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April 1967 Daily Egyptian 1967

4-22-1967 The aiD ly Egyptian, , 1967 The aiD ly Egyptian Staff

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This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1967 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in April 1967 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SOUTHERN ''-'-'NO/S UNIVERSITY Ca,bon_'e, IIIinoi. Volume 48 Saturday, April 22, 1967 Numb"r 129 Pan American festival

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• AEREG Oct NICARAGUA

RUBEH DARIO: SYMBOL OF LATIN AMERICAH CULTURAL UNITY is the theme of the fourteenth annual pon American Festival. The great Nicaraguan poet is shown as he is memorialized on a set of his own country's postage stamps and on those of other Latin American nations. In the background of each stamp are "ym­ bois taken from the poet's works; far example, the $5 stamp. lower right, has as its theme "optimism," man's triumplt over evil. (Story on page 2) Page 2 DAllY EGYPTIAN April 22, 1967

Ruben Darlo: Symbol of Unity

In 1967 it sounds somewhat refuge in an artificial world of his "Marcha friunfal" that most too strange to refer to a literary beauty. In their opinion they formed people find the musicality of lan­ movement which began in the 1880's a group apart from the rest of guage predominant. as "Modernism". yet the most im­ mankind, cosmopolitan in character portant single event in the history because it included Frenchmen, Ital­ Why the swan? He is the sublime image of the decorative concept of of Sp~nish language poetry after the ians, portuguese, English, and North XVII century is still thus known. Americans. They even found kindred life, white, graceful, unperturbed, From the 1680's verse written in spirits in certain poets of bygone as he glides upon the still surface Spa:1ish suffered from the limi­ days. To distinguish themselves of a sylvan lake. tations of euphuism, neo-clas­ from the traditional, they used the The centaur? One might profitably sicism, and self-centered national­ word modern; from which their op­ search for an answer among the sim. Only the best of the poets ponents coined the term mod­ disciples of Freud. of Romanticism could be said to ernista. Kindliness, understanding and escape either the influence of ob­ goodness can calm and control the scure wordiness, narrow precious­ ''The expression now has a fairly wolf, until man's own wickedness ness, or sterile bombast which both­ precise meaning, because the spora­ turns him sour. ered the poets of the entire two­ dic poetic efforts of men in different So pervasive was the influence and hundred year span. Spanish American countries found so great the talent of Dar(o "hat he in Ruben Darlo a genuis for a became a true symbol of the inrel­ Fll~X l~~~~ ~~%7ag~~r;m~:~t~Z~~ leader. From his influence sprang lectual unity of Spanish America. 1867 in the village of I\letapa, pub­ a real literary movement with mo­ Probahl)l no single writer can be lished a small volume of verse and dernista poets abounding on all said to have gathered about him so sides. De;;pite harsh criticism, the great a number of disciples through­ ~~~~, \~~~~·L~~to.u~~gth~i;<; ti~~ movement took roO( in Spain itself, out the Spanish-speaking world since he was in Valparaiso and Santiago, where there developed a consider­ the independence movement took Chile, in the first of mnny periods ahle group of Spanish modernista place at the beginning of the 19th of exile from his nntive Central poets. century. When Dar(o died in 1916 America. lie had wnndered farfrom "A modernista poet is marked by none stepped forward to fill his the Rmall viJ1n~e and s"lf-seekin~ certain characteristics, his keen shoes as a unifying literary leader. politics of hi-; native land to what receptivity to SL'nsuou:; beauty in The dispersiveness characteristic was prohahly at the riml' the most nature, his feelin~ thar he is mis­ of the Spaniard again held sway. liheral and enlightened capital city understood by thL' ~enC'rality of man­ Cenainly no politican, statesm;}!], of Spani:,unl langu3f(e, often zers. compreh,'n"iblL- ot11y to Fe llow poets. These men were nut mere sycop 'fhe literary iti"tClri;II1 i\lfred ,\s :1 ma{[t.'r "I" faL'r, the Spanish hants, however; many of them WG',tld have fJeen great poets in their own right even if tht'y had not been politician, statesmann, novelist, nor philosopher inspired or influenced by Dar(o. One of the earlier associates in literary publishing ventures was has had so many close intellectual sympathizers." the Bolivian Ricardo Jaimes Freyre, whose discourse on poetics written as a result of nis profound study Coester, who at Stanford Universi[y American modernista movement iR of the problem is considered unique held the chair of Spani::;h i\merican part of a world movement that has in the modern era. r .iterature and pioneered in the study its roots in French romanticism and Two of DarlO's poems have been of the writers of the area, wrote the subsequent ParnasRian and sym­ well translated into English as ex­ concerning modernism: bolist schools. amples of his style and of his abilit~ "Young men in Spanish America to inRpire or excite as seen Dth~'r­ toward the end of the nineteenth "The modernista poets in their wise than in "poetry for poctry'~ century felt a keen joy in living. s<'arch for an outler for their feel­ sake." The first, "Symphony in ings discovered rhl' ,- .llue of music, The heauties of nature appealed to Gray 1\lajor" (')infonia en Grb all their :

Educating for Progress

The progress that Lotin America is achieving is due in large measure to improved standards of education. On this page are two faces of education i., Eeuador, both of them seen and photographed by SIU President Delyte W. Morris during a reeent four.day va. cation trip in that eauntry. The photograph at top shows one of the modern buildings at Cuenca, Ecuador's new university eity. Other ties besides the building of new eam· puses unite Cuenca and SIU··SIU hold a an important library of Eeuadorean literary and other research materials, pureltased from the Sauth Ameri~an university's emeritus professor of medicine, Dr. Jose Mogrovejo Carrion. The materials have already served as the bases for two masters theses and two doctoral dissertations at SIU and Ohio State Universities. tes ~e:oki~de~:~~a~. ;~... rd~;g~d::=~ the budget under whieh the kindergar. ten operates and the school's name. MONTERREY TEC: Tltis mural in the Monterrey Tec Library was painted by Jorge Gonzalez Camarena, a native of Guadalajara. On the left is a mask of the tiger knight, symbolic of Indion culture, shottered by Spanish arms; in the center, a conquistador's helmet pierced by Indian arrows; to the right 0 Spanish missionary writes the ancient history of Mexico. The Mexican eagle, top right, clutches a writhing serpent and rises from the conflict as a ~ymbol of the new Mexican nation.

