Southern University Carbondale OpenSIUC

November 1964 Daily Egyptian 1964

11-13-1964 The aiD ly Egyptian, November 13, 1964 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_November1964 Volume 46, Issue 39

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, November 13, 1964." (Nov 1964).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1964 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in November 1964 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. l)AC4 Trustees to Consider Budget:,!q~Qr SlU's budget requests at 6,500 on other campuses. for the 1963-65 period, totaled this mo:",ning's Board of Almost $93 million of this $63.1 miJlion. The *,ate leg­ Trustees flleeting could well request would be for the Ed- islatpre pared th~';.."t1~LE1_l0 top $ 210 million dollars. wardsville Campus, he said. $56.3" million" iit" 'maRi~lR!e John S. Rendleman, vice Rendleman said he could not final appropriation for the president for business affairs, say exactly how many years biennium. said he would ask a capital the period of the request would If the Board of Trustees improvemems budget of $150 cover, since it is based on approves the requests they million dollars for all SIU estimated enrollment figures. must be passed on to [he EGYPTIAN campuses. Rendleman said the President Delyte W. Mor- State Board of Higher Edu­ StJ.U/ielUl, iiluU4 request would cover a period ris is expected to request a cation for approval before be­ 'It 'Z(lfiq.e,,~ in which SIU's total enrollment biennial operating budget of ing presented to the state leg­ Carbondale, Illinois is expected to reach 36,000 more than $60 million dollars. islature next year. to 40,000 students. The cur- This would cover the 1965-67 The Board of Trustees is L-Volume______46 Friday,...:..;... Movember____ 13,;.... 1904______Muon"r 39..... lyrent over total 20,000 enrollment students, is slight- with period. meeting in the Board Room SIU's last bienniel request, of the President's Office. Trio 'Sings In' Parents Day at 8 p.m. * * Sphinx Club University, Dorm Units Set Selects Ten Varied Weekend Activities The Chad Mitchell Triowill day. Earlier plans to have the kick off this year's parents Arena open on Saturday had New Members Day weekend at SIU with a to be changed due to other Pat Micken, student body concert at 8 tonight in the programs scheduled there. preSident, was one of ten Arena. Students at Thompson Point persons named to the Sphinx The group, known for its will register the names of Club at a meeting of the Stu­ unusual style of folk-Sing­ their parents at Lentz Hall dent Council Thursday night. ing, will feature parodies, top­ Friday night. A drawing will A committee from the Sphinx ical satire and typical folk be held Saturday, and the pa­ Club interrupted the meeting ballads. rems picked will be guests long enough for Louis Tickets to the show are still of honor at dinner in Lentz Souchich, chairman of the available at the University Hall Sunday noon. group, to announce the new Center intormation desk for Thompson Point will also members. $1 and $2. Some 150 reserved have a parents' tea from 2 Others named to the honor tickets for faculty members to 4 Saturday afternoon in the society are Trudy L. Gidcumb, that were sold at Small Group Lentz Hall snack bar lounge. Eldorado; Trudy K. Kulessa, Housing are now sold at the Most fraternities and so­ Belleville; Gary J. Libberton, University Center. rorities:H Small GroupHous­ ChIcago; Larry A. Lieber, Other Parents Day actiVi­ ing are "lanning teas, smokers Galesburg; J an Nelson Nicpon, ties will be sponsored by the and open houses for Saturday Glen Ellyn; Chuck R. Novak, various living areas and by afternoon. Many organized Des Plaines; Marsha L. Pur­ the University. off-campus housing units are dum, Fairbury; Joe B. Taylor, The new SIU Arena will be also expected to have similar Decatur, and Dave Welte, open to students and parents activities. Overland Park. between 8 a.m. and3p.m.Sun- Woody Hall will sponsor a In business Thursday night, parents' tea from 2:30 to 4:30 the Council was asked by Harwood Avenue p.m. saturday in B. Formal Micken to send a recommen­ Lounge. They will also have dation to the administration Open to Cyclists an open house from 1 to 5 asking them to make alloca­ p.m. The open house will be Harwood Avenue is not off­ tions for the operating costs open to all parents and friends. of the SIU women's gymnastic limits to motorcyclists as Parents of the Day, selected team. previously reported. at random, will be guests of Micken said that Since the Joseph Zaleski. assistant President and Mrs. Morris founding of the team, it has dean of student affairs, said at 9:45 a.m. Saturday for cof­ been operating on money left mE CHAD MITCHELL TRIO the motorized cycles are pro­ fee. Parents will be registered over from other funds and hibited from entering the Old from 10 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. from money made from the Residenr.e Council Plan Main area by turning off Har­ Saturday at the main entrance sale of concessions at athletic wood Avenue on the short of the University Center. events. Yokie to Weigh Proposals street just east of Anthony Walking tours of the cam­ It was estimated that $5,796 Hall. pus will be given between 10:30 would be needed to finance However, student cyclists a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday, the ream, but with the money are permitted to use Harwood leaving from the north en­ On Dorm Overassignments Avenue to get to the new from the athletic event sales, trance of the University Cen­ only $4,296 will be needed Recommendations recently sated at the rate of at least cycle parking lot on the site ter. The Southern tour train from the University, accord­ presented by the Residence $1 per day starting from the of the old courts just will make trips through the ing to Micken. Halls Council concerning the day the overassigned student northwest of McAndrew campus between 3:30 and The Council referred the overassignment of University takes residence. Stadium. It has been reported 5 p.m. starting at the east bill to the Student Finance t1 .... using "will be given due Contractual conditions: in Wednesday's Daily Egyptian entrance of the center. Committee for further study. consideration and will be in­ Overassigned students shall that in the near future cycles Slides entitled "This is volved in a final decision ahout have priority over all others would be restricted from en­ Southern" will be shown be­ the housing," according to J. in filling vacancies. tering the campus at Har­ tween 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. GusBode Albin Yokie, coordinator of A resident shall have the wood and Illinois Avenues. in the Mississippi River Room housing. right to break his contract, Zaleski said cycles also of the center. Yokie said he has not had without penalty, if he is re­ are prohibited from enter­ Other afternoon activities time ro read all the proposals quired [0 remain in tempo­ ing the campus at the Old Saturday will include a Fash- and evaluate them. rary quarters for more than Main gate (Grand and Uni­ The rna jar recommenda­ two weeks. versity Avenues). (Continued on Page 11) tions in the proposed policy include: Notification and agreement: Faculty 'All-Stars' to Read Play No student shall be assigned [0 temporary quarters unless Leon Bennett, instructor in Henry Dan Piper, dean of the he has agreed in writing to English, will read the title College of Liberal Arts and the conditions specifically role of "King John" at 8 p.m. Sciences; Ralph W. Bushee, stated in the agreement. today in the Home Economics rare books librarian; Eelin S. No student shall be required Lounge. Harrison, instructor in thea­ to share his room with over­ Harry T. Moore, research ter; J. Joseph Leonard, assigned students unless he professor of English, and assistant professor of Eng­ has agreed in WIiting before spokesman for the SIU Fac­ lish, Eric L. von Fuhrmann, his contract is signed. ulty Play Reading Group, des­ instructor in English; E. Wal­ cribed the reading as "all­ ter Richter, lecturer in radio Reimbursement: star." and television; James G. Ben­ After two weeks in over­ In addition to Bennett, the ziger, professor of English. assigned conditions, all over­ cast includes Robert D. Fan­ Mrs. Christian Moe, wife assignees shall be r:.'mpen­ er, chairman of the Depart­ of the assistant dean of the sated at a rate of at least $1 ment of English; Robert B. School of Communications, per day. Partlow Jr., associate pro­ and her son, Eric, complete Gus says HE has been an All students agreeing t( fessor of English, and Mar­ the cast. overassigned student ever share their rooms with over­ tha M. Clark, instructor in The reading will be open since he came ro SIU. assignees shall be compen- English. to the public. LEON BENNETT Page 2 OAIL Y EGYPTIAN Mo.