Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

April 1968 Daily Egyptian 1968

4-24-1968 The aiD ly Egyptian, April 24, 1968 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_April1968 Volume 49, Issue 131

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, April 24, 1968." (Apr 1968).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1968 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in April 1968 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. . '. . . . 5 May Seek Student Body Presidency

The second party said 1:0 be Beyond those predi..cted candi­ 'By John Eppemeimer The Action P any, s trongest and oldest pany on campus, nominated planning an active campaign prob­ dates, the field is ·'llOcle ar, with As many as five s tudents may by acclamation Tuesday night, Sen­ ably will be termed RAP-rights several Senators rumored to be be candidates for s tudent body ator Steve Antonacci. who had pre­ and progress. However, RAP will ambirious for nominations. president at the tMay 15 e lection, viously declared his candidacy as use the framework of the old Paul Wheeler, a Senator, s ays reliable sources indicate. an independent, as irs chOice forthe Dynamic Parry. which has been he has not decided what he will Student government circles have presidency. inactive for the past year but re­ do, but sources say he would like been alive wit~ rumors for weeks. The move came after Bob Can e r, rains its structure. a nomination and at one time With nominating petitions due to be member of Phi Sigma Kappa, with­ sought the s upport of the Ac tion available today, alliances are drew his nom ina t ion and Dave Gary Krischer . one of the mOst Party. rapidly being formed. Fabian, a veteran. declined the active and vocal Senators. will be Se nator John Haney has been S eve r a I knowledgeable Student initial nomination and refused to RAP's nominee for preSident, sounding out people for s upport Senators and other s tudent govern­ accept a draft. sources say. Running wiJh hfm but reportedly has made no deci­ me nt personnel report that there Nominations for student bodyvice will be Mike Rosenthal, a design s ion. If he runs, he is expected will be at least two political panies. president and for vice president of student, a s candidate for student to be a candidate for president. They also say that several inde­ activities were not completed at body vice president. Marilyn Ward, Senators Pete Rozelle and Mark pendents may run. press time. president of Neel y Hall, may' run Hansen are said to be agreeable It appears cenain that one or Senator Jerry Finney is said to be for activities vice president. several to bids for executive posts. . more Negroes will be nominated considering becoming Antonacci' s people say. Miss Ward is one of With the Action Parry nomina­ for Senate executive posts, marking running mate for the posr of student sever al Negroes m e ntioned- for a'­ tions out of the way, other tickets the firs t time for such action. body vice president. major post. are expected to shape up soon. Daily EGYPTIAN Southern fllinois University Carbondale, Illinois

Volume 49 Wedne.doy, Ap,;1 24, 1968 Humber 131 Council Grants Permission for Anti-war March and Do n Ragsdale, of the SIU By John Durbin Security Police. The council' s decision to The Carbondale City Coun cil permit the street parade came l ast night granted the Southe rn after a lengthy debate in which Doug Kragoess, a junior from Dolton and Jean­ Illinois P eace Committee per­ the safety of the marchers nine Hinkle, a freshman fronl SOuth Holland, ex­ mission to conduct an anti­ was discussed. After receiv­ am in e one of the art pie t.:~s on exhibit at Old war parade April 27 through ing assurance from No-rm an Art Appreciation the s treets of the c ity. that local police officials felt Main as part of th e FinE' Arts Festival. The festival runs through Sunday . ( Photo by Nathan The peace marcher s will be that safety CQ uld be e n s ured ~ Jones. ) r equired to walk four o r five the council approved . . abreast in the left lane only May 0 r David Keene a p­ throughout the parade route. po int ed Councilmen J oseph The Council appr o\'ed a change Ragsdale, Randall Nel son and in the route by r eplacing Main William Eaton to Nor­ Nominating Petitions Availal,le Street with Monroe Street in man in negotiating with the order to prevent traffi c con­ PI u m be r sand Pipefitte rs gestion. Union who a r e seeking a 75 For Student Government P.o'sts · The TO ute will begin on cent hourly pay raise. Grand Avenue and proceed The councilmen and c ity Nominating petitions for Petitions for executive of­ one- year te rms and two half­ north to Univer sity Avenue manager will meet with union three student government ex­ fi ces must have 200 signa­ year terms; Thompson , and then continue west to M on­ r epresentatives Friday at I: 30 ecutive posts and 20 Student tures, and cho se fo r Senate one one- year term; roe Street. The marc hers will p.m. to disc uss the union' s Senate seats a r e available to­ post s must have 50 s igna­ Un iversity Park, one half­ turn south 'on Monroe to Ill­ contract which expires May I, day at the Student Govern­ tures. year term ; east side dorms, inois Avenue wh e r e they will 1968. ment offi ce in rh e University Executive posts open are three· one- year te rm s and one turn east and pr oceed back The union is seeking in ad ­ Cente r. student body preSident, stu­ half-year term; east Side non­ to Grand Avenu e. dition to the 7S cent raise in All the po s it i o n s will be dent body vice president-who dorms, two one- year terms City Manager C. Wj Il iam pay, t hr ee weeks vacation fo r filled at an elect ion May 15. serves as chairman of the and one half-year term; west Norman sa i d he d iscussed all e mployees; the probation Petitions must be r eturned side dorms, three one-year Senate, ~d vice preside nt of Monday the l aw e nforcement pe riod for new emplo yees to by May 8. To take out peti­ activities. terms; and west side non­ procedures to be used for be r educed fro m six months tions, students must be en­ dorms, two one-year terms. the par a d e with Bar r y to three months; and the grant': rolled full tim e and have a Sen ate seat s open are: Senate aRplicant s must live Sanders, r epresentative of the ing of two days personal 3.0 overall average or be in foreign student, a single one­ in the area t~ey seek to repre- SIPC, Police Chief Jack Hazel leave pe r year. good academic standing. year term; .commufers, three sent. , Ballot Changes Due to Early Printing Gus Bode

By Don Mueller conte nder for 'he Democratic Stude nts are al so asked to Yo rk and released by May n om ina t i on , and Neg r 0 indicate their party affiliation. 2 o r 3. Stude nts voting in the Choice comedian Dick Gregory do not sex, marital and University Moore said the names of '68 mock election today will appear on the ballot. status. possible contenders omitted notice omissions and additions from the Choice '68 ballot On the local ballots, drawn Rick Moore, co-chairman of to ch e ballot used in the s traw we r e "probably not in the up by the SIU ChOice '68 s teer­ the SIU JX> lling committee, vote. The changes are due to ing committee, students will running when the balots were an early printi2g of the ballots. said the information gathered printed." make three c hoices betwee n from ~?e local ballots will be pai r ed pre sid e n t i a I con­ Srudents may use the write­ The extras on the ballot are u ~ed to compare the ways te nde r s. in space to indicate a first Pr€'s ident Lyndon B. Johnson, student voters c ross political choice for president but not party lines . II who has announced his with­ Richard M. N i xon is for second o r third c hoices. Gus s ars Coach Jack drawal from the race, a nd the matched agains t Roben F. Results of the local ballot­ First choice selections will Hartman \\ill announcE' lace Martin Luther King, Jr. Kennedy in the first chOice, ing wi! be (available in a few be used to determine elections Soon if hE"s going 10 "is· Two other candidates, Vice­ Eugene McCarthy in the sec­ days. he said. Results of the results. SecQnd and t hird will consin ; hE' JUS! dO E's n ' ! President Hubert Humphrey. ond and Hubert H. Humphrey Time. Inc. ballots are to be be u se d for s tat i s t ic a 1 \\ant l o b e' " badgE'rr d " who has. r ecently become a in ~h e fin al. compute r-anal yzed in New analysis. aboot it . Sites NexT"Year New r ATTENTION SECRETARIES Celebrity Series to'Move Don't Mi .. YOUR DA Y at the The SIU Celebrity Series the Student Senate. the Ad­ Commenting on the changes will b" held at tWO differ­ ministration and the Illinois which will he made In Shryock, e nLIocarions next year. Arts Council. Hibbs said. "We he said it wlll be air-condi­ -\\~, ~~ Paul Hibbs, coordinator of haven't received the final word tioned; lobbie s and foye rs w1l1 April 24, 7 ,9 P.M. Special Programs , said, from the Senate as to their be carpeted and enlarged; "Shryock Auditorium will support yet," he added. dressing rooms and showers close. tn June for extensive He said the stage of the for the actors will be im­ Style ShOll! (By Sail-Mart) re mode ling and will not be Communications building is prove d; the size of the s tage R efre8 hme nt8 a va i 1 able umil September much better than the prese nt will he Increased, reducing 1969. This will necessitate facility. but the audience seat­ seating capacity to 1,200; Entertainment the reduction of ~rfo rmance s Ing capacity Is limited to 550 padded audience seats will co two each Quaner. (OUf of people. " Two performances be installed and the orches tra " The treat i8 on U8." which will take place In' the would be run to compensate," pit will he enlarge.!!. Communications Buildirig and he said, "but only 1,IOOwouJd Locker rooms for s tage two at the SIU Arena." be seated even then." hands, a sbop and a J ounge Reducing the number of per­ The two performances that w1l1 he provided In the base­ formances will require addi­ w1l1 he he Id in the Arena will ment. tional financial support from be the Parent's Day program Hibbs said the convoca­ and a spring program. "These tion series will he held at SIU Veterans will Inel ude a big dance trou pe I p.m. only In the Ar ena o r someone like Peter Nero. ,. next year because of con­ May Qualify Hibbs added. struction procedures . • Modern For More Pay Equipment 5[Udem W 0 r I< e r s wh o had simUar work experie nce in two . .Pleasant with years of military duty may Atmosphere he eUgible for higher wages, according to Raymond P . De ­ .Oates Fr,ee Dance & Concert Jarnen, assisram director of the Student Work and Financial play free CO urlellY oj OM & Saturday, April 27 Assistance Office. A letter to (he editor in to­ BILLIARDS The Hippodrome RAINY DAZE day's Egyptian stated that all C0'npI.I5 ~in9 Genter veterans are eligible for the Friday, April 26 $1. 00 Per Person raise. DeJarnen said veterans who can show proof of their mill­ transportation fo r S or more- SOl! each tar y experience rece ive 10 cents for each year of ser­ Change to N. 16th St. vice work., up to tWO year s. He sal d man y s tudents THIS THIS qualify for [he higher wage in janitorial services and some in Meet At The Moo work. With [he security police. Open til 2 Daily Egyptian Eve ry Publlilhed in the [)eplrtment 01 J oomlHam Wedne8da y Frielay & Saturelay T.el4ay th roua:hSarurda)'throulhout [hoe tchool ),e ar, e~ee pt dumg Unh'enlt y YKaoon pen­ ada, ulmlnulon weeki, and I~al hollda)" b)' other days t il 12 :30 SOuthem mlnol. Unlt·eult )' . Carbondale, 1111- afternoon l'IOu62Q()" Pollclea 01 the EiYJ:Cl a" Ire the responllbll­ I'm Running On The New Moo It y of the edltOri. Stltememl publlahrd here and do "oo: necen an l y ren ee! tht'oplnlonofme ad. m lnlltrallon or any depl .nmen! of the U nlYu­ al!)'. Pizza Party EditOrial and bulll"ell " nlce l lou.ted In nighl BuUdlna T -41. F1Kal otfl.:e r . Howilrd R. Lonl. hl!'phone 453-2»4 , SMeII[ Newa Stalf: Natlcy Bike r, John Dur_ bin, JoM Epperhelmer, MUllret Epperhclm­ at the e r, "hry Jenlllen, Cieol"Ke Kne me ycr, Dlvld F , Mulhall , [)on Mueller, Oe M Rcbuffonl, lnn Rencher. Rumpus Room NEUNLIST 213 E . Main

STUDIO NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX MIDWEST THEATR"'E"S ___ --' Pictur ~ of the H·ELD OVER . .. RECORD Month 1 , $11 01&1 SMASHING ATTENDANCE I 1• Pl1.457-5U5 1 • SHOl' T I\I ES' NOW thru TUES . ! C o mplete Sh ow At l : 15 - 4 : 25 - 6 :40 '" 9 :00 f . Walnut and S. Wall SOUTHERN ILLINOIS FIRST SHOWING ... TICKETS MA Y BE PURCHASeD ANY TIME AFTER 2p .m. " WINNER .2 ~~~pEMY AWARDS! CARBONDALE'S BEST PIZZA Paulette Ogren BEST ACTRESS] Your portrait COLUM&.A PICTURE~ pre!>e'Oh a ... the perfect Stanley Kramer p,odue',on 1 ( Sidney I Katharine gift! TRACY ~ POITIER ' HEPBURN PHONE FOR AN goe,s wbois APPOINTMENT TODAY coming to dhiner 457- 5715 ....,,,,,"""" Katharine Houghton NEUNLIST STUDIO 1rf~~ I ~ by DeVOl · Wollen by I\'llLloat ROs[' P")I,uce\l 4'Id CI!!'cled Or Sll\IIIl['f' KR~ Jack Baird 213 w. Main Tl CHN KOlOR ' I :-:.:'} _ -_. :. :-.:~.:i ~ ~::? ~~ :~":~_"":':''J r; 0. SIU Alumnus Gates Opens At 7:00 Show Storts At 7:30 Adults S1.25 'Bonnie and Clyde' Story on Radio Today Ch ildren Under 12 Free NOW THRU Tl~ESDAY "The True Stor y of Bonnie Other programs: i nfluence and future of and Clyde," by Emm-a Parker Britain's capital. W~I3~'I'IT and N. Cowan, will be dis- cussed on "Books in [he 2 p.m. 3: 10 p.m. FA~I)UHA-WA~ ~:~s;~(~)~:07 a.m. today SSC World Repon. Concen Hall: Tchaikovsky, Si b e li U S , Mozart and De­ bussy w111 be featured. 2:30 p.m. . WSW-TV Features The Shadow of the Lion: 7:30 p.m. "London and the Twentieth National Educational Radio ; Century," will examine the Washington Forum. ~ Critical Battle ~ 171ey're ~ young.. , I For Stalingrad E they're The 20th Cent ury will visit ~ in love I the battle of Stalingrad. the NIGHT ~ turning point for Hitler, to­ ,.i day at 9:30 p. m. on WSIU­ ••• and they leill people. . I TV, Channel B• • Other program s: at E()!!~J:E~~L~E I 4:30 p.m. MICHAEL J POLLARD ·GENE HA C:( \~AN · ESi EllE 0 · · '50~S ~ Fr ance: a panorama; WINNER BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS AWARD § SE.CO HO FEATURE: JAMES COBURN " WATERHOLE ,;0 3" 5 5 p.m. What's New: HThe Cow­ LEO'S § COMING: "IN COLD BLOOD" i boy's West" features army = $ scoutS ana pony-express Thu-rsday-7 :30-9:30 riders . MID-AMERICA HEATRES B p.m. FREE PEANUTS Passport 8, Wanderlust : Open 6:30 "The Land of the Bible," Start 7 :00 an int.eresting close-up. In color. Don't be LateH NOW SHOWING THRU TUES . 10 p.m. lnre n el: '

