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March 1964 Daily Egyptian 1964

3-3-1964 The aiD ly Egyptian, March 03, 1964 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_March1964 Volume 45, Issue 100

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, March 03, 1964." (Mar 1964).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1964 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in March 1964 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. l>Ai1, Humorous Skit Earns Top Theta Xi Trophy EGYPTIAN Singers Take Other 1st Places S~l.tlfM 9ttWU4 1(1fiq.",~ A take-off on a Broadway Theta Xi Variety Show Satur­ members folk singing grouP. Carbondale, Illinois show. a folk singing group day night. three men and two women, and a female vocalist took The combined talents of won the intermediate first Volume 45 Tuesday, March 3, 1964 Humber 100 top honors at the 18th annual Alpha Gamma Delta sorority place trophy. and Pbi Kappa Tau fraternity Patty Walsh was the In­ produced the humorous skit diVidual faVOrite, with her Computer Aids called "The Legend of New rendition of "When the Saints York," a take - off on the Go Marcbing In.'' and two musical, "'Guys and Dolls," other songs. Card Section which took first place bonors Second place group winner An IBM machine will be among group 3<:ts. was Sigma Sigma Sigma a silent partner· at SIU's foot­ The ~roups captured the sorority, whicb presented a ball games next fall. six-foot tropby for the second song and dance act called The card section, not the consecutive year. ··1 Ain·t Down Yet.'" a take_ players. will be getting a help­ The Justin Singers. a five- off on tbe Broadway pia y "The ing band from tbe electronic Unsinkable Molly Brown." • wonder. In fact. the Spirit 'Ernest' Is in Love The Dusty Road Boys sang Council says that all card bluegrass folk songs. The section stunts next year will FOT Extra Week five - member group took be worked out by the Data A bold-over performance of second place in the inter­ J?rocessiog and Computing "'Ernest in Love" is slated mediate acts. Center. for 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the Delta Zeta and Sigma Pi 8!.!t right now the council University Center ballroom, won third place with a skit needs help. Director Dennis Immel said portraying Republican Pres­ Jobn Boehner, president of yesterday. idential bopefuls Rockefeller. the council, said Monday that "We've scored a success " Goldwater. and Nixon. called the Computing Center is he commented after heari~g '·Musical Convent:ion." willing to program the smnts,. many requests for an addi­ Tbe Theta Xi Pledge act thus cutting down human error tional showing. was called '·Hugh Hefner in and saving about IS hours The student - produced Bunny Lande'" It was a comic per week of planning. About musical comedy has been pre­ representation of the hap­ 75 stunts would be pro­ sented four times so far in a penings in the popular Key grammed, according to three - quarter round styl" Clubs. Boehner. which seats the audience near The 17 acts played to a "It would be a simple matter the simply-decorated stage. packed house both Friday and to tape the stuntS for each Approximately 250 tickets Saturda y nights in Shryock seat, JJ he said. uTben each will go on sale tomorrow at Auditorium. week the person in charge of the University Center infor­ the card section could go to mation desk for $1.25 each. • the Computing Center and Immel said. SIU to Help choose the stunts for the The all- student musical week's game. The machines features 16 singers and danc­ would then run off an IBM Educate Mali card for each seat, indicating ers in addition to a five piece SIU soon will be undertaking / u.din a orchestra.. the color to hold up for each Sinsel',", five-member [olk­ an education mission in a singing group. won inl("rmediat!" Jirst-place troph., in this It is based On Oscar Wllde's stunt~" "Tbe Imponance of Being second country in Mrica. Boehner said the first step year's Theta Xi Variety Show. Thi ... was their first appearance Robert Jacobs. SIU co­ would be to build a library lL'i a group. Earnest.. •• ordinator of international of ~bout 25 stunts. The council projects" said a team of edu­ needs help in filling out the Rendleman Would Stop Tuition, Fee Charges, cators will go [0 Mali in a IBM forms, he said. program approved by the U.S. Boehner asked anyone in­ Agency for International De­ terested in helping to check in But State Board Majority Vetoes Suggestion velopment to help set up a at Room E of the University project of reacher training. Center from 9 to 11 a.l'I. John Rendleman. SIU gen­ enrDllnlent high at private cause he musl pay his living Last month the Ford Founda­ on Wednesday, Thursday or eral counsel, in a minority institutions; costs while in a per:od of tion announced a $286.000 Friday. opinion of his State Board of --There is no evidence that financial nonproductivity. grant to Southern to develop Higher Education committee, a student becomes more ap­ Rendleman's committee is the teaching of English as a Cars Permitted has advocated that the six preciative of his educational one of 10 appOinted by the second language in Nigeria. state - supponed universities opportunities because of the state board 10 prepare a Jacobs" who said a March • Only After Finals discontinue charging tuition economic burden thrust upon master plan for submission to target date had been set for and fees. him; tbe 1965 session of the an initial Malian survey,. ex­ Any SIU student who wants Rendleman. who heads the --Society's benefit from the legislature. plained tbat the SIU delegation to bring his car to Carbondale Illinois Financing of Higher well-educated person is so The general counsel said would work with the Malian may do sO only after his last Education Committee, dis­ great that it should be willing that free education shouid be Ministry of Education in pro­ scheduled examination, ac­ sented from the majority re­ to pay the relatively small Widened to include higher edu­ viding professional services cording to Joseph Zaleski. port for these five reasons: costs involved to prevent the cation in addition to the pre­ to a teacher training center.. assistant dean of student --Tuition and fees are not a loss of teachers, scientists,. sent system of free primary However. there would be a affairs. significant source of income engineers,. doctors,. and others and secondary training.. relationship with United Na­ This applies to students who to a university; whose contributions are des­ Tuition and fees at the state- tions Education and Scientific do not have stickers for their --They are not needed to perately needed; and supponed