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Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

February 1974 Daily Egyptian 1974

2-1-1974 The aiD ly Egyptian, February 01, 1974 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_February1974 Volume 55, Issue 90

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, February 01, 1974." (Feb 1974).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1974 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in February 1974 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Danger of more Kusk.uski'u floods lessens - By Rale Klinger the levee caused by last spring's flood Ellis Grove called laborers Irom their Rich Friche, 21 , a laborer I~k' ; . .Daily Egyptian Starr Writer have been repaired, he said. The other beds and i1lshed .them to the breach. wood, described the hectlc scene whicb three have temporary patches which Eight hours later, at 6 p.m., the 75·loot occured during last Tuesday's break. 'KASKASKIA ISLAND-The danger 01 should hold.so long as the river does not gap was fiUed with layers 01 sandbags. "Water was comIng through Itke a renewed floodipg at Kaskaskia Island rise beyond the 27-Ioot flood level. "In Thursday morning, the ring levee maniac," hesaid. " We threw a couple of has lessened altN the island's levees the next 4 to 6 weekS, it is crucial lor us appeared Iragile but was holding. The tr.ees across there to slow It down. Then held together against the Mississippi to get normal or below normal rainfall," river had crested and was on the decline. we put wire mesh in front and piled Q9 River's 28,9-loot crest Thursday mor- Martin said. Approximately 50 laborers on the ring sandbags." ning. , Last Tuesday morning. 400 acres on levee either stood around talking or While '400 acres were flooded , Martin Clyde F . Martin.. assistant resident the Southeast side 01 the island were worked slowly, shoveling mud into said, "il we had not plugged the leak, engineer lor the Army Corps 01 flooded as river w8ter at a 27.7·Ioot level burlap sacks and piling them on weak hall the island would have been in- Engineers at Chester, said Thursday burst through a weak section of a ' ·spots. . nundated because-U's so flat":' JIlat "the river is predicted to la1l2,3 leet tem~orary ring levee. The ring levee is a Workers claimed they were being paid Martin said the present flood danger ,/ in the next three days which won't get us ..semI-CIrcle of mud and mud·fllled IVo.e than $9 per hour by the con· presented by .unrepaired levees is the out 01 trouble, but will relieve the sandbags spannIng a 300-yard breach In struc.tlOn company contracted by the result 01 last spring's flooding when the pressure," thi' pyramld·shaped perrtlanent levee. Army Corps 01 Engineers to repair the Presently, five 01 lhe eight breaks in nion hal) officials in Chesler and levee. (Continued on ~ 2)

'Daily 'Egyptian Southern Illinois University

Fnday, February 1. 1974. Vo l 55. "b 90

Testi.mo-ny ,by _14 supports Rafferty

By Debby Ratermann witness was Randy Donath, who sub­ Daily Egyptian StafT Writer mitted the complaint. An 13 said the signatures now ap- ~ The trustee election special Judicial pearing on Rafferty's petition were not Board heard 14 witnesses during the- · their own . Several of the forged first three hours of their open session signatures also had incorrect addresses Thursday night belore about 40 spec· and I.D . numbers. \ tators in the Student Center IUinois Graduate student Vivien Walls said Room. she remembered signing Rafferty's All 14 witnesses were connected to petition near the hottom 01 the last rlisqualified candidate Larry Raflerty's page. complaint that the forgeries on hi s ' 'There were five spa'ces left:" Ms . .petition were made after he turned in a Walls said , "and I remember !egal petition. suggesting three more people he CRaf· Thirteen students testified that they lerty) could get to sign his petition." Plywood walls keep river water from erroding the ring levee on the souftleast signed Rafferty'S petilion in their own Ms. Walls said her signature did not / side of Kaskaskia I sland. Workers toss sandbags between the wood and the mud handwriting, many of them at a birth­ appear in her handwriting and did not. to reinforce the wall. (Staff photo by pennis Makes) day party last lall on the eighth floor of appear five spaces Irom the bottom. Mae Smith dormitory . The fourteenth Rallerty said he got a Xerox copy of the allegedly f,'rged petition after move was made to disqualify him. " I immedialf:IY noticed that aU e Walker delays taking stand on tuition signatures on the last page were Ike," Raflerty said. "The signature the top By John Morrissey' where my name was was no my hand­ pleas lor more higher education lunds them. He claim~ "one of the gover­ Daily Egyptian Starr Writer with stories about directors 01 all other ning boards" told AISG " in confidence" writing. I also immediately noticed that s tate departments voicing the same the IBHE contacted 'the board 01 my girlfriend's name was signed 'Ann CHICAGO- Gov . Dan Walker told pleas. He said the state has only so much regents, board of governors and the SIU Heinz.' Her name is Annette and she student government representatives never signs her name ' Ann'. " , A money, not eno.ugh to meet the budget Board 01 Trustees and demanded com· Thursday he would-not disclose his stand requests of every department. Rafferty questioned student tlUstee on tuition' until his March budget pliance with the six per cent increase "I say that to dioector. after director, recommendation. elect Matthew Rich and Donath 6elore message. after director," ~ said. "And now you the board about their knowledge of the . He did say however he was "very After thfn meeting AISG members lorgeries. Donath turned in a complaint come to me and say higher education stressed a alt to higher tuition would sympathetic toward state lunding 01 about the lor\l~ries to the trustee elec­ needs more money. I can't give an in­ do state niversities no good unless universit)' students beyond tuition-only crease to everyonE}. "_ tion commissIOn after being told about support." Walker also kept the IBHE's $676 possible lorgeries by Rich. Walker made the remarks in response He maintained, 'however, " I continue million budget recommendation intact. to be disturbed about any tuition in· to questions Irom the Association 01 Whitley said Walker could decide that (Continued on Page 2) I11inois Student Governments (AISG ) at crease and added his eventual decision ahout tuition, "could go either way." there would be no tuition increase, and a meetmg here. The AISG asked to meet then proceed to slash money I rom the with Walker to present arguments AISG members attacked the IBHE recommendations for a tuition inc:ease operating budget. This, he said, would against the minimum six per cent lorce the state governing boards to in­ tuition increase recommended by the on the grounds the proposal was "railroaded" through without adequate stitute tuition increases on their own to GII.~ IUinais Board of Higher Education offset the additional budget cut. (IBHE). They asked instead that the . study of the eflect higher student costs state absorb the. costs that tuition in­ would have on enrollment. Walker reacted favorably to another 8m/f' creases are intended to meet. Jim Gilz, AISG executive director, A1SG argument, to increase the amount A six per cent increase, if adopted in told Walker the IBHE made its decision, of money a student can receive from Walker's budget, would increase tuition "without much input." the Illinois State Scholarship Com­ about $30 8 year at SIU and other state Doug Whitley, another A1SG staff mission to include room and board ex­ universities. T~ University yt IJIinois member, explained after the meeting penses. Currently an SIU un­ dergraduate is eligible for a maximum Board of Trustees has a~ passed a that the IBHE set up a subcommittee to $60 l"'r year increase twice the review Lhe consequences of a tuition in­ of $193 per quarter, regardless whether "mirumum" hike recomm tied by the crease, but tile eventual six per cent an evaluation shows he needs more IBHE. • proposal WilS drawn up by the IBHE than that to afford schooling. At the same time, AISG asked Walker board stafT, and .. the committee never Walker agreed that "We need to to include tbe total budg'll figure met to review the report." mpve beyond tuition-only support. As recommended for state eduqtion by the Whitley said he didn't like the way soon as tlfe state can flSCaUy do so, I IBHE. ./ . the IBHE.dictated to the state's univer­ think we should move toward funding of Gus says 0III!f'I hearings are more fun Walker continuaUy answered AISG sity boards instead of working with higher education beyond tuition." after all. Dean's testimony ··,gai.ns in credence

