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February 1972 Daily Egyptian 1972

2-12-1972 The aiD ly Egyptian, February 12, 1972 Daily Egyptian Staff

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SallJrrJay. FebtuiIIY 12. 1972 - Vol. 53. No. 88 Southern minas University

This Valentine time of the year seems the appropriate time to introduce Miss Debbie Wentworth---«- rather to complete the introduction, for she really is no stranger to readers of the Saturday Magazine. The story is on Page S. Black Story in Drama • Stirs Awareness I-Iere

By Rolaad Halliday in straight drama. Joanne C. P. Rain!, Staff Writer a graduate student in music and perfor­ If you have a chance, don' t miss mer in sru's Opera Workshop, said them ! You' U be glad you had the oppor­ "Although I'm not in the Kutana tunity to see this unique theater group Players, I am enjoying this chance to perform. perform in 'Happy Ending.' It's the Continuing to teU the black story first thing I've done outside 0( music. through the arts, the Kutana Players, Besides-there's iust not much oppm:­ SIU's black theater company, perfor­ tunity for blacks to get parts in pJilys." med two plays for Black History Week. The importance of black theater was The one act plays, "The First Militant spelJea out oy Davenport when he seta Minister," by Ben Caldwell, and " The aspects of black theater for 11\­ "Happy Ending," by Douglas Turner struction in the black community is Ward, were presented Feb. 11 in the best served by these plays. Theater Ballroom of the Student Center. should leach the student to cope with The Kutana Players. one of a few the ways of the society they live in." college black theater companies in the Davenport is persistant.. And more country, are directed by John Daven­ important-he gets results. Much credit port, Aurora, a senior in theater, and can be given to him for helping to Ralph Greene, Jacksonville, Fla., a org;lnize SlU's first black theater graduated student in theater. group. He spent nearly a year working Davenport explained that he and on the idea, but didn' t get any real s .. Greene chose Bonnie Harmon, a mem­ port until last fall, and black theater ber of the black theater company, to came into existence. direct " Happy Ending." Making plans for after graduation, " Ralph was going to be busy direc­ Davenport said, " I hope to enter ting another play so we asked Bonnie if graduate school in speech at SIU, and I shea direct.. She was doing a fine job of ha ve hopes of devoting more time to directing in her class and we think she developing the Kutana Players." has great potential as a director," Besides developing the potential of Davenport said. the group's talent, he has hope that a " Happy Ending" may have been black repertory company and a black Miss Harmon's first play that she has theater program would develop at SII. directed for the group, but she's no "I see learning and experience as my newcomer to Kutana Players. Last fall approach to education. and theater she turned in a fine performance in her should be a way of duplicating that ex­ title role as Mrs. Love in "Con­ perience," Davenport said in a sincere tributions." a play put on by the Kutana manner. " The whole effect 0( creating Players at the Carbondale Multi­ a black theater program would be to Purpose Center. draw more interested black students John Davenport. C(Hjirector of the Kutana Players. explains a scene to Don l.ewir as Her­ Miss Harmon, from Michigan City, into. t:Ilt?' SIU Theater Department.." bert Clay continues the action. (Photo by Cornelius Sinclair) Ind., spoke excitedly about the oppor­ The Kutana Players next perfor­ tunity to use her talent directing. mance will be " El Hajj Malik," direc­ Looking back to last faU when she star­ ted by Ralph Greene, and will run FIf. ted her graduate studies in theater, she 18-~ at the experimental theater in the said "As my main interest is working in Communications Building. Another per­ black theater after graduation, I was formance by the group has been ten­ very glad Kutana Players were on cam­ tatively set for the last week in Feb. at pus." the Wesley Foundation. Talking with several members of the Seemingly if Black History Week and cast, they aU expressed the need for groups like the Kutana Players stir more black opportunity in theater at enough awareness among blacks on SIU. This could be achieved through the ,ampus, change will be brought about.. formation of a better program for the H pefully something good will come of black theater curriculum. it, and the growing needs of the bI..e "We need a full-time black professor students will be favorably acted upon. in the theater department.. That way more needed attention could be paid to interest black students," Miss Harmon emphasized. It was the general consensus of the Da; I." E'g.VPI(,;" cast that now is the time for the theater department, the campus-everyone-to Published in the School of Journalism Tuesday 1hrcugh realize qualified blacks need an open Sa1u~ throughoul the school ~ 8XoepI during door to major parts in theater. The Univelsity vacation periods. examination weeks and legal holidays by Southern lltinois Un~iIy . ~ "mammy ' image just doesn' t cut it.. dale. Illinois 62!Il1 . Second class po6Iage paid et car­ It's time to wake up and recognize the bondale. lltinoi!. 62!Il1. great potential of the black performing Policies of the Dally Egyptian are the responsibility of arts on campus. . the edilOrS. Statements published here do not necessarity reIIect the opinion 01 the adrTinislration or' Herbert L. Clay, Chicago, a junior any depMment 01 the Univelsity. majoring in Administration of Justice, Editorial and business offices located Com­ said "I've enjoyed being in the group munications Building. North Wong. Fiscal Officer Howard and I' ve brought others to join because R. long. Telephone S:J6..331 1. SIucIenI '- SI8II: Glenn AmaIo. n-ed Brown. Jim this is a way to promote black Braun. JoI1n Burningham. Keith Busch. Bany Cleveland. awareness. I n other words, knowing Ed Chambliss. Roland HaMiday. Chuck HuIchctaft. Mike who you are, knowing your iden­ Klein. Richard Lorenz. Dave MansrnIwI. &Ie Millen. P,at tification is the purpose 0( black 1IUsman. Sue Roll. Ernie SchM!h. Tom ~. Oatyl Slephenson.. t

Joanne C. P. Raines. a graduate student in music and performer in SlU's Opera Workshop. has taken the opportunity Kutana Players offered to use her talents in straight drama (Photo by Cornelius Sinclair)

PIIge 2. Daily Egypti... . ~ 12 . •1972 A Little Bit of M~gic To Make College Degree

Ron Gawtborp . "Jamie-O," the clown, gives a big Student Writer share of credit for his success to When James O. Stephan goes to work, another ~rson _ with a paint-smeared people notice. face, Aye Jan.." .ay.e is better known as Stephan. . a junior majoring in radio the commerd..atized · Pied Piper who and TV. IS a professional magician leads kids to dinner' at a national fran­ clown and "balloon sculptor." When ~ chise chain hamburger establishment. g~ to work he straps a lar~e black Jayes is famous as the official and SUitcase on the back on his light blue original Ronald McDonald. motorcycle. and buzzes down the " He taught me the ropes o(-: nine­ streets and highways in one or two work tenths· or, what J know in clowning," uniforms : a black tuxedo with lOp hat., said Stephan. " He just about died when or a polkadot clown suit with full facial he heard my name (Mr. James). make-up. "Clowns are supposed to be a comedy Stephan, who resides at 302 Warren figure and " Mr." denotes respect. So, Bldg. in Thompson Point, is also known we changed it around a Little and came ~y two other names. His " magic" name up with Jamie-O.·' IS Mr. James and his "clown" name is Stephan claims to have helped Jaye Jamie-O. also. He taught Jaye some advanced ~tephan is a native of Greenfield, lessons in balloon sculpturing, an art at WIS. After his graduation from a which he describes himself in a no­ technical school in the Milwaukee area brag-just-fact lone as "exceptionally he decided to fu rther his knowledge of fantastic." Stephan prides himself in the electronic media and came to SIU being able to produce more than 140 0b­ jects and animals from one type of ~~:i~.e University accepted all of balloon. Stephan is 20 years of age but already Stephan says another big influence in boasts a 12-year affiliation with the al·t his life was magician Dick Ozwand. Oz­ or ma~ic . He became interested in the wand is one of the na lion's top ' tricky business' at age 8 and by the magicians and, according to Stephan, is time he was 11 he was waving his wand booked solid until 1976. He averaged 14 for money. shows per week. Stephan admits that his " He taught me not to do magic," says " professional" s tatus is a borderline Stephan."He taught me to do entertain­ case. Even though he can command ment. People don' t like to be mystified. rates similar to that of professional Thcv kind of lik£' to have the feeling magicians, his student status keeps him they know what basically is going on." from being a full time magician. " The only money I evel' made in my Stephan, an unknown in this area. has life.," says Stephan, " has been from found a slight slump in business. Since magic." He has played for audiences of coming to Carbondale h~ has done five mor~ than 14,000 people, and before shows. He says that prospects are coming to SIU was averaging 140 per­ looking better and that he has some formances per year. bookings but it interested in getting Stephan says the " Mr. James" title more. came to him by unusual circumstances. Why work so hard? Stephan is He had been performing professionally working his way through college, and for l!I?re than a year as Jim Stephan, he says that out-of-state tuition " isn' t magICian, when a small child corralled cheap." him after a performance and pleaded, Stephan isn' t the first SIU student to " Mr. James, make me a balloon try to get a college by ·' magic." But, please." Stephan liked the handle and you have to admit his approach is a lit­ kept it. tle more practical. ~ James O. Stephan buzzes cAt to work in one of his two uniforms. (Photo by Nelson Brooks)

Stephan's magic leaves his audiences more than just mystified. He gives them entertain­ =ksc;oo at age 20 he's been in the business more than 12 years. (Photo by Nelson Filmmaker Stanley Kramer 'Art ,s to Make Man Confront Humanity' •

