Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

August 1967 Daily Egyptian 1967

8-12-1967 The aiD ly Egyptian, August 12, 1967 The aiD ly Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_August1967 Volume 48, Issue 199

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, August 12, 1967." (Aug 1967).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1967 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in August 1967 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Drafting of Johnson . #' Gives Quarte~back Spot to Jim Hart

7, By Tom Wood his playing eX';)erience is limited to a few minutes during last season's finale Tbe U.S. Army put SJU' s against ~ veland. Jim Han;, In..the ~rlve~'s seat Friday w~n Chjlrley Johnson The Cardinals have known was called to active duty the possibility ofJohnsonbelng for the next'two' years. called to active duty has existed Ijart. former Salukl grid for some time. but B"ill star, second year St. Louis Bidwell told . the Daily Cardinal , moves Egyptian, "We, really didn't Into the po~ltlon Johnson expect them to call Charley vacates as the No. I Big Red up at this time." field general. Bidwell said Johnson has Johnson, who is 28, already passed an Army physical, despite a lcnee injurr I ma rried, and has one child, was called to duty to fulfill suffered late last season. - ~"ROTC obligation he has had Han will have the advantage since college and will not be of studying under one of the available to the Cardinals at most prominent tutors in pro­ all this season, acco"rding fessional football. Bobby ' to team co-owner Bill Bidwell. Lane, a former aU-pro with CASINO NIGHT--Nancy Cook and Tim Mer­ The v e t eran Cardinal the and Pitts­ riman were busy yesterday passing out free quarterback will r eport Aug. burgh Steelers. money which can be used during Casino Night 22 to Fort :;ill. OlcIa. The strong- armed former starting at 8 p.m. in the Uni v~rsity Center ball- According to both Bidwell Saluki was not available for and Coach Charley Winner, comment on the situation. He I the Cardinals do not presently was busy all afternoon part­ plan to make a trade for icipating in his first drills Rep. Williams another quarterback. as the Cardinals' new No. 1 Bidwell's brother Stormy quarterback. ~ said Friday morning, .. I think Scores Morris Jim Hart will do the job for us. " Enrollment Rise His feelings were echoed Over Housing late r in the day by Winner, Indicated for Fall who s aid, uWe have no plans nlinois Repr esentative G~ for a trade right now. We Projected ehollment Williams has attacked Sill feel Jim is ready to step figures fpr -fafi--q~arter on President Delyte W. Morris in. His biggest disadv antage both SIl:l-eampuses indicate EGYPTIAN and Vice President for Busi­ right now is a lack of exper­ about a I,OOO- student increase SHIIAtlUl 9ttUuU4 1{tUq."'~ ness Affairs John ~. Rend­ ience. at Carbondale and a 400- , H Howe ve r , we 'll have to Carbondale, IIlino;.5 leman as being individuals student addition at Edwards­ "embarked on a mission to make up for that in the ville ..3ver the same ~riod Saturday, Augu.t 12, 1967 bankrupt this com munity." upcoming exhibition games. last year. Volume 48 Humber 199 Williams,wbo is a trailer Han will assume the role An estimated 19,166 student court owner, was speaking at Johnson would have had in our are anticipated at the Carbon­ a meeting of 25 owners of exhibition schedule . He will start (tonight) against New dale campus compared to · Law Await. Signature off- campus housing facilities 18,188 last year. according to for srudents. Orleans." The representative went on He has no plans to alter the registtar's t> ffice. to say that S[U' s hous ing and the team's normal attack, Edwardsville's enrollment motor vehicle policies are but s aid more plays would be last year was 7,563 with a <:-yc/e Riders Still driving stud ents away from the sent in from the bench with projected forecast of nearly university. Han running the team, since 8,000 students this -fall. The group of off-campus hous ing fac ility owne r s met Shun Crash Helmets Thursday to form the Carbon­ dale Hou sing Indu stry Organ­ ization. The groUp is similar Lenzi Asks for Probe A proposed law r equiring cyclis ts and six passenge r s toi a group formed in 1962-­ motorcyclists and passenger s were observed but no ne wore the Carbondale Taxpayers As­ to. wear protective headgear protective he lme ts . sociation. apparently is having no im­ A I similar s urvey was con­ According to Archie Grif­ Of Staff Promotions mediate effect on SIU cyclis ts. docjed in May and o nl y 4_7 fin, temporary chairman ofthe . Durif!g a five -hour informal per cent of the cyclis ts wore group, Hthe general opinion Ray Le nzi, SJU s tude nr body cedures a nd requiremems s urvey conducted tbis week he lme ts. among most of the people preSide nt, has calle d for an necessary for admission to on Campus Drive north of the 5 in c e the firs t s urvey ther e was and is to be able investigation inro Univers ity college. Technology B ui-l..!Jj n g, 40 legislation requiring pro­ to wo rk more closely togethe r promotional practices to see "We al so will attempt to tective he adgear has b ee n and offe r bette r hou sing and if discriminamry prac tiCes acquire scholars hip fun d s passed by the Illinois Gene ral upgrade the housing that needs exis t. which will be devoted to the Br.,nze Star· Assembly. The bill is now it, not only for the good of the Lenzi made the s tate me nt lower income groups in the a w a i tin g the governor's university but all of Southern after a conve r sation with John local community," Lenzi sdid. Awarded to s ignature. Dale Young, a Illinois." Holmes, SIU graduate s tude nt legis lative assistant to Gov. Griffin indicated that the who has r e presented the Car­ Ke rne r, said he ex~c t s the unive rsity was nOt the only bondale Neg'ro coblOlunity. Gus Bode SIU Alumnus governor to act on the bill t arget of complaints. He said . HT.h e. r e may ex i s ~ s ubt!e within a week to 10 days. that much ofthe di ~agree ment s dl SC Tl~mator y pr ac t1ce~ ~n t t. Col. John J. Whiteside , Sever al re asons we r e given presented during the meet ing ,promotional procedure Wlthl,~ dire ctor of information, Ae ro­ for not wearing safety head­ we r e directed at fellow ind- staff departme nts at SIU, nautical Syste ms Division at gear. Looks seemed to be ividuals who own off-campus Le nzi sai? . . . Wright- Patte r son Air Force [h e chief factor; several housing facilities. . The Umve r s HY adm_lms tra- Base in Ohio has been awarded cyclis ts complained of be ing Griffin said HI am e m- tlon s hould conductar, m-depth the Bronze 'Star medal for kidde d for we aring a he l met, ployed by the' unive r sity but investigation of hiring and meritorious s'l!Tvicc in Viet especiall y if they had s mall al so own some off-campus prom.otio.na} procedures at ~ I U Nam. bikes. housing. Nevenheless, I don't L e.~ Z I saId. . Whiteside is a native of Other s said 'that crosswinds feel we have had enough co- They s hould do thIS to s ub­ West Frankfon and a graduam te nd [ 0 twist the he lme t. So me oper ation between the two s~ant i ~ te and correct the of SIU. His majors we r e in s aid the friction fro m the chin factions ," meaning off-campus s lt~ auo~ or to a s~ ure the" E nglis h and journalis m •. s trap was annoying, and othe r s housing manager s and theUni- Umverslty. communIty. t hat His service decorations in­ me ntio ned [he uncomfortable ve r sit y. s u ~ h ~~actlce.s do not, In fact, clude the Dis tinguis hed Flying weight of the he lme t. HI would not in any sense e?(lst, .he s.aId. Cross', Air Med;:ll with s ix Oak Practical aspects of the point the finge r at Southern LenZI /SaId "be and. Holmes _ Le af . Clus te r s, the Asiatic­ he lmets bes ides s afe ty inc1ude and more than at us individ- also talked of mcreasIng com­ Pacific ribbon with three s ta r s the bubble from, which keeps uals of off-campus housing," _ munity and SIU r e lations in and two Vietnam service insects and foreign materials Griffin said. general. " Gus says it is not true thJ.[ ribbons . . . from hitting the cyclis t's face .' John L annin who was chair- They both agreed, LenZI the Office of Student Affair~ The Bronze Star wa s award­ It also keeps the cyclist' s eyes­ man of the ' CT A in 1962 s aid, that SIU s~ udem s could is building 01 s to&kad(' .•. that e d for e xemplary leade r s hip, fro m watering and in .co ld and present at Thursday night s trengthen relations by help- fe nced-Off span' next [('I the per s onal ~ nde avor and weathe r it kee ps the rider's eel P 2) ing to acquaint local high Daily Egyptian h~ {or .:1 f3c- de~o.tiOn to .duty. ~ace from free. ~~ng . (Continu on age s chool ~ru~~~.t ~ , . ~H~ the prfl.-... ~"1.9' . 'pI~. rground •. Augult 1~. 1967 Education Picnic, O~GoingOrietitstion.SIDledfor Mgnday