SIU, Latin America: An Intellectual Bond

By CHARLES EKKER same time that students are initiated language. Despite the fact that the time appointments are available [Q into the advantages, trials and tribu­ AID mission had several hundred the highest-qualified candidates. lations of living and studying in persons, there was not one qualified Jlorris Library at the Carbon­ Since 1958 Sourhern Illinois Uni­ anothe r culture on the terms of to satisfy such a simple request! dale campus hz,s an outstanding versitv has had an Inter-American that culture. Most students return Eve ry week Southern receives re­ collection of books and materi31, Stu d i' e s Program administered to [he campus with renewed enthu­ quests for multi-culturally trained about Ecuador, Argentina, Brazil under the auspices of the Latin siam and interest in expanding their specialists from universities, foun­ and Mexico. The one-million volume American Institute. The faculty and dations, government organizations, academic training in the rnter­ library has significant holdings in staff of eight academic departments business firms and special pro­ American Studies Program or in its general collections involving and the Library have contributed grams. We must not overlook the academic disciplino>s with a minor most of British. Portuguese and [0 making the program meaningful fact that Southern's own participa­ in the area field. Spanish America. AcqUisitions are and of the highest professional tion in international projects will being make constantly under the standing in anthropology. eco­ The second pre-requisite fur depend almost exclusively on how nomics, history. foreign languages, direction of a full-time librarian effective participation in the !nter­ mar.y of its own students, faculty specialized in the field. government, geography, philosophy American Studies Program is a high and staff are available and inter­ and agricultural economics. The level of language proficiency in Por­ culturally qualif~ed for positions of' The Inter-American Srudies fac­ Institute has no academic staff of tuguese and/or Spanish, in addition high responsibility in almo;;:t every ulty at Southern corrprise,,: 20 mem­ its own so that the success of the to English. Ideally students should academic and professional special­ bers who are 'unusually qualified in Inter-American Studies Program spend at least one year in Brazil ty. both their academic specialties Rnd has been the result of dose co­ or a Spanish-speaking country in their understanding of the value operation between the cooperating After completing the first basic on a work-study internship where stage of the Inter-American Studies of basic inter-cultural preparation academic departments. the Insti­ learning the language and making before undertaking any theoretical tute-!'md the students majoring in Program our graduate can be placed professional contacts would be the domestically or internationally for studies. Most of the faculty make the field. major requirements. Southern is in Sot.thern lllipois has few if any full-time employment. Such indivi­ periodic visits for study and re­ the process of joining a consortium duals would be considered in posi­ search in their areas and specialties natural ties with Latin America, of universities so that students will tions where additional intership and of interest. but a university must offer its have access to one or more off­ students as universal a series of work-study opportunities may be campus centers in Latin America developed for newer students in Southern Illinois University is opportunities as possible. Gradu­ where the internship program can terested in training for inter-cul­ unique in that its academic l'.lits ates of our university have demon­ be more easily implemented. are equipped to offer two y. ar. stratpd intellectual abilities and in­ tural responsibilities. Contact is to terest in working in Latin Ameri­ After acquiring and proving ade­ be maintained with Southern grad­ Bachelor's, Master's, and Docto~al· ca; the administration of Southern quate linguistic profiCiency, the stu­ uates so that as up-grading oppor­ level degrees in fields that are f"O:::t has therefore seen Inter-American dent continues his academic tunities develop, alumni can be important to Inter-American Stu,1il:s Studies as another means of making .raining, Those students who have invited to rake advantage of them by Program participants. The ( nkr acquired linguistic proficiency a significant contribution in edu­ returning to our own campuses or for English as a Second I 19.' through residence and study in Latin to those of other institutions that cation and public service to the (CESL) has available bask e, '1J; America, by serving in the Peace are members of the Consortium. citizens of Southern Illinois and for students preparing to parr! surrounding areas. Corps or as missionaries, as Amer­ For the next decade or so highiy­ ican Field Service, Experiment in qualified personnel will be in ex­ in work-study programs in r ,,'''1 Intellectual curiosity, however, is International Living and other stu­ tremely short supply; and if our. America; the English Department not enough justification to support dent-exchange program participants educational inMitutions ar.e to be offer~ a I-.laster's degree in the a program with seemingly limited are encouraged to certify their pro­ able to tr.!in more students, full teaching of Fngli~h as a Second value to a limited number of stu­ ficiency by taking the examinations use mu:::t be made of all aVJilable L3nguage for tho~e interested in dents. minois is an industrial state offered by the Department of Foreign personnel. full-rime profe~"'ional work in 'h,' with major business and other con­ r .anguages. l'.S. or abroad. Current vacanci(.s tacts in Latin America. Sales abroad /ly the nature of the Inter-Ameri­ Academic trJining need not be can Studief: Program most students lil this field alone in Latin Am('rica mean job" at home-and it takes restricred to the eight cooperating number in tht..' thousands. highly-trained personnel to sell the should understand that their pro­ departments Iist",d for the Imer­ grams should be "elf-Losted f:O that products of our farms and factories American Studies Program. There ro people who can purchase them the graduate can bargain for the is an urgent need for linguif:tically highest salaq level s. :\r the ;;:ame Daily Egyptian and make tht' best use of them. Thi3 and inre r-culturally-e xpt' rienced time unive rsity administrJtor~ means that our universities must accountants, agricultur;11 econo­ do ~heir utmost in training studvnrs mists. busin.. 'ss administration understand that inrer·culturJl "du­ in area studiPs rarne r than in one­ majors, <:hemisr:" and orh",r pro­ cation is morL' co,.:tlv th:!n prep.lr· special academic field alonL'. fessionals since :11 most eVt.'ry major ation for comparable domestic ['he indlspen~able pre-requu;ite busiOt'ss, govL'rnment, educational, activities. Ukewi:;:e, a lar)!.: part for imernational work is a feeling military and non - profit organization of inter-cultural "ensith'iry and or sensitivity for differences in in the l' ,S. has internJtional in­ operational rr Jining cannot be im­ cultures. climates and responsibili­ terests. parted by textbook". Therefore, ties. For those students who would existing on-campus and off-campus l 1iv:";.~H\. like to test their abilities for inter­ Recently a major Latin Americar, work-study oppor,unities are con­ j- dirlln~l .lnt.! !'L.t":.f'l~ L.~ (.ffl. ~ I, 'I.. ; national and imer-cultural under­ university in an important country l~u:ldln~ T~4~. FbC,l! l'rilc'L'~, r'. stantly being expanded and new ones '(Jill!. r·.·k-~~h"nl.:';:; ,~J l~';. requested that our AID mis:::ion standing, the Latin American Insti­ are being added. Residents of llli­ tute operates a Study Abroad invite one of its members to parti­ Program in Mexico every summer. cipate in an international economics oois have available to them a large Regular courses are offered at the seminar by explaining U5. agri­ number of scholarships; student {:j~r~~~::{,i:f~Xi~~{.,:~i~:5L;~'~i~:i); j-.• P·.·r~/. i . \\""l.(J{. H00p. Rrlr.aic f". ";'.'r-.. ..: .)!10 University of Vera Cruz and by cultural development problems in loan-funds and, where applicable, rhoma.~ H. Wuod Jr. staff members from Southern at the light of local conditioni'-in the local assistantships and similar part- Apri I 22, 1967 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page 5 A Varied Fare SIU Programs in Mexico