By David Daly prominence around 1950 with films that those who habitually complain that a citations from Protestant and Catholic Special Writer he produced that tackled pressing Kramer film makes only one point and groups and then shown by Kremlin in­ social problems. including ones trad­ drives it in too soberly and too hard. vi tation at the Moscow Film Festival What Hollywood filmmaker since tionally taboo in Hollywood ("Home of Arizona authorities refused Kramer (with the long Soviet interest in the World War II is most esteemed? tlle Brave," the first treatment of anti- permission to film one of the real buf­ sociallv conscious cinema. it is perhaplb Stanley Kramer. many would say. Here egro prejudice; "Champion," one of falD-shoots, out of fear of offending signifiCant that the only book devoted'll is the late actor Spencer .Tracy the first anti-boxing films; " The Men," local rifle-owners, who provide the entirely to Kramer and his films is a speaking: "1 think he docs mor~ and a powerful picture about paral)legic state with welcome revenue. So Russian one. Vladich Nedelin's " Stenli tries harder than anyone I know In the veterans, which hrought Marlon Kramer, not wanting to injure any Krei mer," published last year)' industr~ . . . He's got the courage of his Brando to the · cre~mJ . animal, iru erted existing stock footage After the Moscow screening poet convictions at a time when few of us "BI ss the Beasts and Children," from elsewhere. For the oLll!.'r buffalo Eugeny Evtuchencko wrote Kramer both produced a nd directed by Kramer, scenes he took his company to Catlaina saying: " Your film teaches all of us is based on the prize-winning 1970 novel Island off the California coast. A herd kindness and the humanity inside of the same name by Glendon Swar­ of 19 buffalo w" . brought on the island humanity," which supports Kramer's thoul, a 53-year-old scholarly Ph.D., in 1925 for the mming of the movie dictum that " tlle purpose of art is to who taught English for a decade and a "The Vanishir.g American." Since then make man confront his humanity." I half at four universities, but gave up the herd has increased to more than Kramer does so engrossingly, suspen­ leaching in 1962 to devote himself en­ 400, providing Kramer with just what sefullv. humorouslv-and. of course, tirely to writing such things as " They he needed. provOcatively. . Came to Cordura" and "Where the In July the mov ie was entered in the Boys Are." Berlin film Festival, where it won Swartlloul has fur sum l' year" lived in Ariwnd wouldn' l have dune four picturl's \\'ith in a d<'lC'rmi'n''f1 missi'on 10 sav(' a buf­ Sianiev if I didn't Ihink him the falu herd frum bruwl " lhinning-out" by greales l guy a I'OU nd. " hunters granted li ct'nsl'" b.\' tIll' stat(' to Is tlll' re any post-Wal' filmmaker that shoot tIl<' animals in ;, f('I1('('d pasture. ought 10 eternally be damned? Stanlcy I t is this doonlt'r hl'rd \\'Ith whi ch the Kramer. many \\'ould sa~ · . Here IS bovs idcntif\·. 'olumnis l Rpx Hel'd writing on Swarthoul' ha,; said that his ta ll' has Kramel': " He shou ld be cond emn!d to two thl'mt'S " that all 11\'ing things are spend t.ll!' rest of his days in a black kin: and th.1t fly fr('('ing nthers. we free scrcl'ning rflom that shows not hing but oursl'lvl'S." SOIll(' Will illterpn't the film hi - own movil'S. \\'Ia'l'(' the PI'ojl'Ctor a nn book as a s latelll('ni on ccology. on never .· lOpS LUrning. and there are no tht' nl't>O for l·ornpassioll. Oil OUI' thirst popeom machines and nu exits." for guns ilnd \·ioll'nce. 011 our narrow Kramer ha s for some veal's clearlv view of SUCCl'SS. 011 Llll' gen('ration gap. been tlll:' must controversial of ou'r on will I)ower.· and a host of other A scene from Kramer's new movie. "Bless the Beasts &C!lildren :' IS based on the prize­ movicmakcrs. Hl' firs t came to tllings. This shoulli mollifv some of winning novel by Glendon Swarthout. Museum Becomes Replace_ment for Indian Scout

growing up. he never got to bl' a great " 1 colleetro an awful lot of stuff in all modern items on t·xhibit-like the firsti Vera Pakt.or Indian scout. those years." he continued. "and it just Illinois (auto) licenst' platt' whien was Graduate Instead of becoming a tough persuer gOI to the point where my hou se was so issued in 1903. and a St'ars Roebuck of Indians he turned out to be a soft­ clultert'd that I could hardly move catalogue published in 1912. When J oe Thomas was a little boy he spoken museum owner who lidS never around." "I tried to get a widt' \'ariety of things spent most of his time day-dreaming. left hi - Cobden home. J oe tllOUg t about getting rid of his for the museum," Joe said. "because Mon> than a nything else Joe wanted IL all started. Joe said. "when my collections of hundreds of artifacts that there are so many diffl:>rent types of to be a gl'ea t I ndian scout when he grew fatller used to tell me stories of tlle had been st( ,red in dozens of boxes, but people who come here. The adults like up 0 he could go out west and collect 'wild west' and showed me the arrows he couldn't bring himself to parting to see the domestic tllings like sewing arrowheads and other Indian artifacts. and arrowheads tlldt he had gouen with the realities which had grown from machines and Clothing. But the But J oe was born in the wrong place from old relatives and friends." a childhood dream. youngsters like the gum machine ancL at the wrong time and though he did That was about 65 years ago when "Everything was is great shape and I the weapons we ha\re from World Wa~ collect arrowheads while he was Joe was five years old. kept thinking what a shame it would be I." to just throw it all away." So in 1961 Joe Although at first he had only planned bought an old building in Cobden and to use the museum as a place to store converted it to a museum. his Indian artifacts. Joe has watched And some museum it turned out to be. the museum grow into a popular tourist " I really wanted a place that would attraction. be interesting and that a lot of folks Between May, 1970 and September, would want to see," Joe said of his one 1971 , over 6,000 people signed the guest room museum. "So I added an assort­ register at the museum-and that's ment of other things that young people fewer than had actually been to to aren't familiar with." browse, Joe said. ; Expanded by donations from "Many of our visitors are young residents of southern Illinois, the children from the area schools," Joe museum displays include such items as explained. HThey come down in groups a sewing machme from the Civil War to see many of the things they rad about era, a surgical kit used by a Cobden in books. physician in 1884, and a penny chewing­ "And then we get a lot of folks who gum dispenser first made in 1895. are on vacation coming through here." " Even I wasn't around when many of But tourists and school children these things were being used. We have aren't the only people who are in­ the first street lamp that was used in terested in the museum . Southernc., Cobden in our museum," he continued. Illinois residents still show their in­ "That's from 1857. Why some folks terest by donating many of the exhibits don't even know that we had lighting and by donating enough money to keep back then." the museum open year around. " I've got to admit that this is a prelty Most of the collection at the Cobden interesting place," Joe said of his Museum consists of things from the late museum. " It isn' t very big or very Instead of getting rid of his collection of artifacts. Joe Thomas started the Cobden 19th century, but there are some fancy, but it's nice to come to." Museum in 1961 . (Photo by C. William Horrell)

Page 4. Daily EgypCllWl. February 12. 1972 · China... Then Mini A Garden Of ~and Views I ~ I r I )e: 1r (: 1 \ \ ~ 'lil('illlle:1I1 Stil\\'clJ A Quick Look ,lIId 11)(' AI1)en(~111 At New Books EXI)L~riell(~t" ill Cllill

11>- A GARDEN OF SAND by Earl Thomp­ bit. Inc:. 11158 pp. Cloth. 512.95. Paper. son_ New American Library. Signet pb. 14.95. oj • .6.. 81.50. ~ ·.ii.I! ~ Gambit (437 Boylston St., Boston) is devoting an entire publishing season to Publishers' Weekly says: " Don' t one book of national importance: "The STILWELL AND THE AMERICAN miss it. This is one of the best novels we EXPERIENCE IN CIUNA: 1911-45 by have read in years. Almanac of American Politics." It is Barbara Tuchman. Bantam pb. 816 pp the essential field guide to politics for plus 32 pp halftone insert. 82.25. "Mr. Thompson writes with all his the . senses, and his powerful talent creates The big book lays out the United A 28-week national bestseller, and characters who really live in a time and States Congress state-by-state, senator­ Book-of-the-Month club selection in har­ place so vivid you will live it, too. by-senator, district by district and dcover, "Stilwell and the American "It's an incredible story he has to tell, representative-by-representative. The Experience in China, 1911-45," is now of a young boy growing up in the Almanac is a political document that available in Bantam paperback edition. Depression years in the Southwest, on encompasses the whole country, each of Written by Pulitzer Prize-winning the road and rooming houses, crummy the 50 s La tes, a II of the 435 historian Barbara W. Tuchman ("The hotels and whorehouses with his un­ congressional districts. Guns of August"), the book recon- forgettable young mother." For the first time. America has a Q structs events leading to the present definition of the much-abused words. United States involvement in Asia, built The Times says: "grass roots politics." around the biography of General "Earl Thompson has a nice ey{' for The authors of The Almanac are a Joseph W. (Vinegar Joe) Stilwell, the the 1930s .. . he also has a dry comic Democrat, a Republican and an in­ man charged with carrying out knack ... where it counts, making you dependent. The reference work is an in­ American military policy in China see through the page to what he's dispensable companion to news reports, during World War II. describing and making you believe edito~ials. conventions. campaigns and him, he has made something indelible." elections. A Man's View Traditional Heritage Becomes Taboo

(~itor';; note: On Dec. 8. 1971. the Daily EgylT takes pleasure in introducing Debbie Also men's suppression c» women's ad­ from Freeport, added, "The Saturday /Jan prmted a " Letter to the Editor" from Mary Wentworth, to whom the Mini-Views vancement in business, politics or Magazine needs something to create Therese Riccio. The Jetter refered to the picture Legs belong. social positions due to discrimination of readership. ., above. used in conjunction with our "Mini­ Debbie's long beautiful blonde hair, sex. Being more than just a beautifully Views" section. The Jetter stated. in part: "I found Reff! rring to the Dec. 8 letter to the wrapped package, Debbie, majoring in the photograph accompanying your Saturday blue eyes, gorgeous figure and lovely legs serve only as an attractive editor, Debbie smiled again and said, psychology. has maintained better than • ~::'::ta c:= . /~ ~= 't:::~~OZ;w~ package to her matching intelligence "Obviously its author thought c» my a 3.9 grade point average. Upon dr6SS8d in a mini skirt. Ttis obvious exploitation and warm personality. legs as a sexual object. I laughed when graduation she and her fiance, M.ike of a woman's body as a sexual object disgusted I saw that in the newspaper. What she Goro, have pIal s of opening a physical me. This woman had no appa-ent personality, no As a part of this writer's first assign­ said about me seemed more ap­ therapy clinic' in the not too distant intelligence. Evidently legs and female organs ment with the Saturday Magazine last propriate for her." future. are of far more importance to those who fall, he agreed to photograph "a Marcy Scheffner, Debbie's roommate produced 'Mini Vi_s' and also (so they hope) to beautiful set of woman's legs." The job those who read the Daily Egy~ian ." Saturday was accepted with wide-eyed en­ Magazine does indeed have an interest in the thusiasm. measurements-speal

Mississippi River Saturday Magazine's Gnmd Tower, IlIiDois Photo -Essay

A Place To Play

While walking on the shining sand The children laugh and play They talk of rocks and sticks and sai ling ships And how far is far away.

