Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

October 1983 Daily Egyptian 1983

10-25-1983 The aiD ly Egyptian, October 25, 1983 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_October1983 Volume 69, Issue 47

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, October 25, 1983." (Oct 1983).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1983 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in October 1983 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Committee aproves bike rules By Bruce Kirkham 'Daily 13gyptian Staff Writer The University's Traffic and Parking Committee Monday Tuesday, October 25, 1983, Vol. 69, No. 47 80uthem lllinois University approved a set of regulations intended to increase bicycle safety measures on campus. The new rules include a regulation that prohibits bicyclist..q from riding under any Marine's role part of the Faner Hall breezeway. The regulation includes bicycle riders who are passing through Faner Hall on east-west ridewalks. questioned by The rule requires cyciists to walk bicycles under the breezeway. Ricycle parking racks will remain in their current locations under the SIU students breezeway, according to Clarence Doughl;'rty, vice By John Schrag "We want people to be aware president for campus services Staff Writer that Americans are over there and chainoar. of the committee. dying for no rE:330n, " said Rick Anoth~r regulation Thomas Jurgens stood with a Kanzler, a junior in history. designates the area between the group of friends in front of the "And we want them to know south end of Faner Hall and the Student Center Monday af­ that we don't want another north end of the Student Center ternoon and held up sign that Vietnam. as of( limits to bicycle riding at read "180 V .S. Marines killed; I Chuck Hicklin, also a junior in all times. Cyclists can, hope it's worth it. Protect them history. agreed with Kanzler however, walk their bicycles or pull them out." that American military in­ through the area. "Won't you join us?" he volvement in the Middle East The committee also approved called to a young woman who could escalate as it did in In­ a regulation stating that stared at the group before she dochina during the 19608. bicyclists are require(l to yield turned her head and walked "The government may not to pedestrians at all times. away. "It could have been your have learned anything from Dougherty said that signs brothu over there," he called Vietnam," he said, "but the marked "bicyclists must yield" after her. "It could have been American people did." will be placed at several your boyfriend who was killed." locations on campus. The signs Jurgens ~aid he and his ba~kn!~er~:i~~~~gr:n1 :;lIt:= will replace the current "yield" friends are trying to get peoplE' Studt:nt Center Tuesday. He signs on the pedestrian over- to question the role of the U.S. troops stationed in Lebanon ~~~r tht)a~~l1 ~~~b~i~e :~ See nUl,ES, Page 3 after the attack which killed at memory of the dead American least 186 U.S. Marines and servicemen, as requested by the sailors in Beirut Sunday. SIU-C Veterans Association. gus "A few of us got together and One member of the Veterans decidecl that we had to do club, Robert Toussaint, joined 'Bode something," he said. "There the call for a withdrawal of ar:: LOO many apatn(;!tic people troops. around here wandc!ring around "I think they should be pulled in their own little world. All out," said Toussaint. who spent we're trying to do is to get four years in the Marines. "We people to realize that it was had no business being there in Americans who died over there. the first place. We're not the We want them to ask 'Why?''' keepers of the world. H's not our Gus says the walk-your-bike A1thlillgh the group said it war." Mr. Pumpkin head rule WOD't be quite as effective primarily working to increase "'ollssaint, a junior in as a stick in tho) spokes, but awareness, most of the young :'_"'l'keting, said that the Mike Witt. freshmail, undeclared major, gets into the Halloween pedestrians can take comfort in men said they think the spirit Monday with his newly carved jack 0' lantern outside Abbott baving the law on their side in remaining trOOJ:3 in Lebanon Hall on Tbompson Point. the dodge 'em game. should be brought home. See ROLE, Fage 3 Search for casualties goes on BEIRUT (AP) - One by one, personal visit to Beir..:! Monday An anonymous telephone Robert Jordan told reporters: clawed through the debris and the bodies of 4.merican Marines stopping by both sites. caiit:r had claimed respon­ "There's nobody alive m there bodies continued to be pulled were pulled from their shat­ Both Iran and Syria rejected sibility for the attacks in the now. No, it would be a miracle." from the ruins. Besides the tered Beirut command post V.S. suggestions that those name of the "Islamic Earlier Monday, when the mounting toll "f dead, about 75 Monday, pushing the toll to at countri~ were behind bom­ Revolutionary Movement," a death toll stood at 161, officers wounded were evacuated to least 186 killed in the bloo:liest bings. Syria's govf;rnment previously unknown group. estimated 50 Marines and V.S. V .S. military hospitals in attack ~ .. ainst the V.S. military news!l8per des.'!ribed it instead At Beirut International Navy men remained buried Europe. since Vietnam. as a blow by Lebanese Airport, near the dust-l;,hrouded under the crumbled concrete. New stories emerged of the In Wa!>hington. as a political nationalists against "oc­ rubble of the Marine post, During tile day, cranes lifted horror of the first minutes after furor built over the Marines' cupation forces." command spokesman Maj. heavy slabs, rescue workers the explosion. mission, Pi'esidt!nt Reagan One surviving Marine, Robert declared that they will stay Calhoun, 21, of San Antonio, because "we have vital in­ Texas, said he was on the roof of terests in Lebanon." the four-story iluiiw~e; ... nen it Across America, meanwhile, Veterans club to Dlourn dead collapsed, knocking him un­ conscious. military messengers fanned out By Bru~e Kirkham Student Center. Tu<.'sday, Wednesday ard to bring word to scores of When he awoke, he told Staff Writer JaIlS said the action by the Thursday to give out arm reporters, "I got up and my families of their loved ones' Veterans Association is in no bands and provide in­ deaths in the Sunday morning friend Joe was willi me and he The SIU-C Veterans way intended as a political formation on further actions was trapped. I unburied him. bombing, carried out by an statement, but only to show by the association. unidentified suicide terrorist Association is asking the SIU­ We got up ... and we heard about C student body, faculty and sympathy "for our brothers Jans said the Veterans a thousand people, it seemed who detonated a bomb-rigged Association would probably truck. the community to wear blac!: who have died while serving like, screaming 'Help me! ,..00 arm bands or ribbons as a our country overseas in send sympathy cards to help me!'" show of sympathy for V.S. Lebanon." families of men from Illinois In the U.S. capital Monday, Marine families servicemen who lost their "We are doing this with the killed in the attack. House Speaker Thomas P. lives in the bombing of realization that this can O'Neill said Congress is "going await news. Marine headquarters in happen at any time to our The Undergraduate to have a complete review of Beirut Sunday. mel:! serving the United Student Orgp.nization en­ why we're there and whether it Page6 The Veterans Association Srotes. Our sympathy goes dorsed the week of mourning. is worthwhile to keep our boys has declared this week a out to the loved ones back "In the wake of such an there for diplomatic reasons." here in America while they event, I believe that more But Reagan. at a White House At least 23 French week of mourning for the news con.ference, ;;aid of the paratroopers also were killed in dead and wounded, according wait to find out how their than ever we must show sympathy and support for the Marines' role "The mission a similar, almost simultaneous to Kevin C. JaIlS, president of Marine is doing," he said. remains and .t remains un- attack at their con:mand post, the association. Jans made The Veterans Association families who have lost loved one mile from the Marine base. the riclquest at a Monday will set up a table in the north ones," said Stephanie French President Francois press conference at the end of the Student Center Jackson, USO vice president. See MARINES, I'age 3 "itterrand unexpectedly paid a Condition'o,f'wou'nded guards ----Wews Roundup" .' .. 'Minute of silence' struck down NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - A federal judge on Monday str1)ck 'sa.tisfactory', spokeslDon says down a state law requiring a daily minute of silence in public; schools, ruling the measure was unconstitutional because it By Jl'nnifer Phillips connection between the two Powles and Ditterline were in forced students and teacher!' into a "posture of prayer." Staff Wriler stabbings, Leech said, although satisfa~tory condition Monday, The law was the only one of its kind in the country which had the possibility has not been according to Leech. Although he not previously been overturned, according to the American Two g'J8rd.<; stabbed by an ruled out. Both weapons were dedined to say which hospital inmate Saturday at the u.s. conIiscated and turned over to they were in, a spokesman for Ci.-n Liberties Union, which represented an Edison high Penitentiary at Marion the FBI. Marion Memorial Hospital said sc~ool teacher disciplined for refusing to implement the silent {emained in "satisfactory He said Monday there were no all calls about the two guards mmute. The ACLU challenged the New Jersey law &s a thinly ~ondition" Monday night as ntw developments about the were to be referred to the veiled attempt to circumvent First Amendment guarantees of prison officials and the FBI stabbings. prison. separation of church and state. cO!ltinued their investigation of According to FBI Agent Dean Clutts, from Cobden, had the stabbings, which left two Paisley, investigation of the worked as a guard at Marion Union leaders approve settlement other guards dead. stabbings will continue until sirice 1964, when the peniten­ (AP) - Striking teachers voted Monday on a Jerry P Dean , ; "I don't ar.ticip:ate any ~r.peof Ditterline both joined the staff Leech, public relations officer." Inrdrmation being addable as guards about three years executive board, sai(' Robert Healey, union president. HoffT-au rued of stab wounds in until at least the end of the ago. the chest. week," he said, adding that the Nuclear protesters arrested In a separate incident at 10:15 names of the inmates will not be :;'amily information about the t\\-o hospitalized guards Y'as not By the Associated Press a.m. Saturday, Merle E. C.'utts, relea.~~ ,r·lF. ~ fBI ... 11, released out of consideration for Ban-the-bomb protesters were arrested by the hundreds officer I. CorAmeRt 51, a senior specialisti· Paisley Hb!iiOOd on M~nday as they scaled fences and went limp on roadways in was stabbed by an inmate with possible motive!! f~i' the stab­ the families, Leech said. a homemade knife as he bings. Leech said Sunday there Clutts and Hoffman were the futile attempts to blockade key nuclear weapons iacilities escorted the inmate back to his were "several suspects" in­ second and third guards to be from New England to the West Coast. The demonstrations followed a weekend o{ 140 rallies cell. volved in the incidents, but killPd !n the prison's history, There wa:> no apparent would not elaborate. according to Leech. na~onwide against NATO's phmned deployment "f U.S.-built CruIse and Pershing 2 missiles in Europe, where 1.5 million people have jomed thE' protests in recent days. Halloween alternative offered NBC newscaster klUed in car wreck NEW YORK (AP) - She start~-d as "Honeybee" and By Paula J. Finlay The band puts on a "super, campus Christian groups, he became one of ~C News' best-known correspondents, a hard­ Staff Writer top-notch rock 'n' roll show," said. workmg and.articulate woman from rural Pennsylvania who and has offered to play for only "People get turned off seemed destined for the top of her prof~ssion despite a life • Although the City Council has the pric~ of their expenses, thinking that it's got to be marred by personal tragedy. had a change of heart t'lward Bryant said. The Newman someone with a lo-pound Bible the annual Halloween street Center has volunteered its shoving it down your throat," . Jessica Savj~ch. died in .an automobilE! accident Monday at bash, others in the community parking lot as the site for the but that's not what The Great tn.eageof35,still 10 pursUit of the "big things" in network TV. baven't. concert, he said. Alternative is about, Bryant Killed along with her was New York Post executive Martin The council endorsed the Many peol-le, incl"uding said. Fischbein, 34. celebration for the first time members of the Christian Street-theater and clowns will this year by dubbing the community and the Halloween provide p.ntertainment during Soviet missile bases planned weekend event City Fair Days Core Committee, have the weekend and volunteers will MOSCOW (AP) - The Sovi~t Union, in its strongest and allowing beer to be sold at questioned the appropriateness operate a help center on the response yet to the planned deployment of U.S. missiles in six booths along East Grand of the band for Halloween. But islancl, which will offer first aid W~t.ern Europe, said Monday it is readying its own new AVl'nue. But more than 100 Bryant's reply is: "There's and counseling, Bryant said. mISS de bases 10 East Germany and Czechoslovakia community members have never an inappropriate time to Bryant said that his group Western military analysts believe the Soviet armed forces joined forces to organize what c~~~~t the m~ssage of life and wants to help the council with alr~ady have short-range battlefield nuclear missiles they call The Great Alternative its goal of making the stahoned on the soil of their Warsaw Pact allies. But Monday's to Halloween. . .. 'Bryant said the Hanoween Halloween party safer by spirit is reflected in costumes annou~cemen~ was the first public acknowledgement by the 'n the past, "people have sat providing music with a "good, Kremhn that It was even planning a nuclear role for Eastern back, wrung their hands and representing death, distortion positive message that will Europe. complained" about the and confusion. The holiday provoke thought." But he Halloween bash, but this year offers a chance to "get away stressed that they are not trying they are getting together to do from the reality of tife for just a to stage a "battle of the bands." something about it, Jerry while," and many people see it Bryant said. as a "good ole oPf.ortunity to get The Resurrection Band will I USPS 169220) Bryant, of Jesus Solid Rock drunk," but The Great Alter­ begin Friday's concert at about Concerts, is helping to bring the native organizers are trying to 8 p.m., but when Big Twist and Publishe~ daily il! the Journalism and Egyptian Laboratory l\Ionda\ Resurrectiun Band, a con­ present a different message - the Mellow Fellows play .it the th~ugh Friday dUring regular semesters and Tuesday through Frida~' temporary Christian rock band, one of life and hope, he said. Recreation Center Saturday, during summer term by Southern IIhnOls l'niversity. Communications to Carbondale Friday and No one group is taking credit Bryant's band will cooperate BUll~lng: Carbondale. 11.62901. Second class postage paid at Carbondale. II. Saturday nights as part 01 the for The Great Alternative, with Big Twist and play during .~::..;torlal and bUSiness officI'S located in Communications Building. North alternative. Bryant said. Volunteers come his breaks, he said. Wing. Phone 536-3311. Vernon A. Stone. fiscai orricpr. "This is not a reJigious con­ fNm throughout Southern 5,ubscription rates are $30.00 per year or 517.50 ror six months within thl' cert, but the alternative is lllinois, but many are Car- "We're not out to do ~~~~i:St.ates and $45.00 per Yl'ar or $?!l.oo ror six months in all rorpign displayed through their music," bondale businessmen or come something to conflict with Postmaster: Send change of address to Daily Egyptian. Southern lIlinOl!o he said. from area churches and them," he said. Uruversity. Carbondale. II. 62901. MARINES from Page 1 fulfilled." that the Christian minority give officials said :15 !<'rl'n('h !loldi('rs OLDEN SCISSORS OF RICHE He said the bombing was "a up its dominant political role werl' IwIil'vl'(1 trap,,..d, lmd Welcomes Back Terry Smith horrifying reminder of the type here. of enemy we face in many areas At the airport Monday, the ~.:~!~~"1!~I~I,~I:n~;.:~ ~~t:~::l~d. of the world today - vicious, remaining Marines from the Acrylic Nalls ...... Sale - ",.1 cowardly and ruthit:SS." 1 600-man U.S. ground Corce Mith'rrAnd flrw In unex· $20~OO~ As he spoke, more than 300 were reinforcing barriers and pectrdly lin A ~'n'nl'h air (orce fresh Marines from Camp stepping up other security jet. owt with (;I'mllyel and paid Pedicures ..... Sale - Lejeune, N.C., were on their measures. aID-minute villit tn the wrecked $15.~\ way to Beirut to replace their Reagan on Sunday ordered "'rench post. dead and wounded comrades, Gen. Paul X. Kelley, the Marine Free Haircut with Perm who were part of a Corps commandant, to Beirut to In a heavily guarded ~ motorcade, he also stopped by $25.00 - \l\ ~~tin~~:!t{~de s~:&a~~~~ ~~eaet::~i:ili~ ~~ua~1~ the Marine site, where he paid government's efforts to force can be better protec~ed. his respects to the American (with Frank Tergoning) reassert control over this strife­ The daybreak attack on the dead as bodies were loaded torn nation. Marines, most of whom were aboard aircraft for eventual 1110 Walnut Murphy.boro 617-4042 Lebanese Presjdent Amin sleeping at the time, was made return to the United States. The Gemayel told his Cabinet that, by the driver of an explosives­ French president then returned despite the bombings, he laden pickup truck who crashed to Paris. remained determined to con­ through and swerved around vene a scheduled reconciliation security barriers at the airport Two options were report~ conference in Geneva, Swit­ base. He smashed his truck into under consideration in zerland, next Monday, the the lobby of the command post Washington for bolstering the !\ftttftift Lebanoese state radio reported. building and detonated the Mdrines' position: stationing The meeting of represen­ estimated one ton of TNT. The ~e Marines on offshore ships tatives of Lebanon's rival bombing at the French post, in when they are not on duty, or ..... ~~:ft~D€~S religious and ?Olitic?l factions west Beirut's seaside Ramlet el­ expanding the territory con­ is aimed at enning years of civil Baida district, was staged in a trolled by the Marines to enable This Week Luncheon war, a conflict touched off in similar fashion. them to widen their security large part by Moslem demands Besides the 23 dead. F!'ench belt. Combination Plate Special RULES from Page 1 Egg Roll Almond Boneless Chicken pass liver u.s. Highway ;;1. some time, Dougherty said. Three of those accidents In 1m effort to slow down Recent concern for bicycle resulted in inr~ries classified as FriedRJce $2.95 cyclists, the committee ap­ safety by members of the "non-critical but serious." proved the placement of speed University community An accident Oct. 7 on the Murdale Shopping Center tape on the overpass. The s~ prompted the committee to take Rout€ 51 overpass resulted in tape is designed to make nOlse action, he said. the overnight hospitalization of 529-2983 when ran over by a bicycle, but There have been 16 accidents an SIU-C student. because it is nat there is no involving bicycles reported to Schemonia said there is no danger of accidents occurring. University police this semester, way of determining the number The committee discussed the according to Joyce Schemonia, of unreported accidents in­ $eNing ths possibility of requiring cyclists SIU-C Security statistical clerk. volving bicycles. to walk their bicycles over the bridge, Dougherty said. ROLE from Page 1 However, he said the committee helt footl in town chose to attempt to slow down Mar;nes original role of Burns, wearing a black arm­ cyclists rather than require "peacekeepers" has changed, band, said he stood with the rjil~i;~;rg;l them to walk. and thus they should be brought group to mourn the deaths of the The Undergraduate Student home. American soldiers. I in pitl I Organization approved a "It's not a peacekeeping "I don't think we should just •____ 99, ..,.. ____J I resolution Oct. 19 outlining a missior if people are being pull out and chalk up their I bicycle safety proposal. The killed, and 180 of our people just deaths to nothing." said Burns ....--.--'!.--.--,~ ...--.-.-,- ..~ ... ,. proposal was presented to the got killed," he said. "It's going who is in the Officers' Can­ 111124iU.. IOI29/1' committee, which developed to be a war, and we should get didate School arid hopes to be a each point of the proposal into out." Marine Corps officer. 201 S.11l the new regulations. Burns, a junior in marketing. 549-4541 The committee had been Not eVeryone in the group, said he thinks thCit the troops in "-:11.• ' ....s.tj discussing bicycle safety for however, ftlt that the Marines Lebanon should be bet~er CIoaoI,...., should come hQm~ Martin protected.