Monday on{ GOlng Orientation will be SUmmer musical ticket sales held In Ballroom B of the will continue from I to 5 Univer sity Cente r at lOp.m. p.m. in Room B·of the Uni- and 2 p_m , versity Center. .. Vocational Business Educa­ Vocational Business Work­ tion P icnic will be held shop meeting and diriher In Picnic Area #6 from will be held in Ballroom 7l:3C/ ,m. to 8 p,m, C of the University Cen­ te r at 4: 30 p.m, D/aily Egv..pti(ln Publ.l.lbed In the Department of Journal· ta mt Tueadl~hroulh saturday throughoul the> ~ c.bool ye ,ncep: during Untveniry v.cation pc • eu.rnlnatJon ween, and S~!!~~~;2t~:'~ ~~:.I ct~daJ:':'YI~~6~~~~cl¥e.!; SPEOAL.· poataae'-ptld at Cnbondale, Jl111101s 62901. Pollc.lel of tbe £I)'plian are the relpoo­ a lbll1t)' 0( tbool editor.. Slatemen15 p,ibU.bed MenlS,Il. . Girl' s here do 1101 neoe5aarlly ref1ea tbe optnJon Rubber. . Loafer of tbe admln1atTadon or any departmeDt of tbeUn1vualry. Heel . Heels E4ItorJal and bualne .. omen located In 6u11d1n& T-

Zoology Head: Recalls War Years-Albatross? Detroit Free Pr~ •• throw aU of our clothing away collecti0!l- has two adults and By Gary Kelber afte r we finished uncover­ one calf. ing the whales." . By the way, he added, there Will the person who studies What did you do with the ar e only about 15 specimens JDIDtILll-.:_ the population d}tnamlcs ofthe skeletons after you dug the m of this species in the world. Laysan albatross and collects up? What are the plans for this SHIRLEY whale bones please stand up? HI brought them back to collection? Will they ever be MacLAINE Harvey Fishe r, chairman of SiU , where ~ e y are going assembled? the Department of Zoology at studied by van ous people in­ HI doubt if the y'll 'ever be ALAN SIU , slowly rises_ . terested in this species, the assembled; there ar~ parts ARKIN What do whale bones have beaked whale. We've even had missing," Besharse an­ to do with albatross anyway? people come here from the swer ed. ROSSANO ~ .. The · answer to that ques­ Chicago Natur'al History Mu­ Where would you put a 20- BRAZZI _ tlo~ he satd~ . of geo­ seum," he answered. foot beaked )whale anyway, MICHAEL graphics rather than genetics. Is anyone on t his campus asked Fisher? Fishe r had been studying doing r ese arch on the whales? CAINE this s p e c i e s of albatross, Joseph Besharse, an SIU vITTORIO which lives on Midway Island, graduate student who is doing GASSMAN since the end of World War hiS' thesis on thi s particular IL At that time his r esearch species of whale, volunteered pmR was concerned with the e f­ some information. SELLERS fects of the war on the al­ The beaked whale isn't very batross popul ation. large, he said. The adult of . The U.S. Navy has an air- the species doesn't get mu-:h .-'":~ base on the Pacific island. longer than 20 feet. The SIU Oe SlCl's The birds cause all sorts 'of hazards for the aircraft Morris Attacked flying around the island. In ~ r ecent years, with the help ·'RAGE" u of a grant from the Office By Rep. Williams AT ~ of Naval Research, Fisher 4,00 Yefl has done some research on AND how to eliminate this hazar d. (Continu ed from Page 1) 1 7, 45 Wh at about the whale bones? ~ I.COLOR SaUors from Midway dis-, meeting said, "The big com­ covered three stranded on tll~ plaint is one of communicat­ islands around the airbase. ion. Someone is needed [hat "They knew I did r esearch un derstanss the housing ind­ In biology so they saved the du sry and the businessman's dead whales.....Qy burying [hem prOblems." in the sand," Fisher said. UThat is what cau sed all Wh at does one do with three the trouble last year," Lan­ dead and buried whales? nin said. One waits a year o r mor e , Lannin believed that the he r eplied, and then :.mcovers criticism by Williams of Mor­ them aod find s only the skel­ ..ris and Rendleman was un­ ~;on s remaining, except tor called for. He said both men an amourtt of wh ale oil. were highly capable , but quite "You can't imagine how of­ bu sy and could not always fensive the s mell of that whale handle e verything including was." he added. It We had to off- campus housin~ .