WASHINGTON (AP) - An assistant cess of ,keeping the White House out of ' special Watergate prosecutor said the Watergate scandal. " ... ThWJKIay that evidence Sijpports the A tape recording of that meeting IS In story told under.oath by presidential ac· the hands of the prosecutors a nd grand ... cuser John·W. Dean III. " Based on the evidence we have ac­ jurJ~a n also s ~' ore the President sai~ ' cumulated so far·we have no reason for Watergate defendant E . Howard Hunt believing that Mr . Dean has committe lawyer had been going on regarding the SUC- James D. S1. Clair- said ~ i xon "ex­ pressed last n.ig ht !n his . sp~c h a firm desire t't, bring In veS tlgall o n s~u . a Truck s1rikp speedy concl usion so the Pf.,,?p l(' I~ : volved will bt' properly dealt wuh _ ~ nd added : -brings r/Pfllh " I'm hopeful that we can cont inue tu work with Mr. Jaworski's ('o mrn itt ee, or 11/(1/, r; I'l'r but there has to ('orne an end at some By The Associated Press point . and we'll just have to consider The r ing levee at Kaskaskia I sland bridges a 300-y~rd aap in. the perTl':'anent One death and scattered violence were the circumstances as they hereafter oc levee on the southeast side of the island. On.the far Side oT'the nng levee IS sub­ a ttributed t9 the ind ependent truckers· cur. merged island farmland from Tuesday's 8-hour breach in the r ing levee. (Staff s trike whid! spread Thursday as In· As ked if th at meant the White House photo by Dennis Makes) dustries curbed trucking operations. planned to stop turning oyer in.for­ Pennsylvania authorities said they mation 10 Jaworski. S1. _Cla ir replted : found a. la rge rock in t-he cab of an . " I wou ldn 't - want to , make th aI unidentified trucker who crashed and suggestion right n\llY . t>xpli.cit ly. no." Dange.r of-mor.e flf.!ods died near Allentown. "It's obvious to me Dean is scheduled as a \I.'Hness In the . ' someone threw it.:' said Police Sgt. John upcoming trial of Dwight Chapin. the Repko. Another pqlice spokesman said .. President 's form e r appoin tments the rooc;k apparenUy was thrown from secretary who js charged in four counts · at Kaskaskia decreases 3Ild overpass. . with lyi ng to a grand jury. During a pre-t ri al hearing Thursday. Officials e l se\\~e r e reported shooting OIapin's lawyer . J acob Stein. told U.S. . (Continued Irom Page 1J ' Four breaches occurred in the levee and rock throwing incjdents as in· on ·the Southwest side of the is land. The District Judge Gerhard Gesell tha I':- "If isla nd ·s 17.000 acres were submerged dependent truckers shut down their-rigs the government has evidence Mr . Dean water poure"d through across the low. to protest .high fu el prices and low beneath 12 to 15 feet of water. Oa t land and fo r<:ed its way out throullh has lied . even in matters extraneous to At that time. the river swelled to 41. 8 four breaches on the Southeast side. ~ hauling rales. thi s case. we a re entitled to that infor- The impact of the shutdowns hit Ohio mation. ... ., All four breaches on the So uthwest - and .Pennsylvania as well as parts of ~'::'i\t~~ ,,~rt~I:~a~~ e~ ~:~~~~~ ~~~~ levee and one on the Southeast have That promrSled Davis' reply that level of 38 .5 feet. Martin explained. been repaired com pletely. leaving the West Virginia. Indiana. North Carolina. there is no basi for beli eving Dean hed During that eight-day pe r iod . New Jersey and Conn ecticut. three othe rs wi th only temporary and "no ..basis .. for bringi ng any . thousands of SIU students nock~ to th e reinforcement, he said . The Ohio Highway Patrol and West charge of perjury against Mr. Dean." island'o work on reinforcing the levees. Virginia State Police reported they were providing escorts to truckers who feared hea,' ~ Jllcidents on the highways. J-Boa I,d The strike hael been called for early Impeachment panel Thursday. but confusion spread among mOI'e testimony the haulers. Some thought the shutdown tCon ll nued from Page 1) was scheduled for Friday morning. " Ric h came in and told me he had However . strike leaders said the shut· gets expanded powers heard there were fo rgeries on th e last down will be nationwide and lengthy. , page of Rafferty 's petition. I still don ' Special preside ntia l assistant II' .J . WASHI NGTON (AP ) - A un animous Doar a nd Rep. J erome H. Waldie. D· know who he heard it from ." Dona House Judiciarv Co mmittee vote-d Calif. , went like this : said . ~~~7 h~d o'tr~~~~~~~:~s~h~Jco:' ~~~i Thursday to seek broad authority to ·'1 had not heard about th e [0 ries allotments: to permit truckers to pass on Q Can we be assurt'd thiS resolu tion subpoena Whit e House document s and confers on the committee, ir it so before." Donath said . ·' 1 tho tan increased costs a nd to triple federal "itnesses for its impeachment inquiry. investigation was in order so bmitted inspections for fu el price g?ug~ng . de: ires. the power to compel th e ap· 8v voice \' ote. the 21 Democr3ts and pearance of the PrE'sident ? a complaint to th e el ction com· 16 Republicans on the committee ap­ mission." But James Brinkhall . editor of A. The powers a re Ih at broad. yes. Overdrive magazine who had called for proved a resolution that would con~t> r Rich told the boa rd he " had heard a a strike. said the proposals were (otally on it full a uthori tv to conduct the m· Q It it true there could bt> no asser­ rumor in one of the bars downtown that unsatis fa c tory a nd a rehash of pas t vestigation and to 'get compl ete access tion , as a defense against tha t power . the re were forgeries on RaffH ty 's prom ises. to any information it nf't'ds. that it \\;ould diminish the powers of Iht' petition ." _ . presidency for any future president '} During questioning by RafferlT . Rich At Washington Court House south of Approval by the fuJI House is expec· ted Tuesday. ~t ing the stage for a A. II is my \'iew the PreSident would said he "heard the rumor in American Columbus. a spokesman for Armco Steel Tap." a bar on Ul inois Avenue. Corp .. said th e firm was cl9sing in· possible- confrontation between the not be a,e' to assert that kind of a committee and President Nixon. defense. t'I had never seen the two gi rls twho definitelv because of the truck s horta~e . were talking about itl before." Rich The plant employs 565 per sons . A In his State of the Union address Wed· Waldie irected the same question 10 spokesman for Republic Steel Corp and nesday Nixon sa~ he would cooperate Albert Jenner, the chi e- f counsel for said. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co .. both of with the committee "in any way I con· co mmillee RepUblicans. who replied . " Did they say they had made the Youngstown. reported truck movement sider consistent with my respon· "I CO nCur complett> ly with Mr. Doar." forgeries?" Rafferty asked, at their plant " had dried up." si bilities to th e office of th e­ " I don ·t re member ." Ric'h said . " I presidency. '. The senior committee Republican . didn 't think it was important at the In Elkins. W.Va .. oificials of Kellys But the committee was advised by Rep . Edward Hutchinson. R·Mich " has time." Foundry Co. said most of the plant's special co~ nse l John M. Doar that the stated he felt Nixon could not claim La(er in the questioning. Rich said. ·' 1 House had unqualIfied subpoena powers executive privilege- against a commit· heard the girls say they had gotten ~,::g~~h:~, ;~~te~~~~i~~oo~~I~~~a:'as: tee subpoena. Rafferty 's petition and scribbled in a materials , The plant has ISO employes. under the Constitution in impeachment investigations. An , exchange bet ween Although sure of its power. the com· bunch of names on the last page." mittee was less certain what it would do Rich said he did not know who the if Nixon resisted a subpoena. It could girls were. 1'/11' u'f'(llllI'r: cite hill) for contempt. but that would The hearing was still underway at9:3O require it to send out the House p.m. and was expected to continue into sergeant-at·arms to arrest him . the night. The Senate Watergate comminee 'Carta Bollata' will do rejected that approach as " unseemly .. ROME (AP )-Italian tobacco shops !; .~~~:_C~"' m~~~ :.~~~, ?"~~~.~r.. and inappropriate" when Nixon balked sell cigarettes. cigars and matches. Precipitation probabiliti will be 20 per cent. Increasmg throughout the after· at its subpoena for White House They also sell. exclusively. shoe laces. noon. The wind will·be fro the NE at &-15 mph. Relative humidi.t ~ 55 per cent. material. and had a law passed giving Friday·nil!ht : Increasi~ cloudiness and p~ipitaUon probabl~ll1es to 40 per salt and playing cards. And to the the courts juriaiiction to enforce its general public disgust they sell "carta cent tonight. 1lIe low temll"rature WlU be 10 the middle to upper 305. stlbpoenas. Saturday: PrecipitatiOl},iikely with the l\igb around 35 degrees. bollata" -stamped sheets of p"per Thursday's high on campus SI . 3 p.m .• low 44, ·S a.m: One· Iikeiy result · of presidential costing 80 cents on which Italians must resistance to a subpoena would be in· write all leiters and applIcatIOns to .'

SIU's EdwfJrdsville <.:a,mpus experien­ ced a de-cl tnt' in enrollment of bet,ween 5'h per c~J1 t to 6 per cent bet ween fall and winfer quarters. Curre nt on - campus enrollment at E;dwards\'ille is 10.;J85. down fr om 11 .210, said Robert \ . Bruke r , director of Admission and Records. He said that size of the p,fr­ cent age drop is " about regular." ad­ ding last year's figures for th e same quarters ran from 11.835 to 11 .061 in 1973's winter quarter.

The five or six per cent drop "very consisle ntly" occurs at Northern ,(;"/ (/Iollg The calf puts up a good struggle. but the Security Police finally succeed in lllinois University between fall and roping the critter to remove him from campUs. The ruckus tCX>k place in front of / . spring semesters. said Calhy Fields. I; 111" ,[ ogg ;1' ' the Student Center. (Staff photo by Richard N . Levine.) s tatistical studies clerk. She said / enrollment data for this semester has not been completely collected. but ad· ded a slightly more' than five per cent drop over fall's total of 21.070 is expee· t~ . • Bla~,:olfiSlor:~~~.~~ : ; ~:~g~::s,~~~ There is " nothing unusua l" ih the projected drop of bet ween 1.500 and Student Writer 0 of the Student Center. The Black Fire the Door" will be performed by the 2.000 students at the University of Dancers, the Modern Dancers of Waller Kutana Players following the Illinois in Urb~na , said Admissions Of· A e ries of progra ms to cele brate High School in Chicago, and the speech. The social weekend, Feb. 22 ficer Dwayne Denhart. Spring semester Black Hi storv Month has been planned Romanic Epsilon Band will perform. and Zl, will be highlighted by a figures are not compiled, he said. but by the Black Affairs Council. Six workshops have been planned for basketball tournament in whieR any the estimate of final enrollment will be "The committee decided that since eUucation weekend. Feb. 9 and 10. or~anized intramural team m~y par. about 3% .800 , down from fall's total of Black Hi story Week always falls on the Times and places for the workshops will ticlpate. The time and place' of the 34.600. week of mid·t*ms, to have a Black be announced la ter. tournament will be alUlounced later. History Month celebrating something James Rosser of the Uni versity of A women's volleyball tournament has ~ach weekend of the month ot Kansas ill speak on Carter G. Woodson been schedul~ for Saturday morning in 'Daily 'Egyptian February, Stanford Jones, Program and his contributions to the history of the women's gym. Trophies will be Committee Chairman. said. black people durin2 the workshops. He given to the winners in both tour. Each weekend in the month will be also will direct a workshop on health, naments. devoted to one of four types of activity­ education and welfare. Black faculty A dance will conclude the Black cultural. educational. political and and staff members will playa major History Month at 9 p,m . in Saturday in social. 'l'o~esin sa~e programs and workshops Ballroom 0 of the Student Center. The theme for this year's Black History program is " Black Self Imaee in Political weekend, Feb. 1!>-18, will Modern Times," Jones said. start with a program on Africa in Doyle An open session to ~y respeet to Auditorium sponsored by the African 92 I d . University officials Will kick the ob­ Students Association. A film entitled pe 0 pele . servance at 7 p.m! Friday in the Illinois "A Luta Continua" will be shown . Room of the Student Center, Jones said. Bob Stalls of Carbondale's Model • h Felix James of the Department of Cities Program and James will speak as Jet era S e S History will give a brief talk on the on political involvement at 2 p.m. background o( Black History Week. at;ld Saturday in Grinell Hall. NEW fORK (AP) - A Pan American Miss Southern. Denise Barron, and Miss The Jon Taylor Band and the World Airways 707 jetliner crasbed and Eboness. Marquita Grady, will be BlackFi.re Dancers will perform. burned on a landing approach at Pago honored. Sunday's activities have not yet been Pago. Samoa, Thursday and 92 of the 101 Saturday's program will include finalized. persons died, the airline said. . poetry readings. an art display and a Renault Robinson of the Chicago's The flight carried 91 passengers, of fashion sho at 2 p.m. in the Big Muddy Afro-American Patrolmen's League whom 36 were United Slates residents, Room of the Student Center. will speak on tbe black policeman's role according to a "list released by Pan Regina Perry of ' Virginia Com· In the black community at 7 p.m. Mon· American. Eight of the 10 crew mem­ monwealth University will speak on day !n Ballroom 0 of the Student Cen· bers were Americans. 'b1ack expressionism in contemporary ter.

,) Letters Love, hate and newspeak To the Daily Egyptian : I fOWld the most recept contribution of Mr . Crab­ tree to the "01ristians Vs . Homosexuals" letter writing contest to be most inlt!:resting. He is either bluffing us all with an effective use of Newspeak, or he. is surfering from an acute psychopathology known variously as Christian zeal, self-righteous fervor . or hiding in the closet. • I would like to give him my assurance that I do not hate him, I never have, and I certainly don 't know where he got the idea that I did. I don't even know him ; how ,an I hate him ? Besides, I don 't hate anyone : I stopped hating when I gave up OtristianitY-!!Iore importantly I .ceased hating myself: I no "Wnger had cause to. However , I am very selective about whom I love (a very special emotion ), but where does he get the nolion that true love is alien to me? Perhaps it was to him . but I am quite capable of it , thank you . As for militancy, how can we homosexuals be scor· ned for being militant in a quest for the rights which have been denied us by platoons of Christian soldient? I can easily see how Mr. Crabtree misun­ derstands our actions and statements when he SA;ems not to Wlderstand his own . , '. but I didn't call him a hypocrite and I don 't despise him for treading, but if I may again quote him " we do not have to love th. things they do." Actually, I find his brand of " Hare Krishna':. street corner