Show Times 2:00 . OQ . 8:00 pm t Best Actor -Rod Ste i ger 5: All Adults S1.50 Children under 12 75t rowse at Polly's •

THURSDAY T~TE VARSITY 4 :10-6: 35-8 :25 ALL ADULTS $1.25

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OPEN 6,30 ST AR T 7 :00 In Car Heaters CAMPUS DRIVE · IN

Truman Capote's IN COLD BLOOD

Parkins - Patty Duke - Paul Burke .ALSO· ~':.II~~G r~~;t _I . DAILY ~YPTI"H

Daily Egyptian Public Forum

V'oters, Support Illinois Home Rule

The recent Supreme 'Court decision ex­ rending the one-man, one-vote state ap­ Portionment basiS to units of local govern­ ment has srrensz;rhened the positi on of mu­ nicipal home rule advocates in Il linois. Bur municipal home r ule will continue to be illegal unless illinois voters support the calling of a constitutional conve ntion in thiS November' s elections. This o!,e-man. one-vQ[e ruli ng is tanta­ mount [0 a 1964 Supreme Court decision requiring s ubstantially equal representa­ tion-based on population-among state legis­ lative districts . The new decision extends equal r epresentation to include some 81,000 units of local government. The reapportionment measures are de­ signed to eliminate the practice of "Ger­ rymandering;" a positive act of malap­ portionmem r e sulting in the political advantage of the pa.rty in power. When the courts effeC[ this new basiS for apportionm ent the state's municipalities will be as r epr esentatively democratiC as the s tate's legislature. With this innovation, local governme nt officials also should be empower ed to deal with local problems at the local level. This can be done under municipal home rule . Herewfore , the precedent of Dillon's Rule , has given the s tate ulti mate supremacy Letters in dealing with discr e pancies between ptate and local policy. Constirutional home rule would not eliminate state s upremacy, but it would represent the initial step in that Jones' Article White Racism direction. - To the Daily Egyptain: Any intelligent person, if he cares stead of kneeling down to pray The argumem in favor of municipal home to see it, can easily imagine the and ask in a nice way fOil what rule is strong. State legislatures, although In response to An Editor 's OUt ­ bleakne ss. they want, they just went too far employing expe rts in matters of municipal look ("Call It ByltsName"). which Not all black people are the this (im e . T he racist is Sitting concern, - are simply too r e moved from the appeared in the Daily Egyptian dumb ignorant brutes that the white by, anxiously waiting for a declar­ growing problems of our cities to act in an April 18, any rational individua l­ racist assumes us to be. Like most ation of open season on blacks. black or white-would have to call effic ient and effective manner. white people, most black people This s eems to be what Mr. Jo nes The Illinois Gene ral Assembly meets in it an e xpression of extreme white could d e v e l a p their God-give n is saying. And ifthisistheanswer regular sessions onl y six months out of ever y racism . talents constructively instead of to the plea of black people for two years. Therefore, a problem that is not Let it be known h ~ r e. now, and destructive ly- that is, if the white survival. may God help us all! researched and put befor e the legislarors racist would get' his feet off their forevermore, that I \(and Negroes Walter Neal prior to a session may be a long time in backs, exte"d a he lping hand to in general) do nOl condone burning, Physical Plant bei.ng dealt With - not to mention resolved. l OOTi ng, or Vi olence from anyone, raise them out of the economic Interim comm iltees and (he LegislativeCoun­ black or white . But neither do I mire. cil are intende d to fi ll the void of legal condone the econo mic a nd social It seems logical to many people Veterans Get impote nce between seSSions, but they are oppr ession meted out to black be sid e s me that if this great failing to do an adequate job. Municipal people by the white racist de mo­ country can give away billions of ho me rule could alter "this situation. c ratic system. Social oppr ession dollars in for eign aid and lend the 20 Cents More The present IllinOis constitut ion, a s writ­ can be tOlerated. because I have unlimited technica l assistance that ten in 1870, does not permit muni cipal . . the inte lligence to know the r e are it does to foreign countries for ecq­ To the Dally Egyptian: "- ho me rule . The docume nt is obscure and class ranks in e ver y society. no mic deve lopment, the least it Once again the lack of com­ burdened by the tre me ndous deadwood of a can do is co contribute 1n every wa y muricarions between employers, by-gone era. Nearly a century of partisan Eco nomic oppreSSion, however, possible co the econonlic deve lop­ e mployees and the students of imere sts have prese rved bad governme nt is anothe r matter; the extent to me m of irs own citizenry. That's this University n'as prompted me in Illinois; it IS time for the voters to do wh ich it is bei ng meted out [Q logic, howe ver, not r eality. to write a letter. something about i t . the black peopl€' raises the ques­ Black people- ever yone says it­ Do all you veterans who are A vote in favor of calli ng a constitutio nal tion of whe ther black people can have s hed the ir blood for [he free ­ s tude nt wor ker s at the Univer­ ::.on vention will not onl y serve to promme survive much lo nger in this great dom of this country in eve r y war. s it y know that you are e ntitled bener gove rnme nt in Illinois: it will a lso white society. Projecting pre se nt They are shedding their blood to to 20 cents an hour more because starr the political wago n r olling in the di­ practices, JU St imagine what ex­ protect the freedom of the people of the fact that you are a veteran? rection of solving the pr oble m s facing our istence will be like fo r the black in South Vietnam. Look at tbe irony My husband is a veteran and has major cities. The decis ion will r e st with the people 50 years from now. I of it, these second-class Citizens, worked for tWO and a half year s vO[ ers this Novembe r. don' t have to elabor ate on the in economic and social bondage, as a stude nt worker and has neve:r Dan VanAtta frightening aspect of this matter. fighting to keep people free, insure been informed of this fact; neicher democr acy, protect America. by the Student Work Office nor the Now a comment on the r ioting Veterans Administration Office and on Black Power. Nobody says here on campus . Need Better Voice for Right that the looters are "pr ostraJe I accidentally heard of this and with grief, " and Mr. JenkinJones's ca lled the Student Work Office s uggestion- impli,d- t hat Negro for confirmation and was informed To the Daily Egyptian: he r , or a syste m of chaos, r eaction should be expressed by that this "Practice has been going terror and economic paralysis kneeling to pray for kindness and on for years and the proof needed I have r ead features by J enkin will faste n itself on this gr e at consideration is abonnnable and to obtain this 20 cents an hour in­ Lloyd Jones in the Dail y Egyptain a nd be autiful country. " r epulSive. crease is a copy of")'our discharge for some time with disgus t. While The b I a c k people have been paper." I am gener a lly not sympathetic to Regardless of the correctness or trying for years w communicate It would been that during the the views of the political right, I incorrectness of Mr. Jones' s opin­ to Whi te Power the me ssage ., Get numerous trips my hus band has would certainly not argue for the ions concerni,ng the causes of loot­ your foot off my back and let me made to the Student Work and removal of a r epresentative of that ing and wh at should be done about de velop along with this country." Veterans Administr arion Offices view from pages of a University il, to s uggest that children must be His voice and his pleas have been that this fact would have been com­ newspaper on political grounds. s hot ro sa v e the nation from ignored. Rioting is the only ex­ municate d to him. " These s mall I do, howeve r, object to what "terror and economic paralysis" pression that has been heard. Dr. but much needed benefits should might be called the ' 0 st,h=" that is cheap sensationalism and is King said last year that the Negro be made available to those who Mr. Jones frequently employs. The mor ally unjustifiable in terms of has "learned fro m hard and biuer are emitled to them. Colleges feature appearing in the Daily any legitimate viewlX>int on the exper ie'nce that our Government and universities are for s tudents, Egyptian of April !8 offe r s a good spectrum of IX>litical life in "tbis does not move to correct a problem ar en't they? example. The first two para­ great and beautiful country." involVing race until it is con­ Mrs . David L. Jones graphs of ;t are as follows: Rat h e r than further obscure fronted d ire c t I Y and dramat­ comp l ex issues with mor e re­ ically." Editor s' Note: Raymond P . De ­ "The day after Marrin pulsive outbursts from Mr. Jones, That's,what a riot is: not an ex­ jarnett. assistant director of the Luther Ki ng's murder, a young the Daily Egyptian would do better pression of grief prostration but a Student Work and Financial As­ Negro girl skipped gaily past to find a responsible slX>kesman loud voice. This voice has been sistance Office. told tbe Daily (he W hit e House waving a for the r ight- if it must have one ­ answered by white racist only so Egyptian T!;esday that veterans bright blouse and shouting [Q and r elegate Mr. Jones to the pages far: "We are armed and we have receive a 20- cent pay raise only the g u a r d s: I stole this. of tabloids where he would seem tbe numbers to annihilate the black if they have two year s of mili­ Shoot me! Shoot me ! mor e naturally to belong. scum." The blacks have gone far tary experience i n the ar ea in ... "The sad fact is that some­ enough, they say; tbey don't use the which rhey are now working o n day soo n someone m'J$( shoot Steve Rathman ·right tone of .:voice,. they say; in- campus. ing ~nd the gleaming new Univer­ big diffe r e nce between Russia and in the last 4,000 years. The J e ws sity of Jerusalem, the conversa­ America. In America the police ke pt alive the ir drea m. " tion centers on Russia's de te r­ were our friends." Eshkol po inted to Israel's tech­ mined wooing of che Arab world Mrs. Meir won a teacher' s cer­ nical aid efforts i n Africa a s an and her pers iste nt anti-Se m itis m . tificate in Milwaukee and taught exa mple of the kind Gf he lp he Whiie many in Is rae l say the in high schools until the early is r eady to offe r the Arabs . Jew in Russia is worse off today 1920s whe n she we nt to Palestine Ben-Gurion cited thi s E' ff Grt a s than he was in 1917, Premier to work in an early kibbutz near a ma jor Is raeli contribution to Eshkol qualifies his a ssessme nt. Nazareth. s tability in Af r ica. Israeli tech ­ " That is right if one talks about "It was so like today: ' s he nicians are often accepted in na­ the Jewish r e ligion." he s aid. said with a note of s adness. «The tions that refuse" or suspect Amer­ " There . a re a half million J e ws firs t thing we were taught was ican and RUS s ian help, he said. in Moscow. but onl y one syna­ neve r to go OUt at night we aring But while Eshkol pleaded fo r gogue and one house in which a white dress. The Arabs might peace and unde r s tanding in the rites are permined. The re­ shoot us. s a me office from which he o rder­ ligion could die in another gen­ Meyer Weisgal's route to Pal­ e d Is raeli for ces ~ nt O action in e ration. But there's a phenome­ estine was more circuitous. He 1967, there is no s ign of weakness By Ray McHugh non in Russia . went from RUs sia roChicago whe re among any of the Je~ ish leade r s. " Te ns of thousands of young­ he worked as a boy selling matches . Instead there is a gr:im de termina­ Copley Ne ws Service sters who were never taught their The n, to a career in s how busi­ tion to halt the Arab borde r raids faith have s prung as if from the air ness (E s hkol calls Hollywood the and an e qually defiant attitude "'to­ JERUSALEM- A hard, angry, with a ne w interest in J ewr y. oJ Ame rican J e ws' only venture into ward U.N. demands that Israel s tubborn look crosses the jowle d Howe ve r . Eshkol, s aid, this r e - " basic indus try"), and finally to quit the Sinai desen and the west face of Premier Levi E s hkol of Israe l wben be is asked about Russia's role in the Middle East. It is the s ame expression a re­ poner draws from former Premier David Ben-Gurian; Mrs. Eshkol Sees Russian Golda Meir. secretary-general of Israel's biggest political party and ex-foreign minister; and from Meyer Weisgal, bead of Israe l's famous Weiz mann Institute. Tbe four all were born in Russia. ImperialJstic Grab E ach fle d the pogroms of the early 20tb Century. But each r e taine d that indefinable tie to his home ­ land. Each could be pardoned the hope that Moscow would not turn against Is rael, that the Kr e mlin In Midd Ie East one day, would release Russia's 3 million J e ws and permit those who wish to migrate to Is rae l. Immigrants are needed desper­ vival has revived old s uspic ions ately if unde rpopulated Is rae l is a life dedicate d to s uppOrt Chaim bank of the Jordan River - - areas about the J ewish population. Weizmann and his Zionist dream. occupied last June. to esc a p e the tighte ning A r a b The economic progr ess and the .ooose. Weizmann beca me the first presi­ Mrs. Meir, who as foreign min­ advance "in SCientific, legal and Despi~e vic[Q ries over Egyptian dent of Is rael a nd Weisgal has ister in 1957 a nnounced the with ­ educational fie lds have been in ­ built the $100 million Weizmann drawal of Is rae li forces from the President Gamal Abde l Nasse r and terrupte d. King Husse in of Jordan, the com­ Institute as his 1Tlemorial. It Sinai, said: " I e nv y Abb E ban " It isn't jus t conde~.lation of ranks with s uch cente r s as the (he r s uccessor ). He will never be bination of Russian military aid, Israel, or he lp for Nasser," he implacable Arab hostility, un cer­ Massachusetts In stitute of Tech­ told to make the same s peech. said. "There is the s me ll of the nology. " Had we nOt withdrawn in 1957, tain Ame rican policies , the s udde n pogrom again in Russiq • Jews opposition by French President The ins titute specializes in basic the 1967 war would nOt have been are forbidden imJX)rtant JX)s itions r esearch and has been -described fought," s he said. " If we with­ Charles de Gaulle , and the ac­ in science, diplomacy, nuclear celerating British Withdrawal from as "the one most i mpJrtant diffe r­ draw again without agr eements e ne rgy, banking, e tc. Low quotas e nce between Israel and her Arab with the Arabs, we will have war the Middle East conf ronts Is rae l limit Jews in colleges and uni- with a grim situation. e nemies." Egyptians promised again. There is only one question: ver sities. . to destr oy it in the 1967 war and Will the Arabs acquiesce to Isra'eJ "We are anathe ma once again, te rrorists did kill some workmen or will they persist in destroying Soviet A rms for A robs jus t as whe n I was a boy." in the manic ured orange gr oves us? Eshkol, born in the Ukraine in that s urround the mode r nistic " We refuse to make it e a s ier 1895 a nd raised in Lithuania, s till He r leaders' words are confi­ complex near Rehovor. for U.N. diplomats to live in com­ r ecalls the bloody pogroms of fort. dent, but they don't hide the un­ his childhood. easy fact that Arab armies are "For 2,000 years the problem " I r e member how we lived in has been the same. We have once again e quipped with even the house for months with the Comp~ssion for A robs more mode rn Soviet arms. Nor refused to die." windows black and sealed," he To this Eshkol added"a warning do they hide worry over mounting s aid. " We didn't dare rurn on a a tt a c k s by EI Fatah guerrllla Inte rvie ws with these four pro­ agains t American concessions to light for fear it would draw atten­ ducts of Russian Jewryfind a com­ the Arabs. fig h t e r s, Is rae l 's deterior a ting tion to us . poSition at the United Nations and mon thread of compassion for the Washington might feel that s uch " The Russians were e ven more Arabs who threaten Israel's ex­ moves would weake n Russia's in­ the s lowl y Improving Arab dip­ terrified. They had denied us the lomatic offensive . isrence . fluence, he said. but the Soviets right to own land or to till the "We are he r e to stay a nd some would claim that they we r e only Is rae l r ealizes, too, that the soil. They had pounded us into inexorable advance of Soviet in­ of the Arab leaders know it, though evidence of MoscoW's ability to the cracks of their econom y as if I me ntioned their names they help the Arabs. flue nce in the Mediterranean and the artisans , the me rchants, the the Middle Ea st poses difficult might be killed in a week. " In 1954 the Un ited States money le nde r s. Then one day the "We have no te rritoria l aspir a ­ he l ped Nasser and what happen­ decisions in Washington. U.S. czar awoke and fo und us e ve r y­ public opinion is s till on the Side tions against any Ara b country. ed?" he asked. "In 1955 you whe re . to of Is rael, but the specter of a Before the s i x-day war las t year s igned the Baghdad Pact wi(h Iraq. When the J ewish ex 0 d u s to we never dreamed of c hanging our In 1956 you force d Britain and Russian-dominated A r a b wor ld Ame-rica began at the turn of the poses hard choices for American borders. But we will not r e treat France OUt of Suez when Russia century, Eshkol looked instead to today in the face of threats and rattled rocke ts s he didn't have. diplomats. Palestine. Prime Ministe r Eshkolis almost vio le nce. Yo u recognized the Yemen Re­ sar castic whe n he talks of Russia's "I s t111 belie ve peace is possi­ public and the Russians have strategy. U.S. a So lution ble . What we are doing and learn­ virtually taken it over. They are " It is pure imperialis m ," he ing can r evolutionize this part of moving into the Persian Gulf e ven said. " It has nothing to do with "Some of us a sked: ' Is the the world. We have discovere d before the Britis h withdraw_ They J ews or Ar abs. Un ited States a solution?' We had unde rground wa te r. We a r e near are in the Medi[erranean and North "The Russians have dreamed been wandering for 2,anO year s economic desalinization of sea ­ Africa. of it s ince Pete r the Great. The and we decided to go home." water. We are developing ne w Bols heviks pose as opponents of Eshkol arrive d 1n Palestine in agric ulture, new indus try. \Ve Ready to Segotiute colonializ3tion. ca pitalism and im­ J 9 14 a nd we nt to work a s a farm are already exporting cit r u s, perialis m , but these are their laborer . He he lped found Jewish avocados , fl owers. goals. villages near Jerus lae m. He "We are trying to r ep I ace "We are al ways ready [ 0 nego­ , "We are frighte ned about the quickly became acquainted with limited natura l r esources with tiate , bur we wi ll nor s utrender. So long as there is no Arab vacuum created by the Britist Ben-Gurion who had come to Pal­ brain r esources. What we ac ­ re­ withdrawal from the Middle Eas t complis h can be made available sponse to our proposals the re will estine e ight year s e arlier. Both be no Wi thdrawal from the te rri­ a nd we think you s h 0 u I ~ be men served in the Jewish le gion to all our neighbors as soon a s they agr ee to let us live in peace." tory we occupied in {he s ix-da\' frighte ne d, [QO. It ha s given Mos­ of the Bri(ish army during World war_" - cow its opportunity. T h r 0 ugh War I. Eshkol sought to minimi ze the Before [he crisis of i\ lav-Junt? Nasser or through direct inter­ Golda MeiT was taken from religious differences between Jews 1967, Eshkol was ref;arded a s a vention, Russia is trying to pene­ Russia to Milwaukee as a yo ung and Arabs_ prime ministe r whost" political trate the region. girl. "I do not consider myse lf a future was behind him. A tour " We would like normal, friendly He r facher was a railroad car­ r e ligious man , II said the prime of Israel today from l'el Av iv to relations with Russia. Ever y n<.t­ penter and s he re me m bers he r minis te r . " I don't believe IOn thiS Jerusale m, from Haifa tothe Negev tion s hould be free to decide its first Labor Day whe n he marched talk of a 'special mission' for own course. But we are he r e. and mounted policemen joined the Israel. We want a normal nation desert is e nough to convince a Despite what Russia may do, we parade. that has an opportunity to develop "repOrter that Eshkol ha s found [he inte nd [Q s tay. II "My siste r saw the police and its faculties. issue (hat has united his people In a n .interview with Eshkol in scr eame d, 'Cossacks!' .. Mr s. " I don't de n your reJigiou !=> behind him. I his office near the handsome Me ir r e calls. " It took us hours to heritage," he hastene d to add. As Golda.- Meir says, the Jews Israeli Knesset (parliament) bui:d- reassure her and then J kne w the "Manv nations have disappeared refuse [0 die. P ... 6. .

