Eastern Illinois University The Keep

August 1985

8-26-1985 Daily Eastern News: August 26, 1985 Eastern Illinois University

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·The Daily Monday, August 26, t 985 . . . will be mostly cloudy with highs in the low to mid 70s. Monday night will be m0$tly cloudy with lows In the up­ per 50s. Tuesday will be mostly sunny Eastern News and warmer with highS in the low 80s.

----Eastern Illinois University I Charleston, Ill. 61920 I Vol. 71, No. 1 I Four Sections, 60 Pages ••••••••••••••••••• Eastern renews Harris investment contract

. Foundation keeps financial ties in South Africa 'with stipulations' by Julie Cambria-Brecbblll million investment portfolio, which in­ foundation's funds in companies way to solve the problem.'' The Eastern Illinois University cludes shares in U.S.. companie s in which adhere to-theSullivan Principle. He added the subject has been a con­ Foundation board Sunday unanimous­ apartheid South Africa. Controversy The voluntary principle, drawn by cern. of the foundation, but "they ly renewed its investment con­ arose in May when it was learned that Rev. Leon Sullivan of Philadelphia in realize that withdrawing wouldn't help tract-which includes financial in­ Harris had more than $180,000 of the 1977, requires U.S. companies in the situation over there." terests in apartheid South Africa-with foundation's funds invested in 10 com­ South Africa to practice non­ Thornburgh said he believes U.S. the Harris Trust and Savings Bank of panies there. discrimination. companies' partiCipation in South Chicago. Since the bank has complete control However, all companies in South Africa may hinder the apartheid However, the foundation made over the foundation's investment port­ Africa that the foundation invests in system because the United States has several stipulations in approving the folio, many foundation board already adhere to the principle. more leverage with the companies contract renewal, one of which ad­ members were not aware of the in­ Daniel Thornburgh, financial agent there. He added that the subject of for the board, said he believes apar­ dresses the South Africa issue. vestments. · complete divestiture of investments in Harris· handles and has complete One of the stipulations to the new theid should not exist, but "to companies in South Africa "never a control of the foundation's $1.S contract directs the bank to invest the withdr w (investments) would not be a (See EASTERN, page 12) · Teachers' strike vow .puts student posts in peril by Lori Edwards ."""'... ·- Eastern students may not be able to complete their student teaching in Charleston if local school teachers go on strike Thursday. Francis Summers, Eastern's director of student teaching, said arrangements will be made to move Eastern's student teachers to other schools-with some students having to travel as far as SO miles away-if the Charleston teachers strike. "With some student teachers we can wait a while, but some we will have to move almost instantly," . Summers said. "For people in immediate danger, a new school will have to be foundsoon .... . Negotiations between the Charleston Education Association and the Community District No. �· 1 School Board, which covers Charleston pu,l>lic The Subway Nightclub, Eastern's new dry pub, Spritzer" - named after Eastern President schools and Ashmore and Lerna elementary schools, opened its doors Saturday ni ht to about 200 Stanley Rives and his wife. (News photo by g are at a standstill. students. The engineers served patrons drinks, Michael Sitarz) The CEA is awaiting a response from the School such as "Stan · on the Rocks" and "Sandy board .concerning a· possible meeting time and place to continue negotiations. If a meeting is not schedul­ ed by Tuesday, the teachers will strike on Thursday, Subway rolls to 'packed' opening CEA chief negotiator Lew Hankenson said. Mkbelle Mueller by See relatededitorial on page 4 with names like "Mockarita" Students affected the greatest by the strike are The Subway, a new "dry and "Pina-not-a-colada," a Eastern's eight to ten special education majors, Sum­ pub" located in the Union base­ Area Head Bill Clark. "It pro­ selection of snack · foods and mers said. Special education student teachers are re­ · ment, opened Saturday night to vides a social location, at­ an non-alcoholicbeer. quired to complete 16 weeks of student teaching, non-alcoholic drinks, dancing mosphere where alcoholic Clark said the non-alcoholic which is almost the length of one semester. and an impressive crowd of beverages are not a require­ beer is being sold on a triali bas s The rest of the student teachers could wait a few about students. 200 ment." because "so many people drink weeks before they are placed in a situation where a "It (The Subway) is an alter­ The Subway boasts a menu of beer for the alcohol content new school must be found. But Summers said he will native to the bars," said Union nine non-alcoholic "mocktails" (SeeSUBWAY, page 9). look for new positions instantly because finding a place for some student teachers is tough. IfEastern .had a deaf education program, he said Arsonists strike in South Africa student teachers may have bad to travel 100 miles to find a school to complete their student teaching. As JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)-Ar­ guerrilla war for independence from South Africa, the situation stands, however, Summers believes the sonists torched two schools on Sunday, and in Cape according to polic-e in the territorial capital, Win- farthest a student will have to go is SO miles. Town five blacks killed a gasoline-bomber, police dhoek. An additional problem is created, Summers said, said. South Africa administered the former Oennan ter- because most of the student teachers are planning to Overall, however, South Africa was reported ritory under a Leque of Nations mandate after graduate after the fall semester. If a student cannot q ieter after a two-day police u roundup of 27 leading World War I, but has refused to surrender its man- find another school to teach at, his or her graduation supporters of the nation's main. anti-apartheid date place South-West Africa the plansmaybejeapordized. - and under United group. Nations trusteeship system. · Talks Charleston and the . between the teachers Oscar Mpetba, an ailing, 7'-year-old leader of that Police said the schools burned Sunday were in school board with a federal mediator present broke group, the United Democratic Front, beganserving a Middelburg, a coal-mining center '6 miles east of off Thursday mornina at 1:30 a.m. At that time, the five-year jail term Sunday on an earlier terrorism Johannesburg, and Umlazi, a blacktownship outside mediator indicated be could meet later Thursdayand conviction after Justice Minister Kobie Coetsee tbeNatal provinceportofDurban. then· not apin until Sept. 3. The board would not refusedto waive hissentence. In Cape Town's Khayelitslia township, five blacks meet Thursday and the teachers do not want to wait In neighboring South-West Africa, commonly purlued and killed a fellow black who hurled a fire until Sept. 3 to meet qain. known as Namibia, police arrested '2 people at a bomb into a home Saturday, police said. Five men · "Becausethe bOarddid not make useof mediation whi marked versary of a were policesaid a statement. meeting ch the 19th m;ani arrested, .in (seeTEACMBRS, • pqe 12) 1 Monday, August 26, 1985 . The Dally ustem News Associated Press , . Secretary nabbed in spy ring · State/Nadon/World BONN, West Germany (AP)-Federal pro- i;eports said she was not his personal secretary. secutors ann ounced Sunday ' night the arrest of a Die Welt said authorities ..grew suspicious of Computer stops space ·launch secretary suspected of being an undercover her while checking government employees who agent. It the first arrest in West Germany came directly to Bonn CAPE CANAVERAL, 1 Fla.-A , spacecraft computer was 9 s upon emigrating from burgeoning dpionage ·scandal to touch the ex- CorpmunistEast Germany� failure scrubbed Sunday's secopd attempt to .launch space ' shuttle 'Discovery and NASA decided to let two days pass �tive branch. . The spy scandal began on Aug. 6, when Sonja reported tha officials'expected to Lueneburg, beforetrying again. ' A newspaper , a longtime aide to Economics ' make three The delay reduces NASA's opportunities to catch and more espionage-r�lated arrests in the . Minister Martin BangemanQ., was reported miss- rapidly growing repair an $85 million satellite that is drifti11g lifelessly in a spy scandal. ing. low orbit. The woman secretary, who was not identified, Authorities said after opening an investigation

was, the fifth · "It goes withOut saying the team is pretty disappointed in government employee s�ught on that the aide was suspected of leading ari East spying charges in the i>ast month. spokesman German spy having been, denied two days in a row from getting this very A ring. . for the prosec .ambitious mission going," said Bob Sieck, launch opera­ utor's office, Alexander Prechtel, Officials began similar spy probes against Ur­ told The tions director of the Kennedy Space Center. , Associated Press that she was arrested sula Richter, a Bonn lobbyist, and an uniden� Saturday night: tified employee iri the Bonn Army Administra- A Monday start had been possible forthe satellite deli�ery · · · Prechtel declined to give' details. "We do not tion Offic 1 atid repair mission. But' Sieck and the . Johnson Space e . ·want to hinder the course' of further investiga- The bombshell came 'last week 'when Center's Arnold' Aldrich said the extra day needed to in­ · Hans . 'is tions," he tol the spect ducts between low and high pressure pumps on the d' A.SSociatedPress. Joachim Tiedge,' one o,f West Germany's top newspaper c shuttle's th�ee main engines to ensure that the plumbing has Die Welt and West German televi- ounter-espionage officials, defected to East sion said the secretary not been deformed in on-again, off-again cooling and war­ workedin the officeof the Berlin. .ming. president, Richard von Weizsacker. Television

- -�i?����?thP:�c�1�:! ��em, rorce - , Calif orruaserjalJsi lie[_ strikeS.again ' pilot crash-landed a twin-jet light bomber in South Korea, MISSION VIEJO, Calif. (AP)-A man dubb- tified. Olson said the �' an was not expected to killing the navigator and a {armer toiling in a rice paddy, of- ed ,the "Night Stalker" who is blamed for 14 live. ficials said Sunday. slayings shot a man and sexually attacked a The woman, also 29, was treated at Sad- . They said the pilot sought political asylum in Taiwan. woman Sunday, the 34th and 3Sth attacks at- dleback Hospital and released in good condition China said the plane strayed off course during a training tributed to the serial killer, police said. early Sunday, said nursing supervisor Janet Pi- rpission and made an emergency landing. It asked. for return "We do believe it i s the work of the 'Night tione. of . the plane and three-man crew, including the man who Stalker,"' said Orange County sherifrs Lt. The "Night Stalker" strikes in suburban died. Richard Olson. homes at night, entering through unlocked win- The first Chinese account qtme Sudnay evening,over of- A woman called . at 2:40 a.m. to say her dows or open sliding glass doors. He has been ficial Peking television, a full day after the incident took ' · boyfriend had been shot by a man in their Mis- , linked to slayings from southern California to place. . sion Viejo home, SS miles southeast of Los San Francisco, 600 miles away. China and South Korea have no diplomatic relations, but Angeles, Olson said. Survivors ·of the killer's attacks have described state..: South Korean television said the government was T m a bullet he an suffered wound to the head him as having curly black· hair and badly stained in contact with Chinese authorities in a third country. Hong and the woman was sexually attacked; Olson and gapped teeth. Kong was generally assumed,to be _the meeting place. said. Detective Frank Salerno of the Los Angeles The Defense Ministry said. the pilot, Xiao Tienyen, 33, ' The shooting victim, William Carns, 29, was County Sheriff's Department, which is suffered a fractured spine, but the plane's third crewman, in extremely critical condition after surgery at spearheading the "Night Stalker" investigation, . radio operator Liu Shuyi, 37, was unhurt and wanted to Mission Community Hospital, according to a joined Orange County authorities at the home return to China. nursing supervisor wtio asked not to be iden- but declined comment on the case. Moslems violate Syrian truce 1BEIRUT, Lebanon-Moslems shelled Christian areas Sunday in a new violation of a Syrian-brokered truce d<:sign- Dotson tells of conversion 8tteffipt ed to st9p random bQmbardment.. of -resident-ial -areas. - . - CHICAGO - (AP)-Gary Dotson ·· says the She-laid a Bible in my lap and started quoting 1 - - Sniper fire kept all gates closed alon the Green Line, which woman he ,was convicted of raping, Cathleen verses on why she came forward ,and turned her splits Beirut into Christian and Moslem sectors. Crowell Webb, "laid a Bible in my lap" and faith to God and asked how I would feel if I did Police said 16 motorists remained missing after rival tried to convert him to Christian fundamentalism the same, '' Dotson is quoted as saying. Christian and Mosl�m militias grabbed them Saturday while when they met after she recanted her rape .ac- Dotson, 28, was released in April after six they were trying to drive across the Green Line. Other kid- cusation, according to Playboy Mag ne's Pc- years in prison when Gov. James R. Thompson · · azi nap victims were released in a sW'ap hours later.. • o i u . 25- to SO-year sentence for a rape t �r ss e . commuted his The total kidnapped was unknown. The tit-for-tat abduc- The conversion attempt occurred when Dotson Mrs.'Webb now says never occurred. tions caused the arnty on Saturday to close the sole gateway and Mrs. Webb met in a· New York hotel �oom Mrs. Webb, 23, now lives in New Hampshire still open across the 3-rilileline, from six crossing points. .· May 14 before appearing the next day on televi- with her husband and two .children. She said she Police said two artillery barrages coastal townships on 'sion network news shows, according to the arti- came forward to tell the t'ruthand exonerate Dot­ the Christian heartland north of Beirut. They said 17 shells cle by Chicago writers. Edwin and Elizabeth · son because of her conversion to fundamentalist

