I1leS5ilgr. 225i(ri3 Taken By------.• Carbond.... IL 62901 Approved By _____._ Wallet. 10-9. ~Wfft Monroe and O1erry on South UOIver.llty. Credit cards iDvalld Ene. S4II-6I~ Spec:ial instructions: ______1·~!::·II:~:~:l~!:l:I~ TYPE OF ADVERTISEMENT __ A - For Sale __ F· Wanted __ K • Auctions & Sales CRAFT WORLD. 141 S. Division. Cart«ville. Oil and ~I~paint. __ B - For Rent __ G - lost __ L - Antiques macrame and tole pamltnl 5UPPlies. Malut and bUll Horne __ C - Hc!lp Wanted __ H· Found __. M - Business Opportunities ~da;era~~~:30 Bl~~ __ 0 • Employment Wanted __ I • Entertairvnent __ N - Freebies __ E - Services Offered __ J - Announcements __ 0 . Rides Needed ATTENTION CREATIVE PEOPt.E: Common !v.arket. 100 E. __ P • Riders Wanted Jacltson. BuV5 and sells enfts. jrwrlry. pOttrry. macrame. weaVIIIgs. f'tc. ~ lo-S:3O. 54t- 1m Wen!pltr jewelrY. 81MOJ48C

WEA VING CLASSES WILL BEGIN Oct. 18. 7·9 p.m. CHECK YOUR AD AFTER I T APPEARS! The Daily Egyptian will be responsible SlGN~PNOW! for only one incorrect publication. Fib.,. Plu. 2t1S.IIL ,,""*1

Doily Egyptian. Octobe.-16. 1978. Poge 13 OOONES8URY by Garry Trudeau ~_11li.. ~ CP'" TONIGHT 0 ~ o '0 ~ ZOOM CONTRO((C'.p TUESDAY VISION Miller Can Night. 3 for $1

By Johll J. SeGel St..... 1 Writer 811l'V Cobham is bad. and with produeer'arrangt'T Jay Chaltaway to help out. h~ has produc~ a lIPari, laultl.ss album AlthoUj(h Chaltaway :11 btotlft' known for his work With the bill band chans. Iw arrangl'd and conducted thret' of tht' album'3 SIX songs. co­ producing tilt' other th~ .. jth Cobham Jazz vs