International Student ~ Faculty Strike FRIDAY April 26 PETITION: . 'lie the undersigned s tudents and faculty "Iembers 01 So uthern Il li nois protesting the racial oppression practic ed in th is country against Block ' Un iversity , support the Student Mobilization Committee in it' s call for an Americans and other mi nority groups and furthermore realize thot the international Student and Faculty Strike on April 26th. We a re protes ting the Se lective Service System, by it's very undemocratic nature, has no place involvement of American mili tary force s in Viet Nom and demand they be in 0 democratic s ociety and therefore must be abol ished. We will unite with brought home so as to al low the Vi e tnamese people to solve their own students and foculty members through Ihe world and boycott all cl ass e s probl ems on ~ restore t he conditions of self-determinati on. We ore olso on Ap ril 26 .

Doug Haas Vicki Taugbll Selwyn Goldstein Pal Mariott Colll'c n Gelwitsch Vinc.e Rodway John H. Sanper Gram Hamilton Marvls Sell Steven Gary Bloom Glenn Lee Hanson Greg Schillo AristOtle Katr3nldes Ga)'le TemKin Charles Hughes Douglas 1,( Gill w. L. Florchem Mike Bloom Sandr a Johnson William Schaefe r Ra ymond C, Curtis LeRoi Piazza Dolores Cohen !shail S. Reid Timothy J. FanQ[S Eugene Toll Theodore Toomey Douglas C. Slack Pam Gannon Catherine Wilke r son Beverl)' Archie Susie DuBoiS R. A. Williams L. E. Johnson Ka r en Moelle r E rik K. Walker JeTTY Pa luch Ra ymond Lenzi Milton C . Hill Jim Glasier Charles L. Buckley Steve Riner Charles Burton BriBn .C . Bennett Lynne Atkins on Ba TT Y B. E Ilegam Aghili Kamran Jim Kitzmlll Rlcha'rd Mason Bill Ka iser Marl!!ne Marino Da vid Omu Bo rn Paul Joseph Wheele r Roger Leis ner Tom Riley Mlkle Brown J ames A. Bufb)' Ri chard O'dell Bob Angstadt Dr. Je r ome S. Handle r Leslie A. Kolhausl' r William Barrow Laura MarKle Debbie Rodriguz Gregor y Hoffman Arlene Mesnard Audrey B. Shanafeh Harold Franklin Mcgee J r . Linda Libert Craig C rass B. A: Kimbal l G. Rover Webb Kayetta A. Slocum David C . Sassner Conni e Unfenh David R. Counts James (Urboj Urbanik Anne Markovich John T . Wil liams E r enst Bugg J erry Bond Wi lliam M. White Tonette Hoffman Phil C. We igand Pat Marlatt AaTTY Kaiser Joyce GaTTel( G. W. King Sheldon Wykell Jeannette Whitl' Ronald Burns John G. Gehman Dougla s K a~ Michele Pe tit Patricia Jones Deborah G. Jackson Alfred M. Simmons II • Andrew Lanum J .r . Nick Kruge r Jonathan F. Reyman Jeane Ka} Jana Ogg Edward O'Gra y Nikki Rae Redding peggy WoeJlel Hillel Wright Doug Smet hers Mary S. Bennen Vernon James GrubiSlch Mary Norton Patrick Vonnahmen Roben Blome-ye r Rod wagne r R. Hollander Ronald Calmao Nata Anderson Steve Batson Toni Roan Jonathan Chauncey C hristopher II John Esther Brooks Howar d Gr eenblatt Richard Hayes Thomas A. Holmes Care n Ctlerik off La r r y Ponde I Dennis E. Conn Sincla.ir Brown Brtan J . Treusch Glen Johnson Ian S. MacNiven Robert Booker Bard Grosse Alice Robson Sandra Fellows Sue ArmStrong Macklin D. Berry Selwyn Goldstein Susan K. Br ya nt Linda 1. Skinner Franklin Spector Bf!rrtie Huges Roben L. Caner Lawrence E . Jasud Larr y S. Be yna ~~:~fc; . D;~ Gary Golds tein James Tinerlngton Peter J. Davis Eddie Roha ch Steve Lewis Roben Nagle Phyllis Lemow8 James A. Ca\well Ruth Griffin Stephen P. Goldberg Dave Cornlj Bob Schoenbel);t r David A. Wilson James E. Nugent Marc Sc holnick Rich.Siegel Pam Halpenin Ronald Mille r Connie Benoodt Ca.rl Courtnie!' Thomas A. Dawes Rita M, Ver e b Gwenena Blackwell Fred Brown Barney F. Hoekstra Ba rry Beck J udiLh Re stucc!a Janice Bost Gljoraia.s. Bowden Jack Hungerfor d Roben Lapp Tim Proeme Neil Kaurman WilHam R. Strackan )" Jal)e LJoua J udi Jones Mark Hansen J i m Br ubaker Harlan Becker Danif! 1 Re nner GE:rald J. paug Bob Horn Donn We lton William M. Lawer Rodney Harper Armamd Paw et Dw ight Eggemeyer Kar en C. Evans Raymond WiJllams Randy Gremp Paul SchUpp Sarah Staren Terria Lee Harris Steve 'K . Crawford Mitchel Cohen Charles N, Sorensen Martan Abrams Lynne Thorsen J 1m Reynolds Susan Wa lke r Laura Gottlieb Perry Gr lvedJn Gail Wesber Mar y E. Russo De bra G. Montgomery Charles B. Whale r Jr. Doni Davis Ingrid Chrlstia.nsen Pat Carson Stephen Rathman William V. Moor e Peter G. Munch Jr. Gens), T. Brumfield Janes R. Armbruster Suzanne Brown Roben M. Randolf Jane Sa melson Kenneth LudW ig Manin Bons! t . Gene Auben Edger E . RowJhoe Marcia F. Danner Julia Lee Robert Griffin T. F . Slaughter Jr. Frank C ata lana SCOtt S. Ar nald Diane Melching Herb Wilson Chris Estwi.ng Don Lewi s Edward Oldfield Pierre Rene' Tyne' Mar y Jean Molloy J ea n Kaspar Denrti s Wharr Barbara saule r [)onna Leesley Irval Nangle Char les Bar nes PhllUp J . Gaertner Celia M. PUIri.ngton Ti m Sneed James Place Pam Bastox Ar lene Ve lle r Carolyn Bouecls i Jerry Wolf Donald J. Kennedy Jr. Jeff Man in Oon Schuman Diane Bezek Charles M. Routen Sherry Brame Bob Slick Derreck Bradley Car ol Eades J.erry Nelms Joel Brown J ill Yoba Robert ParKer B1II Cor lone Jr. Shirley J. Foster Barry Sanders T i m Hagge rt y Rolf Olm s tead James Fe ist Anne Mouoeau Anita L. Bronnpr Doug Kranjz David La yne W. Floyd O. Olive Kd l y Lowe Jenny Rush Anne Willack Judy Knoth Dickie Garrett Major Heaan Jr. Bernard McNeela RI chard Scan Genie Lowe Manin R. CahiU Tammy p olinohuk Hellen Be nhoud Jeff eq' Williams Billie G. Clauslll SIeve Moll Edward E. Shepler C arol Sande r s Ray Miller Vera R. Chitt y Carolynn Marla Richman Barbara Ande r son C lare Rodewald Nanq ' Miles Harold Gates Walter E. King An Tobia« Wellington Clain:: Yuche C. KI ng Ge rald Rlcordati Roben Turne r George Sibrhorp Jill Mer de lsohn Maril yn King Bob Gutschick Hug h Taylor Fred Ande r son David E . Sauter Mary Turne r Ted Salvia Do nna F rey William C . Cohen Charles Ropleguet Zavier Lerda Patrick Ja y McCammen Ken He nsel Judy Jones E rnie Shu It Jo Ann Bucher Robert Nagle Larry Sims Me ris Marrison Egge n Wa yman Abhage G re g Peyr ot Aliva L. Johnson Maria Usbanas Julieme Ni mcure Timothy Falls Kathleen Whitacr e Rona ld C . Hassen Ti Daw n Gre g Laun Jeanne Rode wald Judith Hand.berg T eryl Sc.h mltzer Cedric Chris!an Ear} Wl1liams M. Ronsyaic EddIe Smith Sharon Oehle r Anita Harris Pamela Sa bin Bonnie Bucco Ri chard Toglis ter William J . Moff t:" 1l Ann Jerkins Pa lricia S. Grady Bob JohnsOf' Robert W. Hanson DianE' L. Naselli Mike Beck man Darlene Hi cks Pa[TiCia Moffell Fenia Lee Harris Jenn ) S. Z lybt DII;k- Urewer J ohnn y Williamson James R. Br idwell Je nnirer Mock Hubert Avavt am Seaton C armetita Hogan Ra lph Moore Nancy Ha skell Charles Barnes Ann Gehman Ber Liberman Rodge r M. BUller Pete Marco Patricia Harvey June Cathcart Ralph R. Kylber Scot Adams Leonard J. Thomas Mike Hofbaue r Grover C . Randell Michae l Harl ), Shar on Davis Jugh Taylor John Le ls ney Haze l Smith Irwin Davies Auther C . Buck La Barbara Ta ylor Mi t. e Gille spie Marian J . Moore Shirley Odol r Harry Sa l me r Ingrid C . Farver Stephen Ganh Rosemary Lorel), John Rot h Brian Treusch Stephan Sengl'r Kendall An lhor s~ Tf;'rr~' Gano Mrs. Egge n De nn y Ri ckl Ki ch Gaser Lowell Darling Patricia Sealon PNer O. Marco F rank Sm ith Cyndl Honon Ella M. Taylor Richard Oonwin James M. Hansen Rich Co ivifl Ron Hansi ng Deane S. Kless Richard Winn Richard Me)'e r U nda Griffis Jack Jam Krom Pawa C unningham Kenneth HOU CK Lawrance Fine Thorn Abbot! Ti mothy S. Orown Ke n Hcdg.::s Je r ry R. Walter Paul Samprunos Lois Goldman Jo Ann Lewis J i m Ll ona Geogor y Woods Ted Williams Jim PO \l(' I1 Connie Reed Darle ne J ohnson Hany Doldman Marlann Be rr y Noel M.:: lche n Dana Herby Ra y Wood Richard Smit h Pal HaTTe li Ja me s Flammer Dennis Swagge rty Mar)' Nyst(.-d Barry Sa nd ,,' r8 Euclid H. Todd E dward C . Single ton Hruce Ashl!.')' Jennifer Cobin Martin R. C abull Douglas M. Alle n Otha Johnson Ted Toom y Hal Dean Deloris Harris Jessie Sl ru Wm . Sie rn Arlene Logan Catherin", WiI"e rson Barry Cooperman George Sibt horp Robert Caff E:T} IJa rryl f:. . Norton Pete Roh..:rtson Cliffor d Jackson Michael L.. Ashley Raphael H. Middeke Marda Eulie n Paul Resluccla Ka thy Gr iffIn Gwe ndlyn Mitchell James H. Sundquist Pew r A. Hugganir E ll yn Abra ms John Curran Lynn AveT)' Bernie F l ynn David Chell E thyl Hudson Ha rian Becke r Vera Hugllnlr Richo::rd Jon Hefl ey Bob Schovs Mark Wiener Judith Ftynn Samue l Sone hala CTaig Th\J. r mond Steve Wright Karen ZelinSK Y Judy Correy Tom Miller Cynthia He rringshaw John Singlelerry Monroe Walker Willis Gailey William Hoff man Raymbnd 1. Cieslak Dw ighl E. Campbe ll ~ot>en French Ronald L. Hanslng Bill Wi lke r son JaCK SCOII Elaine You ng Richard Hagal Y\'onne Goodwin Calvin Walson Geoffrey Li n -Ra.l ph Komives J im Hanson GaTT ) 1 homas Day!.: Lolita Price J ane t Stae hle Cand,' Ba rnes COTY S. Lothling Glenn Morrow Li nd il Brenner Dwa yne Price Don L. Hanselman Shl rJe}' Joals Donald Gorman J ane I\krchant Gilbert Mllchell Ronald Scot( Barbara Aspeset Stewan Sweetow Josefina Ba lleSleros He len C. Fle ming Tom Cieslak Carol J. Love Terry Schmidt L. Glazer E iseth. Holltns F lorence Salsman Sam.: n e Manln James Madison Stua rd Hagman Jim Turne r Chn s Robinson Nabil T . Halaby John KlelnhOIl Larry Sluman James A. Thomas RoscO{' M, Woosley J e. Jill HantJe Fred Wiene rt WilUam C. Llo yd J erry Hocpked Phil Swanse n ~tacy Mc Be th Wa lter Waite Jull"'t Jackson Bob Grace Rick No nhway [)ennis Mc Nair Ed Loserte r Patty Sawyer Randy Phillips Wakrep Kank Vann C . McPick:e Janet Nugent S. Golds mith George Cecrle RI chard SCali Holli s Settles Jr. Max Long Mariann Chr is tan D. Chauncey Judith Konik off Krisllt' Keppler Anne Rathman Tyrone L. Thomas Pame la Pierson Virginia Selleck: Renen e Anderson Da vid Forward Ronald JaCKson RUlh Rose J. Cles Mark KonikoH Netlie Be lle Morgan M. Banlell Kath~' Lawlt:!ss Tomm" Williams Corliss -Srodis M. F . Wolf J. K. Sible John Demelrios MIK e Milaifell Robbie StOKes Charles E . Barnes Thorn's H. Fisher Rodney G. Higgins John Davies Roben Lambert R. L. Hudson Larry Ber eatdzly R. Laughton Ni cholas E . Bent ley Gilben V. Brown Jr. Steve Rnwlard Bob Williams Debbie Pallerson Terrence Russel Patrich Gorman Juies Merideth Lynn C . Abod Ernest Haynes Sharon Lund Benson Lee Richard M. Moore Otis Gould Mi chae l Hart y Johana Merideth Robin Monc rief J . J . Covas E ugene E. Bridwell Jr. Carol Johnson Linda Gene McCa.r y John Tates John Hany Thomas Merideth Frank Knudson Lovy F. Rubensteen John O. Davis John Gardner Sharon Chop Jacob K. Robinson Tish Cox Morr is Simmons Sandra Owens John Roben J ones Aldon Addi ngt on Gail Black Rhonda Starnes Peter Schenldn Joe Klzysiak Dave Smith Mar), Runyon Norman Johnson SyUiva Harvey Josephs T rlschitta Thomas M. Vaught Earlene Jaeger John Ba ldwin Ka lhleen Va ughn Melvin Shembric.k Tamerle J ackson Mar sha Aver )' Ames R. Demons Paul A. Wagne r Richard J . Ballard Tena Lockett Janen e Hoff man Marcy Peter C r ystal Cambell Gene Cross Joel S. Ede nson Guy Morrill Maurice Fern Williams George Andrew Aroffman Foren Anderson Da le Ground John Childers ~~an B~~~~~~ik Allen A. Nelson P3ddy Larrabee Mary Hiloffauh Dennis Mi savage C unis G. Am.!son J r. Richard Allen Jesse A. Blower He nry Furme r Jr. Willard A. Meyer Rod Roger Denni e M habet Sena Augual James I. Spoone Stuan E . Phillipp Ronald Gillene Edward Sampson Raymond Stephen Gloria Smith Carol Montonmf" r ), Terry E. Zwigofr Paw Buss Steve n S. Ehten John M. Black Lamar W. Gimz Jay Clemons Don BaKer C. Wayne Pr ice Gafs Krasner Gary Miller J ames B. Winters MarK H. Hellmann Cheryl Cole Wilham Puardl Whit Meyer Jerry Hicks Howard BaTT ow Linda Ruue ll Calendar of Events for the Weekend

