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April 1965 Daily Egyptian 1965

4-3-1965 The aiD ly Egyptian, April 03, 1965 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_April1965 Volume 46, Issue 116

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, April 03, 1965." (Apr 1965).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1965 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in April 1965 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 'Blue Horizon' by Hans Jaenisch

'Spirit of New Serlin' CominSt -see photos, stories on pages 2 and 3

Also Inside Spanish Column Discusses tEl Futbol'-page 2 SOUTHERH 'LLIHOIS UHIVERSITY Carbondale, Illinois Ezra Pound as Sculptor-book review on page 4 11-:"· Volume 46 Saturday, April 3, 1965 Number N!J

An Invitation From the Mayor of Berlin

MMd! 28, '1965

My VeM F,uend~:

I ex-tend a COlc.ckai. .tnv~on -tltltough YOM c.ampU6 netv.6papeJL, The Va.i..1.Jj Egyptian, nOll. aU nacCLUlj membe1L6 and ,~-tudent6 who can do .60 to v.w.t-t -the exil.tbilion "sp.uu..t 06 New 6eMA.n .ttt Pa.in:ting and Scuiptulte" to be hdd a:t -the Un.i..veM.i..:ttj Ga.UeJt.i..e..~ 06 So(u:heItH IlliHo.w Uru.veM.tty, ApJt.i...f 6-'2.7.

The ugh-t pa.i..n.te.1L6 and .6.tx -6c.u.ipto.1L6 who.:,e WOItM Me .tnc.1uded .tn tl!.-W exhib-i.-Uot! Me I!.epltuen-tative 06 my city lIJ!uch hCUl a .fong and pltoud tltack·Uon CUl a c.CLUUltai. c.emelt 06 .tn.:te/tnatiol1ai. ltenotVn.

On beha.f.n On mu ;\eUow RelthHe.1L6 and mYM1.6, I wou.td Uke to ex­ p.-reM appltecilLUoH 601t the k..ind coopefla.t.ton -6ItOW~1 by aU c.onCef!.ned a:t Sou.:theltn rttino.w .tn bJt.i..ng.tng tlu..:. c.u.l:tUltai. a/.>JJi:.cA: 06 BeiliH'-6 man.i..60.f.d acuv.tUe.-6 mOlte c..to-6e.fy to the lLttel1.tion on aJt.:t .fove.1L6 -it! CMboHda.te attd W Ii.tcinity.