-mller 13, 1964 Shop with About Crwatling Ediwr DAILY EGYPTIAN advertisers Southern Troupe Schedules Play Written by Former SIU Student The first performance of a He cited as the main prob­ ""The idea of this play is play written by a student who lem connected with the pro­ pertinent to everyone," he did graduate work in the SIU duction of this premiering concluded, ""but we are Department of Theater will play, the fact that the play­ especially striving to get the be the Southern's Players' wright, Haislip, will not be attention of newspapermen, next production. present for rehearsals. for the play pertains to the "God in the Hawthicket," "There is always some role newspapers play in in­ a play about the efforts of a question in the understanding tegration business." woman newspaper editor to in some lines and actions," Other members of the cast bring about integration in a Moe said, "for the author has include Bruce Logsdon as small southern town, will be an abstract idea ofthe manner Wayne Collins; Yvonne West­ presented in the Southern in which he wishes the play brook and Marian Honnett will Playhouse Nov. 20-22 and trade off on the role of Sula Dec.I-5. Patterson; Georgia Winn and It is the work of Clifford Donna Beth Held will share Haislip, who did graduate work the part of Mrs. Evans. here, before returning to Jerry Powell will portray Little Rock University, Little Jack Donovan; Richard West­ Rock, Ark., as chairman of lake has the part of Hoyt the Department of Speech. Ward; Jeannette Pinnick will Helen Seitz will lead the play Winnie Mae Clark, and cast as Sally Evans, the cru­ Linda Green, her daughter sading editor of a small news­ Eleanor Clark. paper in a town called Pine Carrie Lee Fortner will Valley. William McHughes, as portray Lena Wakefield, Ross Evans, Sally's brother, Cameron Garbutt has the role and Max Golightly, as the of Clayton McKenny and Bar­ Rev. T .L. Duncan, will bara Bristol will interpret the portray the leading male role of Roxie Lisinski. roles. DarWin Payne will design Christian Moe, associate the setting--the office of a professor of theater and as­ small newspaper. Technical sistant dean of the School of director will be Charles W. Communications, will direct Zoeckler, associate professor the play. CHRISTIAN MOE of theater. "The plot develops as the to be presented, and without Mina Jane Thauburn will newspaper editor persuades him to guide the action, it handle costumes, and Roxanne the school superintendent and makes the interpretation Christensen will be stage president of the school board difficult." manager. to admit two Negro girls to the local high school," Moe MOVIE HOUR explained. Metropolitan Opera Broadcasts FRIDAY NOVEMBER 13 Problems climaxing in violence cause the town to FURR AUDITORIUM, UNIVERSITY.SCHOOl make a decision about itself Are Slated on WSIU Radio ADUlTS60e, STUDENTS 40e WITH ACTIVITY CARD and thus forms the basis for WSIU Radio will broadcast in general, often with the use the action, he said. all 20 Saturday matinee per­ of instrumental and vocal 3 - SHOWS 6:00 - 8:00 - 10:00 P.M. "This is an attempt to formances of the 1964-65 illustrations. write a gentle play--compas­ Metropolitan Opera season. Another intermission fea­ ROCK HUDSON, GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA sionate rather than didactic is This is WSIU's third year ture will be the "Opera Quiz" SANDRA DEE and BOBBY DARIN the approach used in con­ as a member of the special in which a panel of opera centrating on one of the basic Metropolitan Opera Radio experts will answer questions -IN- problems of our time," Moe Network. Approximately 120 received from the radio said. "The interests lie in radio stations in the United audience. the colorful characters in the States and Canada comprise Other operas scheduled are "COME SEPTEMBER" script." the opera network. six by Verdi: '"Aida:' The first onera broadcast ""Ernani:" "Falstaff," '"La - IN TECHNICOLOR _ DAlLY EGYPTlA.iV will be Donizetti's "Lucia di Forza del Destino," "Rigo­ Charming. sang.filled. romantic comedy of a millionaire New Yorker PubUahed in the Department of Lammermoor" at 1 p.m. letto," and ""Simon Boccane­ wJ..o comes every September to reioin his s-.v::etheart and serenade h., i.=:::':rln~ai::l1::,c&:f!r, s~~~. :~ Saturday, Dec. 5. This will gra"; three by Puccini: ""Ma­ at his Italian villa. Unbeknown to him the viliG is operated 11 months eight-week Summer term e.cept durin. be a new production headed dama Butterfly,'" "Tosca" a year as a hotel, with his housekeeper pocketing the profits. Fun, UniverSity vacatton perJod..... aminatioa. week •• aDd leaal hollday. by Southem by the renowned Australian and ""Turando." loughs and romantic complications ens""e when he unexpectedl, a, .. Illinois Univeraity. C ...bondale. Illinois. rives in July! Publhbed on Tueaday and Frida,. of soprano, Joan Sutherland. each week fo'P the I1nal three weeke 01 The complete opera per­ "C~~~ F~~er::tte~r a~oz"~~; the twelve-week s1lllUDer term. Second formances originate live from Nozze di Figaro"; two by ~j::t· &~l~t:·::"le~i~b:t a~~· ai-=:·~~ SATURDAY NOVEMBER 14 1879. the stage of the Metropolitan Wagner: "Der Fliegende Hol­ Pollcle. of the EilypUaa are the Opera house in New York lander" and '"Die Walkuere"; FURR AUDITORIUM, UNIVERSITY SCHOOL rellponatbUity 01 the edltc.r.. Statements publhhfti here do Dot aece••• rUy re­ City. two by Richard Strauss: "Der flect the opinion of the adminiitraUoD Between acts, listeners will Rosenkavalier" and "Sa­ ADULTS60(, STUDENTS40eWITH ACTIVITY CARD or aDy delD_lmenl of the Univetlllty. Editor. Walter W•• chick .. Fiacal hear weekly editions of lome"; and ""Les Contes 2-SHOWS 6:30 and 8:30 P.M. Officer. Howard R. Lone. Editorial and and busine.. offlce. loc.ted in Bwld­ "Opera News on the Air," a d'Hoffmann" by Offenbach, In. T .... 8. Phone: 453·2354. feature with leading per­ Donizetti's "'Oon Pasquale"; Editorial Conference: .Fred Beyer. ALAN LADD, SOPHIA LOREN and CLIFTON WEBB Alice CanriRht, Ric Call, Joe Cook. sonages from the music world ""Samson et Dalila" by Saint­ John Epperheimell'. Richard LaSuaa. as they discuss the opera of Saens', and Samuel Barber's -iN- Robert Reincke, Robert Smith. Froank l\.fessenmith. the day or operatic subjects "Vanessa." Veteran announcer Milton UBOY ON A DOLPHIN" Cross will narrate the story of each week's opera. - CINEMASCOPE and COLOR _ VARSITY LATE SHOW Phone listing Is Wrong Greece and its A, geon islands present a stunning picture when Q TOHITE AND SATURDAY HITE OHLY young girl (Sophi 0 Loren) locotes a great ort treasure an the ocean ... BOX OFFICE OPENS 10: 15 P.M. SHOW STARTS 11:00 P.M. The phone number of J. floor while for sponges. An archeologist (Alan Ladd) tries to ALL aEATS $1.00 Cary Davis, chairman of the find it lot the Greek notion wY.ile on r.mscrupulous millionaire (Clift­ on Webb) w,!>J,es it for his priYote coJt~ction. Department of Foreign Lan­ guages, is 453-2689, not 453- 2811 as listed in the Student SOUTHERN'S FILM SOCIETY "BRILUAITI Directory. The Departmental PRESENTS POSSESSES LIKE Office number is 453-2811. MESUUIE, UTHE WHITE REINDEER" SOME (~~"'CAL Today's FINNISH DIALOG WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES MUISO' HEIGHTENIIG STARRING Weather AU ONE'S MIRJAMI KUOSMANEN & KALERVO NISSILA SENSES!" - Br~ndan G~II

'I~ ~.~~ SUNDAY NOVEMBER 15 .~. ·~/I(.~ ~~~~ MORRIS LIBRARY AUDITORIUM POINT OF ORDER! .\ him "r Ih. \rm~"ll"1 itrth," IIll"ilnnl(" Fair to partly cloudy. ADULTS60(, STUDENTS40CWITH ACTIVITY CARD J-rndu('C"d b~ E"'IJr d .. \nlunm and ~)anu'l Talhuf Slightly cooler. High in [he 2 - SHOWS 6':30 and 8:30 P.M. ••Aim RWIE·sru:.1JI6 PWEllUrml • upper 50s to the low 60s. November 13, 1964 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page 3 Activities LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS 2 TP Coeds Elected LJi To Executive Board Meetings and Movies Two coeds have been elected to vacated executive board offices in a Thompsen POint area special election. Scheduled for Today Lynda Von Kriegsfield of Inter-Va.rsity Christian Fel- of discussion at 8 tonight Brookfield was selected sec­ 10wshiP meets at 11 a.m. in Browne Auditorium at retary. The new Thompson ~ Room B at the Univer- the Probe series program. Point treasurer is Karen sny Center. Shakespeare's "King John" Alexander of Pekin. The ~oslem Student Asso- wlll be read at 8 p.m. in ciatlon meets at 2 p.m. in the Family Living Lounge Room E at the University in the Home Economics Center. Building. "Come September" will be A record dance is scheduled shown at the Movie Hour for 8:30 tonight in the Ro- nur at 6, 8, and 10 p.m. at man Room at the University prosc.nlwn Furr Auditorium. Center. The Latin American Organ- 0 H S ization will hold it!, meet- pen ouse et ing at 7:30 tonight in Room A C b 0 h d F at the University Center. t ra rc ar UI1L Paul Campisi, professor of The annual Crab Orchard an (ntimate F:Jt-.. sociology, will speak on Refuge Open House will be "Forbidden Games" at the held Sunday afternoon at Crab Horizons program at 8 p.m. Orchard. W in M1.:ckelroy Auditorium. The service committee of "The Thread of Life" (on the University Center Pro­ A genetics) will be the topic gramming Board announced that it has plans for a bus I SIU SC h e d u Ie s to take students to points of WEL.L, r FllfA/.I.Y GlOT YOU A ~lINCI PATE" -.!JLJi YOU'L.L T interest at Crab Orchard. HAVE TO PICK. I-IE~ UP YOLlJi:~eL~.1/ Computer Class Students interested in at­ I tending this tour may sign Registration for an adult Gregor Pietigorsky Featured N education class in data pro­ up at the Activities Office today. cessing will be held at 9 The bus will leave the Uni­ G a.m., Nov. 30, in the Mis­ versity Center at I p.m. Sun­ On WSIU·TV Film Tonight sissippi Room, University day. Center. Gregor Pietigorsky will be attempt to analyze whypeo- F The course covers new Psychology Career featured on Film Concert at pIe voted as they did on equipment used to optically 7 tonight on WSIU-TV. Nov. 3rd. o scan documents, and it elim­ This film will give a can­ R inates key punch operation. Discussion Slated did portrayal of the busy day 8 p.m. TUition for non-university A group discussion on ca­ life of the famous cellist. Challenge: A power plant personnel is $12. No fee will reer opportunities in psychol­ Other program highlights of the future which makes G be charged to students and ogy and how to enter the grad­ are: more fuel than it consumes. o uate psychology program will employes of sm. Fri. & Sat., be held from 3 to 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 8:30 p.m. The class schedule consists o Nov. 13 & 14 of a half-day introduction, one Nov. 19 in the Studio Thea­ Encore: The Indian Exper­ Festival of the Arts: Fea­ day on form design, two days tre in University School. iment. tures The Cincinnati Sym­ o 8:30 p.m. on programming, one-half day All undergraduates major­ phony Orchestra conducted T on data acquisition, and one ing in psychology are urged 7:30 p.m. by Max Rudolph and playing Phone 549·2913 Of People and Politics: An the music of Richard day on applica; ion. to