FRIDAY, APRIL 26- International Student & Faculty Strike- Rally 11 a.m., front of Morris Library. SATURDA y, APRIL 27- March Against Viet-Nam War- Noon, starting In front of Morris Library. SATURDAY, APRIL 27-Viet-Nam Happening-2p.m. Saturday through 6p.m. (an'CI Sunday, April 28) Sunday. Browne Auditorium. No Admission charge' 20 Faculty s~eakers' 10 Anti.War movies'Bands • Light show' Poetry Readings' Folk Music' Guest Speakers' Pottery Sale'

T his adverti sement paid for by Southe rn IlIinO.i s:.Peac.e Com~ i ~!e~.1 ~at~eril ~e Wilkerson, Treasure r...... , ...... " ...... _ ...... - ...... __ ...... _ ....> ..._ . _ .~ . w. .._ .. _ 1 •.•. _ _ ._ . . _ _ ...... _ ...... _ _ ...... _ ...... APril :lA, 1968 First Job: Indiana --ARROw.:- CUM LAUDE McCarthy Group Plans Campaign Short or Long Sleeves Students who worked for alternate candidates, Eugtnta cause, HI believe he can win Periect 'ittlng collars McCanhy in the April 2 Wls­ Handler of Carbondale and 1n November, and more im­ Anchored chip-proof buttons constn .. Primary, have formed Ra ben Griffin of Carbondale. portant, win for the right a Students for McC arthy group The y oppose fow- other un­ r easons." Pre-teBled quality at sru. committed candidate s, includ­ According to Wally King, The group is organizing stu­ ing Congressman K e n n e t h student coordinator for Stu­ form fitting dents to work 1n the May 7, Gray. dentS for McC arthy, his group T~pered t Indiana primary, and to work The stude n[ s have been has signed up more than 40 Authentically designed in the 21st congressional dis­ manning a bootb at University s[Udenrs to work In Indiana Premium fabric trict Illinois primary. for the past week, next weekend. They will be In the June 11 Illinois pri­ signing up stude nts to work in worldng 1n Vincennes and In­ mary, four people from the Indiana. dianapolis. southern Dlinois area will be Monday night [he group beld ~~ Perma·lron runntng as delegates pledged a button dance at Muckelroy to McCanhy from the 21st Auditorium. During the dance, 2 :;MJ -~ district. the candidates spoke to nearly • Exceftenc. in DuI"CllbM ".. THIS GARMfNT /MY If, • """""",Iohod by Fobric otiIdUfto I. Comm.dofIy kllInCI.nd The fsur candidates are for 200 students. ~ aftdatt-.wu.n. 1 Raben Griffin told the stu­ ~<: 2. HandwoU.d reg u a r delega te, George Arrow Inno¥01ionl . 3. MoaIlne woshed-tvmbM dried McClure, of Carbondale and dents he was s upp o rting • Expertty designed and manufoc:tvnd Currency (wa:a.h-...... ar Of gentle cycle) Bob Hunter of Makanda; for McC anhy for Pre side nt be- Exchange Local Business Places Make * Check. C•• he

THE EX~ERT. THERE'S ONE IN EVERY FAMILY

Everybody has an Uncle George. . He's the one who knows whkh car is a piece of j unk. And where you can get practically anything wholesale. Uncle George is a Teal expert with other people's money. But when it comes to your diamond, we're hoing . .. but she hasn't heard to suggest that you ignore him. Because unless Uncle George is a trained gemol ogist , he probabl y knows little mOTe than you the price either. do about diamonds. Every ArlCarved diamond is inspected by a 5 99/ month or 8297/ qlr. gemologist and backed by a written PVPSM guarantee. He evaluates it for carat weight, color, cut and cl arity. & s wimming And at any time dunngyour lifetime, if you Room Board, COEDS, indoor pool, ever wanl to trade your ring in for a more expensi ve S un d eck And COEDS! S ing le Rooms ~ ArtCarved ring, we'll take it back. At it's full value. Guaranleed for SUI/Wier! Free Bus service 10 Ca n Uncle George give you t hat ki nd of classes & olher poinls on campus. g uara ntee? .kCarved6

~ A beautiful 200 pa&-e ~el in e ..u ielt' a nel free MAKE SURE YOU'RE HERE WHEN THE LADY AP.RIVES . ,",: ",:·1 · 1

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C Fruit (ocktai·1 4 fo r 89 Detergent Costellos Frozen Desert Y, gal. 49c Hine Varieties Banquet Frozen TIDE Giant Size Cooking Bags 4 for 89 C

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15·oz . , 39c can Spray Starch We reserve the right · To limit quantities ,..------.:.-, r------., ,....---__...., [~---- SAY.MART COUDON Libby's i Lo.Col Good Quality ! Detergent _ ~: Sliced 99 ( Green 10 ( i. 11 DE ~ii::t 39c j! Chocolate, Hut Chocolate, ' ,Bea ns . . :: ~ with coupon. Limit one coupon per cu.tomer~~! 1. - Coupon valid April 24 thru April 30 1968 - ~l Lemon t'. ... d \! Ql"illo Peac hes Ho , 30~ can I · •. . , ~ i L-.~ ____~ 1-_____----1 .. If, ...... _ . Ap,iI . ~, 1968 ' Pop' According to Russians China May Collaps"e MOSCOW (AP)- Communist munist gains of the Chinese Economic failure led to a rule in China could be over­ revolution.' , waning of Mao's "authority 10; . 1"'- thrown because of Ie a su rging The editorial add e d that and belief in his infallibility," -- wave of discontent" created the edito rial added , and Mao ~ i~ g ;1;.., Mao' 5 policies ar e harm ing a . ~.!:: -. I~~ by the policies of Mao Tse­ the Communist and r evolu­ met this with more hero wo r- ~ v C a ..;= rung, the Soviet Communist tionary movement by leading Ship and greate r militariza- ~.~~ u: -:.. :t Q.o ~ pany said Tuesday. China away from the world tion. ..!",,,,-; ~ C An - 0 - ... peared worried [h a t China Communist parties to o r gan­ ize a world Communist con­ ' ~1 ~ 1 Q.,)~J might cease to be a Com­ --"0 ference against "imperial­ STUDENT ~ ! ~= ~ munist country. What might u-' ism" in Moscow this autumn. ~;.2 J _;sial= succeed communism in China u . 0 RENTALS «>~ Z u was not suggest ed. China has opposed the Soviet­ ~ ~ 0 ., g;! directed move as aimed Now Takin g >-~- = c ... "What is now taking place against it. - • 0 &.~ in China is causing growing Looking over the history of ummer & Fall Contract M"O~ E • u ~ :r: concern and anxiety among communism in China, Kom­ for "'u."JJ 7) .,,>- ~ e~ ~ Marxists-Leninists t hrough­ munist reached the conclusion ..2 ';;;-g ~ ~ c -' • Ap arlments -.::r Cl. ... ~ out the world ," Kommunisr that Mao never had really been I. ~ < . ~~ ~ . E -" "'0 ~ : o said. a true Communist. ·Dormitor ies u'='= tflt has now become evi­ "'C._ .H 0 . ~~ C "Already clearly in sight ·Trailers = 1;.1 IL'" dent ," the editorial said, that oIL = :..(. is the danger of a change in Mao was "guided 'mainly by All Air Conditioned the nature of government in nationalistic r ea son s" in the country and, hence, a real 10 Carbondale Mob ile Horne Sales, building up Communist power No rth Hwy . 51 , Corbor'ldole danger to the Socialist Com- in China. RENTALS GALE WILLIAMS 12 Die As Tornadoes Ph . 457-4422 Sweep Across MilJ,west By th e Associated Press residents of Michigan. Ohio ,\\EET THE I·IISS\~.~AT and Kentucky. Small commun­ Tornadoes swirled out of it ies in all thr ee states were a broad band of thunderstor m s devastated by twiste rs. \\'ITH THE .JIIIt;IAH and smashed sections of the Midwest Tuesday, leaving 12 The northern Kentucky town dead, scores injured and of Falmouth was hard hit, with T •• II.~H hundreds homeless. five persons dead. more than A t or n ado watch issued 100 injured and dozens of hours e arli e r by the U. S. homes destroyed or damaged ..~IISA Weather Bureau forewarned in the community of 2,600. STAltl~lltH Would You !IS •• Believe? • E6~p(lRn IJ DORm