Christianity to be repul ~i ve, and this, in fa ct. is the r ~- _ - - primary difference between his militancy and mine : ,l \ , he is trying to convert, to change what we are to what he is ; ~11 I want is acceptance-ffot even ap­ . proval, just acceptance--of what I am,and the rights that everyone else wants-to hav,e-'a declnt job, to .~ -~ ~?it:~ . love, to live- and to have those rights with pride. ,. So you see, I am not hiding, neither from myself in a closet, noflrfrom others behind ~t of faith. It was Christianity which once caused me to hide, to hate, to fear, and to find fault, or as Mr. Crabtree Editorial says in News~: to love and to witness. When I see him end his letter with the words "we shaU serve tl!e Lord,"-I am reminded of the segment in John Stein­ beck's The Grapea of Wrath in which Mr . Joaa recoWlted to his son of the time he took the cow to be Uniqueness vs. ex.cellence serviced, and since then, whenever he saw a signJld­ vertizing "Service". he wonder'eb who was getting Perhaps it is not only im possible. but even un· Our true mission should ~\e tu emphasize our -screwed. Peri1aps Mr. Crabtree can teU us. desireable. fo r thiS u:liverslly tu achieve that dUSIVl' Ulllqueness. We ce rtainl ~' net'd the traditional basic • • Michael Schramm goal of all-around academic ex,.ellence. four vears of liberal arts and sciences. if we are to SJU Gay Liberatioo Organil.tioo . There are many comprehensive uni versiti es In th iS cal l ourselves a university. and i he programs should Junior, AsIan Studies state. bot h public and private. which have un­ be good ones. But a student can gel ---S uch an disputed excell ence . . The re a re other i ns til .Utl O n ~. education a lmost anvwhere. There are areas at SIU· primarily fo ur-year II bl'ra l arts co lll~ ges. wh ich a l­ e where th e progra ms are unique and a student must ford a high qua lity l>ducalion in t he traditional come here to get the best .educat ion in these fi elds. Crabtree conrradierions di SC iplines. The Rehabilitation Institute a l SI U-C has been in At a lime of hi gher cost s and luwer enrollments. it operation for man~' years. a nd;e:'his University was To the Daily Egyptian : seem unnt'ce ssarv to lr \' to build another among thl" first in th e nation to/gear it s operations to How can Steve Crabtree say homosexuality is a lie distinguished comp'reht!llsl\'e unlvl:'rsity. Because Ihe needs of the handicapped 1t has been a model for when all he speaks of is li es in his article of l-J6-74 ? onc um versitv has ala ..... Sl:hool. or a school of programs that fo llowed. ijluch laler. -.at other in ­ Mr. Crabtree, you contradict yourself in many ways. medlctnt' or dentistry. or an l'ngult.:oerin g school or a stitutions. Thl" Speciali zed tudent Services program for example you state " We must in accordance wi th sophisticatt'd higher degrel' program in molecular has enabled many han capped students to obt ain our faith tell others what we believe and how it has science that IS no reason l:' \'(~ r\' universi ty in the state th t.> education thev ex ted to be denil-d . helped our lives." Then yo u go on to say should strive to kN'p up III ihl' sa me areas. SIU-C designed' a awarded th e first doctoral homosexualit,y is a lie. If homosexuality is something degree in Outdoo r ecreation. With lhe ideal setting that the gay person' believes in and it subsequently of the campus a its head start in th e field . our out ­ .h elps that person then it is truth for that person. Law on campuses door reereat i program has become widely known . You state also that gays should substitute Christ The Un iversity has some outstanding progra ms in for gayness ; that may be all good and well for you to The big drug raid recently at Bloomington. seat of the Coll ege of Co mmunicalions and Fine Arts. It s say but until you have been to the mountain top. as it Indiana University. was a mong other things a rad io-T V courses. journalis m prog r a m . is said, then you have no first hand knowledge of the demonstration of cooperation among law enfor­ ci nematography. a rt and opera workshop have all subject and therefore you do not know the circum­ cement officials at every level of government won renown. ' ,. stances. If you believe the word of God is love then I battle ag3Jnst Fa rms Workers.. VOion . , .' give into the industry but to go one step further and Is this an examplt, of the cuursE.' our Unl\IersJlY IS improve market conditions. To promote competition , ae~~a~ ~:!~~k~~~~ detente witthre Soviet Union and taking towa rd the bt'ltl.'rml.'nt of suciety '? As ci l l~ ens, remove oil depletion a llowances. they seem to be the normalization Of relations with Co mmunjst China taxpa\,ers and fell ow huma n beings do not "national the only in4;lustry with such ~Ilowance~ . and have the are -rightfully considered diploma tic: triumph.s, tht.> problems" havt' bCOl nng ~)O us all ? Th{~ m.ef!1.be rs o~ government construct a profll-based 01 1 research and suggestion that Cuban filmmak~rs 111Ighl. C,onstllutc a S-Senate could be till' Il~g l s l ators and admlmstrat,!r,s refinery system of its OW" with no ability to lobby or menace only exposes Am e rican oCflclaldom tu in tomorrow's societ\' . If their actions be any m­ make contributions (campaign ) to separate it from ridicule. die-a tion, the chan<."es for social reform and better­ the rest of the industry . It would serve to increase ( The New York Times ment seem slim indt't'CI ~Iephone MInDel' ~s Sf'l)uld De rypewrfner1 " In m\" \'It'W . Iht' (Constitution I dut.'s not permll ana thel' lenglh Sf'l)uld 001 elloeecl 250 0¥0fd!i Lener """.letS SI'IOu IO Dave Ambf'ose any offi(=ial al' l. .. to be prt>d icatt.>d on so weak a reed. fesp8C1 the generalty accepI6d s1.8o'"'4afOs 01 good tas1e ana are ea · Student Writer 10 make lhelr p:)Iots In terms 01 I5SU8S '.her tf\afl pet. till' pee" Public offidals swum to uphold Conslltutlon may sona"l~ AcoepCarooe 'or J'Ilbhca\1O"I Wi ll .lepeN.I on hn~ talOf\5 0 1 Original landscaping . not avoid a constitutional dut\' b\' bowing 10 the ~ and the tm-oehness ana releYanof- 01 me IT'IiItellal Uns'9"80 hypoth{'lic'a l t.'ffl'(,ts of pri\"att;' filcla'i prejudice whkh Iett~ Win noI be ac:Ol"(ltect ana autnorsn.p '01 an lene~ must oe Yet. The campus architect says the F'an ~ Building will 11180 Dy the Dally Egyp:.iW'I the re5p)n!oo:"':ITy 01 tf'le Da.ol\' ECJYp­ the \" assumt' to b(' both \\'Idely and dt~e ply he ld . It " look better after landscaping . Did he hce ve in mind. han 10 de1efn'lll"lE! conIent 01 the opnoon pages Oche< mater,als on Sur'elY the promist' of tht' (Constitution ) demands PiJ98$ ICklr ana five InCIuOe ecJItonals ~ artIC les 'epanled trom , perhaps. burying it ? more than nihilistic surn'ndl'r." ( Palmer \' Thomp­ ~CJIheo puohCallOns synQICat6d ~ ana a"lC le5 anCl lnt8l"Pl'/ son. 29 L.Ed.2d 438 t. /l ve or op!n.Qn anlC les ilUtf'IOt8(I loCally I Dave ttmbrose / Studenl Writer

( ;;

Dolly Egypli .... , I'ebnJay I, 19l4, Pogo 5 • College women job h.opes lmprove

By Leah V_ Companies said the would be able tel'" of placement emeritus at North- Companies said schools should re­ Dally £cypdaa 8IaIf Wriler to rure 3,061 women in 1974. This is a western. .. evaluate liberal arts programs in OPEN 7 ;00 Wornl!ll coIl'IIe graduates in 1974 54 per cent increase over the 1.998 ''This is the most prestigious terms 0( job markets for graduates. have a fairly good chance or flDding WOOlm that were employed by these report 0( its kind," said Clarles take business-t"elated courses or STARTS 7 :30 • job, according '" the Endicott oompapies in 1973 . Rosenbarger, SchOul of Business minor in a business area and seek Report 00 employment recently According tQ Frank S. Endicott. dlief academic advisor. parttime or summer employmt1lt in . reI~ at Northwestern Univer­ author of the report. 10 years ago In predictions made during sa les and busi ness. James C-ob\lrn sity. the responding companies hired November. before the efl"ects of the Harvey Jdeus. director of the The ~ is the compiled results 5eV81 Per cent women graduates as energy crisis, 78 per cent said Career- Planning and ' Placement ol a survey taken or " 196 well· compared to the number of men business looked better this year for Genter. said the report shows in known business and. industrial con· hire4- Endicott said the rate five their~mpany than last year, and 7 students should make decisions · cerns. to years ago was J 1 per cent. last year per cent said it lookec! wor...se . early ~ in their coll ege career }, Harry in .Seventy per cent of the companies it was 18 per cent, and this year the F;orty per cent of the companies determme- career objectives and­ . said they had more positions 3.068 women hired would represent said they planned to increase alternatives . a nd sell their available for women with 24 per cent of the number of men to recruitment on college campuses. capabilities more aggressively. .bachelor's degrees. Needing l/1e be employe:!. Sixty m e' per cen~ of L~e companies ldeus said. "The students must .Your Pocket said they needed more men \lr,1th p~ same number of women as in 1973 When asked what companies can make the first move. If they are at were 23 percent. Seven per cent of do to employ more ooMege women . harnelor's degrees, 'n p...."":" cent said all uodecided or need to lenow what the mmpanies reported their needs­ the company· r epresentau"es they needed the same. and 12 per direction to take their job hunt. they p l us cent said the\' needed f· wer men . were down. suggested they open more jobs to should come to the career Planning '4'Omen and promote them more Men are - most needed in and PlacemEnt Center- located in T09 psychedelic rapidly, recruit college women mgineering. accounting. business Woody Hall. A 326 Section C." THEY ONLY KilL more aggressively. publiciz.e jobs administration. and sales while The center- offers aptitude testing. " for Irish judge foc women more. inform women of women are needed in accounting. career counseling. placement con­ the fields they are under-utiliz.ed in . general business, nala processing. sulting, job inten'ie'A' appointments THEIR ' MASTERS DUBUN tAP ) - "Discos are a and encourage women to pursue and engineering. and resume f'\'aiuations. pg new development designed by the degrees in engineering and other de\'il flY crazy youngsters to make them even more crazy." said Judge fields directly related to business. Car-r , at Naas Court . County This survey. entitled trends in the Ki ldare. employment of college and univer­ He said the psychedelic lights sity ' graduates in business and in­ which rotate:! at high speed CIIuId dustry, is the twenty-eighth annual drive people out of their minds. report by Endicott. d.irec-... MONDAY and. TUESDAY ONLY Their goal ... assassi.nation. 1l£NA1UW.~ November 22, 1963... accomplished!

"BEST FILM O~ TifE YEAR:' 1 1:00 P.M, All SEATS $1.25 IIaIicIMI 80cieIy 01 Film CrItIca Plort>o, Mogul.. It's BACK "BEST FEATURE One of the most talked FILM OF 11fE about f i lms i n · YEAR:'

"BEST DIRECTOR. LUIS BUNUEl:' NltioNl Societr of Film Crilics

A film by Luis BuiweI -mE DI. SCREET cHAllM OF 1HE $5 bike fine to take effec< ~ .. ' Carbondale Police will begin the case, said Tom McNamara. The earlier reports of the S15 fine • .; i~uing $5 tickets for W1register~ adminslrati\'e assistant to (he chief and a mandatory court appearance bikes slarting Feh. -t . they said of police . • 1:ame from the orfice of the Car­ Thursday. _ People who wish to contest being bondale city a ttorney. John It had been reported earlier that lickets can do so. McNamanr said. Warnick. cit)' c:!~nrney. had told ~.per.sons getting tickets Cr,om th~ . "We doo 't'lhink it is ~essary for a police that an unregistered. bike was carbondale police would be fined $13 a misdeme3nor. The minimum Cine and it wo

