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February 1983 Daily Egyptian 1983

2-1-1983 The aiD ly Egyptian, February 01, 1983 Daily Egyptian Staff

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Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, February 01, 1983." (Feb 1983).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1983 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in February 1983 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Engineering programs troubJe experts Bv Robert Green "We're having the same said. it is increasingly difficult tenured faculty positions In demand (or engineers IS high Starr Writer problems experienced b,' other .0 attract Ph D.s in E'nginE'f'ring E'ngineering being filled by can r,nlv hurt minnis' bid for sch~:" in ti:p state and' across 't) education. RE'taining existing temporary instuctors. high tec'hnology indu..c;try At a time when engineering th~! country." Tempelmeyer ."'culty is al!:o 11 prnblem. he He said although enrollment The rep'rt states that IllinOiS graduate! are in great demand, sa'd "We fill up.all the chairs in said In f'ngineering at SIU-C has now rank.:, 41st in the natIOn in Illinois may be approaching a the d,osrooms. but we don't "Last vear we had an doubled in the past four years. undE':grarluate f'nginE'ering crisis in engineering education. have the reso'.lrces to attract associatE' pmfessor who WE'nt to from 566 to 1.184 s.udents. onlv enrollment per IO.OM Overcrowded classrooms. faculty" a company in St. Louis and III engineering faculty position's population - far below the inadequate faculty s.al

Tuesday, February 1. 1983-Vol 68,1':). B9 TV company plans to produce five raore SIU-C sports events

Bv Rod Stone mE'f't basketb<'.11 gamt's sche the main areas of changes in Reagan's fISCal plan foc 1984. cutting military Asst.mbly passed last year. order to include all of Thomp­ spendirg and alkiing money fer ,ions. That act gave the gO-/ernor th,o son's plannro budget cuts s~t~0~k~di~~5 million was power to cut as much as 2 Samuel Skinner, an attoml>\' added to the treasury by percent from the current fiscal representing the Thompson speeding up collectiom of utility year's budget to help cope with administration_ said he would taxes. a huge revenue shortfall. file an appeal Tuesday morning The order forestalls the lavoff with the state Supreme ('ourl. Since then, the revenuf' of more than 580 state workE>rs. Skir:ner was representing picture has worsened. (Hidal which was scheduled for Thompson because Illinois estimates of the new shot tfall Tuesdav Attorney General Neil Hartigan range from about SzOO million to Porter's ruling came in a had refused, contending the $300 million. Thompson has not class-action lawsuit filed by the budget cuts could have (I said yet what steps he will Legal Assistance Foundation of significant impact on the voti:rs recommend to bring the $82 (,hicago on behalf of two Public who chosp him to serve CIS their billion General Fund budget Aid recipients. Several health legal advO<.ate. into balanci!. +++++++++++..) -+ HANGAR.~ + .+ TUESDAY: +' DON'T FORGET, ! Old F"I~:! Boogie : THIS IS + GRADUt\TION WEEK! t _ + Old Folk's Drink Specials .+ 2 for the Price of 1 Drink Cards Issued at Door + with proof of Old Age NO COVER + Hangar Hotline 549-1233 '+' +++++

> • PREPARE FO~ IiRIt - THI! SPRING tif!jJ MeAT-DAT / Caps & GOWDS Announcements • eou .... 'lv.n In Carbondale Startln,ln Februar, Class Rings • Tope facllltl.. ""III be avallabl. ORDER • 'or Infonnatlor...... call TODAY! b::~t::y SH·al. F,· ... , ,- ,!"".:.r- ~I O!"\'" C .. .,t .. ,'\. CAll TOll ;'~~:. ;O~:~2J.118~ ~~"II"""IIIIII...... 53B.... 3.~ ... yBTUDENTCENTER

Page 2, Daily Egyptian, February I, 1983 Buzbee bill will up the use of state coal B~ Terr~ Lpvecke simply trymg to encourage the hme. guidelines established by the new guidelinE'S may require all Staff Wrtter use of Illinois' own rich coal Similar bills have been in· federal government regarding plants to purchase them resources." trot.luced by Buzbee in the past air quality. anyway. according to Ruzbe'? Sen. Kenneth V. BU7bee in· t:nder current legislation. Iwo Illinois General Assem· Illinois coal was not used troduced ,lne of the first pieces utility companies automatically blies. but they did not pass. before because the sulfur The bill will be rpferreen selected by regulation and standards for Human Services Committee to punish utilities." Buzbee ~~dOs ~~~rJic: haav~:ta~~liz: House Speaker Michael J. farm products. pn)l'tices and and the Select Committee on said. D-Carbondale. "We are Madigan to chair the House marketing techniques. Aging The 117th district that estimated for a long period of Agricultural Committee Rep Rea represents has the highest Bruce Richmond. D· Richmond will also serve 01: a proportio" of si:'nior citizens in Murphysboro. has bt>en named newly created committee. tho the state Rea ~.aid GSC from Page 1 chairman and Rep. James Rea. ~plect Committee 011 SI'.dli important to replace the student D-C'hristopher. has been named Business. The committee will Rea said he plans to continue and discussion of alternatives." hold hearings to allow trustee as soon as possible. Katsinas said. . vice-chairman. according to his efforts to help the sick and press rpleases businessmen to offer the state needy and to push for circuit "I think it is important that Greeley said the council Richmond. beginning his fifth Ideas on improving the business breaker and utlilty rate relief GSC work closely with the would "continue its fight." but term in the Legislature and climate. for senior citizens through work Undergraduate Student feels more constituency groups Rea. beginning his third, on these committees. Organization to get a should coopt!rate on other issues welcomed their appointments Richmond is also a member replacement as soon as as well. because agriculture is a vital of the Cities and Villages and Business owners possible." Greeley said. "It's concern in their area and the Higher Education committees. important that we have a Rion said he thought "peace state.they Said. Because Richmond is a former want city to enjoy representative at the upcoming was a very practical thing" mayor. his expertise should Board meeting" when referring to access. "r intend to push for benefit the Citips ancl Villages HaUoween festival legislation to expal'd our export committee. the press release Katsinas said if he is elf>;:ted. "Where else but a university markets and to help the said. The Carbondale Chamber of he will look forward to working can you learn that peace is beleagueretl small farmers." Commerce wants the city to with USO President Jerry Cook important, Rion said. "And If Rea said. Rea was named 10 the "Quit fighting Halloween and and Vice President Fritz we can have access, and the The agriculture committee Transporta tior and Motor enjoy it." according to Levenhagen to expedite the promotion of higher education. Executive Director Larry replacement of the trustee as then the chances for obtaining Lauterjung SMn as possible. world peace arc very good." PROGRAMS from Page 1 Towne Central. a group of "We've worked together salaries and we need funds to the SIt:·C engineering school downtown business owners. will Venturi said he would stress sponsor a meeting at -; p.m. berJre and I doubt it will be a "working with the ad· upgrade laboralOry equip· has requested $2.5 million for problem here," he said. ment." he said. replacement and modernization Tuesday in the Carbondale minisitration instead fighting Holiday Inn to exchange ideas them." Tempelmeyer said most of laboratory equipment and for Both candidates said thPy laboratory equipment has about new equipment in fiscal year about developing an annual would continue the council's "We both have the same goals a lo·year life, and some 1983. festival. The public is invited. stand on the library storage in higher education and fun­ equipment becomes outdated The Chamber wants opinions issue. ding, and it doesn't do any good after only five years. Tile report concludes that about what role the city should to alienate them," he said. "We "The turnover rate for state-(lf· SlU-C needs over $.1 million in take in the Halloween "The library storage situation need to work with them, the·art technology is high." he additional funding to solve the celebration and about possible is a demonstration of wbat the because they are the c:!

AND IT CAME AS litHe surprise that the city's merchants felt that, handled in. coilerent, ratiOll8I, organized matter, Halloween in Carboodale caD become less 01 a drunken street party and more of a respectable money-maker. The city and the Uni9l!rsity have never CODdOlled Halloween and they bave refUSed to pnmote it in any way. They have refuB'.d to listen to ideas from concerned residentJ and students 011 how the celeiratiOll should be safely bandled. When the problem 01. people uriDating in the streets became apparent and UodergraGiate Utilities turn on profits in '82 Student OrganizatiCll PresidentJ erry Cook came up witb the idea d. portable tUleta, the city rejected the proposal as too costly. NEXT TIME a utility recession. 'Ibe city's main objections to the Halloween celebratiCll is that it request a rate increase and Bob "Other iodustries do bet­ ter," said Reg Ankrom, a cost too much. Halloween '82 cost the city about S3,!IiO Co clean~ tbe Dlinois Commerce Deloney afa the 10,000 people who &bowed up for the party. It alsO cost the CommissiCll is urged to Ilpate spokesman for CIPS. city $16, 'l5O in owrtime pay fer the police to help COIItrol it. l.'OIISumtn further grief and "Revenues go up because 'Ibey also say it is unlawful. ADd while It is true that arrests were 'a8f!, somebody please ask increasing costs of con­ up over Halloween '81 - flier 40 people were arrested - the both of them to answer at structioo and fuel. " severity 01. their crimes wa.. much Jess than those of Halloween '81. least one question: Wby Fuel accounts for 35 per­ Damage to private and public property was down, there were DO aren't the public utilities profitable returns at a time cent to 40 perceilt of CIPS steien cars, m armed robberies, no rapes and DO arson. being ecCllOlDically battered wben most U.S. Industries expense, Ankrom IJaid. like the rest or us by the worst would beg for a rrofitable Capital investments, or mE STUDY IS a good sbrt and 90 is the consideratiCll that tbe recessiOll in 40 years? return. U.S. Stee lost $363 constructioo costs, are even "disorder" that now p-evails can be turned into a festival of sorts. Tbe ICC has ordered the millioo just in the last three worse. The cost is $4 for each If the city actively pnmotes Halloween, gets together to fm-m a state's 10 majm- utilities to mOllths 01. 1982.. Chrysler and $I of revenue. "batHe plan," it just may be able to offset its extra expenses develop comprehensive Caterpillar are laying off Revenues went up IIIn through the additional revenue it wiD receive from the influx of out­ energy conservation workers as fast as they're average of 10 percent yearly of-town dollars. programs to be made pu~ oot ears or tractors. between 1971 and 1981 for 'Ibe city Ills to stop thinking of Halloween and the people who available to cOIIiUmers. Unfair comparisons? CIPS. Most 01 the CG8t was particilB t.e in it as an amual plague and start to cCllsider it as a way Perhaps the plights d the Perhaps, but the energy construction. To cover the to make mOlley. elderly, unemployed and low­ industry too is hurting. c:ost. CIPS Ooated additiooaI Wbile it was COIICI~ itselfwltb building a cooventioo center to income families who struggle Profits are down in almost all stocks 90 that wbile revenues lure tourists to town, the city faBed to n!cqpUze that Carbondale to meet monthly bills are seeton with the exc:eptiOll 01. increaSe, the retUrn for each already had "a IJIId mine wailiDl to be di'JCOvered:" finally beq felt by the ICC. the regulated utilities. If you stockholder did not. !!:a1'Dills doII't believe that i'.JSt look at per Share in 1981 .,.. $U3, a REGARDLESS, tttese are how frantically OPEC is 12 percelt increase over 1981 ~etters ~; the days of 19'13 and tbe trying to head off the but bel.. ", the $1.78 earned in Amerinn worker bas Img downward spiral of oil prices 1971. felt the stranglehold 01. because 01. recessiOll and an recession. America's best oil glut THE11E WERE MORE Elect Steve Ka'tsinas and brightest - U.s. Steel, profits t.ut more uwners, so Chrysler, Caterpillar and EVEN AMERICAN OIL each v ..s gettiDg less. It has been interesting to the time 01 the election should Standard Oil 01. CaliforIia - companies, once the biggest follow the Graduate Student be to blame if the election was couldn't avoid the economic and baddest in the eyes of Revenues going up means Council (GSC) election process wrongly conducted. sting either despite all the consumtn, aren't doing weJ rates increased. So DO matter over the last several weeks. As As it IS, Ilmow Sieve Katsinas financial wizardry and these days. We see it eacb bow many owners there an unclassified graduate quite well from over four years magical accounting at their time we pull up to the were, customers were footing student, I try to keep up OIl GSC 01 working with him;:.to organize dispclsal. gasoline pump and notice the the bill. affairs. various projects. He is in­ In the Jan. 28 "Viewpoint," telligent, tireless and Admittedly, it isn't very price 01. gas again come a bit one writer called for an end to irrepressible. From my initial altruistic: and certainly not closer to the dollar mark. And it's still not unfair to "bebind the scenes cooperation w th him in alaog the lines 01 "let's beat EXXON'S profits rose 6.9 ask how revenues were in- manuevering and the spreading organizing the Southern Dlinois tbis together," but U's percent in the fourth quarter creasing for CIPS and scuttlebutt." Perhaps those Citizens for Kennedy, (the first somehow comforting to know 011982 but that couldn't keep shrinking for others in University-based draft Ken­ that consumers and workers the COIDrAUJY from posting a energy-related fielda .. Tbe ~~or:b!u'ftr: ~t~~ nedy group in Illinois) , I weren't the only ones to go 10l!l8 fOl' the year. Unioo on answer is simple. We pa~d it tiJan I, but from my reading 01 learned that be is a "can do" down in 1982. Co.'!InetincomewasdowDU beca118e the ICC rubber- the DE most of the "scot­ person. It's frustrating, though, to percent m Uie fourth quarter stamped rate requests. Uebutt" has come from the I take !ssue with tbe know that an industry can and Standard Oil Co. of supporters of the candidau, trlat VJeWpOint comment that "GSC overcome recession, er even California nosedivecl 26 Those are the ~ple the writer in QUeStion endorsed is very easy to ignore." GSC . ineptitute for that matter, perceIlt in the same period. eoneemed about the high cast Basically, the whole episode was certa~y not easy to ignore mere;y by going before a Did CIPS faU with the rest of beating a home and DOW bas .come- acrosa as a "sour when Deb Brown serve(J as eommissiCll and request a 25, 01 118 in 1982? NfX !' chance. are asking utilities to im- grapes" situation. The losers in President. If GSC is now 30 or 35 percent increase in Net income in the fir!:t six plement extensive con- the electiOll dido 't their way, perbaps Jet we need more the price charged its month. of 1982 Walt $38 servation programs to help us so they called It a "sour" . leadership to change and then settle fer milIioa, up 32 percent OYer beat our homes for less. election. Then they blamed the the situation. Perhaps we need customtn wiDner of tbe electiGn, Steve Steve Katsinas as President of a 15, ., er 2S percent in­ the fU'St six mOlltbs 01. 1981. = 'Ibe return CIl eunmoa equity 'Ibe research director of Katsinas, for making it sour. R GSC. - Matthew W. Coalter. cruse. seems that the GSC officers at .gradlUlte s&ade.Mo 1IIIC1auifW. in June 1m was 14.1 com- the Labor Coalitioo on Public IT'S NOT FAIR and U's pared to 11.2 the previous Utilities raised a question about tiJnetbe ICC be beId ,...., cl..e enough to what I want ,accour..tablefor this injustice. .uawered: Who', going to --'Quotable Quotes-- The ICC is guaranteI!q BOW IS ft' that the utilities pay tile east 01 implementing ''Every truck 011 tbe bigbway is Flog· to came to a miDai.'. public utilities !mow the aeeret for beating these programs? sereecling balt." - Mille P ...... presideat 01 the In­ .----~~~------~~--~~------~ depeDdent 'l'rul:ters AssodatioD. GIl the IBtiomricie 1I'uck- drivers strik..'. . VIRGIL ~. By Brad Lancaster