universities range Organization. Jacobs Said. autos.. protect private institutions __ The student assumes the from a low of $184.50 per Mali. a nation of nearly The only exception will be in because the expected enroll­ greater proportion of the year at Stu to a high of $270 four million people. became case of emergency .. ment explosion should keep burden of his education be- at tbe University of illinois. a republic in 191>0. Judy Lloyd, Gerry Howe Honored for Service to Southern The annual Service to South- Miss Lloyd is also a member Howe has an overall grade ern awards weTe presented to of the Sphinx Club. average of 4.37. Judy Lloyd anc '''Illiam Gerry Her over-all average is 4.2. Other nominees for the Howe, both ser.. 1"S, by Presi- award this year were: dent Delyte W. Morris before William Gerry Howe Is from Steve Wilson. editor of the the Theta Xi Variety Show. Carbondale. His majors are Obelisk. Friday night in Shryock mathematics and economics. Pete Winton. Saluki football AuditOrium. Howe is the Student Body vice- star and former president of They received w r is t preSident, student council the Intrafraternity Council. watches in recognition of their chairman, a member of Delta Carol Felrich. member of academic achievement and Chi social fraternity and the All-University Council. participation io University Sphinx Cluh. as well as many Mary Putt,. former presi­ activities. other campus organizations. dent of Woody Hall. Miss Lloyd, a speech major A I· .. A"'. bl The 1963 Service to South­ from Chicago. has actively PP leallons val a e ern awards went to Gerald participated in various cam­ Applications for the Campus Lawless, journalism major pus activites, including: Community Chest Steering from Jacksonville,. and Marion Homecoming steering com­ Committee are now available Dean, math major from mittee, and spring festival at the information desk of the Collinsville. committees. University Center. The Service to Southern She is a member of Sigma Deadline for obtaining ap­ award has been in existence Kappa social sorority and Cap plications is noon Sat., since the birth of Southern's and T asseJ Cluh president. March 7. Theta Xi Variety Show in 1947. Page 2 DAILY EGYPTIAN March 3, 1964 Figaro Remarries Singers in SIU Opera Trade Footlights for TV Spotlights By Judy Roales footlights for the overhead room and the players perform spots and have worked for the to an immovable audience Figaro (the cad) is a past two weeks at WSIU-TV which is seated at least 40 bigamist! putting "The Marriage of feet away. Television. how­ He's being married allover Figaro" on tape as a tele­ ever. brings the audience into again--this time on television. vision feature. the players' laps and pre­ And he's encountering a whole sents the scene from any new world of problems and The full length opera is being used, just as it was angle by changing camera challenges. Marjorie Lawrence's performed in Shryock Audi­ shots. Uyoung professional'· opera torium. The major difference "The drama is intenSified,'" ~ singers have traded in the in the two productions is a Gill said. ubecause the shift of emphasis from broad camera can get in and work body movements to the with faces. VARSITY subtler, more intimate act­ "One of the problems has ing required by the close up been teaching the players to TODAY AND WED ability of the television work close together. On stage, J::·,··----l camera. three of four feet maybe close,. Ucal'Y "Opera is probably the most but on television that's like a difficult of the arts to re­ city block." Grant ' loIp.bl~ul'n produce," Jack Gill,. pro­ This closeness to each other ducer-director of the tele­ and to the audience means that vision opera.. said.. "because for the first time. the singers both dramatics and singing are can actually sing to each other required." and not to the audience. Because of the immediacy "This is a problem because of television, the acting should they must build up an inter­ be superior to what is re­ action which was not neces­ quired on stage. This is pas­ sary on stage. Subtle expres­ s ible because the troope have sions become important; the already had the experience of lifted eyebrow, the tilted chin,. SWEET TALK-Suzanna and Figaro are going through tneir presenting the opera. Before the raised finger, the shrug of operatic marriage again7 this time for television. Denise J.osten the stage version they con­ the shoulders will all show up of Crete smiles as Joe McHaney of West Frankfort., cast In the centrated primarily on learn­ on the screen.·· title role. sings to her of marriage. ing the music.. and they feel Just how to handle the music the first three acts with vary­ tacking on mouldings and sure of it. Now, for the first for the opera has been another time, they have an opportunity ing results. But requiring the trimmings. important question at TV. people to be always near a Several of the costumes had to see themselves acting via "The orchestra." Gill ex­ teleVision. and can thus con­ microphone and clustering to be altered. All white had plained, "is an integral part little groups around a mike to be removed from the out­ centrate on the dramatics. of opera, especially of ADMISSIONS 35. AND 90¢ On stage there is plenty of limited the performance. So fits since white reflects too UFigaro.'· A duet is often in act four, both voice and much light. This meant, in not a duet. but a trio--two music were recorded. particular, that a new wedding singers and the orchestra. The staging problems of dress had to be made. White Therefore, there must be good wigs had to be exchanged for STUDENT'S DAY musical balance.'· This is "'Figaro" on television, ac­ cording to James Lash, colored ones; and, in one case, difficult in the large tele­ the actor's real hair was re­ Tuesday & Wednesday Vision studio. Networks have staging director at WSIU-TV. were few but major. With styled to substitute for a wig solved the problem in similar which looked a little too March 3 & 4 situations by recording both only one or two exceptions, with all the sets had to be rebuilt artificial under the scrutiny sections in sound perfect of the camera. Student rooms. Then during the taping on a shorter scale which Car Wash $1.75 1.0. would not exceed a twelve And what happens to the tape of a scene, the actors must when the nuptials are over? match the movements of their foot height limit. The result was completely new sets. but WSIU-TV and the Music De­ ROCKET CAR WASH mouths to the recorded music. partmEmt have cooperated to The music is much better ones which had to be similar Murdole Shopping Center to those used on stage so that make this pilot opera for tele­ this way, but