. .. Glenda Filzen

Photos by••• Ted FUzeD Movies, meetings (v4ctivities ) "Religion in · the Li2ht of An­ scheduled thropology", 5:30 p.m., 803 S. Washington. Ananda Marga Yoga Society: Saturday Meeting, 6:30 p.m., 600 S. Poplar. Wesley Community House: I ntra mural Swimming Tour· Celebration "worship", 11 a.m., nament: 2 p.m., Pulliam Pool, coffee, 10 :30 a.m., 816 S. Illinois. Must be registered in advance. Wesley Community House: "A Mat· Strategic Games Society: Meeting, ter of Conscience Series", Starun~ 8 a.m .. Student Center Room B. Spaghetti benefit dinner to raise D'fAN CANIK)N SGAC Movie: " The CoUector", 7:15 money for Free Clinic, all you can JAMES COCO and 9' 30 p.m. , Furr Auditorium, eat $2.00. admission 75 cents. Sigma Gamma Rho: Meeting, 2.0 .JEIII'*ER O'NEU p.m., Student Center Room D. Sunday Southern Illinois Film Society : Weekdllys: "The Married Couple", 8 and 10 BUick Ca ree r~ Day interview 6:55, 9:00 SGAC Movie: "Come Back Africa" . p.m., Davis Auditorium, Ad· Donald King. right, business student from Gary. Ind. is interviewed by Sat .. Sun.: 2:00, 3:45 7:30 and 10 p.m .. Student Center. mission 75 cents. 5:30, 7:15, 9:05 Admission Free. Bahai Cluh : Meeting, 2-5 p.m. , representatives Clyde Morgan, left, and Tom Hart of the Tum-5tyle Interpreter's Thea ter : "The Library. Undergrad. Conference Co. during Black Careers Day at Carbondale Monday. The event was Stranger", 3 and 8 p.m., Calipre Room. sponsored by the School of Business EBBE (Encouragement of Black Stage, Communications Bldg., Businessmen and Economists) Committee and Blacks in Business, a Admission S1.50. Monday student organization. Purpose is to facilitate contacts between firms Intramural Recreation: 1-5 & 7-11 with employment and internship openings. and interested students. p.m .. Pulliam Pool; 9 a.m.·12 p.m., Pulliam Gym and Weight American Cancer Society : Meeting· Room. luncheon, 10 a.m., Student Center, W.R.A.: Recreation, 2-4 p.m., Gym Ballrooms. Grad Council OK's paper 11-1 , 207, 208. Placement and Proficiency Testing : The Graduate Council voted at its document t.o an ad hoc committee to Hillel House : Sunday Supper and 8 a . m.-5 p. m., Washington Faculty DialoS{Ue, Dr. Altschuler. Square, Bldg. A. acceptmonthl~ Its' meeting operaung. Friday .paper morning as am~n- to considerpassed with suggestions no opposition. The and m~ threeo:ti~o~n ~iiiiii~~ii~ Foreign Language: Lecture. ded by the councIl. The moUon abstentions. " English as She is Spoke," Dr. carried with one opposition and four T heta Xi r ushe Lincoln Canfi eld . 7 :30 p. m .. abs tentions. Morris Library Auditorium. The operating paper details the first ~ liul e siste rs' Intramural Recreation: 8-11 p.m .. method 0( operation of the council Pulliam Pool: 3-12 p.m .. Pulliam and was originally submitted to The Theta Xi Fratentity at 114 Gym & Weight Boom. President Robert G. Layer on SepL Small Group Housing is going to Alpha Zeta : Meeting. 8-10 p.m., 7, 1971. sponsor a Little Sister Rush from 7 Agriculture Seminar Boom. During a special meeting Jan. 28, to 10 p.m. Monday, St. Valcntine's Alpha Phi Omega: MI:.'Cting, 8-10 council members woriled on the Day. p.m .. Family Living Lab. document and agreed that most of This is the first ume Ulat Theta Xi Science F iction Club : Meeting. 7 th nt.'CCSsa ry changes had been liaS held such a rush. The purpose is p. m .. Student Center Room tl. made and tllat an appendix would to start a Little Si ter program at Hillel Foundatjon: Hebrew Class. be added prior to taking the final Ule house. 7:30 p.m .. HIllel Foundation. VOle at ~~ rida y's meeting. Anyone wishing informallon may Judo Club : Mt'Cting, 7:30-8 :45 p.m., The council also moved that tllC/'e call 453-2525 . E. Concourse, Arena. be a Im.'t'ting of the Graduate Faculty to discuss lhe document. obtain opinions and refer tile .".,.n .... -.r...... Life of Queen ElizolJelh I, 1m/if", S,"d p ll' ~ u..-I' I_~_ O Open 6:30 P No.2 Adult Hit Coal.kilchen on CWlnnel 8 ' 0 piN" OffiCPnf Stan 7:00 The Indian Students' Association FRI LAy Sunday afternoon and everung Illinois Senator Adlai Stevenson: (JSA ) will meet at 4 p.m. Sunday in SAT MAT programs on WSIU·TV, Channel 8: 3:30- Zoom ; 4 esanll' Street : 5- room A on the second floor or'the SUN 4:30 P.M.-Insight ; 5- The Defen­ The Evening Report: 5 :30 - Student Center. ES ders; 6- Zoom ; 6:30- The French MisterRoger's Neighborhood : 6- The main topic of the meeting wiU Chef. ThI' Electric Company. be an election 0( new officers who No. 3 Fri. . 7-Firing Line. Host William F. 6:30- The Session. "Coalk.itchen," will assume their duties spring 3 Adult Sat. Only Playgirl Buckley Jr. is a guest in Southeast with Kevi.l Cox , Harry Washburn. quarter. Asia and then in Egypt and Israel 1.0 Bob Pina, Andre Mossotli and Billy Hits Killers get a closer look at peace McMullin on instruments ranging pos ibilities. from conga drums to electric piano CORRECTION Open 7 :00 - Start 7:30 8- Masterpiece Thea tre. and organ. Some of the numbers " Elizabeth R- The Lion's Cub" The include "Music" by Carol(' King, Mon. Feb. 14th • Friday • Saturday . • Sunday only child of Henry VIII and AMI' "Wa lk On Gilded Splinters" and Boleyn was Elizabeth who, despite 'Compared to What?" Henry's efforts to leave a son heir to 7-Special of the Week. " Mary .EBfE. BEER 3 Adult Cycle Hits the throne. claimed England as her i.. incoln." An NET opera (sung in & own in 1588. Glenda Jackson stars in English) based on the tragic events No.2 No.3 the new six·part BBC series in life 0( the widow 0( Abraham Lin­ Angels No.1 chronicling tile life of Elizabeth I. coln. FREE ADMISSlaI Bury Me Angels The opening progrdm depicts her 8 :30- Bookbeat: 9- Encounter; HarCi As first courtship WIth Thomas 9:45- SIU P resident's Report. n Angel Seymour and the events that lead to 10-The MO\~e Tonight. "Viva They Come Die Hard her ba.1ishment from the court. Villa !" Mexico's Robin Hood comes MERllNS 9:45-Charlie's Pad. to life as Wallace Beery. Fay Wray IO- The David Susskind Show. and Leo Carillo carouse through the " What's New at Uae Movies?-Who country are the New Movie Makers?" Guests are nove lis t-critic Penelope SHOP - SHOP - SHOP ~ SALUKI NOW at the LATE SHOW GilliatL autllor of "Sunday Bloody DAIL Y EGYPTIAN IONITE - A I THE Sunday: screenwriter Eleanor ADVERTISERS Perry; director William Friedken; W CINEMA VARSITY film critic Vincent Canby and Paul VARSITY Zimmerman. editor of newsweek magazine. THE CO.. BETWEEN JIM'W BRESLIN'S l'ttooday is A bRilliANT filM of "SHEER GENIUS." Monday afternoon and evening ~ "EWSwEE_ programs on WSI ·TV . Channel 8: OPEN 7:00 STARTS 7:30 clAssic STATURE!" - JUDITH CRIST , N ~ w YOtA! Mag'llne 3 p.m.-Thirty Minutes with I' /h~. OODARD Shelly Winters ffia THis YEAR'S GRANd pRIZE JfJ&'2 rJmII~j Mark Lester WiNNER /' AT THE MS11Dpa~ylor~e in CANNES filM Who Slew fESTiVAl DevU(l+l)" Auntie Roo? THtS FILM C NTAINS MATERtAL ' T G E - ERALLY SU tTABLE F R t'RE- TEENAGERS PLUS Chrome