"TbeI'e's lunatics oot there already. Anytime any of these independent boys calla strike, it IiYell some crazy the ell.CU8e to pick up a gun and pretend like he's IOmatle be's not.·· - .ftDI Uama. tnd driwr, OIIl'ep)rts 01. violelD by the striking tnd crners. "- -""l'be state fJl Illinois HI behaving as if we don' have a future. ~ ..- Alallllller Sdamidt, vice cbaDceDor for bealtb .>affairs lot the Uni9l!l'ldty 0I1UiDois, 011 the medical program' aeelting.~.~~~~.~~·...... "... . ~ Senior writer looks ahead to production of play in May By Terry Levffile will all do something to benefit wanted to be lawyer, but his Stan Writer ourselves," he said. mind began to change when he He picked the setting of entered his twenties. He Meet Herbert. Greenwich Village because he recalled waking up one morning Herbert is an old man who liked the "metaphor" of the at age 21 in Boston and deciding lives in despair. All he has left" area. "It's a place for misfits of he wanted to write, of his life is his house. He now our l>-.'lCiety - that's why 1 "I dabbled with writing before, but it became a process ~!ns~"r~~ni~i~ ~'JJ~ Pi=n~'~ of his plays per- of elimination - I wasn't very kept neidlborhood in New York formed will be good experience, good at anything else," he City pfagued with crime, said Edwards and he added he remarked. Greenwich Villag~, has no qualms about some..'\fIe But Herbert is a SurviV&f. He else directing it. He now calls himself a is carrying oot his life in his ~n "When I write a play, I do compulsive writer. mind. MO'.it people would call have something to say. Half the him in~ilne, but he's just fun is seeing someone else in- "U you really want to write, it another victim of society. terpret it. I can see if my ideas has to be an obsession," I' - said. This is Herbert as described work," he explained. by his creator, Brian Edwards. Edwards calls his writing A lot of thinking goes on Herbert is the main charal'ter "progressive with a touch of before he puts anything on of the play "Fatigue." absurdit)'." paper. A few character sket­ At age 26, Edwards, a senior His style, he said, is formerl ches, a particular setting. how in English, is about to h? It': his from his own personality and many words the play needs all first play produced. 'I'heater f:-om his favorite playwright, have to be worked out before instructor Judith Lyons Edward Albee. author of going to the typewriter, ac· arranged for the production, "Who's Afraid of Virginia cording to Edwards. which wiD be directed by Paul Wolf?," "American Dream," WooHe. senior in theater. The and "Tiny Alice." "I try to write everyday. even pl!Y.. ~Theallbeterperfthe 0firmlrstedWeekat Edwards has written six. if it it is scribbles on a note M..t.A:t,.. plays in his three years at STU· pad," he said. 10 !Aay. C. His latest play is a tribute to The production doesn't have a Albee. "I write until I don't have budget, but "somehow we're Edwards said his ideas anything more to say. I get very going to do it," Edwards said. originate with newspapers. excited when 1 write - it gives He came about getting the play dreams and !'('Cial issues. He me a let of energy. Every hour Stalf Pheco by Cha-yI Uagar produced by "pure luck." occasi-onally imagines himself I'm sitting, I feel as if it's Lyons was the director of i~, different types of en· wasted." Brian Ed_rda, S, Is Baa' to see 1111 lint play JI ....eed. "Twel£th Night," a p1a~ DY vironments - a small, lonely Shakespeare prcx.luced "y the hotel, an out-of-the-way diner or By the time the final project is Theater Department last a busy train station. These completed, it has been Depression here, pollsoys semester on which Edwards places, he said, stimulate his rew:-itten about five limes, worked. He gave "Fatigue" to mind, filling the setting with Edwards said. He calls NEW YORK (AP>-Two out of a depression. In November, the Lyons to read. She liked it characters and situations. playwriting the rr.ost difficult e\>~ry three Americans to fipel~t w:' 60 2 perceI1pere!nt u: enoOJghEdwan:~:t him produce it, se~edwraal rdst'de:if!.o!: peoa1soPlegeh~ resr,xmding to the latest Harris d . it?! l:a~. i~?S ~~::t poL t.elie ..e the United States is decided. A visit to New York last sees. like the old man on the =to write. he believes. 10 a depression. August was the catalyst for the park bench. Compared to a similar survey About 1,254 adults were polled play. While waiting for a bus, "Some~ne will catch my Edwards' "grand idea" of the in November, President by telephone between Jan. 2 and Edwards began talking with an attention ,ilDd 1 begin watching ruture doesn't stop at making it Reagan's rating declined on 5, The margin of error was old man who had recently been them and givir.g them a past. I as a recognized p1aywrillht. eve;')' question about how he is three points in either direction. beaten and robbed.. have a w~ole sto~ag~. 0; handling the economy . . The play concerns despair characters 1D my mInd, he "Playwrights o'lrn out . "t; ...... ' ,"0;.. ".'> :', . quickly. They usually makf' it By a inarginOl ~ ~to ~.~;:=!::=:~;:==~~~t~,J:I~ .. ~~~~. ..,!3~~~-~, 'Ed- whea tbey're afOUllNl..30. Fiibeea 32 ~t, with 2 percent un­ percer!t called It a (a:lure, 26 "When you see the' play, you wards has not been mspired to plays later, . tbey're IiDislted, .. decided, peuple responding to percent a success, and 7 percent might see Herbert as a villain. write ~childhood. Edwards said. "Before I fade, J the poll said the country was in didn't know. But in a sense, we all are. We Edwards said he always want to quit and write fiction."

Health News.•• BY DR. ROY S. WHm THiCLUB, EVERYONE WANTS TO GET OUT OF••• Dr. WhIte 3J5 S, illInois Ave. 529-385' THE ACHIN An Impatient driver switched ' Into her lane and then covIdn't BACK CLUB stop. PRESENT Mort Ellen _ to haYe * * tin.. Gardener WUI wortmg In her garden, bent over with hod bade problems all her life. * THE GREAT TUESDA Y MASSACRE * a1rowel. Probably ltarting from her PaIn stabbed her low back early school days wiler. she wfth 1tIe forewarning of a slumped at har desk with poor *-SUPER SPECIALS SUPER PRIZES lightening bolt. pastur.. * * * She couldn't stralght.n up. ~ ""'''''''. She lost all infwast In gar­ What most of our patients dening and MIl readv to wgrt to know Is "HOW DO t. 25, Drafts BUSCH. & D T-shirt. throw In the trow.I.' She hod RESIGN FROM THE AOfIN' Munchle. joIMd the acJt;n' back dub. BACK a.uer Ow answw Is ~54 Quart ikafts ., to help them rwafign milo­ Much Much More Georg. ~ down to pidc Iigned ~ of the IpIne . up his daughMr - bending at that en caUlling ..,..,. irri­ the waisf croci .. rather than tation. I you are G member at 1tIe !mea. He has beccme of til. AdtJn' IIxk Club ,.. o ...... af_dub. .. ·~.\nn/~ ~:.:"t= he WOlin shape. Now he', a . "rnemf:lwln poor ,tanding." . Dr&~S.White.. $1.2S·:'Quart Drafts spedaI' appearance GlorIa ..vol... In the C/O OIiroptactlc QinIc . . .'. .. . small bar: Dead End dub when ... MIl. sitting 103 S. WasfIington peacefully at a traffic signal CaIbondaIe, IIinois 62901 . 618-451-8127 : waiting for the light to chang.. Business grads to get less jobs By BeUnda Edmondson country," she said. considered, said Detomasi. Staff Writer Detomasi ascribes the reason Detomasi also pointed out for the decrease to the overall that those students who have Graduating College 'If drop in the economy, and received their master's in Business and Administration particu1arly to the fact that business administration do not ~ students at SIU..f' may fmd that goods are not being as rapidly necessarily bave an advantage. landing a job is barder work manufactured as in the past. Recently, re~rujters have hired than they bad bargained for. She stressed that it is not the students "ith B.A.s over l2pkcons 4.48 students wit}; MBAs bocause lJ. According to Marilyn nature of the University nor the Detornai, placement counselor quality of students which has they are cheaper to paJ. MBAs T2pkcon. in Career Plar.ning and caused the change. shoulci sometimes consider S'~ 4.38 Plac~ment, the rumber of "In fact, students are even those jobs which require only a companies planning to in- better qualified than in the past. bachelor's degree rather than ~. 6pkbtls terview students at SIU-C this Tberethem ,~resheSimsaPJ.'IY fewer jobs for look in vain for a job for which 2.48 spring is expected to decrease. d. thf>y are qualified, she said. In Last fall, 73 companie.s With the ~ in the spite of this, placement was still 1CroWD 750ml highter for MBAs in 1982. 5.62 ~oo;~em~~p~~ ~~off=':::.~':!reti~:; Though all areas of business light or dark compared to 157 companies in become necessarily more in­ are affected, Detomasi finds 750ml 5.19 the iall of 1981. tense. The differellCf' between that the job possibilities for Detomasi says that this being hired or rey..-cted usually sales and marketing majors are drastic decline is not unique to lies in a student's grade-point less bleak. She attributes this to SIU-C. average and w~rk experience. the need for personnel with the "A 50 ~rcent decrease in the Nowadays, applicants with ability to run businesses more compaDles hiring students grade-pomt averages below a seems to be typical across the certain standard are simply not ~ GRADS. Page 7 -LamPLfS CBriefs ------mE SEMPER FIDELIS Society be from 6::11 to 8 p.m. Thursday at 9 p. m. Tuesday in the Mackinaw the climbing wall of the Recreatioo Room of the Student Cellte:. Ac­ ~~COa!fru;~ ~~r~ ~!bil~ Center. Persons interested may cr.ii tivities for the spring semCliter will Angels' support aircraft at 7: 30 p m. 536-5531 for more information. be disCIISsed. Tuesday at Italian Village. An orimtation for all PLC's Will be at 3 pm !!:.\PPA PH1 will meet at SPC FINE ARTS Committee will p.m. at the SoutbPrn Dlimis airport. IIDOII Tuesday in the l1'·>(,es Room of meEt at 5 p.m. Tuesday in Activity the Student Center. George WftlVer Room D. CAREER COUNSEuNG wiu hold will speak on . , Acid Rain Effects a workshop to •• Build Your Self lID Forests." Esteem" at 3: 30 p. m. Tuesday in Woody Hall 8-142. THE SHAWNEE SOLAR Project Puzzle answers will sponsor a safety seminar on ME AND MY Dissertation beat~wood. Themeet~wiU be at RO.E SOL workshop will begin at 3:30 p.m. 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Solar .. NUTI!' Tuesday and will meet tlrouglllil Project's Energy Center, 808 S. ING GOA the 5emestB". The group is designed Forest. Persons interested may call to help cope with tbe dissertation 457-11172 for more informatiou. 1iioIii1lllioE'-fI!II,E.+.:-~ F~:~;~ process. H SMS .. HE REORGANIZED (]lURCH HUOS OT THE SA LU'l{I Flying Club will MS 0 I V E of Jesus Christ of Latter Diy Saints H I V E S meEt at 7 p.m. Tuesday in tlw! will have a Pepsi and cheese party DEE R T nll!bo.~l' ~ of the Studert Center. at 7 p. In Tuesday at the bome of UNA Club Illes will be collected. Persons Randy and Dianne Murray. 404 ORE SATO iI.i;erested may callDan Volin at s-& PoJiar. Apt. 8. RSVP is requested A LAT 101t 7870 for more information. Persons interc;;~ may call 549-41194 lEDGE or 457-7486 f« Jl>Qi"r infcnnation. AEAS THE PSYCHOLOGY CWB will meEt at 7 p.m Tuesday in ActiVity A CLASS ON THE Billirws' Room A and B in the Student Center. OvuJat ion Method of Natr::ral Family PerlllHlS interested may (;ootact Joe Planning wiU be at 7:30 p.m. Angelillo at 453-5714 for more i~ Tuesday at the Newman Calter. 715 formation. S. Washingtm. The class is free and co...,les are encow-aged to attend. mE STUDENT ADVERTISING Persons interested may call 529-3287 Ag!!llCY wIII.eel8I 7 p. .. TRSdIy (01' more informaticJIL; 18 Commulca&laDI lZl3. mE ILLINOIS PUBuC IntfftSt A CUNJC IN Climbing basics wiD Research Group will meet from 7 In

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Oh. sure. _ COUld cut \ Tu,. Dt Patate Alia NP.polet..... This is down on the Size, use artificial a-sa. skimp !tal • .., Gaullfl.-,. no cheap on the items and then seft it two for ana But_ 2uocIUnl Alia ~ pizza ! just don't believe in doing business that way. ltall... Bread w, IlUJlIIOd Butter For Oller 20 yeaIS, 'MIve Rlac.e.. been making the best pizza _ k._ how. and 1I:>rte Dt IIandorl" Alia Piamntese 'NfIve been delMring it free. In 30 rninutN or less. Call us. tonight. II. aX".,.. or ee-."",.....