crashed in pinewoods above the port city of Jounieh, 12 Black. · · Christianity,- which stresses strict, literal inter- . miles north of the capital. "The firstthing she did was try to convert me. pretation of the Bible. · ,..:;...;..;...;..;.�--..;..;------�, w�� C�ffleitP ---. Jhe Daily Eastern Ne\vs is.published daily, Monday through Friday. in Charleston. Illinois r;.-.��:tr · - ;�I' during ,the ,fall and spring semester and twice we�ly during the summer term. except durirtg �nday, U' g. 26 �;t��° ' �yn_N_e_w_S_ · school ' acations or examinations. by the students of Eastern Illinois. University. Subscription M A v . price: $15 per semester: $5 for summer only, $28 for all year. The Daily Eastern News is a ' niember of the"Associated Press, which is entitled to exclusive use of all articles appearing in _ this paper. The editorials on Page 4 represent the majority view of the editorial board: all other LI v E. ·eA. ·N D opinion pieces are.signed. Phone581-2812. The Daily Eastern News editorial and business of· fices are located in the Nortfl Gym of theBuzzardBuilding. Eastern Illinois University. Second

class postage paid at Charleston. IL 61920 USPS002250 Printed· by Eastern Illinois Univer· _ . , sity. Cha;leston. IL 61920 PLAYING s�12 PM NEWS STAFF Tuesday, Aug. 2·7 Editor in chief . Dave McKinney Photo editor Michael Sitarz News editor . Ke_vin McDermott Sports editor Jeff long Associate news editor Lori.Edwards Asst. sports �ditor . Dan Verdun Comedian: Tim Cavanagh Managing editor . · Douglas Backstrom Verge editor Lisa Albarran . Editorial page editor Lisa Green Asst. Verge editor Michelle Mueller Act./sup. editor .. . Pamela Lill Advertising manager Tracy Poland SHOWTIMES 8:·30 & 9:45 PM Asst. ac!lsup ed.. , . Angela Paoli Asst. advertising manager . Kathy Keyth The Subway will be closing . i. · Administration ed. Julie Cambria-Brechbill Sales manager . Christy Clark Campus editor . . ... Amy Zurawski Promotions manager . Kelly Griffin � at 11 :00 PM on Tuesday ··�J o ' Art director : . Becky Michaels StudentBusiness manager Wendy Crickman � City editor. . .. . Jim Allen Editorial adviser . . Mike Cordts . Government editor Julie Zook Publications adviser David Reed .=::J I. NIGHT STAFF am •University' Un . ion ��i;f •Eastern Illinois Unt.iiversity.:::.:J Night editor , ..., .•., , , , , Dave McKinney Photo editor , , , , , , . , , , , .. , Michael Sitarz Assistant ... .., , , , . , , , . , .. Loli Edwards Copy desk, , , . , . , , , , , .. , Terry Gaschler, Sports editor, ... ,., ... ,,.,,, ,Jeff long Jim Allen, Lisa Green. Kevin McDermott Shop The Daily Eastern News classifieds! The Daliy Eastern News Monday, August 26, 1985 3 Applicants screened Crews finish New post to be filled by Labor Day last-minute by Lori Edwards University officials began interview­ ing candidates Thursday for an assis­ projects tant to the provost foracademic plann- ' Who was it that said a good ing and development, a new position coat of paint will hide anything? . created by Edgar Schick, vice president That aside, several Eastern foracademic affairs. maintenance crews took to some Schick said the position will require touch-up work during the someone with experience· in academic weekend. Painters, below, finish proposal writing, academic planning the job in Pemberton Hall before . and budgetary management. A students arrive. But painting was master's degree is preferred, he said. not only done inside. An Eastern According to Schick, the physical plant worker, left, paints resposibilities of the position will in­ the lines on the Marching Blue's �lude finding public and private fund practice field. (News photos by sources for faculty retraining.and need­ Michael Sitarz) ed academic equipment. It will be the assistant's responsibility to create the means to achieve some of the univer­ sity's goals. The new assistant will also be in· charge of working on academic reviews and will be involved in the area of budget planning and management. · Cynthia Nichols However, Schick has said the assis­ tant's most important function will be Moore and Linda Calendrillo. Nichols interacting with Eastern's colleagues in and Hoffstrand have already been in­ Springfield and keeping close contact . terviewed by the search committee.

with the .Board of Governor's schools · Moore and Calendrillo will be inter­ in the state. viewed Monday and Tuesday respec­ He added that during his first year as tively. VPAA he has become aware that the Nichols, a resident of Champaign, new position was needed. Ill., received her bachefor's and A five-member search committee, master's degrees at Eastern in 1974 and chaired by Walter Lowell, dean of 1975, with a concentration in history health, physical education and recrea­ and journalism. She is presently work­ tion, has narrowed a field of ten can­ ing on her doctorate at the University didates to four. of Illinois. Schick said he hopes one of the can­ Nichols said she has served as.coor­ didates will be selected and in the office dinator and editor of a self-study at ' by "the day after Labor Day,'' Sept. Lake· Laqd iri. Maoon. "'She ' 4. -CQllege The assistant's salary is $24,000 per · has also worked as a grant writer for year. the National Science Foundation,. Although a new person is being hired Nichols said her previous work ex­ for the position, he said it will not in­ perience would aid in the reporting she crease the number of personnel in would do to the Board of Governors academic affairs. ·and the type of writing required. Schick's senior administrative "I feel I know Eastern very well, secretary, Mary McElwee Adams; is even though I don't know as many of retiring at the end of August. Adams the facultyas before,'' Nichols said. secretarial assignments are being Nichols said she believed she was reallocated to other secretaries and qualified to work with un1versity per­ some of her. salary is being used for the sonnel because, "diplomacy is the key Issue largest in 70 years. new position, Schick said. here. It's always been a trick situation, Veteran students here at Eastern. 1985 Summer EasternNews. The final four candidates are Cyn­ but I've emerged unscathed."· may notice something a little more col­ These supplements are designed to thia Nichols, Judy Hoffstrand, Linda orful than usual in· today's give new students a taste of campus Daily· Eastern News. They may also notice life, to remind older students of why something a little heavier about it. they came back and to give everyone a GET OUT OF THE RUT In fact, only our incoming freshmen complete, insightful look at everything could have missed the fact that today's Eastern has to offer. AND D ISCOV R- edition of the News is the biggest, most . So where did all these bright colors � TED ' colorful and-we hope-the best ever. come from? Well, the important part is s (entertainment center) With a total of four sections and 60 they are here to stay. pages, today's issue of the News the The News now has full four-color r------�.!!t0�------1��!!..�------biggest in the newspaper's 70-year capability, following the installation of OPEN TONITE history. Aside from the latest news in a new press unit over the summer. · our regular section, we have included But the changes are not as important I' MONDAY three Back to School sections-'-an in­ as what has stayed the same: Your troductory supplement and entertain- . campus newspaper is still among the Drink Specials ment and sports supplements-which very best in the nation. 2 • Old Style were originally printed as part of the Enjoy. - 5�or Old Mil Lightning strikes radio transmitter 7 5� Screwdrivers . 1 o : 25$ Hot Dogs & Popcorn by Pam Lill tower is properlygrounded. z The station transmitter for WEIU- Burn marks on the transmitter show j"Whiskey Jack" lead singer I FM was· damaged . by lightning which that the lightning came through electric . · (Stacy DotyJ has recorded struck electric lines Wednesday. lines, Beabout said, adding that ''raw in Nashville! . ''Lightning came in somehow on the electricity is very unpredictable.'' t' electric lines, " John Beabout, Exactly how much damage wasin­ 'Get in FREE 8-1 0w/coupon.... Radio/Television Center director, curred will not be know.n until power is said. fully restored in the Buzzard Building,

However, Beabout, who was away · which houses the radio station. Electri­ vacation at the time of the incident, cians have been replacing the old elec­ on Looking for something you lost? said a preliminary inspection of the tric system in the building and should * * damage showed that lightning did not be finjshed Tuesday. . come through the tower, but through The station was scheduled to go on Lost/Found ads run FREE for three days · electric lines. ' the air Wednesday and may still go on, "Lightning rods have nothing to do damage) is minor," Beabout Ca/1581-2814 "if it (the · with' it," Beabout said, adding that the said. * Forlnformation, * Yeurturn will be able to be proud of your Charleston has been termed the "friendly city." That tradition Welcome back accomplishment,· proud of the Opinion Editor: university, and proud of the com­ will continue and is evident in her As mayor of Charleston it is a munity that you lived and par­ people. We recognize the special pleasure to extend a warm ticipated in. needs of the university and in­ welcome to the new students at­ We are aH, as citizens, proud of tend to facilitate student participa­ tending Eastern Illinois University. Charleston, it's rich heritage and tion into our democratic decision To the returning students, bright future. This administration making process. welcome back! And I hope the fully intends to lead and shape On behalf of all the citizens of summer didn't pass too quickly the future of Charleston. We Charleston, welcome to our com­ for you. want Charleston to be recognized munity . . . your community. I Many of you have accomplish- . as the best city· of its size in Il­ look forward to meeting and Editorials represent ed personal goals and have linois. We welcome and en­ working with many of you. And I - traveled far to attend and further courage citizen participation and wish you the best of luck in your majority opinion · the your education here. Upon com­ have developed a sincare and academic endeavors. of the editorial board pletion of your degree you may warm relationship between city very well be filled with a sense of and university, between long-time Murray R. Choate pride, and for good reason. You resident and student. Charleston mayor 0the Dally Eastern News Monday,August26, 1985 Dry nightclub faces imminent survival game

To call Eastern's self-proclaimed "dry pub" a success based on Its first night would be premature. But with Saturday night's relatively large ,_ ...... turnout-some 200 people-the Subway \ \ Nightclub may have a future despite what I '