And 2:00, 3:45,5:25,7:15, 9:10 Hot Leather @f) P8ge 8. Daily Egyptill'l, February 12. 1972 1 SIU enrollment down Three-pronged study during winter quarter proposed by -board .Winter term enroUment on the deficit therefore is less this winter... B'S...... vey be used for aD,)' deciaiaD SIU-Carbondale campus is 5.6 per Most ci the decline is represented Dally EI1JIdu 8aaIf W.rMer malting. However, Rainey tbouJbl cent below the same quarter a year in the freshman class, down 1,1. that perbIps tbe seooad ..-vey ago. The campus taUy is 21,291 com­ from last year's winter tOlaI. The The Comprehensive Health Ser­ being ~nned might be UIefuI in pared to 22,569 for 1971, according to freshman figure of 3,654 is the vice AdvisOl}' Branch (HAS) ap- Loren Jung, director of institutional lowest ci all four undergraduate ~c::e :=::in~ research. classes. ~ ~resoIc::!~~~ There was also a discussion of • Robert McGrath, dean of ad­ Graduate School enrollment is ~pronged study ci the Health statement made earlier by Mace, missions and records, said the size 2,836 down 276 from last year. The Service." that the physical position ci the of the decline can be looked upon as senior class figure ci 5,184 is an in­ Heal ..'! Se.-vice probably "could DOt an improvement. however, over the crease ci 531. s~in:~:ro~~di;~~~ be changed for awhile." ~ease of 1,461 in last fall's Enrollment in out-of-town exten­ clearer understanding of why Alden liaiI. from the Clinical Ceo­ au-oUment compared to the fall sion classes is 771 , a drop ci 10 from students are dissatisfied with the ter, said this statement bothered figure a year ago. 1971. Health Service. him because, "If the Health Service " Naturally. when you have a Jung said total University "We have an attitudinal, moves into a broader range ci care small.er enroUment in the fall, you enrollment (including sm at Ed­ behavioral and systems it can't remain in it's preIC!Ilt expect a smaller enroUment in the wardsville) is 33,141. a 5.S per cent examination ci the probl.em." be facility." winter," he said. "The numerical decrese. said. Mace said be had more defmite The study would allow for surveys information on the subject. "It 10Gb to get the consumers' suggestions, a as though a new racility is out. It Student groups ask board report on the efficiency ci the had been mentioned that theStudeDt Health Service from the Arthur An­ Welfare and Recreation fund milbt Minister Louis Farrakhan, national derson Co., HAS consultants, and be able to cover the cost ci construc­ fO'r March meeting at VTI spokesman for the Nation of Islam an observational study on the way tion. "But now," he added, "they ~ Leaders of the three student president of the VT1 Student Ad­ ald the Hon. Elijah Muhammad, in which the work is done. simply don't have the funds, and the groups at the Vocational Technical visory Council. and who is also minister of Michael Rainey, assistant direc­ money they do have has been Institute agreed Friday to send a Agreeing to the letter were Miss Muhammad's Temple No. 7 in New tor ci the Health Care Planning locked." - leuer to the SIU Board of Trustees Hilgers; Martha Jones, president of Department ci the SIU School of He suggested that HAB milbt requesting the board to hold its the VT1 Programming Board, and ~ a?i~ , p~~~ ~~J~~ ~.tu~~ Medicine, said that there were want to find out if students want this March 17 meeting on the VT1 cam- Sam Bono. presdient ci the VTI and C in the Student Center. His people within the University who facility and if they would have other pus. Exerutive Council topic will be "The True Black were qualified in observational priorities above a new Health Ser­ Copies of the letter will be sent to Miss Hilgers said since the board History." The lecture is free and studies. "They could be utilized in vice building. He asked Clark if it President !?avid Derge; James M. would be discussing the phase-out of open to the ptlblic. this effort." would be possible to have more d0c­ Brown, chie;f of boar~ staff; and programs at VT1 it would be "ap­ Dr. Walter Clark, director of the tors on the staff. Harold R. FIScher, chairman ci the propriate" for the board to hold its Health Service. said in approving " Presently we have five ~oard ; according to Linda Hilgers, meeting on the VT1 campus. B/~lCk History the resolution that he still didn't physicians on during the day and have a " real answer to why there is that gives them two examining ta Ik i.fIJ Sunday so much dissatisfaction with the rooms apiece. They must have at Coal slrilrp rm,sps I1/m'lrolll in Brilai" Health Se.rvice." even after reading least this many. Unless we extend tric-powered factories forced into Jefferson Humphrey, assistant the report from the Student Health the office hours it would be im­ LONDON (AP) - A struggle bet­ dean of students at sm, will ad­ Consumer Council and the survey ween the government and 2110 ,000 partial shutdown. possible to squee.ze in another dress the Unitarian Fellowship on Michael Rainey, assistant director physician," Clark replied. striking coal miners plunged On the street. however, neighbors "Black History Week ; Then and the Health Care Planning Depart­ Britain's homes into chill and ci Dr. Joseph P. Miranti, Health got together to help old folk whose Now." ment of the SIU School of Medicine, Service physician, added that in the darkness Friday and braked the electrically-heated houses went Humphrey's speech is scheduled nation's industry to half speed. did ear lier this year. past few years doctors have been cold. Drivers queued politely at in­ to begin at 10:30 a.m. during the The SHCC survey was discussed But ordinary Britons coped with operating on a "stop the gap tersections endangered by darkened regular Sunday service at the again and a meeting with Gardiner system." the electricity blackouts in a mood traffic lights. Families ate cold din­ meetillg house of the Unitarian advertising was arranged to help filf resilience and camaraderie "What we need to do," he said, rers when electric stoves stopped. Fell~ship located at University iron out some of the problems of the "is humanize the system more-so reminiscent of the dark days of and Elm streets. World War 11 . The government announced that last survey and make the next sur­ we can have the necessary personal This will mark the final event of vey more objective. A stunned Parliament was told use of electricity is banned begin­ relationship with the patient" ning Sawrday to heat office. shops, Black History Week which began Rainey said that after he and that the harsh cutbacks-imposed by Feb. 5 and continues to Feb. 12. John Beaumont, HAB student coal-fired power stations trying to public halls, restaurants. theaters Possible dental care to be in­ and all other premises used for A coffee hour-discussion is representative., had studied and ad­ cluded into the comprehensive conserve dwindling fuel-could mean scheduled to follow the talk. The ministered the first survey, he did millions of workers laid off and eJec- recreation. health service program was also public- is invited. not recommend that the SHCC sur- discussed...... L ~ ••• ~~-i ' ;~ , :rt,~';~(. .' .' !:(::V;~--!""'! ,'- • " '_.1, FUNICLYSPEMING 'Go-between' tough, unsentimental; reflects old English class system

By Glean Amato frightened by a conversation about her shoulder. It's a suitably sharp, Dally Egyptiaa Staff Wriler love he has had with the farmer, ironic touch. refuses to deliver a Jetter to him. Joseph Losey has had his ups and " The past," according to Leo, the The Julie Christie charaCler, up to downs in the past; from the splen­ put-upon go-between of the film at this point, has been a model of dor of " The Servant" he has the Saluki, "is a foreign country; sweetness and generosity, When fallen-crashed might be a better they do things differently there." Loe refuses to comply with her wOrd-to the depths of "Boom!" He's referring, of course, to the request, she lashes out at his sup­ and "Secret Ceremony." Here his disastrous consequences of class posed selfIShness and reminds him direction is secure and purposefully systems as they existed in lllrll-d­ d his comparatively low position on unfussy, probably because he's the-cenlllry England, and for Leo the social scale. working with Pinter again (~ they take on a personal meaning. were responsible for " The 5er­ " The Go-Between," with a screen­ \'ant")_ Pinter's dialogue is clipped, play by Harold Pinter, relates the with an edge that tolerates no story of 12-year-old Leo (Dominic pretensions or wasted moments. Guard) while at a schoolmate's Norfolk manor house during a hot 1900 summer. He becomes a post­ man for love letters between the The other scene is a confrontation 1,,,1,,,,f, benign, attractive daughter of the betwee n Leo and Margaret manor. played by Julie Christie, Leighton, who plays the girl's Open 24 hours a Day and a nearby tenant farmer. played mother with an iron will wrapped in by Alan Bates. The Julie Christie slik and lace She drops her perfect­ character's mother latche on to hostess mask, grab Leo viciously 7 Leo's function as a go-between and and sets out to the farmer's hOll'ie her daughter' relationship with a for her daughter. When s ill' finds common laborer. and the class them mbracing in a hayloft, her 'WAS -ruE GRAFT A SUCCE5S? system unleashes its fury like a tor­ outrage is equalled only by her WELL, I(E'O RNO NO ~ . nado, ninging Leo and the farmer sense of propriety. Never taking her straight into its eye. The farmer eyes df her daughter. she pulls Leo ShOOLS himself. the daughter of the by the hair and buries his head on manor turrt around and marries a titled suitor and Leo is molded into an antiseptic bachelor. It's an appropriately tough and Registration won"t affect unsent imental film : Pinter and director Joseph Losey filter their cha racter through a coldly insurance, agents indicate nostalgic light and make plain their hatred and disl!Ust for tile davs and By Dave Mah.oiman Allstate I nsurance, a nd Vincent concept of class distinction. 'Pinter Daily Egyptian Staff Wriler Furst. agent for MFA Insurance. has a superb ear for the nuances of said as long as a sllldent IS suppor­ the manor folk's comportment and R~ports circulating at Stu that ted by his parents and coverage of Idle chatter. Outrage is registered Remember a gift to the slud~nLs who register to vote in his belongings is written into the with an expression like " Damn Jackson Cou nty Will lose any in­ parents' policy, he is covered. cheek ,.. and the post-breakfast one you love ---- surance coveragt' their parents Jim Clutts, an agent with the question is invariably "What do you haw on tht'ir belongings appear to Cher ry Insurance Agency. said. want to do today?" A horrible sense be unfoundt.'IJ. 26; $330.00 rlvate Pll'" ic ill t'i ,pti Apartment Month By Unlver"ity l'ews Se~ice $110.00 .. The Stu Dames Club is inviting all married women llldents and wives d sllldents to enter their $180.00 Quarter goods in the club's first annual Homemakers Fair Saturday, Feb. With 26, in Penney's Community Room. Roommate Judging will be from 10 a.m. until noon and the fair wiU be open to the public from I to 2:30 p.m. BENING Persons desiring further infor­ 205 EAST MAIN!. CARBONDALE mation may call Judy Koehler at 549-7271. PERTY MANAGEMENT Phone 457-21;,4-457-7134