• CAMPUS * *RIVIERA • _ ~ c v' r J B £ T"",~. Rl 148' H(RRIH -.- __ £ & ., ~f·-n~Bu" O ENDS TONITE! ENDS TONITE! "HotRodstoHIII" "Hell'iAngeison Whe.ls" Adom Roorke & Jack Nicholson 0_0 Andrews & Jeann_ Crain "TheLiquidators" " AChecker.d Flag" Joe Mo rrison & Ey.ly" King This is an invitation to all interested students to ,i'de' this bus to Rod TIIIYI.". & T, ...... HOWGrd University City and see the facilities thot male e it the mo st co.plete "Spy in Your Eye" " Trunkto Cairo" livinSl center a t -SIU. The bu s leaves .(". Uni versity Center on the half hour(8 :30, 9::1), STARTS SUNDAY! STARTS SUNDAY! etc. through 4:30). Just get on and tell the driver you WOn' to look us It Plycho Circus" 'TheMiliionEyesofSuMuru' over. He"ll give you free transportation out and bade. (Incidentally, even Fn.nkie Ayalon & Shirley Eatan Fro"kie Avalon & Shirley "Eoton though w. furn ish this free service to our residents, Un iversity City is closer to Old Main thon any of the Greek Row houses ore!) 'The Million Eye. of SuMuru' tt P,ychoC i '~us' ~ Chr,_pppf,., Lee & Leo Genn _ _ Christopher L ee & Leo Cenn

/ Bug in the ear Radio Special to Feature Talk , , "·- 4~"'.:. r' ; ' ~''' ' On Chance of World, WarIII IIc, lho. gyptian Camp. Lady Barbara Ward J ack­ II p.m. son, speaking at tbe Women's Swing Easy: Cool easy Inc., Democratic Club in Washing­ sounds for a Saturday eve­ ton on the possibilities for ning. ~ Lak. of Egypt World "War m, will be featur­ Sunday, 1:30 · 3:30 p.m. ed this weekend on uSpecial Sund ~ y Featuri ng Ou tstanding of the Week" at. 8 p.m. Sun­ Personalitie, day on WSIU RadiO. 10 a.m.} L ' $1.00 p. r Carload Other programs: S~t Lake City Choir. Camp. .... F .... I Today 12:30 p.m; News Report: )':eather and ~.e.o.l1.o.0.0.(I 10:10 a.m. Ijusiness an~ farm news. DRIVE-IN THEATR{ From Southern illinois. Rt. 14 So. of Henl. 3 p.m. Gate Op .... 7:50 12:30 p.m. Seminar: Big Sur : "What Sftow Start. at Du . k News Report: Weather, bus­ does it mean to ,know thy­ iness and farm news. self?" P art four of the Rol­ ENDS fOES.! lo May seminar. - 4 p.m. flurl... Fil m hililra '. Spectrum. give you the do'sand don'ts for the I i.:;' ( 6:30 p.m. man with aIll'ling eye an~ the II'ge I News Report: News, weath­ er, sports. and specialized tostray! ~ information. WE WASH ALL FRUITS LePe lley, Chhtlan S c ience Monhor PEACHES From,now tUI Sept. 15 'My Uncle' Comedy Portrays Master Good for eannlnl &. free zinc

Of French Film Humor on WSIU·TV Tomatoe, Honey J acques Tatf. master of from " TV Guide" and " The comb o ~ eKtr.ct Beverly Hills Courier ." Sweet Apple Cid.r French film humor, is por­ very refreshin, trayed as-a man who gets out Home Grown Sweet Cor n of step With the m odern mech­ 6:30 p.m. -no worm.. anized world, in the comedy Aaron Copland: Music in the We Ship GUt P.ck.,e. o( "My Uncle" at 9:30 p.m. Mon­ '20s; Copland and guests day on WSIU-TV, Channel 8. demonstrate the influence of Now OPEN DAILY _ jazz, which first emerged in Other programs: the 19205, on modern music. McGUIRE'S 4:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. FRUn What's New: "Deer N.E .T. Journal: " The Poor Tracks," a n unusual film Pay More."' This hard-hit­ FARM of life in Northern Russia. ting program shows how on ly ' ••UI •• Sou th of C · dQ~ . R •. 5l and why America' s poorer citizens are charged more 6 p.m. STARTS NEXi THURSDAY . ONE OF C ineposium: Three short money - --for rent, food, THE MOST EXCITIN G PICTUR Es- YOU'L L EVER films are reviewed by host services--than their middle _ Michael Jackson and guests class contemporaries. SEE. ADMISSIONS FOR THIS PROGRAM ILLINOIS ALL ADULTS $1 .50 CHILDREN UNDER 12 50 4 V ARS.TY NOW PLAYING CAR.PONQ.ALE, SHOW TIME S Take1Welve ILLINOIS 2:00-4: 15-6 :30·8:45 condemned men. "Hey, Fuse 1helr violence. gedaloadadis! IgnUe n. When . Hi, teach!" it's ready to' explode­ tum them loose

The Yielcoming com r'nitt e ~ for Sylvia Barrett. on the Nazis! brarld teacher at Coolfdge High School.