Southern Illinois University stu­ William Kammlade of Animal In­ dents and faculty have long been dustries; and the research and participants in some phases of uni­ teaching of Prof. Herman :'lit. Haag versity activity in Mexico. Oldest in marketing research in Mexico of the efforts to create a conscious­ City and Sonora With a stint of ness of and appreciation for the teaching at the Instituto Tecnologico culture and language of the sister de Monterrey included as well. In nation across the Rio Grande is addition the principal research and the Summer Study Program which study of Prof. Campbell Pennington was initiated in the early 50's by of Geography and Prof. Robert L. Dr. J. Cary Davis, retiring head of Rands of Anthropology have been in the Department of Foreign Langu­ the Tarahumara area of Chihuahua ages. Since that time a summer and at the Mayan archeological sites school group has gone from South­ of Yucatan. ern to Mexico City, Guanajuato, or Members of the faculty at South­ as this year, to Xalapa, for a summer ern have taught a course at the session combined with visits to University of Veracruz in Xalapa points of historic, cLlltural, and each of the past three years. THE CAMPUS at Monterrey Tee tourist interest. Other activities have been the MesO-American Research Project conducted jOintly by the Department of Anthropology at Southern and the Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia in Mexico in the study of The Student and Portuguese north central Mexican archeology in which Profs. J. Charles Kelley, Carol L. Riley, Pedro Armillas and By CHARLES EKKER other faculty have been active; the work of the School of Agriculture in studies of the Mexican cattle Students of Southern's classes in campus. One of the Pan American on the Madeira, C ape Verde, St. industry under direction of Prof. Ponuguese are constantly be­ Festivals annually held under Latin Thomas &. Prince and Timor Is­ wildered by questions like, "Por­ American Institute auspices fea­ lands, in Macau (China), in enclaves tuguese? Where in the world is that tured Brazil and the giant that it is. in India, and in the major oversea" spoken-in Portugal?" and "Why And, now, Southern is offering a possessions of Angola, Mozambique Albert G. Bork study Ponuguese-who speaks it?" complete two-year course in Por­ and Portuguese Guinea. tuguese studies as a reinforcement Even the linguistic renaissance of Over 200,000 Brazilians of all the past decade has overlooked, sad for the general Inter-American Studies Program. walks of life and ages are at present Wins Gulbenkian to say, the enormous importance of paying cash to study English inover the sub-continent of Brazil, the most Despite what Spanish-speaking 60 private, locally - supported populous and linguistically homo­ Latin Americans may assert, Portu­ Brazil-U.S. cultural institutes and Language Award geneous area in Latin America. guese is a completely distinct and other private language schools (this Eighty million Brazilians living in separate Romance language. How­ enrollment is greater than in all of Language major Albert G. Bork an area one larger than the ever, Portuguese-speakers can un­ the Spanish-speaking countries of has been chosen as one of twenty continental United States have been derstand spoken Spanish With little Latin America; after all, it is easier U.S. students for Gulbenkian Foun­ relegated to oblivion too long - difficulty since bistorically Por­ to learn English if you speak Por­ dation aw~rds in Portuguese Studies. except when brilliant young ~xecu­ tuguese has more of the baSic roots tuguese rather than Spanish) which Bm:k will spend the summer months tives, college professors and gov­ and regularities of Latin, the basic have been organized in every major at the University of Lisbon as a ernment officials suddenly find language from which Spanish and city and town in the country. English participant in the pioneering pro­ themselves assigned to places no other Romance languages developed is the preferred foreign language in gram designed to stimulate Por­ one had ever told them about in While Spanish-speakers have con­ schools although the quality of in­ tuguese Studies at American col­ school. siderable difficulty in understanding struction - jlLSt like language in­ leges and univerSities. Reasons for a general lack of and enormous difficulties in learn­ struction in the U.S.-leaves much knowledge about Brazil and Por­ ing [0 speak Portuguese, they find to be desired. Brazil-U.s. institutes, "The organizers and supporters tuguese are many and varied. The relatively little difficulty in reading private schools, and universities of Portuguese Studies at Southern most important one, however, is that the language as long as technical could easily absorb over 2,000 are grateful for the recognition that Brazilians have such a large land matters are not involved. Simple teachers of English as a second the Gulbenkian Award represents academic terminology in such fields language; the major difficulty, of nor. only for the program but also to conquer, so many opportunities to travel in their own country, and, as economiCS, philosophy, sociol­ course~ is the problem of adequate for the intellectual achievements of despite cenain periods of in­ ogy, law, and commercial