r------,.,.OOoftanyl8"pIzza One eoupon per pizza &pIra: 5/17183

F..e, FIM DeIMrr ",.. Studero' ...... ter in o:.aJunctial 616 E. Walnut Witll ~"""' nU""I" Cbnooru ~ East Gate Plaza 1...,..".,....ted Invl to.. SIU-C Btu< ~~"77. '--_...,....--i------~~:;mtol!!=Stlle Open 11_-3am DrMB.,..,. __ _ 1982-83 Dinner C

Page 6, DaiJy·~·Fetnary 1. 198:1 Marine Corp's air force land We're Hunting for Members by Doug Jaa\oTID 0\1 noon. the flight crew of eight day'S activities are intended to Staff Writer members will cond\K't a formal gl\'E' the genE'ra! population a l prt>senlalion that will be "pen to look at the :\larine Corps' air "Fat Albe(t" is coming to the p'ublic. Then the crt'w will be forcE'. Southern lUil'!l)is Tuesday. a\'allablE' for qUE'Stions until Not Fat Albert of cartoon about 3 p.m. "Pcoplt' don't know that the :\larine Corps ha~ an air force." fame. but rat~r a U.S. Marine ThE' bluE'·and·gold plane is hE'sairl. "The :\Jarine Corps has Corps C·~30 transport primarily USE'd as a support nicknamed "Fat Albert ,. plane for thE' Marine Corps' the 7th largest air Corel' in the world." According to Capt. Larry BlUE' AngE'ls' preci~ion flying team Christie said. While on To round out :~edav. at 3 p.m. ~~i~~ent JA~~~naet SL f:fs~ duty, "Fat Albert" will "tOl'-. ml'mbers 1'1 the SemPeI Fidelis the plane and its crew will be on mally transport about 40 l're'YI. SociE'ty, a'l organization of O\'l'r hand for public inspection and mE'mbers and all of the 2\1 Marine Corps candidatE'S on questiOf'1S on Tlll'Sday. equipment arr supplies needed campus. \\ m havl' a chance to Activities wiil begin at about to service the BlUE' Angels' go for a "familiarizatiofl 10 a.m. wltn the plane's arrival aircraft. flight." Chrisht> said. "I look at 4I~"""'-. at the Southern Illinois Airport. According to Christie, the this as part of their ed~catio" GRADS from Page 6 BAT300 WIT11 THE D.E,. CLASSIFIEDS Something for Everyone ... effici'!ntly, especially when the sequently. !ltudents must ~ ,. .~ economy is in recession. more aggressive in their search Detomasi said that, in spite of for a job. The Student Center Board Announce.c; the decrease in recruitments. The Opening of business students are still "TherE' are some major highly marketable - it just constraints in the job market." . takes longer for them to receive DeTomasi said. "But students One Undergraduate and ofr~rs. She believes that shOiild be ·more willing to- put companies are being more more time and energy into their One Graduate Position st'lf'<'tive in their hirin~. Con- job search. The results payoff" On the Student CenteA' Board Get involved in the formulation of Student Center Programs & Policies

Boar~ applicatJ..>ns can be picked up at the Student C@f't~ Adm!:-~trative Office on the second floor of the Student Center from January 28 thru February 4. Ap­ plicatiOns will be screened alld interviews scheduled on February 7th and 8th, 1983,

11.. AU SHOWtJ BEfORE ep. ... PAUL NEWMAN in TIfEVERDICT _C£NT\1IIY...... """" I!! IHOWSDAIL., .t:1. Gohotnefor RIcNnI 0... - Detn WifIget "AN OFFICER AND A GENTlEMAN" ,., 3 minutes. SHOWSDA.. ., 1:11 J:4I6:4e t:te Home. You couldn't wait STILL OFe to get away. And now THENIGHT_JUA there are times SHOWSDAIL., when you'd give 1:111:111:117:1 t:1 anything to go back. So go back. 11 •• AU SHOWS BEI'OAE SP. ... You're never really further away than the closest phone. Whethe~ it's a ~DA.,.,:tI7:t1 t:tI tvlinge of homesickness, the drudgery of studYIng LYLE SWANN IS A CHAMPION or a terrifk piece of news, call fh~m. You'll OFF-ROAD RACER._ BUT TO THE PEOPLE be there in seconds. BecaUf.e one thIng they OF 1877, HE'S SOME- THING VERY, VERY never taught you in Ma~ ~ DIFFERENT. 101 is that the Shortest) distance between £ two points is L.J!I!~'Jli:l"r·- I. long distanc;e. T/mE FII~RI WllKDA." I... 7:t1 t:tI Independentr~nruake~ featnred at 7 -day festival fy Cynthia Rector senior ill cinema - and SiaU Writer photography said. In preparing r,)r The Big Muddy, Janecek Fiw years ago, a ~:.'Stival says they "made a con began at.SIU-C to showcase the talents of independent film­ :~~= ~:~~p~~r~~~~:~ makers. That event, the Big will screer.· three of the his Muddy Film Fertival, has films: "Ali - Fear Eats th(' grown in leaps and bounl-ls 'oul." "Merchant of 4 Se~')ns" despite ever-increasing cut· and "The Marriage 01 Maria backs in Arts funding. Braun, " as weD as two bv The festival. which begins filmmaker Douglas Sirko a Tuesday, oCfers Southern primary source of Fassbinder's Illinoisans a unique opportunity inspiration. Sirk's films will Ix­ view non-mainstream cinema, "All That Heavan Allows," and as well as providing film Written on the Wind." At each makers an inspirational showing a series of (:mema smorgasboard. Fifteen hours of notes will be provided to draw competition films by unknown pareilels between ~he two filmmakers as well as eight filmmakers and their work." films by better-known artists Other special features include will be screenet.i in the Student the appearances of three guest Center and Furr Auditoriur.ls. film-makers who will act as Jim Janecek, this year's judges f'Jr the competition films [estiVIJJ coordinator, says he and also showcase some of their and the festival 'committee oWn works. "They are: Co,'nie deciderl if I a summer mt:"eting to Field, who has worked as an dedicate the 1983 festival to l.1te editor :n the film industr/. memory of Ranier Werner including being the assistant Fassbin·Jer, a filmmaker editor on "One Flew Over The whose death in June, 1982, Cuckoo's Nest"; Mark Rap- ended a prolific career in·which Tom Petly and The Heartbreakers will perform at the Arena m March 4. he directed over 40 feature­ =::'wf~ ~~~ t!i1:R~ length fLlms. During the fall, credit, including two financed Janecek said, a trip to the by ~rman TV; and Kathy Rose Tom .Petty to perform ~t Arena Chicago Film Festival provided who bas been making animated the group with a neVi conviction films since 1972 and has since Most bands do a tour to odds to come up a winner, but stormy r~lationship and concerning their theme. TIle won numerous awards for her support an album. Tom Petty the new material is not brooding rockabilly pop collaboration Windy City Festival also work. Rose will also premiere has done an album to support a or angry. Most of his hard with Dave Edmonds in the band claimed to dedicate their her latest work, a Iive-dance tour. feelings were aired out on "hockpile." His solo efforts, showings to Fassbinder, but the and fibn piece tjUed "Primitive "I want to go on tour, and so I "Hard Promises," and his new inclUding, "Power Pop for Now group felt tbe northern show Movers" on Sb.'lday evening want to have alot of rock n' roll enthusiasm has provided, in People," bear the 'lnique mark hadn't begun to give a full­ AlI thn.'e filmrr akers will be songs lu play." he said in a Petty's words. "a good rock n' of upbeat English Pop ala Stiff nedged tribute to his work. present at ;! £re-t Open Forum recent interview with RECORD roll albur.~ .. somettoing you can records. "They showed a couple of his Tuesday evening to answer magazine of U:e material on just put Of. and bop to." Carrack's rock n' roll films and that was it." J:mecek, questions. "Long Aftt:r D~'.rk." his most With his legal hasseJs and relationships ha,-e been equally recent release. monpy problems behind him. a 3tormy. He made his mar~ with will There are no songs on the bank of quality music in his a band called "Ace," only to Black Affairs Council host al(>um that mat~h "Amencan repotroir and a new bass player quit and ionn "Squeeze." Girl" or "Refugee" for ('nergy I Howie Epstein replaced Ron free variety show in Grinnell 1 :'!nd pop appeal. but tilt''"f> is Blair who just didn't want to "Squeeze," was extremely enough solid rock to milk .. tour anymore), Petty is anxious successful, but Can ..ck was not Tlle Black Affairs C~cil wiD )ncl~ in the s~w ~~.tJ March come in like a lion when to get in f.'onl of a live audience sa~!sfied and broke it u;- to do spoIlIK'r a iree variety show an oral mterpreUition . PeU. and his band. The again and do a litUe bo!)ping of solo work, a decisiOC" u..:: t from 7 to 10 pm. Tuesday in Uie ~ Hairiet <~rnan by He•• r·tbreakers. play the SlU-C' his own. He and The Heart­ resulted in the album, ~ment of Glinnell Hall Matrina Saffold; dancmg by the Arl!na on the 4th. break(rs haven't performed "Suburban Voodoo." J\ccording to Kevin Valentine, 5-to 12-year-old Fr,eddy Cole Petty's music is extremely since Petty's throat played out BAC' programming direc:tor. the Dan~; and dancmg by the With Lowe's tongue-in-cheek purpose of the variety show is to Black FU"e Dancers. There will personal, and as his lif~ at the end of their tour a year lyricism propelled by Carrack's cha' ~es, so does his music ago - a malady brought on by kick..off the celebration of Black also be music from the band, 4 modem melodies, "Noise To History Month, and to make a.m.; mustcal interpretati~s "You Got Lucky," the ii;-:;: his heavy smoking and ten­ Go" should go a long way. single release from' 'Long After dency to "scream" the songs. black students more aware 6f from BenYl'.h; and a magIc Dark." is a variation on Pelty's Backing Petty up at the Arena Tickets for the Tom Petty the BAC's yearly functions. show by Brad Lancaster. sl.andard theme of overcoming wiD be and Paul COTKCi"1. go on sale Saturc.lay, The variety show was the idea One wall of G~eU will also CalT3ck's new band, "Noise To February' 5, at the Arena's of Clive Neish' newly al)p(linted be used to display pencII­ Crafts sale slated Go." Lowe is best known for his South Lobby Box Office. assistant coordinator of BAC. IiNIw;nS!S and oil paintin~ for Student Center A Valpntine's Day Arts and • aaclle'•• 0. 2, I k ..p.y ...... 1 ••1.111·, If you Crafts SalE: will be held at the south solicitation area of the ca.. oyer,"w woulel you k ..p .. w ....., Student Center Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The sale is ~ponsored by the Student Programming Council Fine Arts Committee and the T T Student Center Craft Shop. Persons desiring more in­ formation about the event may o call tlle Craft~ at 536-3636.:. o II II I. _t I Featuring •H Comedian Scott Alarik as host •H T ··T Phone: Tickets available at thE) doo". 529.4130 $2 per parsooer $3. for couples 611 S. lIIinol, , Block From Campus Ballroom D - Student Center

Pag. s. Dail1 EgyptiID. J'ebruary 1, 1913 Dating Game returns to Ballroom D JeffWDtInob The Dating Game will be We put an ad in the DE and the WrI .... humorous. "We were tempted to throw in sean performed as it appeared on response was slow so we set up a ringer," Stolar said, televiaion, with one contestant Humor is the password, as "Perft.ilp! a t\8mster as one of "Bachelor number one v;e're asking questions of three a table on the first Door of the contestants were choseu for the contestants with a girls ona bip with my pareni.ll: When eligible bachelors or Student Center and received their quick-wits and composure voice piped in to answer me we get to the hotel, we find bachelorettel to determine lots of applications. But when in the face of "suggestive" questions. One guy even offered they've screwed l!n' the their potential as companions. we went to the dorms, it went questions. to dress up like a girl, but I'm rettervations. Instead Of giving 1be wumers will receive dinner crazy." too~ativeforthat. We'l'1! us two rooms, they give us one In the Old Main Room and "Our only criteria for picking going to try to keep it nice, but room with two double beds. tickets for a coocert at Shryock Of U:e 100 a~licants in­ contestants was bow flDlDy tJ)ey still suggestive. What would you suggest for Auditorium. terviewed, ~t gIrls and ei~t were in the interviews," Stolar sl~ arrangements?" guys were packed, along With said. "We're not nmninlJ a "Officially Wf' !k>n't allow any Wrthout hesitation, bachelor SPC Center Programming one alternate each, to play four dating service, we're Just X-rated stuff. Unofficially, number one answers, "It ChairmaQ Glenn Stolar wal gaJ"AS - two with a female putting on a good show." there's nothing we (:an do abc-.:! ~ds on how big your father delighted with the number of contestant asking the questioos it. We've sereent~ all the IS. applications received this year and two with a male contestant Stolar admitted looks were quP.Stions, and we'nJ boping the This iii an example of some of and is looking forward to the asking the questions. taken into consideration for p.nswen fall in lin,., but will) the questions contestants will show. questioners becaU!e "the knows~" have to field when the Dating Hosting the Dating Game will audience wants to !lee a con­ Game returns to Carbondale on "Last year we only bad rT be Scott AIarik, a singer­ testant win a date willi a good­ Tickets for the February 1 Tuesday, Feb I at 7:30 p.m. in applications for contestants and soogwriter-comedian who will looking girl or guy. We're show are $2 per person lUKi S3 ·Ballroom D of tht!-. Studant the show suffered because of it. blend his many talents to keep creating a {anlasy world. That's c: ~~e and are availabie ~t :Ceoter This year we received over 100. the evening fast-paced and pan of t~ show." Ballet sold out;.season tickt~t­ holders asked to call box offi~

The Royal Winnipeg Ballet, are asked to contact the scheduled to perform touilIbt at Shryock Box Office at 453-3378 8 p.m. in ShrYock has aoIa out, today. as soon as possible. This ac:<;ording to Drad Faugn. is being requested so that those assIStant director of ShryOCk., seats that will not be used may Consequently, all season be sold in order to allow tnc ticket holders not planning to maximum number of people the use their tickets for the ballet dlC'i~e to enjoy the ballt't. Tl"ba recital to be given Randal G. Foil will perinnn a Assisting Foil wiD be: Anita visiting artist recital on tuba Hutton, piano; Francine Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Old Sbf'mlan. french ho.-n; Robert Baptist Foundation Chapel. !.ilison, trumnrt; Cliff Shis~, Foil received his bachelor's a Robert WelSl, and master's uI music degrees =~. from tIM:: Cleveland Institute of Foil will be periormi works Music, cIurinI which time be by Beat:h. Stabile. (!otozzi, studied with Ronald Bishop 01 Muller, Arnold and Chet!tham. the Cleveland Orchestra. He is CUJ'1'eIltly performing. with the The recital is open to Ute SIU FaCufty Brass Quintet. public and admission is free.