Willy Brandt, Mayor City of West Berlin Page 2 DAII. Y EGYPTIAN Ap,i I 3, T965

"WITHOUT TITLE" BY HERBERT BAUMANN

-,,,-* • ., Exuberant, Restless Artists Reflect Berlin Fervor By John Lloyd Taylor one direction could be taken Supervisor, and that was to follow the University Galleries impetus of the New York movement in a new and vital No one need be reminded art. that New York, , Paris The Berlin artists. even and Rome are the world's more than their New York con­ "CONCENTRIC FIGURE" BY KURT BARTEL. great art centers. Perhaps temporaries. had an especial­ because of their traditionally ly unique problem. There was exalted position in t his no uninterrupted, long-stand­ capacity, one tends to over­ ing tradition upon which to look a number of other cul­ lean. They, along With their tural centers where art plays city, had to construct anew, Aprenda la Cultura no less a prominent role in and the new painting from New the cosmopolitan character. York molded ideally with their Berlin is one ofthese cities. endeavors. De Sus Vecinos At the beginning ofthiscen­ The spirit of a city is ex­ EL FUTBOL "SOCCER" se juega entre dos equipos el "soccer" es juego de equipo tury, Berlin came into being pressed in its people and in de once hC]mbres. Pero la en que la destreza y la agilidad as one of Europe's important its art. In Berlin there is an art centers. M any internation­ pelota 0 ~alon, un poco menor del jugador individual es de exhuberance, a restlessness, Entre todas las naciones que el basquetbol, es redondo mayor imponancia. ally famous galleries were an aloof pride - and a lust hispanoamedcanas el futbol en vez de ovalado y de dos located there, and the young for excitement which is "soccer" es el depone pri­ puntas. Ademas el juego de En los juegos oHmpicos se German E xpre s s ion ist s reflected as the spirit of ~hat mordial de los hombres de veras se juega con los pies. reconoce el futbol "soccer" Schmidt-Rottluff, Pechstein, great city. And the art of toda edad. Desde los nifios Se prohibe todo contacto de o balompi.e, pero el ~utOOI Nolde, Kirchner and Heckel New Berlin, as evidenced in mas chicos hasta los hombres las manos con el balon. Sin noneamencano no esta re­ gained their first acclaim in this exhibition, embodies that de unos treinta aiios de edad embargo los pies, los muslos, conocido. Varias veces ha sido Berlin. dynamic spirit. juegan entusiasticamente. No la cadera, la cabeza, el codo, campeon mundial entre los The city was also the home Fortunately, it is this very falta un grupo por dondequicra el pecho u otra parte del cuerpo profesionales un equipo de of the Berlin Sezession group, spirit which is helping the New que no encuentre un pequeno que no sea la mano puede la america latina, y en casi headed by Germany's fore­ Berlin regain her former terreno bald(o 0 un pa:cque emplearse en el juego para £Odos los parses es el deporte most Impressionist painter, place among the world's art con un pedazo de tierra plana propalar 0 para bloquear el nacional para la exclusion Max Liebermann. This brief cent ~rs. para este jl-,e~o. balOn. total de todo otro. but dynamiC status as a world German Literature De hecho el f~tbol, "fut" Aunque es juego de aficion­ art center continued until 1933 La meta o"~ol" esta'dentro when censorship from the Na­ o balompie' es el depone de de una pequena cerca y se ados 0 colegiales, los juga­ equipo mas popular de todas dores profesionales son los tional Socialist Party abruptly Talk Scheduled defiende continuamente. Al ended the city's quarter-cen­ las naciones del mundo salvo entrar el balon dentro de la mas expertos. Una estrella A lecture on contemporary Estados Unidos de America como el Pele. heroe brasi­ tury of artistic leadership. Germ an literarure will be pre­ zona cercada del gol de sus With the emergence of a del Norte. Todos recuerdan antagonistas los atacantes 0 leiio del campo de (Utbol. es sented here April 26 by Kurth los motines peruanos y tan valioso que cuando quisie­ New Berlin after 1945, artists H. Guddat, chairman of the De­ contricantes ganan un punto, with new ideas drifted back. escandinavos de recientes no seis como en el fdtOOl ron comprarlo unos pro­ partment of German and Rus­ aiios en que varias personas motores europeos por un In their studios the explosion sian Languages at Ohio Wes­ americano. En las buenas from New York -- Abstract han resultado muertas por panidas el ::otal de goles 10- millon de dolares, elgobierno leyan University. diferencias de opinion entre brasileno previno el trato de­ ExpreSSionism - began to Co-sponsored by the Ger­ grados por un equipo pocas make its effects known. Ber­ los partidarios de uno y otro veces excede c.uatro 0 cinco. clarandolo "recurso na­ man section of the SIU Foreign equipo. Se juega en Europa cional" que no estaba de venta. lin artists lived in a new Language Department and desde tiempos del Imperio EI juego difiere tambie'n del world. a new age, and, rising University Galleries, the lec­ Romano. norteamericano en que mien­ A.G.B. from rubble, a new city. Only ture will be in conjunction with tras el equipo norteamericano the art exhibition. "The Spirit Igual que el. juego f.Olte­ depende principalmente del New Reeords in Humanities Library of New Berlin in Painting and americano, elfutOOl"soccer" uso del peso y la fuerza brula, Sculpture." Include Baeh 'Great Organ Chorales' Professor Guddat, a native Phonograph records re­ tice. Prokofiev. Peter and the of Berlin, is conSidered one ceived by the HumanitiesLib­ Wolf, op 67. RCA Victor. of the leading authorities in UNIV~RSITAJlIO the Uoited States on contempo­ rary: Haydn, Joseph. Trios, vio­ -. Bach, Johann Sebastian. The rary German literature. He lin. violincello, piano. No.1 in came to this country after Great Organ Chorales. Vol. E; No. 4 in E; No. 16 in G 1. 2 and 3. Carl Weinrich, World War II and received minor; No. 24 in Ab; No. 27 his doctorate at Ohio State 19~91t~ organist. Westminster. in F; No. 28 in G; No. 29 Bartok, Bela. Concerto No. University. ~ .... ~~ 1 for violin and orchestra, in F; No. 30 in D; No. 10 The place of his lecture will in E minor. Fournier, J anigro, be announced later. op. posth. With Viotti, Giovan­ Badurg-Skoda. Westminster. ni Battista. Concerto No. 2 in A. minor for violln. Columbia. Massenet. Jules Emile DAILY EGYPTUN Burkhard, Willy. Choral­ Frederic. The great scenes Published In the Oepanmenr of Journalism dally except: Sunday and Monday during fan, Triptychon. op. 91; Fantasy. from Massenet's Werther. wtnrer. sprins. and eight-week summerter-m French. Valetti, Souzey, exce.. durinl University vacation periods. op. 32. With David. Unuber­ examinarion .eeks. and. legal holidays by windlich starker Held Sankt Elias, Leibowitz, Rome Opera SoY[hern Illinois Unherstry. Carbondale. House orchestra. RCA Victor. IUinols. PubUshed on TUesday and Friday of Micheal. Cantate. each week for [be final Ihree weeks of the Byrd, William. Ave verum Melville, Herman. Moby twelve-week: summer term. Second class Dick. Read by Robert M. Chap­ poStage paid a[ [he Carbondale Post Office corpus; Magnificat; Nunc under [he act of March 3. 1879. dimittis. English. Willock·s. man. Spoken A ns. Policies of [be Egyptian are the re­ Sponsibility of me editors. SUlements King's College Chorus, Cam­ Nine Pulitzer Prize poets pubUshed here do not necessarily reflect the bridge. With Byrd. Mass for reading their own pcems. opinton of [be admltlistraUon or any depan­ menl 01 [he University. five voices. London. Poets: MacLeish, Viereck, Editorial conferen4;e: Fred Beyer. Allce German, Sir Edward. Dan­ Roethke. Wilbur. Warren, Canrlght. Ric Cox. Joe Cook. John Epper­ helmer. Roben Re1nc.te. Rohen Smith. ces from King Henry VIII. Kunitz, Snodgrass, McGinley Roland eill. Roy Franke. Frank Mese.ersrruth. Fiedler, Boston Pops. With and Dugan. Library of Editorial and business offices Iceared in Building T-48. Poone "53-2354. "tseal Dukas. Sorcerer's Appren- Congress. officer. Howud R. Long.. April 1, 1965 D~!LY EGYP.TIAN. Page 3 Exhibit Depicts rSpirit 01 New Berlin' Where the Twain Do Meet Varied Works And the People Become One To Be Shown "'- Editor's Note: The follow- Why are so many visitors, A new posture of artistic ing anicle by Hellmut A. Han­ U.S. and allied military per­ expression has arisen like a wig, SILT professor of foreign sonnel, foreign diplomats and mythical Phoenix from the language, is based on frequent businessmen so entranced by ashes and rubble of war-torn visits to Germany and Berlin­ this city? before, during and after World Berlin. It was and again is one of Characteristic samples of War II. His last visit to Ber­ the world's great metropolitan this contemporary art will be lin, where he was born, was centers and as such has the in 1963. displayed here beginning next fascination that all huge urban Tuesday r ;ght and continuing conglomerations possess for through April 27. By Hellmut A. Hartwig us. Yet, as great cities go, "The Spirit of New Berlin Berlin is a mere newcomer in Painting and Sculpture," an "Berlin ist eine Reise among them. exhibition of 55 works by 14 wert!" It does not have the long artists, will be shown in the and grand traditions of Rome, Thib German slogan, the Mr. and Mrs. John Russell title of this vignette on Berlin, Paris or London, for example. Mitchell Gallery in the Home It is now not even a capital is the very antithesis of that Economics Building. World War II admonition which city. It is a divided city. It The exhibition, sponsored for the duration could be seen is under siege. It is an ex­ by the City of Berlin, includes everywhere in the States: "Is posed bastion of the West in 27 paintings and 18 sculptures this trir really necessary?" the midst of a communist sea. produced during the past few What we have here in the It has fewer miliions of in­ years. German phrase is not a habitants than before, less The works by eight painters querulous inquiry into the wealth than before, less poli­ and six sculptors we r e validity of a trip h>u a very tical POWt!" than before, less. selected by the German Arts positive affirmario,l of its influence in the arts, fashions, Council as indicative of the necessity. sciences than before. artIStic creativity within the Everyone in West Germany, What' 3 so special about New free part of Berlin today. native as well as tourist, has Berlin? Formal opening of the ex­ this arrogantly-positive state­ The answer is, that it's the hibition here will be at 7 p.m. ment hurled at him via poster, Berliners themselves that Tuesday. Refreshments will make their city such a spe.::ial newsprint, radio, TV and In be available. "persona," vocally, via a place to visit. I am aware of TIlE "KURFUERSTENOAMM"-WEST BERLIN'S MAIN STREET. Thereafter. the gallery will all the emotion-packed refer­ great many self-appointed be open daily from 9 a.m. to ences to the brave fight of the Berlin fans, whose numbers­ 4 p.m. and Saturday from 9 West Berliners against Rus­ woods, the shimmering lakes there are no outlanders or already large-are ever on the everywhere! 