and mari­ remuneration our student, Albert G. Bork. We stability, they have been able to time activities, however, have little or no similarity in the two languages. More so than anywhere else in expend their energies and sell most Latin America and the rest of the of their production on a large in­ More frequently than not, the same terms have radically different developing world, every major U.S., ternal market. No large groups of Canadian, Japanese, and Western Brazilian economic and political meanings from one language to the other. European corporation has at least refugees are among us, and Brazil's an office, subsidiary, or factory in share of headline-creating revolu­ It is an open secret among the Brazil; most factories are in Sao tions, riots, and confusion for U.S. languages faculty that many a colle.S~ Paulo State while offices are con­ press, radio and TV reports has centrated in Rio de Janeiro. Such been very small in comparison to student tries [0 satisfy his foreign language requirement by taking "the Illinois firms as Caterpillar, and events in other countries of Latin easiest language." In lerms of ease International Harvester, for ex­ America. Even the epoch-making of learning the mechanics of any ample, have major heavy equipment March 31, 1964 Revolution during Romance language, Portuguese is production facilities With nation­ which the best-financed and best­ perhaps the easiest to learn for an wide dealer networks in Brazil. organized Communist plot to take Eilglish speaker • However, in terms Ford, General Motors, Willys­ over the largest country in Latin of flexibility and means of expres­ Overland, Union Carbide, DuPont, America was foresta lled, merited sion, Brazilian Portuguese can be Chrysler, General Electric, IT&T. httle or no attention from the U.s. ranked next to French. An added Corn Products, and almost everyone mass media. Why? The Revolution positive feature is that, unlike of the Fortune lists of U.S. and was effected Brazilian-style - with French, Spanish, and Italian, the ad­ free-world enterprises has major no bloodshed, no riots, and little dition of new terms to the language interests. In some cases, the confusion that would fit the seem­ from other languages is actively Brazilian operations of such firms ingly standard "news" desired by encouraged by Brazilians. are considerably larger than the lJ.S. mass media. It was a "revolu­ ~ parent organizalion in the home tion by tellophone," and, admittedly, Portuguese is spoken in the United country! ALBERT G. BORK it is quite difficult to give movie States in the colonies of Fall River coveral!;e to such an unorthodox and New Bedford, Massachusetts, U.S. and international govern­ are confidem that he will represent ment, foundation, insurance, airline, Southern most ably at the University happening! and in Covina, . There are smaller colonies of immigrants in management - consultant, banking, of Lisbon so thar future studc'ms At Southern the administration cooperative, research and almost or our programs will be: favorably and many faculty members have long Jacksonville, Illinois, in the -Nc·.vark metropolitan every other kind of organization have consillered for awards,·' saiu Dr. had a very active inturcst in Por­ interests of various and sundrv J. Cary Davis, Ilead of the Depart­ tugue,.;e and Brazilian studies. Mor­ area, and in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. A rough estimate types in Braz:l and they have all ment of Fordgn Languages. ris Library has a significant collec­ felt the lack of adequatdy-qualif!cd lion ()f Brasiliana; quite a few faculty would indicate a [Otal of some Bork, a graduating senior, is.11so 500,000 Brazilian, Continental and personnel to "haft their activiti",;. .lnd administrators have visited Th.: U.S. is Brazil's largt.'st cus­ r.:cipienr of a fun tLlI'ion scholarship BL1Zil Insular Portuguese speakers in the flJr study, rcsearch, and tomer (mostly ~offe.:- and cac.lt» for the 1907-n8 JCJekmic year at travel; and, fur the past two years, U.S. and l! .S. companies dir.:-ctly ,1 nd th(' Univl'rsily "r II)WJ and an Soulhe:rn has bL'cr. engaged in work­ :.Lppnimml:n! a,,, grdduate: asSiSIJnt Just as the U.S. has become the indIrectly an' the rna ior supplit'rs ing up i!~ participation In the Illi­ largest English-speaking country, of Brazil's HE'o'd" for :-8W ,:u[,'rials, in Fn:n-:h JI the' :-amL ins(~tuti()n. n, ,is-Sao Paulo Partners of the Brazil I1ds d('vcloped into thE' largest ma,hi!~('r~ anu induslri.ll ·.':juip­ fIL· i:-; son of Dr. ,\lb·.,ct William -\llianc,' Pro,;r.lm B'>[";':, D:rvcl!'f ;11'- Lllin I'I)r!uguese-speaking area in Ihl' ffit::nt, pL'rr-nlt.'ur-rl pr~1du(rs ~lnJ t~.·~:­ .r\m\'ric;tn In... r.llutf_,.d ~ \1.1.:"t!11'_'r:lL' s"v,' ~ d : L·~tr., <.1\'." Dr". J. Car) world-with somL' S(J,UUO,UOO in­ r.l~Jl ~nc1A-G;)W. I:nl',)rts ror..Ll ";'. ~1, 1':. B·,rJ.:', IIlstru,'~!;!" i( .";p.~'~l',,,~, ·.:t • I..... :nu .\. ''tV. Hnrk t)t,.'lUlri nfferipc: rabitam,,;. :\rl')thcr ~{J,r'LJLJ .. IUU peorl<:: 51.; t'illi;,:;', (~f whi...:h tht> L·.~. ::;Uf:' 1::.'::: _l~'();Jr ·_,:·,·_)-t~~rd. L n~v·.·r..:;[; " ~c~', '(j!. L fj rst [>'jn u!"l:c's<' courses o'n UoSt.: lht...· s:JmL' Jan~u ..l~e in Porrug..ll, Pag~ 6 DAILY EGYPTIAI'oI April 22, 1961 Daily Egyptian Book Scene