WE PDN'T WANT TO BRAI. BIIT iNE CRITICI KEEP '''' ...lI .... • III WE'VE lOT TNE "BII1'" MDVIIIIN TOWN TNII "O'NE Of THE YEAR'S' J 0 BESTi' : VARflTY fNEAK PREVIEWI New York TImes, Newsweek, Chicago Sun· Times • • IA TURIIA Y DNl YI 9:DD P." ··Altman "A rust-rate and Gould suspense it."'st-lr,i make abrilliar. Dl.!!lodrama. . • • If 90u can nol only take a •• -"ONE OF THE tong Goodbye: bit of 'now' (ratherthan future) lI'sso good thai i dbn't know shock in pure.movie terms • YEAR'S BEST!" where to begin describing it. and high style, and with love • ~ Shalil. WHBe-TV Today Show It's great fun and it', funny, as well a. wit, 'The Long Goodbyo' • -KalhlNn C.roll. N. Y. Daily New, but it's a serious, unique 'Work. " is for you.', -Re_ Reed. N. Y. Daily News s,lIall c:e6 ..tist , • --Frances Taylor, Newhouse ....ap.per5 -Vincenf C.nby. New York Tim., -Judith Crist. New York Magazine • -Jeff,., LyOM, WPfX-TV • ".JOHN HOUSEMAN • -BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR" "It's a "Oire 01 • . · ~BoardoCReview knockout • "A F~SCINATING FILM1 T imothy _ Qf a movie. ·the best • Bottoms. in his best performance to Gould comes back with his tJilst date. out shining h is work in 'The new • Last Picture Show'. John Houseman performance yet. You feel as -.-, • makes a brilliant acting debut ... a 4if it could go on indefinitely pictures and you 'd be absorbed in il.11 • r are and "'(onderful figure." I've seen • - Judith Cri.t. New York Ma.ga.zine in quite • . some , • time.'" • -Peter Bogd.novich. Esquire • • .'ELLIOITGOULD ,, "THE LONG GOODBYE" •. ' .." NINA VAN PALLANDT . STERLING HAYDEN • " H , m..., ._r_ E>tc'.lL

By Art Novak The concept of hypermarkeling JannotLa said the high ... oIume. Student Writer was developed in Europe. Hyper·· oomes (rom the size 0{ the store andj A type of maTketing never lTied in 'marketing outlets offer infinite the number of persons who come to , the United States, hypermarketing. types of goods. more than found in the store to buy. He said in the U.S" will be implemented in test areas in anyone American store. ... the ave-age discount store wouldOe! the Midwest, said Joseph JaMotta,' vice president of personnel for " Prict is the key attraction. It's ~Carr"!f:r ~ua:sinfe;:;t~S~~ : Relax w ith 't he ut most in comfort 'l\Irnstyle. Inc. the m,ain .thing:" Jannolta said; tfe' 250,00(). square feet of space.: explamed lha.t In France a cham of American stores usually draw Shop- I Jannotta spoke to the American hypennarkeung stores. Carrefour . . pers from a five-mile radius but the -SPECIAL- Marketing Association Wednesday has prices ,"almost nea r cost " Carrefour store has cU~lomers; in Wham. Room 302 . because of hlg~ sales volume. oorning (rom '25 miles away. Jan-; French Finger Tip Mass~ge 01 'a d cast 'h() pe' fu -I Co t () 1d not:si'd~~ 'bei n g physically larger. a 25 OFF - Fri. & Sat. ·..... ONL Y Bro _ ~ hypermarketing store would have ,0 feb_ 1 Feb. 2. products on pallets in " mass . . I· h 1 display," Jannotta said. This sa,'es * Full Body Massage '* Swedish Massage t o' ma Jor I n I e r a a rts slorage and labor cosls. . Vibrator Massage FillQeks ago o£.6bstrul'· ling justice by alll'mp tm ~ to pt-r­ suade the stort.> o "'T1~r . Clary("(' Guess, to lower l he [>stimatt.'(j value of••••••••••• the clo thing . ""B1I;lij ~IICMIIO ...... ,.. ..------...... THE DRI VER =nn&m---:O-;. ADMITTED ~o ffi&fQ) WITH PAID ADMISSION FRI ·SAT-SUN F EB 1·2-3 Use the Dai ly Egyptian Classifieds EXPERIMENT CDUPQN MUST BE PRESENTED AT BOX OFFICE

''Mf liffl. C"ieilltl•• " ''MII~ing If" a e/auie ill eom,;jy ;-- ~_ 7:00- 9:00 Growing up and. making it ••••••••••• are all the concerns of "AIr, .." 6. T., 1 7 -year-old Phil Fuller, I(' by a cynical high school ~. I 11M.,..,...... student in the southwest 3 Fi5e~.~': : !. 8 & 10 p .m. U versify Theater . Bldg. Starts 8 :00 p.m.-SIU ID required Student Center Auditorium S1.7S S ' Is $2.25 Non- St udent Cente r-Ballroom D All Seals $ 1 .00 ~ ) Spon...... -'ed by Souther ~ Student Government Activitie.

:. / Graduate Council may vote SALUKI CURRENCY EXCHANGE . __Q .D Ph.D. residency proposa-l By Uad. Upmaa committee at the Jan. 11 meeting. and a maximum of six hours of :L~ DaDy E~,aa SIaII" Wrilu In the proposal, -Ph.D. caod,idates graduate credit, to i>< counted must meet their residency toward the residency requirement ... ~ • u-.".,. The Graduate Council is expected requirement befor~ formal ad- each term. Also, ~ stud«lt who is {to vote 00 a Continuing· Educatioo . missioo to Ph.D. candidacy. employed more than haIf-time must Unit and a proposal concerning Students may meet this submit to the graduate -dean. an Ph.D. residency requirements at req\lirement by enrpIlment as a full- analysis de the duIies of his em­ • ""'-t."., the 8 a.m . Friday meeting in the time student on campus for two con- playmeot showing their rei€;'aooe to MissiSSippi Room ol the Student secutive semesters or three quar- his doctoral studies. Cent.... . ters. During this time the student The purpose is to insure the may not be employed more than student becomes reasonably weU Of / .fit....~':l:.anJ~~~~ :;:.: . half-ti..,. by an outside employer or known to the farulty ~.... is working U'4H' oerning the revitalization of the SIU the University. under and to enable some Ph.D.. ~•• ,.,. ,.".. ~_, . Foo,mdatioo will also be discussed. Another !lIltian is for students to . Students to fulfiU the residence " . ""r- ...... "The Council encourages all earn at leat 24 semester hours (36 requirements without jeopardizing e..,.,. T,.,..,.., AMer · WI!~I,=I. union . graduate faculty to actively searcb out new and greater outside mooetary sources.in order to main· __ tain the calibe- graduate studies ~~r...~; ~!~~~ Ulci~. r~~ I,~:::::V::::::::=II=- ====s======: ol The .student must complete during at SIU~ . " according . to the each term of residence at least one @ • i resolution. Several training programs in­ ~=~d::'~:;. ~:-:~oc:= . . . d~ continuing educatioo inten­ earn at least three semester hours sive courses in professional . tech.nical and liberal arts areas, are the ~b1e applicatioos or the Con­ tiowng EducatJon Unit, as stated in A"gelllig'If thO proposal. The proposal concerning the Ph.D You're invited to Mid-day residency reqmremt!l'lts was sub­ Rush Week,A<;!ivities mitud by the educational policies Sunday Feb.3,3-5 p_rn Sunday Supper.•. Pick -me-up Chemist's role Q)keHour Student Center featuring these dinnet'5 '13 o/,tIII., to be discussed Activity Rm. A 1 p.m.- S p.m. A aeminar 00 the chemist's l"ClIe , Feb.77- Chapped Bu! Shak :uanbe~ ~t~ . ~ . \»~da~ 99 ~ ZII ol the Neclters Building. Tuesday 4 Thorn .. Roodt, associate dean or Sirloin Dinner $2 the SlU Sd!001 or Law, and Ed Thursday Kiclnka, SlU law professor, will give including 6 bottled import. a partial presenlatioo followed by a Fish Fry $1 49 diocussioo period. IIoocIY said be will also talk about 4 bottled dome.tics '& Uraf.. the· Wlbilities a chemist may be Clam FIy$17 5 ~ble for while working for a corporatim. He said be-also plans to KIDDIE IItlU mils asc dixuss contract clauses that sign Price. good Feb. 3 ~.;. I'h:~~~~el~an~~; For more .information , .....!dlll! for • _atioo. call '*Ie Angel Flight n.e seminar is opE!l to anyOOf in Office 453-2481 fields of chemistry and - (Paid fw b¥' A,ngel Flight! \ . Ton;f"t 8ack by popular demand. Top Rock 'n Roll entertainment -~he dynamic 'GUlLD' plus 'MEDUSA' If/ntl.!/ n;f'" . the unique sound of Double feature -In the Club St.11 'Hardguy" -'G'ENESIS-' Anderson and l,itlll!/ IIlt.,noo!' Rock 'n Roll Revival 'Rolls. Hardly' In the small bar IlItf/l'.tllI!/ 1I11.,nnon ' Rolls Hardly Jazz 'Marble Hill' Free admission in the small bar. -Fr~ admission in th~ .fternoon. pl~s lifo"tllIY n;i'" a rn~on prices'· . 'Medicjne Wh~el' /'

University Orchestra sca les "JUlIET # ' heights of d.ifficult se lections OF THE fPIRITf '" FELLINI . - By Daft 8&earD:I apparent an it carried the orchestra passages of the Oloch piece. like the Dally E~.. _ Writer through Tcilaikovsky's Symphony program"itself. were well controlled No . 6. whicil occupied the last half of amid all of those sharply elciled ac­ A pauern has been prevaiJing in the program. cents. Also , .the short violin solos in Univen.ity Orchestra concerts the Although the Tchaikovsky piece the third .movement wert> delicately past . few quarters : the finest did not receive a sunding ovation. it and agilely handle

o In additioo to WlUSuaUy high position, but the inspired passages music programming , for the or· higblighlS. Wednesday night's per- were far more numerous,' chestra showed it can lackie dif· (ormance by the ' Orchestra in .... Stroud began lhe1irst movement ficult music and play it well. 9uyock Auditorium featured excep- unusually slow. savoring the melan· '- ' - tiooally fine solo playing and well- ciloly mood of the passage . lrlIich , defined dramatic interpretations by erupted into a disarming climax- ~, i,. . mnductor James Stroud. with the help of the brass. The third movement was strictly GAIL'S controlled by the conductor. par­ tiwiarly in the whirlwind interplay (' '" between the strings and the wood­ 4·un . h~lp you winds. Also , the solo clarinet and ~ .u4 7?eview ) oboe passages came out strong and clear. above the symphony's thjck pu •. -,-ouI-! quality since plaud. l.1st quaner-. But Stroud, facing the orchestra . [h~Sl his (shaky palm to.ward the Stroud added his own diS( inClh'e audlence-apparenLly to discourage touch to the prelude as he swept up applause and to retain the IOten se the orchestra with Wlusually abrupt and del icate rapport ' he had acceltrandos a nd dvnamic shifts established with his ensembll~ . that -added excilemeni to the perfor­ manC(>. But had his interoretation And the fourth mo\'cment. with all been any more diver-se, the perfor­ eX its grabbing a~ented sonorit lcs. created a morbi8 mood. Aga m. l1)anL"e would ha \'e been choppy . ba~an ce probl,ems 3 1w(.>('n lJle Unfortunately. the on:h('5tra does strings and brass were appanml . not have a large enough string sec· and I would have preferred a less tion to balance out the sharp brass brusque reading. But in his ap­ timbres. " tlldl tended to be so owr· proach, Stroud achie\ted a fine .. bearing in sPots tha t the strings separation of the orchesti3l s lions S prill~ i.4·IIIS were hardly audible . The authority. in which even the inner voices of the of the brass section was even more score were iIIuminated-a task that !lome profe>sionals overlook. IIOW urrh- ill~ So there were the first a nd last continued Drug p rogra m pieces on t he program - they Be st Foreign Film-N. T. Film Cr i tics Awar d showed the orchestra at its best. t to ",Wspo nsorl'r\ Which leaves the Bloch Concerto 20 050% FRIDA Y 7 & 9:30 p.m. h~a~O~~o;y~i~ ~r~~a~~ the progra m -a piece that could be off ull suh· Student Center .99c 1)\· Hill Ho ust' called neo verge of a tempo-troubled days as residents of the commWlity. catastrophe until Ms . Oldfield's cue Retma n said, put the ensemble back on its feel. The program . named " Tht> However. the opening and closiJijit Workshop." will give people · a mance ID, see the' program, Reitman said. It wi ll also give the residents a l'ofil'l) ojJi l' i fl f ,~ chance to relate and talk to different people . Students s igning up to "be -IIIflY ' f o,~I' j olls residents will have jobs' to do at the House as any other resident. Reit­ CHICAGO , APl-The Con· man said. federation of Police called today for Stutl