Page 10, Daily EgyptiM, February 12, 1972 ,Mary Lincoln's tr.ial . EPA announces year delGy on antipollution mandates subject of new opera WASHINGTON (AP)-The En­ vi.ronmental Protection Ad­ • By Vllivenity New_ Service The work, "The Trial of Mary ministratiOll 8IUIOIIIIClI!d Friday it 011 Lincoln," will be seen Wsru-1V, would delay for ODe year the im­ Ten years after Abraham Lin­ Channel 8, and WSIU-1V, Channel coln's assassination, his widow, position of new antipollutiOll stan­ 16, Olney. Music is by the "year­ dards 011 tJucks and oIber heavy­ Mary, was placed on trial for in­ old composer Thomas Pasatieri, duty vehicles. sanity at Cook County Court House and the librettist is televisio.n Deputy Administrator Robert Fri in Chicago. The plaintiff was her dramatist Anne Howard Bailey. told a news conference the EPA bad son Robert. The opera begins with the trial oC The tragic events which probably Mary Lincoln in May, 1875, and led to the President's widow's thrwgh flashbacks reveals some of disturbed state of mind, including the character traits which constan­ Pick up your . the death oC her husband and three tly placed Mrs. Lincoln in conflict sons, are dramatized in a new Gpt:ra with her husband. Librettist Anne which will have its premiere on the Howard Bailey says oC Mrs. Lin­ Public Broadcasting Service coln: "She was a woman oC am­ DO-IT-YOURSELF television network at 7 p.m. Monday bition, wiU and drive. But at the nighL time her only outlet was marriage. Owner' 5 repair & maintainance guide so she developed the lifelong habit Womtlll pirl..'1 poor limf' oC meddling in the President's af­ fairs." for '.IIIk rohI",ry· ]n the opera, the voice of $].49 CHICAGO (AP) - A 23-year-old Abraham Lincoln is heard offstage F.-ned jazz Pianist Duke Ellington woman tried to rob the wrong bank but he never appears. The role oC will appear in concert May 14. Mary Lincoln is su~ by soprano ~esented by Celebri~ Series. .ts~ :~~r~~ ~~~~ Chicago Elaine Bonazzi, WIth baritone Epps Motors police investigators who happened Wayne Turnage as Robert Lincoln. ~~ f.c:tsao%~.:d ': !:: to be in the bank on another case. The one-hour program in color is Student Center. Student ticket The woman, who was not armed, a production of the National prices are $1 .50, $2 and $3. Non­ allegedly approached a woman Educational Television Opera student tickets are priced at $2. $3 Highway 1 3 East ph. 457-2184 teller at the First Federal Savings Theater. and $4. and Loan Association and asked for money. But before the woman, identified American Cancer Society as J ennifer Henderson, could flee, the two investigators, alerted by other tellers, subdued the would-be begins annual local crusade ~ndiL Miss Henderson was charged with By K. David Breaaer Caskey said that the meeting Overseas Delivery attempted bank robbery. Studeat Writer primarily will be to "acquaint the The American Cancer Society will county leaders with information on A WE to d i.,cuss kickoff its locaIl972 crusade with a cancer research." luncheon meeting Monday in the Caskey pointed out that all women '8 studies Student Center. workers, includill2 himself, are The local crusade is headed by volunteers. He added that there are Academic Women for Equality Albert Caskey, an SIU associate 4,500 volunteers in his districL theta xi invites (AWE ) will discuss establishing a proCessor oC chemistry. He is cam­ " We are working with the women's studies program at Stu at paign director for 22 Southern American Cancer Society to teU Illinois countics, including Jackson. everyone, I mean everyone, about ~~~~ti"E!t~~ . r:c M:Je~e~ The keynote speaker will be Har­ cancer," Caskey said. Classrooms Building. vey Kapnick, state chairman oC the The purposes oC the crusade are to all girls to attend Faculty and students are invited crusade, Caskey said. Also speaking raise funds for the Cancer Society to attend, an AWE spokesman said. will be a local woman who has had and to educate the people about can' breast surgery. cer. Military medical help for area Little Sister Rush .,~till just in talkin,g stage

By Doaoa KoraDdo enumeration of needs before said. If a contingent of medics is ap­ Studeat Writer deciding if aid will be extended and, proved for use in the area. it if so, how much. probably would have to work with Plans to bring military medics Before the military will make a existing facilities. rather than into the southern Illinois area to commitment, Parker said, the bringing its own, he explained. supplement existing medical care medical association must agree to At the present time. Parker said. are stiU in the talking stage, accor­ the plan. Cooperation with the the project is very tentative and as ding to Wayne Parker of the Health medical association is essential for yet no date has been set for another Services Coordination Program of the medics to be of any use. Parker· talk with military representatives. ~=~ ~~o~ is no commit- ment either on the military side or on the side oC concerned parties in After the in-town clubs Southern Illinois. The project, if it is implemented, close we're still open is under the Department oC Den­ fense. Parker said. and is termed a • New Management domestic action program. What these programs entail, he ex­ plained, is military involvement in • Redecorated helping in civil affairs. • Mixed Drinks .ne~~~:e~y a~~c1~ . r:~~:~r I:a~~ Green Berets are not necessarily • Package Goods the military branch that would help monday, february 14 in the area. • Michelob Talks are being conducted through the John F. KelUledy Center On Tap for Military Assistance at FL Bragg, N.C. Pariler said since this 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. is a Department oC Defense project, any area oC the military could be called into the area. Breakfast avai lable ., The initial approach came from local concerns. Pariler said. This after 2 a.m. service has been extended by the military before, he said, in such places as Montana, North Carolina Chicago Bands Be Our and Florida. However, the military does not come in and ask to help." The impetus must come for the area Feb. 11th and 12th in need oC aid, Parker said. In the case oC Southern l1Iinois, "GADZOOKS" Valentine the request has been made through LL CoL John Haley and is now being ROAD RUNNER CLUB .~ ::!m~tJ!~~ ~:;;:~~~ since CoL Haley t.o<* his report Route 1 DeSoto Illinois back slightly a week ago, Parker theta zl fraternity said. A meeting with area concerns, Six Miles North of such as the public health office. the 114 small group ho1l81Dg trauma center and local medical Carbondale on At. 51 persoonel was held Feb. 4, to set up phone 463-2626 a list oC priorities and needs to send Phone 867~7 to FL Bragg. Pariler said the military would need to see such an • DIlly ~ February 12. 1972, PIge 11 ~ far the CARBONDALE FREE CLINIC .. on SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1972 4 p.m. -- 1 a.m. UNIVERSITY CITY CAFETERIA 602 EAST COLLEGE