attend the discussion, es­ 409 S. lIIinais Class sessions will be held pecially juniors and seniors. Strauss and Ravel. A number of psychologyfac­ 'A nthony,Cleopatra , from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Nov. YELLOWS - ARE - SOLIGHT • BY • PEOPLE - OF. THOUGHT 30 through Dec. 4. Peter Wahl, ulty members will give brief from the Measurement Re­ talks on their specialties. On Radio Tonight search Center, Iowa City, More than half the time will ..Antony and Cleopatra" Iowa, will instruct the course. be reserved for a question­ will highlight the Shakespear­ The course is being offered answer session. ean Festival series at 7:30 by the Division of Technical tonight on WSIU Radio. YELLOW CAB CO., INC. and Adult Education in coop­ Touring Theater Other program highlights eration with the Data Proc­ are: Phone 457 -8121 essing and Computing Center Play Set Sunday here. Only Carbondale perform­ 10 a.m. ances of the SIU Touring Thea­ They Bent Our Ear. Foreign Students ter"s production "The Ri­ PRESIDENT valry," by Norman Corwin, 12:30 p.m. PHILIP M. KIMMEL CARBONDALE, ILL. Receive Invitation will be presented Sunday in News Report: The latest The International Student the University Center, at 2 national, international, and Center has received an invita­ and 8 p.m., SherWin Abrams regional news. tion for six to eight foreign of the Department of Theater, students to spend the entire has announced. Admission will 3:30 p.m. Thanksgiving vacation with be without charge. Concert Hall: Brahms' American families in Mt. This dramatization of the "Rhapsody for Contralto, Carmel. great debates between Abra­ Male Chorus and Any international student ham Lincoln and Stephen A. Orchestra." interested in accepting one Douglas, as they campaigned of these invitations should re­ for the senatorship from il­ 7:30 p.m. port to the International Stu­ linois in 1858, is one of two Folksounds. dent Center today. productions that have been presented in 18 other commun­ 11 p.m. ities of Southern nIinois dur­ Moonlight Serenade: Dan Marketing Group ing the past five weeks. The McKavanaugh is host. other was uM a rl i n the To Meet Oil Men Magnificent," a children's R«ord Dance Tonight The American Marketing play. Record dance tonight in Association will meet Tuesday Both have been directed by the Roman Room of the at 7:30 p.m. in the Studio Archibald McLeod, chairman University Center from 8 to Theater. of the Theater Department. 12:30. The group wlll act as hosts to Shell Oil Co. represen­ tatives. For the Finest in Food and Service..• A discussion of personnel problems relating to procure­ ment and evaluation of sales Piper's Parkway Restaurant personnel is planned. 209 S. Illinois Ave. Carbondale NOW is the time fa Downtown on Rt. 51 make plans for your holiday trip home. OPEN 11 a.r.1. to 10 p.m. Let us make reservations and arrangements far you at MEAL - TICKET SALE na extra charge. Reg. On Sale SAVE B & A TRAVEL '3 - $5.50 MEAL TICKETS $71.50 $50.00 $21.50 "We do everything 6 - $5.50 MEAL TICKETS $33.00 $25.00 $ 8.00 but pack your bag." 2 - $5.50 MEAL TICKETS $11.00 $ 9_50 $ 1.50 Phone 549-1863 115 S. University 1 - $5.50 MEAL' TICKETS $5.50 $5.00 $ .50 DAILY EGYPTIAN November 13, 1964

. ____ -.?1~ THE "UN-GROUP" ; "YOU CAN FOOL SOME OF ~ THE PEOPLE SOME OF The basic premise of a with his government because it ment should be abolished or be government is that it repre­ isn't concerned With the in­ given power, it will continue THE TIME, SUT YOU CAN sents the interests of some­ tere&ts of the student. In short, to be the "un-group", the un­ FOOL ALL OF THE body in such a way that it is who cares who's elected? They qualified doing t:le unneces­ STUDENTS ALL OF THE of conc\. rn to those particu­ aren't going to do anything s ary, for the uninterested; and TIME" lar somebodys. Basically, the of importance, anyway. students will continue to think government makes rules with­ Thus, it would seem thatthe of all government as worth­ in which the participants, the so-called student govern­ less machinery. To para­ citizens and interests, are ment is not a government at phrase St. Mathew, so long as going to have to play. Forthis all. The individuals making it the blind lead the bland, they reason it becomes imperative up are usually those who were shall remain in a rut. To P_olicies of Xa are the" sole re-spons, for the interests and citizens fortunate enought to have con­ overcome thiS, we must de­ blUty of the editors and the advisef'. vinced enough of their friends mand that student government, The content of. this pag~ 1s not lnlen to be il'terested in getting d~d to rf!'nect rht' opi.nion of the ad~ those persons whom the in­ to come out to the polls to de­ be made worthwhile, with the mini slration or any department of the University. Communications shou!d be terested parties conSider feat their opponents' friends. qualified doing the necessary addressed to Ka at Student Activitles qualified to do these neces­ Their object seems to be for the interested, or that it or pho-:1.e 3-2525. sary things for them. merely to go through the mo­ be abolished. ~~~~:i~ll- Edil~~ : : : -. -_ .~ CEi':~K~r~:::.! On our campus we have a tions of democratic proce­ .Fa,;:uJty. Adviaer - .... - Georg. McClure student government, or so it is dure, to get their names in called. When we analyze this the newspaper and their pic­ Students' Prayer pseudo-government, we find tures in the Obelisk, and to A Nuclear Policy that its only claim to the ti­ go on trips paid for with the Dedicated to: the Fallen (Scene: The aUdience's con­ out can do to vegetation? tle is that its members are students' money. The organ­ cept of a household in mid­ By George Stillwell elected. Since, as we know, ization also helps to feed the It can kill all vegetation, dle-class America. the vague, except for one type. They elections do not necessarily egos of the elected young Bry­ are almost, sort of posi­ No" r lay me down to sleep. make up a government, even complacent, much maligned, ans. Why, then, does this tive that crabgrass thrives I pray the Lord my grades this claim can't qualify it. worthless (to most of the stu­ middle-class America. There to keep. More specifically, we should dents) organization exist? It are two men seated at a kit­ on radiation. If I should die before I analyze what the participants', would seem that the main rea­ chen table. Joe, a middle­ Joe: Oh, my Lawn! I worked awake, class American, is speaking for years before I drove i.e.. the students' interests son is that if one gives an the crabgrass from my front Up to Heaven my transcript are, who makes the rules con­ electorate the impression that with a nameless insurance take. agent.) yard. I dread to think of cprning these interests, and it is governing itself, it won't my pink flamingo lawn orn­ then observe where the power revolt. Tell the people how aments wing deep in crab­ And, God, I ask just one of government really lies. good they are at governing, Joe: No, I'm sorry, I'm de­ thing more. finitely not interested in any grass again. How does this The interests of the students give them a parliament in policy deal with such a ca­ When f reach that Golden are to be found ultimately in which to bewail their woes, of the poliCies you've shown me. tastrophe? Door, the rules concerning t~,e aca­ and make sure it is well­ And up to good Saint Peter -demic and social areas of publicized -- and make sure Insurance Agent: Well, sir, IA:That·s taken care of under go, the campus. The academic that the publication is con­ I do have one more policy the section of the policy ti­ Can I get in With 3.5 or rules are those rules which trolled by those in power. that you might be interested tled, "Absolute, Complete, below? establish what courses a Stu­ This maxim has been used in. It's our newest one. I Total Protection from dent may take, what the re­ many times before, and no think it would be quite a Green Grass Gap." Now, Divided We Tlwught quirements for graduation self-respecting dictatorship worthwhile investment for if a Bomb is dropped as It would seem that there are, what the established sys­ should miss the opportunity you. an act of war anywhere Joe: All right then, tell me has any adverse effect on has been an unusual amount tem of grading is, and what to use it, even if the dicta­ about it. your lawn, God forbid, Joe, 0;' student interest in the re­ the student may legally do to tors are college admin­ Vision of student council; at attain these things. Since these istratocs. IA: Sir, have you thought you will be relieved toknow that you qualify for the fol­ least six persons have been areas concern the interest of As a result, student govern­ about --- the bomb? moved to comment in the STU the stUdent, why doesn', he ment will have to continue to Joe: The bomb? lowing: (1) a six-month sup­ newspaper and about the same talre a more active role and be the "un-group" until its fA: Yes. The H-bomb. The ply of lawn food; (2) a 25- number has expressed opin­ voice in his student govern­ reason for being has been big one. gallon tank of Hinckley and ions in this student publica­ ment? The main reason would reinterpreted. Until it is es­ Joe; Oh, you mean the one Schmitt pure, distilled tion. For a student boc!y too seem to be that his govern­ tablished .hat student govern- that crops up in the news­ water; (3) a scythe, and, apathetic to support a "Stu­ ment doesn't establish any of papers now and then. No, (4) 3 roll of Saran Wrap, dent Apathy League", this the rules which are estab-' I don't think about it too for protection from ra­ constitutes a deluge of student lished in this area. An en­ much. They don'ttest in this diation. opinion. trenched hierarchy, far re­ neighborhood, you know. Joe: Sounds great! But what The' reason for this undoubt­ moved from the students' lA: It's not the testing, sir. about my flamingoes? edly rests in the realization control, and usually far re­ Suppose the Russians or IA: Well, for a small addi­ that we, the student of C'dale, moved from his view, makes perhaps the Red Chinese tional monthly premium you and they, the students of such rules. Since he has drop a bomb on this CORl­ can be covered under the E'ville (no symbolic conclu­ nothing to say concerning the NDAlE munity tomorrow. Would clause titled," Absolute, Sions, please) are not one selection or [he control of MW!lWifS you be able to care for your Complete, Total Protection jolly giant of !'