Inclepe~--mly procIucecI films from .11 over the cou"try have ...en .... t to C.rboncIal. 10 campeto far .,•• c:.h awanls. Showl... "" .....ny of these flI ...... IIstecl unci.,. '.:oMPlTlTlOt-. FlW.5. All of these ,.haws .... dl...... t. J In •• p ....nt fI...... --...... 1woutIht to ~.. to ...... to ..... ye.r'. '-"-I. They wllllllaopreMllt ...... __ thelr_ ~. • An ...... will ...... ~dln the SfueI.nt CClnt.,. AuciltmuIII oaPT Prllllltive Moven. ~ .,...... , W...... 2 TONIGHT. 1'OMO ••OW. ~PILMS 7..-AY-IIAa'AD THI SOUL 7..-.:ALl tHAT HlAVIN AUOM' ..Irected ~ ...... w.,...,...... , Ou" EU. a.. touch.... ""'.tfwlr ...t_. alJrtyIth ...... ~ ...... ,. ClenllllllfIoorw.t...... _ ...... Ar-." ~ .....m.1tocIr ...... W'~ UI~"""''''''fu!Jan of _Ela. _ ..... __1 ...... ,.. 0...01 ...... fll_.Nut A.....-.c. on ...... of Ita ...... ~PILMS THI,InH ... M.'lDDY raM PIS1WAL" DlDlCAftD fOTHI MIMOItYf.aA__ 'AIHINDIII

I - ~d N<"' •.• ,_.".. ~. "- II. Ell ...... f s I; I_~ t . _'. d u.s. productivity ra.teOl~ top, MAiN ST. LAUNDROMAT but rate of increased is slowed 5l9E.MAIN Ry Robert Green nations, especially Japan and fIrst discuss the productivity All New EQuipment Starr Writer West Germany. problem. learn the methods ... -_. _- "One of the main problems is used to enhance productivity in ..-.- 7tlw-...... ~ Contrary to popular belief. other nations and be willing to the United States still has the ~~~~dol ~~:;rw!~ ~~':: change accordingly. J4t.151. ":.":.'q'" highest rate of productivity in unemployed," Striner said. "All Striner also said illiteracy in the world. of our manpower programs are the United States is hurting But the annual rate of in­ just token programs." productivity. crease of productivity of U.s. West Germany, Striner said. He said behl.·een 20 :wd 30 Carbondale's Original Deli industries has slowed to a has a much greater rate of tJercent of American workers trickle in recent years. This increase in productivity are unable to upgrade their Free Lunch Deliveries decline is primarily a "people because c.f a national retraining skills because of illiteracy . In problem," and not a problem of program Ijtarted in 1969. this resPect. Striner said, economics. "In W~t Germany, leaders pducation must also playa part 11 .. 1:30 ' Herbert Striner. a produc­ foresaw that increasing in improving productivity in tivity consultant, made those technology would require Ammca. 549.. 3366 remarks in a national upgrading the skills of After Striner's keynote ad­ teleconference viewed by about workers," he said. "Now every dress. viewers engaged in local 30 local company executiv.!S in German, emp'!oyed or unem­ dhcussions, viewed a panel • Subs. Salads. the Student Center Friday. pJoyec, is entitled to two years discussion featuring other ·S The teleconCerence, entitled of govt.rnment funded training, productivity experts and _ .. "Productivity in America," and dur.ng that time the citizen participated in a phone-in ~cake.Quiche. was broadcast live via satellite receives a stipend." question-and-answer session. from American University in Striner saiiJ that such an Washington D.C. and from the "investment in individuals" The teleconference was c0- University of Nebraska in should be regarded as "a cash sponsored by the Department of Lincoln to SIU-C and 49 other now." because employed Continuing Education and the locations around the country. citizens, in the long run, benefit SIU.c Broadcasting Service. Between segments viewers the nation's economy. ronducted local discussions. He said Japan and· West William Meyers, director of Defming productivity as the Germany are successful in instructional television. said the U4 519'.111. Awe. output per unit of productive increasing productivity because teleconferences have been effort, Striner predicted that their leaders consider man­ conducted at SIU-C for about a Japan, West Germany and power policies as important as year, and the conCerence Friday JB.!.9..YI.Q§J:J.~,9..y§. France will surpass the United fIscal and monetary policies. was the largest yet. States in productivity by 1987 "In the United States we only unless steps are taken to correct talk about fIscal and monetary Judy Fauri, conference . SIlusafle the problem. policy," he said. "It's like coordinator, said that the 'h LB. Sausage Smothered with American Cheese. Striner said the solution lies in trying to sit on a stool with onJ~' teleconferer ~ held at SIU-C Served on PI,., Breod with '..... Order Steak Fries more effective use of human two legs." have been successful. and she 30. KOSHER HOT DOG with Diced Onion & Tomato...... $1.99 resources and the willingness of He said to improve the said it is hoped tha f a 31. POliSH SAUSAGE Served with Grilled Onions...... $1,99 American industries to learn situation. labor. government teleconference :lI'oadcast will 32. BRATWURST Served with Grilled Onions ...... $1.99 from the met~ods used in other and industry in America must one day originate from SfU-C. 33. ITALIAN SAUSAGE Com Imented w Grilled Onions .. _$1.99 Simon wants bigger coal.exports Southern Illinois needs to ex.'Ort believes the sulfu- oxides ami roote for an increase in the * PLAZA GRIU. * more than the usual 1.5 percelll nitrogen oxides rt. 'eased into demand of southern Illinois of its coal, says U.S. Rep. Paul the air from high sulfur burning coat .. Simon said. Simon. D-22nd District but he plants are ~1ated to the for­ The Port of New Orleans (THAI RESTAURANT) acknowledges some problems ma~on of acid rain. needs to be equipped to handle a Oper. S~"ven dove; 0 week' acid rain. transportation. As a new member of the deep draft carrier," Simon said. research and development House Science and TeclJo.Iogy "similiar to the one in Victoria. Hours: MON-SAT 7am-9P1D:SUN , 1am-.9pm funds. and world ('conomic Committe'!. Simon said.he plans British Columbia. if we want to We serve conditbns - have to be solved to "(ocus f".jeral energy and increase our export":;" first. research and de\'"elopment American, Tho; & \::i .. , ''':.~ Food Southern Illinois coal is attention on high-sulfur Plinois Diane Gilleland. of corporate believed to cause acid rain coal" through grants to coal relations at the coal center said. * Breakfas' 'lunch Dinner because of its high sulfur re;t>:uch facilities." "not much coal is shipped content. However. "Some Simo., said tbe Ad- through the Mississippi Rl\'er. AU YOU CAN EAT LUNCH ~Fm credible scientists dispute the minislr.1tion should provide ,11>114," ...-.uJ; causes of acid rain," said Craig financial incentives to the ~~~m~~~~~~m~t ~ $3.85 ... Carrell, research and National Science Foondation demand i'l just not there for lunch Bufiet Served development coordinator at the for more researcb on coal and to such an improvement." Coal Extraction and lltilization encourage the instaUation of MON-SAT 11 :300m-2:00pm Center at SIU. The facts are still scrubbers at coal-fired plants. Presently, 62.5 million short in dispute. he added. Southern Illinois seDds most tons are exported from the coal this W"'u SpecIal Claire Carlson. research of its exported coal to Jhpan and mines of Illinois. Carle said. Chide... AImoMs DI .. associate at the utilization Spain, according to Dave Carle. Southern Illinois exports to center. is more defInite on the SImon press secretary. "There Canada, Mexico. Belgium. 602 S. 10_ with FrI.d Riu problem of acid rain. She is not a viable transportation Taiwan, Japan and Spain. c.M:sdtIe $2.50 S49-2S14

It. N • X • 1 ION .The A~erican T~~ "0 F Happy Hour 11 :30-8:00 M I X I D MIDIA III~ ~ I I 35. Drafts ! ) 1.75 PLtchers. _ A I 1 A L L I Y (~ SO. S I U ( l.QWENBRAlI 754 Speectrails (INT.I STUDENT 70¢ Seagrarns 1 R E ~ E P 1 ON 75. Jack DanIels 7 p. M F I • 1 ********************* ••••••••*** Special of tlie Mont. h' ~ special all day 'night r Whiff! & Black Bombay W I L C 0 X 5 0 N Russians Gin B U D W I , R A V E N N A 95. . 75'; I ~ by SPC '1... Art. & The Craft Shop -~iI;iBa~_ijl.

Paj(t' 10. Daily Egyptu..:. Febnary 1, 1983 t }bod Ser"ice Center

OA1Sis 4 lOp m • b lOp m ~ __. __,

I Sa 1 i sbu,.y Sf e'.:"" I ,; IIh;pp"d PU"'oe. wiC •• ,y I ~ Salad $2."5 Di"m~r Ro" .-/8utt~r

Ct,;c.ken Patty w/Gra'\(.., Herbed Rit.p Butte'ed Zucchini $2.25 Dinner 1101 J ",/B"tte, I i ttO'Tlcspun Ham s.tew Cornbread I Cole S 1".. $2. SO DailY'· S.".11 Oessert Beef Maca ron i By t t ere-d S" i nach ~IN ~.~ Sp~cials· Dinner R011 w/Butter

~ Mac a ron i and C "'~e5.e ~ Sm.J 11 Sa lad .: Oinner Roll w/8utter 52.4S Qe!o~ert Monday'---:,~ __ TueldaYr-:--:-:-:----::---, BIG MUDDY_ Mostaccoli Spaghetti wI M.at Sauc. ~ Catering Services Ch•• " & Ric. Cal"rol. Pork Fried Ric. Oaily_10.30 a.m.' t::"i[ t-lAl': RO','~ -(:ANISH Rolla Garlic Br.ad All dinners $1.80 1: 30 p m S Pt c- t () A P P !_l S ThUreday FridaJ-______.,-- __--. !-' r ~ I:Ij I: J 1 R 1 (' [* He)T i-I',)LlS W/St·iTI '" Goulalh Beef. Macaroni & Tomato Casserole H ~ \ ! I. - L • I f B L 1/ L I,l A .~~ [ Spanilh Ric. Ham B.ans R eo oJ u ld r ") '. ::. ; f' Dr tJdI f II U:"II V ;,:. I:' Hot French Br ••~ Roll. ...;C;...:o""r""n....;B""r...;;e-=a-=d ______...J

[) y "., f' ,..: ; r. ~ w'l: f' .,.)', 1 t. '1 r ~. ,., I

All dinner .".chdl include: To ..ed S.,.d (c:hoica of 2 dr•• ~ing.) & Cole Slaw. :; .. tJ t1 ~ 1 ~ ,. --: l .... ! k f- Y 0 ~! 'l r ;,) ... ~ ~

-Woody Nail/Cafeteria- Deli Egyptian ~',a\1 M~'aro"i and Cheese Choice of Vegetable Mor,dqay men u ~r'':.~s .. ~ Hot Roll ______~ , 3 Cheese Strata FULL PROF. 81.80 ,.,- Green Beans Tuesday ba/oJ,.. cI_icMl c"- Chocolate Cake ______S 2.38

Shrimp Fried Rice Choi('.' of Salad Wttdnesday

~ ______8a40 Herbe~ Carrots ______, 2.42

liver iOnions Parsley Potatoes Thursdc.y L-,------~ feb II- Appt. Pie ______S 2.31 2..20 ~~~ ______s~ Fried'Perch Col. Slow Frick. I' Tatertots ______S 2 .33 --- '0:30 - ':30------

OLD MAIN ROOM U:OOa.m. -1:30p,m.

~Q.@ghetti wi th Meat Sauce Bu ttered Green I'eans Tos sed Sa I ad Gar Ii c. Bread •~ ~e/QniQn Q~ Green Peas 1::I Tossed Salad ~• Sherbet ~ Ham/Beans 'i Buttered Spi nach ! Car rot/P i neapp I e Sa I ad Cornbread ~• ~ e..e..Q~ Baked Potato ~ 8u i :I t tered Broccol Hot Roll - Buttered •.95 ~ Seafood Day 81.15 Cod Fi Ilet _".lD Scallops - Devi led Crab in a Shell Steak Fries Cole Slaw