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An Equal Opportunitl' ElJ1IJloyer Ollt • US. Citizenship Required We are No. 11

YES, SPORTS FA.IIlS, it's true. The Southern Dlinois Univenity L­ Fightin' Salukis are No.1, winDers of eight in a row and the best 1-"""" - AA football team ill the ~tiOCl; The CbicaIlQ SUn-Times said ~ D"I -::::?"--- interviewwithCoa~~P$#~t~~fleea,,"'and ~ -- the playen knew the Lord was on tJieir side. WeIl,'praise the Lord, - because this is the first time Saluki footbaU b..'UI been first in anything. The Saluki thrashing of IDdiana State OD SatlJl'daJ .. cwP1ecl ~ith .::::ss boostedEastern theIVmtucky's Dogs tv thefailure top ofto thewiD NCAA's over rival Division Wet'~ I-M Kentucky: rankiDgS . , .; .. J :., ~t~e~ ______and gives them a good fOotbold on their first undefeated season

,~.=Statetcsavethevictory. Tbat'spoeticjustice. A n unh leasan t enCOU11 ter IT HAS BEEN a miraculous year so far for the Salukis. Beginning r II wi~ ~ Taylor's game-~ field goa] block against Eastern DlinoIS m the opener, the Salukis bave displayed a talent for the big I wish to share with the that he would "tear them down Perhaps this activist was play. readers of the DE an encounter wherever (he) saw them." ~rustrated by the bankruptcy of I had with an anti-nuclear Fairly certain that the First Ideas that permeates the One of the biggest was flftb.-year quarterback Rick Johnson's ~­ "enthusiast" in the Student Amendment was still in the Bill nuclear freeze movemt'i'it yard pass to Cecil Ratliff agamst Drake, wbo WOD the footrace to the Center Thursday morning. I o! Rights, I expressed my Perhaps he felt trapped inside goal line with only one shoe OD. found it disillusioning yet dismay that he and others like his doctrmaire cocoon. Saluki play has been pure poetry. Last season Sw.c safety Greg enlightening. him were unable to toierate Whatever the excuse, sllch ~ipp was burned in front of the home fans on a g'lme-winning pass Last week, the Sill College opposing viewpoints. He raplierl puerile ~havior is grossly out m the fin.aI seconds of the contest with Arkansas State. This season, Republicans posted f1yc s with a brainy, erudite rationale of place on a university campus Greg Sh!pp stopped a last-gasp Arkansas State drive with an in­ throughout the University for his conduct. where ideas are supposed to terception at the 3-yard line as time expired at Arkansas State to espousing alternative opinions "These