if the lip move­ vision. If the finished product ments and the sound do not they would not seem foreign to actors who had become meets the standards both de­ match exactly. the visual ef­ partments have set for it, For the Finest in Food and SenicL fect is bad. accustomed to working wi th It's a difficult trick, and the original sets. plans will be made to make for that reason Gill decided On stage the closest mem­ it available to all the edu­ PIPER'S PIIIWI' IESTIIIII' not to try it for this first ber of the audience was over cational televiSion stations in 209 S. Illinois Ave. Carbondale television opera at SIU. Be­ 40 feet away. This meant that the country. Through this cir­ cause of the limited space third dimensional details of cUit of educational stations, Downtown on Rt. 51 in the studio and the inavail_ scenery could be painted in. the taped opera has a potential The close-up teleVision work OPEN 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. ability of the orchestra\forthe audience of 125 million per­ daily taping sessions, he de­ requires that the third sons in :Ill the major cities cided to record the orchestral dimension be built in, and and smah towns across the SPECIAL - RIB EYE STEAK music, but to do the singing hours of work went into nation. live. Regular Price $1.1 0 This method was used in Marketing Professor's Book Your Gal or Pal $ .65 D,IlLY EC1'M1A;'\1 Pohh"h,·d In The.- ,,,-,,,,.Ulmen' "r J"Ul"n"h.:m Printed in Fourth Language Served with SALAD, POTATOES, VEG. - ROLLS d,lIly e~H·pT ~unday dnd MfJnd"y dlJrml! 'all. wlnh·r. "pran!{•. md elKhT-weck "umuwrwrm A book co-authored by an use by college students and and all the Coffee or Ice Teo you can drink exc,·pT durrn!{ IInlvt·rJ!!)!. first published in English in Wales also are co-authors of FdUor. Nld !'''''quell; 'F"'e.1 ('(fIef'r. 1961. In ensuing years it was a marketing research book lIow;l1"<1 R. I.onlll. hllTorloJl .lind buslnt'~" ~,,tra. Highest quality lenses {including rr~.,toll offkt·u Loc.lIr .. d In IIlIlIdlnlll T·.8. Phon.. · printed in Spanish at Bar­ published in 1952. \ ..~~~, bHoeals} and sele .. tion of hundreds of lote~t 45J IJ5't celona and in Japanese at \!~_ ~,foshion frames. Tokyo. This year it is being Proscenium Sets published in Italian in Rome. •• " PRICED LENSES ~~ u S9 DIAMO~NGS "Marketing Research, U for Tryouts for Play ~- 50 ~D Budget Terms Shop WIth -:.- ONLY FRAMES r DAILY EGYPTIAN Carbondale"s new Pro­ V Adv.-rtls .. n, Free ABC Bool

Activities TV Looks at World OJ Arabs Tonight Committee Meetings Changes that have occurred in the Arab East since World War II are the topic.s for Plan Spring Festival Great Decisions on WSIU-TV at 8 p_m. The International Relations 7:30 p.m, in Room C of the Other highlights: Club will present a lecture University Center.. by Willliam Harris on tiC an Women"s Recreation Associa­ 5 p.m. India Make It?" at 7:30 p.m. tion's Fencing Club will Whaes New features afenc­ in Morris Library Audi­ meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room ing coach .. torium. 110 of Old Main. 6 p.m_ The Soil and Water Conser­ Edwin Munger will speak on uHow Money Expands and vation Club meets at 7:30 .. Resource Development Contracts" featured p.m. in Room 171 of the is on Problems in African at the Economics. Geography Seminar at 4 Agriculture Building. p.m. in the Agriculture The University Center Pro­ 7:30 p.m. Building Seminar Room. gramming Board Leader­ A trip by mule cart through The Student Government Com­ ship Development Commit­ the wilds of Baja. California mittee will meet at 10 a.m. tee will meet at 8:45 p.m. on Bold Journey. in Room D of the Univer­ in Room 0 of the Univer­ sity Center.. 8:30 p.m. sity Center. Eye On The World features Zeta Phi Eta will meet at 10 The University Center Pro­ gramming Board Special "In Mortal Combat:' a film a.m. in Room E of the Uni­ on the Barnes Hospital In versity Center. Interest Committee will meet at 9 p.m. in Room B St. Louls. The American Marketing As­ of the University Center. sociation will meet at 10 WomenJls Recreation Associa­ a.m. in Room C of the Uni­ tion Class Basketball will Italian Village versity Center. take place at 4 p.m. in the 405 S. Wash. Ph. 7 _ 6559 The Inorganic Chemistry Women's Gymnasium. Seminar will take place at The Southern Acres Residence 4 p.m. in Room E of the HalIs Council will meet at University Center. 9:30 p.m. in the Vocational Review of American Theaters Inter-Varsity Christian Fel­ Technical Institute Office. lowship will meel at 6 p.m. There Will be an Activities in Room B of the University Development Center staff Presented by WSIU Today Center. meeting at 9:30 a.m. in Current American ttleaters 6 p.m. The Agriculture Economics Room B of tbe University are viewed in respect to Soft string music designed Club meets at 7 p.m. in Center. American civilization at 10 for dinner is featured on the Agriculture Building Student Forum will present a.m. on Ideas and the 11leater Music in the Air. Seminar Room. a debate a[ 8 p.m. in over WSIU-Radio. lOp.m. The University Center Pro­ Muckelroy Auditorium. Other highlights: A haH-hour news report gramming Board Displays Creative Insights Will meet with Clark Edwards. 12:45 p.m. Committee will meet at 7 at 10 a.m. in Room F of the Shop with p.m. in Room F of the Uni­ University Center. This Week at the UN. Com­ DAILY EGYPTIAN versity Center.. Sigma Delta Chi will meet mentary from the United Ad" ..rti,. .. rs Spring Festival Steering Com­ at 5 p.m. in Room C of the Nations. minee meets at 7:30 p.m. University Center. 2:30 p.m. in Room C of the University The Faculty Couples' Bridge Center. Richard Dyer Bennett pre­ Club will meet at 7 p.m. sents folk songs .. The Spring Festival Miss in the Family LiVing Lab­ Southern Committee will oratory of the Home Eco­ 2:45 p.m. meet at 8 p.m.. in Room F nomics Building.. The World of Folk Music. YELLOW CAB CO •• INC. of the University Center.. The Parachute Club will meet The General Baptist Student at 9 p.m. in Room C 01 the Debaters Perform Phone 457-S121 Organization will meet at University Center. The FF A Club will meel at In Weekend Meets 7:30 p.m. in Room 225 of In open competition at the p"&.'III'&NT the Agriculture Building. University of Notre Dame last PHILIP M. KIMMEL e ... "'BONO"'L£. ILL weekend. SIU debaters met Munger to Talk with 53 colleges and uni­ verSities. On African State Southern's representatives, Jeff Barlow and Janelle The 275,000 square mile Schlimgen, won five and lost British South African pro­ one of the preliminary de­ tectorate of Bechaunaiand will bates. but were defeated in be the topiC of the final [he first round in the final Geography Seminar lecture playoffs. said Marvin Kleinau. today at 5 p.m. in the Agri­ director of forensics. culture Seminar Room. In the Bowling Green State Edwin S. Munger, professor University Invitational. which of geography at California In­ Was also last weekend. stitute of Techno1IJgy. ',;;111 ne Charles Zoeckler and Pat the guest lecturer. Micken ended with an 8-4 He will discuss uBechauna_ record. Zoeckler finished land: Gestation of a Nation fourth and Micken finished PAT Tl/OIIPSOlV and Economic Growth." seventh in the debares. Munger is currently the The next debate is scheduled Pal Thompson Wins head of a study team working at St. Thomas College in St. in South Africa and is a former Paul. Minn. associate of the field staff Honor at Baldwin in Africa. Be An American Pat Thompson, a resident Zoolouy Seniors of Baldwin 2nd, has been .0. r~L-(~ I named the Outstanding Resi- ..... t , d. T "J dent of Baldwin Hall, in a 1,~ee I!