~ , ...... '~""' ••"''''''' ..'''' -:a~ .. Dai\J £&yptiaD, February 1. 1983. Page 11 Closed grade school solves I*;=~'l . ~ space problerns for elderly S The First meeting of the semester :s will be Todil at 5pm I By Karen Torry atmosphere for senior citizens, Area Agency on Aging to pay Activity oom D a Staff Writer she added. for insulation, carpeting and air 3rd floor Student Center The new center, more than conditioning. The center must I When Springmore Elemen- twice as large as the present match IS percent 01 the grant tary School closed last June, the facility at 606 E. College St., has with :ts own resources, but Carbondale Senior Citizens two fireplaces, several rooms Center got a new home. Carol with cathedral ceilings and a ~I~~ t~r~:i~en m~[~~r ~ I;1nmRftftml~:=====:~ Johnson calls it a "national large gymnasium which will be city.wile, door-to-door fun­ phenomenon. " converted to a dining and draising drive beginning in mid­ "Every year the number of meeting room. February. The money wiD go young people starting school Johnson envisions the center toward roof repairs and other decreases, the number of people as more than a place for the energy efficiency measures. rW~-~::W-l turning 60 increases," and the elderly. Services to senior citizens will need for services to the elderly ''The center is a good op­ not be halted during the move, grows, Johnson, the center's portunity for more interaction which is expected to be com­ Lecture! executive director, said between younger ~ple and plete by the last week in recently. senior citizens," said Johnson. February. Equipment and The City of Carbondale "I am hoping it can become a furniture will be moved In ToPit: How to bu, a used car. donated the land at Springer place for the community." stages to make a smooth and Sycamore 3treets for Carbondale and SJU-C theater transition. Speaker: Stan Hanson. Nallaler of IKE· s Used Cars Springmore Schoo', to the school groul;lS are interested in per· district 33 years ago. When the forming at the center, Johnson That transition will be in­ school closed, the city said. She hopes junior high and strumental, Johnson said, in discovered a reverter clause in hig.'! school choral and musical helping the center continue to its agreement with the district, groups will entertain at meet its main ob;ective: Wed •• 'F eb. 2 at 11 am giving the land back to the city mealtimes, as t,hey have in the keeping senior citizens' ID thei .. if the school shut down within 40 past. Bnnquets, group drivmg own homes and out of nursing International Lounse years. It was a "natural" instruction, card games and homes. solution to the need for a larger gatherings of other senior senior citizens center, Johnson citizens' organizations wiD be .------~ said. held in t.he meeting room. '-fI ucellent LJ _I Home.Cookod Lack of space and cuts in Johnson hopes to develop l! I M.,.loll-6 government funding had working relationship with SIU-C , ' Happy Hour J-6 Overcoming eliminated a number of students who want to explore educational and recreational careers in gerontology. The new ~. TU!!!I!J Dlnnw Specla' programs offered by the center. facilities offer the possibility of UO ..... wlth2 ...... - Back It became difficult to offer an expanded internship ...... Iutter .2.15 entertainment during noon progrc1l1l, she s~id Pain meals as the dining room for the Renovation of the building is 2~ 12 oz. Y!!#1. Golden Goose Nutrition underway. R.B. Stephens 3pm-2am Program became crowded. Construction Co. has been hired Music by: Dou8 McDanl.1 Chronlc,Nckoch. Essential programs became top for plumbing and electric...i "". orpaln?leam priority. repairs. Volunteers from the .. how to beollt the "Our real need has been for center and the House of Glass through ,'roper the Adult Day Care program," are helping with painting and P'U... ,TlII., .xt"-I'CI... Johnson said. The program carpentry. A local moving management and serves an average of 3S people a company has offered to tran- day, Monday through Saturday, sport furniture and equipment. attitude. A meCf1cal .valu­ making it the largest adult day "We really are depending on atlon will'" ~ lM'Ior care program in illinois. Space volunteers to get the center to the start of claa. Regl.ter in the new center will help ready," Johnson said. by February !. call ~1. alleviate ove:'crowding aD( The center has applied for a ~te a spacious, homelik.~ $65,000 grant from the Egyptian Meets Th.. ~. 4:00-5:30 Ltnv train rates to be o,lfered p...... for four CONeCUtl •• By Palrkk WilHams Carbondale is c~idered part weeks ...... nnIng February 17. Staff Writer of the central ~ that runs as Car west as DelWer and south Students plallning trips over into Texas, Since Carbondale spring break may be able to lies in the central area, students take advantalle of special low­ wanting to travel' to Florida rate fares ofiered by Amtrak during the annual spring exodus Attention: Student Workers wi" have to pay &he $225 tw~ be'~Aic~~erica" Cares region rate. New Orleans also will reduce round-trip ticket lies in the central region. prices as much as $397 on some "We're trring 10. generate WHY A CREDIT UNION? CUSTOM CHEQUEI:'IIG routes. tram, durmg \hese hard Your paycheck is rU your only Nr...- chrcking is a thing ollht Under the same rate ecoooruie times,"~ '. said Pam benefil as a Sludrnl employee of ~atbanksandsaYinl!:;& ~..,.. schedul~, the Umted States will Dk:ksoo, Amtrak· spokesman. SIU. Youaredigiblefo-mrmbmbip m 1M area N.~ at 1M aedit wUm "It's kind of an off-peak season in SIC Employees Credit Union. The crMit unic., "(f,,,.. a trulv be.. !tr'~~.~~ for US," cnst.free ch«king account. I, will cost $125 round-trip bet­ .. All Aboard America" fares ~a:::;;;:::..1C::pai ~uires nu rnirumum 1:oaJano,. n" lltnr so,~ and bvrrow tm-1IItU rnll1lhly 90fYICe charge. and Ill' ween any two points within each will be off.~:-ed until May 30. The """"... 1JI; r7Pdil N1Iiar.1ICbIDJIy dlarJ!"ford«lring~ region and $225 between two plan allows 30 days for the trip ",.. "d by 1M IIfnIbns. It ""'..... II/) Semndly. sIudmIl11t'Inbers with regions. A trans-continental trip di/f1'"rtOl£r "'tMr~ Irtu .. $2:5", an aVmlgl'daily ~III mll' will cost $299. ~:,a~~~v~ ~~~ti~~- $25.(}(Jf).,.., (Up fItJ" _-a S7SO ",ill ...m SIit,\ am,ual inl"'" Although lying on the City of slrmrltclthr. trum ttate-.o/'· ~,i~~::a~1n arolUllts 10 their inI..-est.bearing l'ninll offen; an attractivr poriag. dwdring aallllN II> earn interest ,., ,0( financial....-v1Cl!S custom tIiIored an ollheir mc~ - including that to- meet members' ne.!ds. .. hidt ..;n he spent 1111 living expmses. The credit un~• .,', cha:king TBE&oLDMID arn>llJll~ldaily mterest"nall.of COSl'S :'IIafl-lfNG :!!~"':~~~~in rOJul:'ll theamllJl1l t... rw.,dav .. I"" ~lt-rnlx rslup in 1M amit uni"" mnnth!;. III' t""uyears, . III 1 1M Simply ,mmlain $25 '" a Share k.wesl minimum balain ~ l.unch Thl. Week 11·2 $1.49 .s.,1'iinJ(S~acollIDt. Since y ..... arr a " .."Is •., inIm!sI'l!earin& aa:oonts Single Inp-edient alice part, ..11t'T.lh"'~"',~. 111 the arra and JliIY!I wiIhlU sIwr in the credit ..,illn. If yllll "'...... , lilt I\igbtooI rate crl inlen-st & amalllOft drink >I-. ouId evrr ('tllbership. yllur $25 will he "'-,lo."IlIf'rIt., nn bulh pia"" .....winl! ======r~infuU.lnlMmrantio1lt'iI ;dl ""'onll act ivity. PItcher. of "MIOIEIDB. $1.00 "iU""",hlJ{her·IhaJl.bankintere5t. \lV/purchase of med or large pizza 5pm-9pm M·T·W·Th only ONCE A MEMBER i\LWAYS A. MEMBER stu 9.!A.c:Nfl3- Sll: Empluyft>S CrediI Un.", CRErllTlNON111' __ _ .ub!oibes ... Ihe p/lihlSlrphy "'On.."t' 1.'odr ;. menlber. atway~ a mem.~.'" V'1lI c ...... ,62OOt frOIft Campus ... iII~y".... creditunir .. 6'a..e&1.~ t11l. Ill1no1a 52.-4130. n~\Jfo .. lit.. ,"""ifvuu_ Ik' h~ emplnyed by SlU Membership ill a lift.... rx-fit availabl"lnyullnIlW.

Page 12, Daily E:;ptJ.. Febnal'J 1. 1983 I.,....r------~ MR. IIA1'URAL'. ~ II ffice for taxpayer assistance I ~ ~ 4 I Whole Foods Grocery 'I o longer operates for public I Raw i<:\: I in Carbonale with tax questions period from .ran. I to the end of ; SunFlower Seeds .-\. .~! last year will not make the visit April each year. is no longer this year. o((ered, Kris Zini. Public Af­ 89¢ Lb. With Coupon ~~ Anybody who went to the Taxp3yer assistance. which fairs Officer at the IRS office in I :lflil nternal Revenue Service office was .3vailable during the filing Springfield. said_ People who I Sp~.. Wotch For Our Grond Opening ~ I need help with a federal tax Hours 9-6 Mon-Sat 1-5 Sun '\ I problem are asked to call the ! IRS toll-free at 1-1100-424-1040. ------~~-.~~~~~~------.. Today's puzzle This service runs fr;lm 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday ACROSS 52 Japanese through Friday. 1 - - hand' premiel' Dart Taxpayer assistance ho;~ been iielpe(l 56 Cush,on 6 FJlYlbie 57 ReciprOClty cut because of. "e('of)o~ic ~ 1 Pere wasn't 17 Oisaj:provmg 84 Dispatches Puzzle answers 19 PIIrt of Indta 6S Regoons . enough l.-affk." she noted. 20 Celtic on 21 Catalogue DOW .... are Page 6 Assistanc~ wa'J orfered during 22 Blusten 1 Bad the filing perker which, "we had one person 26Woodedaraa 3 Oozes there one day a week." Zini 27 Collar 4 Fun of vim said. The employee was 30 Gorges 5 Gnawed worlrl"q on a temporary basis 32 I,... person 8 Prairies pro­ 33 Sounds duce for the filing period. 34 Young one 7 Decays 28 Capaaty 42 Bird the 37 So sorry! "Since April of last year. 8 L_ out 29 Highway 44 MOU1": ;>r&! end of the filing period, no 38 Junctures 9 Roaster machine 45 C:llnbat 391'1unge 10 Absorb 2 words 46 Garments 40ScarIet 11 Hisque 30 Manne aid 41 Vtolln maker u:is~~~:::e~8f~;i,?e~~~ 41 Sc:orchM 12 NatiW Amer- 31 Buzzes 48 Lock observed. 42 ApiarIes k:ana 33 Rip SO Happy lace 43 Tol's...mk:le 13 F_ 35 "- and 0U1" 51 MOU1hwMd Questions about filing tax 45 Lea". '8 Coagulate 38 Trial 53 - de camp return forms and claiming 46 Vegetable 23 ;"." 38 NYSE mem- 504 Roman garb people exempt on their forms 48 Fish 25 Honshu bay bars'''11 55 DoIIer bills were 1J9:a1ly asked, Zini said. 49 Wothmtght 26 Crazes 39 MiSlortuna 58 RaIl, In Spait'o SO Gusset The service also helped people 27 Gelose 41 Candlestic:lL'l 59 -- mode prepare their fonns. ~-r:-~-r:-""',- Zini declined to give the Carbondale office's address. Since no assistance.at the office is available, she noted. "The ~:~,l public has no reason to

Onl" auditors and examiners in the- coUections department of the IRS are at the Carbondale ofhce.

!, GRADUATE TOGOLD~ •• AND ~*********************************« i ~~ ~A' i DIAMONDS! : cllai) ~BEER· / ': With a Diamond College Ring from ArtCarv. ed.~.. i /'I~~ ( BLAST) i .. -. \ i. /jI~": :tZ ••' Y/ ~ : Beerblast Sub Special : 'JfJ· . . .<0,'1>\ : A bakery f ....hroll wlthCotfo.Salaml. $1 25 : f.. * Turkey, Provolone Cheese & garnish. • * .... ~~-. ~. : Sern.-d with pickle & chips : ... ~.... ®. Your ArtCarved Aepresentabve ' f • ~ ~ Pitcher of Busch $1.25 i IS here now WIth !he beaubfulty alford- •. able DesIgner DIamond CollectIon An ~ ArtCarved exdusMt. EXQUISItely cr;;afted desIgnS. 8UseI WIth genutne ~ orcoke'l diamonds. In 10K or 14K gold. Or. choose !he elegant diamond-subshtute * ...... ~ Cubic Zirconia : fhun through Sun let your ArtCarved Aepresentahve Show you thos beaubful dass nng * Sub Special coIlectlOl'l lOday Gold and diamonds ns !he only way to go' ~ not valid lor .'Ivery ISub Special $1 75 : &Pltchers • JI~~ * I] : ... -----couPONI------I~ F..... 1-4 t:J0-4 Book.tOt.. Supply Counter ~ DATE TIME PLACE i 1354 OH 12.5' Minimum I: Deposit ReqUIred MasterCard or V'sa Accepted NaIhng else feels IIhe real oc*I t I any sub at BOOBYS Not vahd an ~11very I: * I ..06 S. illinois or Beerblost Sub I * i 549-33.. GooII !/1.1/11 : Order now uft~e"IIY I: L----~_COUPON-----J : for Graduation Dellv1ery !!..f!! ..,l!t!a I~ -********* ••••••• **************** ...