IS renting single, air-conditioned room for only- BSA Slarf,re as low as $695.00

. 125 S~mmer Quarter Silky smooth BSA Starfire IS easy gOing as a lightweight can be- but take off the wraps $ , section B (Room Only) and watch it come ali ve! Here's the best of all worlds, the light touch for tooling around campus plus the big punch for open road excit ement . BSA b ig frame features Irke these make the difference: high performance alloy engrne . .. fou r stroke Single Summer Quarter cylinder o.h.v. power .. . four speed constant-mesh gearbox ... multrple clutch. If you've got a yearning for a lightweight that acts twice ItS Size , step up 10 Starftre See VOUI $145. sectionA{Room Only local dealer for details and full color illu strations of all the new BSA models lor 1968- 250 Starti,e / 441 Victor / 441 5 .5 . / 650 MK IV / 650 Thunderbolt , 650 L'ghtnll1g Contact: Co I'e' up rhos .. OJ'" ' Mrs. C. Pitchford, r Willis I\ /t h b l9 .,rtt~.:.. ';'.:;, . ~ colorful SSA p,'sr ,,'5 Resident Manager FOUl 9 11101 I:!: , 34 1'0 st"IS Ir fu l Egyptian Dormitory <0101 lcol IUS( s: ~ set S .... IOU' 10CiJ i dr!.J f( 1 510 S. University .. ' , . ,Phone 9-3807 •

"Accepted Living Center" Check the Yellow Pages lor your local BSA dei/ler . . over 700 coast (0 COd.t;( P.".10 o From Edwardsville Campus ATTENTION Field Trips Scheduled Saturday GRADUATING Two field trips will be con­ of the Mlssisslpian Culture trip to the bluffs along the du cted Saturday by members which existed from about 900 Great Rive r Road north of o( the Illinois Academy of lO 1300 .A.D. . Alton. MEN Science. The lOur wiU be conducted Starring time is at 9:30 a.m. The trips are pan of the by Roben Hall of the Univer­ Saturday from the parking area If ypu graduate in Jun., AU9U st or D.cemb., and you or. in­ academy's annual meeting at sity of Wisconsin at Milwaukee of Principa College , Elsah. t.r.sted in a cor.. , that eamings offen limit.d only by your the SIU EdwardsviUe Campus. and by Charles Bareis of the The trip will be conducted by ability, a car.. , that is backed by a large national organization Visitors who are not members University of l111nois, ar­ Paul D. Kilburn and John but where you ha.,. the independence of a 5l1li011 bu sinessman, of the academy are welcome chaeologists rece ntly involved Wanamaker, both of Pr inciPa a car•• r thot has man0gement po.. nt ial w i~i n two y.ar ••• if to participate wit1'lo u( charge. In excavations at the Mounds. College. you or. int.r•• ted in a chall..,;. and outstonCIifUji pt••• n t and One of the field trips will The tour will leave at 9 a.m. I n te r e 8 te d persons are future earning. be directed through Cahokia Saturday from the parking lot asked to register by sending Mounds. near East St. Louis, of the Holiday Inn west of Ed­ their names to William J . one of [he Indian sites in wardsville on Route 157. Probst. sru, Edwardsville, ill. CONTACT MR. GLISSON North America represe ntative The other is a botany field 62025, by Thursday. 2p.m.-l0p.m. Thursday,Aprii 25 SIU Represented at Craft Exhibition Holiday Inn, Carbondale Fifteen works by Southern associate professor of .art, Lee Hu of Carbondale, Edna Illlnois University people wa s awarded an honorable Kaufman 0 f Haifa, Israel, we re accepted at the first mention. Muriel West of ' Carbondale C~ndida t.s must be 22 to 30 year. of ag., married, pref.robly Regional Craft Biennial Ex­ Other ceramic works dis­ and Frances Walker of Mur­ draft e.empt and" ith a desire to earn a tr..... ndou. i nCOMe . hibition which opened at the played included pieces by Mrs. physboro. Ruth Glnsberg, in­ J .B. Speed Museum in Louis ­ Katherine Walsh, wife of structor, is represemed in An aptitude ~att.ry will be gi.,en to h; fp you determine your ville. Ky. Thomas Walsh. art faculty the weaving section of the pot~tiol. A plastic panel by Nicholas member, and stude nts Leslie exhibition. Vergerte, Stu ceramist and Mile y of Evansville . Ind .• Thomas La Douse of Kenosha, ON STAGE NEXT WEEK! Business Director Wis., and Thomas Dimond of South Milwaukee. Wis. GEORGE AND IRA GERSHWIN'S MUSICAL COMEDY To Present Film Me talwork is exhibited by S re m Kin gton, associate pro­ Alpha Kappa PSi. profes­ fessor . and students Mary s io n a I bus iness fraternity, will sponsor a short film and. OF THEE t alk by Roben S. Gamble at D'AVID F. LOW DaviS Aud itorium on Wed nes­ Watchmake r day at 7:30 p.m. I SING- Gamble , a graduate of Bow­ Warche.·Clock. and doin College, is the senior inte rvie wing s pecialis t a n d Jewelry Repair ing assistant to the per sonnel di­ MAY 3 & 4 rector for A. C. Neilsen Co ., Watchband8 t he wo rld's lar gest market r e­ Leather·Metal UNIVERSITY THEATER-8 P.M. sea r c h organi zation . Gam­ ble"s tal k will be on th e Special Order. TICKETS AT UNIVERS"nY CENTER AND BOX OFFICE. "Neilsen Market Index." The publ ic is invited. 412 S. Illinois STUDENTS -$1.50 NON-STUDENTS-$2.00 lO'/N THE LIVEABLES

~ L~ 7Owe-u MaJUY(/ For the gals For the guys 504 S. Rawli ngs 509 S. Ash Robert Rieman, Mgr. Carl Hamilton, Mgr. 457-6471 549-1369 Accepted Living Centers Efficiency Apartments * Only 2 to an Apartment * Private Bath * Air Conditioned * Large Paneled Living Area ' * Laundry Facilities * Close to town * Close to Campus

Summer Fall $135 $165 to Present Show, Performance 0 n Sunday The University Male Glee Plainsong, Poule nc and Dvorak Club with Robert Kingsbury, will be presented along with conductor. will present a con­ arrangements by Kingsbury, cert Sunday at 4 p.m. in Hunter, Parker and Shaw. So­ Shryock Auditorium. Rebecca loist Karl Ko y will perform Hindman and John Porbeck, "Sometimes Love," and Barry accompanists, will be assisted Karlberg will perform the by John Goodwin, cellist. folksong HWher e Have All the S e 1 e c { ion 5 from Bach, F lowers Gone."

Wensday,April"",rl" 24,4 pm. to 8 pm. ALL YOU CAN EAT ·only

Agnes Moorehead t~ Speak At Convocation Thursday THAT'S7" RIGHT Ag nes Moorehead, star in ac ed from Muskingum College Toni g ht a nd eve r y W e dnes da y ABC -TV's '''Bewitched,'' will in New Concord, Ohio, re­ be guest speaker in Thursday's ceived a master's degree in all the fish, slaw, f rench fries Convocation programs in English and public speaking Shryock Auditorium. from the Univer sity of W i6- and bread you can eat for only 7.Se . During her car eer, Miss consin. a degree from the Moorehead has achieved star­ A m eric~n Academy of Dra­ dom in ever y e ntertainment matic Arts in New York C ity, m e diu m-radio. television. and holds honorary doctorates morion ' picture s and stage­ from three colleges and uni­ receiving five Academ y Award versities. nominations. She devotes much of her spare rime [ C instructing young The PINE ROOM Born in C linton, Mass. , she talent in drama wi th director moved with her famil y [Q St . Ri chard Whorf. They r ecently Louis in earl y childhood where established a theatre and film she began a career in the instruction school in Los theatre. Starring at age 10, Angeles. she spe nt summers perform­ Fo llowing the 10 a.m. cnn­ ing in the theatre and worked vocation, a co1 tee hour wi 11 be with the St. Louis Municipal held in the University Center Ope ra Company fo r four years. River Rooms wh er e stud ents Miss Moorehead was gradu- may meet Mi ss Moorehead. Atomic Energ.r Commission Talk Set David L. Foster of the ture is sponsored by the De- Atomic Energy Commission panment (If BOlany and the for Chicago will speak on "The lectures and enterta inme nts AEC Regulatory Program" at committee. 3 p.m. today in the Seminar r-~~------~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::' Room of the Agriculture Build- ing. The talk. will deal With r egulatOry rules applying to universities engaged in radio- WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL acti ve research. Open lO the public, the lec - SUNDAY, APRIL 28 8P.M. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL GYMNASIUM VARSITY ATHLETES v • . people who don't want to think small, WHEEL CHAIR ATHLETIC CLUB EPPS See t.hese SIU Va rsit), a lh eleles preform in wheelchair." OTOR Andy Kukic . Ja.v Jr ·est coll Roger Bechtold' Bobby Jack soll Highway 13 -East Hou'a rd K eene , Roger Be'ellloid Ralph Gal/owa)' Ph. 457-2184 see the Wheelc hair Ath letic C lub lr:r to an'ngE' ioI lasl ,st>('o nd do uble -ove rtime 1961 de re aL Over~eos Del ivery Avoioble A lltic/·; .. t. ,01,1 at Ih.· door. STUDENTS: .S Oc , RE(;ULAR ADMISSIO N: Sl .

_ . , ...... ~ ...... , • •• _._ •..• .• ~~ ...... , ...... '_ "_ ' _ ' '''T> '.~ .''' ' ' ' '''''' '' '' ~ -, ...... ___ . " .... ~ ... - _ .:.- ...... -- ••••..•. . •••.•. ' . Activities Tickets for May 12 Bob Hope Show Go on Bale Today

Advance tickets for the Bob The Depanment of Music will nomics Bullding, room 140B Univer sity School Pool from pr esent Jerry Lacey, di­ Hope show on May 12 ar e hold a faculty r ecital featur­ at 8 p.m. 5:45 to 7 p.m. r ector of the J acKson-Wil­ on sa l e at [he Univer sity ing soprano Marla Water­ The Music Society w!ll hold The Women' s Recreat ion As­ liamson County Com munity Center Information Desk. man, in Shryock Auditorium its meet ing in the University sociation will m eet in the Action Program, who will Ticket prices a r e: $2.50, at 8 p.m. Center, room 0, at 10 a.m. Agricultur e Seminar Room speak: at their meet ing in $3.50, $4 .50 and $5. A A 3-M demonstration will be An FFA meeting will be held from 9:30 to 10:30 a. m. the Univer sity Cente r, roo m d iscount of 50 cents will held in the Unive rsity Cen­ in the Univers ity Center. Gr aduate Wives will meet in C at 7:30 p.m. Elections be given to student purchas­ ter Illinois and Sangamon room 0 , at 2 p.m. Women's Gym 208 from 6 of officer s will also be held: e r s of the $4 .50 and $5 Room s from '8a.m.to5p.m. The Am erican Medical As­ to 9 p.m. tickets. The College of Agriculture sociation will meet in the Newman Cente r will sponsor WALL ST. A Mon Foundation m e e (i n g dinner will be held in the University Center, room 0 its ann u a 1 Internation al will be held in [he Univer s ity Unive rsity Center Ballroom . at 4 p.m. Night in the Newm an Center Center Ballrooms A, B. and B at 7 p.m. The Activities Programming at 8 p.m. QUADS C from S a,m. [0 5 p.m. The Social Wor ker Club wUl The Depanment of E ng II s h Board Executive Council IS N ~ ACCEPTING Luncheon will be at 12 noon. will pre se n t "Tunc - The will meet in the University The Cr ab Orchard Kennel Club Element of Religion in 'Fin­ Cente r. room 0 at 6:30p.m. AP.J'Lrc ATIONS FOR will conduct dog obedie nce negans Wake '" in its Irish A SOC ial Work Club meeting training classes in the Ag ­ Studies Lectur e, co be given will be held in the University riculture Arena from 7 p,m. by DeniS J ohnson, Ir i s h Center, room C, from 7:30 SUMMER to 9:30 p.m. dramatis t and author, in to 9 p.m. A Student Senate meeting will the Home Economics Build­ A Campus Folk Art Society be held in the University ing, r oom I 22A at 4 p.m. m eeting will be he ld in the QUARTER Cente r Ballroom A at 7:30 The Unive r sit y School Gym Universit y Center, r oom C, LU XURIOUS AIR p.m. will be open fo r recreation at 9 p.m. SHOE REPAIR CONDITIONED APARTMENTS The Depanment of Botany will from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. Choice '68 will meet in the pr esent a lecture on ffThe Weight lifting will be open Unive r s ity Center, room H, all tWrn guaran tef!d 155.00 OTR. Atomic EnergyCommission to male st udents in theUni­ fr om 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. • 1207 S. WALL Regulatory Program ," by versity School, Room 17, The Southe rn Illinois Peace 7-4123 David Foster in the Ag­ from 2 to 10 p.m. Committee will meet in the riculture Seminar room at Phi Kappa Phi will hold a Universit y Cente r . room H. 3 p.m. meeting in the Home Eco­ from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Divis ion of Technical and nomics Building, Room 202, Marine Corps recruiting will VAULT Adult Education's "Great fr om 4 to- 5:30 p.m. be held in the Unive rsity Decisions of 1968 Lecwre Fine An s Festival: A crafts Center, room H, from 8 a.m. S e r i e s " will pr e se n t workshop will be held in the to 5 p.m • .. Ame rican Power and For­ Allyn r oom s I and II, from Al pha Phi Omega will meet e lg" Policy" by F r an k 9 a.m. to noon; an audio­ in the H om e Econom ics Klingberg in the Un iver s ity kinetic laboratory, includ­ Building, room 122, from 14 ;1.) j C IC.] ~I School Studio Theate r at 7 ing ~t ud e nt s ' works, will 9 to iO:30 p.m. be held in the Home Eco- p.m. T he Women' s Recr eation As­ At Hontman'8 gi vcs you. sociation volleyball (class) Cape Girardeau will be held ill Women's Gym 207 from 4 to 5 p.m.; • All your winter woolens volleyball (house) will be Southeast Missouri Board he ld in Women's Gym 207 • Finished and hung on from 7 to 9 p.m. Aquaettes will meet at the individual hangers To Reconsider 8 Firings Fes tival Features • Bonded Insurance