•..,t' The Broncos Cobham holds tht' Jazz·soul sounal Lalln sovnd INtunllj1. ~'n't' Khan on acousu,. !lultar and !\I"rk Soskm on 1" 'Ctrlc plano Coke Tht' [mall'ut l ! ont'. "Pockt'l Chan!lt'" IS Col. .:lm·s allt'mpt at funk sound. and It dof'!In't work Tht> 70¢ ~mall !lTOOP !IOOnd. ar.d partil'ularly The American Tap " \~,,\ \ 518 S. nlinois Ave. o~~ ~,~ SUN / <:> - - Ie> ~SUN RECORDING & GIFTS C> 1202 W. Main (West Sid. Shopping Center) campus interviews for information Systems eome in and register for our drawing to be held and SeMc:es at Texas Instruments. Thursday, December 14 at 4:00 p.m. in our store. In the Infc:oomation Syaeenw and s-tca • BusIness AppIcalions In CoaIac­ The winner of the drawing con select $100 worth Organir.ation • n you w& be IIS8OCi8Ied counting. Marketing. P8yIoI. Produc· l ot merchandise. You do not hove to be present with _01 the most~ com­ tIon PIennIng £, ConaI'I for the drawing in order to be a winner, Our con- ~ puler networks .. ~ wortd. 'lbu Will be • MInkompuIer Syaems o-Iopment on tho ~ edge cI c:ompuIer PoteatW test is n ..,.y in progress and continues until 4:oo~. technology. wortang on 18/1\ 370/168's p.m. Oecember U. Register now and become C>\ with MVS/JES..3. 11 offers poIIentiaI for advancement by upgrading y..__ "'ll!Chnicai expertise eligible to win $100 worth of gifts from our~ 'lbu wII be WOffOng In It consistendy 0- through compan'/ supported coune store!! ~ pendng program. ~ systems work end pt'OjPct ~_ Advance­ .. support 01 ns Management end ment into a supeMsofy/~ment ~OOOOOOOOQ!QQOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO~ li!c:hnoIogy CeMet for Consumer lOll! IS encouraged through ns int:. ;,wi. l Products. training programs by: ImIoIvn U!ef interface. detail dnign. • Inc~Ming CoonInating AbitIies and end implementation of diM base Protect Know\edgt! systems to support production and • Enh.-:o.nng ~ Sirilk TJI('1 planning and control, malenals man­ and Diplomacy agement. shop IIoor c:ontroI. cost ac· • Opgraclng li!c:hnical Knowledge counling. finaocial planning. general accounting. order entry/billing and LocatIon shJpping. TI's Ma~ment end li!c:hnology SpedaItJa I"teecled Cet"Jer for Consumer Products is 10- as and MS degrees In: c!lled in Lubbock. Tet.ss. in the high. dry. end cool plains of West ~LH. Lub· • Computer Scierl<:e \ major or minor bock IS about halfway between Dallas field 01 stu.:fyl and i\lbuquelque. It 1$ the home of TellltS • MBA with a Il!Chnicai undergraduate ..... h Oniversity. You a~ just It ~ hours' field 01 study drive hom skiing in Taos. or tour~o • Mathematics with Computer