Exposing the Parasites

Parasitism and Sub,'ersion: The help is needed is, in short. based Case of l.atin ,'Imerica, byStanislav on credi bility. Andreski. New York; Pantheon Awakening to the illnesses Books. 1966. $5.95. existing in Latin America is a o Pais ,Ins Coitadinhos (Algumas groggy experience communicated to [deias sobre 0 Brasil), by Emil the masses in the form of Hollywood Farhat.. Sao Paulo: Cia. Editora extravaganzas, by mass-media ad­ NacionaI. 1966. Cr $7.000. vertising, by thousands of well­ The Punta del Este conference of heeled tourists, and, last but not the presidents of the nations of the least, the ever-bountiful crops of Hemisphere has just concluded with self-seeking demagogues, oppor­ the customary pronouncements. New tunists, and extremist political ad­ goals were publicly set to achieve a venturers. Most pernicious (and Latin American Common Market by dangerous) of all the" awakeners" 1985, but in the wake of the speeches are those elements in Latin America emphasizing the future appeared the (and elsewhere. for that matter) who speech of President Otto Arosemena have been accustomed to issuing of Ecuador. He appealed for more decrees and posting bayonets to direct U.s. aid to his country at provide themselves and their the same time that the U.S. Pre­ hangers-on With all the miraculous sident emphasized that further aid powers of Aladdin and all the wealth if of Ali Baba. was forthcoming only the Latin From Columbus to Bolivor American nations helped themselves Sociology Professor Andreski's first. The U.s. repeat performance excellent book fits into the L1ENZO DE TLAXCALA: Azt~cs ris~ in arms against th~ Spanish invaders, was necessary for many obvious framework described above. Pop­ reasons; after all, the same nations ulation pressures and the awakening had agreed to help themselves when to the fact that one's children need not die of hunger a.ce in direct ponsible Latin American with the lists were appointed to the govern­ they signed the original Alliance mem owned enterprises only to For Progress Charter at Punta juxtaposition to the sad scenes of courage to make a serious analysis del Este in 1961. hungt:r, desolation. oppression. The and publish it. He uses none of purchase Russian oil. make hand­ "There is no worse a blind man illiterate peasant knows full well the euphemisms customary in such some commissions for themselves. than he who does not want to see" that he works hard from sun-up to works by Latin American authors; and use the standard 20% of the sun-down; the urban laboror like­ his language is strong and even value of Communist-bloc sales to is a very common adage in Latin flamboyant. Unfortunately, few if America. Over the years we have wise knows that he has not spared Brazil to finance additional sub­ spent several billions in money and his brawn in attempting to earn any of our Latin Americanists in version. patience, in the talents oi our busi­ enough to feed himself and his uni versity. government and business The author ''Irote most of his family. Producers in all walks of circles will be able to appreciate observations before the 31 March ness, government, and foundation the profound concern and self-diag­ 1964 depOSition of the leftist regime experts, and in the understanding life know that they are producing much more than what they are being nosis offered; the innumerable of incompetent and oppOrtunist Joao of our colleges and universities. original expressions the author Goulart. Unfortunately. the pros­ Yet we have so little to show for allowed as subsistence wage:;. What indeed does become of the results coins to illustrate his points and pects for correcting the ills so our efforts that such a prestigious their solutions are simply far beyond vividly described by the author are organization as The Twentieth Cen- of the sweat and toil uf Latin America's millions? the scope of a reading knowledge of quite dim. Education and more The author of 1'llmsili,'1n and Portuguese. Translating the work education is proposed as the basic S"bt'.'r";,,n has courageously cata­ into English would be a monumental cure-all; however. the authcr seems logued, With rare insight, the various task. to fO~'get that an educational system categories of parasitism that serve Farhat's thesis is essentially that dominated by political appointees to bleed our neighbors to the south Brazilian economiC, social and poli­ anrl i"l.nancially controlled by poli­ not only of their health. their lives, tical leaders have had neither the ticians most intent on receiving their children's lives but also uf personal courage nor the diSCipline ra.ke-offs from budget appropria­ their uwn and our fmures. Despite to avoid milking rhe public coffers tions can only train students to be its prejudicial connotations, the to helf-l" the pitiable one,.;." Leaders the supporters of the cliques and term "paraSitism" is used in its of all persuasions and positions had claques clamoring for mon' original meann,g in that it involves rationalized the needs of each and "charitable" contributions. practices permitting indiViduals to every pressure group as a matter Furthermore, The Communo- appropriate more gorlds and of "helping the needy" or providing nationalists, opportUnIsts and thei r services than they pruduce'; i.e., charitabk concessions -- by cover­ supporters who were appointed ro being fully-equipped as producL'rs ing (he costs frum government ex­ pOSitions in the educational and they still insist on living at the cost penditures. Print ing paper money gover:lment-ownt'd enterprises in of the efforts of uthl'rs. to cover l'ver-i.1CrL'asing budget rhe country were not remoV('d fn,m The author admits to making no deficits was an easy way 10 rake their positions of long-range inilu­ effort to suggest cures for the ills care of the net'ds of those groups cnce. Charitable sentiment for the \ hs work so adequately describes. who shrieked the loudest. Poli­ "pitiable ones" was able to The simple fan that a Polish-British ticians and their hangers-on overrule even tt.e no-nonsense ad­ author has undertaken to call "a desiring re-election or favored ministration of the Castelo Branco spade a spade" may well constitute government. the rude awakening we need to begin Some light is visible however, tury Fund has commissioned OEC D communicating with our patients. Reviewed by on the distant horizon. The govern­ Senior Economist Angus C. Mad­ Puru.",ifism tlnd S"hl'f"r ..,/oft is ment has decided to sell off certain dison to make a serious study of definitely not a work for the student Charles Ekker government-owned enterprises at what indeed has happened to the beginning his studies in Inter­ a gradual rate based on compulsory over US $100 billion that has flowed American affairs at college, in contributions for share purchases. to tne developing areas from the government, or in business. The government positions. landowners Tax collections have been tightened; world's industrialized nations. inter-culturally inexl1erienced rea­ requiring government bank-loans. utility anJ other government-con­ There is no point in prescribing der would be afflicted with a crisis stevedores wanting extra .. shame trolled service fees have been remedies for the patient if the of credibility not unlike the one pay" for having to carry sanitary increased drastically; "ghosts" doctor-patient relationship is nm causing immouility and stagnation ceramic-ware. and other ab­ have been erased from government hased on mutual confidence. Like­ among the Latin Americans them­ surdities and perversions soon be­ payrolls; and less paper money is Wise, remedies are of no value if selves. gan dominating the scene. Govern­ being primed. Inflation still plagues the patient has neither the courage This first-rate diagnOSis of the ment owned enterprises such as the country and will continue to do nor the diSCipline to follow the problems we face in Latin America the merchant fleet. steel-mills. the so until Brazilians realize that "the doctor's instructions. Confidence suffers only from the minor inac­ petroleum monopoly. the railroads, pitiable ones" do not need alms but in the healing arts, of course, begins curacies (San Salvador for El Sal­ the public utilities. the ports, the a friendly helping hand from local, with the patient's understanding that vador) that seem tu be the peculiar universities, and the social security national and international neighbors. he is ill and that only the specialist characteristic of most British works and pension insti£u[es all became Even the most ruthle3s exploiters whose abilities inspire confidence published about the area. the havens for politician recom­ of "the pitiable ones:' the Com­ will be able to provide a remedy mended jOb-holders who had to do muno-Socialists, have at last begun better than empty promises, oppres­ no work. Deficits and inflation learning that fiscal r,?sponsibility sion. hunger, and death. The key o I'"i" ,1,0" ("ilwlillll"" ("The soared. and socio-economic integrity are to success. then, hinges less upon Laml of the Pitiable Ones") by Then general confusion began the best remedies for the general the qualifications of the doctor than McC ann-Erickson AdvertiSing Exe­ to take irs toll. Opportunists and parasitism and criminal wasre wbch on his being able to communicate cutive Emil Farhat was an un­ Communo- nationalists served only impoverish Latin America. Our with the patient who knows and expected best-seller in Brazil last to invent more absurd demands so role is ro sec'k Out and reinforce believes in the value of doctors, year. It is included for review that even more confusion would thOSt, of our neighbors who have remedies, and diSCipline. Under­ because it is perhaps the first reduce the production of the coun­ th~' und~'rstanding and discipline to standing that one i" ill and that comprehensive work by a res- try. Leftists and Communo-natiofla- follow the doctor's instructions. Apri I 22, 1967 Page 7 A Panorama Gunther's Investigation Of 's South of the Border Colonial Empire