CIWIlU J.iII / __ , RICIWIO 110_ BIIM CASlAIElIS '.waa - ...... _nur cuon -.- lOPEZ MHIER IIYAI SAlUS WAWI ... DAILY ·EGYPTIAN Au ..·.t 11, 1967 ' •.. TlaereMIUIBe anEnd 10 Thi. Som~lfIlaere!.. P , Daily Egyptian Editorial Page ... Pretty Chain Fences Foil Mosquito Sprayer Several years ago, Y'ben the Tbe purpose of tbe drive s, Southern Hills family housing accordlng to tbose persons in pr..o~~t was constructed, the family housing and mainte­ ar.l: hit~ts had the foresight nance who have waged a rig­ to provide strategic service orous campaign against per­ drives to ,several:;.' buildings. sons parking in them, is to provJ(ie a quick passage [0 Anti-C?mmunist t h ..... buildings so tbat fire trucks and other emergency vehicles can drive up close Bu~ark Seen In. to the affected area . . Now, in an attempt to beau­ New Alliance tify the ar!joQ, family housing has ordered construction of The war in Viet Nam is several chain fences to line a continuing tragedy for tbat these drives. country and for us, and not much that is encouraging can Tbe fences are indeed hand­ be said about it. Yet the war some, but they now prevent has another , less noticeable the fir e engine and mosquito aspect thruout that region of abatement truck from getting the world: With communist close to the bUildings. expansionism blocked in Viet The occupants of affected Nam. other Asian and South buildings now suffer a ser­ Pacific nations h a v e been ious bug problem that did not coming together in cooper­ exist in the past; and 10 tbe ative re gio n a I groupings da y when one of these build­ whost! benefits will long out­ ings starts to go up in smoke. last the war. The most notable sign of Tom Wood progress in recent months is t he formation of t he As­ sociation of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), announced China's Atomic in Bangkok Monday. ASEAN is composed of Thailand, and Phillippines, Malaysl;l, Sing­ Might Causes apore. and --very notably-­ Indonesia, I t b e biggest and pote ntially t he wealthies t nation of southeast Asia. The W ,or~larm launching of ASEAN follows by 14 months the establish­ ~~d .l China's accelerated me nt of tbe Asian and Pacific drive to produce operational Cooperation council (AS PAC), nuclear weaponry shadows the a 9-nat1on cooperative group­ world's prospects of escaping ing that inc Iud e}s Japan, thermonuclear horror. Nationalist China, South Viet What makes China's mus b­ Nam, South Korea, Australia, rooming nuclear capability and Ne w Zealand. sbuddersome is the rawness of Neither organization has any ve r y detailed program Chinese Communist idebfogy, Two Nations Exist Side by Side other than exploring and pro­ tbe chaos of China's domestic moting cooperation in trade, problems and the delusions of . Parr of the dynamite that (entiat labor (orce in East quired to make today's unem­ construction, agriculrure, China's political world . is stored in America's racial Harlem. Central Harle m and played and underemployed SCience, and Similar fields. ghettos is transplanted from Bedford- Stuyvesant shares minority group me mbers even The absence of American But they form an enremely diplomatic and journalistic plantations and fums-- the same fate. Over (he minimally competitive with hopeful nucleus for growth, explosive fruit of the mecb- countty as a whole, 25 per the rest of the population for outposts in mainland China stability, and prosperity in an makes most speculation about anization of American ag- cent of all Negro teen-agers the jobs that are available. area of the world that seemed, riculture and the mass are unemployed. When will [he energy and the the course of Mao Tse-rung's not too long ago, ready for an Cultural Revolution and the displaceme nt of farm 13- These figures are in strik- funds needed for this vast task inevitable communist take: borers. WHh hunger stalking ing contrast to the country's ' begin to be available? counter-revolution it seems to over. have ignited aoout as assured Mississippi's Delta and many general prosperity and the1 --New York Times ·- -Chicago's American other once rich farm areas, nearly full employment of as reading tea le aves. a half-aiillion Americans move the white popul ation. Some ­ off the land each year to join thing akin to the depression Preservation of Burgess Home Only confusion is clear. And the already mammoth roster""\Jof the 1930's reigns in man y, confusion is sometimes more of earlier migrants whose areas where Negroes and dangerous tban tbe calculated current poverty and discontent s imilar minority groups pre­ Good News in Bulldozer Age risks of power poIitics. derive in large measure from dominate. while the rest of their lack of _training and the count.r y is at or near the In this day of bulldozer s, needed effons of today' s con­ That Red China may be on adaptability to the radically peak of national affluence. It blllboards, and hot dog stands. servationists. the verge of civil war is un ­ diffl:!rent life of the cities. is , to use Disraeli '5 expres- comes welcome news from the British readers, panicu­ settling, for a nation in up­ Secretary of Agriculture sion, as though two nations Massachusetts Audubon So- larly, may wonder how Mas­ heaval - - esPeCially a nation Freeman has rightly stressed were living side by side , one ciety. [t plans to raise funds sachusetts could posslb[y be that exalts aggression--is a that part of the program for rich and privileged and the to preserve the "Laughing the home of Perer Rabbit. peril to its neighbors and to coping with riots and other other poor and miserable. No Brook" home of Thornton W• . Having grown up · on "The the world. expressions of urban blight better formula for civil dis­ Burgess in tbe Connecticut 'Tale of Peter Rabbit" by Bea­ must be measures for making order could be devised. River Valley trix Potter and heing thor- Chairman Mao's regime rural existence more at- Millions of Negroes now As those "w'lo were once oughly familiar with Mr. Mc­ makes s tatements of propa­ 'tractive and thus stemming the jammed in the Northern children (and who was not?) Gregor's kitchen garden and ganda t hat are positively "flood of displaced persons into ghettos are really black peas­ will surely know, it was' in potting shed, they will want alarming. If Red China's the slums. How disadvantaged ants forced out of farm auto­ the Old Briar Patch that Red- to know who on eanh is Mr. leaders can be so hostile and Negroes, Puerto I,\icans and mation. The men and women dy Fox pursued Peter Rabbit, Burgess. . aggressive after some delib­ citizens of Mexican ancestry who once picked cotton or to­ Dan n y Meadowmouse, and True, Peter R~it was first e ration, of what outrage would tend to be in city settings bacco or strawberries in the their little friends. [n the cre ated by the eminent Eng­ they be capable if driven by Is indlcailod by data of the South fled North with Ii"le Green MeadOWS, the Old Or- Ii s h author 0 f children' .. despair? Federal Bureau of Labor Sta- education, no knowledge of ur­ chard, and on to the Purple 1. books. But the character de­ tlstics. ban SOCiety, and none of the Mountains Jimmy Skunk, Jer- veloped by Mr. Burgess was In poveny areas of San An- skills required in today's in­ The r ealities of China's ry ~uskrat, Little Joe Otter, original in all but name. Be­ po we a,!d problems are tonia, New Orleans and creasingly technological civ­ Hooty the Owl, and' a host t wee n Beatrix Potter and r Phoenix, forexample,becween ilization. No wonder that they perha ~ not so unnerving as of others lived lives of higb Thornton Burgess, English­ t beseeming unre alities of 40 and 50 per cent of the find it so difficult to get jobs adventure. speaking children 0 n both potential labor force is either in . an era when unskilJed China's political life. Pre- • Thornton ='urgess Jc:new his sides of the Atlantic have pos terous propaganda event­ looking for a job un - manual labor is gl.. ingway animals so well thar, although learned to love the animals su·ccessfullY, has given up try- s teadily to the work of[ending ually takes its toll. Powerful sentimentalized, they were al- of garden, field, and forest. men mistake fiction for fact, ing to find work or must con- machines, building them or ways in character. He wanted To preserve "Laughing tent itself with some casuaJ. repairing them. . and in an age of nuclear weap­ to instlll in his young read- Brook" for the children of ons, however crude, mis­ low-pay part-time occupation. The two nations of can­ ers a iove of nature and a the world will do · much to ' The "'sub-employment index" temporary America . must" be calcula,tion can produce the deSire to preserve America's carry on the ideals of both same incineration as mad- for cenatn areas In New York made one economically as well wild life. His tales hav!' un- authors. ness. ( City shows that hetween a as politically. But a vast questionably heli>ed mold·val­ quarter and a third of the 1"'- educational effort will be re- uable suppon . for the much- --Christian Science Monitor - -Hanford Times ------~~ ____ ~~~~~~------'~ ______~ l~· ______""",.t n. 1967 Daily Egyptian Book Page Assignment in Burma