Scierl<:e ing and shop?Ing in Juara. cou~work Mexico. And t1wre IS no SUIte Areas 01 ActIvItJ incometlllL. • Business ApplIcations Development Brooks Vantage IntenIewtng on Campus • Daa Base Design. ~ & October 16& 17 Now available Administration Eiectronic pacing insirumenh • ~UtT.fl,u,-Q(ctiuns and 0... Com­ if unobie 10 IfIIeMeW at trllS bme, send munications Design. Development & resume to: Gary Sprehe/P.O. Boll The Cronus Strider Mainb!nance 1()51)8, M.S. 5806/Lubbock, TX 79408. "Pace your way to health" TEXAS INSTRUMENTS SPORTS MART INCORPORATED

EVERYTHING FOR THE ATHLETE An equal opportunity employer M/F

Page 14, Doily Egyptian, October 16. 1978 'Jackson County Jail' heads film list II, 1M1 .. RHII , SWfWriter , The hOrTon c:onfront~ by a woman trapped in a brutal lmall­ IOW1t jail are graphically dl'pKkod in "Ja~COllnty JaIl" whichwiU ~ ~!!t.~ by Ihp SGAC lIIil ThIs 197& film futures YnoUe Mimieux as • TV-eGmmet'icat writer who leavea bet' lover in Hollywood .ar.J decides to dri", to New Yoril. Alollg tile w.y bet' mr .nd JIUI'W are Itolen and Ihe is knocked UIICOIIIItious. WheD abe wakes up. she finds she is being held by local pllice far identification. During the mght she ill rapM by tile jailer, who shemAnalestokiU. Too_red to do .nythinl else•• he filMb herself T'om Collins 7.0¢ fleeillll with tile fatalistic: mUI'derP-. tTommy Lee J_I. whO WI\II heiag lleld in tile cell next to her ,r... .. ~. '{\~\ ~lCreenplay by Donald Stewart \O~\'? is bold and frtghteoi ••nd tiredor' Mich.el Miller m.naln to brin, ,,~ both of these qualitiea .cr.... Splitwater Creek vi~~. af the film I fineat achievements was ita .bility to IftMIII - rather blatanl satire .~~- •• ..lMIno Paclrane.·· .a ...rd ...... , Id. by on life In America w,thoullakmtl 1"l14li0 lIac \ JUOI'lO J rll\U.. a~a ., ., .....y from tbe Iet'ioulneu of lIIe Wm _ Bil1ards Parlour pIoL .ad • , ...... Slad8& Cn&er AIIdkoriaID Admmu. .. 'I .... die 81.... p~," .,y Special ~-=hCo;'3 -::~. 'r~ ': SGAC. c:amtempGrll~ ~·fiJm can be. Katherine ·He~urll made ber !hi1llS interestirur Sir Christooher. is :: :=:a~I::=ta~r~lso by Jack Daniels 75¢ debut 1ft a I ..rrinl role in rnarriecL Billie Burke plays Ius WI(e. "(bl'illopher StnJlll-" which will be Lady StroIII and IIlnIII in tile best All at l.tII! films this week WIll be .shown Thursday nlPt. perfarmance. sMwn at 7 and 9 p.m. "Jacll._ ~ rum. whicb was made in ld., The ensuing love trianllie I. County Jail"'.nd "f'lIdre Padrone" will ClO$t II eac:h. was based Oft G'lbert to'r.nkau'. handl~ by 1Cl'ffD W"let' Zoe novel of the .ame name, and Atluns and di.rect~ Doc-