8U( mostly it's foreigners to be regarded with a.m. to noon. A special Sun­ increase, and one can soon see Sian and East German pres­ day showing will be held April sures before, during and after the peopl~. The tougn, hard­ a suspicious eye. why. 11, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. the Berlin Air Lift. working, .. trustworthy, but or! A Berliner feels himself to Once a body has been to that sooo cock-a-Ioop people of be a thorC'ugh-going cosmo­ The exhibition is traveling wondrous City of the Dancing No doubt, this feeling of con­ throughout the Unitf'rj States stant danger from an enemy Berlin! polite, and all who come to Bear-Berlin's coat of arms They have the engaging gift his city are first of all human under the auspice..; of the displays an upright or dancing threatening from all sides American Federation of Arts ghes E'veryone a feeling of of gab of the Irish without the beings to be judged on their bear-he or she is apr to i:ome lauer's truculence. A Berlin­ merits and nothing else. (In of New York City. away muttering: "Ja, Berlin Ii \ ing at a heightened and It is coming here from the hence, exhilarating tempo. But er's threats are mostly ex­ 1938 the author saw Berliners jS[ eine Reise wert!" Or the Lyman Allyn Museum at New I claim that Berlin, p<.;: and pressed in such droll manner shield Jews openly on the j:")or br ainwashed soul might streets from indignities by London. Conn. Previously, the up [Q the present (excepting thar as often as not laughter even go 50 far as President ensues and quickly dissoi-.'es Nazi rowdies.) exhibition was shown at the Kennedy did and proudly de­ perhaps the i\:azi period), was A FA Gallery; the Herron fascinating because of the kind all bitterness and anger. And We may talk of a stagnating clare: "Ich bin ein Berliner!" physical East Berlin as Museum of Art, Indianapolis; Just what about Berlin, the of people that inhabited its and the Gibbes Art Gallery, walls. And today one is de­ against a physically rapidly ~€:w Berlin, is so wonderful? Charleston. N.C. It will go lighted by the same people in German Poster improving West Berlin, but from here to the Commercial spite of, not because of, the when it comes to the people Museum, Philadelphia. Photos to Show precarious political position of Berlin, there is neither East Exhibition Set nor West, Border, nor Breed The works of ~he artists in of the city. the exhibition rep!"esent forms German Theater Be it East Berlin, West An exhibition of German nor Birth-and the Twain do meet and become ONE. of expression that were stifled "The German Theater To- Berlin-it is the Berliners poster art will be displayed after the German National day," a series of photographs themselves, on both sides of in the University Center con­ Socialists came to power in depicting scenes from plays the Infamous Wall, that make currently with "The Spirit of **** 1933 until the end of World produced in leading theaters a sojourn in Berlin such a New Berlin in Painting and War II in 1945. in West Germany. will be dis- great experience. Of course, Sculpture:' Gallery Hours The five senior artists, born played AprH 10 through 27 in gddition to the people, there The series of posters, "A between 1907 and 1916, are in the Gallery Lounge of t!1e is, on occasion, this special Place in the Sun," will be The Mr. and Mrs. John Rus­ professors at the Academy of University Center. air of theirs. shown in the Magnolia Lounge. F ell Mitchell Gallery hours for Fine Arts in Berlin and have The display will be in con- It's like breathing cham- They were produced for Nord­ 'The Spirit of New Berlin in world-Wide reputations. They junction with the German art pagne; it bubbles, this deustscher Rundfunk, German Painting and Sculpture" include Hans Jaenisch, Fred exhibition, "The Spirit of New "spritzige Berliner Luft." televiSion network, Hamburg. exhibit are: Thieler and Hann Trier, Berlin in Painting and Sculp- And then, too, there are those The network displayed the Tuesday-7 p.m. to 10 p.m. painters; and Karl Hartung ture" in the Mr. and Mrs. lovely environs! The sandy. posters throughout West Monday thr!)ugh Friday-9 and Bernhard Heiliger, John Russell Mitchell Gallery. clean paths through piney Germany as part of a cam­ a.m. to 4 p.m. sculptors. paign to interest families to Saturday-9 a.m. to noon. "SARABANO" BY HANS J AENISCH Two of the younger artisLs, open their homes or provide Sunday, April 11-2 p.m. both painters, also teact , vacations for West Berlin to 4 p.m. the Academy. They are Hp 1 - children. ,"mann Bachmann and GeL. **** Bergmann. The others are: Manfred Bluth. Kurt Barte1. Walter Stohrer, painters; and Herbert Baumann, Karl-Heinz Droste. Ursala Sax and Rolf Szymanski, sculptors. All have exhibited widely abroad. But only two of the artists­ Bluth and Bartel-are native Berliners. The others come from every part of Germany­ from Koenigsberg in East Prussia, from Kaiserwerth in the Rhineland, from Eilen­ sredt near Halberstadt, from Hamburg, from Sterrin, from Halle and Leipzig in Saxony, E rfurt and Benneckenstein in Turingia, from Stuttgart and Backnang in Wuerttem­ berg, and from Blumberg in Baden. Nevertheless. the\" are con­ sider<.'d authemic 'Berliners because that is wherl;' the\" \lvC', have thdr studios, thl;':r fri.,ncs and thdr faVOrite' rr·qOl-·~r f_iV~~rrs. DAILY EGyPTiAN.:: April 3, 1965 The Egyptian Book Scene: Ezra Pound: The Vision oj a Sculptor 'Bright Edges and Marble Reality' Ezra Pound;h Poet as Sculp­ tion of the vision of the sculp­ Pound himself did not kr,~.' tor by Don a Davie. New tor as fundamental to his form, which direction his interests 'Y5tk: Oxford University and translation as fundamental would take him, our later Press, 1964. 261 pp. $5.75, to his diction and allusion. But viSion enables us to see a cun­ as might be expected in such tinuity, a seeking toward con­ Ezra Pound, like most of the a heterodox poet, these ele­ cision Which forces laconic controversial personalities in ments are continuously over­ statement of s u g g est i v e literature, has been subjected lapping and intermingling to reality - economies found in to an era of memoirs, give richness of texture. de­ both Confucius and modern reminisces, "appreciations." sign and reference. sculpture alike. personal complaints, and most The author rises above Two most startling bits of painful of all, the disgruntled schools of criticism byexam­ insight in this book are: disciple ostensibly writing a ining the works from sp.veral Davie's offering the only in­ scholarly study. For Pound, viewpoints: biographical, tex­ terpretation of Homage to Sex­ tus Propertius which grants ~he end is not yet in sight, tual, formal, and comparative but a turning point has been contemporaneously and his­ that Pound knew exactly what reached in Ezra Pound· Poet torically, All of Pound's he was doing; and Davie's as SCUlptor by Donald Davie. poetry is considered in terms abilIty to see. in Pound's work, DaVie IS a scholar (four of published volumes chrono­ a sen s e of structural books about poetry), a poet logically. Such a grand plan visualization. (five volumes of poetry), and makes many demands upon the Pound's YOjage caused a a professor of literature at reader's knowledge of Pound's stir. particu ar y among Latin scholars, since it is neither the University of Essex, Eng­ poetry. The co shorthand" style land. His cool objectivity and of reference to critical works an original work in imitation of Latin form, nor is it a lit­ erudition adumbrate an era of some~imes involves charac­ responsible scholarship sep­ terizing a whole book in a eral translation. Those fol­ arating fact from opinion. sentence or two. lowing Pound's dictum, "Make It New," were upset by what Davie's analysiS is based Starting With a 1954 trans­ upon recognition of Confucian seemed to them a slaVish imi­ lation. The Classic Anthology tation, and those looking for thought as fundamental to Defined by Confucius. enables Pound's view of life, admira- imitation were aghast at the Davie to show that even when liberties taken. Davie points MULTI-FACETED GENIUS: HARD, FLASHING.ENIGMATIC. out that what Propertius said and the way he said it were 'The Educated Imagination' particularly applicable to the modern world as Pound saw it, so Pound re-worked the Teaching 'Pedigreed' Literature in Schools material. updating its ref­ Tn:> Educated Imaginat~on, by i~ the total strucmre of Jim Haw kin s, J 0 h n n y in his introduction to DeSi~n erence and language, paying Northrop F:ye. Bloo~lOgt~n, hterature. , Tremain? for Learning. a publication y homage to the timeless or pro­ Ind.: I n d I a n a Umverslty Here Frye s recommell- Are they to be abandoned the Joint Committee of the phetic vision of Propertius. Press, 1964. 159 pp. $4.50. dations emphasize: starting at because they do not fit into Toronto Board of Education Pound's sense of structural the center, which meam: start- the SUbject matter sequence and the University of Toronto. visualization leads Mr. Davie "Is it possible to get, in ing with poetry and then and "later" would be too late? A word should be said about to a much better explanation of however crude and sketchY a working outward to literary What consideration is to be the style of the book. There the pro gram s labeled way, some bird's eye View' of prose; laying the foundation of given to children's interests is one decided diMdvantagein "Imagism" and "Vorticisrn'· what literature as a whole is literary experience with the and abilities? Even With the having a series of talks in than has been offered so far. about: considered, that is, as a Bible, considering in this con- proposed sequence adhered to, published form. The repetition The deliberate attempt to find coherent ~ubject of study and text its literary qualities what are the speCific stages necessary to inform an common ground and com­ not just a pile of books?" primarily; laying on top of this audience that may have munity among the arts was This is the question raised foundation the reading of clas- changed Since the last lecture never more strong nor more by Northrop Frye in The Edu­ sical myths; moving from here becomes annoying to the generally subscribed to than cated Imagination, a book con­ into an understanding of the Reviewed by reader, who feels like saying, during the height of the ex­ sisting of six chapters that structure of the four great "But I was with you in the patriate activity around Paris were originally prepared as a literary forms first, Ellan A. Frogner, last chapter. Remember?" in the 1920's. While Eliot series of half-hour talks for comedy and romance as forms Happily. however, the audi- and Yeats were trying to make the Canadian Broadcasting for young students as well as University School ence situation also has a very poetry and drama approach Corp. The author, professor of older, and then tragedy and satisfying effect on the style the condition of music, Pound English at the University of irony as more appropriate for of the book. Within each chap- was trying to acquire the hard, Toronto and literary critic, the older or secondary school along the way? Is mythology ter is a literary quotation bright edges and marble proposes both an answer to the students. other than the Greek and or reference that pu1\s to- reality presented by sculp­ question and an application of Many questions remain un- Roman to be ignored? What gether the main thought and ture. What was it Michelan­ his answer to the teaching of answered in the author's pro- versions or editions of the accounts for titles like "The gelo said? - Painting ap­ literatu'"e in the schools. posals for the schools. proposed literature should the Singing School," "The Motive proaches greatness as it ap­ The hard core of the FirH, we would need to ac- children read? for Metaphor," "Giants in proaches sculpture - So Da­ author's ideas lies in his cept his theory regarding the The quarrel with the author Time." Ideas are often stated vie would have Pound say about chapter (or talk) called "The wholeness of literature. Then, seems to lie in the issues he in a forceful, tangible way. poetry. Singing School:" Every form faced witl. the actual situdtion has not faced rather than in The unseen audience must Davie's book is a central of literature has its pedigree. of organizing the program, we his aims to find an order in have been a challenge to the study providing a hub of close All themes and character!': would ha\e to decide about literature as a whole and to writer. One forgives him his e x ami nat ion with bright belong to one big interlocking problems such as these: What make an application of this repetitions and is grareful for spokes of suggestion which Nill family. The story of the loss be com e s of chi I d h 0 0 d order to teaching. He has been a release from the pedantry so radiate into future and regaining of identity if; the "greats" like ChriRtopher somewhat more definite _ but easily found in current critical studies, illuminating the mul­ framework of Iiterature,lead­ Robin, Alice-in-Wonderland, only somewhat more so _ writing. ti-faceted genius of the hard, ing from primirive mythology flashing, enigmatic figure, to what later becomes ro­ Ezra Pound. mance, comedy, tragedy and George W. Jacobson satire in fiction and the ex­ pression of a mood in lyric poetry. Week's Top Books Literature, Frye maintains, is "still doing the same job Across the Nation that mythology ditiearlier, but fillin'! in its huge cloudy Current best sellers as shapes with sharper lights and com p 11 e d by Publisher's Weeklv: deeper shadows." FICTION The critic is :0 interpret every work in the light of all Herzog by Saul Bellow Hurry Sundown, by K. B. the literature he knows and [0 find out what literature as a Gilden whole is about. The school is The Man, by Irving Wallace to organize its program in The Rector of Justin, by accordance with ... hatone finds Louis Auchincloss This Rough Magic, by Mary Stewart Awaken! NONFICTION MiJkings. by DagHammar­ Poor blind fools we are indeed skjo To let our short lives pass Reminiscences, by Gen. In ignorance of our bles.5ings Douglas MacArthur and Queen Victoria, by Eliz­ The greenness of our grass. abeth Longford Patricia Ann Mason The Founding Father by Reprinted (rom The Search' Third Series. Photo bJ' Bill Sta!>lo" Richard J. Whelan Copyri~ht 1962, Southern IllinQis . AT UNIVERSITYSI;:HOOL: THE FOUNDATION Of LITERARY EXPERIENCE. Sixpence in Her Shoe, by UnjY~"':l1ty P:-~'!J" •• Phyllis McGinley Af'U, 3•. '965 . Literary