_ A· .. :;Uiiy Airlill~S Stewardess contest s~n~::~ ~y tne T.P. The zoology senior seminar t>ointer. will meet at 4 p. m. todav I~"~ " I I Would you lik .. to Imt on an Ameriran Airlines stf"wardess uniform and win~s? Come in for a we~~n n~~:~~~t~~~n~:nr: ~~~e in Room 20: :: ~;Ie LHe Sci: hrief. private interview. varn more about the .... - ence Building. .f Jrene dentt-; ::~ :~te ;irst and third Roy C. Heidinger, senior qllalifi('ations fur this rewarJing career, floors, respectively. majoring in zoology. will Campus Florist Girls arl' now "ejn~ inlf"rviewed for late sprin~ Mis'; Thompson is a junior speak on uReproductive Var- and early summer upt"nin~s, To serve our pas­ from Lockport, majoring in ri:a:n:ts:..:in:..:.F~is:h:e:s::_' _____...!:=:6:0:7:S:.:I:II:. =4=5:7:-6::6:6:0:; speech correction. She is a sen~l'rs~ wf'lfarf' and ("omfort. you must be:

member of rhe Thompson [1 Sin~le ! Hi;!:h Sc~ool Graduatp Point Executive Council, and J A~. 20-27 [J ;;'2' 1o 5'9' is pledging Zeta Phi Eta. na­ FOR RENT tional speech fraternity. n Normal visiun-l'ontal'[ Jenst's l'onsid.. rerl Residents of each of the 11 Two vacancies in ~irl's dormitory. Kitch.. n and ~ Wdght 1 lU max.imum-in proportiun to hei~ht Thompson Points halls win nominate its outstanding resi­ laundry privileges. Private bath. Hi·fi INTERYIEW ON YOlR C.J.llI'lS TilU'."/"-'. 11",,·".i dent and a selection commit­ Con tad ,..our plal'.. m .. nt tee from the hall will sc Jeet and TV in lounge. Transportation offil'r for informatinn the hall·s ou{sranding resident from the three candidates. to and from school. Selection is based on floor. hall, Thompson Point and 401 Orchard Drive Phone 457 -7 55'" campus activities. L:~:"::~::'::::':;:"::':':';:'::' ______';';';';;';;;'';;;';'_';''::;':''.:.I Page 4 DAILY EGYPTIAN March 3, 1964 Associated Press News Roundup New England Tahoe ,Plane Found; Campaign Into Final Week 85 On Board Dead W ASHiNGTON--Sen. Barry TAHOE VALLEY, Calif.,-­ Associated Press the Goldwater headed for New Air searchers found the wreckage was folJnd 200 feet Hampshire Monday to open a wreckage Monday of a four­ helow the top of a rugged six-day, last-week drive for engine plane where it crashed peak towering among those the state's first-in-the-nation into a Sierra peak,. east of whicb rise up to 10,000 feet presidential primary. Lake Tahoe, killing all BS or more in the sId and New York Gov. Nelson A. persons aboard. gambling playland around Rockefeller, the Arizona A doctor, taken by heli­ Lake Tahoe. senator's chief announced copter to the remote scene at The sponing helicopter was opponent, returns to the the 8,.800 foot level of a snowy one of 17 which flew out Mon­ Granite State Tuesday night mour-tain. confirmed there day over the rugged wilder­ for a solid week of campaign­ were no survivors. ness scene near the site of ing hefore the balloting Marcb The Paradise Airlines Con­ the 1':,~O Squaw Valley winter 10. stellation vanished in a snow­ Olymp;cs. Meanwhile, a Newsweek storm Sunday while carrying A ground party iii snow magazine poll revealed that 81 passengers to Nevada's tractors headed for the Henry Cabot Lodge, U.S. am­ casinos and ski resorts on a wreckage. bassador to SOuth Viet Nam, flight from San Jose, Calif. Because of the weather con­ might whip both Goldwater Lt. Col. Alexander S. Sher­ ditions and the topography. and Rockefeller--if his name ry. deputy commander of the there was no indication when were on the New Hampshire Western Air Rescue Center. the trip 01 more than lOmiles ballot. Hamilton Air Force Base, told might be completed. Supponers have been seek­ an airport news conference the ing write-in votes for Lodge wreckage was spotted just Senate Approves and former Vice President west of the hamlet of Genoa, Richard M. Nixon since Nev. Peace Corps Bill neither is an announced Just before the conference, candidate. a helicopter pilot told The WASI-HNGTON--The Senate Bruce Shanks, Buffalo Evenintr; News The New Hampshire ballot passed by voice vote Monday lists only Goldwater, Rocke­ a bill authorizinb a $115- feller, Maine Sen. Margaret Greek million expenditure to finance U.N. Receives Resolution Chase Smith and i!aro1d E. an expansion of the Peace Stassen. Corps during the fiscal year Over the weekend, Gold­ Jewelry starting July I. For Peace Force on Cyprus water gained 48 first-ballot The House is expected to votes from Republicans in UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.·­ tegrity, and by Turkey on a act on the bill today or North Carolina and Oklahoma, Brazil -lnd four other nations reference to the 1960 treaty Crests which became the first states Wednesday. submitted a resolution to the under which Turkey. Greece The $l1S-mUlion authori­ to complete their convention U.N. Security Council Monday and Britain t,C;lve a right to Lavaliers zation. which is subject to a delegations. proposing that an international intervene in C yprlls under later appropriation to provide the actual money, contem­ peace force be sent to Cyprus certain conditions. Chapter Guards for a three-month period. Brazil, Norway, Ivory King Paul of Greece plates an expansion of the The proposal also called Coast, Morocco and Bolivia Suffer. a Setback Officer's Dangles Peace Corps from the present for appointment of a mediator worked out the final details 7,300 to 14,000 volunteers to help achieve a settlement 'If the resolution at a private ATHENS, Greece -- Ailing sometime in 1965. of differences between Greek conference. King Paul of Greece suffered BUENOS AIRES, Argentina and Turkish Cypriots. Meanwhile. ships of the U.S. a serious setback Monday and S.I.U. --A fugitive Nazi accused of Brazilian Ambassador Car­ 6th Fleet and the Turkish navy his doctors reported Monda~ organizing mass killings to r!d los Alfredo Bernardes intro­ began joint NATO maneuvers night that his general condition Charms Hitler's Germany of mental duced the resolution at the in the Aegean Sea. is worsening. and physical cripPles has been Security Council session.. A Greek naval strike force TlIe third medical bulletin Lavaliers arrested in Argentina, the The resolution reponedly also was operating in the of the day said: uTheworsen_ government said Monday. contained some modifications Aegean, officially on maneu­ ing of the condition of His & Dr. Gerha.rd Bohne, 61, fled sought by Cyprus and Greece, vers, i\. 