THOSE STATShave madeSW.c the team to be dealt with in the Missouri Valley. SW-C players have been named MVC player-of­ bleeding hearts and liberals the-week six out 9f eight times this year - fiw times for defense In reference to Bogdan criticizing his record. How '''liberals'' into- a group with and once for offense. We aM rated first in the MVC in rushing Medrek's letter of Oct. 18 could they? It was im­ "bleeding hearts" in his letter, defense, second in pass defense, fU'St in total defense and first in regarding "liberals" con­ peccable." To the contrary, the reminiscent of Mr. Watt's scoring defense. However, the Dog.' may have to share their first demnation of James Watt for media have "attacked" Mr. separafion of two groups of possible coaference title with Tulsa because the two teams don't his "Foot in Mouth Disease," I Wa~t for ~ verbal iaux pas, Americans: "liberals and play this year. would refer him to the two while environmentalists and Americans" in his infamous The NCAA ranking almost assures another fU'St for SIU f~tball volumes of the Wilderness citizen groups have consistently quote. Perhaps when and if Mr. -post-6eason play for the first time in Saluki history. Society's "Watt Book." Here, criticized his laild-use policies Medrek graduates with his But right now, the Salukis have more important things to worry professionals in the fields of in great detail. If Watt's record biology degree, he can fmd about than the post-season. They are New Mexico State, Dlinois ecology, land-use management, has been so impeccable, why work with Mr. Watt defending State and Wichita State. forestry, wildlife management, h~ Congress blocked many of the cause of big business. I and natural areas preservation his proposals, and coalitions of guess I used my biology degree . THIS SAnTRDAY, the Salukis will take on the New Mexico State explain the ramifications of Mr. envltonmental groups, in­ to become a "mud-slinging, Watt's poliCies as steward of cluding the State of California bleeding heart liberal." How Aggies in front of the Carbondale Halloween crowd. The party is our nation's federal lands. filed lawsuits against his ac: un-American! Valeri bound to flood into the stands, and if McAndrew Stadium doesn't fall Mr. Medrek states, "A!; usual, tions as Secretary of Interior? DeCastris, Graduate, Biological down when the Dogs take the field, it never will. the liberals refrained from Mr. Medrek .has lumped Sciences. BA C claims allocations were suspicious There are usually two sides to allocations hearings were not surroundmg last year's fee percent. percent. In reality the reduction every story. However, in the taped. allocations process was at least :r h e c i r c U III S tan c e s was 21.6 percent, not the 21.1 case of the Black Affairs That is only one of several suspicious. surrounding the fet: allocations percent we originally charged.) Council grievance against the charges the BAC filed against The BAC suffered a 21 percent process also led us to suspect The BAC is the only Priority USO admhistration of last tht; !ISO. Most of the hearings decrease in funding from Fiscal foul play: One group that has never year, there appear to be three: were taped. The only Year 1983, though funding bill - A rumor that the BAC received a consistent level of that of the USO, the BAC and organizations whose hearings ratio~al~ stated that all ~~d rect;ive.the exact am.ount funding or funding increases. Russ Brodie, a graduate student were not taped were the organ17.ations should have been It did recelVe m fee allocati~ns, You are probably tired of the in geography. Thanks to some Priority One organizations, prepared to face a decrease of even ~fore the ~AC waIl ~v,:n word preJudice, but the fact is, selective editorializing by the including the BAC - though 12 percent. Some organizatio~ a "fall''' ~~g. (TIus IS even m 1983, in as progressive Daily Egyptian, the public baa Priority One funding accounts rece~'!ed an increase in funding hardly a comcl~D;ce ..> an institution as SW-C, in as been made aware of the USO's for over 80 percent of the total - some as much as 30 percer;t . - Jerry Cook s mslSten~e on rrogressive an area as Southern and Brodie's sides. This is our monies distributed. or mOh!o mterrupUnga senate meeUng to llinois, it still happens. second attempt to give the The campus Judicial Board The BAC is the only PriQrity defend a process that public the BAC's side. f~r Governance did not rule on One organization that received theoretically should occur in- A!; for our tactics, we did not Not only did Brodie attack the any of our other charges, saying a decrease in funding ot that dependent of his office. make up the rules. we sinlply BAC .'is being greedy and using that the charges dia not lend magnitude. All other prioritY' - Cook's sta!eme!'ts in played the game. The J-Board disagreeable tactics he also themselves to specific violation organizations except the defense of the funding bill were for Governance which ruled in stated'SOlDe facts of ';hich none of the constitution, and as such St'~nt Programming Council iill~ with lies and misleading our favor was ap,pc?inted by the of the principal participants in were not within their experienced an increase in fee conjectures. (Cook sta..ed that same USO which we flIed the case were aware. Brodie jurisdiction. alfocation funding or received the ~tal monies given !-O ~AC charges against. -'- C. Wood- IIIud the foul play claimed by .the We maintain.' that our ~es other student-based funds. sp,C and Its membeJ: orgaruzations swortb Neisb, CoordJaator. BAC lit that last year's ~ are valid and the SItuation suffered a decrease of only SIX made the reduction less than 21 ,BI-c, IAf~ If~~: The U.N·. at 38 - is it closer to peace goal?

OCTOBER 24 is celebrated every year as United Nations Day. Leading world statesmen of this generation, of course, speak of peace, stability and progress, which the United Nations was supposed to bring us. About this need for peace there is little debate among leaders of good will. The proble~~ ~; ff;! in seeking Jack Prasai agreement on the route to peace. StaHWriter The crisis in Lebanon and the Afghanistan stalemate have amply demonstrate:d a lack of --CWew.PQmt,"'1I .;,. H/- ")1",,, consensus on even underlying many who feel a need for an theories of peace. This points to effective international forum the need for world government, for the whole complex of a world forum for judgment. So political, social,legal, economic Straw polls signal recovery where is the world in regard to and military problems, it is a peace, stability and progress in beacon leadmg slowly but this 38th year of the United inevitably to a better and Nations? brighter world. .of grass-roots partisan politics Those holding this point of HOWEVER, reflection on view have come to compare the F.ditor's Note. The following candidates to rehearse themes the 1960's and before. But the current rivalries, historical Gnited Nations to a giant commentary was written by they will use in the campaign. It decline of parties among voters animosities and competitive iceberg, only a scant amount of David Everson, Joan Parker also provided a chance for party has detracted attention from a economic, nationalistic and which is visible. The portion and Jack Van Der Slik of the activists to see the candidates in counter-trend, the resurgence racial interests among nations that can be seen is likened to the Illinois Legislative Studies a competitive situation. Ac­ of state and local party of the world leads to the con­ political disagreement that Center at Sangamon State tually, only Simon and Rock organizations. clusion that peace is an ideal receives worldwide media Univenity. appeared. Alex Seith sent a rather than a realistic goal of attention. The submerged base surrogate, while Roland Burris IN P ARTICULAR, the humanity. Nevertheless, some is compared to the important Straw polls - the latest was unrepresented. Republican Party has made up degree of stability i:.. in­ human rights, health, gimmick in presidential for a lack in numbers with unity ternational relations is both humanitarian, educational, nomination politiCS in the The significance of such on b:sues and &ubstantial attainable and valuable. social and economic activities, United States - have filtered events lies beyond the straw ~.arces, and that party now The United Nations Con­ carried on in a large part down to the state level. poll gimmick. The chance to get 'boasts a good electoral ference on International through the specialized agen­ A straw ~U is a gathering of their votes recorded brings the organizapon in many areas of Organization convened at San cies of the United Nations. The party activists at which a participants, and news of a lthe coun~. The 1978 and 1980 Francisco in 1945 and com­ United Nations is both a moral candidate preference vote is ''winner'' brings the media. But 'election triumphs for the GOP pleted its work with the adop­ . ideal and a limited institution of taken. The practice first got a a long-tenn effect may be to 'attested to this revival, which tion of the Charter and Statute government. lot of attention in 1979 in the stren~then ties between the 'took place under the national of the International Court of presidential nomination "pre­ candIdates and the party GOP chairmanship "f Bill Justice on June 26 of that year. season." The results of such workers. The liveliness of this Brock of Tennessee. THE 20th CENTURY is a polls, which appear as a one­ forum may signal a revival of For too long, the Democratic paradox. Nationalism has day news item, are generally as political parties at the grass become intensified at the very trustworthy as a long range roots, a welcome development ~~lic~gr: =:s ~~ About the need for time when, it is said, "all the weather forecast - and just as in our view. organization. The Democrats eople yearn for progress meaningful. had relied on the fading peace there is little Ceyond nationalism to the On Oct. 8, the Democrats of AT THIS gatheI'!ng of ,strength of their old New Deal wider, larger and admittedly the 20th Congressional District cownstate Democrats, the I coalition and their partnership debate. The problem vaguer community of held a forum and straw poll for various elements of the with organized labor. But the mankind." Under these cir­ U.S. Senate candidates. The poll Democratic Party were in losses in 1978 and 1980 woke that is in seeking cumstances demand<:; have been was the idea of state Senator evidence: labor union mem­ party up to the need for a raised to look at our world, not Vince Demuzio, D-Carlinville, bers, farmers, blue collar counterattack. The effects of agreement on the .through a haze of national the state central committeeman workers, minorities, women, . President Reagan's policies on emotions, but perceived "in from tIlf' 20th District. More university people and other some of the party's traditional route to peace. cold hard reality." An element than 800 delegates, most of professionals. The grass-roots supporters, espec ially 'of this reality IS the common whom paid $10 for the privilege, nature of the gathering was minorities, sparked these membership in the United gathered at Sangamon State evident. The diversity of people responses. Attempts to imitate Nations of all states old and University in a kind of mini­ helps to ~xplain why the Republicans have followed. AS OF JULY 1982. the United Nations' total standing mem­ new, rich and poor, those convention atmosphere com­ Democratic Party remains both bership was 152. The nation­ equipped with advances in plete with banners, signs and a strong electoral force and a COMPETITION between the science and technology and cheers for the candidates. frequently divided party on parties at the local level is states that make up the U.!'!. those less developed countries, issues. A main them-e of healthy. In the process, both roster originally agreed upon THE WINNER in the straw parties are discovering that three major goals. In today's some rich in resources and speakers at the meeting was the others not. poU was U.S. Rep. Paul Simon need for unity after the struggle people can be recruited to take context the first goal is in­ of the 22nd District; state for nomination has been part in political party affairs on terpreted as being a dedication Senate President Philip J. Rock decided. Only time will tell how the basis of attrac~ve can-' to the building of conditions that of Oak Park came in second. didates and relevant issues. will allow lor peaceful and THE UNITED NATIONS is .this will work out, but on the neither the fearsome surface the rivalry between So although the straw polls friendly relations among The results are actually in­ Simon and Rock at the forum are largely a meaningless ~les. Second, the United supranational monster that some extreme nationalists have significant in predicting who the was amicable. exercise, they do bring together Nations seeks to provide fonnal eventual nODlinee of the party . Much of the talk about decline party members for a pre­ machinery for the settlement of denounced nor the supergovernment that many wiU be - that will be decided in of U.S. political parties is ac­ campaign rally and they serve international tensions where the the Democratic primary in curate because it focuses on the as a small but noticeable nonnal process of dil?lomacy expect it to be. Impatience has illustration of the revival of been responsible for much of March. But the event did behavior of voters: they are less proves ineffective. Third, the provide an opportunity for the tied to parties than they were in political parties. United Nations is dedicated to the criticism. Outstanding the establishment of a program world leaders still believe the of collective security under U.N. provides greater potential VIRGIL By Brad Lancaster which aU its members must power for uniting the moral and material strength of the world come to the support of any J'U5T Tcrny A GUY AAlD IF TJIrr CA5HIt:R member victimized by community for maintaining "Tl£ LY.RLUs FULL , •• I "eVER I. it is nonetheless the best that SOME MEMBERS look upoo man has yet devised. Best of aU the U.N. as a pennanent in­ as former U.N. Secretary ternational conference. Others General Waldheim said, "It is see' it as. ,an... ongoing. in­ alive with the spirit of the age to ternational' institution. : F~r corne." .,,,,, Daily Egyptian, October 25, 1983, Pajte 5 ...... ).".'J.1 ..' 't\ \ •• ~.'l !tC.-i'tJ." f ...... Fanlilies.await news. of Marine relatives