The Big Band Criticism Of • Surveyed A Short History of Literary Criticism, by Vernon Hall, Jr. Harry lames New York: New York l'niver­ sity Press, 1963, second edi­ tion. 184 pp. S5.

Professor Vernon Hall Jr., who teaches comparative lit­ erature at the University of Wisconsin, has presented in this small volume a survey of literary thought from the time of Plato to the New CritiCS of our own day. In Rudy, Megaphone and Bib Overalls shorr chapters, each with its The Wonderful Era of the player with midwestern terri­ own brief bibliography, he dis­ combo variety, it is indeed in Chicago around 191I(where cusses individual literary Great Dance Ban d s Leo torial bands, has stated his surprising that this book is Wilbur Sweatman, a "ragtime philosophers, singling out im­ Walker. Berkley: Howell- purpose at the outset with the first history of the big clarinetist," was featured portant ideas and commenting North Books, 1964. 315 great precision: b;lnds to appear. From a prac­ playing three clarinets simul­ upon significant achievements. pp. $10. tical point of view, tbe music taneously) to the decline and Included here are repre­ of persons like Tommy Dor­ fall of the 1950's and 1960·s. Whatever happened to the sentatives of all literary Reviewed by sey, Harry James, Woody Section Two is given over periods and of the chief great dance bands of the 1930s Herman, Dick Jurgens and to the more diversified ele­ countries of western Europe: and 1940s? This question, W. Kent Werner, (Yes!) Lawrence Welk has ments: the role played by Aristotle and Horace from asked so often that by now it influenced the lives of many records. radio, movies, agen­ classical antiquity; Boileau, has become rhetorical, Is one Department of Music of our citizens to a far cies and vocalists in the build­ Dryden, Pope, Johnson from for which there is no simple greater extent than have the ing of the bands. the Neo - Classical period; answer, and one which runs less "commercial" products Section Three. a short sum­ Wordsworth, Coleridge, like a leitmotiv throughout "Many books have been of Sidney Bechet, an Art Ta­ mary, is followed by a use­ writt-::n on Jazz and the Jazz Saint-Beuve and other giants the pages of Leo Walker's tum or an Ornette Coleman. ful name and place index. from the Romantic Age; book. Musician ••• No one has written Of particular interest to about the Dance BanGS which Therefore, it is a pleasure Croce, Freud, Richards and In attempting to seek an most readers will be the Eliot from the 20th Century. answer and to trace the many numerically were a much to report that, for the most part, Walker has succeeded wealth of pictures and fac­ One entire chapter is de­ factors which contributed to larger group and out of which similes liberally distributed the growth and decline of the most of the Jazz Men came. amazingly well in t.his first voted to Renaissance critics throughout the text. In these (Italian, French, English), and dance bands, the author con­ "This is an attemptto write attempt to chronicle so com­ plex a field. sophisticated 6O"s, a picture of another examines the New tacted scores of bandleaders, that story recognizing that it Ted Lewis"s first (1916) or­ is so big it could never be Criticism in the light of lit­ sidemen, personnel managers The organization of the book chestra decked out in clown erary history. Certain writers and agencies. Out of these considered completely done"" is lucid and sensible: Sec­ costumes, or of Rudy Vallee not primarily critiCS have a interviews, the present book After confronting the long tion One traces the chronology with his famous megaphone place here, tOO-Dante, Boc­ emerged. lists of titles devoted to of the dance band, from its and his Connecticut Yankees caccio, Milton, Goethe, Whit­ Walker. a former trumpet jazz of the solo and small origins in the Pekin Theater clad in bib overahs may bring man, Tolstoy-as Professor a smile or two. (Today. Hall describes and evaluates 'Creative Aristocracy' "dressing the part" is con­ their contributions to the his­ fined mainly to the Dixieland tory of literary theory. wing of the entertainment in­ Although Professor Hall A New Braintrust jor,Politicians dustry.) deals mainly with the history A reproducUon of Paul of literary criticism, he also The Crisis of Political Imag­ similar to the ecclesiastical Whiteman's Weekly payroll touches upon the role of social ination. by Clenn Tinder. New sword in medieval times. in January, 1928, reveals that and political forces in shaping York: Charles Scribner's It would not be too difficult salartes were substantial, literary thought from one Sons, 1964. 373 pp. $7.50. to argue that In his analysis even by roday's standards; period to the next. In his ac­ of the crisis of modern man Bix Biederbecke, his trumpet count of the 18th Century, for Recent studies in political Professor Tinder has in fact man, drew $200 that week, theory seem to tend toward added bttle to the analysis while Ferde Grofe, his ar­ one of two extremes. already presented in varying ranser. collected a com­ Reviewed by At one extreme are the es­ aspects by other modern phil­ fortable $575. says pitched on such a high osophers and theologians. Further documentation is Nan C. Carpenter, level of abstraction, treating Reinhold Niebuhr, Nicolas offered by numerous re­ great chunks of data and his­ Berdyaev, John Hallowell, productions of agency re­ Department of English torical trends in such broad Hannah Arendt, Edmund Cahn leases, publicity posters, sheet music covers, news­ sweeping strokes that their and our own Henry Wieman are instance, differences between paper clippings and t.::!~­ generalizations at times seem some of the more well-known the views of Tories and Whigs grams. Such items extend the tenuous and insubstantial. At modern thinkers who have are shown to fa\'or di~fering value of this book into the the other extreme are the des­ analyzed the condition of literary ideals, as the Battle areas of performance prac­ criptive and experimental stu­ modern man in great depth and between Ancients and Moderns also sometimes at con­ tices, humor, tastes, history dies which, in their effort to of clothing stvles, and eco­ ran its inevitable course. maintain methodological ri­ siderable length. nomic conditions of . And revolutionarv ideas of gor, often concentrate so in­ In this work, however, the the great romantic~ (Words­ tensely on narrow problems author has added a strong Like most chroniclers, worth, Hugo) are presented that they sometimes seem to WARD MORTON sense of immediacy and a Walker depends on the amas­ against the changing ideas of "prove" the obvious, the triv­ oition Professor Tinder rec­ concentrated focus on politiCS sing of details to tell his human freedom that brought story. an amassing which, at ial or the inconsequential. ommends the development and which entitle him to be .read about the French and other times, leads to paragraphs This essay by Glen Tinder, acc.-=ptance of a creative aris­ on his own merits. revolutions. In other words, professor of po Ii tic a I tocn;cy of brains and talentto In some of its more ab­ such as this one: the shifting currents of criti­ philosophy at Lake Forest influenr:e and advise the po­ stract arguments and meta­ "The Benson Orchestra was cal thought are constantly College. belongs in the first litical ;ilJthorities. He con­ physical discussions, this very popular around Chicago viewed as a part of all human category. tends that t!>e political system work almost disintegrates into at that time and another big experience, not a movement Professor Tinder has can no longer be indifferent to a series of aphorisms. This favorite was Don Bestor. quite apart from the center of undertaken to identify and des­ the moral tone ""d activity of is particularly true where the Benny Meroffwas already well things. cribe the current crises in the society and sugg much whole and of its indi\'idual despair interrupted from time considerable influence upon incomparably richer for to say, and can·t afford to slow aspects. Like most products to time by feverish al'!d even each other. In his modernized having gathered these lumi­ down to say it in more po­ .:>f the New York University hysterical mass movements. version the "creative aris­ nous gems of thought along lished prose. After all. Walker Press. its format is hand:' As an antidote for this CO£l- tocracy" would play a role the way. is not a writer by profession. some, its pages enricing. Poge6 DAILY EGYPTIAN A Living Friendship In Spite of History By Foster M, Russell the French Canadian has be­ vestment in Canada helps to" come more home - base accentuate the fear. With hand and mind and conscious. In the United States One essayist feels that the heart stretched across the un­ he was assimilated, renounced fault lies with the Canadian defended hontier, six Cana­ his tongue, which he fights to in his reception of media. dian and United States men of retain in Canada. Only a soul sickness will letters contributed essays as In this triangul~r situation, destroy man. If the baser part of The American French Canada is a minority output of Madison Avenue and Assembly program, instituted within an English Canada mi­ Beverly Hills were cut off at Arden House nearly a year nority within an American ma­ by an Iron Curtain, the sick ago on the Harriman campus of jority. The talented French­ soul would find its own cor­ Columbia University. Canadian student gravitates ruption. The very finest of Seventy-two people partici­ to the best English-Canadian American culture is available pated in The Assembly after universities which lose much too. reading background material of their talent, in turn, to the Quebec is most fearful of on the subject of Canadian­ great common market for Americanization. If the Cana­ American relationship. brains to the south. dian government does not ap­ The six essays prepared The accident of the French pear to provide safe shelter for The Assembly were edited Canadian and the United Em­ for French-canadian provin­ by .lohn Sloan Dickey, presi­ pire Loyalist and the Ameri­ cialism, the way of the dent of Dartmouth College. can Revolution gave birth to separatist lies ahead. Nation­ These essays are now con­ two great minorities: A third hood in Canada is vulnerable tained in the book, The ['nited of all Canadians are French in a split - language dual States and Canada. in origin, and 20 million culture. Dickey in his preface refers Negroes inhabit the United In the larger essence, FOSTER MEHARRY RUSSELL to the aim of better under­ States. The first situation was Canadian-American relations standing between the two a marriage of convenience, now are not only bilateral but countries and stresses that and in the second rights are multilateral, in the cosmic Behind the Byline the six essayists were asked demanded in a different way. aspect of a major power and Foster Meharry Russell, reprinted in The United States [0 approach their assignments Although this is a four-sided a middle power. An important publisher-editor of The Co­ and Canada (Englewood, N.J.: as scholars, not as partisans. problem, the minorities re­ dimension has been added to bourg Sentinel-Star in Ontar­ Prentice-Hall. Inc., $3.95 in As one penetrates chapters main as a nat ion a 1 a former North American io. Canada. has won from his the U.S. and $4.30 in Canada). in the book thi s index is clear. responsibility. isolation. colleagues the er,viable ac­ The reader is challenged, too, French - Canadian in- In this nuclea. age, the colade of "a man who sees Russell. who is author of to dismiss prejudice for surgence is a Canadian prob­ threat to Canada and the U.S. more than the surface of Braids of Beauty, a book of reality, and then to inject lem, and the civil rights issue can be ignited in Central news." poetry. and One Small Drop feeling in fact, from the hard must be settled within Ameri­ Africa, Northern Brazil or The reason becomes ob­ of Ink: Essays from an Edi­ core issues of trade and de­ can borders. However, the Sarawak as readilv as in vious in this cogent, thought­ tor's Scratch Pad, has de­ fense to the emotional appeal problems of the two large Berlin. The United States is ful discussion of Canadian­ voted most of his life to jour­ of independent nationhood. minorities must be ap­ Canada's champion. unity of American relations. His nalisro. His newspaper, the It is evident in the essays preciated in the approach to the West is necessary, con­ starting point is a collection Sentinel-Star, serves a com­ that the smaller populated two-power understanding. frontation dangerous. To be of essays prompted by The munity 70 miles east of Tor­ country is more aware of the History made two neighbors different but no inimical fits American Assembly program onto and is the oldest con­ la l'ger, and that Americans enemies. They are friends in the Canadian vocation. In the at Columbia University and tinuing weekly in Canada. are generally uninformed 5 piCe of history, not because Suez crisis, Canada assured about Canada. This is more a of it, The hard core fact of the Egyptians it was not seek­ surface problem than a North American def",nse is ing to promote British or deeply-rooted one. American omnipresent. Neither country French interests, nor acting cheers for imported* * football * *not *as a * great * out-of-doors ~oodwill overcomes the fault­ can escape the holocaust of as an agent for the U.S. players from the United for squatters. not as a museum genuine in emotion and not attack. It is not aiways easy for States. Whether they approve in ice • • • but as a country hypocritical and therefore of In peaceful outlook this the American to understand or not, Canadians are never with similar problems. inestimable value. continent is an economic unit, that an independent ally can divorced from American Nationalism is comforting. Proximity provides the Ca­ its bisection political, not be more useful than a docile influence. The familiar propinquity of nadian advantage in con­ geographic. Canada is the one. Disposition of the Cana­ The obverse of the coin is the known is less fearsome and tinental knowledge. More than larger country but the sheer dian to compromise is attri­ not 50 clear when it is con­ hostile than the unknown. One five million Canadians live weight of 10 to 1 American buted to history, With the in­ Sidered that the hinterland can sleep safely under the near the border which population advantage causes herent patience of the evolu­ of Callada is an anachronism, coverlet of nationalism, bol­ stretches from "the Atlantic the junior partner to fear loss tionary rather than the haste painted in poetry so unrealis­ stered by the pillow of to the PaCific, almost onc­ of national identity. of the ebullient revolutionary. t;cally by Robert Frost as "a independence. third of the population. Hard facts create such The result, on an inter­ wilderness looming vaguely Perhaps, anothe!' essayist Early French Canadians anxieiY: Over one million national footing, is one of beyond the bounds of settle­ writes, this is why smaller were not border conscious, trade unionists in Canada are American intransigence and ment" and touched by the and still smaller groups of and it is likely that there are affiliated with American Canadian appe<'sement. Aut no errata of T. S. Eliot who people are clalming indepen­ more people of French descent unions; loss of Canadian cul­ matter how independent Ca­ spoke of Quebec coumy as dence • • • and occasionally in the United States than in ture is threatened by U.S. nada would appear, she would though it were a county in Americans are heard to con­ Canada. With the North Amer­ communication media; domi­ not remain neutral if the Vermont or Maine. The focus fide that they would haif like ican rural-to-urban change, nance of American capital in- United States were involved in is improving, however, even to live in Canada where war. Thus the problem of per­ though at times in mid-SO change seems less constant Browsing Room Additions spective arises-readiness to July temperature, Canadians and values more settled. The listen becomes more apparent will point with derision to an wish is sincere but disappoint­ than roaring to conclusions. unipformed American tourist, ment inevitable. It is an im­ Include 'The Barrymores' Another essayist believes his car loaded down with fur perfect world. Canadian grievance against coats and skiis. As the millionaire is loved New books added to Brows- The Rest of ths Robots the American press, U.S. edu­ In the beginning the U.S. be­ less by the have-not, the large ing Room shelves at Morris Isaac Asimov cation and the uninformed gan with clear postulates. All state is trusted less by the Library: American is genu1ne. Cana­ men are created equal • • • smail state. It is extremely ART dian media does no~ penetrate expansion came almost unin­ unlikely for power and love to HUMOR the American communication hibited by tradition, racial or be altogether compatible. Sus­ As you Like It. Charlie Art· The Revealing Exper­ market to enlighten the personal differences. picion and anxiety remain as Brow'1, C. M. Schultz ience Kurt Kranz masses. But where all men are equal, irritants. American Lit Relit, Richard Early Pennsylvania Arts Canadians can for get all men may be equally worth­ Power penllltimate is the Willard Armour and Crafts John Joseph Whether they are attending a less, or equally open to pres­ nuclear monster. Now Hear This', Daniel V. meeting in Cleveland or sure and manipulation. These Canada is fortunate in her GaHery HISTORY Toronto. The farmer crosses dangers exist in Canada. The neighbor but neither ailiance A Pennant for the Kremlin the border to find similar subtle difference intrudes in nor friendship can banish fear The Santo Tomas Story, A. Paul Malloy crops. The Pacific coastengi­ the two countries, born of of the horrendous possibility V. H. Hartendorp neer has more kinship with history. that with one push of a button BIOGRAPHY the sea along the Canadian Canada is a country. this the world can be inflamed. Catherine the Great Zoe PSYCHOLOGY and American coastline than Americans will have to learn, This uneasy realization colors OIdenbourg he has with the mainland be­ one essayist points out, but ali relationship and clouds the The Barrymores, Hollis Man and His SYmbols, Carl yond [he Rockies. The Que­ Canadians should nOt forget vision. Alpert G.mtav Jung becois may make a speech how they have profited from Patience, cooperation, un­ on cominental differences but a grea( productive neighbor. derstanding and persuasion MUSIC TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE the very next day he may fly ingenious, and for the greater have summits in Canadian­ to New York to negotiate a part, magnanimous. Much of American relations. Most of The Won1erful Era of the Schoolhouse in the Clouds, loan. The well-salted Mari­ the American success in vari­ the problems affecting the Great Dance Bands, Leo Sir Edmund Hillary timer will feel more at home ous fields is well worth Study whole planet have been con­ Walker in Boston fisJ market and imitation. The mature tained in our two-country, Your,', Folks Songbook, Earl SPORTS environs than ne will in Canadian recognizes this fact. continental history • . . and Robeinson Ontario. Americans should not think the long undefended border re­ SCIENCE FICTION Off My Chest, James N. When East meets Wegt in of Canada as useful annex to mains a living testamem as Crown the Canadian Grey Cup foot­ the domestic market, nor as the sanative solution for The Martian Wav and Other The Sportsman's Notebook, ball classic, Canadians from a glaciS between the SOViet troubled tensions which wound ~, Issac Asim'w H. G. Tapply COJ.st to coast give rouging Union and the United States; the peace of the universe. April 3, 1965 DAILY EGYPTIAN Page 7 Missouri Minister To Speak Sunday The Rev. Webster L. Kit­ chell, minister of the Eliot Unitarian Chapel, Kirkwood, Mo., will speak on "Honor, Death arId Economics" at 1 0:30 a.m. Sunday at the Unitarian Church. A graduate of the Hgrvard Divinity School, Mr. Kitchell Saturday meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. in Room D was associate minister at the of the University Center. Unitarian Church of All Souls The University School pool will be open from The Eastern Orthodox Club will meet from in New York from 1957 to 1960. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. for corecreatiOllal swim­ 4 to 6 p.m. in Room C of the University He was one of the founders ming. Center. and is currently aboard mem­ GED testing will take place in Morris Library "Queen Christiana" will be presented by the ber of the Memorial and Plan­ Auditorium from 8 a.m. to noon. Southern Film Society in Morris Library ned Funeral Society of St. NCAA gymnastics meet will be held in the Auditcrium lit 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Louis, a non-sectarian group_ Arena starting at 8 p.m. The ROTC Cadet Officers will present The University Center Programming Board SOLOIST-Flore Wend, French art Eastern Orthodox Club "Military Establishment in World Affairs song specialist and artist in res- will sponsor horseback riding from 1:30 - A Political Necessity" at 8:30 p.m. in to 4:30 p.m. A bus will leave the Uni­ Room D of the University Center. idence, will team wi!h Fred Den· To Meet in U. Center versity Center. ker, professor of mUSIC, for a COn- Exhibits of the service and academic units cert at 8 p.m. Sunday in Shryock The Eastern Orthodox Club The Iranian Student Association will hold a of the University will be on display from Auditorium. It is part of the Mus· will meet at 4 p.m. Sunday meeting from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Room noon tn 5 p.m. in the University Ballroom. C of the University Center. ic Department's artist-in-resi· in Room B of the University "High School Day" will be held from 8 a.m. dence series. Center. to 4 p.m. in the Agriculture Building Monday Members are urged to at­ and the Arena. The Aquaettes will meet in the University Katz to Comment tend as final deCisions will "Some Came Running" will be shown in pool from 4:45 to 6 p.m. be made concerning the Greek Furr Auditorium at 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. The Women's Recreation Association will On Halting War Independance Day Dinner­ Dance. The University Center Programming Board hold house volleyball in fbe large gym­ Marvin C. Katz, graduate will sponsor a record dance entitled nasium from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. student in the Department of "Southern Spring Swing" beginning at 8:30 Alpha Phi Omega will meet in the Family Philosophr, will speak at a Amateur Radio Club p.m. in the Roman Room. Living Lounge and in Rooms 106 and 122 public meeting sponsored by "Johnny the Giant Killer" will be shown at of the Home Economics Building from 9 the International Relations SIate8 Sunday Meeting 2 p.m. in Davis Auditorium in the Wham p.m. to 10 p.m. Club at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in The Amateur Radio Club Education Building at 2 p.m. The Women's Recreation Association will Morris Library Auditorium. will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday in Exhibits of the service and academic units hold class volleyball in the large gym­ Katz will discuss "The the Industrial Education of the University will be on display in the nasium from 4 to 5 p.m. Problem of War: How Can War Building, T -26. University Ballroom from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. The Judo Club will meet at 7 p.m. on the Be Ended?" " A Place in the Sun" will be shown at Arena concourse. He will present an ethical 8 p.m. in Davis Auditorium in the Wham The Department of Music will present a analysis of the structure of Education Building. student recital by Paul Horn on the oboe war and peace in the light of at 8 p.m. in Shryock Auditorium. historical perspective. Sunday A display will be given by the Saluki Flying Club in Roon H of the University Center The University pool will be open from 1 from 10 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Senior to Perform p.m. to 5 p.m. for corecreational swim­ Harry T. Moore, research professor of ming. English, will present a lecture entitled In Recital Monday The Rifle Club will meet from 1:30 p.m. to "Why Yeats?" in Morris Library 5 p.m. in Old Main. Auditorium at 8 p.m. Paul norn, a senior from The Chess Club will hold a meeting at Alpha Kappa Psi will meet in Room E of Herrin, will perform in a stu­ 6 p.m. in the Olympic Room of the Uni­ the University Center from 9 p.m. to dent recital at 8 p.m. Monday 607 S. Illinois 457-6660 versity Center. 10:30 p.m. in Shryock Auditorium. The Amateur RadiO Club will meet at 8 A "Health and Audio-Visual Conference for Horn will play selections for p.m. in the Industrial Education Building. Student Teachers" will be held in the Studio the oboe. His numbers will The Campus Folk Art Society will hold a Theatre from 3 to 4 p.m. include G. F. Handel's Sonata No. 1 for Oboe and Piano, Walter Eston's Suite for Oboe Voices on Campus, Metropolitan Opera, Jazz, and Piano, and Joseph Haydn's Concerto for Oboe and Piano. Sunday Musicale, to Fill FM Radio Slate Voices On Campus presents 11 p.m. Monday prominent speakers and lec­ Swing Easy: With Mario .603S.III. Jla turers each week. Jim Sacket Erda and his late night jazz. 8 a.m. gtreetcar is the host at 8 p.m. on The Morning Show: Rick ~ Ph. 457-2521 Monday. Sunday Ascroft is the host inter­ naMed Other highlights: views and music. 1:15 p.m. deSire. Saturday Sunday Musicale: Jim 11 p.m. SATURDAY 1 p.m. Armstrong is the host. Moonlight Serenade: Fred M' SUNDAY c. Metropolitan Opera: "Va­ Harms plays easy music. Beauty a.z.. fA! nessa" ShopO {jJUJdceniu", ~ 8:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. lromolU to Meel THEATRE Jazz and You: Dan Parker A Composer Speaks. The Iranian Student Assoc­ is the host. iation will meet at 2 p.m. 8 p.m. Saturday in Morris Library VARSITY 'Path of Hope' Film Opera. Auditorium. On WSIU Monday "HUSH --- HUSH, SWEET­ "Path of Hope," an award­ VARSITY LATE SHOW CHARLOTTE" winner at Venice and Cannes ONE TIME ONLY TONITE AT lUG P.M. Film Festivals will be fea­ STARRING tured on Continental Cinema BOX O~FICE OPENS AT 10: 15 Bette Davis - Olivia De Havilland at 8:30 p.m. Monday on WSIU-TV. The inhabitants of Joseph CoHen - Agnes Moorehead a small mining town travel to France from Italy when the ~lrf l/.~~8hr.P~U~~W.:ss»rs,·:~UA~E·VER ~~~~ED mines are closed down. TO BABY JANE" IN SUSPENSE, IMPACT AND SUPRISE. Other highlights: 5 p.m. What's New: A look at the history of riverboats.