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By Gary llaay shouldn't be a requirement to Hanson said Thursday he had Dally EgypUap Staff Writer graduate," Hanson said. MilC!hell been told that since he was not in BOYS .& GIRLS later stated that it was possible to contract with another publisher. the ~raduate School Dean Thomas postpone or waive tbe contract Xerox contract could not be waived. Mitchell has ruled lhat a student requirement if the student was " I' m still against the policy w1?o protested the University having his paper published by steadfastly," Hansq"n sa id . .. It is lenit shirts -dress shi,ts­ Mlcrofilm.contract required for his · another firm . " The itudent should instituted without considerat ion dissertation will not be.exempt from meet with his dissertation advisor given to the r ight~ of the student· the contract. . and me if he wants the requirement author, as Xerox doesn't shar.e the The contract.., which stipulates a IHted." Mitchell sa id . profits with him ." Entire srocle 0' longs lee.ve f~ oC $25 and gives J(erox Cor- When questioned as. to- what the pOfation copyright priveleges. (or In a reprlf- Ietter to Hanson. Mit - graduate school considers a viable / the dissertation. is reouired (or Ule chell said there has been one excep­ exeeption to the contract. Mitchell blouses and lenit caps st ud ~Dt to complete graduate' tioo to the miaoftlming policy since said "We don 't have a recipe. We ... school . , he joined tht*-graduate school in the have so few requests ror exceptions and scar' sets •.•... - In a letter to the SIU Bursar dated summer of 1971. The exception was that we haven't set a specific policy . Nov . 19 , 1973, James Hanson, "granted in the case of a student I'm not in ::: position to say what the Sociology graduate student. who was then negotiating for bolUldaries of those conditions would protested the microfilming. policy . publication of his dissertation in be." If we get more requests. maybe He said th~ student-author is "ex- book form ," Mitchell wrote. we'U be able to work out the ploited in a way other authors would "The excepuon was made with the parameters or an exception," he lind intolerable." Hanson said the Wlderstanding that the dissertat ion said. _ _ 25% OFF contract with Xerox, o( which would be microfilmed if the book did A committee has been ronned by University Microfilms is a sub­ not appear in print within two years th e Gradua te Student Council to sidiary, gives the corpora'tion the " look into the rules" or Hie from the time of th e except ion," TAKE TI ME OUT TO right to reproduce and sell copies or Mitchell Slated. He said he would be microrilming policy. The com ­ the students' dissertations. mittee. headed by Bill Faulhaber or "happy" to discuss the matter with READ THE ~~dL~r~lmA~~~ ~t~ Hanso n ....i r an exception was the English department is sc heduled ~ M?£:; requested . to make a report at th e next council microfilming policy .,.e that it meeting Feb. 12. DE c.LASIF IEQS "makeS the existence or doctoral After discussing the matter with dissertations known a nd the :\tilchell. Hanson wrote him a letter material inexpensively a\'ailable." on Jan. 28 in which he "concluded "I like ha\'lng me disserl!ltion , that the slatus'"()( my dissertationl • ava ilable. but paying the S2 5 does not constitute an 'exception ' to, the requirement or ha\'lng to pay lhe DOLLAR DAYS' SALE U /I .~ h (/("/ I il'.~ $1 5 microfilm ing fee and sign a i ri co ntract with (Uni ver sit y Mi cror ilms ... last call for sale merchandise /0. /1I't.!·ill .";/1 1/1/".'" . " ThC' polic y IS still With us. and I February 1s t & 2nd only would urge you . the Graduate f or .. j II t.!A f/ iJ.! hl Council and the Graduate St udent Council to reconsider i l." fia,\son The SIU Harper Angel F1.gh. " ,II ~ rQ t(" f Assor-ted Fabric TQble, begin its rush activities ..ith an in'­ formal cqce hour (rom 3 to S p.m. lu Sunday in Student Center Activities J -ll uU J'· d h«-'u r- .'"'"" Room A. _ $'-99-$ J .88-$2.88-$3.88- J/2 Pr;c Angel Flight is a n.ational Sluft pnt Se na tt' organizatiqg of college women dedicaJgJ to serve their universities and oommuruties. The purpose of \ Oil' (·t4I1lpl a inl;; All Regular Stock Polyester Knits Angel fligh' is 10 promote !he U.S. _ . ( not sales items) . Air Fon:e and AFRbsoo. who submitted !he Work..-. Unioo

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2 NEW SANDWICHES ••ratwurst 70c .Frankfurter 70c

. Open Doily 11 ~ 9 Mu_~", c.n .., )

... 12. Dolly ~ . Febr.-y 1. 1117' Workshop for aged B.lacks DOLLAR­ to begin at Atlucks Center DAYS By BreDda Pealand agiog aOct in de<.'eioping approaches Purpose Center. corner of North Daily Egyptian StaIr Writer to these problems:' she said. Gum and East Main S.:-eels. She said the program ~i ll also Interested persons may enroll iR A Workshop Series on the Black function as a resource to those who the ",-orkshops oc receive additional Aging and Aged ~;II 'Slan March 9 are currently involved in providing informatioo by calling the Training al lhe AllUcks Mulli·Purpose Get· services to the aged. and Ming Program at s:J6.T169. ter. J~n W. Robinson. director of Thi flf'Sl series of workshops ""ill the workshops. announCt.'d Thur· begin March 9 and run through May sday. 25 and the next series will run from The workshops will be conducted July 6 Ihrough Sepl. 211 . by the College of Human Resou~ All the sessions will be from 9 lhrough !he Training ' and AgUlg a.m. to noon . on Saturdays. Program of the Rehabilitation In­ A certificate wi ll be, ~' arded to .~ stitute. Ms. R~ inson said...... th~e participaf)ts completing the TIle topics to be discussed include mUre ~our series, Ms. Robinson black. histor-y and family lifestyles. said. urban a nd rural differe nces. She said lecturers ..,.ill be drav.l1 nutrition. physical and mental from a variety of diSCiplines within aspects of aging. education of the StU and Olher universities. aged and dea!h and dying. Enrollment is open to anyone who Ms. Robinson said the purpose of has a specific interest in the area, the workSlops is to develop an but it ",ill be limited in number, ac· awareness of and sensitivity to the oordil)g to a secreta.ry of tht' druble jeopardy of being black and Training and Aging Program. aged. The workshops wil l be free of . "The program ",ill assist in the c:ha~e. Ms . Robmson said. dO~ hard task of facing.problems which 9J.e said all the workshops will be are common LO all of the ag and conducted at the Allucks Mult. - life. S;nluel Goldwy n dies tor aU ifs . - after 50 years in filnl Wol1h " .

BEVERLY HILLS. Callr. IAPI ­ first movie job In Goldw\'Il's , whose tasteful " Roman Scandals." said ' " He 'was Stlndo..y Worship I!ms and colocfuJ language were the best Jriend I (>\'er had and the part of the movie scene for mort> greatest showman I l'\' er knew.' IO:~5"'" than half a centur\,. died at his James Stev,arl " Ht' was one of homt> early Thursd3y al 91. that rare b ~ that started Ihis 10· rnlb ~ coffe.e Thl' cause of tie-ath was not Im ­ dlblry and JIli1de II IOto soml'lhlOg mediately kno,",'O . Hl' had s ufferl>d a more than a nictwrodoon sld;';how /0: 15 .. "" stroke ttillt caused his n.'llrement in Ht' had a slrangt> seflSt' of 1969 and was hospllali7.ed lasl kno"" lng what the public wanted." wesley t.ommcinij month " 'ith a kidn .... y ailm. t. John Wa,'O(> : " Well. the induslr\, GoIdw"n. who had lind most of has lost a' man whoaooitated hiS . house. his life In the limelight. had been tife 10 making plcturt.>s 10 good 13SIt> , II\;llOis confined tu hi S homl..' In recent I \\;sh then- were more like him ." 811. s· st. years. Ht> emerged on March 2,. Goldw)'n produced an astonishing 197 1. 10 rccei\'c Iht> Ml.--dal of number of film hits . Among them : Freedom from Prt>Sident Nixon for " Arrowsmith," "Dead End," " The nis " fi t> rce ind~t.'ndence . deep Westerner," "The Ultle Foxes." h .':Spect for quality, st rk1 t."lhics and "Pride of the Yankees," "Up in Wlcompromising inlt.1;rily .'· Survi\'ing a re his widow. Franc~ ~s~~~u ~r~ Ht~~:,:· ':~ and their son. Samucl Jr., also a Foolish Heart." " Hans Qlristian film producer. Ander5en, " "Guvs a nd Dolls." His Tributes poun.>d 10 from famous last film_was "Porgy and Bess" in figures. . ",'ho got her 1959. FINAL ,toUC iDDLLAR$ $$ LADIES SHOES SWEATERS-TOPS *' A 00 *'1' . PANTS values to $18.00 now $5 * 1 Group vaiues to $22.00 now $700 * Originally $10.00 - $15.00 y values to $32.00 now $900 * . .. NOW - $5.00 1 Group LADIES BOOTS Originally $16.00 - $22.00 values to $5000 NOW - ' $8.00 $ t SPORTSWEAR-DRESSES (1/2 OFF 1 Group .r - MENS SHOES Originally $24.00 - $30.00 values to $25.00 now $9" NOW - $12.00 values to $45.00 now $ 1 4 II Group Origi nally $32.00 - S40.00 NOW - $16:00

Slore H (, Nw:In . 9 : :.la~'1: 00pm Tue-Sal 9 : ~ : 3lpm :> Mlirdale Shopping Cel)ter {