By the Associated Press as he and thr\.'e other Marines the dreaded slam of the car door ~rr::1. family members were helped carry a wounded man or knock at the front door. The sounds of grief across from the bombed building. "I've been working around "It goes all the way from Ameriea on Monday were car Rose and Bennie Harris of the house, cleaning up and being very matter-of·fact to doors slamming and doorbells Woonsocket, R.I., saw their son trying to keep busy," Harold taking the notification ... very, ringing as Marine officers and on a stretcher 011 television. Montgomery, an Austin, Texas, very hard," saidd Richard Nay:! chaplains called at the Later he called them. "He band officer said. "WP. sort of Boyer, a chaplain at Camp homes of families who lost sons sounded good, very good," Mrs. figure no news is good news." Lejeune, N.C. and brothers and fathers in the Harris said, her voice choking. Marine officials told frantic He said the chaplains tried to weekend bombing in Beirut. Sandra Robinson of Windsor, families c~mng Washington comfort the families and an­ The relatives of servicemen Vt., heard unofficia Uy through a that they would be notified only swer questions about funeral wflo had been killed reacted in Red Cross hotline l'ult her son arrangements. "No chaplain anger and anguish after the was safe. :e~:S:oul~ ::an~ o~~c~{~: feels good about a call like this, visits by chaplains and other Other families, however, nouncements about Marines but they'll bury their feelings - officers who personally bore the waited tc hear as names of the who were unhurt. for a while," Boyer said. sorrowful news. victims slowly trickled out Officers and chaplains were "I would give anytPing if he But in some nomes, the Monday afternoon. Some typically working 12-hour shifts would call," Marie Crudale of laughter of relief broke the prayed. Some tried to keep to bring the news of dead ser­ West Warwick, R.I., said. "If I tension when families heard busy. All tried not to liSten for vicemen. Immediate reactions could just hear his voice ... " their loved mles wl!re safe. ~~~:~tfa~~O~k~~~~~:~~ Suspect held for attempted murder know he was safe, Wa~ I r •. .i.. . ." .,," Barker of Chandler, ArizJ, gG\~.l .• : 'Ai ,,,t-1eat'old Carbbndale . Arrested in a Marion hotel by the business about 3 a.m. and, NIGHTLIFE (Xl similar call from his brother. man renulinrd in the the Williamson County SI-p.riff's after calling the victim to his DA&" 1:15 I:tlS 1:15 Ttl' 1':1' Katie Morrison of Williamson Cow.ty Jail under Popartment was Fr t L. car, shot him in the leg with a Poughkeepsie, N.Y., recognized $5,000 bond Monday, chargeci Butler. small-caliber handgun. her son, conscious but being with attemi?t.~ed murder a,fJer he carried on a stretcher, inlan aJle~ shot. a M~roPolice said the shooting oc- Police said more charges ••• an Associated Press photograph man in the leg Saturday night, curred after But!er and the might be filed against Butler by at the ""siness printed in the Poughkeepsie Carbondale police said. victim became in.')lved in an Jackson County State's At- of pleasure! Journal. "He's alive, he's alive, The 28-year~ld victim, whose argument outside the b'lS1ness torney John Clemons. at least he's alive," she said. name was not released, was at 11 p.m. Friday. Butler Charles and At'!I Madarns of admitted to Carbondale reportedly threatened to shoot Butler will be transferred to Potomac, Md., spotted their Memorial Hospital after !he the victim but the argume'lt Jackson County jail Tuesday, Nightli/e son, David, in another AP photo incident at 3 a.m. outside Tuck tlroke up without problems. said a spokesman for the WAlED •• NOONE ...... Industries Inc., 600 N. Illinois Williamson County Sheriff's 1.... mlttM.I.D • .....,1..... Ave., police said. Butler allegedly came back ta Department. SHOWS DAILY Ag School to hold 1:15 S:U 5:15 7:1' 9:15 student reception Police warn of check thefts, forgery ring

A get-acqaainted reception Several thousand dollars in With the "rash of forged abou~ $500 or $6CO. Clothing is ~VIDEO will be held for the un­ merchandise such as televisions checks" being passed in Car­ another item frequently being dergraduate and graduate and video cassette recorders bondale by a group of coilege­ ix'llght with the checks. students from foreign countries has been purchased tbis aged people, police are asking No arrests stemming ~rom enrolled in the School of semester, Carbondale police merchants to require more these incidents have been '''~'':;-.. Agriculture from 9:30 to 10:30 said, by a group of people who identification before accepting made. a.m. Tuesday in the Ag Seminar apparently steal checks and checks from customers. Police ask merchants to Room. make false student iden­ Police noticed the inerease require a driver's license and ~·."··~·" The 65 undergraduate and tification cards to match the beginning in late August. The credit card before accepting .. and 54 graduate foreign names OD the checks. check amounts art' usually for checks. H students represent 14 percent of the enrolled ia agriculture programs. W At the reception, plans tor the Tu ...• International Agriculture Club A and the International Farm Thurs. Training Center will be discussed. ------..-- L. ------...-~ _- 104---- CABLE FM /600 AM..., L o 7& 'pm We ate the_only radio station in the area that has a clear understanding of what is happening in the world of today's music. We play bands like ". .IPC Films~ Aztec Camera, the Jam, U2, Jean-Luc Ponty, Yaz, w· TONIGHT Tears for Fears, Zapp and many more that other radio stations either don't know about or just $1.00 don't care to play. We are the only source for E COMA soul in the area. The only station for complete Saluki sports action, Campus news a.nd all the in.. formation that is important to you.. the S.I.U. E· student. So tune us in and find out for yourself. 'lfrc:I

. ~. • , ..lo. 7&9pm $1.50 We're\,iDB -Carbondale's Rock & Soul- Request Lin~ 536-6661 Student Center DlCMtJM'aoc .... Auditorium

, ...... : .. ~-w' ...... " ...... \.t..i ~Ia·,,!.;,,· ...... ~ Ge"nesis album is a dull effort''' By Terry Luecke Alburn ~ Alien." It is an upbeat, happy room, and you keep on going cm Entertainment Editor CD • song about a serioU'I social you're unaware, then you know -n e V 1 e W I problem that is explored from that you are there." Genesis has released a new ______...... 1,:;; .....= ... :...... the minority's poin~ of view. album. So What. This is one band that has gone The LP doesn't sound backed up with a strong. steady "Silver Rainbow" offers through a tremendous evolution anything like the group's 4-4 beat. The song, as the rest of some humorous lyrics about a siTlce its first U.S. release, previous LPs, and it has a fe-ov the side, is dominated by fantasy place that can only be ,. Foxtrot," in 1m. Their old good tunes on it, but the band Collins' vocals. Side one is reached through love (or lust>: work isn't eve~ comparable to doesn't offer anything of new dominated by Collins so much "if you're sitting mere beside their new stuff. A."Id being an old substance. that it sounds like an extended her, with your arms you hold Genesis fan, its hard to accept The group dc:a incorporate a medium for Collins' solo efforts. her close, and you're wondering the new stuff, although I grew to new sound on this album, "Home by the Sea," the last just how far she'll let you go, like "Duke" and "abacab. " however. Instead of trumpets, song of the side, offers the only you haven't been there either. This album is growing on me like "abacab," a high-pitched, instrumental section on the But if you're sitting there beside too, but it's genf . ally a take-it­ resonated sythesizer sound side, which consists of a heavy her and a bear comes in the. or-leave-it LP. characteristic of Euro-synth electro-drum synth jam that groups that have emerged this kicks the album into gear. year is intermingled in sev!!rl'J Rven though the band has songs. explored sew'ral different in­ The LP examines life in struments in its past few LPl!, it different· facets of society in maintains a tonality and st}le of songs like "megal Alien," "Just playing that yi~lds a definite a Job to Do," and "U's Gonna Genesis s:1und, which is Get Better." rekindled 0[1 "Home by the But no Phil Collins-i>riented Sea." work would be complete without On side two the group takes a few songs about love on the what it started on 'Home by the rocks ("That's All") and love Sea" and gives the listener gone by ("Taking it All Too Genp.sis music instead of Phil Hard"). How's your love life C"jJjns music. It offers a dif­ Phil? ferent sound and vocal style. The first cut, "Moma" has an The side opens with the best eerie synthesizer introduction song on the album, "Dlegal Auditions set for two plays Auditions for the Calipre will also direct it. Stage productions of "William Three women are needed for and Mary" and "Bridgeport "Bridgeport Bus," which ex­ Bus" will be held from 4:30 to plores the life of Mary Agnes 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday and KeelllY, a 35-year-old 'lirgin and from 3:30 to 6 p.m. Thursday. her rather "strained" mother­ The performances will be daughter relationship. billed together, and are scheduled for Dec. 8 and 9. The story is by Maureen Two women and two mee are Howard and was adapted and needed for "William and will be directed by Keith Mary," a humorous story by Hoerner, senior in speech Roald Dahl about a widow who communication. discovers that parts of her late Prepar.:'fJ auditions pil!{"es are husband are still alive. The not needed. 1i ~'1lU would like to stary was adapted for the stage .wdition, but cannll~ make it at by Adam Fogelson, senior in the specified times, CGntact the speech communication, who directors at 453-2291. 'Soldier Songs" to be sung in recital A collection of "Soldier from Western Kentucky State Songs" depicting youth wasted University and a master's in by war's brutality will be vocal performance from highlighted at a recital by Wichita State University. baritone David N. Williams at 8 , Before comin~ to SIU-C, p.m. Tuesday, in Shryock Williams served m the Peace Auditorium. Corps, sang with the Central Hugo WI:!sgall's "Soldier City Opera in Colorado, soloed Songs" are based on poems with various symphony or­ written by several poets during chestras, and taught at the World War I and II. The muscial University of Alaska and Idaho style mirrors the irony of the State University. texts. Other pieces to be featl!re~ in Williams will be accompanied the performance include four by his wife, Candace. She has a songs by Brahms in hocor vf t..';e master's in music performance l50th anniversary of his birO.. and attended the American Williams will perform a piece Institute of Musical Studies in from Wagner, in celebration of Graz, Australia. She currently the looth aninversary of works as a coach-accompanist Wagner's death. and teacher, and continues her ,\~.i\ Williams received a srudies in piano with Kent bachelor's degree in music W~rner at SIU-C. TONIGHT 8pm Student Center Ballroom D Laugh with New York's "Catch a Rising Star" Professional Comedian Bill Scheft, along with you.. fellow student comedians. FREE. FREE. FREE. FREE~. ~ J! COMEDY ... Date: Nm-ember 7, 1983 Tune: 8:00 PM Place: RaIlroom "D"-Student Center Free Admission .. or more infonnaoo. contact: 536-3393 CATCH A RISING STAR ON TOUR SPONSORED BY t. SPC CENTER PROGRAMMING & LITE BEER FROM MILLER EVERYTHI~G YOti ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS. J t '983I'.Me' '(,o_ft'I~'MI,+.·iH.HI'l

Daily Egyptian, October 25, 1.l1li:.\ Page 7 Hearing requ·ested for suspect r--=N=E=F==~D::--:'A-'~~ By Jennifer Phillips ~~ ~., option to reinstat'~ them if he was released by me AI~xander ...... Staff Writer ever becomes m(!ntally fit. , The hearing, f'lr which no ~~s'ft~~~~~it t~~ur:o~r~v. h~~ ...... Ten months after he was date has been set, "':U be held in failed to review his case within charged with the beating death Randolph County Circuii Court. a statutory time iimit of 180 of a Carbondale woman and Jackson County Associate days. determined unfit to stand trial, Circuit ';udge David Watt He was found unfit on Jan. 10 Daniel J. Dervartanian remains reserved ruling on dismissal of to stand trial for Nation's in Chester Mental Health th' murder charge until after murder and -taken to Chester to Center awaiting word on the hearing but said he would undergo psychiatric treatment. whether the mW'der charges probably rule in favor of it. Hearings have been held every will be dropped and he will be Dervartanian, 32, We 'I 30 days to determine his committed to a state institution. arrested Dec. 16, 1982 aftel progress. Jackson County State's At­ Carbondale pol;ce found Mary Under state law, it must be torney John Clemons requested S. Nation, 32, beaten to death shown within a year from time the civil commitment hearing with a clothes iron. Bond was the defeilCant was said to be ONE TOUCH MEMORY COIUtECnON Friday during a mental fitness set at $1 millian. Officials called unfit, that the defl'!!dant shows hearing in Jackson County his releaae from ~ menl.al in­ a likelihood or probability of Circuit Court. Clemons also sUtution one month before the regaining his fitness to stand requested that, if Dervartanian rnuroer "a grave mistakl'." trial. talk to US about is committed to the Illinois De.,.,,·artanian was committed In a 'written report admitted Department oi Mental Health Nov. 3, 1981, according to in court li'riday, Dervartanian's our typewriter and Developmenh:I. Carbondale ~lice, after trying doctor said he no longer thought Disabilities, the murder to commit swcide by placing his Dervartanian would become fit cha.rges be dropped with the head on a railroad track. He within the one year period. rental program.