7 p.m. Pathfinders: The story of baseball's immortal, Con­ nie Mack. 7:30 p.m. Public Affairs Program: MfiRO G£IlDW~I~ \b.:~ ~,!S!'T'!S 'I.~~::~ ~_~~£UtlOHS ~~DLJCf:u!l. 1~. The population Problem: Born in Japan. Explains "A REMARKABLE FILM! GrRNER .ANDREWS; DOUGLAS the successful population A sweeping panorama of control methods employed ~~!!~eRICanlz;nlon OF our century!" "un EmILV- in Japan. w::t~~~~~~a" British Ask II Nations 'HERE, HERE, LET'S KEEP THE FIGHTING CLEAN! East Germans Bar Traffic to Berlin For Ideas for Truce BERLIN (AP) - East Ger­ LONDON (A P) - Britain has retary, is due to fly to the man border @!ards again invited II governments con­ area in about 10 days. slowed traffic on the highway cerned with Indochina's future These moves were part of a to Berlin from West Germany, to submit ideas on how the British push for peace that has causing big car pileups Fri­ war in Vier Nam should be the backing of President John­ day at the western end. ended. son's administration. West German officials at British diplomats in Peking The ini[iativl;< Friday by Helmstedt said they feared the sporadic slowdowns may be and Hanoi tried formally to Prime Minister Harold Wil­ arrange early meetings for son's government came as the overture for "counter­ Patrick Gordon Walker with British, Indian and other of­ measures" the East German Communists have threatened Red Chinese and North Viet­ ficials claimed-without pro­ namese leaders. Gordon viding firm evidence-that to take against a planned ses­ sion of the West German Par­ Walker, onetime foreign sec- Communist North Viet Nam liament in West Berlin. next may be softening its terms for peace talks. Wednesday. 4 Americans Killed The East Germans have Previously, Hanoi and other branded the Wednesday Par­ In Viet Nam Action Red capitals had demanded to­ liament session in West Berlin tal American Withdrawal from SAIGON, South Viet Nam a "provocation." Viet Nam as their price for There has been no inter­ (AP) - Four Americans were attending a conference. But among the combaL dead Fri­ ference with Western military President Ho Chi Minh and his tr affic. It is checked through day as U.S.-supported Viet­ North Vietnamese fellow lead­ namese rangers battled on for by the Russians, not the East ers are being portrayed widely paynp., Chat lotte Observer German. possession of a heavily de­ by a variety of people now as u.s. Forces to Increase fended Viet Cong stamping being prepared to meet with­ ground 20 miles west of out preconditions. Saigon. Such an attitude would con­ A military spokesman an­ form exactly With the terms of Gen. Taylor Returns to Saigon nounced four U.S. Army men a peace appeal issued Thurs­ had been killed and six day by 17 nonaligned states wounded and two U.S. Army whose representatives met With Plans Military Buildup helicopters shot down in the recently in Belgrade. for action thdt flared Thursday Britain acted in her old role WASHINGTON (AP) - Am­ improvements in the antiguer­ bassador had a busy round of in Hau Nghia Province south­ as a cochairman of the 1954 bassador Maxwell D. Taylor rilla campaign. appearances at closed ses­ west 0; f)uc Hoa. Two of the: Geneva conference that pro­ wound up the administration's Presenting a somewhat op­ sions of the Senate and House dead and some of the wounded duced an agreement to end the Viet Nam review Friday by timisUc picture, Taylor said Foreign Affairs and Armed were helicopter crewmen. Indochinese civil war. The disclosing plans for a big step­ the chances of intervention by Services committees. Reports from the field were other cochairman, the Sovlt!r up in South Vietnamese armed Red Chinese or·Soviet troops The House Foreign Affairs so fragmentary Lt. Gen J.L. Union, declined to be asso­ forces and a small i:1crease appear very slight, at present. Committee quickly approved Throckmorton, deputy U.S. ciated with the British move in U.S. men and equipment. He added he feels the po­ the $1 million Johnson asked commander in Viet Nam, flew in seeking the views of the These are the major items litical situation in South Viet to build a new, more secure to Duc Hoa to get a clearer Geneva conference govern­ in a long list of proposed Nam is improving and "I am U.S. Embassy office building picture. ments. quite satisfied with the pattern in Saigon to replace the struc­ of the air strikes-on North ture damaged by a terrorist Viet Nam-at the present bomb Tuesday. rime.'" Johnson summoned news­ President Johnson declined men to the Cabinet room to to say how he feels the gen­ question the National Security Send The Campus News Home eral situation shapes up. "I Council members as tbey con­ don't go into degrees of feel­ cluded the wrap-up meeting ing," he told one questioner. With Taylor. The ambassador The President said Taylor's made these points: week of consultations in Wash­ - The payoff in the struggle Keep them ington has been very useful to save South Viet Nam lies and productive and the aim is inside the country itself and "to make an effort as effi­ that was "the focus of great­ informed with cient as we can." est tension" during the week Johnson, Taylor and other of top-level consultations a subscription top administration strategists here. gave a group press conference -An increase of about lSO,- sent to your home. at the end of a 90-minute 000 in South Viet Narn's army, meeting of the National militia and civil guard and Security Council prior to Tay­ police forces is planned in lor's departure for Saigon the coming year. The present 0 today. force level was listed as about only S20 term Earlier in the day, the am- 530,000.