.Burmese Journey. by Norma are intrigued by the forces of his­ Bixler. Yellow Springs. Ohio: The tory that have shaped these nations Antioch Press. 1967. 238 pp. $6. and make our attempts to change them almost fruitless. Despite the To every family returning from sometimes overwhelming TV cov­ foreign assignment, the question is erage of the effects of communist posed, "What was it like?" Norma reprisals on V ietnamese villages, Bixler in her delightful boo k, we in America can be stubbornly .Bunnese Journey, tells exactly whal ignoraoV of the real horror of such it wasllke for her, her librarian hus­ reprisals, and, therefore, of the rea ­ band, and their teen-age son. sons why the villagers will do any­ The Bixlers llved in Burma from thing to avoid them. Two subse­ i958 to 1960. where Paul, on leave quent trips to Southeast Asia, af­ from Antioch College, establlshed a ter the one recorded here, have Ubrary for the Faculty of the Social given Norma Bixler a keen sympathy Sciences of the University of Ran- for the vuinerable villagers. She is mildly impatient With theecon­ OIniSt who said, "Basically, this RlWieweJ by is an economic question." The auth­ or says, "The villagers of Burma, From TiO." of Tommany He/ ... Haag of Southeast Asia, are more fear­ TAMMANY FOURTH: A Fourth of July colebrotion staged by in ful tban hungry, more ignorant than t812 as it was depicted by the painter William R. Chappel. Ill-clothed. They are people. this they know; they say ..-ongly they -\ Politics in New York goon. It was during that same period are Burmese, Or,,-Lao, or Thai. that my husband, I, and our two But of any moder~ nation-state, teenage children were living in Ran­ their own or any other, they know goon. Our families became close very little. They are~ty.et ready friends and were pan of that life to fight and die and sa ice their rTigers of Tammany' which Mrs. Bixler describes. But children for a country ey call their own." it would be misleading to Imply T igers of Tammany, by Alfred that Mrs. Bixler merely recounts The chapter on Burma's national John Kelly. Richard Croker, Charles Connab1e & Edward Silberfarb. New Francis Murphy, Carmine DeSapio the typical experiences of all Am­ religion, Buddhism, is knowledge­ York: Holt, Rinehard & Winston, and Tammany's last boss J. Ray­ ericans living' in a different cul­ able and enlightenlng. Mrs. Bixler ture, unller unfamiliar conditions. writes, HI had taken for granted 1967. 384 pp. $6.95. i mond Jones. As the authors describe Tam­ Burmese J Durney probes the ex­ that 1 must learn soJ11ething of the In the dimly llghted room of ternal situation for underlying rea­ ""untry's histoJ."Y and culture !f 1 many's history, each of the nine Barden's Tavern on New York's low­ men who dominated New York poU­ sons and with cogent thought ar­ were to reach any understanding of er Broadway, a solemn ceremony the people; now I was discovering tics was a crafted poUtician in his rives at understanding of the for­ took place on May 12, 1787 - & time, Each overcame numerous eign people among whom the Bix­ that neither history nor culture ceremony which in essence marked lers lived and of Mrs. Bixler her­ would have any meaning without a obstacles in order to actualize his the birth of the Democratic Party political ambition or the ambitions self as an American. knowledge of Buddhism." Under­ standing aoother's religion requires of others. Eacb of these' men had Norma Bixler is a trained journ­ !!'h~~e!~~in~~!c~~f~a~~~o~i~ the strength of ,.iIl.-'€lephant, the alist. She has worked on the \.i1eve­ more thought than understanding his of the Society of Saint Tammany, politiCS, and more tact than under­ ferociousness/O!->a tiger -- giving land News and the Cleveland Plain also marked the birth of the polit­ justification 'ttJr the book's title. Dealer, was a free lance writer of standing his culture. The author ical machine (Tammany Hall) which exhibits both. Connable and Silberfarb have pre­ 'fiction and articles. She now writes for, 150 years dominated New York sented brief biographies of the po­ a column of commentary for the The last three chapters of the City polictics. book distingulsh it from all such Utical Uves of nine hard-driving Dayton Daily News. However, her Today the average American is . men. But more than thiS, tbe authors "reporter's eye" for detail and the personal travel tales. Many stor­ quite often non-hesitant in associat­ Significant thing cannot alone ac­ ies of "ugly Americans" or Hquiet" ing Tammany Hall with poUtical vice 'count for the wonh of this book. (stupid) ones have been told, but and corruption. widespread pubUc Reviewed by More limite d in physical scope than the goofs by a government are of­ mistrust and a general ,undeclared Lester R. Porleer a Baedeker, and more deeply per­ ten squasbed. All governments make state of war between the politiCians sonal than a 'Kate Simon, Burmese them, and Burma has been an in­ and citizens of New York. Perhaps Journ ey shares with the reader the discriminate victim. Some are the basiS for this aSSOCiation hap experiences, tboughts, and conclu­ tragic; some hilariously funny. Many been the mystery surrounding this have provided a penetrating history sions of a warm, compassionate are narrated in this chapter. once extremel y powerful polltical of the New York Democratic Party woman. The chapter titled, "To Be Yet machine as well as the substantial up through 1966. Secondly, the book The first half of the book re­ Not To Be", is the best descrip­ lack of knowledge as to its actual is Just as much a one-sided view lates the family's decision to go tion of the disorientation an Amer­ history and some of its achieve­ of the history of New York politics abroad on aSSignment, the prob­ ican can feel , il) a foreign culture ments. as it is a history of Tammany Hall. lems of getting settled in a new that I have ever read. It is a In Tigers of Tammany, Alfred The mode of presentation and the home, and the usual frustrations of clinical masterpiece. Conn able and Edward 'Siiberfarb not facts surrounding Tammany make meshing Western determination witb Finally. the summing-up of her only give an insight into the for exciting reading in any case. Oriental fatalism. Many characters experiences brings Mrs., Bixler to political lives and philosophies of But the style in which the book is are introduced in this pan of the an understanding of herself and ber the nine men who ran -- and some­ written and tbe overwhelming account, but, in spite of strange­ own country that transcends all the times controlled poUtlcs in New amount of research put into tbe sounding names, all emerge with superficialities of her [wo years York City, but the authors also pro­ writing of the book make Tigers of dlStinBt personalities. The ino~ abroad. A person with less per­ vide substantial evidence contrary Tammany even better rea.ding. In dents, too, are typical, different ception could nor have identified to popular belief concerning these no orner work, for example, can only in detail from those of most it and one of less eloquence could men. one find the very poignant - ritual foreign service families. However, not have expressed it. The authors, while demonstrating (which is part of a treasury. of they are told with-.Y~e and humor. Burmese Journey will appeal to their superb reponorial skill, also Tammany arcana donated to The next quarter of the book is a wide range of readers: to those demo:1strate a keen affinity for his­ Columbia University in 1965) a description of the country of with e xtensive experience in South­ torical accuracy through their required of the early. members of Burma with an historical record east Asia and to those who know painstaking and detailed factual ac­ the Tammany Society. No other of its people. Even with our in­ little of the region, but want to counts of New York poUtics for a author has gone loto such detail to creased soph\Btication concerning learn more. The treatment is com­ century and a half. Both men are acquire varying and current view­ the peoples of Southeast ASia, we prehensive enough to give the broad not strangers to New