\ikely wi\\ be some pretty stiff competition '\ from town �s. \ \ ·� : Edltorlal Located 1n space also used by Pickles, \� the pub has the potential to pump profits in­ �!_SI#' to the Union from a space that traditionally has not been a great money maker. ECCIVC�IY The concept stems from a proposal from Union Area Head Bill Clark that later was en­ INT£RNAT/()NAL ·LESSON dorsed by most of Eastern's administrators, E"CONOMICS 41=-1.: including President Stanley Rives. llt:XJ lo Acc€t.£R..111E 1N£V1rABt.£" /i'"'l/ENIS tlV As Clark said Saturday night, the pub is in­ j)A MA6t IJ/(A.JAJ tended to give students an alternative to PDR.£16N COUNTR.leS ANT) YtJl.ltZ. drinking alcohol, which has become t:CONOMY synonomous with collegiate socializing. Sl�ULIAN•OCJ.il.V. But to survive, ·the pub faces no easy chore. It is pitted against Charleston's col­ legiate institutions-the bars. While at this Your views have a place on.Page 4 point, It is too early to tell if the pub will make Welcome to Page 4, the editorial/opinion page, much of a dent on the wet pubs' business, it and the first issue of The Dally Eastern News. is no secret that students are the bars' most Page 4 offers commentary in several types of opi­ nion pieces. No news stories are presented on this News notes: loyal clientele. page. Whether the pub, which is partially funded Editorials, labeled as such, represent the majority Lisa Green through student f�s. lasts the year will ac­ opinion of the editorial board. Board members are the curately measure if students can have a editor in chief; managing editor; news editeir; good time without alcohol. We think it is associate news editor; editorial page editor; and two associated with the News. Faculty members have possible. rotating staff editQl'S may also carry a vote. The often contributed Viewpoints on controversies, such board also receives input from editorial writers. as one column this spring taking issue with a pro­ The pub is not a self-righteous attempt to Editorials, most of which relate to campus issues, posal to create an academic senate and eliminate the condemn students who party with tllcohol. offer a final opinion, but should present all the Faculty Senate and Council on Academic Affairs. Nor should students who frequent the pub arguments. . Personal files and Behind the Byline columns are be dubbed self-righteous. Although editorials are known as the core of most written by staff members. The latter, is an off the In the project's early stages, those involv­ newspaper opinion pages, our Page 4 has another beat type of approach on issues covered by a primary function - and that is to present the views of ed in the planning stressed that they reporter or editor. others. Letters to the editor from our readership are News notes are staff member's opinion about Daily weren't trying to tell students not to drink. the most common. All letters, though, must be sign­ Eastern News operations; Cross views are opinion The idea was just to provide a non-alcoholic ed and include a phone number of the author for pieces run with permission from other college option but with an environment similar to the verification purp0ses. Unsigned letters will be newspapers. Cartoons also offer an opinion on bars. aiscarded. issues and will often complement the editorials. The old sayin�. "nothing ventured, Occasionally, with ongoing controversies, the The News welcomes each type of opinion pieces. News receives dozens of letters on a single issue. Your input determine Page 4's diversity. nothing gained," may describe this latest can Many of the opinions become redundant even Although some letters 11fay be edited for length or approach. Students definitely don't need to though the authors vary. At that point, to allow space other reasons, the News will strive to present as be saddled with supporting a boondoggle. for other views, we will not continue running letters many views as possible. But if given a chance, this dry pub may pro­ addressing such issues. -Lisa Green is editorial page editor for The Daily ve the idea is not all wet. Viewpoints are opinion columns from people not Eastern News. Tiie Monday, August Dally Eastern News 26, 1 985 5

Reagan tax Proposed tax increases draw fire controversY VPAF uncertain how utility tax will affect Eastern by Jim Allen vice charges rather than on individual 1. Charleston's city council, attempting phone calls. However, Charleston Motor Inn . to avoid running into a deficit by the And while students living in manager Letty Murnin protested the heats up middle of 1986, is working to tack new residence halls do not pay these basic council's move, saying tlte tax would taxes on utility bills. service charges, the tax will still be add- bring in almost twice the $20,000 to WASHINGTON (AP)-Presi­ Meanwhile, another proposal to in­ ed to their bills, according to a council $30,000 which the council estimated it dent Reagan is vowing to "pull crease Charleston tourism through new summary of the tax proposal. would generate. out all the stops" for passage of motel taxes is drawing fire from local Gas and electricity taxes, however, Council member Bruce Scism his tax overhaul plan when he and 'motel and hotel owners. will be based on individual usage, tax- countered that the city was not looking Congress return from their sum­ Proposals to levy five percent taxes ing the entire bill by five percent. The for "an excessive tax, " and that if the mer vacations. on telephone, natural gas, electricity council's summary of the tax effect revenues were higher than expected, Depending on who you talk to, and water services were placed on file placed the average residential monthly the council would consider reducing enactment of that plan could for public inspection after unanimous gas bill at $54 and electricity at $S7 the tax to by one or two percentage mean a blessing for Illinois, little approval by the council at its Aug. 20 with tax on both totaling SS.SS moo- points. if any change, or the end of the meeting. thly. Murnin was unavailable for com-

state as we know it. In explaining the utility taxes, As far as students' bills being af- ment · after the meeting, but did "It's a good plan for Illinois," Charleston Mayor Murray R. Choate fected, Finance Commissioner John estimate before leaving that up to 30 insists Robert Mandeville, director said the city faces the possibility of Winnett said, "That was brought up. percent of the Inn's business is from ·of Governor Thompson's budget running into the red by the late spring There's about no way of getting Eastern alumni, parents ;ind other office. of 1986. A summary of the utility taxes around that-that's the way it is. It business related to the university. In contrast, some education, prepared by the council estimated that would be a burden on them." College Inn Motel manager . Kirit government, labor and business the new taxes will generate an addi­ At the council's Aug. 6 meeting, Patel said a problem with the tax is that groups have been spending their tional $350,000to $455,000annually. Choate said the budgets had been cut he has already booked and quoted summer sounding alarms. Op­ Verna Armstrong, Eastern's vice to the "bare bones" after the council prices for at least 2S rooms for dates ponents say Reagan's vision of a president for administration and approved lopping $112,600 and after the tax will take effect, meaning fairer tax code could wipe out finance, said university officials are $78,000 off the Fiscal Year 198S-86 the motel would have to swallow the some state and local government still not sure what effect the proposed and FY 1986-87 budgets respectively. loss. services and undermine already utility tax would have on Eastern's The utility taxes were introduced at "I am going to discuss this with the sagging businesses ·in older, in­ budget. the next meeting on Aug. 20, with the owners," Patel said. "They're really dustrial states such as Illinois. "We haven't had a chance to council again Citing the possibility of upset about it-we're not charging that The president has backed a analyze the effect of the taxes' on the Charleston running into a deficit if tax much for the rooms anyway. Why are "revenue neutral" reform ap­ budgets,'' Armstrong said. ''Anything revenues were not increased. they doing this?" proach, meaning it would not that's an added expense means we'll Also on public file is a five percent However, Winnett said the council raise or lower total tax intake. A have to reduce the budget tax on hotel and motel rooms-dubbed thought local hotel management would recent congressional report, somewhere-there is no surplus." the "tourism tax"-which was in- be supportive of the tax. however, said Reagan's plan Armstrong added that analysis of troduced at the council's Aug. 6 Winnett said in promoting tourism, would cause a $25.1 billion the proposed tax's effect on Eastern's meeting. the revenues would go toward revenue loss from 1986 through budgets will be completed by Wednes­ Council memberssaid revenues from ''Charleston Days,'' Eastern's 1990 and administration officials day. the tourism tax would not go directly Homecoming, Parents Day and quickly pledged to make ad­ The tax for individual phone into the city treasury but instead to possibly "having a downtown justments in the document. customers will be at least $1.25 mon­ "promoting Charleston tourism." If cookout."

thly, based on the basic monthly ser- approved; the taxwill take effect Sept. ..

. DRINK $1°° COVER SPE ·� CIALS

p . J . AND THE�E�RR�O�R---ISTS WEDNESD THURSDAY TUESDAY AY CLA STU and Y'S 'ROMANS WELCOME .BACK THE MODELS BIGGER AND BETTER BASH than ever! wfth SISTER KATE FRIDAY NIGHT TURNING CURIO.US Monday, August The Dally Eas 6 . 26, 1 985 tern News

The Daily Eastern News needs p hotographers

If you're in terested in joining _ the award-winning News photo -team, attend a meeting at 6 p.m. Monday in the N�ws office, Buzzard North Gym.

Questions? Call photo editor Michael Sitarz at 581 -281 6

Warbler is stil I ava19ila85ble

WHAT: Year�ook Pick-up

Mon. - Fri., 8:30 -4:30 WHEN: pm

WHERE: The Eastern News Office Buzzard Building N. Gym

HOW: Just bring your student ID

HOW MUCH:

Full time 2 semesters ....· � ....•...... FR EE

Full time 1 semester & summer ...... $2.50

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No fill time credit,. students ...... $1 0.00

Faculty, non-students, offices ...... $1 2.00

Get you r copy TODAY. The Dally Eutern News Monday, August 26, l 985 7 Getting off to a great start: It's all right h9re Central re S ...... _ ...... 11 :SS a.m. Pick-up hours longer In addition, if a student plans to gistration T ...... 12:30 p.m. drop or add several classes, Sandefer t begins Monday U-V ...... •..... l:OS p.m. by LoriEdwards said he student should wait until he W-Z ...... 1:40 p.m. Textbook Library hours will be ex­ has a firm schedule to pick up his by Amy Zunwski tended Mond11y through Friday to help books. Students who have not preregistered Get card , books . students get through the book lines He added that if students add for fall semester classes may register Students who preregistered for fall quickly. classes, add slips are required to obtaiit during central registration Monday semester classes may pick up t)leir paid Textbook Library Director Richard books for the class. and Tuesday. fee cards and official class schedules in Sandefer said the library, located at the Students may report for registration Lantz Gym Monday and Tuesday in south end of Pemberton Hall, will be Orientation offered at their designated times and before 3 alphabetical order. · open Monday and Tuesday from 8 Orientation for freshmen and p.m. To register, students need to br­ The schedule for Monday is: a.m. to S p.m. transfer students who have not their official registration permits A-C...... 8:3 0 to 10:30 a.m. Hours for Wednesday and Thursday preregistered for fall semester will. be ing ' that they received in the mail at the D-F ...... lO to 11:30 a.m. are 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. The textbook held M•.Jnday and Tuesday, a registra-

time of application, G-K ...... 11:30 to 1 p.m. library will be open from8 a.m. to 4:30 tion official said Friday. The registration schedule by the first L-M ...... 1-3 p.m. p.m. on Friday. Assistant Registration Director Dave letter of the student's last name is as The schedule for Tuesday is: Students will also be able to pick up Sardella said non-preregistered follows: N-Q ...., ...... 8:3 0 to 10 a.m. textbooks during the lunch hour students should attend the new student R-S ...... 10 to 11:30 a.m. because workers will remain in the orientation to receive necessary infor­ Monday T-Z ...... 11:30 to 1 p.m. building, Sandefer said. mation and class schedules. A ...... 9a .m. ' 9 All ...... : .. 1-3 p.m. He added that students who go Students whose last name begin B ...... - .. :3S a.m. s Assistant Registration Director Dave central registration only need with A through should attend 8 a.m. C ...... 10:10 a.m. through K Sardella said students are reminded to to present the yellow schedule given to Monday, and those with last names D ...... 10:4S a.m. use only the main enterance of the gym them when they register. beginning with L through should at­ E-F ...... 11:2 0 a.m. Z when they pick up their schedules. Students who have unclear records tend 8 a.m. Tuesday. G ...... ll:SS a.m. He added the students must bring with the library because of failure to Sardella said students should bring H ...... 12:30 p.m. their ID card with them to have them return books must go to the unclear their registration permits with them, as 1-J. ...•••.....•.....•. 1 :OS p.m.

...... p.m. properly validated and to receive their counter in the library to pay fines or well as their checkbooks, as they will K ...... 1:40 Tuesday , schedules. take care of their records before they be charged for tuition and other fees at

· ...... 9a.m. After students receive their will be allowed to get their books. this time. L .. .. .

. . . schedules, Sardella said, they may pick Sandefer said textbook fines have in­ ''The purpose of the orientation is ...... a.m. M ...... 9:3S to ...... lO a.m. up their textbooks at the Textbook creased this year from $1 per book for students to get some sea legs," N-0 ...... lO:

. . . . . a.m. Library located at the south end of $2 per book. The maximum fine has in­ Sardella said. . :4S P-Q ...... 10 ...... 11:20 a.m . Pemberton Hall. creased from $S to $10. R ......