S6~0 year Alabama Legislators Condemn Bombings in Strong Resolution MONTGOMERY, ,\Ia. (AP) State House of Representa­ Moil Completed Coupon with -- A legislative resolution de­ tives joined as cosponsors nouncing as "inhuman crimi­ of a strongly worded state­ Remittance to: nals" the bombers who blew ment of poliCy which declared, up a Negro'S home under­ "Such threats to our tranquil­ scored growing official con­ ity will not be tolerated." DAilY EGYPTIAN cern Friday over racial The res 0 I uti 0 n swept Circulation Dept. violence in Alabama. through t~;e House without a Bldg. T - 48 Ninety-five members of the dissenting vote and went Southern Illinois Un~yersit1 across the hall for concurring Carbondale, III. 2nd General Hurt action in the Senate. The Sen­ ate recessed for the weekend In Chute Mishap before r e c e i vi n g the res­ olution. IN THIS SOX, GIVE INFORMATION ABOUT THE PERSON WHO WILL RECEIVE WIESBADEN, Germany The statement bore the en­ (AP) - Maj. Gen. John K. dorsement of Gov. George C. THE PAPER. Hester was severely injured Wallace, who Thursday inter­ in a parachute jump Friday and rupted a night to Washingron underwent brain surgery. The Name ______and turned back to inspect U.S. Air Force said he was the bomb damage after word holding his own. of the explosion in Birming­ Address ______The injury to t" -t8-year­ ham reached him aboard his plane. City______Zone __State ______old commander ot the l' .S. 17th Air Force was the sec­ Dr. Ivy to Go on Trial ond parachute mishap im'oh­ Paid By ______ing an American general in With 3 Others Monday two days.