Doily fIMIIIon. FoI>r.-y 1. tW~. "-lIe 13 Business j"ields open jobs for wOlnen ;~~'l :";:~'t ~~:': i ~~~IS~.~ By Uado LIp...... " Women can oonu-ibute to the in· limited on the hours they could "But (or women 10 move into Pflvale Camps. Dude Ranches ana o.IJy. Egypdaa _ Wriler aeasing social responsibility of work. If yoo want to get ahead, yclll ~erial positions they must be Resorts throughout the nalion. business. But peopledoo't think of must stay until the job is done," she aggressive. We need somebody who Over 50,000 sludenls a.ded each .,,, ~ ·than me million jobs are this area In the business sdlool." explained. can get the job done." Bell added. yea' For FREE informal ion Oil av'ilable to women in the sluden! 'SStstance program ,end ~~id • n.e «)-hour work week. is a myth. "Due to affkmative action. the seU·aOdreueo STAMPED en.... r:::=.ooa1 and UlChnical areas of He added that wom8l are limited Il>06t of the panelists agreEd. opportWlities for women in business lope 10 OpPOrlunlty Releareh , . ,-Richard o.t>orn, assistant in the business fields because they are wide open." Osborn said. _. Dept SJO. 55 Flathead Orl lt • • PQlf....,.. of administrative sciences do nct have qualifications. He said Educatioo in business is impor­ " But the opportunities for anyone Kalispell, MT 59901 . . I tad the audience at the careers Cor . management positioos in large cor­ tant. Barbara Rendleman , in business in Southern. lllinois are YOU MUST APPLY EARly .... Wc:men in Business seminar Thur- porations usually require an managing officer of the CamondaJe limited, ,- Ms. Barron said. aday. I engineering degree .• Savings and Loan. "lid. " Business • 'Secret.aries will never become changes so rapi,dJy . that education "As the economy expands, there managers Wl1ess they ha ve the . is needed to keep 4J!' on the par· is a Deed foc -more people in the training." he continued. ticulars." Most panelists added-that ~ force. The largest increase "Your chances fer advancement a master's degr~ may mean a ~ been for women." Osborn said. are increlSed if you have the ap­ bigger salary, if you .can find the propriate training." job. " And experience doesntt sub­ F He jobs in the cikil41ew opening stitute for the degree," Osborn said. extemal affairs- department. whim Mary Ba!J:?n. associate professor many larger businesses "are adding ct account.ancy, said Limiting -the David BeB , recruiter for Sears' to the traditiooa1 marketing and hours a woman can work reduces data processing, said the hesitation 5100'.00 management d~ents . The ex­ her ctIances of advancement. for some employers to promote ....nal affairs will 'deal with Iaber "When I began in accowlling. it women in the same scale as men relations ~ community relations. was a ne\It' field and women were was unfounded in his department. -Wardrobe -Board lal."l's flel ;011 No purchase necessary Delay of hearing sought Be sure & register now By Du Haar dinance ,Sunday, He asked that the comes that they can't, WE're aU in ... TOPS Dolly Egypti~ swr Wri .... muncillWld the hearing at its Feb. 4 trouble." - . 82'.99 ... meeting and asked for fermal action Elwyn Zimmerman, chairman of The Board of Fire and Police at its Feb ...J 8 meeting. the board, said he doe::; n (l( think it Commissioners announced Thur­ Instead of settling the issue ethical that the council should hold a All Junior Dresses !day that it will ask the Carbondale . , through the inexpensive means of hearing on a matter before the • City Council to delay a dismissal referendum, Zimmerman said the couT!. . hearing against Ute boal"ll for not city has dlosen to go to ooun at a RWlge said that if the council does to wmtt~ir::a~~aisci~~:ni~ ~~ greater cost to the taxpayers, not delay the hearing the OOard 40% 70% OFF " If the electorate c

[EJ1$21Is4t Now you, as an SIU staff or faculty member, can have yq{u pay check automatica'lly . [M] I $6; [Ii] deposited in your First National Bank and Trust checking account. All Str·etch 800ts Call the SIU payroll office for details. Values to $2 I 99 NOW 1$5 . At your service Men's Shoes I /2 Price First National Sank and Trust Company Southern Illinois and Carbondale THE ~DTEllT Member FOIC 124 S. (IliOOs - across I. C. 'Depot Z open till 8:30 .... 14.1lII1y ~ . I'ebr.-y 1. 11174 Falconry practioner trains Dollar DaJe:s a! R edlail Hau'k to be housepet T". I. 'f,." 3' 1 5 S. III. 1 0% off on Mexican By Gan' Hou\' something," said Kylloe . a graduate car window. Gus attacked the slow­ Daily Eg~' plian StaCr Writer student in recreation . " And when he mo ving pigeon and became en· , Sterling Silver RJ ngs ilets a grip on a rabbit. that's it." • tangled in the twine. Some people ha\'e cats or dogs for Kylloe used a pigeon trap tn snare " He wa s weighted down by the until Feb. 1 6 pets. others like turtles or even rabbits. But Ralph KyJl oe is a hawk­ ~ Gus about nine weeks ago DriVing ~~f;~nhi~r~~ :~~r~e( i'!l~: ~ ~~~I~ !.Dver. Gus, his three-pound Redlail down a . r~ ad In hiS car , he ~lghted said. He managed to"-get the hawk Hawk with a four-foot wingspread, ~e ha."" k perched on a Lr~ hmb. A, . back to his house. where he tied bim likes rabbits himself. hv~ pigeon . harnessed With a long . .... li th a ~sh to an ov ersiz.ed biro •'He can reach speeds oC over 200 .....elghted s ~rap and several sma)) dhouse in his yard . miles an t:»our wh,ery he's .Qjving on loops of twme, was thrown out the - " He wouldn 't eal for the first six da ys. We just kind of stared at each other for awhile: ' Kylloe said. Afler spending three to four hours earn day with Gus. KyUoe was able 1O train him 10 come at the sound of his name. " It takes ab3IJ1 three mmths 10 really train a hOl wk . But DOLLAR DAYS it 's a real thrill to call him

119 No . Ph, 457-2985 Was.'lington 0ttle'(j; J~ . Ft:A Y: Catfish Plate $1.75 ~ 0 r . From 5 _ 8

Doily f0I>IiIn, """"*y I, 1874, I'IiIe 15 -' Sales management, J .00 Protect.ion ·P'an against fire and theft computer science interviews offered: LOWER RATES The following are bn-t:ampus job Will also interview accounting Special"'" inter Two Quarter interviews scheduled at Utdver­ interns on Feb. 13. • laity.:'Placement Services (m: tbe NatiooaJ Mine Service Company. week of Feb. 11 . For interview Ashland, Ky .: B.S.· M.S. in Quar'ter Rate Now Rate Reduced appointmenlli' aod additional in· electrical Sciences and systems formation interested students "{ electrical and mechanical I. Only to should visit the Caner Planning Manufacturer oC underground and Placement Center located at mining equipment. "\. ~o~Hal1 . Section A •• North Electronic Data Systems Cor· ~. thin! floor. poration, D~Uas : Individuals 00 Interested III going into develop­ $1200 $2l ,...,.,.. Fe!>. tz ment programs designed to develop a good business person. CNA .inlurance. Chicago: Multiple ' skilled in dl ta interested irr career positions for qualified b~iness and data processing and business. math and liberal arts possess outstandlDg records ( majors. Procter and Gamble Distributing ~~::~r:t~!~fli~::-r~n~~ii~~!~~ mini+kool Company, Cincinnati: Sales Also seeking account executive management: Initially, an in­ trainees and corporate recruiters tensiv~ sales training program leading to sales management forWalston the newlyCo . Requiresacquired DuPontMBA 's,· r======:::::;;::::::::::;::§:::::§:§§::::::';:::::::~~~~~::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==i responsib i lities . Sales undergraduate business majors management responsibilities with prior business and military include: &election. training and junior office experience, as weU as motivation of a sales organizatiCll ; othen; who (eel they qualify based personal selling responsibility ~o~~~~u s records o( per· with major accounts; ck.ve1oping promotIonal plans anif-presen­ University Placement Servi'Ces: tations ; managing sales plans and On·campus ~Q b interviews. For policies; analyzing business appointments stop by the office at results and recommending action . . ,Woody Hall, Section A , No rth • to the company. All candidates Wing. third floor . who have a strong interest in sales The Peoples Gas Light and Coke and sales mgmt. C0n:tpany. Chicago: ' audIting: acclg. and bus. W_y. F .... 13 majors (wi th concentration accoWlting ). Industrial relatioo!. Horace Mann Educators .. (wage and salary ad· Springfiel d ~ Positi~s available in ministratioo): Ind. relations or our accounting. actuarial. and personnel mgt. !TONITEl ~~ data operations department. SaJes Procter and Gamble Distribpyng . endless opportunities in this area. Company. Cincinnati : Refer-.o FROM CHAMPAIGN . t~roughout c~untr y. either in . . Tuesday, Feb. 12 date. r f '. . ,._. direct sales or sales management. Also openings (or management '4 trainees with general business _'Y. F... background. Majors: bKsioess. accounting. computer scinece. T~~~~t ·tincpr~~~~~~ ': _ Ga~~ri~~ math and aetuariaJ science. knowledge to the discovery of nO\< Arthur Andersen and Company · oU and gas reserves by in· '. ARE M CPA's. St. Louis: Accounting terpreting s~ce and sub-surface majors interested in a career in infcrmatioD. Prepares surface and subsurface maps. Recommends C~~~n a::t~V~ i~i~ ~:n~~ prospective acreage and is ' ~ . responsible (or lhe location 0( ex­ ~~ri~~~s ~~~::Ii~a~t!i7'r! : ploratory wells and for the terested in auditina or taxation. evaluation of formations penetrated"""'Application Corm BAY 64 per ~o n s d e fecl shou.k:I be oompJeted prior to in· * from Polish ship ~t';i'e. hanltlin Park : Seeking management candidates COl' retail HAMBURG. Germany (AP)­ stores. candidates are trained to Sixty·four pasoengers from a Polish assume responsibility to manage ocean . liner are missing and ap­ one oC rive retail departments in a parently d8ect¢ to West G..-many Turg·Style store. Degree: bus . while the mip was docked at Ham· admio. and lib. arts. burl. police ri!ported today. Electronic Data Systems Cor· The passerI8/!rS were reported por-atioo, Dallas: Refer to Wed· missing (rom the " Ste{an Satory"· nesday. Feb. 13. in 'what was believed to be the Arthur Andersen and Company - iar1!esI mass d8ection to the West CPA·s. SI. /Allis: Ref..- to Wed·

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2 '3 E·. Main Phone 457-7878 The Febru_ary SAL-E; $250,00.00 Inventory on Sale at DIENER STEREO ..

~I J. J.. I I •

DOKORDER ImX AM­ PM STEREO RECEI VER 60-60 Watts 'RMS Per Channel LIST $500.00 SALE $250.00 HARMAN/KARDON OO6OA STEREO AMPLIFIER 50+ AM-FM RECEIVER w­ 75+ AM-FM ·RECEIVER 35-35 Watts RMS Per Channel Wal. case LIST $200.00 SALE $100.00 SO-50 Watts RMS per Channel 25-25 Watts RMS per Channel • LI ST $439.95 SALE $309.95 8070 AM- LI ST $275.00 SALE $189.95 FM STEREO TUNER 100+ AM-FM RECEIVER LIST $200.00·SALE $100.00 150+ AM-FM RECEIVER 65-65 Watts RMS per Channel 9(}9Q Watts RMS per Channel LIST $539.95 SALE $384.95 LIST ~9 . 95 SALE $469.95

. BLANK TAPE - Reel to Reel , Cassette. 8 T rk , PRE-RECORDED - Reel to ' Reel. Cassette. 8 Trk MODEL 2002 STEREO AM­ STORAGE CASES PLIFIER • ~ Cassette. 8 Trk 1 ~15 Watts RMS Per Channel W-Walnut Case . ' LIST $135.00 SALE $67.50 We have many (One of ~ Kind ) and many, many Demo Un its.

HERE IS JUST A t= EW OF THEM.