Daily EoptilD, February 1, um. Page 13 NICE ONE BEDROOM apt Wides Village 3 miles from campll5 INSURANCE S1U COA" ....-dtor CASH ~het52=~ortable !I~~~ tophomor .. and up Low Motorcycle Ra... NOW ..HTING POtt CARBONDALE HOUSING, TWO Alto W.~I"""""'" SUMMII & 'ALL __tIoft_--", ...... "'..-. ~ • ...... MaWIe ..... - ~~:bTe ~:~~~~i~~a w~~1 Feoturi"9: Efficlencl... 2 I 3 bel. tt.fth, ...... & Group ALlOt Carlxlndale Ramada Inn onOld.Rt Spfn 1..... 1 opts. W..rry_ftoIIl_ofMAI... NTZ 11UIO .... _ ..... '-t 13 West 684-4145. BSlnBaS7 wuh Swimmi"9 peal AYALA INSURANCE . Ai, conditioning ~,.,...... - TWO DEDRooM. FURNI~ED or Wall to _II corp«ing .57-4123 SYC.nae PtONIII... lCS .... ALlK. __ Ate AI, ~~urf5~~ N.. !!~ ca~~J:a9 Fully 'urni.hed C.... ,.rvserv_ Audio S~iall.ts CARBONDALE ,r;:FFICIE~CY Moint.. ~~ • ...-vice R.. I btate lHIoIII.A_ ...... , APARTMENT. water furruared. Charcoal grli'. reduced rates, Goss Property ANOyn ACREA'':;E ON SKYLINE drive Managers. 549-2621. 5411-~:9&Ba93 between Alto Pas. and Cobden. VEIlY nOSE TO CAMPUS 893-2901,. 88IS%AdlOl For Informal''''' ,100 by STIRIO NICE FlJRNISHED TWO bedroom The Quaas ~u!.Ue~r~lr~ IN H~Jru~ ~~C:it~~~to ca~~Ba~~1 12075. Wall alPAIR I Audio SpecialiSts. !W9·8495 4S7-!':U Mobile Homes Anou 'rom the C'Id traIn 11OtIon) • I SU~~":t~E~~:fJ~~af~ie:~CE SHOW Al'ARTI-,1fNTS ~k for SOl E. College, No.3. (467· Mon .. Wed." Frl" ioxso BEHIND FRED'S Dance 4422. 82558892 Bam. $3100 $400 down S71-moatb ·Com~·~ 1·5p<, '18M .I(oy..... portable Sol" 1I.2pm =ickup. 302. CARLA'S CLOSET CON· NICE L"RGE FURNISHED or 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Cedar ~a~1s~~~~ty~OCkS~ ~~G~!tE~~~rp~~w ~u~r;; P.ts & SUpp II •• .... furnisbed 2 and 3 bedrooms. All Creek Rd. Catiri:dral ceilings overf:ads on rear. Ideal for Ct.'<'llJIIiC'S, candleSAAd mUdl more. utilities furnished. On New Era deck. oak cabinets, I lear Old baulq or basic transportatb: 529-iuI2. B769OAl91 AQUARUlMS MURPHYSBORO. Road Nopets 1.568-I13I'=a~ RUDII great. $850. IIl7 -Z138. 8223Aa118 TROPICAL (;.sb.L~mali animals ~~;~ci ~!!\ t~~ed~f~- GOOD CLEAN USED F1rniture. N)On. B8213BI89 ~'S~~c:~n~c~~ ~a~::fb 2-BEDROOM FURNISHED Il1016 PLYMOUni BELVEDERE ~res~~~:~. t~~~· Nlr: 17th. 684-6811. B7779Ah94 APARTMENT on Giant City LARGE 2 Bi:DRooM house. Neer ROOd conditiOll, Dependable. new 00 B~b Aveme. . 7900Af911 Blacktop. No petit. n;ierenCo.'!S Rec. Center. Availabl... im- HAPPINli;S~ IS A llUg,llable ~red, appointment ~~~ ~~~~ lralre8. $1SO~~agi IBM SELECTRIC 11 with dual !ij{..JIe t,upy for Valentine s D~. =i~'!kJ23~.::9-397~~~ ~~~~~nditioo. S750l~ 687~2. 1'1 Christmas DaJg7~ 1 BEDROOM APMtTMENT CITATlCli ~980, +door. ~ CARBONDALE. CI~SE TO am-fm. camJlll!. I-bedroom I:r.ltage. nt;­ ~~7ste.J'mg, frMJ.J::i MAKE MONEY F1\O'd your lIEd ~SH~uid t~v:~t,~aa.f'8 month clothing. Put th(m 011 COll- Sporting Goods bloclu from cam!lUs. '190.00 Nice .-bedroom 101:50) trailer=a-e, AsKING $ISOO. 19'111 Mama loaded. month. 549-2533. B8354Ba98 rural Iocaton $146-nlOllth. Book value $2100. Call befcre 9:30 =io":,t. ~~~~~'::'rJy CHICAGO SPORTS FAN~ S'Lib­ scribe to Bill Gleason's' , Ch!~uC) Properties. 684-6274. B82CBBbl a.m. or weekEllIB. 529-2128. 8288Aa91 =~. sizes In dema~::; Sports" mafjzine. Sperial ~ Women ~ ar~ei_:zkt isslES lUi' J:Jil07 ~~!::r:2e~ Acto"':;~ ~~ 1:f11 VW BEETLE $850. 1974 WATERBEDS BRAND NEW. I • Secure Room DatS\ll. new EIltlDe, sbary. $151!15_ have many different styles and • Across from Campus ~~~nD~m:J:'~C~~,?~Z:, sizes. Buy complete or parts. Musical B8189Bb90 ~r::::'~1'~uto~::'-:4 • Cooking focilttift ::::J E. Main. SG-1331. 8338Aa91 ~~~~ed.c~~rrya~t 45f-~ SOUNDCORE·P. A. SALES .. • Monogement on pret"::.:.s 01'457-7018. keep trying. IDI4Af9S Rentab, 16 channel PA with ef­ 529-3833 1974 FIAT Sf"ECIAL, 4 door !IfdaD. fecta. monitors, soundman. PA Sales. 681-4758 7995An98 ~~eu G=~~, ~~ ~~n~ A~~l'~1e ~f~~d ENT CUT SPEt :IAL T-square Included. $100.00. 4';3- VIOLIN. S400 NEW, askillll $125. NICE. CLEAN. REASONABLE. V.W 1973 MUS1' sell. Excelleat 4647. Marty. 8348Afi2 Call collect (314)·33HlIl8. encl.' .... . two bedroom house to sublease. alIIdition, new pail!t 617-4082 or 8311A.n111 884-2616. 1aS9AlI9!i Royal ....t~' ::;~~.on~~City BI~ Electronics GIBSON ELECTRIC MELODY efficiency op1s. $135 a month DATSUN 8210, +speed, :'6 ROCK TAPES CUSTOM niade fill' Maker Guitar, $150. Yamaha 1 bedrccm opts. $150 a MURPHYSBORO, 2-BEDROOM, b."'DeIIdable, escellent condition. Acoustic Guitar, '100. Call Bob, -m refrigerator and stove furnished. you. Chooae from new wave, heavy air MIBl ~eIL Rest offer . 457~Aa92 metal. COUDtry. or aU three. Pbooe 549-7768. 8289An92 furnished, conditioned carport. nice yard, c:tlesonlYtaDO 457-8636. 1219A~ All electric, dOH to campus ~:is~~~f~~~ua pos~~m:o FOR EN! . ~~22 FOR SALE • 1969 VW semi­ FOR SALE: STILL under automatic Trans needs wort. S3lO, NoP TWO BEDROOM Hor, .. ~. N"lCe. 55-5733 alter 6 p.m. 836 I Aa93 warranty, Tec~ :M-14 tape Apartments $35O-lTIO"lth; Or one I'OiJmrn.J.te for ~~~COII D-I0~~i CARBONDALE DISCOUNT same hUJSe. 549-3114 or 687-2291!, CHEVY IMPALA' 76. RullI Gnat! HOUSING. I-bedroom furnished (eveui ,.l). 830GB tal :::: :A:e~t sell, ~A!it PIONEER SX-t COMPUTER­ comrolled receiver. $15(1.00. Sansui :riJe8m::~' 0~~'=!3a: d:a~ AREA. II, BEDROOMS SI4!'>. 2 D-9S cassette deck, $125.00. Mesa TnD 011 Old Rt. 13 W st. Call 684- We're HaYlal 1976 FORD WAGON. Good COD­ =~OC:~. S!~. ~SI~o.it~on:ft dition. New 6 year battery. AM- tunaable. $541.00. 453-4'175- 4145. 1924B.187 8321Ag9O campus. Nopet.s. 549-3&71. NEW 2 BEDROOM AP.\R1'­ a facemt! 83)9Bb1lO t:Je~D~:':~S::: ~~a~: MENT, all electric, w.he!~fer ----- 1l:00p.m. -12:00). 1aS7Aa95 eev. on 3-BEDROOM. 305 S. Birchlane R..,,_Z-Ith =:lid.s~=th.1l~:'~ Count", Pan: Mancw. now near F'ull East,ate. Two bath Color t.J.vt.1one 2322 and 867-3041, call after ';:00 ....nng £IhcJency and I ~!c:';;:~~in()~~~~~CI Motorcycl.. S25monlhlr pm. 1909BIIIIII e.droom.....,~ IIad and WhIte .. leMpet. J*n1. ..cl B8aBbl06 HONDA HAWK. ExcelJ..Dt TWO BEDROOMS, CARPETED, 1m $1'0 month ~ ...... ts. FutndtIecI or HOIISE F!>R RENT. Carbondale. conditi~ miles. Must see. free dei"-Y-.... moIn__ nicely flrnished, water included. I 'I'umosII4Id. NICiI. Nopeu.S29-1735, 4574)56. Bm8Ba9S 4'~ bedroom. Garage, deck. alter 6: 30 5p«101 Sole ..conon"JI&aff~. basement. 1400 pius utilities. 1:'&.. 'k~.~ No ~ WIth iIPOI'