York politics points on the merit, influence and impress of that fascinating country, or City Hall for that matter, and debatable future of Tammany Hall. but specific enough to make it real 1heir book attests to this. Sllber­ The book does not stop for a and lively and lovable. The book fa,b is a city hall reporter and paragraph to ponder whether Winte; Woman can be a matter-of-fact preparation Conn able has served as writer on Tammany Hall will reVive , or for for the novice going to Burma; for, New York's fOl(mer mayor Robert that matter whether it has disap­ it describes conditions more care­ Wagner's staff. peared . from the political scene. Unpainted. fully than a post report. For me, William Marcy Tweed ("Boss Tbere is the inference, however, tbat Sdll bedwarm, ,. it was a nostalgic remembrance of Tweed") has by far Deen ' the the citizens of and She comes out\ into the sharpness­ the most unusual period in the life most notorious. of the nine men just as much so tbe citizens of The cutting cold- of our family. tabbed as bosses of Tammany Hall. that state were in open rebe11l0n And exhales a passive cloud of Whether Tweed' It notoriety or pop­ abainst Tammany domination when steam. ularity is justifiable certalri!y leads they elected RepubUcans John Lind­ Our Reviewers to conjecture, But the fact remains say as But I know that Tweed welded around himself in 1965 and Nelson Rockefeller in That this cloud an organization capable of influenc­ 1966 for a third (fe'rm as governor Is like the neutral white smoke Helen Haag, the wife of Herman ing and controlling the election of of New York. \. that a chimney puffs . M. Haag of the Department of Ag­ important city,· state and on some Who then will replace J. Raymond AgainSt the dead gray skies of ricultural Industries, spent sever­ 'occasions national offICials; and as Jones as the tenth tiger of Tam­ winter­ al years in Burma with her family such, was able to amass a fortune, many, if Tammany is not altogether Altbougb it clouds at about the same time the BIx­ polltical and financial. dead as some people have argued. lDd1Iferently. lers, of whom she writes, were Tweed was by no means the most Conn able and Silberfarb are not It speaks of deep, fiery furnaces there. . ' outstanding of Tammany's nine staking their reputations on making Hidden below. Lester a. Parker is a graduate bosses. The other eight men were, any predictions. They content them­ student in the Department of in historical order: . selves with letting the ppllticians . " .4.. . ',:,' 'r. Ronald 'Gillette ' .1oumalismL ' , - , Martin Yan·Buren. Fernando -Wood, ··take that psk. DAI 1967 Clash in Nine Cities Mao's FriencJ.s, Foes Quipble " TOKYO (AP)--Lar ge - scale Maoists were holding mas­ The People's Daily. official armed clashes between fo l­ sive demonstrations in Peking publication of China's Com­ l owers and opponents of i n an attempt to halt fight­ m unist party, urged the army Chairman Mao Tse-tung were i ng in the Chinese capital to repudiate Liu's side. It reported in at least nine major a nd its subu r bs, the Japanese said Defense Minister Lin cities of Red China Friday, newspaper Asahi repor ted. It Piao. Mao's No . 1 ally, re- .. including Lanchow, said to be said the Maoists hoped to cently issued a new order the site of China's nuclear ar­ spread a truce throughout the showing Hthe utmost solici­ senal. count;'iY; tude for and faith in" the The di~i>atch said support.­ army and calling on it to ers of President· Liu Shao­ stop up its · activities in sup­ Vietnam Invitation chi, Mao's principal" enemy, port of Mao. ha v e , s u rro~nde d Mao i s t Tass ~ aid 10,000 persons groups ~ nd we e on the 'attack were taking part in bloody Get. Cold Slwulder in provincial apitals in wes­ . in Canton, south Chi- WASHINGTON (AP) -Con­ ~~~a.nort-hern and southern ;;.:.:..~~~~;o..----., gress got an official invitation f rom South Vietnam Friday Asahi's report from Peking to send a delegation to observe quoted wall posters, a tradi- '==iii;;ii;;r.;;;~~i=~ t hat country's September tiona:l method of dissemin~ti n g r elections, but leaders at the news in China and an impor­ Capitol turned a told shoulder. t ant source of information In an obvious response to about Mao's year- long cam­ mounting senatorial criticism paign to purge his political of the conduct of the e lection foes. campaign, S o'u t h Vie tnam's The pos ter s said battles Ambassador Bui Die m for­ ere going on in Lanchow, warded the invitation to capital of Kansu Province 700 Secretary of State Dean Rusk miles west of Peking; Yinch­ 5ee Us fo r " Full C overog." for relay to the legislators . wan, capital of Ningsia Prov­ HWe i n ten d t hat the ince, and Kunming, capital Auto & Motorscooter processes in Viet of Yunnan Province. INSURANCE be free and are anxious KwangSi and Yunnan prov­ I they be opened [0 scrutiny inces, in southern China, bor­ by all," Bui Diem wrote, and der on North Vietnam. made a direct bid for a con­ The Soviet news agency EASY PAYMENT PLAN gressional visit. Tass reported disturbances in Kirtn, Changchun and Har­ A Good Place to Senate Democratic Leader MOp for all your MikeMansfield of Montana im­ bin, all in Manchuria in north­ insurance needs mediately rejected the idea. eastern China. Ki r in is a pro­ the top a "I see no reason why Con­ vincial capital, Changchun is FRANKLIN building under construction shows a crane that toppled down len gress s hould involve itself an induscr ial city and Harbin in this matter by sending a is a leading food-processing stories recently. The crane operator who rode the crane to the INSURANCE delegation to observe the center. ground is in critical condition. One end of the crane struck the election process," Mansfield Tass said the Chinese army AGENCY back end of an automobile in the parking lot across the' street said. ,) was taking part in battles in sending its three girl occupants to the hospital. The crane was 703 s. IP ~ A ve. "T h e responsibility for an indu strial city and P h o~S7 :A", 6 1 atop a new addition to the. General Telephone company in Tampa, holding a fair e'lection is not Fl•. (AP Photo) on the Congress but on the gove rnment of South Martin Luther King Suggests Viprnam." ) STU DENT RENT ALS Nationwide Voteo.n Viet War Apartments . Do nnitori e, Trailers ~~ ATLAN.TA. Ga. (AP) - Dr. roots oppositon to our JX)licy Marrin Luther KingJr .• highly in Viemam. All Air Conditioned OPEN 24 HOURS ADAY .critical of the adm inistration "Twelve thous and Amer ican Coil for its policies in Vietnam. lives already have been lost," plans to take his antiwar cam­ he s aid. Of And while our GALE WILLIAMS 7 DAYS A WEEK paign [Q tbe American people. Cities decay, w h i 1e our RENTALS He proJX>ses a nationwide ref­ domestic programs are erend)Jrn on whethe r [h e drastically cut back, we are c i o Carbondale M o b il e~Ho me CAMPUS SHOPPING CENTER Ph. 549-2835 fighting sho:Jld continue . s pending $16.000 a 'minute H. H i.way 51 · ",57 King said 26,000 voluntee r s every minute of the day on already are at work on the one of history's mos t crue l pro j ect in communities and senseless wars." o ploce YOUR od, use this handy ORDER FORM throughout the nation. Although the wording of the . "Our ener gies and local referendu ms has not yet been INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPLETING ORDER organizations can help provide d ~termined, it is e xpected to FlED ADVERTISING ' C a mp lel" I'cel , o n s 1- S u lin" ballpoint pen. the manpower to bring this --differ accoring to the com­ 'Pri nt i n a ll C APITAL LETTERS : DAY 'In s u ', ion 5 : issue to the community and munity in which it will be sub­ On .. numb .. , o r h ·ller p .. , s pac e 3 DAYS I e .. " ...... , n "' ) . allow the voice of the com­ mitted. Do n o \ u!< e s " p cra l t" space for p .." cl uaIl On muntty to be heard," King King said that las t year at 5 I:::.YS ,c ...... · " ...· ... S kIp _SUit' .. . b e t ween wo rd s said in a state~nt Friday. Dearborn, Mich., a referendum DEADLIN ES COU"' a " ,· p lI. " o f iii lin .. . S 8 full lo ne . calling foran immediate cease­ °Mo n .. ,· ,· .. nno l b ....eh.