Fl,"ing Salukis sweep. region. contest Not everybody can afford to own a good typewriter That's The Flying Salukis soared tallying 233 points. Runner-up who was killed in an airplane why we rent them . to people past flying teams from five was the University of Illinois crash in 1981 as he was leaving like you Whether for a week or Midwestern colleges to win the with 81 points. the regional contest. lor a month. we have a rental 1983 Region Eight In­ Leading pointmaker for SIU­ tercollegiate Flying Association C was Timothy J. Haviland of Thirteen of the Flying Salukis typewriter to fat your needs championships at Indiana State Antioch with 48. Haviland took earned points during the University. the top male pilot awards and (!ompetition, said Coach Tom AT THE CROSSROADS The championships were held broke an SIU-C record: He has Young. Oct. 13 to 15. The win qualifies earned more points and OF THE UNIVERSITY the team for the National In­ trophies than any other Flying A new event this ye~~, the tercollt'giate Flying Association Saluki in the history of the club. student instructor competition, competition next spring in was won by Davette ("Dee") tTNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Colorado Springs. The Flying Haviland was also the Tanner of Ursa. STUDENT CENTER Salukis have been national recipient of the Scot Perry champions for five of the last Memorial Award, a monetary seven years. award presented to an out­ The Is-member flying team standing flier on a team in the won regional championships in regional competition. It honors flying and ground events, SIU-C's 1984}81 l~m captain.

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Page" DafIY Egyptian, October 25, 1983 -Health and Fitness Guide-- PHYSICAL FITNESS Stop Smoking Now section 2 Recreation Center Television rr eets from 3 to 5 p.m. Thur­ Lounge. Al'robitone Session 2 will sdays in Kesnar 208. Interested meE't from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. persons may call the Wellness Tuesdays and Thursdays, Nov. Center to register. NVTRITION 1 to 17. Those interesled may register in person until Monday Time-Out, an alternative Quick CoorsI' in "Newtrition" at the Recreation Center In­ hanDv hour, meets from 4 to 6 meets from 7 to 9 p.m. Wed­ formation Desk. p.rn: Thursday in the nesday in the Ohio Room. EI •• PIII A three~n-three wheelchair ~••••• ¥¥ ••••••••••• basketball tournament will be ¥. TAN J P ASM held by Recreation for Special TANSP.4 OFFERS THE FINEST BEDS Populations from 7 to 9 p.m. ~ PART.TIMIRADIO ANNOUNCING ~ Nov. 3, lOand 17. Registration is ~ POSITION OPIN • AVAILABLE WITH LOW PRICESI being held until Nov. 2 at the Healthy Suntans in just 7 sessions Information Desk. SAFER THAN THE SUN A clinic on knot-tying will be £ lRrl III ~ 529·3715 held at 7 p.m. Nov. 3 at the ~ .Qualified applicants should call for appoint- ~ 300 I. MAIN (ea.t of bank of Carbondale) Recreation Center Climbing ment. Call: 684-2128 between 9:30am & Wall. ~ ~ BRING IN THIS AD FOR A $3.00 ~ 5:00pm lOt/MI' , iC MIND-BODY -SPIRIT INTRODUCTORY SPECIALI ~ ~ ...... (limit J ".r _tomer) Fertil!ty Awareness section 2 ...... meets from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays anti Thursdays in Kesnar 20&. Th~ interested may call the Wellness Center at 536-4441 to ****************************************** ~ster. . * i( Campus Briefs. * ~ ~ MEETINGS TlJESDA YS: Pi a tf-~"'t. THE GREAT TUESDAY MASSACREIv't.~rt. £ Sigma Epsilon, professional co­ educational fraternity specializing in marketing, selling and sales management, 7 p.m., Lawson 221; Gay and ~ ~#~' PRESENTS, ~ ~~ £ Lesbian People's Union, 6 to 8 p.m., Iroquois Room. and The Psychology Club, 7:30 p.m., * i( Activity Room A. * ~ BLACKS IN Engineering and * ~ Allied Technology will begm training for the Halloween fest booth at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the Mississippi Room. ~~.£ BI.ACKS INTERESTED In 1". Business will meet at 5:3U p.m. ~~ 8~t Tuesday in the Thebes Room. ~ \..{6'"'IS orrLES ~ Pictures will be taken for ~le l1 yearbook. * eO \: THE +: STUDENTS IN the College of Communications and Fine Arts may express complaints and a35. Drafts AMAZINC £ ideas to USO senators at 7 p.m. Tuesdav in Communications * WHEEL ~ UL';. - * OF i( A WORKSHOP on procrastination will be held b-T ~'I.OO Quart F : Career Counseling from 1 to '2 p.m. Tuesday in Woody Hall B- *' Drafts 0 i( 142.

A PARENTS panel (In special * R ~ needs children will be spon­ * i( sored bv Women's Services at 2 Speedrails T : p.m. Wednesday hi Quigley ~ 754 Lounge. • U i( .. N -~ Puzzle answers .. '~ PAD LAU .. E ~ A RID E AIPPEDUP I A L A [ *' MTV ~ * ~ hi K HAD ROCK PRIZES iC R I * ~ VIDEOS GALORiEl :

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Daily Egyptian. October 25, 1983, Page' Lobbjis"t: 'Collective bargaining generic s~\..E \ may mean more faculty input copies .~~ musrre.:;"In documenl JMder By John St~Woi!"t for research and student aid. governing board favors We've moved ..... Staff Writer AAUP has a lobbyist in collective bargaining. next to Campus McDonald's. Washington who monitors the Professors may be able to budget process and tries to The Carbond&!e Federation of 815 S. Illinois, Carbondale 457-2223 make some policy gains in assist higher education University Teachers, an af­ Springfield, Charles Zucker, filiate of the A.FL-CIO, has Illinois executive secretary of Locally, the AAUP began a already begun a membership the A.merican Association of membership drive Monday in UOI vers i ty Professors, anticipation of a a push for a dri-ic and expects to try to speculated. representation election. The 90- ~olt\e the faculty agent along But, educators will have to member group hopes to with AAUP, according to come down from their ivory or its ranks. T:iirty Lawrence Dennis, CFUT vice towers and get involved in the percent of the faculty must sign president. issu~, before anything is ac" cards asking the Illinois Labor complished, Zucker said. Relations Board for a On Nov. 1 CFUT and AAUP Zucker said, "collective representation election, which are co-sponsoring a cdlective bargaining at universities won't would determine if faculty waJIt bargaining inform·ational mean faculty members will collective bargaining, and if so meeting, featuring AAUP become teamsters." what group would act as faculty speakers. Dennis said another Bargaining could mean more bargaining agent. co-sponsored meeting is being .. faculty involvement in decision planned for February, and will feature CFUT speakers. making, and more lobbying . Two-thir;~ Slf respondents t~ : ;,1; power in Springfield, he told recent survey of local AAUP AAUP members last week. members indicated a He said with the ongoing "moderate to strong" desire for difficulties in funding sta~ collective bargaining, ac­ higher education, causing the cording to Emil R. Spt.'e5, elimination of programs and AAUP Carbondale chapter entire departments, collective president. Spees said the smvey bargaining could ensure that also indicated members would the administration would get overwhelmingly favor AAUP to faculty input on decisions. be the fdculty bargaining agent, Zucker said state university if collective bargaining comes systems lobbyists actively to SIU-C. Spees said he is going opposed collective bargaining to ask the Faculty Senate for a and almost had Gov. Thompson straw vote to see if the faculty omit faculty from the state's first public bargaining bills. Zucker, who acts as an AAUP lobbyist in Springfield, provided an account of the events leading MED YOUR PROFESSIONAL TRAVEL CONSULTANTS up to Gov. Thompson's Signing .. AIRLINE REPRESEN1'ATIVES of the two public collective • Ozark. TWA • AIr mlnoll .6rl" • United. D.lta bargaining bills Sept. 23. He said he met with the Governor's s~~ on Sept. 1~ to lobb~ for Register for FREE slgm..g of the bill. On Fnday, Sept. 16, Zucker said he called LAS VEGAS YRI P (must be 21 yrs. old) State Sen. Terry Bruce (D- 54th), the bill's sponsor, who Sponsored 8y BORGSMILLER TRAVELS . assured him tile Governor was - planning on Signing the bill. On Monday, Sept. 19 Bruce Stuclent Center-Ballroom A calJed Zucker and said, "I think we've got problems." Bruce Oct. 12, U, 17, 19, 24, 25, 21 told Zucker state university 1:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. systems administration lob­ byists had convinced the Refreshments will be served. Governor to exclude faculty from the bill. Zucker mobilized collective bargaining sup­ porters and conducted a phone calling campaign asking the Governor to leave university faculty in the bill. Finally, Thompson left faculty included because, Zucker said, it would ~~e be less trouble than excluding them. \~"alfels '- ... no ... _ .... III'I(IUITIOl Zucker said AAUP was active on the national level in fighting 21 North 11 th Street, Murphysboro against Reagan policies reducing and cutting off funds CALL COLLECT (618) 684-5500 t BUS SERVICE -:m~~fr TO CHICAGO & SUBURBS CALL 529-1862 As Little As 5 ~ Hours To Chicago-Land -THANKSGIVING BREAK- Tickets Now On Sale **Only $39.75 ROUNDTRIP OFFER EXPIRES THIS FRI., OCT. 28 Reg. $59.75 ACT NOW STUDENT TRANSIT TICKEt SALES OUTlET & SAVEll AT715S. UNIVERSITY AVE. -- (ON THE ISLAND, UP.PER LEVEL) DEPARfuRES RETURNS ~c:...,..~ar"" __ "'1 WED •• NOV. 16 ~~':.~~: MONDAYTHRU THURSDAY 10:30AM-12:30P:A :~NO~~· 17 &2PM-6PM ·..,-io}tIOV.l',. FRIDAY '10:30AM-l:3OPM