Southeast Mi ssouri S tat e A facult y committee wrote • Itemized Receipt College' s Board of Regents Scully [he abrupt dismissals A rt Sale, Ex hi bits will reconsider (he dismissal "contributes to a fear among S1'ORE NOW ... PAY NEXT FALL of' eight teacher s that cr eated other facuh y member s [hal An art sale and exhibit is a fa c ulty crisis and student the y tOO may be released for scheduled from 3 to 9 p.m. For only $4.95 plus cleaning . protests. any variet y of reasons un­ May 11 at [he Spring Festi­ ~ $1000 in,.ranee. Following 3 meet ing of r ep­ r e lated to [he ir professional val Midway. r esent 3rives of the faculty and qualifications. ,. Sponsored by the Special college Preside nt Mark F . Events Committee of the Some of those dismissed Scully, the Board of Regents Festival, a booth fe aturing have c ited r easons [hey be­ will s tudy the mane r at a the le ft bank of paris atmos ­ lieve led to lhei r fin ngs. They phere will display the work. 303 S. UNIVERSITY PHONE 457 -4000 meeti ng Thursda yin Cap e are; Girardeau. Participating srudenrs will Ninety-two teache r s , about R oger Harrr.s andC l ark determine prices attached to HOTE THEDIFFEREHea a third of the faculty, have Pennington, lhal they are fac ­ articles. signed a petition char ging the ult y advisers of Students for Those inte r ested in ex­ This Week' s Dandy Deal adm inist ration with under­ a De mocratic Society; John hibiting s hou ld contact Deena min i n g the mo r ale of the Reardon, rhat he ha s been ac­ Vukmirovich at 3-4159 or fa culty. tive in Cape Girardeau c ivil Mrs. J eanne Rohe n a[ the Eight teachers in five aca­ r ights actiVi t ies during the Student Activities Office by Ham Sandwich demiC departme nt s r eceived pas t year; Louis Cantor, that 5 p.m. Ap ril 30. identical two-sentence lener s he IS an our spoken li beral, April 10 indicating they would and Herben SCott, that he is nm be r ehired next fa ll. The fac.uhy sponsor of a sludent & lener s sem by A.R. Meyer, literary m3gazi ne which has dean of instruction, gave no be€'n criticized b y some ad­ HEY LOOK! explanation of [he Board's de ­ mi nisrralion officials. Salad Cision. NO FOOllN' Sxpert Syewear Vo u Can Come & Steo l'em' 79¢ Proof is in the P uddi ng A THOROUGH EYE 58 Chev. Sed. Sharp EXAMINA TION S149 April 24 - 30 r~,"_"'~ WILL BRING YOl ) 60 Ol ds Conv. Air Condo '\. ;.0' .. ' I ' S19 9 / \ ~ 1. Co rrect Prescrip tion 2. Correct Filting 58 Ford V·BSt ick O.K. 3. Correct Appearance $69 Sm;" avai la ble fo r most 54 ( hev. Sed. Oi l Burner \41 $39 -_eyewea. - 1 r w b~ e.10~~ i !- _ r- R easonable MANY MANY MORE , C" nt ad I. ,' n, cs I P rices WE'LL TELL YOU 1- - __ I L....------, CONRAD OPTICAL HILTON .MOTORS 327 NORTH ILL. AVE ,( 11 S. Illinois . Dr . l ee II. Jo t r ~ Optom ~ t ris t 457 -4919 16th and Monr.oe. Herr in - 0,. ~t)nra d . C pt~un e t'i $t 942-S5Od' Carbondale E., Main, CC;Hbondale · Pa.o. . 13 Study Of Newman Foundation Requested by Priests Senate

~ An in- depth study of the at age 70 effective Jan. I, Catholic Stude n t Newman 1970. Foundation at SIU was on of The Senate approved affilia­ the resolutuions discussed and tion with the National Federa­ appr oved at a Carbo n da l e tion of Priest Councils , pre­ meeting of the P riests Senate sently in the process of form ­ of the Diocese of Belleville ing. held last week. The g r 0 u pas ked fqr The 'study of the Newm3;n three se rm o ns on white Foundation will be conducted r acism and racial indifference by the Senate's Resear cb and before J une I. Development Committee. A r equest ' Jor permission Other r~so lu tions approved to say Mass ./ in the homes include the option of separate of laity was resubmitted after residence for ass 0 cia t e a negative r esponse 9-¥ the pastors presently forced to bishop to a previous r equest. live in established rectories; The Priests Senate of the a basic equal salar y for a ll Diocese of Beileville is com­ clergy; a r equest that every pOsed of an e lected board of prj e s ( be consulted before 18 priests r epresenting the every appointment; and the Roman Catholic priests of the option of retirement at age 26 counties in southern 65 with mandator y retirement IllinoiS. T hese coed s will vi e for th e Miss Sou thern title, T hey 'are. seated from le n , Dian a Wag­ Pianist, Soprano To Give Recital ner , J an i c e T h ompson , Sh iela K ay' Belbas, Anne Walker , Diann Taylor. Phy llis Green Marla Waterman, soprano, r anged by SIU faculty member and Nancy Mecum; st andi n g, from len . H el en and Steven Barwick, pianist, Joseph Baber. Included in the will be pre sented in a faculty Southe r n Contestants H icks, K athy Callah an , Carol Roseen, J en­ last half oJ the concert will be n ifer H arroun, Camilla Bruc h , Denise D . recital at 8 p.",. Wednesday r w 0 ari-ls fro m Puccini's in Shryock Auditor ium. opera "Turandor. " Novak. pat Newhar t and L inda SP ark s. Not Miss Waterman will open to pictured is Chandra Ellis . The winner wi ll The concert is open the the recital with an aria, public free of charge and be announ ced at the 8 0 b Hop e show fl.tal' 12. "Dove sana i bei momenti" music credit will be given. from "The Marriage of Figa­ ro. " After the aria she will perform the "Frauenliebe und SPORTS FANS! . 16 Coeds Vie for Mi~s Southern Leben" song cycle by Robert Schumann. The first half will Contestants for the Miss bondale., and the state tirIe versiry judges. The winner close with selections from five Soutbern title will be judged holder will serve as mistress will be crowned May 12 at the Shake ar- at a pageant at 8 p.m. May of ceremonies. Ma yor David Bob Hope Show in the SIU I 4 in Shryock Auditorium. Keene will present Miss Il ­ Arena. Sixteen coeds will Vie for linois with a boquet and a During the week of May 4, BET tbe title. They will display key to the city. A parade has the semi-llnabsts wi ll appear YOU their talems and participate been scheduled i n her honor in on f' The Hou r" television show in bathing SUif and evening the afternoon from the airport in Harrisburg. DIDN'T gown competition. to a motel. The sixteen contestams are KNOW May 4 has been designated Five semi- finalists wi ll be Chandra IE llis, Diana Wagner, "Miss nlinois Day" in Car- selected by a panel of Uni- Janice Thompson, Shiela Kay Belbas, \ Anne Walker, Diann Taylor, Phyllis Green, Nancy BY Kahn to Speak at TP Forum Mecum, Helen Hicks, Kathy Callahan, Carol Roseen, Jen­ JAMES G. SIMPSON M el~n A. Kahn, associate ference?" at the Thompson nifer Harroun, Camilla Br uch, pr ofessor of government, will Point Forum at 9 : 15 p.m. Denise D. Novak, Pat Newhart Undoubtedly, the mO",l speak on "Democrats and Re­ Thursday in Dining Room 3 and Linda Sparks. McDONALD'S IS DEDICATED famous nickname in all of publicans : Is There a Dif- of Lentz Hall. sports was Babe Ruth's _ Phi Kappa Phi to Meet rO MAKING TASTv,DWCIOUS but, do you know how he got The lecture and following HAM8URGERS' r-__"-- , Ihat nickname? . . . Babe Pencils, Paper Wanted discussion is sponsor ed by Phi Kappa Phi, all-Univer­ grew up in an ol"phanage in Steagall Hall and RHA Edu­ sity honor society, will hold lIlERe'S GREAT SAT!SFAaloN Afro-American African Stu­ ~~tT8~r~~d ' ;t~h~n ~~d'~~~ cation::!.l Programming Board. its annual spring meeting\ at IN DOiNG A ,s08 LIKElHAT of the orphanage.Abe Balti· dent Unicn will sponsor a Convocation cr edit will not 4 p.m. today in Room 202 of more baseball ,team signed tutoring service for the be given for the forum. the Home Economics Building. him ... Ruth had never children of northeast C ax:bon­ seen much of the outside dale. world up to that time, and looked even younger than he Donations of penCils, paper and e le mentary texts are re­ rl~all)joi~~~' lh'c T~:iti~~~~ quested. Donators should con­ team, some of the oldeJ' c lay. tact Lin d a Alexand er or f~s ili~~e\\'~~:;.~ 3aSnJ "thacbn~ Crystal Campbell at I 09Small J~ naturally, some started call­ Group Housing, or 7-7777. in ~ him "Bilb£'" ... Sports· writers co\,pring the teilm picked it up. and that nick­ AIR CONDITIONERS ";~!' tu:~;J; me used so often SEE YOUR that few people - then 01 Ea rly Bird Special now - know that his j'eal name was George Ruth, 4000 BTU liS V 98.00 o 0 CREDIT Here's a question for \'011 go l! (al1.). " Who are 't.h~ 5UOO BTU 1I5V 108.00 only two bl'others who have BTU e\'er won the PCA golf cham· UNION 6000 115 V 138.00 pionship? , , , They are thE" Hebel1 brothers , , , Lion!'1 7000 BTU 115 V 168.00 won the PGA title in 1957 for Low Cost 8000 BTU 115 V 188.00 and Jay in 1961, lOOOO BTU 115 V 228.00 Did you know that relief pitchers weren't used \'e11' AUTO 12000 BTU 115 V 248.00 often in major league base· ball back in the old da\'s For ('xa mple, in 1904, 't he 14000 BTU 115 V 308.00 Boston Red Sox played 15; 10000 BTU 220 V ;James and u ;-; N;t relief pitc h· 198.00 ers in only nine «::Im~') all 12000 BTU 220 V 218.00 y('ar: . .- 14000 BTU 220 V 238.00 I bet you didn't know Ih::ll FINANCING 16000 BTU 220 V 248.00 fg~;c~e I f1each~~I;:('ta~~~~ ~ lower of'.:Iib rate .:md ar(> 11\', 18000 BTU 220 V 268.00 In :::' fit"(- '('.:Irs lon~er on I1lE SIU ;, \"t'r:l !: (> I han oon·rollt';:: e 20000 BTU 220 V 288.00 McDonald'~ mc'n, ThC' iowlIT death r atE' is ~ kind of place, .'1 <"clircC' mt:"n make!' po~ Employees 23500 BTU 220 V "I ble hnl;l,:e> r ~ndilc an{1 358.00 :::: rt~ 2 i t 'r (':I~n \'a!up ;: U'! Ct)I· 27000 BTU 220 V :t',.:,' L n" UI 'IIt'lr:, ; ' hl~ .~ er · CREDIT' UNION 398 ..00 !:!i nly m.:l!.('~ ~( ..x; !'cn.:p. r.n('~r.' l :1 ' 901 South Elizabeth LEE and HILLYER ~ The COLLEGE LIFE INS . CO . PH . 453- 2736 APPLIANCE CENTER Entranc e To 413 S. II1inois 7-8090 512 Wesl Ma in Center Phone . 9-2189 .. Independen t 8 Years Nf3W Conference Merger Recommended by Study