Ad~ess ______CHICAGO (AP) - A fed­ Thursday, Brig. Gen. Jo­ eral judge ruled Friday that seph Stilwell, 53, broke his City ______Zane __State ______Dr. Andrew C. Ivy must go back, pelvis and heels in a on trial with three codefen­ parachute jump at Ft. Bragg, 4il dants Monday on fraud and N.C. He was reponed to be conspiracy charges in connec­ in improved but still serious tion With distribution of the condition after an operation. drug, Krebiozen. April 3. 1965 DAILY EGY-PTtAM Little Grassy Caucu6 SIU Student Leaders Seek Working Paper Six months have passed continue as u sua I. The since student leaders at SIU committee was to report the began to re-structure student results of its study to government under the new President Morris. University statutes. William H. Murphy. chair­ The baslc need for the man of the University Student change is the one-University Council, was assigned to con­ concept resulting from the duct. With the help of the merger of the Carbondal-e and committee, research in three Edwardsville Campl!SeS into areas: one University. 1) the history of student In what is hoped to climax government at SIU; 2) the the months of work. 14 stu­ stu den t government ex­ dent government leaders are periences of other Univer­ meeting this weekend at a sities which have multi­ retreat at Little Grassy. campus situations Similar to The purpose of the retreat SIU; and 3) the ideas, opinions, is to draw up a working paper suggestions and recommen­ which will serve as the basic dations of the SIU student body guide for student government. regarding student government In doing so. the committee organization - present. and is expected to rely heavily future under the new statutes. on proposal s subm itted by both In October an executive campus student councils. by committee from the Carbon­ two students and by the Car­ dale campus drew up a bondale cam pus Judicial proposal for student govern­ Board. ment. The report was gen­ KNOW YOUR UNIVERSI1Y-'I1lis display by Jery Lounge and Ballroom of the University Cetl­ Following is a summary of erated in part by a statement WSIU-TV is one of more than SO in the annual ter. The display is open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.to­ the main developments that made by President Morris at "Know Your University" exhibit now in the Gal- day and from noon until S p.m. Sunday. have occurred since the com­ the September retreat. (Photo by Hal Stoelzle) mittee was established in It quoted him as saying: September: "It shall be the function of Unreserverved Section in Arena Proposed At an .<\ll-Univ::rsity Stu­ the University Student Coun­ dent Council Retreat at Little cil this year to determine what A bill requesting that a Thursday unanimously passed trative assistant to the stu­ Grassy. Sept. 25 and 26, kind, if any, student govern­ sp.:;...ial student general ad­ "a r~lutlon that the student dent body president. calling President Delyte W. Morris ment mere IS to be on eaCh mission section be established body president obtain a written for a study of the possibility campus." established the ad hoc com­ at the Arena was referred to policy statement about the re­ of having sidewalks con­ Concern over the fact that a committee for study by the mittee for the study of the lationship between Ka and the structed along the newly ex­ an eight-member University Student Council. student council. Daily Egyptian and freedom tended Campus Drive north­ Members of the University Student Council was to be the The bill proposes that a • of expression by students. east of the University Centf'r. sole body responsible for the system such as the one used Student Council plus the stu­ The resolution followed a dent body president and vice reorganization was a Iso at McAndrew Stadium would instrumental in prompting the be more efficient than the discussion relating to the cen­ president from each camp... s report. reserved seat system now in sorship of a cartoon that was were designated as student At the Nov. 8 meeting of the use at the Arena. to be printed on a Ka page. members of the committee. ad hoc committee. students In other action, the Council The CouncU also sent to Ralph W. Ruffner. vice presi­ were assured that their voice committee a bill submitted by dent for student and area ser­ would be heard in determining ROTC Drill Team Terry L. Cook, the adminis- vices. was appointed chair­ the fate of student govern­ man. ment at SIU. Vying in Peoria The committee was to Both Vice President Ruffner function during the .964-65 and Chairman Murphy Members of SlU's ROTC academic year; in tile mean­ stressed the importance of regulation infantry drill team time. the three existing stu­ student opinion on the issue. are attending the Midwestern dent c 0 u n c il s were to Murphy also mentioned plans Invitational Drill Meet at to contact students and stu­ Bradley University in Peoria. Midway Requests dent organizations. The annual competition of In addition, three members Air Force, Army and Navy Due by April 16 were added to the committee: precision drill units is being The deadline for midway two from Carbondale. one sponsored by the Arnold Air applications for the Spring from Edwardsville. Society, Area 0-2. Festival is April 16. No ex­ At the committee's next Uon Harper, executive tE:nsion of that time will be meeting, Jan. 30, Ruffner officer of SIU's Honor Guard, granted. presented the committee with said SIU's unit has partici­ Applications for booths. a definite plan to be followed pated in the annual meet twice shows and displays can be in carrying out its respon­ before. and during the 1962-63 picked up at the information sibility to draw up a wo":king competition won first-place desk in the University Center. paper for student government. honors in the over-all The theme of the festival The com mittee outlined competition. this year is lhe "Wonderful procedures to be used to get Moments in Music," Co­ student opinion and set up chairmen of the event are schedules for proposals to be Robert P. Quail and Laurie submitted to the committee. R. Brown. The festival will Ruffner turned over the be located aeros!'" from the chairmanship to Murphy and campus beach. the committee (once described as a "possible sham and a Business Council hoax") became what Pat Micken, student body presi­ To Hear Grant dent, called "a student-con­ The Inter - ProfeSSional trolled action group." Council of the School of BUSi­ At its last meeting the com­ ness will present a discussion mittee acceptE:d proposals on "American Business in a from the two student councils Changing World" at 7:30 p.m. and from the three other New Earring Fad' Tuesday in Browne Audi­ sources. All 6 Pair 250.,.. JO'JIo ... torium. If all goes well, the corr.­ Virgil E, Grant, vice presi­ mittee hopes to come up with Si. ways fO looi eltol,c' HftOvenJy, color. lui drops slip-on itt sec.Ottds. rypicol se' dent of Caterpillar Tractor the working pap e r this includes coJotlul ceromics. g/olf. Ott. Co., will speak. weekend. lique- meta', etc. You get 6 poir." eouil'lg drops pl!}s "lour choice 01 • -pierced­ loot", screw-type holders or l4..torat If you like Doughnuts ... gold plf,rced eor wire ... ~II 'or $1.50. (Or 12 different po;r and wjre fol' $4.00.j Colors and slyhu 0' drops may vary. You'll Love ... Add '0% Federal 101_ Postpaid. The Play Time 283 Broadway. Arli.""", Mass. r~liiISCONVliim;TCcIU;oNTOm!-, I "_rn..... d m. ___ se'. of e.r,i,.,•• Of II J ~ "Iul '0% ~a:. .C"e-c' Oft. [J 'i.rc", , ... wire. U ',.reN-look holde". I (Jpen 24 Hours Campus I NA.' I ," ••O£SS , A Da~ Shopping Center I.:!T~~'"'!.~~~-=:J "Page )0 DAILY EGrPTIAN April 3, 1965 Eyes of SID on Relay Team Magnificent Five In Austin, Tex., This Weekend Is Bowling Champ The Magnificent Five won A pair of highly regarded the 100, Al Ackman in either the championship of the SILo SIU relay teams are in action the mile or three mile, Herb winter quarter bowling league in the Texas Relays in Austin Walker in the 440 hurdles, in a playoff With rhe King of this weekend, hoping to bring Mitchel Livingston in the high Spades. home Sout':tern's first blue jump and Joe Beachell in the r-lembers of the winning ribbon in the big extravaganza. javelin. team and t'leir averages are Both teams, the mile relay SIU Track Coach Lew Hart- Jack Caputo (180), Ken Snider and the sprint medley, are zag is just waiting for the (16-1), John Rousseau (199), potential winners, although the breaks to start turning the Moe Wheller (147), Bill Doil field will be composed of some Salukis' way. (166) and Pat Schwartz (188). of the best quartets in the But the team had to over- The section champions rep­ nation. C0me a series of incon- resenting the 10 leagues that Some 1,300 atnletes went veniences to do it. First of all qualified for the quarter through the preliminaries the players had to travel all championship were the Mai!­ Friday with Randy Matson, the night on Thursday before the nificent Five (2,962), King of Texas A&M stl"cmgman, ap- Saturday meet to even get to Spades (2,850), Arnold Air pearing in the lone final - compete. Society (2,83:-), Pantheon Two the discus throw, in which he Then in the sprint medley (2,812), The Sarmentos (2,- will be seeking the intercol- the Saluki entry was put in 747), The Saints (2,729) and legiate rE!(;ord. the wrong ht:at. The result the Gutter Balls (2,:-26). Besides the two relay groups was that leadoff man Jerry John •. "lus!'llins in left series with Washington Uni­ Spares 58 34 fip.ld. John Seibel in center versity of St. Louis Thursday Chemistry 56 36 and Al Peludat in right. and Friday the team had com­ Technology Two 56 36 Rounding out the lineup will piled a 5-1 record, losing only V.T.I. 51 H be catcher Bill Merrill, who its opener to Notre" Dame. Rehabilitation 46 46 University Center 46 -16 Agriculture 45 .. 7 It's as simple as this: Alley Cats 41 51 Industrial Education 40 .52 Data Processing 37.55 Housing 37 55 A Good Briar Counseling & Testing 3.J, 58 For a Good Smoke the finest THE SAFE WAY to stay alert Fine briar pipes by World Famous makers at in without harmful stimulants sh(Je-repair NoDoz™ keeps you mentally makes you feel drowsy while alert with the same safe re- studying, working or driving, denham's fresher found in coffee. Yet do as millions do " .. perk up NoDozisfaster,handier,more with safe, effective NoDoz 410 S. Illinois Carbonda1e Settlemoir's reliable. not habit- Keep Alert Tablets. , Fine"st Imported Tobacco's. Too, ' DAILY EGYPTIAN Pag.11 Best in Free Ezercue Frank Schmitz and Bill Wolf Reach NCAA Gymnastics FiIlals