>tudent unity, these individuals, the student loved ones' financial prob­ from Flamingo Gap". but rather, two separate can't do anything about them. -WbLCOMb lems while you are in the Joe: What's the total monthly groups with separate inter­ And since his student govern­ hospital? premium? ests. I cannot comment on the ment doesn't have anything to Joe: You may have something IA: We ask no money. All we uniqueness of Southern's Ed­ say about the rules, he to think about there. ask is a five-gallon jug of wardsville branch, but we are doesn't concern himself too IA: And what if, God forbid, pure, distilled water which all acquainted with the unique­ much With it either. The stu­ your loved ones them­ will be stored in a cave ness of our own campus. At dent knows he lives in a dic­ selves might have to be at our home office in Gi­ Carbondale, we have the :tfore tatorship; he tries to make -*~ hospitalized for radiation braltar. mentioned student nev!s­ the best of it by playing the burns. You and your family Joe: Where Do I sign? papers, our year book, and rules of the hierarchy. Well, probably have dreams which (The insurance agent indicates theatre productions such as what about the area of so­ being hospitalized could set a dotted line on the policy "Who's Afraid of Virginia cial rules? This is the area back for no telling how many form.) Wolf" (complete With allegor­ concerned with what is ac­ months. IA: You'll not regret this, ical white mice With little red ceptable student behavior. Joe: As a matter of fact I Joe. You can rest assured eyes and no gilded mouse With rules about where the S(U­ REGIONAL NEWS do have some land in New that you won't be caught un­ house), along with other stu­ dent can live, about what he Mexico that I've been plan­ prepared when they drop dent activities that do not and can urive (indeed, even if he MARISSA, ILL., (KA) -­ ning to build on. that Bomb. God forbid. should not affect nor be af­ can drive), where he (or, more A spokesman for the Univer­ iA: You have land. Do you fected by students attending frequently, she) can or cannot sity of Illinois said today that know what radiation fail- Curtains different classes on a different go •••• Upon analYSiS, we find University anornies were campus, 120 miles from here. that the student doesn't have looking into the legality of the In faCt~ the only entity of a great deal to say about proposed purchase of Route potential 'combining nature is thiS, either. His government 13 by our school motto: "Deo certainly doesn't. The same University. Valente", loosely translated hierarchy controls these Didder Dodder, Regional as "one campus under God." things; and. again, the stu­ Vice PreSident in Charge of --L.E.J. dent doesn't concern himself Ev

Research at SIU 'Explosion' Divides Yeast Cells; 2 Scientists Show New Theory Two SlU microbiologists, shown through many hun­ that produced by yeast cells. Dan O. McClary, assistant dreds of dark-field observa­ Electron micrographs of professor, and Wilbert D. tions and photographs that the yeast cells with buds ranging Bowers, Jr., a doctoral can­ observed "hole" is an arti­ in size from minute projec­ didate in the microbiology de­ fact of focusing and that read­ tions through many variations partment, presented a paper justment of focus will always in size up to mature cells before the American Society result in an entire ring of revealed intact cell walls of for Cell Biology, holding its refracted light which en­ equal thickness enclosing both annual meeting in Cleveland. closes both the bud and the the bud and the mother cell Bowers, who read the pa­ mother cell. throughout the budding per, presented evidence inthe They f:..rther show that the process. form of dark-field photomic­ dark-field microscope is not Bowers' research on this E.A.'TALLEY HAROLD BLUMENFELD rographs and electron micro­ an adequate instrument for and other projects is sup­ graphs which showed that one the study, since inert bodies, ported in pan by a U.S. of the prevalent theories of including oil droplets, reveal Public ~ealth Service train­ Editors' Workshop to Discuss cell division in baker's yeast much the same picture as ing.grant. is based upon illusory obser­ vations. Press Problems, Techniques According to this theory, The lllinois Editor's Work­ tickets to the SIU vs. Toledo which is based upon time­ shop, sponsored by the De­ football game will be given to lapse, dark field cinematog­ partment of Journalism &nd those attending the workshop. raphy--a process by Which the Extension Division of SIU, "Editing Local Copy and an automatic camera takes ~ wHl begin its weekend pro­ Writing Headlines on Local pictures at definite intervals gram with an informal get­ Stories" will be discussed producin~ a moving picture MClgnCl"o~ together at 7 0' clock tonight by Bedford at 9:30 Sunday effect--the yeast cell divides in the presidential suite of morning. A windup question­ by an explosive emergence of the Holiday Inn. and-answer session will be a naked, spherical mass of E.A. Talley, telegraph held at 11 a.m. protoplasm through a rupture editor of the St. Loui8 Post­ The workshop, first of its which it produces by internal Dispatch, is director of the kind to be conducted by SIU, pressure upon the wall of the workshop. Tom Pendergast, will be open to students en­ cell. chief of the St. Louis Asso­ rolled in journalism classes. Bowers and McClary have ciated Press Bureau; C. Richard Gruny, SIU legal Meet the New Faculty counsel; Harold Blumenfeld, executive picture editor of the United Press Inter­ Philosopher Don Ihde Wrote national; and Emmett G. Bed­ ••• lets you give your ford, SIU journalism instruc­ 'The Tragedy of Freedom' tor, will also conduct famlly the mQ~t glorious workshop sessions. The Philosophy Department Frost Scholarship, the Chick Pendergast will conduct a has added Don s. Ihde, of Scholarship, a Teachin!/; As .. music they've ever heard! session in "Handling Tele­ Lom.londerry. Vt., as an sistantship, and the Turner typesetter Copy" at 9 a.m. assistant professor to its list Graduate Fellowship. These components gIve greate.,!: Stereo and F M/ Saturday in the Agriculture of faculty members. He is the author of "The Seminar Room. "Wire Edit­ Ihde, who formerly taught Tragedy of Freedom," "Paul AM Rildlo performance __ . more audiO power at the Boston University, Bos­ ing and Writing Headlines on Ricoeur's Phenomenological .... and ten times the effiCiency of a tube set Wire Copy" will be discussed ton, Mass., as a philosophy Methodology and Philosophic by Talley at 1~:30 a.m. Lunch lecturel- received his B.A. Anthropology," "The Philiso­ will be served in the Illinois degree r."om the University of phi Forum" and "The Phen­ Powerful com.,ln •• It.,•• Amplifier .nd Radio Choah­ and Sangamon River Rooms of Kansas ii' 1956. In 1959 he omenological Movement." has no tubes. TllOUlh ten times the University Center. received hlg B.D. Degree from as efficient as a comparablo tube Afternoon sessions will Andover Newton Theological Alexander Slated sct, it uses 1/1Oth th.lIl~ begin with "Libel and Other school; and in 1964 he received power-no more than ••m.1I Legal Problems of the Press" his Ph.D. from Boston Uni­ To Attend Seminar Opt bulb. by Gruny at 1:30, followed versity. Orville Alexancier, chair­ by "Picture Editing" at 3 He is a member 'If the man of the SIU Department of o'clock with Blumenfeld American Civil Libenies Government. has been invited speaking. There will be a tour Union, the American Philo­ to participate in a two-week of the production plant of the sophical Association and the s.:minar on the United States Daily Egyptian at 4:30. Free Society for Phenomenology Constitution beginning Dec. 26 and Existential Philosophy. at the C enter for the Study Trainees Sought lhde, is married to the of Democratic Institutions. • lcromaUc pra,.er-eUmi.. Lar •• bpon.nU.' Tr .... former Carolyn Wilcox of Santa Barbara, Cal1i. illites discernible record and Horns-have the ICCKISIfcoI By Soil Service Lawrence, Kansas. Theyhave Alexander said he was asked atyIus wear. The high·com­ efficiency of 20 cone three children, Leslie Ann, to present a report at the !IIlance pick-up plays per· speakers: reproduea !r::':. Andy M. Kmetz, personnel 6, Lisa Carole, 4, and Eric fectlyat• iCcitr.;;Ue;ht !/!Dth tun .... without distortion. seminar on current concepts offtcer With the Soil Conserva­ ounce touch. The Diamond High·efficiency U· WMfeN Martin, 2. of some of the most import­ tion Service state office in He is a member of Phi Itylu. I. Guaranteed 10 give you 1>... definition Champaign, will speak on ca­ ant problems of federalism. ,..ra-)'OUr ~s can last you've never heerd bofore. Beta Kappa and Delta Sigma Other leading political scien­ • nr.tfme. reer opportunities with the Rho, honorary forsensic so­ SCS at a meeting for inter­ tists from throughout the na­ ciety. He was graduated Cum tion will report on constitu­ ested students at 10 a.m. Fri­ Laude from Andover Newton. day in the Agriculture Semi­ tional problems. He was also a recipient of The Center for the Study nar Room. the Donnelly Scholarship, the The agency is especially of Democratic Institutions is interested in agriculture stu­ Art Prof I. Attending supported by the Ford Foun­ dents for full-time summer dation's Fund for the Repub­ lic and headed by Robert trainee pOllitions. Kmetz will Seminar in W'uconsin be available for interviews Alice M. Schwartz, asso­ Hutchins, former chancellor and personal conferences ciate professor of art and in­ of the University of Chicago. from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. by structional television, will at­ Cost of attending the con­ appointment. Appointments tend a study seminar in el<.ten­ ference for both Alexander and his Wife will be borne The D8nlsh Modem. may be made at the School sian and adult education in the 1.11631 In W.lnut $39850 visual arts at the University by The Fund for the Republic. of Agriculture Office. In..... ONLY of Wisconsin today through Shop With Armstrong to Give Saturday. YOU MUST HEAR IT TO APPAECIATE what. 