Religious Studies (Loyola University Extension Course FALL COURSE: Introduction to the Old Testi ment CLASSES: Monday and Wednesday 7:00-7:50 p.m. : Tuesday and Thursday 8:00-8:50 a.m. CREDITS: 2-Granted by Loyola and transferred to E.1.U. as elective credits, TUITION: $45 per course for students $45 for auditing l nonstudents : $65 per course. Registration: Mo n Tues . Wed .. August 26th, 27th. 28th: 9:00-1 1 :00 am 1n Newman House (909 Lincoln) For more info. or l registration by P.hone, CALL 345-7779

From Eastern Illinois University and Pay your college education PXPt .Qualify for your loan by meeting Woodfield Mall • Oakbrook Mall IGLP requirements • Old Orchard Mall Pay only interest (tur first Northbrook Court .• 8"'•· time applicants> Chicago Union Station .Begin making payments 6 months after graduation

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We can you. Unive rsity Union Box Office help (21 7) 581 -5122 � or Cales�,� County (217) 581 -361 6 ral � Bl

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Well, um, we kind of got our place settings con.fused by ingredients for their pizza$_. Manager Dave Eudson DoualaBackstrom For more restaurants,, see page 11 of the Back·to­ ·<>ops! said students can order mushrooms, olives, onions, School edition During the summer, The Summer Eastern Ne ws . ham: Hrger and bacon bits for their pizzas. printed a story· listing local restaurants' meals, pork for $3.85 and sweet and sour chicken for $4.05. Monical's has recently added something · new-a specials and business hours. Phung added that the Hong Kong House is open Off-Truck Special. Students no longer have to place Unfortunately, some eateries were inadvertently from 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday an order to get a pizza. If a Monical's Pizza truck is left out of the original story. And so, in the interest and 11 a.m.-11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. seen on the street, students can flag it down and pur­ of Charleston's restaurants-and our readers, ap-> If students crave steaks, they can satisfy that crav­ chase a large pizza for$6.95 . petites-we'd like to correct that oversight here. ing at Sirloin Stockade, at 801 W. Lincoln. In addition, students can purchase a 12-inch, 14- Students who enjoy Chinese cuisine may want to Sirloin Stockade offers a sizzling sirloin special on inch or 16-incb thin crust pizza. Or they can purchase stop in at the New Beijin restaurant, on West Route Tuesday for$3 .99, manager Vernon Millsap said. He a 12- or IS-inch thick crust pizza, Eudson said. He that the same plate isoffered daily for $4.0S . added that their pizza price ranges from $5-$14 16, and the Hong Kong House, on 1505 18th St. added · The New Beijin restaurant offers a luncheon and In addition, a lunch special is offered daily except depending on what is requested on the pizza. dinner buffet. Beijin manager Grace Chang said the Sunday, Millsap said . The special, for $1.99, varies Students can finda number of beef or turkey sand­ luncheon buffet, which begins at 1 :30 p.m., and the , but some of the meals include Steak 'n Stuff, chicken wiches offered at Wrangler Roast Beef located on

dinner buffet both offer a full menu of delectable friedsteak , fishplatter and chop steak. 703 W. Lincoln. _ · Chinese and Americanfoo ds. Millsap said the hours are 11 a.m.-9 p.m. daily ·ex­ Manager Roger Ott said students can purchase a Chang said foods offered include shrimp fried rice, cept Friday and Saturday with their hours being 11 Pike's Club for $1.76. He said the sandwich \las egg rolls, beef with broccoli, Chinese vegetables, a.m.-10 p.m. turkey or roast beef with swiss cheese. twice cooked pork and crab legs. Charleston also has its share of pizza houses .. Also, Ott said their most popular sandwiuch is the She said the luncheon is $3.90 and the dinner is Pagliai's, on 1600 Lincoln, has a number of ingre­ beef and cheese which can be purchased for $1.59. $6.9S. Chang added that the restaurant is open from dients to offer and their prices range from $S to $16.· Wrangler Roast Beef's is open 24 . hours with 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. "We blend our own cheese and grind our own breakfast served from 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Those who are not interested in the restaurant sausage," ma�ager Paul Pagliai said. He added that Other eateries are the Domino's Pizza, at 611 scene but want to take their Chinese food home can their ingredients include sausage, mushroom, pep­ Seventh St., Little Mexico, at 513 Seventh St., and venture over to the Hong Kong House. peroni and anchovi. the Nighthawk at 416 Seventh St .. Lan Phung, Hong Kong House manager, said the Pagliai's hours are 4 p.m.-1 a.m. daily except Fri­ Fast-food restaurants on Lincoln Avenue include restuarant offers a fu ll men'u of Chinese food only. day and Saturday, when the hours are 4 p.m.-2 a.m. McDonalds, Wendys, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Piz­ Some of the foods offered include sweet and sour Monical's Pizza, 909 18th St., also has a variety of za Hut, Hardees, and Long John Silvers.

__fr om page 1 rather than the taste." Funding for the pub will come partly from profits and the remainder from the Apportionment Board, Clark said. The pub is intended to be self­ supporting except for the cost of enter­ tainment, Clark said� noting that the money for bands and other entertain­ ment will "hopefully" come from AB. "I'm pretty sure that the . thing will '.be a success and that the UB (Universi- ty Board) and the AB wili want to do ft," he added. , Clark said he was happy with the tl,Qblber of people who attended Satur­ ifiy's grand opening. "It couldn't be 6.tner. We've been packed.'' . eral students also said they were rised at the large turnout. i'�There's a lot more people here than expected,'' said freshman Dawn '.aleszonia. · Sophomore Debbie Strum said she thinks the Subway's dam;efloor will be n ilirect competition with that of E.L. JfJckers, 1405 Four�h St. "I think it's t-exactly what the university etded," she said. "I'm impressed." Senior Roy Pearson echoed Strum' s port of the new establishment. "It's �t to be here without drinking,'' he jaid. "Everyone's out there dancing talking and having a good time. don't need.to drink to have fun." �'The great thing about it," said 'or Sherrie Downs, "is that you do et have a morning headache after­ dds, but you still have a good time." Downs added that the bar at­ phere and music "makes you feel owdyanyway .'' Getdown to bu siness faster._, Withthe BA-35. If there's one thing business calculations, amortizations A powerfu l combination. • students have always needed, and balloon payments. Think business. With this is it: an affordable, bt.isi- The BA-35 means you the BA-35 Stude\ ness-oriented calculator. spend less time calculating, Business Analyst. '.Ji:. The Te xas Instruments and more time learning. One V BA-35, the Student Business keystroke takes the place Analyst. of many. EXAS Its built-in business The calculator is just part T . formulas let you perform of the package. Yo u also get INSTCreatingRU usefulME proNTductsS complicated finance, a book th.at follows most and services for you. accounting and statistical business courses: the Business functions - the ones that Analyst Guidebook. Business usually require a lot of time. professors help·ed us write it; and a stack of reference books, to help you get the most out · like present and future value · of calculator and classroam. 10 'Monday, August 26, 1 985 The Dally Eastern News -- -· -- . - - - - - * ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS * Because Dr. Jimmie Franklin will be leaving the University at the end of the year, your last chance to enroll in his course, YOUR AD HISTORY 3065-Hlstory of the South will be during fall semester. The class will be taught at 1 2:30 Tuesdays and Thursdays. could be in this spot. Because this course has not previously been scheduled , it will be necessary to sign up for it during Registration Week, Ca/1 581-2812 for more information August 26 through 30. Priority enrollment may be made through the Histo,.YDepartm ent in Coleman Hall 224 .

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WOMEN'SHISTORY-IN STRUCTOR & SCHEDULE CHANGE Dr. Wendy Hamand will be joining the History staff this fall Get a safe tan and will be teaching Women and Feminism in the United States during the fall semester. The course, History 3903, · in just 7 sessions Monday, Wednesday and has been rescheduled to 1 p.m. · Friday. _ * * Dr. Hamand was the first doctoral candidate at the University Fall Special of Illinois to choose the history of American women as one of SM Reg lar ed .. her fields of specialization. u B 7 for , ... ,,.. $35 .00 Since this course has been rescheduled, all students will Su er'Bed - 7 for P A � p have to enroll for it during Registration Week, August 26 T A N s $38.00 through 30. Come to the His tory Department at Coleman Hall 224 for more information and advanced signup. 618 W. Lincoln - West Park Plaza - 345-9111

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Notice to all 1985-86 college students The Charleston N at i o nal Bank is now accepting applications u nder the Illinois Student Loan Program (low interest-deferred payment)

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The Charleston National Bank is serving Charleston's college community through the addition of Myron at the Lincoln Street Facility across from Old Main

�on national bank · FDIC...... Downtown · SIXTH la MONROE I CHARLESTON, ILLINOIS 61920 I �17) 345·2 1 01 •-• •••c Lincoln Ave. • SIXTH la LI NCOLN I CHARLESTON, ILLINOIS 61920 I (21 7) 345·2 10.l 11. Monday, August 26, 1 985 The D.ally Eastern News

Eastern.______:.______;.__ _from page 1 cameup" duringthe board's review. "some type of action" on the founda­ dum askin8that the foundation divest The bank earned more than But English instructor Michael tion�s South African investments. He its holdings in South Africamay be cir- $166,000 on the foundation's total in­ Loudon, a figurehead in what appears added that the Faculty Senate has culated shortly after the forum. . vestments. Thornburgh said he does to be a growing divestiture movement scheduled an Oct. 11 meeting to ad­ Thornburgh said foundation board not know the number of companies or at Eastern, said he still believes the dress the apartheid issue. members were • 'vecy pleased with the the amount of money the foundation foundation should remove its funds Terry Perkins; a Faculty Sena�e returns" on all the investments made has invested in companies in South from the U.S. companies in South member who is heading up the forulJl, by Harris as they are. Africa. Africa. said the· particulars of the forum have. "They (the foundation board) could In May, the foundation had approx- ''I think we should request that Har­ not been set yet. have gone to another financial in- imately $182,000 invested in apartheid ris withdraw investments in South "The question of divestiture will be stitution," Thornburgh said. "But it South Africa. It represented 11.8 per­ Africa," Loudon said. "We should discussed, and both sides of the issue was a unanimous decision to renew the cent of the foundations $1.5 million reinvest in companies that aren't in will be addressed," Perkins said. contract. Harris is very· conservative, · portfolio investment. South Africaif they can show a greater He added a campus-wide referen- solid and in good financialshap e." profit or the same. It's easy for Harris to move fundsarou nd, and it should be  explored. "The Sullivan Principle has not had a great deal of effect on the govern­ ment in South Africa," Loudon add­ ed. Loudon went to the Faculty Senate last spring and asked them to take TUESDAY, AUG. 27 Teachers '_from page 1 2 p.m. LIBRARY QUAD the next day and did not issue a counterproposal, we issued an intent to Rain Location: Grand Ballroom strike," Hankenson said. "Our posi­ Dynamic entertainer, Gene Cot­ tion is that they're the ones who walk­ ed away from the table. They refused ton, is known for his hits to come back Thursday morning when "Before My Heart Fin ds Out" the mediator said he could be there." The strike notice was received by the and the duet, "You're A P art Of Illinois Educational Labor Rel�tions Me, " with Kim Carnes. Board on Friday. The teachers must wait five days after the day following the receipt of the letter to strike. SPECIAL EVEN TS The CEA wants the board to meet with or without a mediator by Tues­ day. Without progress toward a settle­ ment, Hankenson said, the teachers will strike. However, the board has adopted the position that talks should continue on­ ly with a mediator present. Superintendent Bill Hill said both sides agreed to mediation because they had problems coming together before and both sides admitted they were at a standstill. "We are still at an impasse, and the most successful talks are ones with the mediator," 'Hill said. He gave no in­ dication that the board would meet without a me

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FA LL, 1985

Health Ed. . . 3560 'Women 's Health ' •Dl5C JOCKEY· 1200 MWF- Woods •r:Y\NCING• •BANDS• History ... .. 3903 •MOVIEB• •VIDEO """17\F£5• 'Women & Feminism' •COMEDIA�5 · •OPEN SU\GE • MWF-Hamand 1300 •SPEC ll\L :jtdlued11 EVENT-5 - Home Ee. . .. 2831 'Women in Society' 1500 MWF.:._ Coyle Pol. Sci. . . . . 3903 'Public Policy/Sexes' 1400 MWF-Bonnicksen Speech .... 3903 'Rhetoric of Women' 1100 MWF-Norberg Monday, August

PRINT Christian 2231 S. Fourth . ·(Just south of Lawson Hall) ��0<'Q.PRINUIKTING & COPY SERVICE (High Quality • Low Cost) - Campus (Fast Service • Call N Compare) ...·----� • Printing •Copies • Typing & _Art Service Fel lowship Invites • Wedding Center You To 21 7-345-6331

-SCHEDULE Of' EVENTS-

• Monday 6 p.m. Hamburger Cookout at Campus House • Tuesday 9-10:30 p.m. Swimming Party Meet at Campus House at 8:45 • Wednesday 7 p.m. Christian Campus fellowship meeting with "Sonrush" -• Thursday 7 p.m. Bowling Party Meet at Campus House � 6:45 p.m. Friday 7 p.m. VCR Movie Night For Rides or More Info. CALL 345-6990 or 345-7860

*

• • • • *Biggest Buys On Campus Before � crack open � books, �·re sure to crack a smile White · school supplies. start the off right some class savingsfrom � Hen So year with , Pantry isoffering back-to-school specials on many of � .favorite snacks and neighbcrhood White Hen Pantry.