B)' Dave P alenno Slnce Boyds mn became ath- inciding with the MV C ' s r e ­ le tic direcmr in 1957 SIU has COnside ration. Athle rics at The thrill of banling for a won 25 of 42 pos s ible 11 AC Sourhe rn wa s a question mark confe r e nce champions hip may c hampionships. His overall hinging i>fl the findings of rhe r e turn s oon to Sl U. winning perce mage in the con- commissiOll. Re comme ndarions by th e fe r e nce from 1957 to 1962 Be ~s e) of (hi ~ , Preside nt SIU Study Commission on In­ wa s .738 with 395 wins , 135 Morris wrote to confere nce te rco lle giate Athletics, 3.J ­ losses and fi ve ties. offic ials asking a "'2I le to the prove d by [he Board of T rus­ Afte r le aving rhe . I1 AC , consideration of adding SIU tees and turned ove r to P res­ Southe rn applie d for me mber- to the confere nce. ide nt Delytc W. Morris for s hip in the Missouri Valley In a le tte r sem to PhUlip rHification and e xecution, e n­ Confe r ence. Bake r of Bradley Unive rsity, courage confe r e nce affilia­ Boyds ton talked with No r o; Morris s aid, " We wish to in­ tion. vall Nave , commissione r of form you of thiS study and Article 10 of the recom ­ the MV C, and was told the s uggest [hat no cons ide ration me ndations advise SIU athlet­ confe r e nce wa s ime r~ste d in of me mbers hip of S[U in the ics « to become associate d, admining ne wly- inde pende nt Misso.uri Valley Confernce be i n a confe r e nce , with unive r ­ STU. made at this time or during s ities having s imilarities in Howeve r, three pre r e qui - the s tudy pe riod. " purpose, organization, s tude nt s ires s tood in the path : (l) As a r esult , the MVC by­ body a nd gene ral characte ris­ me mber s we r e to have a foor- pa ssed Southe rn and admined tics . Such a confe r e nce affil­ ball s tadiu,m with a seating Me m'ptl is St.ate U niv e ~ s it y . iation s hould le ad [ 0 high le ve l capac Hy of 20,000, (2) the Ma ny be lI eve Morns wrote This picture or O scar Moore was pe rformance and cooper,arion s chool neede d a fieldhouse to the MV C because of the la ke n earlie r when the SIU tra c k amo ng its me m ber s in univer­ tha t couid seat 4,000 fans confe r e nce ' s e mphais on foot­ star ..... as reelin g no pa in rrom an s ity a ctivities othe r than ath­ and (3) the MV C re qui r e d that ball, a s po rt in which SIU has injuf)' Lo his r ight ank l e. T h e an ­ letiCS. " me mber s offe r a speCifie d found little s uccess . Record Se tter kle ..... as ope/ a led on last ..... ee kend If [his are a o~ the r e co m ­ numbe r of scholars hips . The s tud y comm is s ion' s and a physic ian said T uesda)' me ndations is carrie d out, SIU's football s tadium wo ulc:! recomme ndarions do nor in­ lhat Moore will be r eady t o run a­ SIU would lose its s tatus as be burs ting at the seams with e lude a ne w foorbal1 s tadium 13,000 fans . le t alone 20.000. o r affiliation with the MV C . gain DtXl s pring . an inde pende nt for the first time in e ight years . , ... is wa s perhaps the main T he commission does reco m­ In 1962 SIU broke re la tions proble m for Southern. m e nd pa rtici pation in a con- with the Inte r s tate Inte rcol ­ Als o , rhe bas ke tball Salukis fe r e nce s imilar to the Big Moore 's Operation le giate At hle tic Confe r ence, we r e pl a ying the ir game s in E ight, '"W hich ha s a highe r an affiliate of ·the NAIA , and what is now the gir ls' gym, acade mic s tanding a nd bette r e nte r e d into the r anks of the locate d near Old Main. It all - around s pons p r o gra m NCAA a s an inde pe nde nt. had a capac ity of 1.000. than the MV C. Called Successful A r rhe time it wa s no s ur­ As far the NCAA s cholar- Wh at happens next is specu- prise rhat Southe r n w 0 u I d s hips r ecomme nded by [he lutior.. Howe ver, one thing le ave the II AC s ince the Sa­ MV C, SIU had no s uch scholar- is c ertain: At no time since i~;{~ . cons tantly dominated the s hips . Southern le ft the II AC has MVC officials evade d the confe r e nce partic ipation been By Bone Spec ialis t During the 1961 - 62 season questio n of admitting Southe rn more of a ce rtainty. StU duplicate d its feat of the a r that time . As rhe caliber r--__= ..... = ..... ~=::'_=_., 8~ ' J erry Poe uS M oor e started schoo l i n [he previous y e. a r by winning of athle tics at STU improve d, HERM 5 An operanon on [r ack star spring of 1965 a nd s hould c ha mpions hips in nine of 10 howe ve r , the admittance of Oscar M oore' s leg has bet.' n gr aduate at Ihe end of 1969 . s ports . Only the (ennis {itle Southe rn aga in became a pos ­ Barber Shop ter m ed a SUCCeSS by bone Upon ent er i ng school he had e vade d thl: Salukis , who won s ibility. 5 p ee i a l is [. Dr. Ho r sl von three yea r s of e li gibility left 105 of 13 1 conte s ts . Southe r n now had a ne w We accept Paleske o f Carbondale . T he i n spons. He ha s four sl..'aso ns T h e ma ins pring in up- bas ke lba ll fie ldhouse, the SIU operallon wa s on [he a chilles ' of e ligibility r m aining: one gr ading s po n s a t SIU in rhe Ar ena. The que s tion of NCAA APPOINTMENTS l endon, the te ndo n co nnect i ng season In c ross count r y; tWO pa s t seve r al he a r s ha s be e n schola r s hi ps didn't see m a s the bllck of [he hee l 10 the i ndoor sea sons ano one O U[- tUhle tic Director Do na ld imporra m. Now the Sa lukjs Call 5J 9-4042 m us cle of the right ca lf. door sea son. Boyds ron. we r e winning agins t top- notch The o p e r al i o n wa s per­ Oun ng his college ca r eer When Aoyds ton beca me he ad com petition in all s ports . 203 W. Walnut formed lasl Friday by Dr . of rhe athle tic prog r am a t The SIU Srudy Co mmission Oscar has been one o fth ~ best vo n Paleske . Moor e was r c ­ Sill, the Sa luk is had wo n on o n Inte r collegiate Athle tics c r 0 s s count r yme n Southern le ased fr om the hospital Mon­ o nc confe re nce c ha its wo rk in 1 da y and hc r e tu r n e d to has eve r pr oducL' d. Despite the campus. hi s 29- ye ar- old age , he s hould To p His leg will be in a ca s t be back next year as s[ rong for SI x weeks . Aft e r that as ever ro break exis ting r cc - li me will be [he ma jor fa cto; or ds . Moor e cur rentl y ho lds CLASSIFIE:l ADVEHISING RATES i n decIding when he wi ll be thre e SIU schoo l r e~o r ds in · Com pl .. , .. """ " Onl> 1-5 USInC b ..llpo, n l p .. n . • Pnnl in a ll C A P ITAL L E T TE RS able 10 run aga in in com - t [r ~ ck and look pan . In Ihe 4- 1 DAY ...... JS t per line pe! itiono A "walk ing he e l" mIle r ela y ream which broke On .. numb ... o r 1.. 11 10 ' p ... ~p. c .. was PUt on his cast !2 ~ ~ !'" .. th.e scho.ol r ecor d in 19.6 7 3 DAYS .. ( C o n S", CUll v", ) • •...... 6 S t p e r line 0 0 n OI u~ .. S lO p .... ' .. lO p ...... (0' punrlu .uCrn SkIp s p a c .. s b .. I ...· e ..n " 'o rds .. Coa.c h Le w Hart zog said, ~nl~~vi~u~r~ :C ~:d!6i:~~I~d e~ I;~ 5 DAYS .. (Con n c u live ) ...... 8 St per line Cow." a n )' p a rI o ( • lin .. 85 • full li n .. . It wIll be three mo nths be - mile r un, 8:41 .9; 3-m ile run, OMo ne y ... nnOI be . e fund .. d "ad II conce lle d . DEADLINES " 0'1;1), Ecy p l l .. n ' e S"'V" S Ih .. " Ch I l O r" Je e l .ny for e Os c.ar will be . ab.le to 13: 29. 8; a nd [he 6- m ile run, " 'ed . thru S. I . ..d .. I"'O d.y s prior 10 publ i c .l lo n . .d,·e"15,"!: ",oP )· . s tan tr aln:ng, that IS If the JS· ·)6 1 Tue s .•d s ...... F rid .y . m uscle he als co r r ec t l y ." - . - • . Moor E= will not be used ne xt ,------., fa ll duri ng {h e c ro s s country I DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM season, but will see some ac ­ Mo il order form with remittance to Daily Egyptian, Bldg. T. 48. StU Don du ri ng the winter indoor '\ NAME ______DATE ______~eaSGn if the leg improves I s ufficient ly. Midland ADDRESS PHONE NO . 211"'" KIND OF AD 3 RUN AD 4 CHECK ENCLOSED HillS, 01 DAY FOR • T. r,nO, •• ' co '" 03 DAYS m u ltiply 101 111 numbe r u f Iln' 5 I,m .. ~ "0'" p ... \ ,n .. • s ; n d ic. ,ed under ~ .I es . 'F o r .. . ample . If ,-uu ' llo n OS DAYS • ri v e lin .. . d (or " ,' .. d.)·s , l o lio! roSI .1 !~ ~:; taQI; .1I0 ..· .l d.ys fo ••d (8S t IrS ) . O • • 1"'0 Ir nr .d fo r In ' ,,,, d ;r. rl ,' 01>11 10 SUrt if mailed S I . JO (6 5 , 1:2 ). MInimum ';0 " fo r .. n .. d , .. ;0( . ~ COURSE . --"" Special Student Membership Rates • Indi vidual Membe rships • Family Memberships reen fee play all week RENTAL CLUBS AVAILABL Rt . 51 5Y,m; . S• . • 1 C'dal. DAILY EGYPTIAN..... Page 15 South Africa Out of Mexican Olympics

LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) South Africa to .compete in the This r eversed an IOC ve r­ be served by standing on house the multimillion dollar Olym­ tops and shouting our anger to pi CS if South Afr ica c() mpeted. -South Africa was officially Oct. 12-27 Games. dict decided by a postal vote A simple majority of 36 during the Winter Olympics the world and vilifyln~ the lex; Many other nations, e!:.­ voted out of .the Mexico City as s uch." said the president. pecially the So vi t:t Union had Olympics Tuesday. was required. b u [ an IOC at Grenoble, France, a little spokesman said at least 40 more than seven weeks ago. Fra nk Braun. for cefull y tndlcatt:d they also The International Olympic votes already have come in At that time 36 of the 71 He said South Africa will would not compete With South Committee said a majority against South Africa. And not voted in favor of South Af­ carryon In tbeOlymplcmove­ Africa. of Its 11 members had voted all of tbe votes are in yet, r ica's r einstatement. The na­ ment ,ceven if we are excluded The IOC, dominated by a to withdraw the invitation to he added. . tion had been banned in 1963 this vear." powerful elite of r ich idealists because of its racial policies. The vote of the IOC mem­ and headed by Aver y Brundage bers backed the r ecommen­ The Grenoble decision was of Chicago, was generally In Aquaettes Water Show based on a pledge by Soutb dation of the lOG's nine-man favor of readmitting So uth Af­ African Olympic Comminee executive board. Tbe board r ica to pre S~r v e the uni ver­ officials to send a multir a­ met in an emergency session sality of the G~mes . cial team to Mexico City. here last week recommended Brundage had consistently Scheduled May 1, 2, 4 In Johannesburg, the head that South Africa' s invitation be maintained"" through the year s of South Africa's Olympic withdrawn, that " the Olympics is ~ above Committee sai~ uTbe Lau­ Mexico'.s organizing com­ D on n a Machlek, Marl e n e politics," . The WRA Aquaettes will hold sanne decision is illegal, im­ mitee had requested the emer­ their 8Mual water show May Meinhardt, Lenora R et z e r , But the pr essure of world moral and unconsti tutional." g e n c y m e e tin g following opinion forced the e mergency 1, 2 and " In the Univer sity Lora Stott, Kerry Schoenbron, threats by mo r e than 40 na­ Linda Tauber and Pam Wey­ but added, "We will accept the session and the second vote. School s1"imming p001. illegal poSition as it stands tions that the would bo con This year's theme will re­ haust. now in a gentlemanly manner ," volve around uThe Mad Hat­ Tickets for the 8 p.m. May WANT to HAVE I and 2 and the 4 p.m. May f< We feel, at this stage at WALL ST . ter." An added attraction will least, no useful purpose would A be a Bonnie andClyde number. 4th shows are on sale at the Participating in the show will University Cemer. Price w~.ll QUADS PARTY be Bob Schoos, John Currin be 50 cents fo r s tudents and PERSONAL I rs NOW ACCEPTING the and Carey Burke. 75 cents for non-students, Girls In the s how wlll be; . ' POSTERS I APPLICATIONS FOR 12:20 CLUB Helen Weyhaupt, Gayle Zion, '" urx24- I IS NOW Kathy Cochran, Pam Helqulst, ~ , . Sena your blllC" ana l I .::: .... h'le or color Vicky Hollar. 8 e v Johnson, . Pholo O' '' .... 'no I SUMMER AVAIL*'SLE FOR LEASE Bobbi Lewis, J an Lougeay. I1I 0 ' · I ' II • Negat,ve Ooeumenl I I ~"f:~"'":~ . . M"gaz,ne P'c FOR PRIVATE PARTIES I GREAT FOR GIFTSll QUARTER Parker Se l ects UK 7S SUNDA Y - THUR SDA Y .. " T OIOSSY pronl 01 you. I CARTERVILI.E High School, signed Tuesday I or'g,nal senl .... lItl e,ch O'dS' Add I IlI)7 S- WALL phone a letter of intent to enroll I SOC ~;'ReS~N':t ' ;o~~;~S I at the Universit y of Kentucky, .r.o .••• ll11 51 . Lo.I • • • I ...... t 'lilt I 7-4123 985.6675 985. 3116 Daily Egyptian Classified Action Ads The Daily Egyptian reser"es the right to reject a~y advertising copy . No refunds on cancell.d ads.