From Columbus to Bolivar. by Inside South America, by John about institutions, flora and fauna, Abraham Arias-Larreta. Kansas Gunther. New York: Harper & RoW, business and other practices, he City. Mo.: The New World Library. 1966. 57.95. has obviously relied on informant!' 1965. interested in presenting the best of Pre-Columbian Masterpieces. by Twenty-five years have elapsed all possible pictures short of down­ Abraham Arias-Larreta. Kansas since the author first attempted to right falsification or on locally­ City. Mo.: 1967. present a comprehensive profile of published government and other our neighbors to the south in his politically-oriented hand-outs. The In these two volumes. part of Inside Latin America, Maturity and most glaring of the pit-falls of where a projected series of six. the author. more careful research can be con­ such information is employed lies, professor of Spanish American Lit­ sidered as the outstanding and most perhaps, in the statement that in erature at the University of Missouri A.W.BORK welcome characteristics of Mr, the case of Brazil, employers, em­ cranch in Kansas City, presents a Gunther':; writings in this new vol­ ployees and the state contribute panorama of the cultural and social finally recorded in writing by a ume. about B% each of all wages to main­ development of the Spanish colonial priest, Antonio Valdez, in the town The cut-off date in this new tain "a strong and well-established empire. A Peruvian by birth, Arias­ of Tinta, Peru. Translation from Baedeker about South America is social security system" (p. 19)_ Larreta writes from the point of the Quechua into Spanish in IB68 1966; each country is covered with a Little does Mr. Gunther know that was the work of J. Sebastian Bar­ view of the Spanish American in­ general historical survey from much of the financing for Brasilia, digenists in an effort to provide ranca, another Peruvian. In En­ colonial to modern times; a general for te'ls of thousands of vote-buying Angloamericans with an under­ glish the other previous transla­ overview of recent conditions with appointments, for thousands of tion was that of Clement R. Mark­ standing of the cultural traits which emp~asis on events of the past ten apartments and offices for the rela­ have developed from the union of ham. , 1871. The new version to twenty-five years; general de­ tives and friends of politicians and Spaniard and Indian. by Arias-Larreta is therefore the scriptions of the more significf!.lt labor-union leaders, and for many a Philosophically (and politically) only accessible one. items (,. interest to the seri"us Communist-indicated job-holder the dominant ideas in the books In these two volumes the English tourist; and short biographical came from the coffers of thE social­ derive from the writings of Gon­ speaking reader has access for the sketches principallv of key political, security penSion institutes during zalez Prada. Amunategui, and Haya first time, therefore, to materials military, economiC, literary and the Kubitschek and Goulart regimes. de la Torre. Stress is on the Indo­ not previously available, but more social personalities. Rather than paying iO£o the system American culture and society as important even than the tex~s pro­ the governments had shamelessly differing from the European and vided in translation in the effort Any appraisal of conditions in milked every institute for what it Anglo-American. to express certain ideas and con­ Latin America must first be evalu­ was worth. Beginning with 1966 Few writers of his background cepts of great cultural significance ated from tRe background of the the Castelo Branco government and origins have attempted to write in such a manner as to make North author. Mr. Gunther's Europeanand raised total coO£ributions to 28% In English for the North American American readers not only aware U.S. profeSSional backgrounds would at the same time that the demagogic student and general reader, Hence of them, but to convince the naturally color his points of view and hoodwinking "governr.leO£ con­ these two books are valuable and "Yangui" of their importance. and his lack of knowledge of either tribution" was dispensed with_ After Arias-Larreta succ:eeds in his Spanish or Portuguese would neces­ all, doesn't every"me pay the "gov­ effort to a high degree, bu~ From sarily force him to rely on secon­ ernment's share"? Futhermore, Reviewed by Culumbus 10 Roli".,r is unfortunately dary sources for practically every­ despite energetic attempts to reform A. w. Bork marred by one fault. the bogeyman thing except for such information bure-aucratic procedures, most of all writers who attempt an ex­ as might be forthc;)ming from his beneficiaries of the social security position of ideas and values in a own personal observations and veri­ institutes have to wait in line for unusual in their offe.. ing of ideas language not their own. Much of fications, In other words, the author weE'ks, supply an endless number of and information. From Colllmbus the writing is Spanish in structure is to be credited with staring that expensive documents, and, in most to Bolivar is an exposition of the and syntax With English words. The he realizes his own limitations; on cases, "know" the offiCials handling cultural history of the era from result is that when the thought be­ the other hand, the reader must be the case to get any benefits at 1492 to 1830 as its title implies. comes involved or an effort is made cautioned by this reviewer that all. Conditions are not as bad as The other book contains the trans­ to write With some style and flair the accuracy and credibility of the in Uruguay but such social welfare lation into English of portions of as the Spanish American is wont author's information diminishes as schemes even in Sweden effectively three important native Indian writ­ to do, the English reader is likely rapidly as the field of personal deny benefits because of burocratic inlts: two ofthem Mayan: the Chila", to get lost or to find that the train observations and the cataloguing of inefficiency to a large number of Balam of Chumuyel and the Pupul of thought which has been develop­ facts and figures is transposed into the most needy beneficiaries, Vllh, and the other Quechuan: !lpu­ ing so interestingly is suddenly general interpretations and evalu­ In summary,lnside Soulh America Ollantay. interrupted due to the author's ations of political, social, economic is still one of the best generally Maya-quiche is the language of language difficulties. and other conditions in each coun­ available works of its kind. However, the southern Mexican and con­ On the Whole, however, this is try. the beginningstudentofInter-Amer­ tinguous areas of Central America, a small price to pay for what is ican affairs and the businE'ssman and Quechua is the language of the an opportunity so far too infre­ As secondary sources Mr. Gun­ looking for trade and other oppor­ old Inca empire of Peru and Ecua­ quent, whereby the English-speaking ther has made effective use of the tunities should double-check and dor. The Popul Vuh is a national reader can have a look as it were works of many an astute observer obtain the most up-to-date infor­ cultural history which has been into the brain and feel the intense whose works have been available mation possible concerning specific compared to the Old Testament emotional involvement of a Latin prinCipally in English, But in gather­ details which may seri:..usly influ­ history of the Jews. and seems American writer with the ideas of ing and cataloging many a detail to ence future decisions, definitely to date from before the his racial al'd cultural history. present a more up-to-date picture Charles Elcker Conquest. The Chilam-Balam was a later compilation 01 Mayo tradi­ tions and beliefs. Both works are filled with the symbolism and poetic concepts of the culture from which they grew. One does not have to be an anthropologist or enthnologist to enjoy the stories they include. nor a specialist in religious beliefs to derive worthwhile concepts from them. The .·lpu.Ollantay is the one com­ plete dramatic effvrt of any of the native peoples of Hispanic America to survive to our tim",. It was transmitted orally apparently from pre-Spanish times, although there is some controversy in thiS regard. In the 18th century when it was Our Reviewers t\. W, Bork is a member of the faculty of the Department of Foreign Languages and director of the Latin American Institute. Charles Ekker, assistant director for programs of the Latin American Institute and coordinator for Por­ tuguese in the Department of Foreign Languages, has recently returned from nine years of advisory work in Latin America. Spaniard's visit to Atahualpa From Columbus to Bolivol" Atahualpa's visit to Pizarra Page 8 DAILY EGYPTIAN April 22, 1967 Conozca a su Vecino IBocet~sME:!~::::~!.itanos I Los ffHinfelecfuales" RARA A"I$