Greatfor snacks Fresh from ourbakery Sliced as you like · OZ. Kelly's Mix N' Match lmpo .,..1 l!ed· 32 FREE Qyd ' S ct. Potato Chips DOnuts Ham U Fountain 200 7 oz. twin pack ·6oil ed . Acrudial Soft FillerPaper Drink with any sandwich =e purchase ��. ��) V · � ··� -�or - .. . . $12.95 (95� value) 89 t 6/99t $1.29�a. !49t Offers 8/26good thru 9/7 /85at locationslisted. WhenYo u Run Out. Run Out To ... Whtte HenP ...... 200 Fast Lincoln Ave. •Charleston

3454240 Lll>!C.OLN To m and Valerie Craig, OumeJPperators

OPEN 24 HOURS WHP 1985 Monday's Report errors Immediately •t 511·211 2. A correct eel will •ppeer In th• n ext edition. Uni... notffled, we c•nnot be r"ponslblefor en Incorrect ed efter Its first lnaertlon. Deadline 2 p.m. previousdey. 14 August 16, 198S Classified ads

'1 -Monday's aServicesOff ered TYPING. Undergraduate ii papers (5·15 pages) only. .� 345-7981 after 5. · WELCOME BACK ______8/3 1 Professional_ resume packages: typeset or typewrit- ' � STUDENTS!! papers g ten, quality , bi selec· ' tion, excellent service. PAT· From Youngstowne TV Crossword TON QUIK PRINT, West Park •------·Digest Plaza, 345-6331 . Oldtowne/Heritage ------o--�oo 3:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 12-Doctor Who Outdoor PoOI hours, 3:30 to ' 2-Charlle's Angels 2, 1 5--Wheel of Fortune 38-Twlllght Zone 6:00 dally. Open 1 :00 to 6:00 Pinetree Lincolnwood 9, 1 5,38-Heethcllff 3-PM Magazine 10:30 p.m. weekends. Located just west 1 0-Fat Albert 9-Soap 2, 1 5-- Tonight off of 16th street, tum at Apartm• ents 12-Mlster Rogers' Neigh­ 1 <>-Newlywed Game 3-Maah cunlgan.· ------'8/28 borhood 1 7-Three's Coml*IY 9-News We still have a few 3:35 p.m. 38-Sanford and Son 10, 17-Entertainment Tonight 5--Addams Family 1:35 p.m. 12-Latenlght America vacancies if you have 4:00 p.m. 5-Baseball: Pittsburgh at 38-Nlghtllne Help Wanted . not yet found Hart · 3-Hart to Atlanta 11 :00 p.m. -- : 9-Leave it to Beaver , 7:00 p.m. 3,38-Hawall Five-0 ttPost advertising materials on suitable housing 10-Uttle House: A New 2, 1 5-- TV's Bloopers & Prac· 9-INN News campus. · Write: College ': Beginning tlcal Jokes 10-Simon and Simon Distributors, 33 Pebblewood -CALL TODAY- 12-Sesame Street 3, 1 G-Scarecrow and Mrs. 17-Nightllne Trail, NapervlHe, IL 60540. 8127 ' 345-2520 345-2363 1 5--Happy Dais King 11:20 p.m. -__ .,,.-,.,..--:=""'"',-:=:::- OR _ONE TAV ERN IS 1 7-Every Second Counts 9--0dd Couple 5--Portrait of America PAGE HIRING THREE WAITRESSES. Office: 916 Woodlaw,n 38-1 Dream of Jeannie 12-last Round-up of the 11:30 p.m. Apply in person today between 4:05 p.m. Elephants 2, 1 5--Late Night with David noon and 3:00 p.m. 5--Brady Bunch 17,38-NFL Exhibition Foot­ tt rm Le e an ______8/26 4:30 p.m. .ball: Chicago at Dallas 9-Movie:·" The Keys of the 2-Happy Days 7:30 p.m. Kingdom." (1944) Well ac . - ted ...... 9, 1 5-- Laveme & Shirley 9-Baseball: Chicago Cubs at version of A.J. Cronin's novel • 17-WKRP In Cincinnati Houston A . about a priest (Gregory Peck) ...._ Roonunates 38-Gomer Pyle USMC 1:00 p.m. doing missionary work in '1 111 __ ...... •. . . . •.• •. •. . • •.....••• • •.....•. • •. •. • 4:35 p.m. 2.15--Movie: Robert Blake Roommate Wanted: EIU • • ...... •. .. . • China. Vincent Price, Thomas .• . • •. • • • •••• •• •••. • ••. • student preferred. 3 room apt. . . •. . ., . . • 5-Father Knows Best stars as George Miiton, a Mitchell. . . . 607Y1 Monroe , Low Rates. . . ·. . . U · . . 5:00 p.m. rough-and-ready yet wistfl 1 7-Barney Miller •.. . : . . . ST DENT...... • Cigarette smokers need not . . . . . 2, 1 5-Jeopardy! migrant worker in a 1 981 TV . • Midnight apply. • · 3-Newscope adaptation of Steinbeck's . . RENTAL · •• "Of 3-More Real People 8/28 · · ..••· · · • 9-Good Times Mice and Men." Randy Quaid 17-News · · · • • • • · · · E S • 10, 17-People's Court stars as Lennie Small, a sim­ 38-Jimmy Swaggart • HEADQUART R • •••• I• ••• • 1 2-Readlng Rainbow ple-minded muscular giant. •.m. • ••• • •••• 12:10 • · 38-$ 100,000 Name That Lew Ayres, Mitchell Ryan. 1 0-Movie: Warren Beatty •• · · · · · · •• For Rem • •••• Tune 3, 1 0-Kate & Allie and Susannah York in ti •• • · · • 5:05 p.m. 12-Blade on the Feather "Kaleidoscope" (1 966), about Two bedroom unfurnished •.. :::• ·· • · • ••••• 5-Andy Griffith 1:30 p.m. a vivacious blonde who cram· apartment for two or three per· •• •••• • p.m. sons. Carlyle Apartments • : MICROWAVES • •••• 5:30 3, 1 0-Newhart ps the style of a playboy out •:::••• ::: 1308 1 8th Street. Call 348· I··: · · ···· 2,3, 10, 15, 1 7-News 9:00 p.m. to break the bank at a · · & ::: 7746. • 9-Archie Bunker's Place 3, 10-Cagney & Lacey European casino. Manny: ------�00 •• 1 2-Nlghtly Business Report 9:20 p.m. REFRIGERATORS Clive Revill. Dominion: Eric Spacious 4-bedroom house , ••••• · · ••••• 38-Let's Make A Deal 5--Movie: "Dallas Cowboys Porter. Aimes: Murray Melvin. • $1 15 per student, 348-8096 ••• ••• •• 5:35 p.m. Cheerleaders." (1979) Jane 12:20 p.m. after 5:00. ··· · ::::•• • :: ($10-$1 5/MONTH- ) ::· ••••:::: 5-Safe at Home Seymour as an investigative 5-Movie: "WUSA." (1970) ______8/30 · p.m. $ 1:00 rePQrter who joins the football Paul Newman and Joanne Student housing. 120 per . 2,3, 10, 15, 1 7-News team's cheering squad to get Woodward play ill-starred person per month. Maximum 4 ------.•• students. 31 9 Madison. Call •• · · · . 9-PriVllte Benjamin an inside story. Bert Convy. lovers in this political tale cen­ · · · . · · ·1 345-5976 after 3 p.m. ••• · · - · 12-MacNeil, Lehrer 9:30 p.m. tering on a right-wing New · BR ·• ______,8/27 •••• APARTMENTS ·· 12-Jean Shepherd's America · (2 $280/MONTH) • • 38-Famlly Feud OrleanJ radio station. Filmed ••••• • • •• • • p.m. 10:00 p.m. on IOcation. Available: Apartment, · · · · ••• 1:05 •••• · 5-Sanford and Son 2,3, 10, 15, 1 7-News two/three men. Wanted: Man •• • • • • ••• ------• • to share apartment . 345· ••· · · · ·····- 19 Concem 39 0btund or 4846. ($25/MONTH) · · · • : ACROSS DOWN ••• ••· MINI • ______9/6 -STORAGES • • 23 Hebrew month obtuse · ••• 1 Reptiles in the ••••• • 1 " ...baked in 24 Pouch 41 Elves • • · · ·••• Nile 1 bedroom fumished apts. •••••·· • 28 Famed Italian 42 Wood sorrel 7 51 6th St. Water, garbage • • • •••• 5 Repaired tire • • CARPE---T------REMNANTS · 2-laureate baritone 44 Is not up to par paid. Call 348-8 1 46 ask for • ··· · · ·• 10 Mop the deck · ·•• 3 Brainstorm 27 Extremely 41 Venerate Hank. • • • • • • $2.99/YD.) • • • • 14 Fizzy drink 4Bore cold 9 • • 47 Actor Duilio ______/6 • · · · · · •• 15 Color called • • • 5New Deal 280ver del - • · . · · ·• •• bleu Louise • •• · •• agcy. 29 Sheercotton 48 Ants' creation •• • 11 Partof an oriel ••••• • �- &Vacant fabric 49 Ostrichlike •• • • • • • ...""t lul• ••••• 17 Equal 7Head, in 30 Marsh plant bird � · ···• 18 Value ••· ··· · Milano 31 Worries 50 Imitator • • 20 Puncture •••••· nt•tlOfl ·· •• 8 Ouse feeder 32 Creator of 51 - and void · · · ·• 21 Ballet •• · ·· � · · 9 Promises Truthful 52 Where Perry • • · · · · · ·· · performer 10 Partof a tome James triumphed · · . n_llmlt•d e• • ••• · · •••• 22 Not difficult 11 Woman soldier Property, e.g. "- Smile Be · • · 33 . 54 · ·• 25 Pleasure, in •· ·· · · · in l942 35Mother of Your ..." • � • •• · · · • • • • Paris 12 Poker term Horus • • 55 Pillage • • ••• • W. RT. 16·CHARLESTON .:::• :••• 28Work list 13 Porter's 31 Something 58Queen or • · ···:·.a 21Family- ••••· ···; .. . relative startling princess • 345-7746 31 An arm of • •• !:· • 58Harden •• .• • • • • • • • • • • • � . . ..•• HUD • •. . . • •• ••.. : ... . ••. . •. . ..; . .-; ·�·. ·· 34 Dishonest • • . • • • . . . • • • . • • 31Epochs . •...... • . . ...• .. •.. •• • • 37 Birch's cousin . : ;::::::::::::: • • 38 Sonny's sibling • • 31Tinters 41 Layer CLASSIFIED AD INFORMATION 41 Outline of a COST: 1 4 cents per word first day, 1 0 cents per word each consecutive figure day thereafter (minimum words). Student rate is half price and ad MUST 43 Peculiar ' 10 be paid for in advance. 44 Recess in a church PLEASE: no checks for amounts less than $1 . 00. 45 Kind of drama PLEASE print neatly. Don't use Greek symbols. 41 Atmosphere Fill out this form and cut o ut from newspaper. Place ad and money in 47 Insect's feeler · 48 Star envelope and deposit in the News drop-box in the Union by 2 p.m. one 53 Singer business day before it is to run. During the summer semester the News will Fitzgerald be published Tuesdays and Thursdays only . 57 Frauds 59 Brightlight at Ads may be submitted in person by coming to the News office, located in night the Buzzard Education Building, North Gym. Office hours are 8:00 a.m. to IOSly gaze 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday . 81 Choice Legitimate Lost Found ads are run FREE for three days, but dates to 82 Jacket or & collar run must be specified. There is a limit of 15 words per ad . 13 Decoy All political ads MUST contain the words "Paid for by" and the name of 84 Frozen rain the person/organization paying for the ad . No political ad can be run without IS Charge this information. The News reserves the right to edit or refuse ads considered libelous or in bad taste. See page 15 of News for answers Monday's . Report errors lmmedletely et 581·2812. A correct ed wlll eppur In the next edition. Unless notified, we cennotbe responslblefor en Incorrected efter Its ffrat , Classified ads Insertion. Deedllne 2 p.m. previous dey. 15 BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed .....������--� � .. or? Kll111€KsrttL , me 8