'III1t Miss Schwartz is chairman DAILY EGYPTIAN Improvement In music re·creation an ASTRO·SONIC Talk to Corn Club of the section on training of Advertiaen offers youl You'" always enjoy the full beauty of muslc­ David L. Armstrong, as­ personnel for the meeting. whether from Stereo FM, Monaural FM, powerful AM. sistant proiessor of agricul­ or records. Your choice of five beautiful, authentic fur­ tural industries, will speak at Worship Each Sunday niture styles. So reliable-solid state componen...... the annual dinner meeting of lUarilntelld 5 years. the Jackson County 150- bush­ el Corn Club at 6 p.m. at 9:15 a.m •• First Service the Gorham High School. Fr •• Bus at 9:00 a.m. Or her :\lal!naw, SI('rt'u (1lIN,ll" \\llh ...... 1,,1 He will speak on "Feasi­ Sr;lll' Circllilr~ are priced from nnh ;.. I ~I' "" bility of Large Machinery." 10:45 a.m •• Second Service A wards will be presented at Fr •• Bus at 10:30 a.m. the meeting to area farmers who have produced high yields. E.L. Hoffman, Postor DURALL TV CENTER Sbop _tOt FIRST METHODIST CHURCH DAILY EGYPTIAN Adverth•• ,.. 214 W. MAIN 413 S. Illinois Ph. 1-8090 Poge6 November 13, 1964 Associated Press News Roundup Drought Cost Is in Millions, Floods Kill 5,000, But Weekend Storms Possible CHICAGO (AP) - The na­ end--the earliest start in a Cripple Viet War tion's eastern half is counting quarter of a century. the multimillion-doBar cost of The storm centered Thurs­ DA NANG, South Viet Nam was to get food and medicine a mild, sunny aut'Jmn in terms day in Oregon, spreading snow (A P) -The most disastrous to the thousands homeless and of forest and farm fires, crop across the Rockies. Two floods in 60 years have hungry in the 10 provinces losses, and dwindling water inches of new snow fell at drowned 5,000 or more per­ struck by the typhoon-fed supplies. Spokane, Wash. sons north of Saigon and dealt rains. The stable weather pattern The storm front, with a severe blow to the war on U.S. Air Force transIX>rt of the last six weeks broke teulperatures mostly in the the Communist guerrillas, of­ planes began an airlift of sup­ out Thursday with storm pat­ teens, flowed over the Rocky ficials said Thursday. plies [Q larger cities. Orner terns in the Upper Mississippi Mountain barrier and began With roads, bridges and U.S. aircraft defied downpours Valley and the West, loosing to stir up the plains weather. railways washed away, a U.S. and Communist guerrilla fire winds and some rain. Dry conditions extended military adviser declared: to take relief supplies into It was too much wind and from eastern Colorado's fi3t­ "This flood has hurt our the flood area. roo little rain at the outset. land farms to Mame and New communications more than Mountain valleys and coastal TAX CUTS PLANNED - Secre­ Winds of more than 60-mile Jersey. In the East, the great­ thousands of tons of Viet Cong tary of the Treasury Douglas velocity whipped flames which est drought damage appeared explosives could have done." plains were swept clean. En­ Dillon conferred with President tire hamlNs of flimsy bamboo have charred more than 12,000 at this stage to have been Rebuilding the roads and Johnson this week at the LB] acres of bn.:sh, timber and wrought in pasturage--feeding railroads pre se nted an huts with thatched roofs were Ranch and then announced plans washed away without a trace. farmland in IllInois and grounds for livestock--and in enormous problem ro a nation to seek repeal of $550 million of Indiana. shorting the yield of grain and where already the Viet Cong U.S. officials felt that prob­ excise taxes. (AP Paoto) Southern Illinois has its 45th truck crops. stage daring strikes at the ably the Viet Gong guerrillas day without appreciable rain­ Germination damage was doorstep of Saigon. got off more lightly than people Bolivian Aid Cut fall. widespread, including winter "To rebuild all this," a U.S. on the government side. !\lost Fires burned over 10,000 wheat plamings. adviser said, "will take large of the ViN Gong base areas Draws Criticism acres there, and 2,200 acres Water supplies were a engineer units. arc on high ground. LA PAZ, Bolivia (A P)-Sus­ in Indiana. worry. Some reservoirs were "If the Viet Cong tries to Despite the desol"tion and pension of U.S. aid to Bolivia A disturbance in the Far at their lowest levels in years, interfere with this work, very tragedy of a huge expanse of because of the overthrow of West held the best hope of or in history. Indiana's Gov. large numbers of security Viet Nam, the war in the the regime of President Vic­ relief, possibly by Saturday. Matthew E. Welsh banned all troops will have to be brought North was continuing. Near tor Paz Estenssoro drew pro­ In the west, Sharp cold pene­ outdoor fires in Indiana. For­ in to secure the engineers. the coastal city of Quang Ngai tests and criticism Thursday trated into Arizona and pre­ est fire danger was serious, As it is, we're very short Tuel'lday, a large Viet Cong from political leaders and the cipitated rains and snows dur­ although not critical, in many of troops anyway. This in turn unit fought a heavy engage­ press. ing the last week. eastern states. could be damaging to other ment with local security Washington cut off all but Sunshine returned to much areas, if we have to divert forces, apparently trying to emergency aid. The total has of Northern California Thurs­ Grand Duke Jean troops here." seize fo~).; supplies and silence been running around $300 mil­ day, and ski resorts made The tirl'lt concern, however, government artillery. lion in the last 12 years. ready for openings this week- Becomes Ruler Of Luxembourg LUX E M B 0 U R G (A P) Prince Jean, 43, took over the red velvet throne of Luxem­ bourg as grand duke Thursday on the abdication of his mother, Grand Duchess Char­ lotte. He became the first man SEND THE FOLKS THE to rule this prosperous little constitutional monarchy in 52 years. "The decision of my be loved mother to retire from state DAILY EGYPTIAN affairs after presiding for so many years over the country's fate will not remove her, I am sure, from the hearts of Luxembourgers," he said. Jean pledged to seek the 12 Wee. - $2 elimination of "all that can remain of material and moral 24W_. -" Full Year-56 misery" and ro pursue the traditional role of this coun­ try--a member of both the Mail Completed Coupon with Remittance to: North Atlantic Treaty Organ­ ization and the European Com­ mon Market--as a connecting DAILY EGYPTIAN link between bigger powers. Circulation Dept. Grand Duchess Charlotte, Bldg. T - AS 68, had announced last March Southem Illinois University that she would retire because Carbondale. III. of age. The ruler of Luxem­ bourg's 330,000 people for 45 years, she signed the ab­ dication decree in a palace ablaze with flowers sent by admirers from all parts of IN THIS BOX, GIVE INFORMATION ABOlIT HIE PERSON WHO WILL RECEWE the 999-square-mile realm. THE PAPER France, Germany Name' ______In Tiff Over Tariffs Addressi ______BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)­ French and West Cerman City______Zone ___State ______delegates skirmished T,;urs­ day about how far Western Europe should go to meet Paid by, ______the tariff-cutting proposals advanced by the late President Address ______John F. Kennedy in the U.S. Trade Expansion Act of 1962. A decision--if only a de­ Zone __State 11/13 cision to fight again later-­ City is due Monday. Commercial nations have promised to re­ poT' in Geneva on which of their tariffs they will cut and which they won':. ?resident Johnson is em­ powered under the 1962 law to slash nearly all American tariffs in half, provided the European GOT'""!mon Market member!" and o,her countries slash their own the same way. France, a high tariff coun­ try, wants a long list. West Gf. rmany wants a short one. November 13, 1964 DAilY EGYPTIAN Page 7 FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE? Get-Aquainted Gathering Johnson, Mexican President Meet, Feast, Speak at Ranch By Douglas B. Cornell There was time for a bit ferring disputed land near EI of chatting between the men Paso, Tex., to Mexico, which JOHNSON ~lTY, Tex. (AP) about their landslide election he described as "economically -With a warm welcome under victories. Diaz Ordaz will take and militarily very weak." a warm Indian summer sun, office Dec. 1. Serious talk on other the President of the United Then a bit of LBJ Ranch matters lay ahead. States embraced the presi­ tradition, of inscribing names dent-elect of Mexico Thursday in cement, was a must. After 1D1I1II1l1l1l1ll1l1l1ll11ll1l11ll1l111l1l1llllldlll111111111101 at a gala get-acquainted get­ that, a festive barbecue under together. the old live oak trees in the The stage for this first pasture beside the river. WHAT ARE YOUR meeting of President and Mrs. At the end of the feasting, Johnson and President-elect the master of ceremonies, PLANS AFTER and Mrs. Gustavo Diaz Ordaz C actus Pryor, introduced GRADUATION? was the LBJ Ranch in the Johnson as "the boss of this rolling hills along the Ped­ spread," and the President ernales River. and his visitor spoke. "We have problems," John­ son said. "We are here to Nuclear Sub discuss them, and in the days ahead we will resolve them." Riot Fizzles Addressing Diaz Ordaz, ~::~~:::;,University SASEBO, Japan (AP) - Sail­ Johnson said: "You make us fi·J 1964 ors from the nuclear sub­ very proud to be in our home marine Seadragon went ashore and on our land." in this port wday and riot The Mexican leader re­ Bruce Shanks, Buffalo Eyening News police were alert for any new sponded with thanks for "the outbreak by leftists. Police overwhelming hospitality in "I want the opportunity of being warned that major trouble still the sweet inUmacy" of the of service to people. I know Assembly or Crime Commission knowledge is important and is possible, and Moscow said Johnson ranch. necessory, but knowledge in it. the submarine's visit could "I am here," he said, "to self does not become powerful To Hear Testimony on Payoffs affect relations With Japan. seal a friendship with a warm unti I put into oc:tion.'