PaIB 1.., DailJ ElYptiaD, February 1. 1983 1~i~"'): .~;~ ., ,-, 2 room -100.00 OVERSEAS JOBS - St:M1tfER· EXPERIENCEP GlJJTARTS1'­ T£ACltER is I(>oking for !ltuierts t.v. .SO.oo.cl_n. _II ~~~J~,d.A~r.:~ISFi~e~. maintained. unfumldted ~i~~tilT&~ii:nd lea~f~~ we __ " tnnh ,.Ict fl!ro" w"ri°~tl!}t :r~1Cc= Del Ma~. CA 92625. 82IIIOll; ENERGY INVESTMENT fumlture. _Ileltl. FEMALE ROOMMATE WAN­ '29·1539 TED, reasomable rent, located on COOK, 18-22 HOU!'.S ~ wP.ek. ~T~~:::e;;;e !nC:";~s Cherry street. For more in· 10::11 a.m.-2:oo l1.m. Daily. MlBt can b .. "'t any )j8n.k. A per· fonnlltion call :;29-5425. 11268Be90 !IOnalized, comprehensivt' ~neJ1IY SINGlE RATES ~~::eplb=~~n::~~ audit of Jour home, apartm!Sll IS MALE OR !"EMALE roommate: rorienced/cjefen-&:i. BF\fesume only $15. For businessell - $21) to AVAILA.BlE Private b'!droom-batb. Garage $100 Cal I ThO! Otber Gtilitv fo .. FREE bus to SIU &~JaI~::~~!I~PJIl~~Y information: 5-l~53C2. Ba339EIC17 ~.eNi;a=-;~~t =.~d Empoyer. 8298Q11 '- '(!f 3 5212 8'l76Be90 OPPORTUNi"i'Y. TRADE"'5 ff}( SAlESPEOPLE (5. PART·TlME "t£1' ~~; ROOMMATES NEEDED LARGE Advertising work. Interviews, ~nc~:fy ~eor~:Sf~~~~!ft: fumshed house. Sl20·montb plus tO~~ls~rr~:rsBarb, 7~ gi:~~~:-iII'i\) after~~ ~'Ts~;o ~x~t:.~ ci~~~~~ ~Ie""""-­North Hwy 51 II.. 62901 833UEI07 ON-CAMPUS VOLUNTEERS FEMALE ROOMMATE WAN­ THE HANDYMAN. TED, two bedroom a'.>artment. ~a~~~~. fora.~~:rd~~~c EVER YTHING from fixing ROYAL---- RENTALS ca U 457-70911. &!64Bet19 doorknobs to remodeling ~fid.~m~a~:~~~1 ~ bathrooms. carpentry, roofing, MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to D,Jve. 549-2861. Meeting Wed­ snow sboveling, la-.rn mowing. 2 bedroom Mobile HOMes share rtllt in bouse on (ber ry St. ~~~abi_ Feb. 2, 6: 30pm. ~ Reliable. Reasonable rates. lurnlshed, AC, Anchored UI;;at IOcatior.. rea sonable rent. References. 457·7026. ilMSl!:l08 Half furnished. call Mack at 549- Underpinned Available 7168. 8256Be90 BARTE,.uERS. WAJ'IRESSES LOST .. ' . .._', Now AND Dorrmen now hiring for TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES sp-ing SI20-1~Monthly and summer semesters. On wanted for 7 bedroom home o~ RF.WARD FOR SUNGLASSES 457·... 22 Sycamore St. near University. Call ~~~~'!t/~~r~~nsor J:tt6~~ taken from Communication& No Pets A. J. at:;29-20400r549-198S. :::~lng~~&-g! No q~~1 L 8299Bf.89 ye~~nOf M~nd~~.~I~~/Pf~~~~ ~m. Gatsby·s. 608 S. 'rIlinois SUBLEAS!i: UNTIL MAY, 1913. Ave. 88325017 LOST CASIO FX-31 scientific Nice furnishf:d. two bedrooms Cor CLASS alMFORTABLE HOUSE, calculator u."i!.h b~v·.. H:' ~c:::di..hc:i ~p good folks, Monroe St. Microwave. ~:I:a~ or ro~le. SI7~:mn~ PERSON TO WORK part-time 0:­ 1·21-!IJ lD Lawsnn, Parkinson or Aj.:. Rl!wa rd. 45.'-3:;38. 8319G92 u.~~:~es~~:J-,~5-':iB~- full-ti.ne selli~ the new Slender· ------Me diet I1lan In the Carbondale STAY FRIENDS WITH your ANN EMENTS roommate in this two bedroom at 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES for area. Profit potentIal is uniimitPd Call J24~ 8163OJ1 extra nice 4-bdrm. dose to cam- ATTENTION ENJOY ~r;tt~, ~n~IY T:~~I:bet':: f~:n!~~i:,bed, no petsiJ:g~o:= U. S. SUMMER JOBS! JUe's of derpnned, air cOOdi tioned, natural opportunities. Summer ca'nps ~ft~:U~~;S;in;a~J yt:UT ~~~~ Have supphes fi~er tips see. FEBRUARY RENT FREE~! 1- at your W~~~~1!s.~f:kio ~;rer~e~he~ ~~~l:aeso~t,~ I~~ (palOls. green ware. etc. I. Classes &J42Bct12 female needed for 4·bedroom ------Lewis Park Apt can ASAP, 529- ~~mK Et~oY"Be~~ Dm~~or.:;;s ~ii~ungJan ,9&. ~~r 1975. SMOBe92 CARBONDALE - VERY NICE two Gatos, CA !f.i4l31-1715. 8318C97 bem-oom with fenced in yard. :v" WEARY OF HAI.J..MARK" Per­ ONE ROOMMATE NEEDED for ~it~~5-Y~:.'sthJt.a_:~ A~: EARN $500.00 OR more per week. sonalized love :!!cssages hand· r.:::: b~nf~m~~~~Il!;~2 working only 3 hour. a lewly :tcorated two bedroom. day ... Guaranteed' For more in- ~l!tnaf~~a:Cat1~;~rCI3I $1 75-mont h. No dol!!!. 457-6372. 8329Be92 81S1J97 D;28d1 ------~~a~:s ~Ji~Uth ~~~n ------_.------~~ ~~~!~ FQ~~tar~ ~f~: Blvd. gEpt bE, Beverly HillstSA SIU SUNBATHERS' VERY NICE 141172 3-bedroom. 90211. 837 1 1:18 SPI-:]NGBREAK Florida trip to Attractively f1.U'nisbed witb Ft. Lauderdal.e or Key West: 8 ~~:dkr~~~~~.on'~;~~~f beach days. 7 nights lod~~ in fine ~.:~t~o.~.Ol~:~ CRUISE SHIP JOBS ROOMMATE WANTED FOR 2- available. 4,";7'8352. 88332Bcl08 $14-$28,(XX) ho~!~ ;~~t~~tri~~l ~~~ bem-oom house on Bridge St. Own 1:11 free l Ask for Annette Go with l~, 2 OR 3 BEDROOMS. F\Jr­ room for only $92. plus utilities. ~. HawaII. World Dished or unfurnished., ?'l:ted, can 457-5320. 8366Be92 for gukI£. d!mctory Newsto.tt .. ~~u:lf~Tr:e~1 fl~"l'ERCARD? etc. stOlES by GeOrge and Jean's Rooms ROOMMATE WANTED LEWIS Everyone eligible. Fees and WOMEN: SECURE PRIVATE Park Apt. SF, SI99.oo plus .". ~~~:~: ~1~al~~1:8 utilities. 4 bedromns. Malf' .~male. ~r!ffss ~{tco~n~~~~~'t. F~~~_ = ~hbl:~snw~t:n.d ~. m(!~E92 pilyslDro, fL 629fJ6. (618)-54H217 THE BooKS"om;. ~CYCLEG $150~month You have cooking anytime. 71185D7 facilities with all paid Itilities. ~lfe~lt;-rrt;;;!:i-!l~:r' ~l. Clean. well·maintained, Duplex•• stair&-across from hotRagS. management on premises. 529· ~~:~W~~·&~~ 8326.197 3833. b17Bd!7 NEAR CRAB ORCHARD Lake, 2 and easy revision. Call ~E92 or 3 bedroom unhrnisbf!d, 1 :;W t;I.t,,'ESTRIAN TEAM and the KING'SINNMOTEL 825E. Main =~~t!:I~~~;~N~raJ~i Saluki Sadd:e Club invites - cable TV (HB~ f'ur1jShed, air HOUSECLEA..1\fING. TAILORING. everyone interested in horses. ALTERATIONS. For ap­ - $62.65 SPACIOUS, FURNISHED, 3. ~~~e~::W poil. ment call 529-3198 .• 6p~ I r=lfe~at~O~~i~~a~e!; B79CBdloo BEDROOM brick. Totai electric, t<; com.:- to the meetings every FOR -R-E-N-T-O-N-E-roo-m-c-Io-,-e -to c:omtr:. Crfting. 457-5716' 88370Bf93 GfLBL::RT BOlIN FURNITURE ~~lt~~!:uSe~c~~ ~~~ campus. S11500 per month in~- Repair. Modt'r1l and antique ro~tbe level an.:! ~Ie of ridi~~ =:oom bouse. aill ShaJ~aJBS:5 Bu.lne.. Property furniture repaired and restored ------_._ ARTIST STUDIOS, THllEE wi~sc=e:a:e~ar~~~~ CLEAN CARS LAST loogn. Try ROOlf.~S IN 5 bedr Ala.' farm howe ~~, office, am apartmtllt c:.rlDndi-le.457-4924 B7926E98 the Foamin(l Brush Car Wasb nelt 3 miles south nf Carb<)odale. $75.00 m.!'eVI~alized downto~ 1'!fakan(.'a. to Penny 5 Restaurant at per room plus ooe-fifth ttilities. HIstorIC restored bUlldlDg. Lo"!' TYPING· THE OFFICE. 409 W SycllI!oreandW Main. 8317JI07 457-6167 , ~2971. B&l53Ba18 I rem. 54"-448. 8275Bh95 Main St., 549-3512. 8087E100 , . I SOOT MAGIC CHIMNEY SWilep ~'O:t:~::IIic()~; L~~~h~~!'~n RooMmat.. . ~oblle Hom. Lot~ _ The Master SweeJ? tnat knows your lolleybali gamr played on a rll !."01'...,t ball court. Student FE."'ALE ROOMMA'ft: WANTED FI~ MONTH RENT free, chimney. cartervi'Je, ~E99 FOR Quads. Furnished, quiet I SpacIOUS new shady lots In nac- Recreation Center Racouetbldl ==:,~i~s5~ for81:ta~ fc:1:~::J~i:. and~l~l:; GASOLiNE ALLEY. OFFERING g:-~;!~!c~i~~~; :~ro~otf~e!:~i~: 3~~Ae~tic andSIU VolieyballCluh. 8314J'c19 1 BEDRWid IN 4 bedroom house. HELP W~NTED' lliinDis. 529-1515. 8128E90 Mature ~. Nice bolBe with tot a t- ~I and RN's NEEDED~ Apply in perllOll. I. AIM DESIGNER, 3lIy garmett • your pregnancy ~,~ ;~::Sula~~~ ma;;ie, cIothi~ coostn..'Ction, and No pets. before noon or ~erriD H~tal I-M2-21191f~ ~73 alteratioos. O~n 7 days. ~3998.. after 6 Po m. B82l2Be81 • birth control 8158EIOI .a sexual concern ~~i~?~ ~n ~~: ~:~ WOMEN'S CF,NTER, CAR· Call the WeDness Centej ~~a~?fl~~ :P';:t: specialists. ~ 2.rnp Cedar, BONDALE offers confidential :Z!.ya~~~C:Zfla::- 1758 BeacC',J Street. Brookline, Mass .• 02l~. Or call 1-4117-277-80lI0. ~~o=i~~,!~ MALE ROOJDlA'ft: NEEl'1;!D Jot 8106010 2:tK. 87388Elii5 =s ~,-~F~~ a~iliJ:.n ALASKA, SUMMMER JOBS­ MENDING AND ALTER~'tIO'fi. Wi of51-7Otf1. D5lBe8t Good mooey SSS. Parks, rlllh~ Ch'!08p. 6B7~ after5P.m.~ceE90 aOOMMATE NF.EOED: NICE 4 :~:-:s~ re.=~: 1C?"~~:r Emplo~ Guide" 19C3 em- TERM PAPERS, THESES, lIf«oom funP~ botlIe in quiet Dissertations, resumes, etc. (IBM ?.. u, Sl.p«mOlth.5ri-~ ~~.~~,Bo][ 8165CIOI ~~equiPIDI5lt). ca~~s ROOMMATE NEEDED. FEMALE' or male. Lar~ bedrooai e;Jit ~rs':!irft':'~f·.::n PWEGN :,~ S110.00, all lit ':~ weela!rilil am breaks. Apply Great 8CC.iedltedThroIogy with Courses LoyaIa-U Skate Train. 8'.M8C90 COn BIRTHRIGHT l F... ,..-.gno.1Cy twsllng al the Newman Center 8. 101 12 wide ROOMMA'ft: WANTED ro share Condltlor Natural gas 1I bedroom house. Unfurnished CARFONDALE. FREE RENT and •..,..,..,tIaI .... ;,,_ R.ter beb-e Feb. 5 a utilities In exchange for limited J4t.~ corpeted $851 up-Country bechom. Quiet Joeatoa. Sloo." 715 S. Washington l~rvWon of 4 disibled uulta. 2 --~ mo. Grad..-efcmId. ~8eSZ ....." ~ Call 529-3311 llvl6L~~~~.13 -,-_.. ~,~carr' ca~

n.uy Egyptian. February 1, 1983. Pllge ~ Name change does not modify behavior of analysis program By William JasOII Yong program was changed because the departm,,~t confe~ ,to its Starf Writer of the old namt"'s mislt"ading grad~ates wlH speclfl,cally connotations, mention behavIor analysIs, he Behavior Modification, the "The old naml' is not quite said, old name for a graduate dear in terms of what the Enrollment for the program program at the Rehabiiitation program is," Lutzker noted, has Increasro ,by 15 percent In!'ltitute, is a misleading titlt", "Usually pt"ople think the over the prevIous academIC In practice, the program not program is associated with year Now the pn"6ram has only deals with treatment of emotional or men':I1 over 40 students, Lutzker noted. emotional problems, but also problems." "Job markets for BAT dt"als with research. The new namt" mere are bright, par· That is the message the curately indicates what ~he ticularly in the m\>dicine and Rehabilitation Institute at the program is about. Lutzker other relate:i industries, ". he College of Human Resources is believes, He saiu "behavior said. 'The Lleed for tral,:ed trying to get across. And to be analys,s" reflects the r'>'''>~rcb personnel ill this field is sure the message is conveyed to part of the program, and growing." the public, the institute has "therapy" reflects the treat· The program has merited II ct,:>nged the name of the ment aspt"Ct. nation~, and, iTlternatio~al program, "The significance of the name reputatIOn for Its outstandir.~ Thf: Illinois Board of Higher change, other than giving the achievemJ (~\ dezths have not hurt sales at his store. He attributed that to the AD GOOD AT TH~ ~UOWING CARBONDALE LIQUOR MARTS \ SMILE TODAY) W3y the media and the company handled coverage of the \" .. PO.i~~:::iis·l1eNo.lsPlIer- a_.AND~ .. it was before, it is now, and it .A.-.__ ___.-4 ~ 'KJ will be," AtVI·ood remarked. LIQUOR .MART LIQUOR MART "The media and the press did a . congr~ good job of ha:ldIing it. The WALL & WAtNUT 457-2721 to the founding mothers ~~':::~~~W!~('!:ir;;~ EASTGATE SHOPP~NG CENTER 109 N. WASHINGTON ALPHA EPSILON PHJ Phi Zetc; Chapter shelves.perie!\ce It madewas a(Of gooda badex- ~,~549-51-2(.,,'2 sorivrne.-upW,in. dow. ::::·~tion.·' B- An Atwood empl«lyee noted people are beJ!inmr.g to buy Lori Susan Tylenol 4g~in Paula Monique "We're stocking Tylenol in. -- Debbie Andrea the new packages, People are Davit'! Robin ...''Sales """ .. nttobuy;.:·...... havt: just recent1y '-::::':1. ~~4 29 Pam begun picking up, but it's not yet up to where it was." 11 12 k 12pak Not all retailers have the new ,2' . . po ·4~-6.91 safl'ty·packaged Tylenol ',- ~.)~\, Cons Cans ~ At. becau:;e wholesal~rs can't meet ');l. " '*" the demand for it. ~ t A Larry Moore, manager of' .:; AD GO:>D FOR TUES. AND WED, ~ ~_ .• ' ,.~n R~all. ~id l~t •••••••••••••••••••••i.~i~ ••••••••• ~ Pagll! ~ ~ Egyp&iala, Febnary I, 1983 ayoral race runs downstate People Who Care Both mayoral ::dndidal.:"S are have spreae posters around H~The£ , When Care campaigning at univers;ties campus. throughout the state. Mid.ael "I'm really trying to get Cl i n ic ., Is Needed Milanovich, junior ii' zoology, people to vote," Milanovich for has been established as carr.pus said "The mayor is so popular, Women lid. an nllt-patIeDt medkaI ceater cooni!!!!1tor for Mayor &Yi ne we feel that if we just get the • Abortion Service. whtle Brian Clak, senior in peoJ:le out to vote, most of them wiU vote for her." • Band-Aid Se'1l"'Y (~*rfllzatlon) zoology, has been established as , Vueaomv (male _rlHzadon) Richard Daley's campus Clak said he ho~ Daley gets r~~resentative. Both have the nomination beca'.lSe he clin't • I'mfHsional co_ling pnMded wttb absentee ballot applications and stand Mayor Bym':. He wanted aURrvt~ to ge hack to Chicago one week • Hope Is the on.1y state IJc:enRd oat-patietd before the Feb. 22 primary to medk1ll center in tile Gl'MIrr St. I.oab ..­ providing help for unplanaed ~ & campaign for Dak/ JUt he was pregnancy preftntloa. interested in ex­ about living costs. housing, told he coold be more help by possibility of a scholarship opportunities amI getting absentee votes down CAU. 1UU. FR£E 1-800-682-3121 ring internship in special Features of W(,LA. here. 'iasrungtOin, pC. are inviletl to "Daley's campaign is 1602 21st St. . Granire City, It . 62040 an informational WCLA is a non-profit financially strapped." Clak te be htl!l in the Thebes educational organization. In­ of the Student Center ternships are available in :!~~'.'.T~~~~ :tll t!e vho~~d: 8 from noon to 2 p.m. Congress, State Department, carrying the absentee ballots community affairs, public back to Chicago Feb. 4. relations. education, women's Student!: have to be registered issues, arts, museum, theater to vote in Cook Count" am! be a and other areas. resident of t.he city of Chicago in order to participate. The Persons desiring additional deadline to apply for absetlt~~ information may contact Betsy ballot applications is Feb. 4. All Peterson, cam,>us coordinator absentee ballots should be for \ilCLA at Woody Hall, Cot tS, mailed by Feb. 17 in order to get or b) calling 536-5506. to Chicago by Feb. 22.