. Pag't .10, Daily EgyptiaD, October 2:», lwa 1lIlJlllliIIllllIIlJlllIIlllIIllIllIllIl1;JlllliillllllllJlIIllIIlIIlllII ACROSS 54 Factories Board candidates 1 Sane 58 Portico C:ASH PRIZES FOR 6 Survev nail 59 Severn to meet at school 10 extol feeder To day's HO'I,ECOMING 'S3 EVENTS 14 Piano siudy 61 Bouquet !.. meeting of candidates for 15 Asian noble 62 Blanc. 91. at District 165 school board will be 16 Skin problem 63 Agrippina'c held at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday at the .760 In giveaways 17 Spu!! son Learning Resource Center at 18 """ of 64 Land masses lJuzzle "B.A." 65 Understands ~ the Central High School 19 Seaflood 6'; Prosaic Campus. 20 Fleeces 67 Ways and - The meeting is sponsored by 22 Tore ap8It Puzzle answers the honors American govern· 24 Ananias DOWN ment class of Central High 26 Categories School. 27 Hooked 1 Permits are on Page 9. 31 Decree 2 State candidates will have five 32 Lively 3 Cunning minutes to state their reason~ 33 Hoax 4 Nonfealism for running. A question and 350wned 5 Hoist 28 "nracted 46 Beast's .. Ide answe.. period will follow the 38 GIrder 6 Madrid Mrs. 29 Telephone 47 Arizona MIS candidates' statements. 39Spouse 7 Young fish 30 Current 48 Fiber plant The Carbondale League of 40 Roster 8 Caprlc:e 34 Concepts 49 Mine Women Voters is also spon­ 41 Hand tool 9 Dislodge 35 - sapiens excavation 42 Con'poser 10 Newes1 36 Speck 50 Pry soring two candidate forums. Ferde - 11 Harsh liquids 37 European 53 Rail bird Candidates for the high school 43 Villain 12 Uncalled for 39 - ...:.... butter 55 Theme song board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Decorated Can «Implead 13 Abysses 40 Practlc:e girl Tuesday at Winkler School. ht ... rize $40.00 45 - pay 21 Pre-Sun. 42 Hindu 56 Revslue Candida~es for grade school 47 French wind 23 Horde wise man agents 2nd prize $20.00 51 Six on a die district board 95 will meet at 25 Back: pref. 43 Harangue 57 Cheek 7:30 52 Forces out 27 Bishop 44 Aint glass 60 Swell p.m. Thursday at Winkler. ~~~~~~ ~~~~~ • Window Painting Modeling troupe Entries .1lt;'rize$75.00 Sl! to perform at mall I ' 2nd prize $50.00 :: !! 3rd prize $25.00 ~ The "Big Apple Mer,agerie," an international beauty and fashion theatrical modeling I. Banner Entries II troupe will perform in eight live stage shows, Saturday and - lst prize $50.00 ~ Sunday, Nov. 5 and 6. as part of i SlID upespc Offlce e 3rd Ooor SPC Special Events ~ the University Mall's 9th an­ i SrudenrCcntereS36-3393 .. niversary celebration. !':illllllllllllllllllllnlllllllllllIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllllillllllllnHIIIUIllIfllllllllllUlllmlllllllmnFri Davis Auto Center Rt. 51-5 Makanda Cedar Creek Rd. 549-3675 Most American Cars MUFFLERS 4 Tires Alignment $12.95 Computer Bolance $14.00 S.-oke Special 40-month 22F Fron1 Drum & Disc $19.95 Battery $39.95 Disc Brok.. Brok •• $39.95 $89.95

CUSTOM e4 Full Tread Plys PIPE PEERLESS al Polyester 'Mind spnrt' recruits players BENDING STEEL IELTED aADIALS eWhitewnlls • Complete f'155/8QR·13 Put on)our thinking caps and '40.47 Sfze Co.t held in FebiWlry at Purdue Muffler and f'165/8QR13 ... ,.• , A78·13 Ul.00 dust off your dictionary. The University . Tailpipe P175175-13 143.06 878·13 U2.00 "Varsity Sport of the Mind" is Teams wishing to compete in PI85f75R·14 ...... 5 Service 08·14 133.00 coming to SIU-C once again. the bowl must complete an P·,9SI75R·U .....00 • Fair Prices £7B·14 The annual College Bowl application and pay a $10 per P205175R·14 149.00 "".00 F78·1~ 135.00 • Fast Service P215,75/1·14 SSl.00 competition will begin Nov. 2 team entry fee, Franck said. G78-U 1,..00 P225175R·1,f SS2.00 with teams of four competing in Applications are available. in H7S-14 IM.OO P205I75R·15 SS2.00 IS-minute sessions answering the Student Programmmg G7S-15 136.00 P215175R·15 '53.00 "questions ranging from Council Office in the Student H1S-1S IM.OO P225175R·15 algebra to zoology," according In.oo L7S-15 141.00 Center and must be turned in by * plus installQtion P235/75R·15 to Beth Franck, assistant Oct. 31. " ••00 coordinator for the University *most American cars prices incl'Jde fed. tox - Programming Office. Franck said teams may consist of any full-time SIU-C undergraduates or graduates. However, only two graduate students are allowed per team. STOP The double-elimination A OUICK COURSE BACK PAIN preliminary competition will IN "'NEWTRITION" Nov. 2 and 3. she said, with SMOKING the top teams C'.mpeting in the WORKSHOP GROUP final competition Nov. 9 ~nd 10. Prizes for the Ccllege Bowl GROUP are $125 for each member of the winning team, and $100 for each member of the second place team. Franck said the "top-ranked" TIiIS EFFECTIVE individuals from the entire PROORAM LENDS competition will then be picked STRUCTURE, to compose an "all-star" team SUPPORT, AND to compete in the Regional MOTIVATION TO College Bowl Competition to be YOUR EFFORT TO BREAK mE HABIT. LEARN HOW TO IMPROVE STARl'S THURS. NOV. 3 YOUR NUTRITION WHILE 7-9PM, FOR 3 WEEKS. ENJOYING HEALTHY FOODS