NAME ____~~ ------D AT E------EYEWEARCwtHt ADDR ESS PHONE NO. Your eyewear will be 3 \I"" KIND OF AD 3RUN AD 4 CHECK ENCLOSED ~ 1 DAY Employment FOR T :.. fin,I ...... u • •· u., waY8 cor rect at Conrad: o 0 O J DAYS Wanted 0 m .. ll ;.,I\' " " .. 1 num h r . " . l;n .. " " m .. " .v,",1 p ... I'n.' 2 S DAY S ' "'' ,",I1 ... " , ... d .. n d~ . ' '' I ~ '' ,,'., . ... ,.

JOB OPPORTUNlllES ($ . . JOB OPENING OF THE PLACEMENT OF THE WEEK WEEK Mechanical En"lnee.· Quality Control Man number 2 ma n in department $ 100 fmo. fee paid. Colleee Dee.ee - c hemistry I~B;;"."'. :;;M;;;.''''h'';n!....'''''''::;. 20:-:0---1 WILSON ~~.L

major Or minor · $65O / n.o. Pu.chesine Tral n e ., _ Open _ fee paid HALL 210 for men 1101 S. Wall 457-2169 Dai.ly Egyptian Classified Action Ads T~e5Daily Egyptian reserves the right to reject ony advertising copy. No refunds 56 watts output po rtable Stereo rec· Mobile homes fo r rent. Sir x 10. Girls dormitory. 400 S. Graham. Sales Rep. WoR. Grace ' &. Co" Rudy FOR SALE ord playe r . Separate volume, bal­ Un\ve rs ir y approved living for jun­ Cook.ing privileges. Qua rte r contrac t Patrick Seed Dlv., MI. Vernon, [ll. ance. ba ss, tre ble comrols. 580. Mag­ iors , seniors , grad, and marricd SilO per qua rter. Phone 7·7263. Territory in So. Ill. Furnished co.' Go lf c lubs. Brand ~ w , never used. Ic Chef gas r ange. Timer , light, s tudents. quk In pe rson, Malibu BBI494 car &. expense acct. with s alary. Sell­ Still in plastiC cover .-5c'll for hair. s torage area . .S 30. Hotpolnt 12 cu. Village Inc., R. R. 1/1 Car bondale, Ing seeds. chemicals, and inoculants. Call' 7- 4334. BBl 305 ft. refrigerator. 570. Ad miral 220 01. Phone 457-8383. 3585 Private rooms and cooking pr ivileges send resume to JohnDUllngkam, P.O. volt air-condit.lone r. $40. All In e x­ in accepted living center. Also trail­ Box 783. Ph. 618- 2U-0127. 3567 1965 Har. Dav. Sprim H, 250 cc. cellent condit.ion. Th(' whole lot for ers. All near campus. Phone 457- E x. condo Se ll for good OrreT. Call $200. Contact Bob Fourhman at 1528 Murphysboro, recentl)' remodele d 2592. B81496 . 549-3981. 35i4 Edith or c.1I 687-1674 or 453-2285. unfurnis hed, 2- bedroom, downstairs WANTED 3590 apanme nt in large house located HousetraJler, SO uth on 51. Air condo 3 bdrm. hse. 10 min. to ca mpus . in quiet neighbor hood. Ne w gas fur­ Married couple only, Ph. M9-1782. Need girl for reside nt manager po_ $16,500. 107:, on contract fo r dee d We buy and sell used fu rniture. Ph. nace. Garage, $80/month. Friendly BB l502 s ition supervising 3 other girls. Pri­ 995-2034. 3580 549·1782. BA l438 but quiet upstairs neighbors. Won ­ vate room with 1/2 baths. Call O.H. de rful landlord. AvalTable August H . C'dale rooms . Approved. Boys only. Hand 549- 2242. 3593 Utility rrailer :' x 6'. Will accepl 1963, 4- door Bel Air Chcv. $750. Contact present re ~e r s at 1528Edith $7/wk. Meals available. Ph. 7-7342. best offer. 509 S. Wa ll. Apt. 7."3 582 Excellent condo Ph. 457 - 5250. or call Bob Fourhman at 687- 1674 BB I 509 Small apt., or room .... Ith cooking pri­ BA I499 or 453- 2285. ~ 3591 vi leges or apt. In return for work.. Must sell 1966 Sears 106 S. S. cycle 2 room furnished house for fall and Call collect 673-7438 or write Bill by GHira. Pe rfect cq,mlltion. 5250. 3 new German-' made violins. Ph. DeSOtO apartment for rent. New kit­ winter. Grad. student o r married Pula, 910 Knoxville Ave., Peoria, ill. 506 S. Logan, Tr. #1. 3583 549-4520. BAI501 che nette , bedroom, bath. Air con­ couple. Ph. 7-5953. B8151 0 BF146.. ditioned, tele vlsen. See Speedy at 1963 E1car mobile home. 2 bedmoms. Frigidaire elec. stove, May tag auto­ Speedy's tavern. Co mple tely fur­ Air condo luxury apt. for two gl.r1s. .Rooms available [or 3 boys. Free ~ Ph. 549-2021. Must see to appreci­ matJc washer. maple buffet. Ph... 7- nished $8000. 3592 Call 9- 2407 after 5. Mus l rent im­ room for I boy in exchange for work. ate. 3584 8765. BAI51 3 medialely. BB151'" Phone Carterville -4796. BFI506 For lease 3- 4 b.r. house, furn.. aJ.r 1954 Plymouth. body excellent, en­ cond., gas heat, den. living rm., car Buyers for new and used C . B.radios, a_way radios. tv's, etc. to repair. line needs repair. WUI accept: be,;! FO.R RENT port. Nice neighborhood. AvaUable f. ;~.~kG~~: .- s~~~~:t5 /~~~~ offer, tel, 549-"375 after 5. 3586 alter Set. I. 985-.. 555 after 5 p.m. living center men undergrads. $30. C' dale C .B. Center, GlantCltyBbc.k- 3595 Chuck's Rentals, 549-3374, 104 S. ..