Al crecer las grandes ciudades no se distingue uno del otro e industrialisarse las naciones de automaticamente como en los la America Larina todo cambia. La pueblos chicos. gente que se ve en la calle An M~xico como resultado de la metropolitana ya no es filcilmente Guerra Civil en Espana (1936-39) identificable en cuanto a sus ocurri6 una inmigraci6n voh,minosa origenes. Tanto el chileno, como el de refugiados pollticos. Est a rnexicano, el ingMs, el aleman, el inyeccion de sangre nueva trajo al norteamericano u Olra naCionalidad, pais muchas contribuciones valio­ vistt: del mismo modo, camina sa s: a yuda t e c n i c a. talentos rapidamente a sus tareas diarias, y directores. impulso a la industria y el comercio en la ~poca de la II Guerra Mundial. pero no sin algunos trastornos en los sentimientos Recording Notes nacionales. Entre los dcsterrados habra una mayorfa de individuos que sin grandes dificultades se ajustaron al nuevo ambiente y al trabajo que There's No pudieran encontrar. Aunque anhela­ ban regresar a su patria europe a no tardaban en integrarse en la vida nacional mexicana. Para otros el Bad Basie rE'ajuste fue mucho m§s diffcil. 0 porque no encontraban un empleo By Phillip H. Olsson adecuado 0 por sufrir de la nostalgia Assistant Dean, School of Fine Arts o del "shock" cultural. Algunos crelan con tanta vehemencia en la For a Basie fan there just isn't pronta carda del regimen franquista any bad Basie, and Hollywood ••. que no querfan dedicarse al trabaja UJI Basie's Way fits this description­ por otro lado. ~Por que arraigarse -jMira, mexican" ••• ! it's all swinging good. This, of donde no se iba a quedar'l ------course, is a sequel to Broadway ... Probablemente regresarfan a Es­ sideraban superiores al trabajo presencia de un ciudadano del palS Basie's Way, but it has more meat paft'a en unos meses. se declan. Y manual 0 10 veran como algo huesped. UHintelecuales" con "h" because of the fine tunes such as estos formaban un grupo pequei'lo secundario. Estos "intelectuales" implica que los supuestos "cere­ Laura, Secret Love, A Foggy Day, y conspicuo que diariamente se 0010 se dedicar(an a tareas bros" de Europa no demuestran Days of Wine and Roses, etc. Ar­ reunfan en los caMs a discutir su mentales. m§s educacion formal que el pobre rangements are by Chico O'Far­ futuro. planear sus actividades EI caricaturista Medina de la analfabeta a quien seiialan con tanta rill and they mainta;n the driving polfticas y comerciales cuando Vega reunio todo este perfodo de curiosidad. Basie style with clean driving lines, llegase el dla del retorno, 0 se crisis en la vida mundial y mexicana No se podri"a pintar m:'is but also show off Marshall Royal juntaban, llevamlo sus caracteri's­ en un dibujo en que se ve frente al claramente las dificultades del and the reed section more than ticas boinas. en las banquetas d,'1 Monumento de la Revolucil'in de 1910. reajuste espiritual, intelectuaI y de many, recent Basie records. (Com­ centro a comentar los acontecimi­ un pobre harapiento y enhambrien­ los sentimientos nacionalisras que mand Stereo. RS 912 SO.) entos del Ma. tado "pelado" nacional y un par de traja la epoca de la II Guerra Brasilian Impressions ..• Dick i:.mre estos habra unos cuamos que refugiados que en la calle de la Mundial a la Metr6poli que es la Hyman, Piano and Woodwinds. The en 1a tradici6n latina se con- capital comentan la inusitada Ciudad de Mexico. music of Brazil in recent years has he Id an attraction for most Ame rican jazz players and arrangers. Dick Hyman, of course. fits both cate­ tories, and in this album he Television's Week tastefully combines the North and South American jazz styles in such a way that the end result is very pleasant listening. The woodwind groups are either The Bogart Mystique quartets or quintets. With the quin­ tet. however. a f1ugelhorn sub­ stirutes for the usual French horn. Performers for the most part What's the Bogart mystique? students attending American high MONDAY are all NBC staffers. (Command Why the enthusiasm for Bogart schOOls. (6 p.m., Ch. 3) Stereo, RS 911 SD.) film festivals? Why the rash of Cineposium looks at the work of Brass Imp~c{- The I3rass Choir books about the la[(' tough-guy actor? SUNDAY independent and experimental film Conducted by Warren Kime: Four Why the unending admiration? "EI Prado: Masterpieces and makers. (6 p.m., Ch. 8) r iuge Ihorns, rhre,) trumpets, four An ABC documentary probes these Music" is the Bell Telephone Hour Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass 'rombone", flute, three girl singe;-,; questions Sunday night. "Bogart" presentation. Classical guitarist present a concert filmed on-location :,nc! rl(:rcu:-;sion is .1 marvelous com· will look at the man and his screen Andres Scgovia leads viewers on a in Mexico and Southern California. ,",il,":j"n fr)r the stvle of these ar- ima~e through cxcprpts from his tour of Spain's EI Prado art museum. (8 p.m., Ch. 12) ! '~ .. ' l:1·.... nt:=::. This r~l"orcj is .:l mu.,..a films and convcrs;Jtions with his (5:30 p.m., Ch. 6) "The Man in the White' Suit" stars ".:l"~,' f:1ns in gL'ncral and l'S friepds. "Bog3!'t," a docunlentary ,;£tIdy Alec Guinness as the strange yOU'1g :, 'oJ ;(;r ,hose inter('stc,d in new of Humphrey Bog.ln, probes the man who invents a fabriC' that nev'_'r . Il)n..:! id;:'.';I~. In other pr(]~!'arnminp;: man ~ml the scrCl'n ;mJge of the wears out. (10 p.m., Ch. 8) ,'it :-:wr:~lr \'OU have' .3 center late 3cror. (7 p.m., Ch, 3) .' [.1\ :;!:';.'r s~ sf("fll ;I~ wt.:1J a:-, Icft ~nging rail." ABC Stage 67 presents an original ('«rsonnel are: wnor and soprano suspense drama "D.:lrc I Weep, Dare sax: Curtis l'my /baritone sax: ) ,e­ I lI.!ourn?" James II.lason stars. (9 !"uy Cooper/Trumpet and flugelhorn: p.m., Ch. 31 Jimmy Owens/guitar, Carl Lynch/ piano: Kenny B:Jrron/drums: Rruno FRIO.", Y Carr/bass: Edgar Wi!lisjvocai: Eva Harris. N. E. T. Playhouse pre sen t s Thii" is a good imroduction to SMILING FIGURE: Totonaca Indian sculpture found at Britain's Sadler's Wells Opera what's going on on the We!lt Coasr Veracruz, Mexico. (From The Magic of the Smile, by Oc· Company in an adaptation of Offen­ With the younger avant garde musi­ tavia Paz and Alfonso Medellin; photos by Francisco OJch's "Orpheus and Eurydice." (10 cians. (Verve, V /V6-S68·U 8everido,) !l.rn., Sh. S) Ap'il 22, 1967 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page 9 Political Committee Replies to Charge The Committee for Keene, the reputations of the persons Kirk and Nelson Friday issued s;.;bmitting the advertisement. a statement about a political The newspaper accepted the ad which drew sharp criticism advertisement without further Thursday from C. Richard verification. This, of course, Gruny, University legal coun­ was a mistake fo!' which we sel. apologize. The ad, which appeared in the edition ofthe Daily Egyptian, contained a quota­ tion attributed to Gruny. The quotation dealt with residency \. f requirements for students. Mrs. George McClure, ex­ ecutive secretpry for the - ~"4 NEW FLAG PRESENTED--Ken Schlitz, second Meldaw, head of the flag committee; Marvin Ed­ Committee for Keene, Kirk from left, president of Abbott Hall, accepts a wards, vice president of Abbott Hall; Elwyn and Nelson, made the following new flag for Thompson Point donated by HarriS­ Zimmerman, aSSistant dean at Thompson Point; statement in reply to Gruny's burg city council. The housing area has two John Anderson, President of Thompson Point; statement: ~::=- flags, but both were badly tattered, and have John Ross, Honor Guard, and Bob Wiese, trea­ "The committee for Keene, CAMPUS SHOPPING CENlEP nol been flown since the end of Fall quarter. surer of Abbott Hall. Kirk and Nelson is responsible ,PHONE ~49-3S60 Others in the presentation ceremony are Tom for the ad which appeared in the Daily EgyptIan April 18, \uthorilit's to Visit not Mr. Gruny. The 3d quoted an article in the Daily Egyptian EARN . Since the interpreta­ tion of 'resident' was in $3600.00 Et'aluation Of Recreation Department Set controversy, we used the in­ terpretation of an authority we The two divisions of StU's Northern nHnois University. Southern DiVision, nlinois respected and one that seemed THIS SUMMER University Department of Hammernlan will be here Outdoor Education Advisory fair to us. We apologize for Recreation and Outdoor Edu­ Monday thro.lgh Wednesday to Council meeting, at a dinner failure to attribute the quote cation will be evaluated by top evaluate the effectiveness of meeting in University Center. to the Egyptian." OR MORE authorities in their respective the outdoor education division He also will show a film he The article to which Mrs. areas of specialization this in meeting educational objec­ has prepared titled "Beyond McClure refers appeared on month and next. tives in teaching education. On the Chalkboard." page 13 of the April 7 edition. Brought to SfU by the Col­ Monday at 6:30 p.m. in the Hutchinson, an author-lec­ The Daily Egyptian accepted lege of Education will be John Morris Library Auditorium he turer and brother of the late the advertisement in good Student_ Uk. you •••" made L. Hutchinson, head of the will speak to an outdoor edu.:a­ Fred Hutchinson, m a j 0 r faith, and on the strength of SZ400.oo to $6000.00 last Summe. profeSsional recreation edu­ tion seminar to which both league baseball pitcher and ••111"9 vacation pNlpe