REGISTER BY OCT. 27. STARTS THURS. WED. OCT. 26. 7-9PM OCT. 27, 3-SPM OHIO ROOM FOR 5 WEEKS. STUDENT CENTER "Befo... You Buy Give Us a Try" • GuI..... & Acc.aorf.. . *FREE HEALTHY SNACKS! CA~L 536.. 4441 TO REGISTER. • Plano & Pfay8t.. . Kroger MolI-CDale We"st SEASONED FIREWOOD OAK &: ~;7s;m~·987-2468 01' 1-~~s5 .. C1anlfled Illf"rmatloa RateJ .. 15 Word Mlru,nlllD , JENNY'S ANTIQUES at used 1m TOYOTA LAND Cruiser. 4x4. furniture, Carbondale. Buy and Excellent runDinIu conditIon. New sell. Old Route 13 We'lL Tum south BUY, SILL, TRADI :~"a~ Inn Tavern, gOB~~~ m&~:aU~alL~~ ceDtl per word ~r.t'$3~~ers, ual exl,afI~1:7 USED Sl!REO EQUIPMENT IN GOOD Two Day_' Cellts per WGFd. per Motorcycle. COLLEGE SWEATSHIRTS! CONDITION OR NEEDING REPAIR dafi.ree or Four Day-S ceats. pet' i 1980 HONDA CB750K. Vetter! ~~~:t:.? iW~~; ~~~~r~~~~h W';'i!'e ~~~1M Dar-7 cents ~r (keli;') • North Carolina (tJiht ~~~~,~n~"tl~~ires at =i~1 i blue) - USC (white) • others. 14 Lowest Prices, Largest Selertlon ~;,! r:. ~!n~eell Day...... Cellts each:f.r.trrid. Send check to G, per word, per day. 1982 KAWASAKI, like II new, only 3100 miles. MustseGPZ55~ .549- ~t ~;de':~'\l1:SO~~i085~I. pe~*e::a. ~~:. Day_5 cellts 0614, evenings. 3074Ac49 I 3147Af65 USED YAMAHA 125, 3880 mi, $225. I HALLOWEEN COSTUMES All Classified Advertis~ must· Call between &-7 p.m. 457-5286. Ask for Mike. 3137Ac47 :rr~~~r!~~c. l~tlion~~ . ~::~~ ~~J'~~e:~xt ~o;.: Sat.,I00E. Jackson. B3149AflMl: 1972 KAWASAl rs:~m~:. ~fn':f!et'~l ~ir~ ;~~~~an's ., 20~ pels, laundry facilities. Located 1% miles east of IIyN.I. • ~lt10~~~~~M V~s::~e~~r $3995 WAN'rED. ADOPTIVE PARENTS interior, $1200 OBO. COllI after I (2 bib. from Campus) g~;her:;~r.u:a~~d HI~a.!D ~!r~~ 'pm, 529-5375 or 529-5982 -,1421150 rlnCilnclng Avail ror six sweet AKC po¢Ip p~es. tenance included in rent of ~ ".s. ..wll .... mlll'l!h. Available DOW! Also t . ~t.fa.IlI*O.IS See Doug Bu.hur .~~:Jer~~=.ASA?· 31J.~, 549-2454 457-7941 m9 CHEVY IMPALA, Car- at N. Hwy. 51 • I ~ring (4% month) contracts. Carbondale one 549-6612. 549-3002 t!~B~ bon.dal~ta!!~~~~a~~~ 1 .. COUNTRY PARK MANOR - or Call I ~pm. • 3148Aa51 I-Bed. $160 TWO BEDROOM COMPLETELY ~r 549-3000 I EFF-$I35 I 9 & 12 manth contracts. ~~~~~s~n::d a.:~J:;1I1~~~~~dg::ci t:'J'~I.11.o1t!~!~40 ~ew, ~rell, i 30 day contracts also condition. Located in Lakewood clean. in JJerfect mec~Dl~ available. Park Subdivision east of Car- shape. $2800. 54!H236. 3145Aa5O Mllc.llan.oul All with Private Bath, bondale. $145-nu)::tlL Phone 54!}, o • SPIDER WEB ... BUY and 6612,549-3002 after 5pm. B2724BC4Il 1976 TOYOTA. EXCELLENT ,.sen AIC, and Kitchen Foe. condition. Stereo IIYStem. Must see :egl~~~~~.antiq~~ N_'y Remodeled 2 BEDROOMS. Clean, nicely to appreciate. can after 3J).m. 529- furnished. Close to campus. 1m- ~ Slightly higher. 311M.$~650. 3163Aa56 SOLD ON CO~iSIGNMENT, Long i NO l>epa,it with ~~'i.~=~'Y. Nu r~~ rormal dressaI at wedding di'esses. ! 1973 FORD LTD Power Great for Halloween costumes. Approved Credit. everything. nuns food. Good Hines Enterprises.bl N. 14th ONE BEDROOM - $100, Two winter car, P,SOor bes off:f74Aa51 i Call 529-17'" Street, MurpbyslKJro.:~ ,~~1 !leu.1TY PATROI.UD r.too:riJ:.~Jet ~tlfaw= L __ -~~.,-..;~-- Park. 529-1539. 2954Bc56 VERY EXCELLENT 12x6S. Two CARBONDALE 603 N. --Billy WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR- I bedrooms;·rumi4hed. air, n~ _ Bryan, available immediately, SHIP AVAILABLE. Start· your I ras, underpin~ anchored. C.O&~ fE;~?~ejU~~~r, t~~llbe~~g~:ii g~ne ~~~~~r~t1m~i:l!::' FOR SOUTHERNFEST III, $~~~~~~d niversA~4T~!e house. Central air, nice location, No inventory to buy. send SASE STUDENT ACTIVITIES own room, car space. 549-4719 afer for more info.: SpecIalities, Rt. 3, VERY NICE 10X50, 2 bedrooms, Spm. :!!l16Be54 Box 59E, Cobden.IL62920. ANNOUNGEMEN"fS FAIR. ARE NQ'lLAVAIL­ . B3161C55 . ~'!;;.Wnhnee~, a!~c~~~~al ~r;Se ur~ SHARE TWO BEDROOM mobile ABlE IN THE OfFICE OF home,pets o.k.. Rent $75-month CLEANING LADY NEEDED. STUDENT DEVELOPMENT. ~~.and University 1~kIf~ p/'JS utilities. 549-4726 3035Be47 Must be here over semester break. THIRD FLOOR STUDENT EXTRA NICE 12x60. 2·bdrm, 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES for ~~~..:~~nr~~relM~~)~ ~~d CENTER. CALL 453-5714 furnished, private settitJg. la~ very nice 4-bedroom apartment in Thursday afternoons. $30 per IT'S SO DARK IN MytholoJ!Y! week. 549-3973, mornings FOR MORE INFOR­ ~ f~Zni~,:~lated, no d~fgi6Bc59 ~sl.rl~~~r~s Sf~~~r~~~!fJ' ~~16&c49 :!r~~\!te:ih;'c!rren?~~:N:atlt:! 457-5366. 3076Be47 Carr: Marsha at 457-4664, ~ter MATION,' COVONES - ALL POSITIONS 10pm for more info~ation. ~~dR~!L~~:o~~;, 1~~~Ob~~t~~ 3146J48 furnished, central air, natural gas, !t~:!~~u:.~~~~~~~.j57~0 _ ~v:~~a~~e. I1.prJe~ person from 2610. 3106Be52 IBlderpinned, anchor~ close to SERVICES OhERfD ~~. and University B~~t~i SHARE ",. OF 3-Bdr house - THE HANDYMAN· PAINTING, ' 1981 ONE AND Two bedroom ~e.;::.) i~~ ~ srf'~;;~~J:'~~: glazing, drywalli'lg, electric,.l, nicely furni~h .. rI, energy savinI. Susan. 457-0371. 3122Be50 An cam;.us. Sorry. ca~.:~~r jgg!ir.~e ~a~~~: =. nO~B~ FEMALE SUBLEASER, NICE I ~ality work. Reasonable rates 457-7016. 276SE48 TWO BEDROOM REDUCED rent, ~~~r~bl! ~k1~ ~°:O~r~~~: available now. No pets please. 457- 549-2643, Martha. 3131Be48 8352 after 4 p.m. B3060Bcsl 12x80' TWO BEDROOM. Fur­ nished. $175-month. 549-4777 after TYPING - RUSH JOBS and 6p.m. 3073Bc48 regular. Cassette tapes tran­ See our great selection of scribed. Termpapers, theses­ CARBONDALE - NEWLY CAR­ dissertations, bOoIt manuscripts, Hardwoods in stock. WfTH BEST WISHES PETED, nicely furnished, 2 t.edroom with air. 3~ miles east. NEED TO SUBLET or find two ~~t:~'Y:r;:r~~~~· 3uH..... ut S2.65IF! DIJ$T1Nt 8ONTY, SAflBANt No dogs. Available November 1st 2757E53 t:"War ' J.35IF' $175-month. 457-6372. B~6Bc51 ='::'~r~'o'::'~:i a-r, 2.65 IF /fP£ SONNATH, $AN1f(, month rent free negotiable. Pets TYPING - THE OFF.CE. ~09 W. RMiElm .97 IF VERY BEAUTIFUL AND prac­ o.k. Call after 1:OOp.m. 549-5255. Main Street. 549-3512. 2914E56 J"KOfJ 2.98 IF SANTA, ,'''AmL ticallt=ol4 wide wit,'; front and 3111BEGO 2"Kao 3281F ~en, newmc~r1! ru~~ LEWIS PARK. FEMALE room­ ~~ r!:~~ ~ $1:'. Philippi ... Mahogany 2.02 IF mates needed for spring semester, teed. Lacquer $250. ~ m=-IIS, HatdMapI. J.531F ~~~~:.;~:~~~~~t~~l~ 1984. Rent negotiable. Call 529- ."Oak 1.95 IF 2354. 3173Be51 ~~7=Wc:..~:~.~~f:=: 2"Oak 2.J61F MALffiU VILLAGE, FRONT and for appointment or informa=E58 PI_ .90 IF rear bedrooms, I",. baths, fur­ ROOMMATE NEEDED TO share Poplar 1.33 IF nished. washer included. Beautiful l'urpl.H.art 3.nlF condition. $225-month. Lease and ~nt wo~:Sire t!~:re:r~ro: I~: FAITH TEMPLE INFANT Day Care Center, Carbondaie. 608 L Salsafras 1.74 IF deposit required. 549-~3151Bc53 ~f:u~J~~t~~f:;:;~~:t~i ! .··Walnut 3.35 IF 549-1401. 3165Be57 I ~~i:~~:;,c:f~~M.~~atlons 2··Walnvl 3.35BF 3I137E60 Willow 1.67BF ~~f~le1(r~ r:-~ %m~: ROOMMATES NEEDED. MALE~ Z..browaocl 5.45 SF Don't wastl' money. call us. 529· STOR-N-LOCK MINI 4444. B3104Bc65 ~=.en!~~~r~~~~fJe~~ Wood.hlp 4265. 3181b~1 ~~~rYd~~' seWst~rag~~~~ PERFECT FOR COUPLE. Two I many sizes ava.lable, low monthly Located in the Student bedroom with 12x20 living room, FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED rates, for more info, call ~'l9-1133. Cenfer ... 536-21210r Lewis Park. If, utilities, 549-4581. I B3101E63 ~~~i~li~:il.b~~~~~f~l~a:O ~~1;: 3182Be50 Crafts Shop .....53-3636. Available immediately. 549-3973. mornings best. B3167Bc52 Duplexe. '. ~iCf,W¥G t~i~:rfn~ATIO~!d alterations. Best prices. 1182 East FRE~BIES '" I· ROY AL RENTALS CARBONDALE, 2-BEDROOM Walnut (behind Unive~ Mall), DUPLEX, clean. energy efficient, =~pm, Monday-5a 310sma KITTENS-ONE BLACK, one The stove and refrigerator. all electric, striped, wean~ litter trained. Apartments available immediately. $275 per Mobile HomEls month, 529-1203 After 5pm. HOME TYPING SERVICE, ~~:o~~. to dogs31~J:, " 3117BffiO Classifieds Furnished & Air Cond_ ~::=' ts. C~~57~1:J~;e RIDERS 5. 1-984-2~31 after 5. Reasonable WA TEO ,. No Pets ~= rates. 3121E63 457-4422 ~f~~~~:i~ders : r:r~?ri~, Pf~;tE !n:r~;u!:t:. time. Dancers: $5.00 per Guaranteed no errors. Reasonable 536-3311 rates. 549-2258. 3170E66 Car­ ~~~enle~\~~~t;:~~~l e:t . $42.80. King's mn Hideways, loca~ at 457-4144. 21441>51 FREE BUS King's Inn Motel. 825 E. Main, Carbondale. Or call 529-9336 for I WORRIED ABOUT RIDE ' , THE STPlJENT TO S'IU appointment 2827C51 PREGNANCY?' !:~i~:e~e.=t~~~~~~'l:;urs OVERSEAS JOBS - SUMMER- ConflcMntlal Mlp with pregnancy Chicagoland. Departs Fridays e Laundromat aptlanl and birth control. Call 1M 2pm, returns Sundays. Only $39.75 • ('..ABLEVISION I~~:3a~nxs:.u!\lf~i:l~mer ., W.llnno c... t ... s:J6.4,UJ • '1200 monthl'y:. Sigblst!eing, ~ :::rv~!~f. ~~trr~:~a~::b~ -1 or 2 baths info. Write IJC Box 52-lL-1 Corona 12:30pm '!!1ufsda),s

BUTLER EARNED-one of his quarter. SIU-C ~as outscored its see the fans at the game Player of the Week awards last opponents 69-6 In the fourth because they can have an effect I LONGBRANCH year with a 25-tackle game quarter, with Drake scoring the on the game, Dempsey said. against Indiana State. Last year lone touchdown a~ainst the I• (Wigs, Hats, Dresses, SUits, etc.) Butler was an All-MVC first Salukis in the final period. This week, though, as it has team selection. Against Indiana State, the been all year, Dempsey said I 100 E. Jackson 10-6 Mon. Thru Sot. Butler, second on the squad in last quarter was no different that he and his assistants' main tackles with f¥7, became the from previous Saluki games. job is to keep the Salukis from •IL~ ______$1.00 Off Any Purchase _ sixth Saluki this season to win SIU-C gave up just 56 offensive losing. I expire. Sat. Oct. 29, 1983 Player of the Week honors. Five yards to the Sycamores. The Saluki defenders have won the closest Indiana State came to honor. scoring in the fourth quarter The stunning first half display was when defensive end Dan against Indiana State that Wetzel sacked Miller for a 7- helped vault thf' Salukis to the yard loss on a fourth-and·six No. 1 ranking included SIU-C I!lay from the SIU-C 36-yard scoring on its first five line. possessions. F.:rur touchdowns "We've had good fourth­ and a field goal gave the Salukis quarter/lay all year," Demp­ a 31-0 lead with 11:35 left to play sey sai . "I felt that we got in the first half. better cn offense as the game Dempsey said that the Salukis went alllng. We feel we are in played a great first half. real good condition late in' the "Against as good of an op­ game. ponent as Indiana State is," "The kids believe that the fourth quarter is ours. We have g~m'l:it ~~i "~~l~: o~:,~! faith in ourselves that we'Udo played. Except for a couple of well in that quatter." mistakes here a:ld there, it was Not only do the players have a gOO'l first half. We had a great faith in the team, but so does first half against Northern Mayor Helen Westberg. After IJwa, bul ;ndiana State is a the rankings came out Monday, better football team." Westbf~rg declared Oct. 2.t·30 as HALLOWEEN SPECIAL. $3.99 Indiana Statp quarterback "Support the No. 1 Salukis Jeff Miller, though, rallied his Week." team with a late first half touch­ down that took some of the wind WESTBERG SA ID she urges PLACE ORDERS BY 4PM OCTOBER 27 AT out of the Salukis. Indiana State everyone to atten~ Saturday's The Dell. Old Main R•• taurant Woody Hall Cafeteria came back and scored two game against New Mex;~~ State touchdowns in the third quarter In an effort to aid the team in and seemed to be on the verge of gaining its ninth win and overcoming its early deficit. helping it to host the first round in the playoffs. ONE OF THE keys, though, to Dempsey said he is happy for the Salukis' undefeated season the student body because it has Style comes to S.I.O. so far has been the fourth a No.1 team. The players like to )C:.[§O:D~ c;J.",,, """"-TIONA"r (On Th. Island. N."t Ta Nalder SI.real KEEP YOUR SUMMER TAN Y~~ND GRAND OPINING-.rM .....OfI Friday. 10128/83. 10:00-1:00 Salurday, . 0/29/83. 1'>:00-5:00 (tak. on. fr ...... ion on each day.) No Purcha•• I'Jec... ary New Rate.: '5.50: Student. '5.00 715 S. Univ.nlly. Catbandal. 529·51"1