TEAC model 1230 Tj\.PE THERE ARE IT9MS ON DECK SALE THAT WE C:AN NOT LIST $399.50 SALE $339.50 PUT IN PRINT. / ~ COME I N AND sAVE, SAVE, MARANTZ model 120 am­ SAVE' / -- fm TUNER w-scope . GARRARD 40B AUTOMA TI C LI ST $429.00 SALE $299.95 TURNTABLE $49.95 You have to BIP Power Base 14.95 01 Dust Cover 5.95 STANTON SOOE Cartridge TECHNI CS model SA5600X come in and see . :ll.00 am-fm RECEI VER 100.85 LI ST $319.95 SALE $219.95 l the savings SALE PRICE $59.95 I HEADPH0NES MARANTZ model 2440 Quad 4 to appreciate SAVE up to 60% adp. AMPLIFIER LI ST $299.95 SALE $199.95 AUTOMATI.C TURNTABLES this sale. SAVE up to 40% TECHNI CS model SA5200 The Best Sound am-fm RECEI VER DIE'N-ER LIST $229.95 SALE $139.95 Around

STEREO MARANTZ model 4060 Quad 4 Diener Stereo Console AMPLI FI ER 409 S. LIST $249.95 SALE SI79.95 " lu.s-Sat l"Cr-S Illinois ~49-7366 Hours: Monday lp-8

DIlly ~ I'«Jru.y 1. 1874. Poge 17 Hill House to begin la.undry, STARU.NG delivery service for inc ome JANUA~ 1 ~ By Davld _ W. Oak Sl. The hou.:.~ was donated to "BEEF. OF Dolly EgypCIu S&aII Writer them by Doctors Hospital at the beginning of January. 'Hill House wiU initiate a delivery The house is coming rent free. BARON" service and a laundry service in Reitman said in a earlier intervie'ol.'. Night about two weeks . .Paul Reitman. Rent on their old house was 5400 per E very Sunday. Monda y, director of the Carbondale drug month. rehabilitation center. said Thur­ ':\'be modern fh'e-bedroom home is & Tuesday; 5 sday. equipped with a washer ~ nd dr)'er. unlil 9::Ilp.m . . The businesses will be run by the Reitman said. That is wh y we are residents of Hill House. " It's going gOin.g to i ~pl e ment the Isundry to bl a successful program," service. Reitman said. . • Reitman said he has plans ror the - Starting the small businesses is money houSe members earn and the one phase of the ~ogram Reitm,!" funds they save beCause they don't has set lID for Hill House. In"-a n have to pay rent. earlier interview. Reitman said he " We want this money to help us '- 10 build the new Hill House· get out of the red," he said, " We ' businesses into small oorporations. have most of oW' bills paid. but we are not up to date." ~~C~~~ r=~~:t i:u: Some of the money is going. to be br house alumni and kept up by the paid out in ne ..... staff salaries, residents. The money (or the Reitman said. Hill House has hired per persoo restaurant will come from the tw.o new stafJ members since they profits of the other businesses. Paul Reilman moved . Bar b Dolan . a graduate Reitman said. student in rehabilitation at StU, and ONY Before the delivery service AJthough Hill House residents hope to gross $250 per week . Reit­ Ed Andreson. a graduate student in begins. Hill House has to secure a man said he is not sure how much sociology at SI U and a trainee at the pick-up truck. Reitman said. " Vic deliveries will cos t his clientele. Asklepieion The rapeutic Com­ Standing Rib Roasl­ Kaening Chevrolet has htade a "We will deliver anything, but the mWlity at the M:trion Penitentiary. Roasted to m edium Rare cortrmittrnent to donate a used pick­ rate5"'Wili vary on how rar ..... e have to have started working part-time for perfection and carved at up as soon as one comes in ... the house, Reitman said. Their go and what is going to be . your tableside. " We are not looking for nan­ delivered." salaries are $250 a month. douts. ,. Reitmjl n s aid. " We are Sue If'\\.'in a graduate student in Seconds are ·'on the The house residents and starr are going to operate' and compete like communications. has been working HQUse " and a complimentary anv other business." also unsUTt' how much money they full -time since Reitman assumed his glass of Burgundy Wine Reitman hopes the delh'ery will charge for their laundry ser· posit io n in early Janua ry . Her vice. " We will wash, dry and iron service will make "$250 per six day sala ry is 5500 per month, Reitman will be served with week." He was unsure how much the clol)les ." Reitman said. said , each ··Beef of Baron'· laundry service might suppleme nt Hill House 's bU Sinesses will Som e of the money earned will special ! the figW't' . , operate out of their.new home at 412 also go to reside nt s of the house. J Reitman said. When the businesses begi n. Bob Ke hm. r eside nt of the Tryi~ to serve you more Chi lla j 'rtol PS A -" t.p ricall house a nd ma nager of the ne w in 1974' operations. wi ll receive $3 per hour, Reitma n said. "'He 'li be payin g hi s

own room and board. " p a/hol t 1 0 da.,·s ;"'--('(1111 p The slate is presentl y PJlYlOg S850 per day for each of the dozen CLARK AlH. BASE . Philippmes rive South Vietna mese. al sf's when it done . some thing picked up or said LI. Cmdr. Milton Bakt"r ...... 11 0 was ordered 10 proceed to the delive red or e \'e n their gr ocery WANT ADS A RE WHERE THE BARGAINS ARE! \ Dew with Kosh from Hong Kong . Paracels after fighting eruptl>d shopping done for th em. can ca ll Hill How long Kosh s tays in the thert~ . - House at 549 -7391 , hospital al Clark depend ~ on his No - other Am erican ha s been physical condition, Bak<, r added. reported involved in the fi ghting Earlier reports had said Kosh was over the islands. 225 miles east of ill ..... ith hepatitis. South Vietnam's coast and 165 m iles Wearing a standard Chinese southeast of China 'S Hainan Island. worker's uniform of cbrk blue tunic The islands are prized as a possible Use Your Imagination and trousers. Kosh walked 50 yards jumping off point for off-s hore oil across the Lo Wu Bridgt' between exploration. a nd both China and Olina and H002 1\ )Og, follo ..... ed by South Vietnam claim them . With Our / Condiment 8a,: Tomatoes Onions etchup FREE: Pickles Lettuc Mustard ... garnish our already great Pitcher of Cold Drfjlft Beer sandwiches to your bearts t $1 00 desir~ 1 1 a.m.-6 p.m. Ever, _Friday That's not 'cutting any slack' Try some of Carbondale's Buffalo Bobs finest ·French Fries, . 1 0 1 W. 'College f"flflo,' .,,,. f~/"lif fa/",/ag! The t drinlc is .2 5 C clcet stub·. Wall & Main, Carbondale OPEN 24 HOURS' ,

..PIOt 18. Doily~. Februay I. 1974 Ent: ironlnental report ca,lls -Old World 1m ports ] o'r a , ~to ban at. N,U calnpus Famous Clearance Sale DEKALB . Ill. (AP I-Northe rn the a utomobile has been g1ve n entrance. replacement of surface Impor.ted Chess Sets Illinois University released a n precedence a l NIU. causing untold pa rking areas with three multi-level inconvenience to the most important parking garages. increased use oj _The fine st selection in are a! -indi\'idual on cam pu ~" the student. la ndsca ping a nd construcrion of ~~~~:t&lla~alfl~~n~: r:~~~ ~ ~ Includi ng: of " the offending ",utomobile " and " F'urthermore," the report added . facil ities incl uding a "Perform ing other recommendations to make the .. t he visual impact of the N1 U art£ center. a recreation a nd in­ Mexican Onyx tramural complex aM a graduate ,,3tl~m 5 and t he. "ci t~' ~ f D~Ka l b " the campus is one of chaos, the result of Handcaned Bone &: Weod s e commuDity It IS. " the ad hoc pract ice of locat ing research fac ili ty fo r the scien ~s . Oriental &: Italian Oesigns The 76·page re port was relea sed bujldings b ~ i n is tr ative riat wi th The st udy wa s conducted by a a t a news , confe r e nce by NIU lim it ed profess io na l pla nning ad· lini versi ty of Illinois deSign team at ~ .....eres ident B~ ha td J . Nelson,_ who \ice." a cost of less than $;10.000. Nelson ~ 20% - 300/0 OFF! ..- said the r ecomme nda tions a re Chief blame...-ror \A.·hat the report said. widergoing further study and " do call ed NIU' s "functionall y inef· The repor t divided 'planning into Highway 51 N, Open loam to 5P.m :'. not mea n that funds to implement ficient " at mos phere was laid on three phases carrying into th e 21st Next to Stotlar Lumber Co, Tues - Sat _ them are avail a ble," No rthern 's exploding growth in Century. "A university campus should be enrollment from i.OOO students in the phys ical expression of a 'uni'­ 1960 to more tha n 22,000 in 1970. o,: ersity,' a unit. a single entity in Reco mmendations included new purpose. orga nization and place." la nd acquisition. closing se veral the report said. existing roads to through traffi c and .. As such it should be designed to providing for a ve hic ula r tra n· the m easur(> of man. for the sportation system a round the pedestrian on COQt rather th a n for perimeter of campus, a new main Fr,id'ay Special:, Land speculato!s pay to get rid of r e fugees 2 C Drafts...... ~ , ~ .. SAI GON (AP 1-Local author ities 0 and then decide he wants it back. and landowners are paying soldiers "Sometimes. when the landowner to terrorize refugees and drive them sells it . the land is swamp or jungJe away from resettlement homesites and not worth much. so he gets rid of wanted ~y land ~ u1 a t o rs , SOuth it to the go ve rnment. " the official Vietnamese oHicials said Thursday. said. • Th e orricials' comments, in reply to a reporter's questions, came after a raid on a resettlement a r ea t h ~';~ f::~r t ~re fr\~! u~~~~~aa~~' ~ Monday where soldiers ki lled an 'Old cultivated it a nd the a rea ' has woman and wounded several other become more secure. the lartaowner refugees. takes a second look at the property I ' and decides he wants it back. So r e7ug~~~~~:~t hf~a~~ iy s:'~~ e ~t~ hepa:.ii off somebody to terrorize the tacked b .... three unidentified men new settlers." , firi,...,grenade launchers and rifles. Someone re turned later a nd replaced the emptycartridges from J) ('(t( J../ ; II t~ S t>I the American-made weapons with Up Your Alley empty shells from the kind of w~tie ~ofdr;;~"~~'r~~ nV~e L,, f:~~ ~ j'ur I"t'g;olla I grabbing raid" and had been paid off on behalf of a wealthy Viet­ namese landowner. said the monk , j'plloH's";p Thich e hau Toan. secretary-gener ct l A fel lowship award will be offered of the Buddhis t Committee for National Reconstruction and Social to wom& in the U.S. sol.lth --<.'eO tral Development. region who are studying in distinc· The Saigon government's minister tive and. frontier fields. of social weUa re. Phan Quang Dan. Sponsoring the fellowship award ordered an investigation into the is the Soroptimist Federation of the attack in Long Khanh Province, Americas, Inc. Topics under con· about 50 miles northeast of Saigon. sideratioo for the award include ~~@lXJ If the attackers were Viet Cong. psychological research of young there wouldn' t have been a n in· people 's needs : psychological res.earch in mass mOlivation ; body I vestigation . one official said .• Dan also de manded that lo cal chemistry as it affects physical and officials guarantee the safety of the mental strength and weaknesses ; refugees . all resettled from the preparatioo for roles in politics and ProvinfJe of Quang Tri. He. said he government : and advanced study in was told there had bee.n several eng ineering , geology, ener gy , other incidents .. but that no one had physical and mental health fields been ki lled before last Monday. and the a.J"1.S and communication of idea ~ . LI One gover nment official. who . asked not to De identified, said such Women- interested in the award acts sometimes are " instigated by 'a lnust be college graduates and . corrupt military commander , residents 0( Arkansas, Louisiana, sometimes by a regional t)'coon. Missouri. Oklahoma, Kansas. Texas sometimes by a Catholic priest who and Olinois within a 75 miles radius ba tes Buddhists ." Many refugees ,. 51 . Louis. are Buddhists. 11le deadline foc applications is The oUicial said occasionally a March 25, and forms will be landowner will sell la nd to the available in Woody HaU 228 B. For 'government for a resettlement site more information, call 4S3-2:3S'r.