12 hours sailing Majesty the King, provoked West Germany last summer a but there was no assurance time frl. ~ yprus.. by blood clots. is continuing.. II Crests few months before he was to go that it would win complete ac­ on trial as one of four major ceptance by either nation. defendants in the N a z i The chief stumbling block Texas Districting Invalid, euthanasia program which has been insistence by Cyprus took 200,000 lives from 1939 on a guarantee of that U.S. Supreme Court Rules to 1942. country's territorial jn- The trial opened at Lim­ W ASI-HNGTON -- The Su­ coming election and the opera­ 102 S. ILLINOIS burg, Germany. Feb. 18 with­ General MacArthur preme Court affirmed Monday tion of the election machinery out him. a deciSion tha.. Texas statutes of Texas noted previously by Is Hospitalized establishing the state's 23 the federal District Court in • congressional districts are Houston in an opinion. II Little Pigs Cut Out Menu WASHINGTON--Gen. of the unconstitutional. The high tribunal also or­ Arm y. Douglas MacArthur, The high court said its dered continued a stay in the 84. flew here from New York decision was without prejudice caSt; granted by Justice Hugo BASKETS Monday and was immediately to the right of state officials L. Black on Oct. 23, 1963. Bl) Pork .J;' Ill) Pork .69 taken to WaIter Reed Hospital to apply. by April I. to the This stay. the court or­ for •• observation and evalua­ U.S. District Court in Houston dered, will continue "pending B() Pork JUITlIx> .:;0 BV Bihs .79 tion of abdominal com­ for ufunher equitable relief timely application" for the mllN.f 5;, 1«) [hf .79 plaints." in 1ight of present cir­ relief mentioned previously The five - star general cumstances. " and the final disposition of tii(·kor;.· Bllrr~f'r .]0 f licknrv f lurgf'r 59 walked off the military air­ The circumstances, the Su­ the case by the federal Dis­ (:hf'f'sf'bur;...,'f'T .:fi ~~~~~'l. Chf'f'spbufgt'f .69 plane and entered a limousine preme Coon said. include trict Court in Houston. which lOot him to the hospital. u'thf; jmminence of the forth- The Houston coun, in a 2-1 Fish Sand\'iich .3.) decision, had found tbe Texas districts invalid. I NATES The Tex:tS case involves ATTENTION the contention raired in many 1«) Pork .7') other states--that present mll('('f.iN • Dealers in high grade fuei OIl, ~~;:::::~!!: favors rur;:!.] voters over city voters. 1«) Bih .99 outed.• ga-.-~.. , ___..... d_ The Supreme Court ruled B two weeks ago, in a Georgia PACKS I --"~j;udonal districting (:olf' Slaw JmTlho .X) Phillips 66 gasoline Pick-A-Pack of Fn'nc-h Frips .~O ~~:::""rt;;.t congress~~~:: ~:~- Harllf,,('uP mrat, BULK tricts must represent the \\llOlp Shouldf'r I.~.) lb. • Prompt deli"ery same number of voters, as BUrlS, ~;III('f', Slmv far as is practicable. ComplPlp Family \lpal Pork Bllik I.lfi II>. Tn (j() Ih'flllllk ~.mll>. • Complete service & parts for (,.Pack 1.80 Bibs Sial. I. ~<) THE a-Pack ~IO mobil homes L'·P".. k :l.fIJ FREE DELIVERY SEATlES ASK ABOUT ... SERVICE ·In <;'Y (;m;" & AFT-;:R 5 P.M. S T OIL COMPANY RECORD ALBUM CUSTOM BARBECUING ... on all ord~s of S2.00 or more, Located on old Route 13 (East of GICtver·s Trailer Soles) CATERING S .25 dJarge under $2.00 James "Doc" Turner, Operotor WILLIAMS STORE 1202 W.MAIN PH 7 -4424 549.2583 457.5370 212 s. ILLINOIS rI'>n should he..' ma!icd h\ Mar("h naT Will be OVl.'r ahout 4 p.m. Itentlary. Chester. March 3, 1964 DAILY EGypnAM Poge 5 Geowgist Awarded More Research Aid David Nicol, associate pro­ mers of 1960 through 1962. fessor of geology at SIU. has Nicol, a native of Ottawa, received a $3,700 grant from Canada, came to SIU in 1958 the National Science Founda­ from the Smithsonian ] nstitu­ tion to continue a research tion in Washington, D.C~. project staned in 1960. where he was an associate The grant, added to an orig­ curator of invenebrare inal NSF award of $13,500, fossils. He h.:Jlds master-s will help Nicol complete a and Ph. D. degreesfromStan­ study of bivalved mollusks-­ ford University. such things as clams and Shop With oysrers--collected on trips to OAJLY EGY PTIAN the Antarctic during: the sum-

Aid in Mental, Physical Problems Given to Over 1,000 at SIU Clinic For more than a thousand Southern's new Wham Educa­ and faculty, as well as to persons annually ~ a quiet tion Building. the center began anyone else who needs them~ service center at SIIJ is a in 1958 when nine separate such services as speech and source of help in a wide range clinical agencies on the cam­ hearing therapy, marriage of mental and physical prob­ pus were combined into one counseling~ psychotherapy and lems -- help [lIey might not centralized office. The oldest,. vocational counseling. otherwise receive. the child guidance clinic. dates Services are provided to Known as the Coo~rative back to 1939. students and faculty members Clinical Services Center, the Combining the clinics has without charge~ except for a SIU unit at the same time provided easier accessibility serves as a practical labora­ nominal fee for physical to the public. according [Q therapy. Others who can af­ tory for students in various Alden M.. Hall. center man­ areas of counseling, thera­ ford it pay, Hall said, but ager.. And service to the pub­ one peutics and diagnostics. no is turned away for lic is a basic purpose of the lack of funds. Moved earlier this year center. .'from temporary quarters into It offers to SIU students Last year, 1,061 persons were received by the center.. More than haH were non­ University people, the ma­ jority coming from ~he sur­ rounding southern Illinois area. Some came from neigh­ boring states. The clinic draws upon various academic units of the University for its staff~ Pro­ fessional marriage coun­ selors, for example, are pro­ vided by the Sociol('gy De­ panment, while medical staff members are drawn from the University Health Service. Treatment facilities double 35 laboratories for advanced students in such fields as psychology. rehabilitation and social work~ Students often confer with patients under d.i­ rect faculty supervision.