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Page 12. Daily Egyptian. FiIbn.uwy 12. 1972 Ware it caaIiIIaea GIl to dIlarillr n I 1-- $e'Wage -ca;t~~~locatedeast ' £-roposa Sp' lttlng summer plantsface cI Carbondale on Old Route 13, ~si=:;~=~the fmal design for the additions. quarter to be consi-dered l1eadline We hope to have final plans lip- By Ridaant I...­ mendations concerniQg 8m in­ The ooI,y respoIIIe dIe- ~ :=t:eOt!~~:~~==c:; Dally Egyptiu 8Q1f Wrller portion received trom the admiaiItratiGll it'll be a year from July or lqer volvement in the academic By JobD Rudell of the conCerence. The report has COOCI!I'IIiIII this I"flICIIutiaItWIII a let­ before we will have these facilities A proposal for splittill! summer ter from PreUdeDt Robert G. Layer Studeal Wrller completed," Mayhugh said. not yet been released- quarter into two six-week terms or which said the Universi~ ... not Mayhugh said that the total cost A. letter from Richard Mager, one eight and one four-week term legal cwnsel, has been sent ~ Pace Two cI Carbondale's three sewage cI the expansion and improvement recei"'1romBDfmw~ or intiaI treatment plants wiD not be able to will be one cI the topics which will concerniQg a resolutioo which was cI the city's two plants will be over be discussed at the Faculty Council passed at the last meeting of the Tn"response to this rellCtMm. the fulml the new requirements set by 52 million. "Eighty per cent cI this council approved a resoi&llio:. at tile the state's Environmental Protec­ meeting at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the council concerning Marisa Canut­ will be paid for by state and federal Mississippi Room of the Student Amoros. Jan. 25 meeting again askiJII tile ad­ ton Agency in time to meet the July funds," he added. ministratiCll1, e.peciaIIy to 1.... deadline, according to Jim Center. Ms. Canut-Amoros, professor of Dem. Although the Environmental The change in the summer quar­ applied science, resigned from the immediately resume DejOIiadons Mayhugh, superintendent cI water Protection Agency has threatened with Ms. Canut-Amoroa. and sewer treatment. ter has been proposed by James faculty under disputed circumstan­ stiff fines for those cities that fail to Benziger, professor of Ell!lish. In a ces last spring. She claimed she Mager's letter states, "The ad­ Mayhugh said that it would be im­ meet the deadline, Mayhugh said ministration did not agree to possible for Carbondale to make the letter sent to Thomas Pace. chair­ meant only to resign from the that this will not apply to cities ac­ man of the council Benziger states School of Engineering and resume negotiations because DO necessary changes by this deadline tively working to meet the such a plan would give students a negotiations were ever commeocecL 82 Technology. but the Board of and noted that an estimated per requirements. The Universi~ administration bas cent cI IUinois cities will also fail to choice which they do not have now­ Trustees upheld an administration "We have talked with state of­ to attend school for only part of the decision that she resigned from the not desired to continue or resume an comply with the order. ficials and they have assured us summer. The faculty also would employment relationship with Dr. "We must add tertiary and University. that Carbondale will not be have more options. Benziger. chair­ She has charged the University Canut-Amoros. .. chlorination treatment facilities to penalized, as long as we continue to man of the University Senate sub­ with sex discrimination. The Depar­ The letter goes on to say that a work towards satisfying the stan­ committee on Calendar and tment of Health. Education and faculty member who submits a it.:n~~~::ra~~~eCh:I~~J~~ dards that have been set." he said. Scheduling, has asked the council Welfare (HEW) has been in­ resignation must take the risk of its ~~~i!~es i~t ~f~n\:n ~o~!,: ~~~ Tf'X8!ii ('u\l(':I;f' rN'C'jH'" for its views of such a plan. vestigating the case acceptance. The letter says the requirements," Mayhugh said. In addition, a report from the ad At the Sepl- 28 council meeting, a resignation was accepted and that 1.623-mlunlf' lihraq' hoc committee to study the resolution asking the administration Ms. Canut-Amoros has not taken MayhuJ!h explained that tertiary MARSHALL, Tex. (AP ) - A academic portion of the Midwestern to "resume negotiations in an at­ any action to accept or implement facilities make up the third step in 1,623-volume library, including Conference is expected. the water purification process. It is tempt to arrive at mutually the council's resolution. books over 150 years old, has been The committee was formed after agreeable conditions under which Mager concludes that the coun­ here that the effluent passes donated to East . Texas Baptist David Derge, SlU's president. her (Canut-Amoros) services can cil's resolution is not acceptable to through a sand filtration system College. asked the council for some recom- be continued" was approved. either Canut-Amoros or the ad­ ministration. Also on the agenda is a report from the Aerospace Studies and Almost 40 inmates due at work release center AFROTC Study Panel. By John P_ WaLih ~ Student Writer When it comes to working, the in a correctional institution. located throughout the state. In,uraIHt" Within six weeks the number of residents of SIWRC are responsible A person who has a history of In addition to Carbondale. other inmates residing at the Southern for their jobs, Buchanan said. drug or alcohol abuse is screened centers are located at Dwight (for ~Lterlllt\ lknell!' Illinois Work Release Center " Employers usually will find that heCore he's eligible for the program, women). Jolie t, Pl'oria and Bru ce Cox (SIWRC ) will nearly double, Robert our men are much more reliable according to the guidlines of Chicago. Buchanan staled that the Mutu31 of Omaha A. Buchanan, supervisor of the cen­ than the average worker because SIWRC. next two or three years will see "a ter, said in an interview recently. the center has some control over The person who is convicted of great increase in the number of P.O. Box ~ 26 _ <\ccording to Buchanan, there are their activities." he said. For in­ murder, aggravated kidnapping programs around the state. Marion. 111. 62959 Ift!W 28 inmates located at the center stance, the center sees to it that the and treason is not eliv.:ble for the hopefully ten." and in a short time this number will men are at work on time and thaI program, Buchanan said. The Work Release Center recently MUlUillc\ climb to approxImately 40 men. they are putting an all out effort in The participant must apply for moved from Cherry Street to the "'f)mahaV The release center. the only one in their jobs, Buchanan added. the program and if accepted by the location at 805 W. Frecman SI­ I he~I"""''YS southern Illinois. is set up to find The availabilty of jobs for the in­ screening committee. he is usually The center was relocated because Lite Insufance Alilluone Unnoo 01 Gmaha mates fluctuates with the labor admitted into the work release the one on Cherry Street was not MUlualol Omaha Insufance Compan-,' employment and-or education for Home Ofhee ()m.'1h8 brask8 the inmates and to relurn them t.o market. Buchanan said. When the program six to eight months prior to adequate enough," Buchanan said. the community as productive market is low, the jobs are hard to his release on parole, the guidelines citizens. find. state Among the 28 inmates located at he public generally is willing to Once the inmates are at the cen­ HETZEL OPTICAL SERVICE the center three are considered full­ offer jobs to the center's residents. ter, they are not allowed to drink 411 S. Illinois ' i'11e sllldents at SlU and the rest Only one out of 125 employers alcllolic beverages or leave the Dr_ James C. Hetzel Optometrist 1nJrk within or around the Carbon­ refuses to otTer these men jobs. premises without the permission of dale area, Buchanan said. Buchanan said. a counselor. Buchanan said that the Contact Lens Polished Frames Repaired "These men do a variety of jobs," An inmate who wishes to par­ center has 17 such counselors. 1-day Service Buchanan said. Some are welders. ticipate in the work release . Since the passage of thP work mechanics, machinists. factory program should have served at release legislation in Illinois, ill workers and even managers. least half cI his minimum sentence 1968, five such programs have bet>.n LATEST FRAMES & GOLD RINtS Police contend oldest profession We Specialize in Eye Examinations and Contact Lens Fitting Ph. 457-4919 "II but nonexistent in Carbondale

By CyDthia ToppeD prostitutes. had an inadequate record system so Studeal Wriler Dakin implied that another factor that statistical information on the Lets grab against prostitution is the direction growth or decline of prostitution as Prostitution is not a problem in of entertainment in Carbondale En­ a problem in Carbondale IS a couple Carbondale, Police Chief Joseph tertainment is aimed at those under unavailable, Dakin said. at Papas! Dakin said in a recent interview. 25, unlike other cities which have The number one problem in Car­ "There's very lillie if any at all. I the topless bars where prostitutes bondale, as far as crime is concer­ wouldn't call it a problem," he said. can solicite customers, he said. ned, is burglary and theft because Dakin said the number of com- Prostitution is more prevalent in of the large romber of houses and larger cities where there are a rom­ trailers. .~~~tio~n ar~~fa~~n~:I~o~,b~::J ber of older men out on the road all Most of the students' money is that any activity of this type has not the time and the communities are tied up in portable valuables, been observed by police or detec­ more conservative, Dakin said. "1 stereos, guitars, TV's and tape tives. can't imagine anyone making a recorders, while in a lIOn-college living at it he.re," said Dakin. There have been reports on town most of the money is tied up in If prostitution does exist, it is not heavy items such as houses and fur­ several girls "working" east Main, organized into houses. or accom­ niture. and prostitution's existence seems plished through the use of motels or While the students' property is to be common knowledge, said Cor­ solicitors for the girls, Dakin said. portable for them, it is also portable pral Bill Rypkema. But there's Part of the reason complaints might nothing definite in the way of leads, for the burglar. The police hope that Rypkema said. be low here against prostitutes is the new engravers they have because of the social implications. acquired ' will help combat the Complaints usually occur when a burglary problem by making items ~~~ ~o:,.bt:'i:~':~m~ ' ~~ customer is relieved of more than harder to seD and easier to trace . traveling salesmen or other out-of­ agreed upon, but because the Besides burglary, there has been Monday Special town travelers. ' customer is ordinarily a willing vic­ an increase in rapes and assault at­ No arrests for prostitution have tim he ~t be too embarrassed to tempts, Dakin said, but there also REG.$I.G9 MINI89J. been made in Carbondale in the last has been a correspondill! increase CHEESE PIZZA & year. This is well below average on "t:1 i~:W~ :8~ department inarrest.s. l' the national scale, Dakin said. JUMBO SALAD •_ Rypkema said that about eight AIRGO, INC • o~ rune mooths ago about four gtrls between the ages of 19 and 23 were Col11Jllete F ,A.A. and V _A_ approwed ~[ight training programs for the following courses. ~estioned in regard to prostitution, Italian hstlval_. out the charges were dropped ~~~~~:6';~!ILOT MULTI-ENGINE RATING ~~~~~~:J:J~6R @'j.- . ' College towns are IIOt a good all you can ~ market for prostitution, Dakin ex­ Financing easy monthly terns available or join the Airgo Flying plained There are too many girls. Club and Oy (or a 40% reduction in costs. He also stated that it has become eatf "'" " more or less accepted for college Airgo. also offers complete Air Taxi and Air Ambulane<: Scrvicc OPEN students to live together. for the bl,sine5Sman. For additional information please calL..... DAllY:10am~3am ~~ Premarital relations are more com­ listen to Papa on WID. Campus Radio I mon, he said, and college men do 549-7341 - Day or 457-5890 - NiQhu IIOt have the money to spend on • Daily fGyptian, February 12, 1972, ,.. 13 Restraining-order sought for Gophers MlNNEAPOUS, Minn. (AP) - slatement 0{ the players on grounds " However, we are compelled 10 backed the suspensions ~ith two AtlOrneys for Mimesota Gopher their rights were not properly urge that all responsible authorities conditions understood_ Bally' basketball players Ron Behagen safeguarded during the commiLlee's withhold judgment with respect to "Investigations by both the com­ and Corky Taylor asked U_S_ investigation and there had been individual responsibility until a missioner's office and Mimesola District Court Friday for a tem­ " undue harrassment and character proper inquiry has been conducted were 10 continue, and the suspended porary restraining order agail'-st vilification" which proleCts the slandards of due players were barred from practice CLASSlFIEO INFORMATION their suspension by the Big Ten A slatement by the university's process which every citizen of this as well as the remaining games_" DeMl",.", Deadline k:w ~ 'ted ads IS 2 D'" two dayS '" acJ\I¥K:e '" ~t.on ea.cfnt Judge Earl Larson conducted a governing board said the regents nation must enjoy as a maUer of Slanley Wenberg, University of l!'\al CJeadhne lot T uesoay ads IS F:lCAY 2 o.m two-hour hearing, and said he would regret "deeply that the events 0{ right." MiMesOIa vice president in charge Paymen. Classd.ed actver1tSIOO tT\.IS1 be: pa.G trl ao­ a nnounce his decision late Friday Jan. 2S occurred. That the 10ngSlan­ The action brought comment from 0{ sllldent affairs, said there was vance e pC IOf acoounts aheaoy eslabhSlleO night or early Saturday. ding tradition of friendly com­ Ohio Slate Athletic DireclOr Ed .. no precedent for a full-season The ortH!f form WfUch aapears ,n each t.SSUe may De milIleO or btOUghl to tnc uthoe b:a 00 m the Frank Brixius, a former Gopher petition between sister institutions Weaver tha't he is "deeply concer­ suspension_ north wing ConwnurucallOtls Dulldlng football player representing 0{ the Western Conference should be ned about a member institution He said that penalties in other ,etU1'l(b on cancel&ed aos Behager~ and Ron Simon, represen­ marred by this event is a source of challenging the decision of the com­ sports where rules are spelled out, Rarer. Mlnlrn.Jm chalge lS tor t'NO ...... es Munlple In­ great concern to us. normally run one 10 two games_ se:1son ,ales S63. 9S88A Illinois. As is. it's doubtful the NI '55 Chevy, runs good, best offer, callI 8 y Ken St.e,,'art " Th" on l\" school thai has \"ot('(j 10 Huski('s WIll lose IWO conference Room Scott, afte,- 5::11, Sl9-8798. 960tA Daily Egyptian Sport.; Writer pull out- is Southern." lilts. Northern did apply six years ago Kawasaki 500, ' 70, 2100 m i., exc. Of SuuUlcrn's four league ga m(',; Coffee House cond., 5700. call SI9~ or Sl9-2870. Midwl'S lcrn Conference schools but wa ' not admillt.'