Franle Schmitz and Bill Wolf Dan Millman. California Fred Sanders. Michigan (94) moved into the finals after (90 1/2) John Hamilton. Michigan their performances in the (91) opening session of the NCAA SIDE HORSE Terry Day. Denver (89) Gymnastics Championships. Bob EIsinger. Springfield Schmitz turned in the high­ (92 1/2) est score in free exercise Steve Cohen. Penn State HIGH BAR with a 95. He a!so qualified (91 1/2) Rusty Rock. San Fernando for the finals in trampoline Ken Gordon. Iowa (90 1/2) State (94) With a second place score Gerry Herter. Wisconsin Jim Curzi. Michigan State of 95 1/2. (891/2) (94) Wolf qualified for a spot Bob Hall. Washington (89) Mike Jacobson. Penn State in the finals on the high bar Glenn Gailis. Iowa (8i) (93) With a fourth place score of Ed Isabelle. Penn State 91 1/2. TRAMPOLINE (91 1/2) The trampoline competition Gary Erwin, Michigan (96) Bill Wolf. SIU (91 1/2) resembled the action in the Frank Schmitz. SIU (951/2) Glenn Gailis. Iowa (90 1/2) trampoline trials which were Danny Millman. California Terry Higgins, Air Force held here two months ago, (94) Academy (90 1/2) as Gary Erwin of the Univer­ sity of Michigan, Schmitz of Southern and Danny Millman MIKE JACOBSON (LEFT) AND PETE SAPONARO. PENN of the University of California finished 1-2-3. STA TE'S CO-CAPTAINS The top six qualifiers in each of the' first four events One of Bes. Years and their scores:

FREE EXERCISE Penn State Boasts Franlc Schmitz. Southern (95) Mike Jacobson, Penn State (93) Depth and Quality Jim Petrino. Temple (91 1/2) B7 Ed Carpenter Under the system adopred Ed Isabelle, Penn State Penn State Daily Collegian last year by the NCAA-Rules (901/2) Written for the Daily Egyptian and Executive Committee. a Jim David, Washington coach may enter only one (90 1/2) Hanging on the wall in the performer in the all-around. Penn State gymnastics team Wettstone has four and has Auto Club Rallye Set locker room is a slip of paper been forced to decide on which that says, "We can win the man to enter. Plans for the Grand Touring National Collegiate Athletic The quanet is made up of Auto Club's April 11 gimmick ASSOCiation title in 1965." two seniors, Mike Jacobson rallye were discussed at the The paper was ,posted and Jim Culhane; a junior, group's meeting Thursday. shortly before the Penn State Ed Isabelle. and a sophomore, Drivers meeting for the event Lions opened their season on Steve Cohen. will begin at 12:30 p.m., with Dec. 5 against West Virginia, To appeaSE' the four perfor­ the firs! car slated to begin and it was still hanging there mers, Wettstone alternated the course at 1:01 p.m. SID'S FRANK SCHMITZ when the team depaned for SIU them in all eight regular sea­ Wednesday. son meets. The records show Between those dates, Penn that the Lions won the first­ DAILY EGYPTIAN State posted an 8-0 league place laurels in the all-around record and a 2-0 mark in the competition in each contest. regional playoffs. An expen who has seen the The 10 victOries won't mean four compete on three (

Technolo,gy LONG HORSE

Frank Schmitz. SIU (97) Fete Students Danny Millman, California (97) The Schools of Home Brent Williams, SIU (96) Economics, Agriculture and Rich Black, Springfield (96) Technology will play host to Jim Selby, Iowa State (94) nearly 2,000 high school stu­ M ark Buckingham. Wash- dents from 37 communities ington (94) during High School Guest Day at S!U today. Unauthorized Cars Home Economics guests will receive "Seven Keys to Southern" in a keynote speech To Be Checked by George Carpenter, assoc­ The Security Office and the iate professor of Home and Parking Section will begin Family. registration of motorized During the afternoon the cycles and checking for un­ girls will see fashions authorized cars Monday. designed by students in the Edward F. McDevitt of the department of Clothing and Parking Section said owners Textiles. After the fashion of motorized cycles should show the AFROTC Singing have 1965 license plates on ~Squadron will present a their cycles or a notarized .. concert. statement showing that they During the morning agricul­ have applied for plates. ture guests will hear a talk The two offices will patrol by Wendell E. Keeper, deanof the campus and neighboring the School of A~riculture. A towns searching for student panel discussion by srudents automobiles that have not been will discuss how to choose a registered with the Uni­ career in agriculture. The versity. Students found to Angelaires, AFROTC wo­ B08 DIAMOND IN A FREE EXERCISE ROUTINE possess unregistered cars men's singing group, will J"., One of the Guy. will be liable for assessments present a concert. of $50. Tours of the campus and a McDevitt said 84 students visit to the "Know Your Uni­ paid the $50 assessment in versity" exhibit will close the Television's 'Fury' Star Bob Diamond the first two quarters of the afternoon. year, and a number of Guests of the School of registrations are in the v Technology from Illinois, / Competing in Gymnastics Finals Here process of being ~hecked Missouri and Kentucky in the through the office of the Sec­ engineering and industrial By Frank Messersmith spent. He won the California in the still rings, parallel retary of State at Springfield. ed ... ':ation labs and will tour A diamond in the sports state conference this year, bars and free exercise. the SIU Data Processing world is usually associated placing second in the a11- Diamond expressed enjoy­ Delta Zeta Initiates Center. with baseball. but there is a around event. and winning first ment at being able to perform The agriculture program diamond on campus now that in the SlU Arena. 14 New Members will begin at 9 a.m. in the spllrkles in the gymnastic Unlike most athletes, "'hose Agriculrure Building. Home world-Bob Diamond. educational interests are Fourteen coeds have been economics and engineering Diamond is one of the 116 usually in physical education, initieated into Gamma Omega programs also will start at contenders at SIU this weekend or professional actors. who chapter of Delta Zeta social 9 a.m. in Shryock Auditorium participating in the NCAA are generally interested in the sorority. They are Mary K. and the University Center, Gymanastic Finals, and he stage, Diamond's interests Chapman, Jeramae Clark, respectively. is also the boy star of the are divided between political Karen A. DaVidson, Karen S. Leslie J. Chamberlin, SILT television series "Fury." science and journalism. Hinners, Sharon K. Kramer, admissions director, whose Now a studt'nt at San Asked if he is confronted Kristina M. Nelson, Mary A. office coordinates guest day Fernando State in California, everywhere he goes With per­ Palm. Janis K. Reed. activities, said the day is Diamond no longer acts in the sons interested in his tele­ Marcia E. Rodriguez, Donna planned :(] give high school show, but he does see reruns Vision baLkground, Diamond M. Roche, Jacqueline L. srudents interested in attend­ of it on morning television said that he is really not S~hryer, Suzanne Shelton, ing Southern an opportunity for every now and then. As far approached often, either by Marcia L, Winfree, M. an organized visit to the cam­ as show business goes, onlookers or the press. Kay Wiss. pus. Diamond still makes appear­ At school in San Ftrnando, In addition to the planned ances on teleVision programs Diamond leads an ordinary activities, the students will in the surr.mer. life, as many of his class­ have free time to explore At about agt' two, Diamond mates are teleVision or movie Southern's campus. gOt his first stan in the busi­ stars in their own right. ness When he posed for a "I'm just another one of the 'Go-Go' Banquet Tickets magazine cover. Afrer that, guys at home," he said. he worked hi>. way from bit Diamond mav be just On Sale at SI U Are na parts £0 the full-rime" I"ury" serIes. another one of the guys in The "Go-Go Banquet" will Gymnastics has interested California, but at SIl' the word be given in honor of theSaluki Diamond ever sinc,' ht' "began spread quickly that the icle­ basketball team ar 7 p.m. piddling around in it in junior vision star was on campus. Thursday, April R, in thl' high school." The rraining and Mrs. Bill l\-teadc, wife elf Ballroom of the University conditionipg he developed in tht' SIU !