;;--~ Lunch Workshop INTERVIEWING PATIENT-RlJtn A. RlL<;!Jing. regi,<;tered nllr,<;!' at ."iI/), c(Jllects data from a patient ('''tering the Coopt·rativt· Plans Completed Cliniral S~rt'ir('s C,~ntf'r [or pflysiral therapy-ontO of eight treat­ Plans have been completed m"nt sl"rvires available La lhl" pllblir. al Jhl! center. for the 1965 School Lunch Workshop 10 be held June Public Seminar Will Discuss 15-19 at Sill, according to Henrietta Becker. lecturer in the SIU School of Home Eco­ How to Improve Pert;onality nomics and director of the A day-long public seminar 9 to H.B.. Bauernfeind. as~,s­ workshop. slated for next month wilJ con­ tant dean of the divisio~1 of The planning committee of flO !url~er in Technical and Adult Edu­ sider suggestions for women area nutritionists who as­ cation. im improving personality. sisted Miss Becker in de­ lJubiic ;:;:!~!~nn5. app~ara!~c;.e On the program will be Gene r. nok .. director of C enrral Ser­ veloping the program includes: and performance on tnt! jV...... Mrs. Hilda Wandling. cafeteria ;i~e . at Meau~-Jv~:;:;or: iii The workshop is presented manager at Marion Commu­ Evansville. Ind .. , discussing 5arex by me SIU Technical aod Adult nity School No.2; Loren Fox, ~ ···-...... inn Division and the uThe Secretary Builds Public director of food services, ~uu'-... ~__ -- nf the Relations;U Sus a n Butler Slacks bY- Carbondale Chaple1 ..... ,...... ,. on "A More Charm- DuQUOin High School; Patsy National Secretaries Asso­ spcaJlr.JUb . "'--l1_nrlc: Carver. director of cafeterias. ciation. It is schedulec! for ing You:' and Art rel..l. .. ~_ r-- ...... ,.rtsville school systemj r.u .. ___ .~ -_"0'" di- ~vfarch 14 in the Library Au­ of the Dale Carnegie Institute and Mrs. Lydia .... Ut;.:H ... ~. ditorium and Ballroom B in in Evansville, Ind•• talking on rector of cafeterias, Central mi'4:' the Umversiry Center. "'Speaking for Results:' TownShip High School, Ceo­ Theme of rhe seminar will Mary Walker, supe:Lvisor be uBuiIding Personality. of the SIU Stenographic Ser­ traIia~ - Public Relations and Per­ vice. will suggest ccShorr Cuts Also Mrs. Anna Light Smith, formance." in Office Procedures" "tnd Don chairman of the food and nu­ Registration is free for VTI West of West Frankfort will trition department at SIU; :ftudents and StU staff mem­ speak on UWhat Does Your Roy SUddarth. director of the 98 -hers. H:gn school students HandwritIng Tell?'" school lunch division, Sla[e Only $5 - so, get several pairs! will pay $2.50 and adults ~3.50. Registration is scheduled Depanment of Public [nstruc­ FARAH MANUFACTURIN6 co .. INC El. PASO. TEXAS A luncheon is included in the for 9 a.m. in the Morris Li­ [ion; and Jack Thomas. c'''ief price of [he ticket. Reg:istra­ brary AudItorium. The semi­ s[eward, Menard Stale Per. non !;hnuld hi.' maned!w March nar will be over ahnu[ 4 p.m. itenriary. Chesrer. Page 6 DAILY EGYPTIAN March 3, 1964 Letters To The Editor Debaters Seeking Victory -- Not Truth I recently had a very en­ dence, manipulating data and the law curricula cultivate Cafeteria Confiscates lightening conver$atioll with quoting out of context, all in their own vices, and let us an articulate member of the the interest of winning Withdraw university sanction Southern lllinois University debates. immediately from such a cor­ Tickets 'Out of Blue' debating team. The question which urged ruption of the principles to Perhaps thiR is merely itself most strongly upon me which the university is One day last month we went In neither case did anyone testimony to a deplorable when] learned this was: What dedicated. to the Roman Room for our intend to defraud Slater Food naivete. but 1 was astonished is an activity }:ike this doing The ability to take any side weekly Sunday dinner, meal Service. It seems to us that to learn that it is standard in a university, where, pre­ of any i&sue. on request, un­ thi,::; is just another method of tickets in hand. When we practice in debating teams sumably ~ truth is our primary doubtedly a cherished one in reached the <;hecker we were strengthening their control of deliberately to seek to in­ goal. certain circles. seems to me asked to present our SIU the cafeteria monopoly. crease the skill oftheirmem­ ] understand the usefulness to smack too much of prosti­ identification cards. One stu­ A g a i n -- remember these bers in dissembling, statis­ of such training as this in the tution to be a suitable object dent's name did not cor­ meal ticke[S were fully paid tics-juggling. reversing posi-' law curriculum, for in court­ of university sponsorship. I~d respond with the name or. the for .. Were we that much in the tion on an issue of principle, rooms this kind of verbal like to see other comments meal tictet he carried. The wrong? We desire an explana­ virtually on signal. adducing agility has long heen the norm, on this. rickel was confiscated and tbe [ion. misleadingly selective evi- but then, J would suggest, let Norman Haugness student turned away rather Russ Blais rudely. We discovered that Fred Rood many orner students were ex­ John Guleserian .IRYING DII,LlARD periencing tbe same problem. Bernard Crowley We will now state the ques­ David Stack tion: why, out of the blue, Tom L. Jones were these meal tickets con­ The 'Monkey Wrench' Bills. Clarence G. Doughtery, fiscated? We note that the rescinded Its adion. The I.gislalors went meal contract states it is University Center director. We Americans tend 10 ... by Ii~ ODd starts. home, the year ..,ded ODd DOW people could their prerogative to check offered t his explanation: W. blow hot ODd tbeIl cold. We let steamed hardly care less agam ..Yet 22legislaturos lie identification in conjunction Weekly 20-meal contracts of­ up ODd tbeIl let the Iteam die doW!!. W. with meal tickets. To quote: fer students an estimated $16- meeting In rqular ....ion this year and the especially act this way In public affairs. "Meal tidets along with $18 In meals for $14. . 'Dkmkey .wrench" amendments milbt be ap­ identification cards must be University Center Food Just a year ago almost proved in ..me of them almost wI~ at· presented to the Food Ched­ Service must show a profit. DObody could be boIIlend tention. er at each meal. No meals which Is applied toward oper­ .- !be ""heme 10 slip But DOW there is M agency even to keep will he serv.