Page 14. Daily Egyptian, February t2. 1972 .= ~ , '" .I · i 4 Egyptian Classlfleds Worlt! ..- (SEIlV.OI'I'__ ) [ .\(;TO)lOTI'-E ) (~'ISt:ELL",~.n: s ) ( "'OR KE~T ) ( n ••ENT )

1l\S4 Corvair. recent overhIIuI ...... Golf dubs. biggest inWntory in So. III . AVilIl . 51). qtr. • .- I bdrm. apIs. ~condition . S275. call 611U12S. Full sets S.e9 to S19. stat1er sets S29. localBd 3 mis. E . d C'dale. on.-RI. =.~~~ . ~ :MI. ~=-C:.~Ph.~.. 13 IICT05$ from CnIb Ore. swimming = ~. ~.slJj~daz · ~i t.8ch. idaIIl CQ.I1try location for IP". R~ now to IhIIre NIdrm. 63 L.eMans. V-8. gI"lIduating. S215. 687· &. 56-6612. Ask for Bill or f'WIny. nller. reNo call ~II . .. for 2133. eYeS. \IIW3A Hunter Bovs bookstore now open. 9 to 766 Guy. 960Ml ==Id~w.~~ S. Mon.·Sat. Boc*s half price or less. =~teto~ 1965 I/W Karmann Ghia • .-engine. BA769 C'dale.• I becIrm. apt• • S130. mlln'ied Sl9-2Ml. 2W S. UnlVllBlty. 8E74J tires. brakes. haw receipts to proIIe. :tr. aVilii. Mardi. phone 56-SC2II. ~~,:.=~~ • really fine car. $650. 6IW-3108. !l4S9A 9C B . ~t~~~~~~th~ Contract elf. apt.• March to June. 411 C'dale. 2-Cdrm. tntller. Gl E . Walnut. ~C:Iege . Apt. ~... nwwger. WANTa [ )lOBILE HOMES J O1emical toilet W6717. 9608A :UH~~'=~~":,~I~.~·~'f'~: 96118 Epps. Refum to «)1 James. 536-1593. graduating-discount. S49.78l5. 9471B 9620G 1960 10xSO. ex. cond .• fum.. IS.000 Fern. roommate needed noN for nice =x near Murdale. call 457·2837. ( SER". O ..· ... ERED ) Lost German Shepherd pup. black· BTU a<. avail. Mar. Town & Country New duplex. C. Orchard area. 2 96 2B tan. Stag-a4ee. Reward. call S49·S876. tr. pk. no. 31. S49-8S69. 9627A bedrm. • appl. fum .• pets. wooded lot. 962IG married only. $ISO mo. call 985-2930. Student PaPers. theses. books typed. 1969 12x60. ex. cond .• deluxe interior. 94708 Cont.. 2 girls spr. & sum. • Gdn. Pk. Highest quality. Guaranteed no 56-S824 aft. 5. 96138 Large reward for return ot female a ir conditioned. 457-4994. 941J9A errors. Plus Xerox and printing ser· Irish Setter. answers to Clancey. call 1967 12xSO trlr. • fum .• Sl~ mo .• util. vice. Authors Office. next door to ~-668Sor David at 4S3-3292. pd. call Dawn ~ ·32 74 . 8-10 p.m . ~e ~~Ptt~~~ · Plaza Grill. S49-6931. BE752 l'm afe.pleese! 9622G l2xSO New Moon. fully carpeted. a ir. -9553B 9614B =.. reasonable. 4S3-2m. bet. 5 or S49~716 East Side Texaco Pair d bnJwn.rImmed ~ in after s. 964AA Girl to share apt. with ~ room. Bob's ~ d Lawson & LS I. " DIane ~~ra~i~~ft:' 5 . ~ S9Ikno. Available now. S49-...w4. Ine. 56-92lW. !II631G- 1960 10xS0 mobile home. close to cam· acro5S from C.P .0. . carterville apartment. 3 rooms. fur- 96ISB DoutJIe T.V. Stamps lI645A free lube w-oil filter chng. Nikki : female puppy. sandy brown. • PUS. phone 457·SI~ . nished. carpeted. 985-3117. 9S55B L male Garden Park apt. spr. & or lost or captured I1Mr 600 W. 0IIk, Tntnsmission ~ I r summ. Brand '-. pd. • must Please refum to same or call S49-3\l62. Female quads. efficiency. spr. • $25 water" see . ~. 9630B We love her! lI657G f )lISCELLANEOUS) diSCOl.l1t. 56-1417. leave name & no. .549-1952 9S65B House for rent spring quarter. call Lost green pad< and adv. book at Con· 687·2ISI. lI63lB spintCY fl id< Friday night. call Ken. Crafts & Beans4landcrafted and Accurate electric typing 01 term S49·S44I\.Reward. 96IBG custom leather goods. call 687·2583. ~~ir: .•~cir . ~u~9~~ papers. theses. S49-14S4. 9480E 9396A room. 9566B N OW L E ASIN(; lV·s fixed and sold by electronic MJst sell contracts for 2 bedroom ~EHousecall or carry-in, 56-7190. Typewriters. new and used. all Fully C arpeted r J\NNOIj~C;E)lMTSl brands. Also SCM electric portables. trailer. spri~ 3 blk. from campus. SIOO ~ man . call after 5:00 fs,m .• Apartments g;;~ . =i.t~~~: I~~ 549-1 . '48 Typing & Reproduction A .- compIe.te line d fntlemity & R(St .~ VL AN AllAH I M .. N I Services sorority ~r. mugs . ~. Pentax system lenses. macro. misc. 1970 trailer. 12x60. for " . carpet. l O R W IN IER 1(J PLACl: favors. trophk.'5':./fr:lry. re filter. darkroom equip. S49.842A. 9S32A washer. call S49-1769. 9S7SB GU.f.nteed Perfect Typing o n IBM • VOu R SI r By 'He POOL Qu.llly Ottset pri n ting ~ ~PPf'd~ . ~o:"~~ Pyramid apt. • 2 contracts elf. apt .• IN S PRING eo. 'loUMMl;. R Editing, H.rd Bound thews, W lr •• 207 W. ·N8Inut. S49~31 , student available noN or spring. 2 blodedrollill & June 21-Sept. .. pliances Winters Ba~in House. NOIN Leasing EJcperiena!d. dependable female and ""' N. Market. Marion. I I. BA723 efficiency liMITED NUMBER AVAI LAaLE July___ 2-Aug. 19 =~i=ri'C:~ca~i~~~ leave a number. Try us! 9616E FOR IMMEDIATE OCaJPANCY 4D_"_ .... I...... ID5aU ...... 1 ... . G reat Desert Waterbeds * L:lundry facllllles lV. radio. & stereo repeir by ex· c~n : So. 111. su:.rt Fl~ Fer o.r .. ,.... -.,- ~ienc:ed electronics instructor. 451· s.lf,7W CH p.m ' Model Apartment 7. 9617E $15 - $5 ~b''''''~ TYPists! Eam commission for every • * C lose to ~ h()pping ~TlCE- thesIs you book. 549-3850 for Infor. 207 S . Illinois --2 -""" Mobile Home Owners 96S9J