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For as little as 70tt, you can reach • 315 N. Illinois the entire SIU market. ·421 E. Main • 914 W. Main Dait;- E8t~ DAILY EGYPTIAN April 22,1967 Campus Visitor Knight Accepted Honor to Give Wife Title

By Margaret Perez coIn's Gettysburg Address, octogenarian confessed that he a lot of personal prestige, and I once had a physical was concerned at one time but the material benefits are Sir Limon Anurews, the education instructor who was that his promisee: knighthood meager. only knight of the Queen of a veteran of theCrimeanWar. might have been forgotten. "When one is a knight," England now on the SIU cam­ I've even known people who "Sir Winston sent me a note Sir Limon said, . 'people don't '. ""'.'.' , pus, accepted his tirIe because were in Charlette Bront<:!'s asking if I would accept a like to disappoint him. As a he knew his wife lVould be Sunday school class." knighthood," Sir Linton said. result, I can usually find it I • ~- "terrifically pleased to have Sir Linton, a Visiting pro­ "I replied that I would, then room in a hotel. A knight ~ - . people call her 'Lady' An­ fessor in journalism, was I thought they had forgotten can have '1 coat-of-arms if . . drews." knighted during World War about it. •.U he likes and have it painted See Us For "Full Co",eroge Sir Limon, one of the most II for valuable information he "I waited a whole year be­ on his car, but I'm afraid inlfuemial men in England supplied the British gov­ fore I heard from the Queen. it would look awfully silly on Auto & Motor Scooter during his career and probably ernment. During that time I never told my small car. INSURANCE one of the most modest, does "I was very fortunate in my Wife, because I knew she .. Also, on festive occaSions, not like to boast about his ac­ discovering this informa­ would be overly excited. It a knight can wear a badge of complishments. The only ac­ tion," Sir Linton said. "I would get all around, and if a knighthood on his chest. But complishment he will talk divulged it first to Winston knighthood is known before the there's no sense in that really EASY PAYMENT PLAN freely about is his age. Churchill who was very grate­ ceremony, the name is taken because the lapel of your coat At 80 Sir Linton still smiles ful. It was so secret that I off the list," he said. hides most of it," he said. FINANCIAL RESPOI'ISI31LITY When he says, "I'm a very can't even tell you now what Sir Linton is one of the What's in the future for tcis old man. I have spoken to a it was." few journalists knighted by the active knight in the Queen's POLICIES reporter who covered Lin- This delightful white-haired Queen of England. service? Just a lot 0 f travel The honor of knighthood to the Mediterranean or the FRANKLIIV dates back many centuries Hebrides Island. But if he runs Recreation Jor Retarded Youth when it was applied to a man out of things to do, he just 11VSVRA.'~CE who was reauy to g 0 into may buy himself a whole fleet AGENCl battle on horseback, Sir Limon of big cars, and spend his time Topic Jor Institute on Campus explained. painting a coat-of-arms on 703 S. Illinci. Ave. Phone 457 ~4461 The fifth annual Kennedy by the Joseph P. Kennedy "Today you don't have to each and every door. Foundation Institute will open Jr. Foundation, are designed be an equestrain to be a Sunday at SIU. Recreation to train community workers knight:' he said. "It is given ONE SHOWING ONLY specialists from 30 states in ways of serting up re­ now for outstanding public TONITE AT 11:00 P.M. have signed up to attend. creation programs for men­ service, and usually to a po­ VARSITY The Institutes. sponsored tally retarded children. litical or military man." BOX OFFICE OPENS Until '960 Sir Linton was the Included in this year's con­ LATE SHOW 10:15 ALL SEATS $1.00 tingent of trainees is a seven­ editor 01 the Yorkshire Post, Student Art Exhibit man task force from the New and before that was the editor York City Parks and Recre­ of the Leeds Mercury. He was chairman of the British Press "BIZARRE AND BARBARIC ... MACABRE AND GRUESOME •.• During Spring Fete ation Department. New York IRONIC, BLOOD·STAINED AND SADlSTlC ... UNCONVENTlON· City plans to launch a year­ Council from 1955-.59 and head Offers $100 Prize round recreation program for of the British ProvinCial Al...PROVOCATIVE ... CONTROVERSIAL...FILMED TO PRO· the retarded, according to Press during World War n. DUCE MAXIMUM SHOCK!"-Fronk Quinn, Doily Mirror The second annual Outdoor "I've written a few books William Freeberg, director in my time," he said, .. but Student Art Exhibition will of the SIU Institute. be he Id at STU May 5-7, during The week-long program will I don't pretend to be a scholar the, Spring Festival, accord­ be at Little Grassy Lake Out­ by any means. I've delivered " HORRIFYING, ing to Bill Boysen, chairman door Laboratory. a few speeches, but this is the of the sponsoringfacu\[ycom­ first time I've ever taught WEIRD, mittee. Guest workshop leaders will a class of young journalists." All students enrolled in the include Laura Ganoung, di­ Sir Linton is now teaching HIDEOUS, Department of Art are eligible director of special education a course in international BIZARRE, to enter competition for the for public schools in Tuscon, journalism as a senior-level approximately $400 in prizes. Ariz., and a specialist on course in journalism. VORACIOUS First-place winner in the camping for the retarded; and He published his first book undergraduate division will William Rapp, recreation­ when he was just 16. and it AND receive the $100 purchase physical education consultant was under some very unusual for the Kennedy Foundation. FRANK!" prize to be awarded by Robert circumstances. -BosJe-, CrowthRf', W. MacVicar, vice president Albert Shafter, superin­ "My father was dying at the New Yorlr Tllnes for academic affairs. A tendent of the A.L. Bowen time," Sir Limon said. "He similar purchase prize for the Children's Center at Harris­ had been commissioned to first placz winner in the burg, will give a keynote ad­ write a book, and so as not graduate division has been dress Monday morning. to lose the money, I wrote contributed by William Sim­ Other lectures will be the book and had it published," eon, dean. and Milton T. Edel­ Franc.is Kelly, director of the Knighthood carries with it man, associate dean, of the Manfield (Conn.) Training Graduate School. School; Gene Keltner, of the Deadline for entry is Decatur Red Cross; and Betty Thursday, with entries to be Reynolds, actiVities specialist delivered to the Department at the WarrenG.MurrayChil­ of Art by . The silow dren's Center in Centralia. will be judged April 26 by a Among SIU faculty members panel composed of Lawrence who will direct traininl':. ses­ Alloway, artist-in-residence sions are I.P. Brackett, at sru, Evert Johnson, curator speech pathology; William of galleries, and Tom Lyman, Crowner, special education; associate professor of art. and Jay Bender, physiology. 1 he exhibit will be set up in the area west of Old Main, Fa.' Mo"irag Anima" and will open at I p.m. on Few sea animals move May 5. At 4 p.m.,Lyman will faster than sqUids, the conduct an auction of student National Geographic says. work, the proceeds of which Some squids can shoot :\0 to will go to the Florence(Jtaly) 40 feet out of rhe water, glir.­ Relief Fund for restoration of ing over the wave~ for more flood-damaged art. than a hundred feet. ~-...

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7-5715 COLOR by DeLliJIll' UNITED ARTISTS April 22, 1967 DAI L Y EGY PTIAN Page II En-Iai to Head Dismissed Priest Declares Six Member Academic Principles Violated Presidium WASHINGTON (AP) - The Instead, the university's TOKYO (AP) - Premier Rev. Charles E. Curran said Board of Trustees decided in Chou En-Iai's star apparently today his dismissal from the last week not to re- soared higher in Red China faculty of Catholic University new Father Curran's contract Friday. Peking wall posters "touches the entire Catholic when it expires Aug. 31. The said he will head a new group a cad e m i c and theological of six members in a presid­ communities:' board included 11 laymen and ium of the Communist party. .... --- DiSCharge of the 33-year­ 33 churchmen, including five Already No, 3 in the part} ..",~..-:::;:------old priest, who has taken a U.S. cardinals, 22 other arch­ hierarchy, Chou recently has liberal stand on birth control. bishops and six bishops. been taking an increasingly -- precipitated a strike of stu- .._...,~ ___"!'!"" __ --. important role in party Chair­ dents and faculty at the uni- !.. man Mao Tse-tung's struggle versity. II · , with his enemies inside the In a statement prepared for I' -, - - ! - party. a rally of demonstrating stu- I!J -~\, _--- -" Japanese press reports said dents, Father Curran said .A. -... .. the exact function of the new "the central issue is the -I'-i!! _ presidium was unclear but the termination of a contract with- WHEN THE OCCASION posters said the group will out specific charges or a hear- CALLS FOR be solely responsible to the party Central Committee. ing."Another issue involved, he MOVING It will not supersede the said, is that the "professional IR Y II-man presidium or standing judgment and integrity and the committee of the all-powerful professional competency" of K E EN-E Politburo, however, since that the School of Sacred Theology is headed by party Chairman and the university's Academic UNIT E0 V A N LI N ES Mao Tse-tung. (.roPeUey, Christian Science' ~onito1' Senate have not been re- It probably will be con­ 'MUST HAVE BEEN A SNIPER OVER THERE' spected. Ca rbondale cerned with the conflict between Mao and his oppo­ Fa~~:r t~~r;::\!;O be~~ar:~ 457 -2068 nems, led by President Liu Defense Witness Gives New assistant professor of moral Budget Pion Moving Shao-chi. Evidence of this was theology in that school. MOVING WITH CARE _, EVERYWHERI that the second name on the Impression in Coppolino Trial The faculty of the School of ~ list was that of Chen Pota, Theology, which went on strike AUTHORIZED chief of Mao's purge commit­ an injection of succinyl­ on Wednesday, had recom- AGENT FOR ~e tee. choline. mended that he be promoted to United Van Lines The reports said it was not Defense attorney F. Lee the post of associate pro- .-0 ALL 50 ST.HE!' clear whether "still pending" Bailey called Foldes to the fessor. The Senate had ap- -Id >10", Than IUu For•• gn Lan