Full set o! scuba diving dquJpment, Weadngbobae a lrcondltloner forllale . Untv. approved, 3 bedroom duplelt. Reaerve your Topycopy ktt now. Call at 5 p.m .•nd alter II p.m. 8SOO B~ . Bough! Sept. 1967. SI SO. Also furn. 3. rm. lIpt. Boch avaU.ble (plude Mutenl Ph. 457-5757. FOR SALE 7-S143. 4883A C.ll after 5 :00. 457-8957. 4908A Summer ~rm &; on. Ph. 7-4334. 4191E IS3BS Bait De SotO, sml., me d., large min­ Royal portable typewriter. $60. Goya Golf clubs. Brand new, never used. Home- bliked cakes made to order. no_so Large Canadlan c ra .. le r . F ish­ C- IO classical guitAr, $85. Ha ll8uom Ask anyone. OaUy Egypctan ads get Ordered by 9 a.m. delivered by S 5tUl Ln plutlc cover. Sell for hdf. ing license &: supplies. Open 7 days n electric glJltar-$IOO. Gibson Les results. Two lines for one day. only Call 7-4334. 618A p. m. POtato and noodle puddings too. .. k. sa. B 5poct1ng Gooda, I blk W. Rt. P aul Jr. e lec . guitU, SIOO. Call '0<: . por more Wo. eall 7-4953 aft. 4 SI . 4887/1. Bren 549-6892A Used 12" poru.ble TV . S7S. See at p.m. 4884E Have I. room. hou.se, o r a contract Tbe Author's Off1ce , 9-693 1. 1378A Ben Peanon MUlitang Bow 5ft. Srand Piranha tAM: . ~mp and filter. Phone you .... nt to rent7 LeI the studenUl new. Re loader mec. s uper 250128A. 549-6849. 4910A know wbere there IB 8pace available. Expecienced typlBt w/term. thesis, Honda 590, I96S, SISO o r bellt offer. Ught load bu. '49 Pord plckuptnlCk, 'The OIllly Egypt1a.n, (T- 48) Is open dlssen. Call alter siX 9 -0080. 4912E Eltc. condo can Mllte all. 10 p.m. 6 c yl. with 'S3 motor 4 s peed trans. from 8- S, so place your ad now and 9-4006. ISI8A AU Rus. DeSoto. 867-2427. 4888A watch the resultll. FOR RENT Sewing alterat1ons. Call MTS . Hyson. CIU8Uied Ads. Space in a widely I yr. old male German 5heperd .. ltcb­ Wanted, 2 r oomates for s ummer qtT. 126-18 Southern HUh; at S49-3918. rud papl!r. For good results put dog. S20. Box 104. Datly E gypdan. Ulll .... t.lty , ... lat l _~ ,"!"Ir. tIt... 1I Approved bou8lng (male) Contact 4913E your ad in mday at the Da1ly Egyp­ 4889A .111,1. "ncI.,...... htclellh ••• t II ... . Cun. 6 14 E. Park. Phone 5-49-4047. dan, (T-48l. III A~c.,,'" U.ia, e...... Ip " 4861S 120cc Suzuki, 1966, Uke ne w, low Con~ lIct for which wltlt ft.. '66 Yamaha 100, car rack $200, '64 .".t •• iii" WANTED , mlle.ge. Call 9-3521 after 5 p.m. Qff.c..,.". H_I lag Offju. Vacancy fo r I male stud. In a 4 Opel also letting booked. 9-4219. 4890A bedTm. home. Phone 7-2636. 48718 4838A Summer conuac t, board &; r oom. Tired 01 nding home .Ione on the Martin GT 70 guitar, perfec cond. SUgbtly used d1&mond e ngagement Swimming pool.alr cond. Wt!sonHall. Save money. live in Zeigler, extra $300. F e nder stritoc.L'I(er, $200. weekends? Place. classified ad for set. Not tarnlsbed by pre vious ufle r. 7- 2169. 9588 modern 4 rm. house, couple only. See ciders ~t the DaHy Egypdan (T :' 4. 8). Pender Super Reverb. Amp. S3OO, Cbeap! Ph. 7-6358. 489 1A cuatod1an at U. Scbool after 4 p.m. 9-4562. 4851 A Women- Fall-2 rm. kltchenapts. prlv. S45 month, $15 aecur1ty Oep. 48978 220 lb. weight fie! alao weight lifdng bath, air cond., I.rge s h.1dy !t living Babyslner morn1ng S18,.t.Iy. MU51 1964 Cbeory Impala. 327-4 spd. Lt. bencb, Ute new. Call 9-6994. 4892A area, close to town &; eampwi. S1 65/ Room cootract Immed. Gir l. 1 bilL furnlS'h own tranaponat1on. Call 9- blue, very clean. c.n 9-2690. 4852A u. Ptlomey Towers. so. S. R.wl.Lngs. fr . campus. SI OO/qu. Can coole 3598 In the e vening. 4862F Fem.le Sl.I.mefle kitten. S mo. old. Ask for Bob or Peg, 7-6471. 138BB 7-7841. 4911S 8' racJnS hydroplane. Powered by S20. A! 900 E. Part., #31 after 5:30. Mercury Mk. 2OH. Fast 9-2690. 4893A Womt'n-Su mmer-2 I'm. kitchen apu;. Ride wanted. M'boro 10 C'dale a.m. 4853/1. pnv. bath, air cond .. laclle study 81 blId: p.m., M-FrL Ph. 684-2087 alter 5. 4864 F '58 Cbevy. 348, 3 spel . . ..htte Impala , Hvlng a rea, close to town &; ca mpus. HElP WANTED Cbev. '56 beat offer, Gibson e lect, 2 door. 9-4380. 4894A $1 35/U. Pt.1omey Towers, S04 S. Raw­ 6 $100. 5-49-3894. 4854A saiDg, new, lingS. Ask for Bob or Peg, 7-6471. Volunteel'li to ..oTt for Sena{or E u ­ Stereo componenf aet, choice 01 2 139Bb Cirl student [0 &.seIBt dlaabled fe­ gene McCanby in Jnd1ana anydme 1965 Hcoda SO. exc.. cond. wlm ear­ fICUS 01 speakers. 9-4380. 489SA 139BB gtAle s tudeot in o1.aUy U ... ing funetton. from now until May 7th. Pbone 9- ners, SI25 or beat otter,9-S867. PU ll t1me Fall term. ShareT.P. room. 2484 or 9 - 2663. 4874F 4856A .38 cal. S.W Snub Nose, I week old. Men-Summer-Apu. wlm kitchens, EltOelleru pay. Great e xperience. Holster. CAll 9-1249 after S. 4896A prt.... ba.th8, dr cond., ~ 8tudy • Suzy So-otune1er. Call 3-3-477. 4872C Want room for 8ingle girl wim room­ 1964 Ves s- Scooter. good cond1don, Unna area, cloee to town &; camp..Ls. ma~ or roommates. Call DeSoto, ac.oeaaorie.s, Pb. 549-4307. 48S7 A Air coa4lrloner, 10,000 BTU. Beat Uncoln M.nor, S09 S. Ash. Aat for Volunaeen to won fOT Sen.ator Eu­ number 867-211 3 before 2:30 p.m. olle r . C&ll 4 S7~. 4899A Bud,9-1369. 1408B gene McC.nby In Indlana anytime 4885F '67 Bultl.co Matador Enduro, 2SOcc, 1957 Cbery 327, 3SO HP Hurst, 4 from now undl May 7m. Phone 9 - 700 mL BeIU offer. C.U Bo, 457- PaU sa ... e money, luxury tiring, room 248-4 or 9-2663. 4873C Re ward for bd'ormadon leading toche 4036. 4868/1. 'p. Needs aorne body work. Runs good. call BW Kooatt. 9-1621. • board only S99/mo. or $297/qtr. recovery of stolen '61 Triumpb. Call .900A Pree bus aernce, lndoor pool wim Glrl w~d for general boWlewon Don 5-49-2731 . 4914F Attn. barpJn buDrers '65 Pont. Gal. . UDded:. A/C, carpecr;d, eurclee 6 hours/ week. CallS49-2725. I54SC SOld, 3 spd. elm. Pull sync. 2 dr., Corvair 1961 Wagon, 4 on the n oor . room, e tc. Both men • women. apt., coupe 389. Gnat shape. new Good conditloo. Only $295. 549- U. City 602 E. coUege, 9-3396. UIBB LOST dns • batrery. Gall 5-49-6609 for 162S. 4901 A info. 4869/1. Summer save mooey. luxury living, SERVICES OFFERED Sacr1ftce 1962 HUton, 10x5S tt. 1965 priY. room s, air cond., free bus Alrald there ls DO room for rour 1965 Yamaba ~ . f.culty owned. GTO 3-lbbl., 4 IIpd. Must sell. Gall servta! to classee, men !t women Claulfied Ad ? COme «0 the caUl· low mUea, windbield, e tc. 7- 88.fO. 549-1129 durtng the week. 49021. S99/ mo. or S297/qtt. Unfvenity Let us type or print your term paper, Egypd.an (T - ~8l and we wtU mat~ 4876A Clry, 602 E. CoUege. Room and thl!a'lI. The AudIor's Office, 114 1/2 room. Fender Jazz bass ute new . No board 1ncl. 9-3396. 14.28B S. nlinolB. 9-6931. CU BE '59 Pontiac CataUDa. auto •• fUrcond. Kra[ches. $290 o rhestotfer. 3-4673. Gold and wbite male- cat: I\:amed Good ttres, good en&tne. 992-30S6. .903A Special de.l. Summer only. Egyp­ June p-ada. register ritb Oownatate Jes8e The WoU 01 Vel.,.et Fortune. 4877/1. tian Sanda etf. apt., Auburn HaU, Personnel 00 find the job you are Call 9-6392. Rt'WHd. -I 8:-S(; WoUenaat, 4 track stereo tape Ozto rd Han, I. HOWIe E., alr cond., looklnc for. Emplo~rs pa.y me fee. RemiDatOn 270. Wadel 700 • .u power recorder. $180. IS" nr- S30,ZenJtb. prl.... rm. $175/qrr. Double oc.a.Ipan­ Don', bell1a.te. Come on dowu. 103 Loet SJameae ki~n victnity of U W we.ner ... a.r1a.b1e acope raag1Da 110 to radIo-$15, Call 549-2740. Aat for cy SI3I.lS/ qu. Pb. 457-2134. I"B8 S. Wub1Dgtoo. 549-3366. 128BE a.nd Poplar. WUe- In te. n. Call 1000,.. $175 or be8t otfer. Call BW ..... y Dlke best atler. 49041. 9-2278 o r 705 S. Poplar. Rrward. after 5 :30 614- 2686. ...,8A . Summer. Air cond. eft• • pta:. Mar­ Am-war parade .. bappenia«. April "SoC 8x30 Mobile Home, $100. 16 Pleuant Oed • ,"de. $Ioo/ mo. Pb. 4S7- 27m-2B. See peeters for deu.Us. Honda 305 1968, drafted tate oYer Hill n. Cn...... yeeeaayt1me. 49051. 2134. 149BB Black mana wa lkt lnltiale-d O.K . Call pa.yme .... call 549- 3213. 4880/1. '''BE 9-3252. Re-wud . • 491 S(; Ulcn.blJa. elearoa1c flaab sun, AC • Trailer 2 bdrm. A... aUable anyt1JDe. 2 vaeaftde8 in A Child's World Pn­ F:ord FaJriaDe iaatbacL 1968 ctrafted recharp.bIe bAttJery.; a.l.8o AOC poinf:- $8O/ m. 600 N. ~r. Gnd. aNd. school. Ph. 687-1525 berween 8 • 11 take Oftr pa.ymeDta. CaU 549- 3213. 4E stereo can::r1d(tle. CaU JI.II'I at 9- .. married couples only. Pb. 457- 147BE 4SSIA · 435-4 &fmr 8 p.m. 4906A 4308. 15088 FOUND Elecuon1c repa.ir 8eTYice-lV, stereo SUz,utj, X-6. 1966, 7,000 mUea wirb '60 Butct (:(IG't't. PuUpower, bucb'tI. Summer v.C&Ddes, 2 bdrm •• pt., also tape- anything e lectronic. Fully U­ Gree"n ear key with playboy e mblem. helmet. Call 9-4094., 409 E. WalnUl...... dio. Htt., Good rop. $4.50. call IIing. • double room, air cood. wtth ceru;ed &; quaWled. Call 549-6356. Found Nonh 0( barrack OS6 1. lden­ 4882A 9-S294. 40Q7 A. kltcbl!n. Ph. 457-6286. 1528R 47 26E rUy at Dally En'txi.n .. 916H 16 DIJ L Y EGypnAH 12<1, 1968 '!\lain Conce!"n SIt:' Girl Volleyball RELAX HAVE FUN Coach Says Invitation .Team Defeated PLAY BI LLIARDS 01 Led to Wisconsin Trip By Westerners Weste r n Illinois' women 's volleyball first team won two m an, K n igh t, Kr zoska and 8 )' Geor ge Knemeyer games in the volleyball sec­ Lloyd wer e interviewed Mon­ tiona l at St U over the weekend. SIU Basket ba ll Coach J ack day. The r e m aining three can­ Hartman s aid late Tuesday didates we r e scheduled to be SIU's firs t team fared onl y afte rnoon that he had visite d interviewed Tuesday. half a s well, winning one game. the Universit y of Wi sconsin A n announcem e nt is ex­ against Illinois Scate and drop­ campus at Madison earlier pected near the end of the ping a second one to Weste r n this week "onl y because of week or by early next week, Illinois. an invitation extended by Wis­ according to the Wisconsin The sectional is nor a tour ­ consin officials:' Sports Information Office. nament s ince all teams do nO[ Hartman is one of seven The depaning Erickson had have a chance to play each persons prom inently mentioned held the coaching position for othe r and the r e is nodeclare d fo r the head coaching JX>sit ion nine yea r s. He guided the winne t: . which was left vacant r ecentl y UW Badgers to an over-all Members of the SIU first by John Erickson. 13- 11 record. and fifth posi­ te am include Bethel Stout. Pat " Since I wa s un familiar with tioo in the Big Ten Conference Gee, Virginia Gordan, Jo Lee, the basketball coaching posi­ during the past season. Among Toni Smith, Carol Ste arns , tion at the Universit y of Wis­ his feats were four Milwaulcee and Sue Stefani._ conSin," Hartman said, " I ClassiC Champions hips in the STU' s sec a nd and third was pleased to be asked [0 go six years that the tournament volleyball te ams r e ma i n~d un­ to the University and vis it has been conducted. Quarter the people the re' concerning Er ickson, 40 , we nt to Wis­ defe ated for [he sea son. The seGond tea m defe ated the sec­ the job, and to be tte r acquaint conSin as an assi&tant coach in myself wit h it. Jack Hartman 1958, fo llowing three years as ond te ams from IllinOi s State head coach of Lake Fo rest and Western Ill inois. while the Night et A coaching job in the Big ' . . . j ust visiting' College in Chicago. He was third tea m beat Weste rn and Ten alwa ys cr eates a cen ain Greenvill e . amount of inte r est," Haqman promoted to t he top posit ion Lloyd. Jim Harding. D a \' e team will fa ce said, but added: "Right now in J 959. His most s uccessful Th~ wom e~ ' s , at Br own and John PolUs . Montice llo .. P rincipia, and E d­ I'm more concerned with our Knight is head coach at West se ason was J 962 when he led his team to a 17- 7 recor d and wards ville at Illino is State on recruiting, and having a good POint , wh e re he has been for Saturday. ball club at SIU ne xt · year." the past three seasons . while second in the 8 ig Ten. Hickory Log Ha rtm an checked out of the Krzoska is head coach at the Edgewater Hote l in Madison University of Wisconsin cam­ Women's T ennis Team Downed Ever y Wed n esda y pus at Milwaukee . Lloyd is a early Tuesday morning but St U Wome n's te nnis tea m Mi ss C lark and Miss p roper l.D:s le ft hi s baggage at the hotel forme r NBA playe r and served as assistant coach and head los t its first match of the Phillips , both junior s, are the " for conve nie nce sake ," ac­ season recently to South­ only r e turning veter a ns from requir ed . cording to the harel desk clerk. . scout fo r the DetrOit Pistons during the past season. e a s t Missouri State by a s core the 1967 te am. The job opened wh e n forme r­ Har ding is c urrentl y head of 4- 3. On the losing e nd were SIU coach J ohn Erickson 'resigned coach at LaSaUe Unive r s ity. Darkness ha lte d the doubles coeds Sue Maynard, Mary April 3 to accept the position He forme r ly coached at Loyola round with onl y- one game Pende rgast, Vickie Sheets and of general m anager for the of the South and at Gannen being completed. SIU coe ds Kay StarCK. new National Basketball As­ Co i l e ge in Pennsyl vani a. Sa ndy Cla rk and Ann Phillips The wome n's team will face sociation franc hi se in Mil­ Brown is a Wi scons in alum­ won th firs t set 6-2 and we r e Montice llo, Principia a nd Ed­ waukee. Sources indic ate th .:l t nu s and is curre ntl y assist ant le ading the second s et 3-2 wards ville at Il linois State on Eric kson had bee n offe r ed a bas ketball coach there . Po11 is whe n .( he ga me wa s ca lled. subs t antial inc r ease by the is another assist ant at Wi s ­ -W inner in the s in g I e s NBA team over the $ 15,OOOhe consin and has held s imilar m atches was J e nnie Stanley, was making at \Vi s consin . positions a t Cincinn ati and the te am 's numbe r two pla ye r, Six othe r s bein g prom in ent­ Flo rida St ate. winning 6- 1 and 11-9. ly mentioned for the Wi sconsin Seventy candidates we r c Ani ta Ro d re qu ez (SIU) coaching s po t a r e R o b~rt o riginal1 y r e ported unde r con­ downed her Cape Girarde au Knight, J ay K r zoska , Ear l s ide ration for the post . I-I a rt- opponenr 8-6 and 6 -3. Uptight With the Draft? 00 You Hove A O uestion About: YOUR · PRESENT DRAFT STATU S • YOUR RIGHTS AND ALTERNATIVES CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION . •• APPEAL PROCEDURES . CHANGES IN DEFERMENTS . FATHERHOOD. DEPENDENTS. HARD SHIP BOTHERED? Others Are Too. DRAFT INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE New Assortment of EVERY WEDNESDAY FROM 9 A.M . TO 10 P.M. AT, Swim wear 5.00 and up THE STUDENT CHRISTIAN FOUNDATION 913 South Illinois Avenue New Arrival of Striped or Corbondale, Ill inois Phone: 457·6424 Grub Knit Shirts 4.00 COME IN AND TALK IT OVER Male Casual

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