-' fuil l ~ Bill's 24 Hr_ Mobile Used golf clubs in excell. cond .• full ~rc:DtditiCNIS Home Service & Parts SCUBA DIVE WITH sets 128. starter set $16. also IlOO CA LHOI IN VALLEY APTS MurphyDro. 6II4-4SS5 EGYPTIAN DIVERS assorted i rans & woods for S2.so to - ICII _ ""'" finenclng _I~ for SJ.OO ea. We also rent golf clubs. call -"'-- ~..c34 . BA751 ...-,.OOd'_ Old RHute U East andIorIng & Of" uncIerPninu __ ,,.iler. Spring break for Fectary treinod Iumeat _ COt all $100. Florida Keys. Brand name band equipment at rod< ...... bottom prices. Write for latest stock at.. OlrIs ~~ --~,.,,~ _oI~Ie""'_ . IO,," . bulletin : Soundz MJsic Shack. liS 457-75.15 or Perry s.Nla Mill St .• Wauconda. III.. 60084. 9S5IA ...... ___ In ..-...... Mnliao .. PBnaw IntInsted In Edgar ~ .. ~r . study group, call ~ . ,.., • Big Sale Next Week Tntiler for two girls. 12x.60. to shan! --_ _- All Work Guaranteed GARRARD ZERC>I00 call us for prices & DISCQUnt travel: to and within ~~~~be~~~ · Nos~~::rr':.9: fllWldng arntl1lllmf!ftls Europe. t..w anvtIrne from N.Y.- Sale $159.95 -- ...... 20lIl. 9632B List 5189.95 "'- 0I1cago At. Or. 'DJ N. RandIII. (my partner thinks I'm crazy. too) APPUCATIONS TAKEN Madison. Wis. S3106. 933ZJ --. S20 disCOl.l1t. eft. apt. spring qtr_ Con- Typing. editing. manuscripts. term ~.?~~~fi. Communic~.w: FOR 72 .. 73 tract for sale. Lincoln Manor. 509 S. papers. "--dIsIer1ations. ~-4666 . Ash. no. 6. ph. 56-1369. 9633B BE73S . SALEs-sERVICE·1 NSTALLA nON GARDEN PARK TopIcapv masters. affIet (JIik· SPRING BREAK MUNlot 4 ACRES APlS. ::T:;' Complete line. new & used radiators. !::,~ ~: ~":i"~ ~s:lr . & CXIpy service. IBM typIJ8.lJr. elCP· batteries. & used car parts. If we flJ7 E . Park lI6348 lhesis. di~tions. - . 9416E don·t have a part. we can get it. 1212 Mwdl II-IttWdt » Fer AjIpainInwd caN N. 20th. ~ . III. 687-1061. Girls! 2 CXI1tracts for sale at Garden KARATE LESSONS Chicago to N'ulic:h 9339A Jchn Honey 47-5736 Parlt apts. call Rozanne. 56-S618. ~ __ InC'dele 963SB -trip.,.... •Yamaha 12'string acoustic. easy playing. new SI«); VaJ( wa_. $25; c.aug"t In a bind. $30 discount on 116 North ". 2nd floor $189.95 'air'" anlrl Marshall fuzz. $30. ~ . Ask for ~· ~~a:; ·See~~ Schneider Hall contract. spring. Call .... 9S81A ~ p.m .• M-F. 414 So. ,-- SlU_ ...... Mike. Graham. Paul. 453-5846. 9479B CERTIAED INTERNATIONALLY_- · - "'--Itt __ anIr Guinea pigs. all breeds. S2 and up. I' Also mich. $.25. rats. S.so. Ph. ~ . House trailer. C"dale. • for male stu. 21 ~~~~~O~~ PI\. s.HN5 IW ...... ' --.,QII- 11110 __'" 59n. 9573A rn: .. I txIrm .• S60 mo plus utilities. '1IW6B mmed. =:ion. 1'12 mi. from .,J i ~ , ~=3.hunt . show .~ ~ . abinson Rentals. 56-2S33. Room. SIIIO per quarter. ph. ~4T7. ~ ~. 'f~~~~= Dlity EgyptiIwI, fetJr'*Y 12. 1172. PIge 15 1 ~ ( J C I. • It.,:. ! l ' .' I { ( .: on campus • next 'Week

By Dave Malwmu Dally EgypUu Staff Writer SIU students who want to be registered to vote in Jackson County will have that opportunity next week::? when deputy registrars will be on cam­ pus. The registrars will set up shop from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Monday through Friday in Activities Rooms C and D d the Student Center. Students may also register from 9 a. m. to 2 p. m. Feb. 19 and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 21, also in Activities Rooms C and D. Feb. 21 is the last day to register to vote in the March 21 Illinois primary. The deputy registrars who will be on campus are being provided by the League d Women Voters. According to ·Mrs. Helmut Liedloff, the league's voter service chairman, this will be the first time Jackson County Clerk Delmar Ward has agreed to deputize league members to register students on the SIU campus. She explained that Ward has not agreed to such a large­ S'ar~ in. Janet HUber. a freshman majoring in nursing. seems to be enjoyilllil her moment of scale registration before because ~ q.Jiet on a pier overlooking Lake~-the-Campus . The black stars vi!!ible are caJsed by fmancial barriers. The 35 to 40 league bubbles rising under the ice and those black areas melting first. (Photo by Nelson G. members who will register SIU her ice? Brooks) students are working voluntarily and will not be paid. Mrs. Liedloff said the league waited with the registration service until after Christmas break to allow those students who wanted to register in their parent's hometown to do so. . - The potential voter must be at least 18 years d age. ., -He must have resided in Illinois for at least six months. 'Daily 73gyptian - He must have resided in Jackson County for at least 30 days. -He must have resided in his 80uthem Illinois University precinct for at least 30 days. Daily Egyptian writer: 'More student control' By Rudy Tboma,; said. " However we are not allowed to How is it determined what reporter plete. Daily Egyptian Staff Writer editorialize in our stories. If censorship gets what beat? " If implemented right now as writ­ occurs in the Daily Egyptian it is only " We' re assigned them in- ten, the plan would not work," he said. Sue Roll, a Daily Egyptian staff because the reporters must decide what discriminately by the managing Wiggins said that in several instances writer, told members of the Student is newsworthy and what isn' t " editor," he replied. " However if we the members of the Interim Board had Senate Friday. that she would like to When asked why very little in­ don' t like our beat we can request a to start from scratch when trying to see more student control of the n \\ '. vestigative reporting and muckraking change. figure out the report's recommen­ editorial operation of the Daily Egyp­ appears in the Daily Egyptian. Gene Wiggins, a member or the In­ datioru tian-but only on a limited basis. Mahsman replied that most staffers terim Board which made a report on Wiggins also said that he felt it woul~ " I basically like the way the Egyp­ wouldn' t have the time for the research Expro to the University Senate. said the bt: impossible for a student to handle tian runs," she said, " But I certainly involved in stories or that nature. plan as originally written, is incom- the job of managing editor. don' t think it runs perfectly. I think we need more student control on arbitrary policy matters" . Ms. Roll made the statement at the final session of a week· long series of esc puts aside motion criticizing hearings by the Student Senate to study Expro, a plan for reorganization of the Daily Egyptian's news operation. board's stand on A lien tenure case Ms. Roll suggested that a small board • made up of staff members might be for· By Richard LoreDz "Unless we can receive some additional Bill Edwards, a member of the Con­ med to handle complaints made by Dally Egyptian StaR' Writer reporters about policy rules and, in funding, we will not be able to publish stitution Committee, said the commit­ some cases, censorship. She said the our spring edition." The edition is tee would have specific amendments or board should have the power to The Graduate Student Council (GSC) scheduled to appear in the first week of a whole new constitution written for the override the managing editor' s Friday tabled indeiInitely a motion spring quarter. next council meeting. decision. which would be critical d the Board d Charles Newling, a member of .the Finally, Wayne Riley, council vice Ms. Roll cited as an example an old Trustees in the handling of the Douglas Health Insurance Committee, told the president, described a meeting he had policy rule which forbids women repor­ Allen tenure case. council members that a ruling has this week with President David R. ters from covering riots. The motion, presented by D. Reed come from Alan Drazek, state director Derge. Riley said he discussed " Most d the reporters were furious Clark, stated that the council "did not or personnel. dealing with employe graduate assistant pay, health in­ over the decision," she said. " But there look with favor" on the board's action status d graduate assistants. surance and the 'possibility of a 12- was nothin~ we could do about it. " in not granting Allen tenure. Clark is Newling said Drazek has ruled that month contract for graduate assistants When asked by George Camille, the council's president. graduate assistants are not considered with Derge. Riley said De~e did not in­ student body president, IJ anythmg she Allen was denied tenure at the state employes and therefore would dicate definitely how he (Derge) stood had written for the Egyptian had ever December board meeting despite a not be able to participate in the new on the questions. favorable recommendation from then­ state health inwrance plan for state been censored or with held from print, employes. Ms. Roll replied " no."She did say, president Robert G. Layer. however, that it has happened, but not The reason given for tabling the "In order to be a state employe, you ~ J ' for political philosophy or criticism eX motion was that there was a lack of in­ have to be covered by the retirement plan," Newling said At the present Gus the University. formation concerning the case. The ,~ She said censorship only occurred in motion can be brought before the coun­ time, graduate assistants are not con­ cases d extreme obscenity or in stories cil at a later date. sidered part or the state retirement Bode and editorials with sexual connotations. In other action, the council tabled un­ plan. --' ~ In response to a question from til the next meeting a request from The council passed a motion allowing Camille, David L. Mahsman, also a Franklin "Buzz" Spector, editor of Newling to use any means he wants to J :.~ . ~. staff writer, said that, for the most Grassroots, asking the council for $350 in order 10 try and have the ruling part, reporters make their own in order to publish the spring edition of d df'Cisions when covering their beats. the magazine. ='~e~~tg~~:=i~neral "We are not told specifically what to Last week, Spector said the The question of constitutional change Gus says he aJways thought there ws a cover or how to write our stories," he Grassroots account is empty. He said. was also discussed, but no action taken. dirterence between oenaored lIld edited.

Page 16. Daily Egyptian. I'ebrusy 12. 1972