lOx 55 Town & CountrY Mobile Reduced Tlltes for summer. Check o.n Efficiency apts. and rooms for male · Wanted, a personal attendant for the For [he excitement. speed, and com­ Home. Excellent candIdon, very rea­ air-conditioned mobile homes. Check single undergrads. University ap­ fall quarte r. Room and board or more. pedtlon of Olympic bicycle r acing sonably priced. Mrs. C. L. Carson, o~r prices before you sign any con- proved. Low Tate, near yn on bus Write . [9 . :r:~rry PledlscalzZl , 4410 join Unle Egyptian C yclJng team. Box· 6.fI, VIe MAl. ilL. re l ephp~ .6508- , tT.a.C;~ .. p'l)one '9-3374, Chuck's Re ntsls . , Elgp' Lane, Ma~lson •. V! fS~ : .53~~ . • 'ABLA: r:'.~s thru ~t,Jl.{id West. For .. BB{\JOS·· ·· . , info~ call'GreaP.osl.s49-246t. BJ151? . :.. ~.~ ? ~ ,1 ::\ . ".: :.. ,.;. ,.: ... ,.,. .. .~~~ ...... :: ...... :. s t~p: ~~ ne ~~t~: ~~.t ~:I : ~~ ~ ~~~.i ui Pog.8 DAILY EGYPTIAN '. Au?, sf 12, ' 1967 Ohio .State May Substitute Place Kick for Punt ; By Hal Paris The veteran Buckeye coach many coaches, who claim it down some 25 pounds from practiC{ kicking a few minutes says he may use his top place- will increase the risk of io- last year. a week in the evening. Columbus, Ohio (AP) - Ohio kicker, Gary Cairns, in juries. Cairns used one of his own Cairns. a guard in high State football fans, thoroughly punting siw3tions. In last May's spring intra- diets to lose the weight and school, is strictly a kicking i n doctrina~ed by Coach Woody U It's only an experiment squad game, Cairns was used occassionally skipped a meal. specialist at Ohio State. Only Hayes' methodical style of and it will depend on two in onepumsiw3tionandplace- A pbysicaleducation major, one of his six missed field .. play, may see something new imponant conditions- · field kicked the ball 39 yards. Cairns said he got his w,eight goal attempts came from less this fall. position and wind factor," uWhe n we use Cairns, we down U because I geel better than 34 yards last season. Hayes emphasizes. want him to put the ball out at 21Q . ~He·sbeenworkingfor Whether it's shooting for Rookie Strive. Cairns, a 2 I-year old senior of bounds. We may give a few a meat packing firm inCanton field goals or deliberately from Canton, set Big Ten yards that way. but we prevent this summer but manages to punting the ball out of bounds, kicking record,arlast year. He a runbacke" adds Hayes. L " J' • Cairns' main interest is to get To Make Redskins booted one SS yards against Cairns, who successfully ElatonHoVlard Deal into thej game and keep his WASHINGTON (AP)-Rookie Illinois, the longest field goal kicked 11 of 12 extra points I nclude. K)imkoVlII' i .It~oe=a=c=ti'tl!==. ======;1 John Love is determined to 10 conference history. and set and five of 11 field goal tries make the Washington Red- another mark with three field last season, consistently NEW YORK (AP) - Ronald OVERSEAS DELIVER skins, even if it means car- goals against the Illini. averages 35 yards on boots Klimkowski, 23 - year - 0 I d rying ~ the water bucket or "Cairno is a vary accurate from scrimmage. right-handed pitcher now with lining the field. He covered placekicker and wearewHling Ohio State punters did little Pittsfield, Mass., in the about every other job in his to sacrifice dis tance for better a year ago. Mike Eastern League, was sent to fir s t professional football accuracy. We have to find Current, who graduated, the New York Yankees Thurs­ game. a way to com!lat the NCAA's punted 38 times and averaged day by Boston Red Sox as a EPPS In the Redskins 37-14 vic- new punt rule," explains 36.2 yards. part of the Elston Howard deal. tory over the Chicago Bears Hayes. But the Bucks may have Klimkowski, now in his Wednesday night. Love played The new rule does not come up with a g~od punter in fourth season in pro ball, was offense and defense. ran back permit interior line me n on the sophomore KeVIn Rusnak 0 immediately turned over to punts and kickoffs and booted kicking team to go downfielq Garfield, N~J. He punted twice. yracuse, the Yankees' farm ~ a couple of extra points. until the ball is in the spring for 91 yards. in the International League. "He's a handy man to have punted. The rule, Buck rooters also may have Howard. one - time Most Hi ghw ay 13 Eas! around," said Coach Otton give the reveiving some [rouble recognizing Valuable Player in [he Ameri- 457.2184 Grahamin cheek:. addinguHe haswith atongue good ~ball,b~e~t:te~ r~!shas ~ho~t~a:tcome ~under~~ ~:!~~c~a~i~r2 _n~s~pounds'~W~h~o~is~n~o after ~w~atrim:ning~s~v~e~lt~e-! c~a~nRe d~ L~eSox~a~gu~ ela~,~w~ast _s~t~r~a~de~d__ to__ th_ e~!!~~~~9~8~5~. ~::1 2::::::::~ chance to make our team," Love, drafted by the Red­ skins in the seventh round after he starred at North Tex­ as State, caughhhe eye of the coaches soonl after he Phone 549-3396 entered rookie cam p last month at Carlisle, Pa. ' Committee Adds 4 Representati ves BOSTON (AP) -- American League Presidect Joe Gronin added four club representa­ tives Thursday to the Major League Baseball Players Re­ lations Committee of which he is chainnan. Named from the National League were Bing Devine, pres ident of the New York Mets. and Dick Meyer. exec- utive vice president of the St. Louis Cardinals. American League repre­ sentatives: Tom Yawkey of the Boston Red Sox. and J e r­ old Hoffbe r ger . chairman of the Baltimore Orioles, ' r------~

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