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~------Phon~~ ______For $2 jaM fllllD the fonD. clip &. mail o,.....dline 11:00 noon Thun., Feb. 10th for .,ublicatluc with $Z.OO to the t:Ill Valentine', Dav. Feb_ 14th. Daily Ec"fptian (pI_leave apace between words) , TENNIS frOin qooociarci e kiropractic Page 20 A matter of fact, LeFevre had Dr. Brian E. Woodard kind words for everyon~, especially sophomore Scott CHIROPRACTOR Krul'ger, "He played a tOllgh matdl," Lt>Fevre said of the transfer OFFICE 161S) 529-4646 HOll' S Bv Appoln:ment who missed singles competition 504 Eastgate Drive last week because of illness. After Hours Emergency P.O Box 3424 "He made some mistakes of 1618) 457-8776 Carbondale, Illinois 62901 course. but if you were Ollt with the flu for 10 days, it's hard to step right back in and con­ tribute. As long as hp gave it all Le.blan /Gay / BI-Sexual he had. That'salJ I can ask ror" LeFevre asked. and mest of Support Group. for Men and Women the Salukis ~ave. Other si.1gles Now Forming ~~~rs i~rudd:f~::~3 ~~! Montgomery 2-6, 6·4, 7-5'; An opportunity for men and women who Gabriel Coch beat Tanum 6-4. 7· loving and sexual feelings for their some 5e.'( to 5; and Rollie Oliquino went together in a safe, confidential, supportive three sets before t>pating (JatmosJ)hEtre! to shore common and uncommon feelings Massad :Hi, 6-4, 6-4. experiences . Up 4-2 after the singles matches, LeFevre said it could Balancing act have still went eithe!' way. But FOR MORE INFORAlATION CALL: _~I.Y~'s~ry Runck ~ld on tight during her routine on NO.1 doobles team of John Greif balance beam in a meet SUMay against !lIinois-Cbicago. The and Filer dumped .t :h.:;Ig1mID WOMf.H CAI.L: WOMEN" SERVICES AT 453-3655 and Montgomery &-4, 4-6, &-4 gymnasts' next meet is Sunday at the Arena agains! Indiana MEt. CAU: COUNSELlW~ CENTER AT 453-5371 and NO.3 Krueger and freshman State. Paul Rasch' defeated Barry Thomas and Erik Tisthammer :Hi, &-1, 7-5 to push the Sa.lukis SWIM from Page 19 ahead to stay. "Basl!d on our train!ng. we're individual swims." "We played much more better than our times sh-'lw." he Hill said he is pleased that his consistently," said LeFevre. "1 said. "Our progress in practice team continues to show im· expect us to improve each TIIS has been satisfying, but in provement. week." meets we haven't shown the ''I'm happy that we have consistency of which we're individuals who are eager and The Salukis win need t'"':ery IO.BBIS~~ capable. have room to improve." he said. practice day tbis week to "We're doing great in our "I don't ask the team to get prepare for Kansas Saturday "t relays, but not as well in in· fired up f"r every meet, but at the Egyptian Sports Center. It dividual events." he said. "I this point in the season we need will be the third consecutive lWO HAPPy HOURS EVERYDAY think some people are lacking to get with it mentally and be ~Jome meet fnr the netters. The confidence in themselves when ready for our remaining first road trip ~;ll be Feb. 12 at meets ... Vanderbilt. they get up on the blocks for Strow. Ooquirl n.se Cuervo Margarltas fl.M Salazar charges bribe offered for marathon: Dos Equis n." Superior n." NEW YORK (APl - Alberto said the officials were Ollan Los Angeles race, Salazar said.. Salazar, the fastest marathoner Cassell, TAC executive "They were trying to bribe Aftmpn Aroetiza: Spejal in history, charged Monday that director. and Alvin Chriss, a me." . officials of The Athletics lawyer who manages tbP trust Nachos $1.50 Congress, the national gover- fund for road running'tnd track Salazar's comments came during a telephone hooIrup from ::!'1 ~orhj~~ ab~t!el~i .i~.!~~~~etes,..-under TAC's his home in Eugene, Ore., to a $50,000 to $60,000 to run in the Chriss and CaS!flill denied the luncheon of the Metropolitan Los Angeles Marathon May 14. allegations. h. Track Writers' Association. Salazar, who said he rejected "TIley were williDg to pay me the offer made late last ye'r, $50,000 to $6O,OOO'\to run in the Broadcaster Jack Buck 10 give ~lk Gyros Jack Buck, sports diiector of bas also worked en a national KMOX radio and announcer for level. He bas appeared on Suvlakl, Kett •• the St. Louis Cardinals, will broadcasts of MQmlay Night speak on "An Overview of the Football on the \' CBS radio Ethics and Status of Modern network, NFL Football on CBS Gr•• k Pastrl•• Sports Broadcasting" at 7 p.m. Television and se'ftral Super Feb. 9 in Davis Auditorium. Bowl games. Buck is a member Homemade of the Missouri Sports Hall of Fried M~,.hroonu Buck u. :n his 28th year of Fame for his depication to &OnlonRI..- broadcasting in S1. Louis and sports announcing. I Saluki home schedule-....) -- ... MfJI'l BaskeC ..n-7:35 p.m. Feb. 31ndianaStateat~a • ••• IW_fJl',Basketball-7: 35 p.m. Feb. 4 SW Missouri at Davies Genuine Greek Cuisine Call For Delivery Ms', SWlmmiDg- 2 p.m. Feb. 5 Missouri at Ree Center pool 457-0303 MS'ITeIlllill-2p.m. Feb. 5 KalBuatEgyptianSportsCenter 516 S. Illinois Ave. Carbondale 11·11 M-Sot 12·11 Sun MfJI',_d WomeD's Gymanstics -2 p.m. Fet>: 6 Indiana State at Arena

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PItt'! II, Daily Egyptian, Febnary 1, 1983 ,q fJl'f . .. Jf"' ., , arper named Sall1ki MVP Printing Plant 3C COPIES Harper is being projected as Senior tight end Pierre Pugh an early round pick in the was named as the team's top • TWO top quality • Plain willie paper National Football Lea~e draft. offensive lineman. and junior machl_ - 3 clerks copies - 0''''' paper The first time John Harper He was a third roond pick of the cornerback Terry Taylor, a ,.,. fu'... ..-vt<:e. a' addllional Charge. on a Saluki uniform. C08c;h Denver Gold of the United three-year slarter, was tabbed Dempsey knew he had a Slates Football League. but as the top defensive back. • Multi-paoe originalS • SALE lasts througll Dempsey remembers rejected a contract oreer to wait Harper shared the team's mus"eedln Saturday. documenll~ 529-3115 en as a freshman. for the bigger dollars of the defensive lineman award with was the only pass NFL. junior linebacker Granville couldn't be stopped Six other players received Butler. who was twice named ..,_1 C.ubondaie___ -- rushing drills. spec;. I awards at the team's Missouri Valley Conference l~~::::::::::::::::::::::::~ ~S.~ was the start of an annual banquet, held Friday defensive player of the week ! .lamlaziing'ly successful career night at the SIU-C Student this season. VALUABLE COUPON r...-,,- 2/6/N another high point Center The Harry Bobbit Award, I Quarterback Rick Johnson given to the most inspirational .1 received an award as the player Saluki. was handed out to Jeff I I~~~~N~ a':'h:player ~~X!~for the :!~1982 who gained the mQSl team stars Ware. who remarked that the I I season. from the Saluki coaching staff trophy was almost as big as I Dempsey called Harper a in addition to being named as him. I ~~tt~,,~ hard worker, dedicated, a great the team's t.'p offensive back. I get a spare for just a penny. I t~ player and a pt man. "And," Johnson will be back next year, Be safe and save. he said smding, "In a few after he was declared eligible m:s~reo;U~~~ sa'i~~;n'r~f~~~ I months he's going to be very fOf"another season in a surprise records, and was also a capable I Get extra keys made at our Key Department now. wealthy." announcement a few weeks ago. reserve tailback. !-~~~~~~I: ~Q9~- ~ ~~~~~_ Tan.ker.1! s~rfacf! short ------for disappointing m~et mkUmI ~,.r~,:~\·.~~ilabC1 !IIII r~T' ~. By Sherry CldseahaD '.~ . SINing TIll Bllt staff Writer ren::''::;:J'ab~~~~ in that event. "It ~asn't what it could bave Hill emphasiz~ that the J./ A"WAm,ricln Fool been" is almost a cliche in swimmers competing in the sports, but womex;'s swimming meet were amOllJ the best in the c/ coach Tim Hill said it ac­ coontry. He pomted out that curately sums up his setltiments Westfall placed fourth in the 200 on his team's performance over fly, and all three women that ...... I La., - Beef---- i .------, the weekend. beat her are world-ranked. I ftltlel I The Salukis traveled to In­ WestfaD continues to be the I Cps II PItt I dianapolis to compete in the mQSt consistent performer on I $1.SO I I 99. I Midwest USSA Invitational, the squad. Hill said her which is primarily a club meet. workouts he. ve been productive ----... --_ .. aU season and she bas competed ----... --- Hill's goals for the weekend were for his team to improve on well in meets. Phone: individual times and to qualify "Stacy was outstanding this r----'P~S... I for nationals in more events. weekend," Hill said. "She not II P'rII "I'm reaDy disappointed we only qualified lor NCAAs in the 529-4130 I I didn't swim some faster times," 200 ny. but she turned in I $1.25 I Hill said. "A few individuals lifetime bests in the 200, SOO, bad some good swims, but 1,000 and 1,650 free, the 100 ny. 611 S.lIIlno1s overall we mdn't do as weD as and the 400 1M. She had the best 1 Block From Campus I'd hoped we would." meet of anyone on the team." SIU-C qualified for nationals Ratcliffe was right up there hi f __tao .JunioI" ~dout Pam Rat~liffe met NCAA ~th :id~b~iII: "i:r standards in. the l00IJreast­ nationals in the 100 breast­ stroke and freshman Stacy stroke, recorded ";er lifetime Westfall qualified in the 200 best in the !oo bal..~troke, and butterfly. turned in excellent times in her SW-C's 800 freeot)'le reiay of reJay splits. Westfall, Ratcliffe, Janie Freshman Janice Suchomski Coontz and Barb Larsen turned in lifetime bests in four recorded a standard time, out four events she competed in, whic'h was another of Hill's Hill said. objectives for the weekend. He said he also wanted to qualify

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"We've with 14.3 pOints and eight S~ff Writer lost to ~ke, and we have to rebounds from the pivot beat nhlIOIS State. To most of position. She is abley backed by Welcome to the Gateway the people in our program - the strong tandem of Dawn Collegiate Athletic Con- coaches, athletes, former Hallett !l2.8, S.Il and Debbie ference's first annual coaches and former athletes - Benak (12.4, 4.3). Jan Bowers demolition derby. Illinois State is the game. It has compensates for an otherwise In this mad scramble for post­ to do with our intense rivalry. ailing guard arsenal. season tournament seedings, We've played them for 20 years, ScoU's squad will carry a 12-4 three teams, Drake, Illinois and in n.'Cent years we've taken season slate and a 3-1 GCAC State and SIU-C will be pitted our lmnps." mark into Tuesday's game. against each other in head-to­ Coach Cindy Scott knows aU National field goal leader head competition. Each team about lumps. In her first two Connie Price (70.3 percent) will attempt to outrun, ·encounters with the Redbirds, combines with Char Warring outrebound, outmaneuver, ana she came away With wins. But (62.7 percent>, ranked 11th in that was five long years ago, the country. to put the Salukis ~~~~oou~ ~~~ of l~ and the watering hole Ivs been amonR :.he top four shooting awful dry since. ISU has cap- teams in Amenca. Guards D.O. :m't~la~~ ~~;~ tured the last seven contests in Plab and Rose Peeples are will have an inside track on the a row to run their series ad- coming off their best game of first seed in the GCAC tourney. vantage to 21-10. the season together, combining After battering each other for "Our people are really for 40 points in the losing effort the better part of two hours frustrated that we haven't against the Bulldogs on Thursday night, the Salukis beaten. them," Parkinson said. Thursday. were tmally put out of com· ''They're very balanced. Every mission by a Orake squad that year they've got six or seven Although the Salukis' shot at a refused to die. That 82-79 set· people who can reaDy hurt IlI'tional ranking was jeopar­ back looms larger than ever in you." dazed in the Drake loss, a win at the race of Tueday night's The Redbirds, IH on the year Normal might just reawaken matchup in Normal will con· and 3-0 in GCAC play, are the pollsters. And if SIU-C hopes ferellce co-favirite ISU. And coming off an impressive 72-66 to be standing in the front of the after the Redbirds confront weekend loss to sixth-rated Old line when GCAC tourney Drake later in the week. the Dominion in the finals of the seedins are being passed out in conference picture will be Optimist Classic at ODU's home March, the ISU Redbirds are crystal clear. court in Richmond, ·Va. Senior one Cl"ew that the Saluki ''We have to split." said Mitch Cathy BosweU, an AU-American demolition team had better put Parkinson. women's Sports candidate, leads the Redbirds out of commissiOll. .. SUlI Pilato by Grel.,. DrezdZGII Salald coach AUen Van Winkle yeUs instnlCtioos to his team. Hurricane free throws drown reeling Salukis Ry Dan Devine . foUls wouldn't have hurt us as Stan Writer bad," said Saluki coach Allen Van Winkle 011 his post-game Tulsa rained a barrage of free radio ~·how. throws on SIU-C Monday night, Ha"y Hunter did not make and the Salukis went under for the ~rip, and Charles !IIancr their siXth straight 1068. played, but was hobbled by a SIU-C fell 84-70 to the surging thil!ih injury. . Hurricane, and now are 5-12 overall and 1-7 in MiSSOllri s.!t ~n::.istheG= h!tr:-ru: Valley Conference play. Tulsa the game "n."n at halftime, and is 9-7 and evened its Valley the Salukis even briefly held a mark to 4-4. lead in the second half, when Tulsa made 40 of 49 from the Pie Walker hit for two of his 16 free throw line, outmuscled the points. Salukis and pulled away late in Damall Jones led SIU-C with the game. SIU-C had stayed 18 points, while James Copeland even until the 12:07 mark, and added 11. were within five as late as the Van Winkle started Brian 9: 00 ma rk, but played the rest of Welch at guard, but the fresh­ the game without most of their man did not score a point. front lilM:. Neither did Ken Byrd, whose Karl Morris fouled out with slump is taking epic.' propor­ 13:47 left, and Pie Walker tions. followed him to the bench three Ricky Ross had Tl to lead minutes later. Tulsa, and Steve Harris added "If we were a little deeper the 24. Tennis team evens mark by beating Murray State By KeD Perkins What a difference a week Starr Writer makes. The Salukis plafed tough, consistent tennis agamst In last week's 9-0 loss to the three-time Ohio Valley Northwestern, the men's tennis champions. Six of nine matches team paid the price for hardly went to third sets, and SRJ-C working. Sunday, it paid the won five of those. Leading the price for working hard. way was No.1 singles player Coach Dick LeFevre wasn't Per Wadmark. The freshman had it good da~, SU~ght we could beat even though he and Rollie them," he said after a 6-3 win Oliquino lost their doubles over Murray State at the match to Johan Tanum and Egyptian Sports Center. Steve Massad 6-4, 6-3. He got a "I thought it would be !econd chance against Mats something like H, a little LjungmlJn, Ohio Valley's closer. We played a lot better defending singles champion. than we did against Nor­ And that's all he waanted. thwestern. Wadmark avenged an earlier ,", "We're still not in shape. We loss to Ljungman during the feD 10 far behind during the 3G­ faU, beating him 6-4, 5-7, &-s...... day break. I don't think they LeFevre had special words even Jooked at a racket during for his yO'.mgster. "It was ""ad that time. But that's the price something to watch," he said of sun Pbok by G...... ,. Orea.... you pay for turning them loose the Swede. "He's going to be a and not bringing them back good one." early.· Against Northwestern, "U IZ-'It ... Iii h .... r...... a.- WaJriag _Wed far a 100Ie duri.c SIl!.-C'•. ~~:. they were in -terrible shape." See TENNIS. Page It Pall! 20. DiU, 1!&YptiaD, Febnary I, 1983