-----�8/28 , We're back for our . Let's make it a great , Cheryl. - -8/26 __,...-c:------::-: Groups-Sign-ups BLOOM COUNTY by Berke -Breathed shots for the 1986 --�������� .... end Sept. 6. Don't 'CfXlmill!P 8£JVIYKJI?. Of TIE I WILi WALKIERl IHOPl'INCl CENTIER• .-s Cf)tfWJNP€lh

Official Notices are pa id for through the Office of University Relations. Questions concerning not.Ices

Offlclal Notices should be directed to that office. ·

Dlr9Ct0ry lnformet1on­ policy). Room 201 , Student SeMces OtflMAppiioprla of .. nS abeence reports, wlth­ c Atttletlc Ac:tfvltlee If hie · hallenge Is not Mdlng DlractorCoOtdlnatar OI drawat forma, and rein· Individual Advlaers Athlete's Position on Teemor reeotved tohiseallsf8ctlon, the (as Bolrd " Governor'• Degree Sflltem.nt. petltlona Squad, Height, Weight, High student maymake a formal llt'gried) Coordll lator Attlltrnl a-.. Student Par· School Attended. requeet for a hearing on a form ALUMNI lnb matlon ....,_ Room 204, OldMain 80M8I SarW:ee IMlllable atthe deaignated of· milted withapplcatlon for Room 219, OldMain flee where the recordll In Career Occupations Degree Pr"8cyAct Rights �- VETERANS, Including Under Educatlonel Rights the queetlon. ..malntallled Directorof Alumnl Servtces Director Veteran's Admlnfetratton and 9 4, The student 109, Privacyof Act 1 7 eech . and�of Room Old Main . Room 304, Applied Arts educaHonal recordl and student of Eastern llllnoia the records lhall thereafter CAMPSI CONFERENCES EducationCenter a a ecllC8tlonll ...... to University Is grwited the right echeclJle meeting with OtrectorHousing of FINANCIAL Alda, tnctudlng Inspect and "" ofbenefltll. to review his review oftloerappointedby the Room 214, Student Services loans. flnancllll aid, IChollr· and health lnautW1Ce. Director, Veteran Sarvtcal _ J educatlonel records In ac· Prealdent. An ad hoc com­ ahlpa Buldlng . , Room 1 02, Student SaMcel " cordell08 withthe pollcles and CAREER PLANNING Directorof F'"-'<:tal Alda mittee of facultyandad­ and Building ij: procedures adopted by the mlnlalnltlv9 par•o1w181, ap­ Placement, Including creden- East Wing, Student SeMcea \ University to Implement the pointed by the Preaident, shell tlals, student teaching Bulldlng Oanlll E. �. AcingDirector Act. act as an appeal review com­ evaluatlona, employer referen- FOREIGN 9tuden'9 ofUM• rtty Aelatlol• Caples of the Eastern Illinois mittee In the event a challelige cea, andcolege and univer91ty lntematlonll Students AcMeol' University not resolved. review Room 21 1 • Old Main pc)Hcy on the Is The recommendations. Full-timeStufftlt · Rights o f committee Privacy Eastern shall conduCt Its Directorof Placement Acedemlcelly lllinola University in hearing according to the 11, 12, and 13, FRATERNllY Students Roome mid Sorority In order to be considerftd a In of avellllble the Office establlahed federal regulatlona Student Servlce8BuHdlng Membership FULL· TIME student Unlveralty Relations, 111 Old and report Its decision within CONTINUING EDUCATION, AsaiStant Director of Student ACADEMICALLY a student 4 Main. 1 calendarfrom days the date tnctudlng regtaballon matertala ActlvltieS must carry AT LEAST 12 A student requesting access of the request for a hearing. Al for short couraea . worbhopa, Room 316, University Union semester hours each semester to his education records shal decisions may be appealed to non-credit eot.nea, academic ' and AT LEAST 6 semester follows: proceed 88 the President. conftH11C88, and off-campus GRADUATE Asaiatants hours during a summer term. 1 . A student wishing to couraea. Dean. GracblteSchool For any number of semester review his education records If a student believes that the Qlrector of Continuing Room 206,Old Main hours less than 1 2 during a shall complete a request to in· university I'm failed to Comply Education semester and 6 during a sum· spect personal recorqs at the with requirements o f the Act, Room 205, OldMain GRANTS-In-Aid andTatenteo mer tenn a student Is con· designated office whe'le those he may make a formal com­ DISCIPLINARY a nd StudentAwards sidered a PART· TIME student records are maintained. plaint to the Family Educatlonal Behavioral Records Grants-In-Officer ACADEMICALLY. This Is the 2. A student shall begranted Rights and Privacy Office University Judicial Hearing Of· Room 102, Student Services rule by which Records Office review his education (FERPA) of the Depstment of of recor­ fleer Buldlng certifies students as .full-time to ds no Education. 88 soon as poeslble and Room 2 1 4, Student Services such agencies as Social later than 45 days afterreceipt Students Herein In advlMd Building PETITIONS for Rein· Security, Good Student of his request. The specific that H la unMnlty policytofor­ EVALUATIVE Items and statement Discount, etc. If you have time and location for such ward epproprlate education Reports Rela ting to Student's Vice President forStudent Af· questions concerning any of review shell be determined by records on request to a achool ProgressToward Graduation fairs this, please contact R9C9f'ds the custodian ofthe record. in which a student seeks or In­ Room 115, OldMain I Office. The cuatodllln shell enaure tends to enroll. Officeof App11oprla.. Daan James E. Martin that the student (a) has flied a The following Is a list of College Sclenceaof Applied REGISTRATION, lncUlng Registrar requeet, (b) written presents student records maintained by Room 103, Applied Al19 achedulea and ct.tgea, feel appropriate Identification, (C) the Unlveralty, lnchJdlng the Education � Testing Senlcel· (d) paid,el'lc:t outstadngblll views only his .record. mid location andcustodian of eech: Directoral Reglatlllllon Following is a schedule of nMew9 hll own record inter ACADEMIC, Including per­ Collegeof Arts nS Sciences Room 16, Southeast local examinations for Fall, aipeMelon manent record, Room 202, Main Basement, McAfee 1985: Test date, (Registration 111PP1oprtlte . grade changes Old Gym-' 3. Records or portions of mid removal of Incomplete for· Nlk.m deadline), fee. records mayt>tJ provided to the ms, high achool tranacrtpta, Collegeof Bualneu Constitution student upon request for a fee tran8crtpt9 mid evaluallons Room 109, Blair Hall SCHOl.ARSHIP Date.(BU Oct. 8 Day 8hd evening, (Oct. $2.00 for retakes. which covers the cost to the from other p0st-eeco11daly Foundlllon) 1), uca 29, 22), $2.00 university for copying the ed ttonat Institutions, Collegeof Education FllCllEIU Agent. Foundrtlon Oct. (Oct. for retakes. record. The amount charged academic ...... lettee of Room 21 o. Buzzard Bulldlng Room 111, OldMlln shall be copying charges academic dlllrnll88I, andletters Dec. 3, . (Nov. 26), $2.00 for retakes. regularly established by the of .....•llltement. Collegeof Fine Arts STUDENT HOUSING . ln- Health unlveralty. Reglatrs Room 219, Doudna FineArts c:Ulng �...... Competency 119, . Nov. 14, (Nov. $2.00. 4. A student may challenge Room Old Main Center timing, nS llllJllfMllt ln­ 7), the content of his education ADVISEMENT, Including formllkM. WritingCompetenc y Oct. 3 (Sept. 19), $5.00. record on the baala that one or acoree DirectorHaualng of grade reports andteat �School Nov. 1 2 (Oct.29) , $5.00. more Items are mlsleadlng, for students � to the Room 208. Old Main Room 214, Student SeMces lnformetton Inaccurate, or Bring your EIU ID and feeto otherwl9e Inap­ Ac9demlc AaslstllnceCenter. Bullclng Alumni Activities H 208 Student Services Building propriate. e may request that Acadei'nlc Aaalstance Center College of �. Physlcll to register for81'1 exam, ate of Graduation, the ltem(s) be amended, (Only s tudents aaalgned to nS Education. Reciaatlon STUDENT PERSONNEL. in­ H.C. Bartling 's Name, Year At­ corrected, or 164, deleted. (Ora Center) Room Lintz Bulldlng cbtng llC8demic progrees, Director. EIU, Degree, Per· appeals tered un- Director, Academic AsMtllnce reports, attendalice reCords Testing Services n! Addrt: der a uni ·iy Center The Dall

Welcome Back orme

Students I1,. elect Dan Verdun Janet Marquis · ftball last DELIVERY SERVICE Marquis replace who resigned istant basketb top of ' Open "I'm on • IS BACK . •· "d. "I never dre 24 Hours e softball coacl hool. I'm really1 Marquis gradu OLD STYLE ....$2 8.95 MILLER ...... $3 4.95 te with a bachc educ COORS physical ...... LITE . Labor Day Sale $32.95 ...... $34.95 a., native recei COORS LIGHT ..$32 .95 BUDWEISER ...$38 .95 bile playing for e Indiana Tab, Sprite, BUSCH 1981 ...... $34 .95 BUD LIGHT ....$38 � 95 A former pit Diet or Reg. Ground- Beef camore record 5LBS. Coca Cola DELIVERY AND PICK-UP INCLUDED a regular seaso tf'� LB or mor6 utive 88 ICE 1 Olbs ...... $1 .00 are very 1 "We 2Liter 89$ CUPS 50 ct...... $1 .75 eone like Ja� Chicken Of The Sea ssociate Athle ...... (oil or water pack) IGA Hot Dog or TU B ..$1 .00 hmidt said. "I ge for us to ID and DEPOSIT evote all her tim oz. Tuna 6% 56$ Hamburger D' Abbraccio REQUIRED o resign was ''st Buns "It's been a g Kraft Pimento, Swiss or aching softbal 'Eastern has so · American Singles Bet. 345-51 17 59$ e softball prog 12oz. $149 Flav-0-Rite White or Yellow Hellmans Popcorn Mayonnaise · 32 oz. 32 oz. $179 bag 6 9$ , ------I· I I I , I I I I \-:;. I I . SENIORS I I out I Don't miss . I I on being in the ·· I I portrait section I I of the I I 1986 Warbler I - I Sign up soon. I Sign-ups Photographers I start today Or call 581-2812 here for limited . � y .ll:l��' :.a::.!; and continue to make or change time only! a a ointment i----5- t-o_p_b_y_t_h_e� n pp through ,_____ .. Warbler table First com Sept. 6 e in the first serve.