· No incidents were reported handshake." SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP)­ crete evidence he has. Leh­ as most of the 108-man crew Then Diaz Ordaz pointed to Allegations by Sen. Paul man said he would pay the went sightseeing. Thursday recent settlement of the cen­ "Study is important to my per­ Simon, D-Troy, about payoffs commission's expense if the after the submarine docked, tury-old EI Chamizal border sonol growth. I'ye chDsen Morth. western Mutual Life because of of state legislators will be commission lacked the money. small bands raced through the dispute as showing how dif­ its outstanding troining program heard by the lIlinoi!'; Crime L. Morrell Gross of Hins­ streets shouting in English ferences can be eliminated. for new representatives. One out Commission in the event the dale, a commission member, "Yankee go home!" and "Go He said the most powerful evety six Northwestem Mutual legi81~ture does not call him, said: home, devil," nation in the w0rld had Agents is a ChOrtered Life Under. the commission voteJ Thurs­ Leftist leaders had promised "yielded to justicl:" in trans- Writer. U As our Educatiano) day. "If a senator makes charges a turnout of upward of 15,000 Department motto suggests: "He Commission members said about public offiCials, we have demonstrators to protest the b~i~9S~!Sd.?~tting better ceaSes legislators indicated they plan to take notice. If he testified visit of the Sea dragon to to have Simon testify before he had no evidenc.e, I would Sasebo. But only 2,000 showed GUARAJVTEED General Assembly commit­ gladly vote for a motion to up. The port is 35 miles If you are in doubt regarding your tees. Six commissioners voted censure him." south of Nagasaki, shattered SERJtlCE plans after graduation, I suggest for the hearing by the anti­ by a U.S. atomic bomb near you sign up now with your Place_ Sen. John Meyer, Radan­ ment Office to interview. crime group, and five voted ville, who noted that after the end of World War II. present. Jan. 1 he was no longer a The only skirmish occurred ON Simon was co-author of a legislator, said a hearing when police tangled With about national magazine article would give the matter more 200 leftist students, who tried Televisions Wednesday, which said some members of attention than it was worth. to stage a sitdow;, on a four­ November 18th the Illinois legislature accept Meyer, who did not run for lane road leading to the U.S. and payoffs or are gUilty of other re-election, was a primary base in Sasebo. Police said wrongdoings. candidate for secretary of seven demonstrators suffered Stereos with The move to call Simon state. minor injuries and 15 were before the commission was taken into custody. THE NORTHWESTUN starred by Rep. Ed Lehman, Purdue Computer Moscow radio charged the MUTUAL LIFE R-East St. Louis. His morion Seadragon's viSit was m::de GOSS INSURANCE COMPANY was supported by Rep. Leo "in accordance with U.S. im­ 309 Dial The Median', 11th ...... <0-,",_ Pfeffer, D - Seymour and Sets Dance Dates perialists' policy to make S. Illinois 457·7Z72 AnnnltllllnllHlllllllUllnnllllnllnlllllll1l111nnnnlR others. LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - Japan the strategic point of Lehman said Simon should Everybody will have a blind aggression in the Far East." be called to see what con- date, arranged by a computer, It asked "why the Ameri;..an at a Purdue University "IBM" nuclear - powered submarine PIZZAS Who's Afraid of dance tonight. should have been deployed in Japan at the time when the Vital statistics, hobbies, 11- 13- 1'1" Friday the 13th? international tension has be­ s...u r..... J..... 1to habits and ambitions of sev­ gun easing." NOVA TO, Calif. (AP) - A eral hundred students will be Tomato and Cheese .70 1.00 2.00 little thing like Friday the 13th fed to the university's big isn't interfering With Bank of new IBM 7094 computer. The NBA Scores Half and Half .85 1.10 2.10 Marin plans to open a new electronic marvel is supposed By The Associated Press branch at Novato--not With the to match boys and girls of Italian Sausage 1.00 1.25 2.25 insurance bank officers are appropriate sizes and similar Detroit 121, San Francisco 99 packing. interests. Philadelphia 110, Boston 109 Hamburger 1.00 1.25 2.25 Just to make sure no ill winds are blowing today, the Mushroom 1.00 1.25 officers announced they'll All the popular names 2.25 come fortified with a horse­ shoe, rabbit's foot, four-leaf Pepper and Onion 1.00 1.25 2.25 clover and a Japanese good in "Modern Uwln ••" luck cat. Anchovi 1.00 1.25 2.25 . .. come in now and see ou, fine selection of Pepperoni 1.15 1.40 2.50 *Rlz-Cr.', *Arlnour Combination 1.25 1.50 3.00 ~AcadelnY ~Em"ssy Any c:ombination of the above is available ,#. •• J . 8' Widesel0' Widese12' Wides ~').~'"!.. . the greatest sel~tion Sizzling hot to your door Flower ShoPf:.6 in in our new radio - dispatched hot oven "Pizza Bug" Jl~iIJI"liinilU:'1 Southern Dlinois We Deliver Campus Shopping Chuck Glower Trailer Sales Center Carbondole PIZZA KING ph. 549-3560 Highway 13 East Phone 457.6945 DIAL 457-2919 Page 8 DAI LY EGYPTIAN Novemb.r 13, 1964 Model U.N. Planners Choose Discussion Topics for Event Topics for discussion for Loss of Vote for Arrearsof the Model United Nations Payments. to be held Feb. 11- 13 in [he Committee 4--Economics: University Center Ballroom Capital Development Fund have been selected by the for Emerging Nations. steering committee. The y Po pu 1 a ri 0 n Explosion. _, __,.;;-:"'~, arc: and Control. Committee I--Political: Security Council: Communist China. Cyprus and Malaysia. Use of Force for Settling Disputes. Geology Professor Comminee 2--Trusteeship: ...... ~::..~.-:' South West Africa. To Anend Meeting .~.~ >" .'(,. .. :~-- "::'Il.~ ... !.~-::,~",... ". POrluguese Territories. Frank J. Bell, assist- • ~~~~!"!"'!•• ...... __c ...L&- ...... _"t ...... ant professor of geology. will ..~, Committee 3--Financial: -*_. ---.. -... attend the annual meeting Fri­ ."..... ~'-.- .... Support of Peace-keeping day and Saturday in Denver of Operations. the newly organized Ameri­ ~---I"'- ... 6ft.... ",' --- can Institute of Professional 1lIIlUiIIII;"iU.-- '-"'IU...... Geologists...... REED'S Bell, a specialist in petro­ c._an.-.. " .... 18',: leum geology. joined the SIU (·...... 'rlll faculty in 1957 after being an • .',..fl01 ...,.._ ..... 101 .. indL'pcndent consulting geolo­ .., .... 1"1.. , ... u.., gist in Carmi for 12 years. ' ..... 'OMIILl Ill' has served on the insti­ ~Inl.. '~Flowers for all Occasions U tute's committee to screen membership applicants from 457-oUloUl Illinois. He also has been a committee chairman in the un .... ~. :\1 ... "\1-:1. Boyds of Feather Flock Together f·'lfnnl\ll.'t ....:. 11.1."01-. American Association of Pe- lrolL-um Geologists-

FOR THE BEST IN VI1~HllV "C"••• SIU's Red Book Is Weak on Plot eTREE RIPENED APPLES But Has Great Cast of Characters (We gr

For Memorial Budg.t Terms A Kathleen J. Easley Mem­ orial Scholarship Fund has Free ABC Boo"'et been established jointly by on Diamond the Women's Cooperative, the Buying VTI executive council and the INCOMPARABLE V TI Student Center. Miss E as­ ley, 19-year-old VTI student, watch, jewelry. died recently of a brain hem­ shaver orrhage. reconditioning Based entirely on donations, the scholarship will be ini­ 2 - 5 Day SERVICE tiated for one year. Contri­ butions may be sent to Mrs. 1!un9wib. :Jewe~'t Bonnie Eaglin, women's co­ ACROSS FROM CAMPUS operative r~sident counselor, SH;)PPING CENTER or to the VTI Student Center. 611 S. Illinois Also in honor of Miss Easley, a Kathleen J. Easley Memorial Award will be given yearly to tru "girl who contributes most to co­ ops. Profits realized from the recent "Slave Day" will LACK OF RAIN CAUSES TOP SOIL TO CRACK be used to purchase a plaque to be hung in the dormitory Draught Grips Area With the names of each of the recepien(s of the award engraved on it. The first award winner will be chosen spring Rain, Rain, Don't Stay Awayl term. A memorial service was conducted Wednesday evening for Miss Easley at the VTI Don't Wait for That Other Day Cafeteria Faculty Lounge. The By Frank Messersmith tried to bring rain by "cloud Much to the disillusionment Rev. Mark Miller of the Stu­ seeding," but this, according of many old-timers, the long, dent Christian Foundation of­ Sometime last September a to Cunningham, "is limited dry summer and fall will have ficiated at the service attended dejected little girl with blonde and has little value." no effect on the other sea­ by 80 co 100 people, including hair and big, blue eyes looked He indicated that for seed­ sons, said Cunningham. students, staff and faculty out a window and sang in a ing to be successful local Glancing at a meteor on members. sweet tender VOice, "1'.