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Pagt 14, Daily E~. October 25, UIII3 Fielders drop three, win one on East Coast Bv Steve Koulos said. "J.I (SIU-C Coach Julee the Salukis toughest opponent Student Writer IIlner) took care of some things this year and were stonger than and it showed when we took the fourth-ranked Iowa and 14th­ The SIU-C field hockey team field against Wake Forest We ranked Davis and Eikins. SIU-C dropped below .500 for the first weren't worried about personal lost to Iowa 3-0 and fought Davis things, we were concerned and Elkins to a 1-1 tie. ~_~~ i:~~~Je::i~ft~:g~s~ about ~Iaying as a whole." trip. Left mner Patty Lauer scored "North Carolina is four times The Salukis, who slipped to 8- two goals and left wing Sharon better than Iowa or Davis and 9-3 overall, notched a 3-0 victory Leidy added one in the victory Elkins," Well said. "Everybody over Wake Forest for its lone over Wake Forest. The game on our team agreed they coult! win on the trip. was more one-sided than the have clobbered Iowa and they They suffered consecutive final score indicated as the would have been no contest losses to 10th·ranked North Salukis outshot Wake Forest 33- against Davis and Elkins. The Carolina, 3-0, Virginia, 2-0, and 1. North Carolina game was our 18th-ranked Maryland, 2-1, The Salukis took a 1-0 half­ first loss but it was our best­ before salvaging a 1-1 tie time lead when Leidy scored an played game on the trip.'\ against Virginia Com­ unassisted goal at 32:41. It was In the loss to Maryland, right monwealth, which lasted Leidy's team-leading 12th goal back Jeanine Janos scored her through two overtimes. of the season. first goal of the season 9n a The Salukis haven't been Lauer added the insurance penalty corner for the Salukis. .... below .500 since the 1981 team goals in the second half. She Janos was switched from center struggled to a 1-5 start, before scored on an assist by right back to right back to replace regrouping to finish 12-10-2 wing Jennifer Bartley at 5: 19 Nancy McAuley, who didn't overall. and capped the scoring with an play on the trip due to a chipped Team captain and startin!~ unassisted goal at 10:06. b(ne on her ankle. McAuley has sweeper Dore Wei! felt thE' Lauer, who scored only one been sidelined for the last eight January Great Ski Escape Salukis played better than the 1· goal as a reserve last season, is games. January 2-7 & January 9-14 3-1 record sho\\> ed. the second leading scorer on the March 4-9,11-16,18-23.25-30 "I can't say we played any team this year with seven goals. In the tie with Virginia bad Rames this weekend," she Goalie Lisa Cuocci was forced Commonwealth, left back Includ•• : said. '" thh:k we played well to make only one save against Mindy Thorne tallied her first • A full y_r _ ...... Ip In the American Sid A_. against strong competition." WakE Forest, which slipped to 3- goal of the season for SIU-C. ·51. oIaya/fl_ nl.h•• 1..... 1"" In .Ither hot. I 01' Four of the five tea~q the 8-1 overall. The Salukis have po<;ted a 0-2-3 contIomlnllftuftl .ccoon ...... tl_. Salukis faced sportt>.'iid the team regrouped Dougherty to improve their per ...... oIIICGUn'''' group ra••• unable to retur . from the East ••~ ....Innar 1_ an" "_01_11 IHI prlvll.... after a 1issapointing 1-0 loss to record to 9-3-1 overall. The Tar because of poor weather, so In ••cha .... for _ 11ft tI ....t ....,. Western Illinois, which Heels, who posted their eighth Tuesday's game in st. Louis has ..__ ...... w...... JICI ...... ,.rtIee I" n· preceeded the East Coast trip. shutout of the season, outshot been cancelled. SIU-C will face ,...... 11 .... lnet ...... ,.. __ ...... All the conflicts were the Salukis 17-0. James Madison and Southwest resolved before the trip," she Well felt the Tar Heels were Missouri at home this weekend. SJ5&oc~Up~~cySI71 DWYER from Page 16 [ ...... ,...... - Being a lefty hitter, he started . legal problems. in right field against right-. '" never got involved with handed pitching. He batted .286 cocaine," Dwyer said. "Those with eight home runs and 38 players who do will eventually RBI. get caught. It's not a very bright thing to do." Duane Kuiper, who is playing with the , was al30 part of the Salukis' 1971 near-championship team, which lost to SGuthern California in the College . Kuiper finished that season batting .352 as the Salukis had a team batting average of .315. The Salukis had six players Priced By The Armload who batted over .333. Dwyer said the success of that team was due to fact that Itchy Jones 'EM WHILE THEY was the coach. Jim Dwyer LAST" "Itchy taught as how to play ball and how to keep our heads Dwyer has a negative view of in the game," Dwyer said. the professional athletes whose "He's a good coach, a good use of cocaine and other drugs teacher, your basic fun­ h~lve brought them - and their damentalist. " spt'rts _. i1~gative publicity and Jones had a few nice words to say about Dwyer, too. "Jim is a fine gentlem:m," Jones said. "He aiways had PRIME TIME PRESENTS control of what he was doing on the ball field." Bud Party Night on Wed. Night

From 9:00 to 2:00am party with your friends In a unique atomsphere. Clinic ... ServfrtB Lunch 1 day. 0 weelt llam-3pm ~£ Serving Dfnner Sun-Thur 5pm-JOpm WXDeiiLtd. Serving Dinner Frl-Sat 5pm-llpm Drink 50¢ drafts and Take home prizes and giveaways. .. -1IMient ...... -- . Every Friday from 12 noon-J:3Opm our JaNlfon • Abortion up to 20 weeks c..... or 1ocaI ____' allow luncheon wfthfaahlona provided by Ruthfa • "-nd-Aid Surgery Ladies Night is Tuesday and rfhursday • Vasectomy night from 9:00-2:00am with drink specials for ladiES. • State Licensed • Member National Abonion Federation rou. ... Prime Time Restaurant & Lounge 1~-3121 1602 21st SUft't Route 13 EaJlt Next to Uni\lersity Mall 529-505J G,Mite City. Illinois 62040 15 Minutes from St. louis Daily Egyp.ian, October 25, 1983, Page 15 ;~~ .~ ~~::;.j~;"j"-; ,~ri .. ~;.~>. c~~I,--::.! .~;~ ~!;~~ We're No. I! Salukis jump to top notch in NCAA rankings

By Jim Leu Staff Writer It's official. The Salukis are the No. 1 team in the NCAA 1- AA football poIl. What started out as a dream at the beginning of the football season has become reality for the Sahl..l(i squad. A 34-21 victory over Indiana State, coupled with former No. 1 Eastern Kentucky's 10-10 tie with Western Kentucky, thrust the Salukis into it. top spot in the rankings for the first time in history. SIU-C, 8-0, garnered three of the four first place votes awarded in the poll, while No.2 Holy Cross, 7-0, snared the remaining first place vote. Eastern Kentucky, 5-0-1. fell to NO.3. Saluki Coach Rey Dempsey's after-game pr;}diction Saturday that his team should be No. 1 came true. "To know on Saturday that we were going to be No. 1 is a good feeling," Dempsey said, "but the reality of it when it happens is a real great feeling." When Dempsey broke the news to his team in the locker Staff Photo by Stephen Kennedy~-- room at McAndrew Stadium, he Saluki running back Terry Green serambled for a few extra yards before being taken down by a trio of Sycamore tacklers. said his team almost took the said that his team will be able to news in stride. keep the ranking by winning. "They were really excited," "They know what it takes," Dempsey said. "They were Dempsey said. "We told them NCAA I-AA Football Rankings happy and smiling, but they that we don't have three E'asy handled themselves in a mature opponents left. We have three RAN KINGS POINTS 7. Eastern m. (7-1) 57 14. Southern U. (6-1) 33 way. The team really is feeling tough games left and we have good right now." our work cut out for ourselves. ,. I. SIU-C (8-8) 79 8. Furman (5-1-1) 55 15. Idaho St. (5-2) 23 Another honor, this one from THE PRESSURE associated the Missouri Valley Conference, 2. Holy Cross (7-0) 75 9. Middle TellI1. St. (6-lJ 51 16. Grambling St. (4-1-2) 21 with the team atop the rankings was bestowed on senior will be with the Salukis, linebacker Granville Butler as 3. Eastern Ky. (5-0-0 72 10. S. Carolin St. (6-2) 40 17. Tenn.-Chattanooga (5-2) 10 Dempsey said. the MVC Defensive Player of "Whether you want to say it the Week for his role in stopping 4. Northeast La. (6-l) 65 11. Nevada-Reno (4-3) 37 and Rhode Island (5-2) 10 or not," Dempsey said, "the the Sycamore offense. pressure is there. It'll be with Butler, a 5-foot-ll, 213-pound 5. N. Texas St. (5-2) 63 12. Delaware St. (6-1) 34 19. Idaho (5-2) us. But when we won six games, two-time MVC Defensive the pressure was on us to win Player of the Week last season, 6. Jackson St. (7-1) 58 and Tenn. St. (5-1-1) 34 20. Indiana St. (5-3) seven. When we won seven, the earned the laurels with 13 pressure was on us to win unassisted tackles, two assisted RankiDga are decided by a board of four NCAA visory panell, die ofOcialll award votes for eight." tackles and one quarterback officials. represen&iDg foar geographic regioas. positiGol. A fint-place vote is word! ZO paiD". Even though the pressure of sack against Indiana State. After pooUallaformatioa obiaiaed from ad- while a ZOOt-place vote is word! ODe poiat. being the No.1 I·AA team will be new to the Salukis, Dempsey See RANKINGS, Page 14 Former Saluki helps Orioles claim Series

By George ~appas Dwyer, however, will have said. "You just have to be on the Staff Writer something no Saluki Hall of right team at the right time." Farner has - a World Series In 1971, Jim Dwyer helped the ring. Dwyer has had the chance to Salukis achieve a 43-9 record play in the bodl the American and a trip to the College World "It's going to feel good to and the National leagues. He Series. This year, Dwyer helped wear that ring," Dwyer said in says he prefers the American the win the a telephone interview at his League, though. World Series Championship. home at Oak Lawn, a Chicago "The American League is Saluki baseball Coach Itch1 suburb. better because of the designated Jones put it frankly. "I tla.i.uA In the Series against the hitter rule," Dwyer said. "It Jim Dwyer was one of the most , Dwyer makes it more of a hitters' outstanding baseball players we was three for eight, a .375 clip game." ever had." with one homer and an RBI. The This statement would bI! hard was put into the Dwyer was drafted by the St. to doubt. Playing baseball for record books as Dwyer became Louis Cardinals in the 12th the Salukis from 1969-71, Dwyer the 18th player to hit a home run round of the amateur free agent batted an amazing .401. In 1971, in his first time in the draft and has played nine years Dwyer led the team in almost World Series. in the major leagues. He has a every hitting department with a lifetime batting average of .257, .413 average, 83 hits, 18 doubles, What makes Dwyer even playing for the , a whopping 12 triples and 43 more special in SIU-C sports Cleveland Indians, St. Louis RBI. In 1970, Dwyer led the history is that he is the first Cardinals twice, Chicago Cubs, team in at bats with 147, with 43 former Saluki to play in the San Francisco Giants, Montreal runs scored, 56 hits, 14 doubles, World Ser:es. George Expos, and the five triples, seven home runs Vuckovich, an now team he said he won't ever and a .381 average. with the Cleveland Indians, was forget, the 19"3 Orioles. Dwyer With all this at hand, Dwyer with the 1980 Philadelphia signed with the Orioles as a free hasn't gotten the recognition he Phillies, but did not play in the agent in December, 1980. deserves. Series. "I've always been amazed !)wyer, 33, played 100 games that Jim Dwyer hasn't been "1 never thought ab6ut for the Orioles this season. AP Laserphoto of die Southern Illinois .. mentioned f~,. the SIU-C Hall of playing in a World Series when I Jim Dwyer carries aa umbrella that got away from a fan in the Fame," Jones said. was in Carbondale," Dwyer Set! DWYER. Page 15 World &ries opener in Baltimore.

• Page 16. Daily Egyptian, October 25, 1983