Union walkway from 9 to 4. to make or change an appointment

------Monday, August 26, 1 rmer pitcher Marquis lr��OPEN���l lected as softball coa·ch Verdun "With the athletes we now have, the AUDITIONS Marquis was named Eastern's program will continue to progress. I coach last Wednesday. will miss it." uis replaces Deanna D' Abbrac- D'Abbraccio, a Cheyenne, Wyo., � � o resigned to become full-time native, posted a 126-72-2 record during for t basketball coach at Eastern. her five-year career at Eastern. In m on top of the world," Marquis 1982, she led the Panthers to a 45-8 Un iversity Theatre ,s 2 "I never dreamed of being a col- record and third-place in the College � j IOftball coach while I was in high orld Series. D' Abbraccio coached I. I'm really excited.'' �L1'ree All�'Americans-catcher Kelly l production of 3 quis graduated from Indiana Waldrop, pitcher Kathy Richards and with a bachelor of science degree outfielder Penny Berg. ysical education. The Hickory, Marquis, meanwhile, said that "The Wa ltz native received all-state honors D' Abbraccio has made her . transition playing for the Sycamores after into her new job much smoother. of the Toreadors '' 981 Indiana State Tournament. "I think the world of Deanna," � j former pitcher, Marquis held Marquis said. "She has stayed on past ore records for most strikeriuts her resignation to help me with � j regularseason game and most con- everything. I'm really greatful to her." 7 p.m. ·ve strikeout innings. Marquis is also very optimistic about � � We are very pleased to have so­ the Panthers' chances for the 1986 like Janet on our staff," season. c Wedn�sday, August 28 S "ate Athletic Director . Joan "I've got all the (players') skill in the "dt said. "It will be a real advan­ world to work with," Marquis said. "I for us to have one person to think my hardest job will be getting the and e all her time to softball." kids to believe they're that good. 'Abbraccio said that her decision "When people think of Eastern Il­ � Thursd�y, August 29 2 was "strictly personal." linois University, I want them to think � ign j 'It's been a great experience for me about our softball program. My goal Is in the Theatre bing softball," D'Abbraccio said. to be ranked in the Top 20 in the next . c S tern has some excellent athletes in two years. " softball program. � Doudna Fine Arts Center 2 C Scripts are available in S the Theatre Arts Office (FAT 105) Come out and bowl at

The ·Junction Any registered studentmay aud ition

LEAGUES

6:30 & 8:45 p.m.

Panther Individual (Students & Faculty-Staff Now You can Choose From '(This isan individual league with One Of The Largest selections· handicapin which handicap is added to each of 3 gamesevery Wednesday). Of Movies In This Area Men's (Student)

Faculty& Staff Mixed Doubles NO MEMBERSHIP FEEi Here's something for the outdoors people Enjoy watching movies in the Just arrived-a new Inventoryof camping equip. comfort of your own home, 2 or 3 man tents without paying a high member­ . Cabin Tents (6 man) ship fee. seethe latest releases . Sleeping Bags Choose from action / adventure. Coolers drama, musical / general, comedy, children's themes, science fiction Lanterns or horror films. Many titles For more information or rentals stop by the available. Best of all, there is no Junction (Bowling Alley) in the Union. membership fee! Renting a movie is great home entertainment. For . fantastic video values, visit osco ·s family video cente'r today Hundreds of movies to choose from! EASTERN IU.INOIS UNIVEASITY Dally Rental Rates:

Movie for ems andearn extracash 1 249 Sellunwanted it in OO 2 Movies for 4 TheDaily EasternNe ws Each adclltlonalday $1 permovie Classifieds •• 6, 1985 The Dall Eastern Ne

(? ScorebOard Reportscores to 58 1-2812 ------WllSon Detroit 1 1 1 44 T- •�Clly ST. LOUIS8, A11111M2 HERR, ST. LOUIS, 82; G. . 1 2 0 33 ...... Clllbnla Chlhlllll8, CtlCAGO3 Phlladelphla, 7 4 . Gr..i llay OlldlrlCI 1 2 0 58 New YCllll111 HITs-McGEE, ST. LOUIS, 152; T.,,,.,. eay Football CHICAGO 0 2· 0 1 8 Baseball ...... �f ell) Gwynn, Sen Diego, 141; HERR, ST. .... Cincinnati 138; ...... Monday'• ...... LOUIS, 139; Parker, . Houllon Wnt CHICAGO81 Samuel, l'l1llldelphla, 130. Clnc:lrwwll Momrelll T PF Tueecllly'e gamee ST.LOUIS 111 DOUBLES-Wlllach, , 29; NFL P,....aon w L MLB 2 1 58 ...... � Loe AngliealllNew York Hernandez, New York. 28; HERR, ST. LARmna Q � Cincinnati Amerlc:en Conf..,.ce F l'WICieco 2 1 0 88 ...... r- 111CNCAGO Sen Dlego lllPhillldelphla LOUIS, 28; ·Parker, , 28; G. Sen Ent T_ Fl'WICieco Monlr9ll WllSon Phlladelphia 27 Eaet Admnla 1 2 0 81 lll ..._. Sen Ill . , . Atllrlla L T PF PA New<>Mlna 1 2 0 82 w L Pct. GB �Clly ...... Plltllugh.. w T- 77 47 .821 e.lllmore.. c.llomla lndlilnpoll 2 1 0 48 40 AL Leaders 2 1 0 83 NewYOlk 73 49 .898 3 Oelralt.. Selllle Tueedey'e gamee Mllml 50 Friday'• r•ulte Sin ClhnlughAug. 20) New EnglMd 1 2 0 87 82 14, Rmna 12 Delrol 88 87 .837 10% NewYork 111 OlldlrlCI Ftwldlcolll ...... Phillldelphla L.A. AB R H AVG 0 2 1 85 88 CWIChllllll 8IMnof9 84 .1529 11% Loe AnglleaIll NewYork lk!fllllo Oetroll31 • 17 87 Bogge, Soa 488 68 166 .355 58 .479 18 Sen ..Phllldllllt• NY Jela 0 3 0 68 97 Wllll*lglon37. New 38EnglMd , Bollorl 83 6l9eo Brett KC 395 . , 74 139 352 LOUIS 14, PltM>urgll8 88 815 .458 20 NlltlonlllL-.ue ST. LOUIS lll Clncmllll Centr.I ST...... Alllnla Henderaon, NY 389 102 136 .350 ClevWnd 43 79 .382 33 Eaet Plltllugh.. L T PA Houelon Meltingly, NY 485 74 154 .331 w PF Saturday'• r•ulte w L Pct. PF CHICAGO 81 2 0 88 154 Fl'WICieco 25, Diego 10 Boehle. Oak 296 37 94 .318 c ...... s 1 Sen Sen Weet 715 48 .820 Cincinnati ClevWnd Elutllllo . ST. LOUIS Lacy, Bait 365 54 116 .316 1 2 0. 86 88 31• 28 L NewYork 715 48 .810 w Pct. . GB 1 NL Leaders Bradley. Sea 467 71 145 .310 ' Pltt8burgh 1 2 0 82 82 ' o.n- 20, lndlilnpoll3 c.llorliia 7f 83 .1573 Mof*..i 89 1515 .15158 1%. (ThnlughAug. 20) Whi!Mer, 458 82 142 .310 Houelon 1 3 0 815 72 Gr..i28, Bay Alllnta 24 87 .5154 2% CtlCAOO 80 81 .498 115 Del �Clly 154 Cooper, Mll 452 61 139 .308 W•t N.Y. Gilnta 34, N.Y. Jeta31,0T � 80 .1518 1 Phillldelphla 157 815 .487 18% H AVG T.,,,.,. 14, NewOrleln9 1 o 84 AB R BAINES. SOX 451 61 137 .304 L T PF PA eay CHICAGO 159 82 .4 10% Plltllugh 39 81 .3215 315% w 88 McGEE, STL 42 81 152 .362 o.n- Sellltle27. MlnnelOla 1 0 8ellllle 157 87 .480 ' 0 2 1 0 80 48 14 Guerrero, LA 380 80 134 .326 RUNS-4iendereon, New York, 102; Sellltle !<.-City 24, Houaton 19 MlnnMolll 14 2 1 0 82 32 1515 88 .41515 WMt HERR,STL 428 86 139 .328 R Whitaker Mi1m123, L.A. Relcler9 17 ipk.en, Baltimore,83; . Detroit, C 2 1 0 72 77 Te- 48 78 .377 24 � lly w L Pct. GB Gwynn, SO 48 1 63 1•1 .308 82; Davis Oaklend 80; Wlnliekl, New , , Sen Dlego 1 2 0 49 158 llonday'•game 72 49 .5915 Backman. NY 352 57 1 07 .304 79. Loe Angllea York, . LA Relcler9 0 3 0 47 815 CHICAGO Sunder'• reeulte 87 57 .540 8% MALAND. CHI 412 125 .303 at Dlllllt Sen Dlego 50 RBl-Mettingly, New York, 100; Mur· c� 8 ...... 2. 1•gmne Cincinnati 84 157 .529 8 136 Thureclay'•g•m• Parker, Cln 455 59 .299 ray, Baltimore, 90; Wlnliekl, New York, NlltlonalConl..,.ce Clewllrld2 . o. 2ndgmne Houelon .4159 1 8% Raines Mon 432 85 1 29 .299 ...... 158 88 , 85; Rlpken, Baltimore, 83; FISK, Eaet Oetroll at Pltlmdelphla CHICAG0 15,T- 3 Admnla 50 7 1 .413 22 Cruz. Hou 407 49 121 .297 CHICAGO, 82. w L T PF PA Frldey'• gem• Te-7.�Clly 3 SenFIWICieco 4 75 3815 215% Hemandez, NY 422 58 125 .296 . HITs-Bogge, Boston . 166; Mattingly, NY Gilnta 4 0 0 915 73 L.A. Relcler9 Clewllrld Cllllfomla7' Oetroll 1 ! 111 New York, 154; Bradley, Seattle, 145; 3 0 0 88 59 � 10, e.lllmore4 Wmhlnglon N. Y. Gilnta atPitl9burgh Sunder'• reeulte RUNS-Murphy, Atlanta, 94; Raines, Wilson Whitaker Detroit, 142; , Kansas Dlllllt 2 0 0 154 21• MWnlet Alllnta NewYork 8, Sellltle5 Pltt8burgh9, Houeton3, gmne , 1 et Montreal, 85; COLEMAN, ST. LOUIS, City, 142. Philldlllltia 2 1 0 65 57 WMlllnglonet Tampa Bey MlnnMoCaat ,ppd1!991on .... PlttaburQh 1o.Houaton9, 2ndgmne 84; McGEE, ST. LOUIS, 81 ; Guerrero, OOUBLEs-Mattingly, New York, 3 7; ST. LOUIS 2 1 0 31 48 Clnclnnelltlndllinapolla et Momrelll 1 Loe 8, AngelM Angeles, 80. Buck-. Boston , 35; Bogge, Moncter'• v•mee Loe Boston, Centr•I Mlnneeotaat Den- NewYork 9, SMDiego 3 RBI-Murphy, Atlanta, 88; Parker, Cln· lloetonCHICAQO at 32; Cooper, Milwaukee, 30; WALKER, PA SenFranc lllcoSeattle et Fran w L T PF Detroitet s..ttle Phlladelphi8 14, Sen 5 Cinneti, 85; J. CLARK, ST. LOUIS, 83; CHICAGO, 30. Orleln9et SM Diego MlnnMota 2 1 0 67 74 New