<1in, conditions must be favorable the wall, Cunningham said, rain go away, come again and there must be some mois­ "the winds are now blow­ Coed Attacked, some other day." ture present. ing from the Southwest in If the weathermen and farm­ Meteorologists have ar­ gusts up to 30 miles-per­ Left Unharmed ers could find that little girl, rived at a theory by which hour, and this could bring An SIU coed was left un­ they'd probably hit her With a they think weather can be us just the conditions we need harmed after she was at­ ton of dried leaves, grass and controlled, but as yet it is to start winter on its way." tacked about 8:30 p. m. wheat, and throw her into a untried and unproved. FREE Delivery On hole filled with Southern Illi­ "Nature maintains a bal­ That's a pretty chilling thing Wednesday while walking to say. Orders Over $2.00 home from the Varsity nois dust. ance in weather by a process Theater. Because the rain has done of advection," Cunningham The attack occurred in a just exactly as the little girl said, "which is a horizontal one-block stretch of Freeman requested, the southern pan shifting of air from region A FREE TRIP TO NEW YORK Avenue between Forest and of IllinoiS, and most of the na­ to region." James Streets. tion for that matter, is in the By this process nature for the lucky winner. Anybody buying an air or steamer ticket An unidentified assailant middle of a drought that has keeps the tropics from get­ from HOLIDAY TRAVEL between now IUId Mar~h 31, 1965 grabbed her from behind, put desuoyed most of the win­ ting too hot and the arctic con pr.Jrtici,ate~ Stop in far details. his hands around her mouth ter wheat crop. And it threat­ regions too cold. and threw her to the ground. ens CO kill even more unless "If we could control this, At first, the girl thought that "other day" is just around we might be able to do some­ HOLIDAY TRAVEL the corner. thing about the weather," he a practical joke was being In Business Since 1956 played on her by neighbor­ Last month was the driest said. hood friends, but after she October of the century in Il­ "The present drought is The Fully Accredited Travel Agency realized she was being at­ linois. probably related to the jet 207 S. III. 457-6173 tacked, she began to scream. t\nd, the longer a drought stream, a meandering flow of The screaming frightened lasts, the harder it is air in the high altitudes," the assailant, and he fled with­ for nature to bTeak, accord­ he said. Weekend out harming her. ing to Floyd F. Cunning­ "We don't know too much The attacker was described ham, director of SIU's Clim­ about the jet stream, but its as about 6 feet tall, of slen­ atology Laboratory. winds have occurred farther Special. der build, having black hair "The less moisture [here north than usual this year:' and 20 to 22 years of age. is in an area," Cunningham Cunningham said. He was wearing a green said, "the more natural force "This has repeatedly 6 PORK crew - neck sweater with a that has to be exerted to bring caused a flow of dry, Cana­ white shirt underneath, and rain." dian air to sweep across the BARBECUE appeared to be well dressed, Many persons feel droughts Eastern United States, de­ the girl said occur periodically, but ac­ flecting winds from the South SANDWICHES The frightened coed said cording to Cunningham, that could have brought the she was walking in the middle weather prognosticators know much needed rain." of the street when she was of no cyclical patterns of Relief from the drought is $1.80 attaCked, and that the man drought. already being formed ip the was so quiet she didn't know "It was thought for awhile shape of cold arctic air. anyone was near her. there was a pattern in the According to Cunningham, -19~ midwest section of [he plains Shakes This is the first such in­ "Cool air is building in the states because, since 1850, Arctic at this time, and soon­ Good today thru Sunday cident this school year, ac­ there has been a drought every er or later will spew fonh cording co Tom Leffler, se­ 20 yea r s/' Cunningham a burst of cooler air." curity officer. continued. This ought to be beating FREE "Last year five persons "However, the present were arrested in similar in­ a Chilly path to us this month, drought eliminates the theory he said. Cidents, but this is the first because it wasn't supposed to attack to take place since we It's possible this might not ••DELIVERY occur until 1970." happen, but it will be unus­ cleared the others up," Leff­ In some places, men have ual if it doesn't. ler said. •••SERVICE The security officer said Our delivery truck the girl gave them a good Sudsy Dudsy is equipped with an description of the assailant, oven _.. we serve and the officers are inves­ self.service laundry '~rene " HOT food on every tigating a suspect. delivery! WASH20¢ Jackson County Allotted college DRY 10e fl()rist ~4424 813,123 for Fuel Tax Jackson County has been We are now serving Home-made PIE. DRY CLEANING allotted $13,123 as its share 20c a Slice of the motor fuel tax paid ~Sibs .• $1.50 .into the-statEpreasur;lC during Corbond·af • ·Occobe·l'.···· .. · ...... ;;U·N;.;:I;.;.V.;;;E.;.;RS;.;I.;.TY.;..;.P.;;L;.;:AZ;;;A.;;...... I L..;;.;;';';";;';';";";';";';';';';"'_'_:..;4,;;'Sl.. -6;;,;;6.;.;60;;,tl· ~ .. 12.02 W.· Mci'''. DAILY EGY PTIAN November 13. 1964

More than 100 high school the finest teams in the state. coaches are expected to be Winding up thtl sessions on on campus Saturday for a one- offense will be Gene Haile of day clinic on "The Changing Mt. Vernon, 111., who will Style of ." The meet speak on pattern offenses. will be held in the new SIU The finale to the clinic will Arena. be an hour-long demorstration The clinic will be held from by Coach Jack Hartman's Sa- 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will luki basketball team. feature four sessions and a Q '1 S S d;::monstration by the SlUbas- ual eason et BILL MEADE ketball team. To Start Saturday ~ Clinic The morning will be devoted e. _ \ to defense, with the afternoon The Illinois Department of BILL CORNELL DAN SHAUGHNESSY ~O );1eatupn ."eade going to offense. Coach Lee Conservation has announced ~ 1"'1 • ~ lUI Cabutti of Champaign, whose that the quail season will be- Saluki Record Is 0-2 Bill Meade, coach of South- teams have been known for gin at noon Saturday and will ern's national champion gym- years as having perhaps the end at sunset Dec. 31. n:tstks team, will be the prin- best defense in the state, will Shooting hours are from Cornell Leads SIU Runners cipal speaker Saturday night open the sessions by speaking sunrise until sunset after the at a dinner climaxing the first on man-to-man defense. .'irst day of the season. annual gymnastics clinic at The second of!fensive ses- The daily kill limit is eight. Today in Chicago Chalienge the University of Illinois. sion will feature Dick Ruggles The possession limit is 16 A five-man varsity team to win the special three-mile The clinic is co-sponsored speaking on zone defenses. after the first day of the sea- and four freshmen are rep­ race following the varsity by the Illinois High School Ruggles, now coach at Nash- son. On opening day both lim- resenting Southern today in events. Coach Lew Hartzog de­ 8~~~::::r/~:~~I\~~~; ;t~~e~~~ ~~~~~rell~~_l~~: ~~~:~;-p\~c: its are the same, eight quail. ~~~e~c~nt~~~s~~~:~!::~ ~~~~ scribes Shaughnessy as the Association. finish in last year's State Bask ball M f Se in Chicago. finest cross-country prospect Meade, who is also presi- TournaJTI .. .,t. el ee Ing t The Salukis, who are 0-2 he has ever had. The young dent of the National Associa- After lunch provided by All basketball team man- so far this year, will be led Canadian recently set a four­ tion of Collegiate Gymnastics the SIU Department of Inter- agers who want to enter their by veteran Bill Cornell of mile record in Chicago when Coaches, will speak on this collegiate Athletics, coach teams in the intramural bas- Chelmsford, England. Alan he finished in 19:30.2. Defend­ year's Jlympics. Meade's Don Stanton of Mt. Vernon ketball leagues are requested Ackman, John Trowbridge, ing champion Dick Schramm of prize pupil, Rusty MitChell, will speak on fast break of- to attend a meeting sched- Jack Leydig and Jay Beeskow Miami of Ohio holds the con­ fi'lished as America's sec- fenses. Stanton formerly was uled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday round out the varsity squad. ference of 19:07 for the four­ ond-ranking gymnast at the the coach at Pinckneyville, in Room 308 of the Wham Canadian Dan Shaughnessy, mile course. gra_m_t=_s_.______w_h_e_r_e_h.e_pr.o_d_u_c_ed_s_o_m.e_o_f_E.d.u.c.a.ti.o.n.B.u.il.d_in_g_. _____ S.I.U.f.r.e.s_hm_a_n_, .is_th.e_fa_v.o.r.it .. e Geese _ Get Going! It's Hunting Time Goose season opens in J ack­ son, Williamson, Alexander and Union Counties Monday and ends Dec. 23. SOLD: A second season will open Dec. 27 and run through Jan. 15, 1965, and if a quota of 15,000 geese is killed before Jan. 15 the season will be closed by administrative order, according to the Illi­ 1 TV SET nois Department of Conservation. Shooting hours will be from sunrise until 3 p.m., except on the state-operated hunting areas. where hunting is per­ F_ sale at "erg,"" - 21 , ..ch mitted from sunrise until Z ... itlt T.V_ ...... _·co .... I•• I noon. The public hunting areas _d c.,diti_. C...... C. CI • will be closed on Thursday I...... 80S Taylor 0.-. Call 7.S71l. and Friday every week. The daily kill limit and possession limit is five geese, of which only two may be Canada geese or subspecies. " Received 10 calls, sold on the SfU Cage Games first one, and wanted the To Be on WSIU All of the home-and-away phone turned off. " Saluki basketball games will be broadcast over WSIU, John L. Kurtz, operations manager of WSIU, said. The first Saluki basketball game will be a home game against Oklahoma State and will be broadcast at 7:50 p.m. Dec. I. • • • Proof that CLASSIfIED Dallas Thompson and Al Jacobs will do the play-by­ play of the game. They will also broadcast the first two away-games against South­ west Missouri State and Kan­ sas State. SELLS! Richard M. Uray, coord­ inator of the Broadcasting Service and producer of the sports broadcasts, said WSIU will feed the broadcast to a sports network of area GET RESULTS QUICK VVITH - stations. Included in the network wm be WJPF, Herrin, and WEBQ, Harrisburg, and they will car­ ry the games live. DAILY EGYPTIAN WINI, Murphysboro, and WC IL, Carbondale, are sched­ uled to tape the games and rebroadcast them the next day. Uray said more stations CLASSIFIED might bt! added to the network at a later date.