>d without these ating expenses for the Center IJ/fIf6 tile "mGlkey wreDeh" track of thi. plaD to subvert our bist1IrIc two identifications." and toward a $320,000 annual amendments whicb would federal unioD. The Council of State G0vern­ We do not question the va­ debt payment on tbe structure. hue llltered !be fuDdameD­ ments. headquarters In Chicago, bas otepped lidity of this clause, but wouid Sales of meal contracts enable tal relatiollsbips betweeD !be out of !be pitlure. While this is JIrlltifylag 10 liIee to poInt out that in the the Center to realize some stales ODd !be fedel-III UIIioIl. many friends of the C. S. G., presumably it five months previous that we savings because with som~ These three proposals would means that tIIere will be DO IIlItionaI ...".. bad eaten at the University cont~act-guaranteed sales it C' rea tea 5O-state super'­ board for keepinl track of approvala or rejee.. Center, not once had an identi­ is easier to predict how many "court of the Union" ••• lions. fication check heen made. persons will be served at thorized to override !be You may wonder why so each meal. The Center frank­ Supreme CotDt on certaiII Wllere Are VO/llnteers many students were turned ly counts on absenteeism to matiers. bar !be fed e r al This is a ..tion of more thaa 1111 million away that day.. Some who pur­ lower the number of meals courts from jurisdictioD In people. We bave bunc{redo of collel" and chase meal tickets would de­ served--if everyone of the state legislative .pportion- trwi'.. 011 ...... universities. many with ~:1OO1s or ctepart. cide (0 go home for the week­ 150-200 students who pur­ .ment, and chODge !be CODStituticmal amend­ monts of polit*,-l science or institutes on end. and sell their tickets for chases meal tickets were [0 lag process so as 10 elimiDate action In C.... governmenL What on earth interests them If perhaps $3-$4 to some one eat all 20 meals each week, II!.... Almost UDDoticed these three ....lIIts not a single one will volunteer to keep track without a meal contract. (Re­ expenses W0 u I d increase aD our Constitution started tbru !be &tate again. of this f.ver cbart an what Mr. FreuDcI member, this ticlcet is paid for, l<1Iislat1lres. righUy calJs Our 4'national health?" and Slater has the money.) Since the incident men­ Some students who cannot af­ tioned. more regular checks Lawyer Prodded Nation Even DOW no one knows for certaiD now ford Weekly contracts might of ideo~iiication have been many states have approved wbich of the Under !be proddi1l~ of a veteran battler for One take advantage of thts [0 get instituted. thne proposals. of them bas heeD ap­ their only well-balanced meal legal reforms wltbia the nab of the Ameri­ proved by at least 13 states, another by at of the week. Managing the news is much can Bar association, Arthur J. Freund of St. least 12. Apparently Arka..... Alabama. Because they could not af­ like trying to manage a woman. Louis. the ""unlry began 10 wake up. Eminent Florida. and perhaps South Carolina have ford the $14 weekly, other It can't be done for any great judges, law professors and legal scbolars, blessed aU three. Dlinois passed !be ODe 18 students might split the cost length of time. newspaper writers, specialists in government. weaken the amending prccessp of a meal ticket and split the --B.rooks (Ala,) Bulletin in colleges and universities and publiC' study 11 one citizen c\luld do a l~ part or the meals eaten. This would in­ groups grew concerned. Here and there a bar job, at his own expense .. last year, surely troduce some well-balanced One thing that causes much group stirred and in June the fll'st public there is somewhere a national civic organiza.­ meals into their diet. even if of the world~s increasingsor­ debate wu beld under the auspices of the tion or a college or university that can taU the rest of their meals con­ row--the liberal of today is Madison county [m.1 Bar Association. over on a systematiC' bilSis and report to u. sisted of hamburgers and the conservative of tomorrow. The piocress of the proposala slowed down American people. If there Isn'ti we are ill • cokf~s. --Thomaston (Ga.) Times ElDd at least New Jersey, after approving, bad fix indeed! DAIL Y EGYPTIAN Page 7

NCAA Games Begin Thursday Evansville Threatens to Take Title from Defending Salukis Some say that lightning can't The Cards, who have posted second leading scorer and is strike twice.. Southern's bas­ a 17-6 record this year, hoast Ball State's most accurate ketball team is out to disprove one of the top small college shooter.. He holds the sc hoo1 that theory. players in the country, 6-6 record with a ,565 percentage. The Salukis will try to strike Ed Butler. He is not only the Other possible front liners Cardinals' top point getter, Evansville College right off for coach Jim Hinga' 5 squad the face of the NCAA small but he is BaU State's all time are 6-3 Stan Neal, 6-1 Jerry college championships for the tOP rebounder. Lanich, 6-3 Ron Latham, 6-4 second straight year, but first Butler was a thorn in the Bob Heady and 6-3 Dick Reedy. they must Overcome a small Salukis side last year, and but tough roadblock. With the IOS8 of Southern's The Cardinals have met the top rebounder lloyd Stovall. Purple Aces twi.ce~ dropping The fireworks get under­ Butler migbt drive the thorn both games, 98-92 and ')0- way Thursday night at 7 a little deeper. 83. The Aces handed the Sa­ o'clock in Roberts Stadium lukis a 93-74 defeat. where the Salukis will clash John Lee is the Cards with 16th-ranked Ball State in the Opening game of the Upset in Still Rings Highlights Great Lakes Regional at EvanSVille. Gymnasts' Defeat of Michigan In order to get to the host Aces, who are meeting little Salukl Chuck Ehrlich's Jackson (Miss .. ) State in the sparkling upset victory in the feature at 9 o'clOCk, the still rings highlighted SIU's GEORGE WOODS Salukis will have to first de­ 65 - 47 gymnastics triumph Enters Elite Group feat the Cardinals. over Michigan State hefore a SIU and Ball State haven't packed hourse here in Men's met tbis year but the two clubs Gymnasium Friday night. Woods Hits 60-Foot Mark won one each in two encounters The undefeated Saluki gym­ last year. The Salukis dropped nasts swept five of seven blue the first one, 73-68 but came ribbons and tied for another In Kalamazoo Track Meet on strong In the second clash as they registered tbelr ninth In shot pu[[ing, 60 feet is 1,000 yards. Jack Peters and to band the Cards an 85-73 dual meet victory of the sea­ equivalent to a four-minute Bill Lindsey finished founh loss. son and 27tb straight since mile in track, a .300 batting and fifth in the 600. 