GWEND()LYN BROOKS

1'ull~ PrIze· Winning Poet "'W.Moln 1112.own ....ton Mllrfon will speak at .13 I. Moln. CarMnclale John A. LOl:!an Collel:!e on Wednesday~ October 18 10:00 a.m. until 12 noon in The College Gymnasium

Admission to the \ectun! will be fJW and will be open 10 the general pubhc as well as students of • John A. l.oQan Coliege

Spnn~ bu· John A. Loon Cultural Aru Pronilm

glee Jll'eut ~~ 501 E. Walnut-Across from Wendy's

DISCO LOUNGE No matter what your favorite pizza is, we can ~ it. Nightly 9-2 '. Just say SuperStyIe",.., you order your pizza You'" ~ lots "Carbondale's Newest Night Spot­ .::~ cheese. And ~ of your favorite toppings. For just a little more dough. Yw can haw your SuperStyIe paza - Dazzling lights & Exhilarating Sounds Thick 'n ChewY' or Thin 'n ~ Any W8!f you want it Get more of what you go for. Go new SuperStyle . • ally .e. Yorker Special One coupon per party ...... ThiS coupon good ttlru ••• rperYisil------iiiiiiil---1 At participating ~ Sunday, October 22. 1978 ::=::::.restaurants ~ $l.OO Off ~ I I 8enton.I38W,...... ~ ~ 00 MeIUn =nut SupetStyie MMton. ',12 Ikown \11AJU c.rbondUt.I13 E.1hIft $LOO 00 SmaI L~_ ''1'11~ SuperSIyte J ------UOily Egyptian, October fO, 1'178. Page 15 'Coach's kid' loves the sp B, THI'I 'hag_, you don't win or lose, you survive,' .. she News EcHter said. and Tonya plays wing back, a baD camer. By S ..... CresOl!' Theoretically, wing backs shouldn't get Studnt Writ"' tackled but. "We're haVIng problems She'd go With her Dad to his work and with our offense, so I'm getting hit more watch men who have necks bigger than than I'm!IU~ to," she said, She was most pt'Ople's thighs crash into each at home iCUlg her knee, and not at the other with terrme force. daily practice. She learned the three ptlint stance from her Dad before she learned to read The women's team is young, only two or write. years old, and has yet to win a game. She's had to change schools constantly "Most of the teams we play are a lot because her Dad's job kept chlonging. more experienced Ulan we are. ThPy But Tonya Dempsey has never have warned how to tackle, how to play regretted her Oi3d's profession. Because without runrung themselves ragged and they knm.. how to fall in a tackle wiiMut of Rey Dempsey, Sill football coach, hurting themselves. Tonya has enjoyed a different life lU. the t'Oach's kid. "I used to love watching the "We've had a lot oflnpies, so there is Detroit Lions practice," she said. Her always a new replact'tnent in a position, Dad was an assIStant coach there. "I and it's easy for them to make was able to see everything from the mistakes," she said, It wasn't long inside," the 21·year-old senior in health before her Dad realized Tony. was education said. serious about rugby, and has since been CoostanUy e"posed to athletics, Tonya givi,* her tackling tips, could have either grown to hate or love As she was growing up, Tonya bad to sports. She loves 'em. ''I've alwavs change schools t'OnStantly because her enjoyed competition; I play for Dad's job was constantly changing. "I winning," she s~ud. Her father never used to be real shy tlecause 1 was always pu~':::::: her one" 8" or tht> othl"r, but she the new kid. but I gueoss mOVlng a lot said he was always supportive and made mt' more outgoing in the POd. I had helpful. to learn fogo out and makefriend!," she When hl" heard that she joined the said. "Now. people can't tum me off. rugby team. he said, "I can't behe\'e it, you must be nuts." ''I'Vl' bef'n in C.arbondale for three She changed from team sports to years, and it's the longest time that I've rugby because she liked the "different ever lived in one place, I had to choose atmosphf)re" of rugby. She played on between coming ht>re or sta);ng at the Sit' women's \'ollevball and Eastern Michigan University when my teams, but to mf'et Dad Ilot hirPd at Sit;. It was one of the ba~kt"lball "'anted hardf'st df'Cisions I have had to make. I different Pf'Ople "Most of the people in wanted to _ a new state. and I'm glad I mterl"ollegiate sports are physical did heeat:Se 1 hke it here a klt" education majors, but 10 rugby, e\'eryone has dl (ferent backgrounds, Most people don't suspect that she is "Ru..:by IS a team sport, but it's also a related to Iht> football C08f'h, and at soda) ~port. We play to win. but after football gamt'S she has to keep quiet the gam~s the teams party together. when an Irate fan yells something That wouldn'( happt>n in the inter unfavorable at her Dad. collt'gla!ps. Alone of thE' first rugby But she takes her Dad's position m~'t'ts I WE'n! to. tM\" had beer for us serious Iv. A non-smoker and non­ at half timE' . drinkC"r: she says, ". try to keep a ItOOd "But wt' play hard. One of thE' girls on reputation fur my (atM and get good the tt'am has an {'''pression: 'In rtlIi:by. grades for the boih of us."