Meetings set . There will be a meeting for all in­ IT'S HERE . . . dividuals wishing to try out for the ih\\11 baseball team at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the west bleachers of Lantz Gym, "�\\1111111\\ui coach Tom McDevitt announced. THE EVENTSFUL! ! Those interested must attend this meeting, he said, because there will be The Students' Record For no spring tryouts . Cross Country/Track Day�To- Day Events Throughout Head coach Neil Moore has announced there; will be a cross country team The School Year mce�g at 7 p.m. Monday at the Lantz Club . Room. Moore also announced The Eventsful will on that a track team meeting will be held be 'iept. 3 at 7 p.m. at the Lantz Club sale in the Union Room. Lobby ,, Women 's Tennis AUGUST - cJaiGail Richard has announced an 26 29 informational meeting scheduled for 2 p.m. Monday at the Lawson Courts. If PAI.CE anyone has questions concerning the 50 open. tryouts, contact Richard at 581- $3 27 12. '- NEW Images At Reflections

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Abooe selections include tossed salad, choice of potato, rolls and butter. Salad Bar with abooe $1.50additional. GREAT Food at Moderate Prices Monday, August 26, 1 985 19 epshire pitches Cards to fifth straight win ANTA (AP) - Kurt Kepshire Gross and Glenn Wilson, in a 14-S rout , 13-12, held the of the San Francisco Giants Sunday. . Royals a five-hitter for 7 % innings and' / to five hits, including solo · home runs by and Lonnie Van Slyke homered Sunday to Baseball White Sox 5 Blue Jays 3 the S�. Lou�s Cardinalsclaim �eir Smith. The knuckleballer struck out � CHICAGO-H aro B aines· bla s t e d straight victory, a S-2 declSlon . 'Id . five and walked three in pitching his ' ' · roundup a three run homer a�d Floyd Banmster the Atlanta Braves. _- 1 1th complete gameof the season. won his first ga�e m mo�e than two defeat was the sixth straight .for drove in two runs with a•homer and a months as the Chicago White Sox beat Yankees �' Mariners aves who have lost 12 of their single, and .Bo Diaz doubled home the 3 . the T ront Blue Jays �-3 on Sunday, SEATILE-Dan Pasqua dro,ve in g es. tie-breaking ruri Sunday to give the ? � 13 am' breakmg a five ga�e losmg streak . four runs with three hits, including a epshire, 10-7, has won five and Cincinnatti Reds' a S-3 victory over the � . . It was Banmster s first victory smce three-run homer and a double, ' and one in his last 10 starts., The 'Chicago cubs. . Ju e after seven losses an six no­ ' Don Mattipgly added a two-run home Louis righthander lost his shutout Left-hander Tom Browning scat- � �O, decison , nd broke Toronto� s three­ run Sunday to lead. New York to when Terr}' Harper , hit th first tered seven hits over six innings to im- � � ?.n 8-5 e game wmnmg streak. victory over the Seattle Mariners. · the sev:enthinning into the left of pro:ve his record to 13-9, the most vie- The Yankees, who have won 10 seats for his 15th homer of the tories by a rookie pitcher in the majors. of · Rangers 7, Royals 3 their last .11 games, moved to within Phillies Giants tP,ree games of the T.oronto Blue Jays Kepshire walked two and struck out 1.'4, 5, KANSAS . CITY-:Pete O'l}rien in the American league East. before Jeff · Lahti relieved him PHILADELPHIA-Reliever Dave knocked in four runs, three with a Rucker pitched five scoreless innings, " bases-loaded , and Toby Harrah Ed Whitson, 8-7, sailed t hrough the ' · one out in the eighth and struck fii:st six innings, allowing just one hit, Dale Murphy to end an Atlanta and the pounded drove home three runs Sunday to t 10 extra-base hits;·including home runs power the past the Kan­ but was knocked ·out in the seventh. t. " In the ninth, Lahti gave up another by Juan Samuel, Von Hayes, Kevin sas City Royals 7-3. ' er to Harper and the Braves load-

the bas-es 'before BiH Campbetl-got ' - · - last out for his fourth save. Dorsettma kesseaso n:debatvs. Bears' Dorsett called the Cowboys tailback against San Diego, has Mets 9, Padres 3 · IRVING, Texas . (AP) - Tony Dorsett makes his 1985 debut for "double-crossers,"· but meekly been moved to second-string NEW YORK-Dwight Good�n of New York Mets became . the the unbeaten Dallas Cowboys apologized when he returned to fullb�ck. ungest pitcher in major-league Monday night in a National Foot­ camp. "I was driving a Rolls Royce," ball· League preseason game with Dallas coach Tom Landry fined Springs said of his demotion. · tory to win 20 games in a season · "th his 14th straight victory Sunday, a the Chicago Bears. him $20,000 and held him out of "Now I'm back to driving the I'm in excellent shape," says the last week's game against San same old Chevy with blackwall decision over the . San Diego · 3 tires adres. Cowboys' running back, who Diego. He also has worked Dorsett ." The 20-year old Gooden, 20-3, is the missed 20 days of training camp hard in practice, getting him into a Dallas quarterback Danny ond pitcher this year to. win 20 before his contract was goal line scrimmage early this White, who suffered a torn car­ es. Joaquin Andujar, who has lost renegotiated. week. tilage in his left ribcage, will not ven times, won his 20th for the St. Dorsett, the sixth leading rusher "The contact was good so I play, tur,ning the starting ·duties ouis Cardinals Friday night. in NFL history, ended up with a must l;>e in shape,'' said Dorsett. over to Gary Hogeboom. Kickoff will be at 7 p.m. CDT in Gooden's 'Vinning streak is the five-year pact that has deferred · "I can't .wait to get back into the payments well into the next cen­ starting lineup. I don't plan to Texas Stadium to accomodate ngest in the majors this yeal", equall- · the string that Rick Sutcliffe of the tury. He also is paying off the hold anything back. If yo'u get out ABC-TV. icago �ubs put together last season. $412,000 he owes the Internal there and try to keep yourself from The Bears received a big lift this Revenue Service. . getting hurt, you'll get hurt." week when middle linebacker Mike Reds 5, Cubs 3 At one point during his holdout, Ron Springs, Dallas' starting Singletary ended his holdout CINCINNATTI-Nick ,

ATTENTION All Organizations ,Sign-ups for·g roup shots forthe 1986 Wa rbler·:

will be· gin Aug. 28 and continue

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All you have to do is stop by the Warbler Offiee­

I:Juzza · rd.Building-between 1 and 4 p�m. reserve your to group's space in the 1986 Wa rbler Oroup·shots beginSe pt. 9 so don't delay! If you· have at;ty. questions? call 58 1-2812. and ask for the Wa rbler office. Monday's

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10 Au1ust 16, 19

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�A GCAC now � has footb�ll by Dobie Holland ST. LOUIS-The proposal of allo ing NCAA Division I-AA football in the all-women's Gateway Collegi Athleiic Conference recieved an e phatic bill of approval last Wednesda Constantine Curris, president of t GCAC President's Council made an.nouncement, which was preceded the vote of approval by the council. Eastern, along with Western Illino' Southern Illinois, Illinois Sta Southwest Missouri and North Iowa comprise the six-team leag which will begin competition t season. Other GCAC members, includi Drake and Indiana State, have opt for independence this season. Wichi State has a Division I-A classificatio Bradley does not have a football pr gram. The inception of football into t all-women's conference is a histori first. Never before has a male athlet division joined an all-women's spo confet ence. And- a woman has nev been chosen to head a conferen associated with men's athletics. But 33-year-old Chicago native P ty Viverito will be the first. Viveri has been commissioner of the Gatew since it was first established in the ##..•· f of and she expressed enthusias Eastern wide receiver Charles Williams hauls in a pass in High School. The Panthers continue preparation for the 1982, about her new duties. front of linebackers Chris Nelson (58) and Bill Cochrane Sept. opener at Northeast Missouri. (News photo by 7 look forward to the added excit ( 59) during- Saturday's Intra-squad scrimmage at Mattoon Michael Sitarz) "l ment and challenge that football bring to this fine conference," Viveri said. "In addition, the national pr Defense may hold key to success minence of football will also help to i crease the p·rogram's visibility a by Jeff Lona Eastern passed its way to a No. 2 enhance the prestige of our women To what heights will the vaunted ranking among NCAA I-AA teams last programs. "Eastern Airlines" carry the Panthers season with 370 yards passing a game, Curris was equally enthusias this season? topping 300 yards passing in all but about Viverito's appointment. "Pat two games, including perfor­ The answer to that may lie in . the 400+ Viverito is one of the brightest a team's defense. mances in the last three. most capable administrators With the return of All-Americans The Panthers are planning to repeat America," he said. Sean Payton at quarterback and Roy the scenario again this season, only Curris added that "the football di Banks at wide receiver, it appears a Molde would like to alter that a little sion universities were unanimous sure bet the offense will again possess bit, which in effect would be doing the wanting her as commissioner. We plenty of firepower. defense a favor. proud to be part of a significant Payton is · coming off a phenominal "I've seen enough of our passing ment in athletic history.'' sophomore season in which he was game to know we're going to be able to Games for Gateway Conferen selected the Mid-Continent Con­ move the football again," Molde said. football are slated to begin on Sat ference's Player of the Year, while "But we need to be able to control the day, Sept. 7, when Southwest Misso establishing nine school records and 16 ball and the clock better so that our plays Southern Illinois, and West his staff have the luxury of this fall, MCC marks. He ranked third among defense doesn't have to spend so much faces Illinois State in conference b NCAA I-AA quarterbacks with 3,843 which wasn't there a year ago, is the time on the field. That means we have ties. yards passing, fourth with 28 experiencefa ctor. to be able to incorporate a sound runn­ Futhermore, Northern Iowa touchdown passes and second in total Eastern opens its season Sept. 7 on ing game." Southern Illinois were not scheduled ·offense with a 332 yards per game the road against Northeast Missouri, The running game seemed little more play each other this season so they b average. with the home opener slated for Sept. than a decoy last season. Eastern will play substitute conference - Banks is touted as one of the finest 14 against Indiana State. averaged only 47 yards rushing per ches. Northern Iowa will host Indi wide outs in Division I-AA. The junior The Panthers return 31 lettermen contest with a meager l.7 yards per State on Saturday, Oct. 12. Ark returns after catching passes last from last season's squad, including carry. 69 6-S State · will host Southern Illinois year for 1,269yards. seven starters on defense and nine on · Those figUres may be bolstered by SatUJiday, Nov� 9. He ranked second in I-AA behind · offense. the return of a stronger and more ex­ Jerry Riee in both TD receptions and It's a young crop though, with only perienced DuWayne Pitts along with receiving yardage. Rice became a first- · six seniors returning in a starting role; Bernard Holland, who was shelved nside _ round pick in laSt May's draft . That, coupled with the presence of a with a knee injury after three games !I · NFL · Coaching change If the Panthers are to make those of­ dozen or so junior college recruits and last season . fensive feats stand up, however, they'll the best recruiting class in Molde's The Panthers appear stronger in Former IndianaState pitcherJanet to need to tighten the screws on a defense three years here, has made for heated both offensive and defeasive lines also. Marquis ha8 been named replace which )rielded over 23 points a game­ competition. And with newcomers who are potential Deanna o· Abbraccio • last season. "We have more experience on both contributors, spirits are hiah with an­ head softballcoach. U will be no easy task, either, con­ sides of the ball but the thing that's ticipation around camp. s..-e-11 sidering the defense lost the core of last really apparent is that we've got a lot .. Although we have the usual ques­ year's squad. Linebacker Tyrone Cov­ of players of about equal ability," tion marks at some spots," Molde Baseballro undup ington, who established a single-season Molde said Saturday following the says, •'we have a solid corps of starters The St. Louis Cardlnala and New school record of 172 tackles, will still team's intra-squad scrimmage at Mat­ to build around so we approach this York Meta remain a game apart In be on the sidelines, but this year as a toon High School. "Our depth situa­ season with a great deal of optimism.'' the NL East. student-coach. tion appears to be better, especially in TuMday••• The •erlal arHnlll What third-year coach Al Molde .and the defensive line."