1961. Michigan State was the average in baseball, or a 20- The varsity relay team 5 Students Pay last team to defeat Southern. point - per - game basketball could only muster a third place Automobile Fines Ehrlich, a senior and co­ average. while the freshman relay team captain from Dayton, Ohio. George Woods !lit the recorded a second in freshman The Office of Student Af­ handed Michigan State's charmed circle in spons competition. fairs has taken final action on heralded Dale Cooper, de­ Saturday night in the Central John Jaeger ran a 4:20mile five students accused of motor fending NCAA still rings Collegiate Conference track to finish second In that fresh­ vehicle violations. champion, his first loss in ~ meet at Kalamazoo, Mich., man event. A 20-year-old sophomore 26 contests by edging him CHUCK EHRLICH when he threw the shot 60 from Stratford, Conn .. , who Herman Gary was unable 95 to 94.5 in the event. Mitchell, Ebrlich, schafer­ leet, 7 1/2 inches. to compete hecause of a pulled had piled up four traffic vio­ lations this year was assessed Senior and cocaptain Rusty meyer and Geocaris ended It was the longest toss in leg muscle. Mitchell, West Covina, Calif.. , Woods' injury- prone career $10 and ordered to take the their season careers with once again paced the Saluki Southern. and it set a new meet record. Compardo Takes automobile home between terms. He has lost his motor effort and led all scorers However, the rest of the Saluki w~tb two firsts in the free track team wasn't as success­ Free Throw Lead vehicle privileges as an un­ dergraduate. eu.rc!se and tumbling, a tie ful, as Western Michigan won for the top spot in the paral­ SPEED the team championship for the The men's intramural free Four students were each as­ throw tournament moves into sessed $50 for illegally pos­ lel bars, and a second place second year In a row with 104 in the side horse. WASH points. its final round this week, with sessing automobiles.. Each Notre Dame finished a dis­ the top men from e'ach league lost his undergraduate motor Other Stu first places came battling for the campus cham­ vehicle privileges and each in the side horse by Steve SHIRT LAUNDRY tant second with 58 points, SIU pionship. was third with 33, followed by was ordered to take the car Pasternak and high bar by and Drake with 19 andWayneState After the second round, or home. The four were a 19- junior Bill Wolf. with 11. 50 shots, Fred Com pardo year-old freshman from Au­ Spanan John Noble took holds a five-shot lead over rora, a 24-year-old senior first place in the trampoline CLEANERS Bill Cornell was the only his nearest opponent.. Com­ from Jacksonville, a 22-year­ and his teammate, Jim Curzi, other winner for the SaIuk!a, pardo has made 490fhis shots. old senior from Virden and a tied Mitchell for first in the 214 S. University as the Briton toolc home two 19-year-old from Pana. parallel bars. blue ribbons in the mile and Following Compardo in the haif-mile eVents. Cornell's top 10 after 50 shots are John I1lile time was a good 4: 1 0 .. 6 Van Mill and Harry Bobbitt and his half-mile time was a with 44; Morris Ritzel and !:53.7. Larry Schaake with 42; Dallas Notre Dame's Bill Boyle Thompson and John Haddock set a mee[ record in the with 41; and John Hackett, Ron Baker, Charles Arns and C quarter~ E as he turned in a N0 T I 48.7 mark .. Gary Carr and Alan Peludat all tied With 40. Jerry Fendrich finished third Journalists to Meet and fourth behind Boyle. Garold Eaglin and Farrell Flott, camp directors at Little Grassy Facili· Bob Wheelwright took sec- Sigma Delta Chi will meet ties, ore now interviewing applicants for camp workers for the 1964 camp· and in the 300-yard run, while at 5 p.m. today in University ing seoson. They are interviewing by appointment only. Herb Walker finished third at Center Activities Room C. DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFIED ADS The classified advertising rote is five cents (5" per word Letters requesting opplicotions have been received from many ports of with a minimum cast of SLOO, p" ,ble in advance of publish .. the United Slotes. It is only fair that those applicants be notified soon, ing deadlines. as to the possibility of employment. Advertising copy deadlines ore noon two days priClr'o publico.. tion except for the Tuesday paper which will be noon on Fri. . day • Call 453-2354. The Doily Egyptian reserves the right to reject any odvertisin9 As always, Southern Illinois IJniversity students have preference at Ak· eopy. wesasne and Little Giant. However, we must notify applicants from other The Doily Egyptian does no' refund money when ods are c~. schools of our summer needs. They must have time to secure employment celled. elsewhere if they cannot be hired at Little Grassy. FOR RENT FOR SALE Quiet rooms, cooking privileges One portable washing machine, optional. Newly decorated and one rick fire place wood, and furnished. Call 9 - 1836 before a teeter totter /0, children. Consequently, all applications from SIU students should be mode prior to 98. 99. 100, 101 •• Call 1-2487 after 4:00. 99-102p. 2 p.m. April 1st. 196] Hondo 50 ce. Sport Rooms for 1 or 2 boys. spring model. blaclr .,ery clean, much term. Air.conditioned. Call 549.. 2580. 100· 103 •. IC_L'n4u4~t sell. Co'~:~rr02:~ If you are interested, contact Denver Bennett at the Student Work Office, LOST WANTED between the hours of 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Heed a male student to share a Double pearl, yellow gold ring. ""large double room. Cooking pri. Missing since FeblVory 21. Sent• .,ileges. 509 South Hoy«s. Ph. imcntol value. Reword. Coli 7·8766. lOOp. 453_1469. lOOp. Page 8 DAILY ECYPTIAN March 3. 1964 '/ All-University Council Opposes Fee Hike for Both Campuses Any increase in student fees first presentation this spring. to pay for construction of a Library hours at Alton and proposed health clinic and East LouiS should be in­ recreation bUildings on the creased so they are similar Carbondale campus should not to Morris Library's 95.5 hour effect students at the south- weeIdy schedule, the Council western campuses. the All- recommended .. University Student Council EvansvI·lle Buses recommended Saturday. If University statutes re- Planned for Game quire tbat fees at the two C3J1lPUses be equal. the Board The Southern Spirit Coun­ of Trustees should amend the cil will sponsor two buses to statutes. the Council recom- the SIU-Evansville. Ind., has- mended. kethall game Thursday. "At this time tbe pulley of Reserved seats, costing the University is based on $1.50. will be set aside for the philosophy that the two bus riders who will pay for campuses are one. However. them at the game, says John there are definite differences Boehner. cbairmao. between the two,·' said Jim Students who want to ride Greenwood. a Carbondale the bus may sign up anytime member. ··These differences in the Student Activities Of­ sbould be recognized and de- fice. Buses will leave SIU. fined. This Is necessary so about 4 p.m. Thursday. Bus growth of one campus won't tickets are $1. ~ •