Shup with Bldg. T-48 Ph. 453-2354 DAILY EGYPTIAN Ad,\."~rti'!'f.e1"s Novem'- 13, 1964 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page 11 Tattered Rockets Coming to Town Toledo Squad With 1-7 Record to Meet 2-6 Salukis

By Richard La Susa Simrell, a 6-3, 180-pounder 89 of 166 passes this season Toledo's third best pass re­ an average of 76 yards per and Toledo's team captain, for 965 yards and one touch­ ceiver witt, 18 catches for game. The Rockets are coming to currently is eighth in the down. Simrell's Sal u k i 195 yards and one touchdown, Han has been averaging town Saturday. and they are major college ranks in for- counterpan, Jim Han, has is averaging 3.2 yards per 11 completions a game and a sporting for an explosion. connected on 88 of 198 passes carry. shade better than 160 yards. The Rockets, Toledo Uni­ for 1,283 yards and 12 Two other Rocket offensive versity's torn and tattered touchdowr;.s. staners -- fullback Jim football squad, will provide In addition to his fine dis­ Berkey and end Henry Burch-­ the opposition for SIU in the play of passing in Toledo's also loom as big threats for annual Parents Day game in first eight games, SimreU has Southern's unpredictable de­ McAndrew Stadium. carried the ball lO2 times for fense Saturday. Berkey (5-11, Like the haggard Salukis, 324 yards and three scores. 21O-pounds) is Toledo's top coach Frank Lauterbur's All told, Simrell has carried scorer with 36 points, and fizzling Rockets have barely or thrown the ball 268 times has carried the ball 75 times made it off the launching pad for a total offense of 1,289 for 294 yards. rhis season. Toledo currently yards. Burch, a 6-2, 200-pound Jerry Rhome of Tulsa, who sophomore from Detroit, is ~s grounded with a poor 1-7 record and ... two-game losing played havoc with the Salukis Simrell's favorite target this streak. earlier this season, is the season. Burch has pulled in nation's leading passer and 32 passes for 317 yards. Don Shroyer's weary Sa­ total offense leader with 2,252 A word ('! caution for quar­ lukis are one Ilotch ahead of yards. terback Han: in addition to Toledo with a 2-6 record and Gray, a 6-0, 178-pound their potentially potent of­ a three-game losing skein. 'Speedster from White Plains, fensive threat, the Rockets JIM GRAY But the Rockets do pack N. Y., and collegiate football's are ninth in the nation in total some punch, panicularly in ninth best scorer a year ago, pass defense. Toledo has al- Shop .... " DAN SBIRELL l OAILY EGYPTIAN I the offensive backfield vrhere is the Rockets' leading rusher lowed 50 completitlns in 93 Adverti~ers quanerback pacing-ace Dan ward passing and ninth in total after eight games. attempts but only 598 yards, Simrell and halfback Jim G!"ay offense. The sparky senior has have been making a lot of A native of Toledo, the rushed 96 times for 357 yards noise in recent weeks. crafty senior has completed and one touchdown. Gray, also 6 Yards Net in 8 Games HELP WANTED Salukis'Progress Means Step WINTER TERM

Daily Egyptian needs carriers for Forward, Penalty Backwards delivery within Carbondale city limits. For every step the Salukis backing off the field is quar­ the old mark, opponents were have managed to tru1ge for­ terback Jim Hart. His aerial thrown for a loss of 300 yards ward on the gridiron this sea­ skills have accounted for 1,283 because of infractions. • Hours 6:30 to 8:30 each morning, son they've taken a subsequent yards, also a school record. Saluki fans, somewhat dis­ Tilesday through Saturday. step backwards. The statistics seem to in­ appointed at the team's 2-6 In eight games they have dicate that instead of playing record, have been advanCing • 3.0 grade average required. netted only six yards on the football, Coach Don Shroyer's their opinions as !o the Sal­ ground. Their total yards squad is playing tug of war ukis' frequent usc of "re­ • Must be responsible, punctual, gained is 714; their total pen­ with the referees. verse play." energetic. alized is 708. But it's not only the Salu­ Some say the penalties are And, just for the record kis. Their opponents have been caused by sloppy play, some books, the 70S-yard total est­ a bit backward also. Some 66 say it's dirty play, while Applya& ablished a school record. The ~nalties have been called others contend it's because old mark was 692 for 10 games. agains: Southern's foes, ac­ we're playing tougher About the only thing that counting for 640 yards. competition. STU DENT WORK OFFICE has kept the Salukis from In 1961, the year SIU set And then there's the age­ old complaint that the refer­ ees are just whistle happy. Parents to See Fashion Show Coach Shroyer has a couple versity g-reenhouse north of of theories of his own. First, Daily Egyptian Classified Ads (Conti nued flam Page 1) the Agric~1ture Building. he says that since this is the Classified advertising rates: 20 words or less Ore S1..00 per ion Show-Convocation at 2 in An exhilit of paintings of first year Southern has played insertion; additional words five cents eac.h; four consecutive issues for $3.00 (20 words). Payable before the deodl ine, the Center Ballrooms. (Con- Fairfield Porter will be in under Missouri Valley Con­ which is two days prior to publication. e)ICcept 'or Tuesday's vocation credit will not be the Mr. and Mrs. John Rus- ference Officials, "Maybe ~aper. which is noon Friday. given at this show.) A coffee sel Mitchell Art Gallery in the they're watching SIU a little hour will take place between Home Economics Building. closer now that we're trying The Dany Egyptian does not refund money when ads Qre con­ 3 and 5 p.m. in the Ohio This display will be (.Open from to get into the MVC:' celled. River Room in the center. 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday. The head football coach also The Daily Egyptian reserves the right to ,eject any advertising A buffet dinner for students Displays of the three tyfoes said the increased number of and parents will be in the of poisonous snakes and oi penalties may be due in part HELP WANTED LOST Roman Room of the Univer- stream fishes of Southern lI1i- to the players' being a little sity Center between 5:30 and nois will be in the University over-t;>ager at times. Full.tim. f .... al. attend... t need· Black trench coat. black velv.t ed for wint.r qUClft.r at T.P. coli .., zipper for lining. Rumpus 7:30 p.m. Museum in Altgeld Hall this Fred Huff. spons publicist Room Friday. Nov. 6. Reward. Following the SIU-Toledo weekend. Museum hours are for SIU and himself an ex­ :;l.8;.el~fte~7 p:;~erview c~ Call 7.7845. Christine. R_no 18. football game, which begim;at from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. offiCial, agrees With Shroyer 60 8 p.m. in McAndrew Stadium, Saturday and from I to 5 p.m. that being under the MVC Free round trip iet fare to New FOR SALE there will be a dance and hoot- Sunday. rules has made the difference. ..{ ~:'~ Christmas vacation in ex... I----..:....;;.;.;..~-----_i enanny in the center. The dance ,..------. change for '''':~-'''!'''. care of phys~ lC1I1A n,,==ti e,onco. 125cc•• red will be in the ballrooms, with i"ally h ... dicapped male grad tanlc, low mileage very clean. student during thanksgiving vO­ Asking $300.00. Call 457·2897 music by the Nite Owls, and cation. Call immediately after after 5 p.m. 62 the hootenanny in the Roman 5<00 p.m. 9.1314. 46 Room. The Folk Arts Society WELCOME I For holiday parties; Gntique is helping to arrange the song punch bowl. cuPS. tray, ladle. I fest. PARENTS. a-____W_A_N_T_E_D ____ -f ~~esG~o;iZss~V~~~r:::) 4~7~nii t Exhibits which will be open Girl to sh ..e apartment for 3 after S p.m. 61 , to parents over the weekend d.. ing winter & spring quarters. 1957 Chevy. 4 dr. V.8 automatic. will include a display of Location .5 one block fro ... Old 58.000 ac:tual miles. Very good d"cawings from live plants and Main. Phane 9-2574. 49 _hape. Call Dave 7·7882 or se. Be Sure And Visit Carbondale's at 608 W. College. 59 flowers by SIU freshman art Ride w... ted to Miami. Florida students, between 10 a.m. and for ThCXIksgiving. C ... leave any· 1956 Ford canv.. automatic: 8 5 p.m. Saturday in the Uni- time. will share eXpenses. Call c:ylinder. dep... dable. Asking FINEST 549·3823. 54 $175.00. Call 9.3177. 606 E. Park, Apt. u. 57 FOR RENT Men's Clothing Store 1964 Fend ... B ...dmaster Amp. ifA f;' i :I blue strati coster guitar with vi­ brato. Call 457·5588 or see at RECENT LV ENLARGED TO SERVE YOU BETTER =11 c~~':. "U~t'!:;";'h:d~IC~~~ Jacksan Tr.,;l.r Ct•• trailer no.3. ~a.:: .;!ah~r~9,.·.; 7~~!.nW6d&si 58 [j :Ie] ;iii p..... or Fri