__ Il4ullll('k for RUf{gerl' Absellt refs, poor officiating among problems Rv ('hris t:amH Larry NormanseU, "I didn't want to see Dumston's 3-point oenalty kick tied the and l\hssi5l>ippi state: said match studt-n' Wri'f'r anyone get hurt." game at three, eighth-man Rocky LewIs secretary Pat Cummins ...It wiD be a The sn; rugby club has had plenty of The ruggers couldn't changl" their luck kicked over the onrushing ISU backs and . good change of pace for us.:' ... luck this year. Plenty of bad luck. with refe~ on the weekp.nd of Oct. 7, scored on the winning sudden-death try. The women's rugby club pla'J'" in The nl5!.2ers ha ve been plauRed by tht> when the~, played host to the University The Bteam weftt on to lose to eventual Indianappolis on October 14 in the absence of referees, mix-ups in game of IIh •.ollt in the illinois Intercollegiate champions U of I I()'o but wound up Indiana Womens Tournam' :~, Rugby Tour.18ment, Umes anti quesliOAable officiating. takrng third place by 1efeating Eastern The next home game will be It all started in Springfield on Sept, 30 The eventual champions downed StU Ilbnois4-0on thes~th 01 a try scored Halloween weekend when Westel"l and thE, dub showt-d up to playa game. in a hard fought game that the Daily ..nen by wt~-forward Eric Zan. Eastern lIIiD'Jis t;niversities will JOlD'• only to find there was no referee. In a lIIini termed a match between .. th~ The SIU women's rugby club dropped hIghly unorthodox move, SIU, the hunters (trot I) and the bunted Ism .... two games, one to U of I mother-ruggers SIU and the £vansville AU·~'hites for a \'lSiting team, had to supply the referee. After losing to Illinois 3-0, the SIU A and the other to Ohio State. The Ohio muu·tounv,ment. . After several outbreak's of hand·to· team went on to beat the Uruversity of State game ~ as a hard fought battle that Rugby originated in England around hand combat in the game, SIU decided Chicago and Northern Illinois saw the ladies lose 8-0. the 18!lO5. It is played on a field that is to leave the field with eight minutes University. The ruggers have accepted a shorter than a football field. but wider. remaining, losing IH. The SIU B team defe&ted a tough tournament berth in the Nashville The ball is oval, Iar'liter than a football "It got out of hand," said president Illinois State & team in sudden death tournament in two weeks. "We'll be and heavier, Pta)Wr5 required to wear overtime by a score of 7·3. After Todd playing clubs like Vanderbuilt, Auburn mouth gards. Program designed for smiling joggers Bv JiD MicHlicll croceed counterclockwise on LincobJ.. Siaff Wriwr bou!tlas Drive. RlDlning is becoming a way of life for manv ~e. A day doesn't go by when The Bystander's Kid pa~ngrul~ ~!!rt="e!tnu:r ~roo~ one doesn t see someone running along ~ '::) Health ~ra~ Building and will end at side a road or aroond a track. Most, and ' the ;starting pornt, maybe all, have smiles on their iacE'S. • . By JW MicMlieh "We've measured this to the nearest Scott Vierke and the staff of the -\ . Staff Wrilft' foot three limes," Vierke said. III)r 1 "But one doesn't have to run the Iona _ ~~~~,!:g k=:~e at C~te:tu~; distance, we want them to corne ana promoting tho6e smiles, enjoy being with other people who enjoy "Our goal for teaching lifestyling is to shirts with the lifestyling logo imprinted a group. to share a good t'Xpl'rience," he ruming," Vierke said.• .,.ht>y can share make people aware of tht>mselves for on the front. said. "That was foremost in our minds a :;imilar ellpl'rience." their well-being, both physically and when planning the run." 'l"be idea oflifestyling as a way 01 life a[! mentallY." Vierke said, "The Lifestvlinl! pr~ala:er~n:, af~=~ft The philosophy behind tht> road run is bfoc'nming very pc1!IUlar with ~ Road RUn is our way of ge~ runners i'eceive m1!Cia Is, • and the lifestyling aspect of it is for o:.n:emed about their mt-otal 8nd together to have a good time, ' "In aD dIere WIn be 70 awards from aU neoole to aquire an intl'mal R'I1S8tion, a physical wen~. The Uiestyling Road Run will be held 17 categories:' Vierke said. ''There win l'ruimer's higb", ~ are four pillars in lifestyling: • on Sunday. Oct, 22, beginning at 1:30 "U's great to be running on a crisp fan ecology, nutrition, relaxation and p.m. A "fun run" will fie held at that a1v.!t: ~t~ ::..:~~:~ afternoon,"Vierke said. "A person sees exercise, time, and at 2 p.m, a 5,000 meter race lifestyling program and an advocate of thirws in the environment. This brilllts People wishing to tab part ia the will start. running bUnself. about one of the pillars we promote in evomt may pIck up an appliation at the "President Brandt sent in bis "I've heeD running for 12 years., and lifestylinM- ~0l0'." Sl.. otIent Wellness Resource Center or at application yesterday for the race," have won a lew races in my career," hi" The 5,000 meter race win begin behind the Department of ContinuiDg Vierke said. "He's been running about said. "But what we are striving fa-' lD the Student Health Program Building in Ed\Jt"ation, Washqton Square Wq C. four miles a day, and we've given him a this road run is DOt strictly rompr..ilicJn. the Southwest parking lot. The COlU'!e Th~ ~re also ~en around rampus shirt with 'number one runner' on it" but support from other runner.I, will begin eounterclockwisll' one-br.if lap whiclt iDdude iDfCIrIUtion and enery , People entering the race will be liVeD "We want people tosenae ~ part of around SInaI! "roup Housing lind then blanks. .. Pop 16. Dol" Egyption, October 16,1978