LA~~c GRou\> Of SL~C.\

CLASSIFIED IN FORMATION [ JIODt ...: tIOJn:.~ 1 OEAOUNE-Oeaoll~ lor placIng c la!o~loE!C aos ,s 1 In1 IWO oa.,~ on auvanct: Of PoJOhColl,(lI1 , ('aceo' Ina' oeadImt.' lor T~v 1964 OldsmobUe Wagon 12x.S2 mobile ~ . two beOr'oan. SoJthem MHP No. lB on Warren Rd adS IS Fnday ,)I 1 pm . Complete Electronic $225 186JAII DUNN APARTMENTS 1969 Ford 4·Door $795.00 Repair Service Fumished Efficiency PA.YMiNT--C~~' l lecl acJyer1' ~nQ 1'I'II,hf" be 1967 Chevy Door 0e1t.JU 2 bdrm. trailer 10x50, a .c ., All makes-Best rates & 1 ·Bedroom Apts. p,lId ,n acJ¥Cll"lCt' l..'1Icepa. lor a ,(CUlts a l~adY 4· $?99 natural gas -neal, dose 10 CCl'np..l5. establi§he(l 'The orocr form "",,,ch ~ ~ '1"1 Available Spring quarter WILD MOTORS carpeted. musl SII!e , 549·5267. 1885A1 2 B r ~" ' S"TV ~ fuuc mav be maliN or orouqnl '0 I~' oj Lewis Lane Rd . f,et'. locale(; ,n the 'j0l"1I1 wIng. Com· 327 N Illinois 111 W WoJ l""" CCla ...' Pn ~9 . ~ IT'U''i,caI'O"l buoldH'IQ No rel~ on cancelk.<) .-sorry,. nil pets-

"" Fo- sale.,' '67 Calallna, P.S., p.b .. a .c .. Duplex. furn , kIt ., 3 room apt .• ~ ie l . R.A TE5-Nun,mum Ct\olrge 1\ 10< rwo h~ Used furniture, many items. SClTle an· after 6, ~..e28B . 1834A91 carpeTed, S8) plus util., 7 m iles fr(7n NUlople Ir6t'I'l,on roI'{'1o art' lor acIS wr"(f\ ' ..... t i ~s , 414 W Sycamore. 199A campus. (ambna_9!5·1824. 27668Ba O"l (~ , ~ dlYs WlmOVI copy ~ '604 etevy-:atr cond., new parls:9OOd fires. S250 0- besl of1.. 549·8026. 1h.2A , 1 tBirm" furniShed, carpet, air use th" 1\oInCV cnan 10 loQUtl' COSI 1835A91 N-eloov Farms. I nSh setters, HU5kles. WanTa ntce place near camp.JS? Need CDnd.. new f .... nace and hot water CoI! :"-"'S. lerrru. reaSO'\able, 996-32)2 lank. call -4S7· 70403. best ofter. I903A01 a r (Dl'lmate. glrl·now, ~9 · 3275 . 1IA26,. 276SBSa l,r'I!"> Ida'll } o.Jn 5csa ...... 100an '67 Che... . h.L 8. aulo and aIr, sell , 111 150 100 600 Oleao. 457-687.. allet" 5. 187'9A94 ('..uitar· amp. bass guitar, biKk pack NIce 3 roc:n( apt , all furn by big lake. , ". 11S 3 00 900 and frame. TV and stand, Shl..re­ goOO fiSh irg. 6871267 lac>Ba91 l OCI 400 1100 1971 Fo-d van. good aRLo call 549· Sphere m ike and stand. and bike '00'" 1 ,~ S 00 1S00 689", SI900 er best Offer. 1a52A93 perts, 56·5520. 18S6A90 1 or 2 oedrm apt . furn . all utll paid , ,'" 450 I!oOO t&lO rypewriters . new and used', all rear carnp.,s WinTer and SprIng, S49- sn 700 '100 brands, also SCM electric port .. Irwin AKAI Reel to Reel with buill In 4.S89 2757BBa07 '111 Al\averidt Grabber, under 3O ,0X) 1100 8 1400 'n Typewriter- Exdlange. 1101 N. Ccurt. cassetle~gnt Irack l"Kordef. if in· miles, 6 cylil"der'. standard Trans .. A· I Marion. 0PI!f\ .v..cn.·Sat. 9'(3-']997. ' 1en)!S,led call 45].11045. I857A90 '''' c:crc:Iitien, v.tloIesale price 549·3275. Qo,.o ,,,..- ..... ~ ....- .... . ,-- ...... lasJA93 BA2710 00I' ~.,..._'"" _ ... .., .. Colored metal for skirting and etc . 1111 .. ".'" anchOr' kIts . Sheds, awnings. roof '10 0IINy Imp:lla cust(7n 2-door hard· ~:'~: ·T~~~.~~aaYf~r ~~7!~t maTing, and Of her parts and eTC .. 5.019· Gartxn1ale hOuse. 4 reed 1 more fOf' 5 tqJ 150. av1C1"1'\ati( , ~y strg. and 3275. IB6OA93 REPORT ER~S AT ONCE !rakes. CapriCE infe1iOi .... vinyl 10Cl. 4·Sale Wint 0' Spr' .. temale QU6d5 bedroan t-oJs(' Immec:halely. call 457· 4ll4. • 2767BBb Check your ddvertlSofmenI upo'Il'r5I,n. a ir , new.....paint . QOCXj shape. below C(J'ltract. own rocro. Cheap. ~9 · ~ Discontinued carpet samples· lbIB, 5I!rt,on an.3 plNW notIfy Vi 'f me,,.e ,~ an v.tlOIesale price. 549.3275 18S4A93 18J8A91 S. 19 MCh, 18x27 S.95 each aT Universal bedroom furnl!.hOO for rent, error. Eactlild ISCro. e-wrytl'long Irern G E aP041a~ 10 t ern 1908A 13 PIt''''' :- .....6enolo furn,!I'I'~ All natT'll!' Single rms fO' male studenlS will1 '64 Penl .• 1 dJ' aIr, p.b. and S., rebulll . Droll Nb- U,,"" IUI'n,Iure rel roge r oJlor- ~ k Itchen and lounge , priv., TV, engine. ¥d Trans .. Yery rei., s.t9~757 Gotf dubs. largest Inventory in S. (~ . evt>n carpellng' telePla'e. launcL very near campus, 11101193 Illinois. slarlN sets, 519; full sels, . lOW P~KES Al l YEAR' ...ery conpeflllve rates. call 451·ns1 S4.S : in:::l ividual dubs, 52 . .50 and 1..4l : ~ N .v..aon. el.v..aonon III or 549· l'OJ9 Bba2Tl5 '68 Olds CuI . conV·1.. pb and s. r adiO, ~Cl)Rj .. S800 ex besl off .. Sd9·9270. r:"s~J~~~ .~I~ 'IS , ~~ per dozen, call 457-4334. BA261 7 ~llIhi'" IIl1m.'" ..·OR R.::\T '72 CHEVROLET Sewing machine. dressmaker Z90A 2 bedroan furnisl"ed ""1.. 5 79.00 per brand new, 2S year g.Jarantee lor enly SPORT VAN rT'IO " ~d Rt. 13. 684-197 1. 2mBBc13 IYOl00cyle Insuranc:e, call UpchurCh SISO, 0111 549·7843 after 5. 18S8A9IJ Insurance 457~131. 276JBA ·\llarlm.'III" Brand new 1974 12x60 2 and J bdrm. Scott 175 Watt RXer standard 15 walt mbl . hOmeS, anchOI"ed. pool. balh 1/ 2, Yamahil 100:(, best Offer, call attet" 5, RXer . I yr. Old. 549-1082. 156BA no pel!;, avail. S49-833J 549·7548, ask to- DAfy. 190IA95 ~79'l ' now.

Accv1rcn 'Na10'!. 170 wilh ~e . s.t9· '70 ~NTE CAR LO Kawasaki' SOO trlple, ...ery fast .n:I 4587 altef' 5. 1814A91 reliable, S450 er offer, SJ6·1274. 2 bedroan II" . StudenT rurned. no LJ9tII 00100 . ~r a. A,r. lBS4A91 hassles, call aflet" 5:30. s.t9·1188. 10Vl0'l'lef' Q.QOJ m lln ('VI lie area duplex, extra nice and I ..... C Water- and frash in:: .. -marl". 'c~~ 457·2141 A Ql"e.il place 10 I,,/~ l7efer-.. no pets, carpel .. .. mites to WI LSON HA LL campus, CIPS gas. 687·1698.1841Bc91 1971 FolINf\. 12x60 2 be

~ 20. Daily Egyptill'1 . February ~. '974 _A_c_ti_o_"__ C_ ,_IB_SS-...:.....i_f_ie_/_d_s __W_ ./ _o.IU]

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Studen1 papers. thesis, books typed. For rent. 10xS0 trJr .• 2 bdrm .. furn .. h i ~t 'J)cllity. guaranteed r'() eners. ex . ancl.. wr. and tr free. 190 mo .. We've got plus xerox anet printing servIce. Sof9-4219. 18698c9'3 AuthOt" 's Office. neXT door To Plaza ' Gril\. S.~$J I. BE27JO MlbIe heme Cl2x50), 2 bedrocwn. clean. available now, ~ .c57-8J7B. TVJ)Ing . thesis, term papers, IBM 18J08cll , • M or F rmml fer 2 txirm. hSe.. share Seiec1ric. call after I p.m .. 457·5766. with 2 otl't!i"s, s.so ITICI'lth, s.i9-89c8. 164AE 1a.8F91 ~;:· I .f~~~OW~os~~~~ Florida·sp..-ing trf!lalk . S49.{)829, all i fmle. rrrmte. for s prirg qtr. 10 located 3 m i. east of ('dale behin::l trcY'lSPCII"tal iCl'1 and • lOdging . BEllI I Share 'apt .. ~ . near campus and your number." Egos VW. SIJO per month. Sre9-66U. ~==9~ rcxm ms qtr _. SA9-&f91 . ,1618_ . ... Printing : . theses, dissertat ions, resU'nes, bV fINs. Stcnemark. at Typing and Rep-oductiCl'1 Services. 11 Roonvnale fer 1005 2 bed. Irl.. SooIO , 1WO BEDROOM yrs. exp., spiral Ot' hard bindi~ , typewriter rentals. theSis "laSter) ~~~~ ~~ : 108 E. CoI~s8;r~i NOBI LE HOMES avail. kl type CI'I yQUl"setf, ph. s..9-3S.50. Furnished, $90 per month BE2712 PeoPe who feet LPSeI and anxious speaking befort.! gt"Q.411S to rece i ~ free Call ROYAL RENTALS Start )'OUr skin care trogram t0d3y. experimental treaTment, contact Scot1 457-4422 Have a trained beavty consultant in­ Bentscn Psy. Dept., SJ6.2lO1.11S9FOJ troduce yCkJ to Mary Kay Cosmetics with a complimentary facia\. Call 1 penat or

One female roommate tor spring Female typist wanted. salar.)' ~jable , ' call Ben after 8:JO p.m .• Pleasant Hill Pres<:hoo( offering can· =~~~~:~~s.t~ . ~~ Nul. ttw"u Tlu"s.• ph. S49~74 . 191.tC93 e day care service is rON taking ; icaticns fer ctlilcren ages 2 to 5, Female roommate spring ~ter . I ~7 · 2918 . 189SE9A Bartendel""s<&ay and nigt1!, no ex­ ea Garden Parks, call 549·1513. 1559F perience req.rired. apply in pet'"SCJn al V"", Ray' s Tavern i n Anna , wages discussed c11 lime of appl ication. I~ OST TI-.H'"5day ar Fr;$y. S p.m . . 12 a.m .• ask far ~ 1871C90 BICYCLES'! . ' -Parts- Girls hi{tl sc:t1ooI ring. red slone. ~f you can't stand- -Se . rnilials J5. yr. 69. reward, SA9-6n1. constant pr'l!ssure, . 176);;03 loads of responsibility, a WI~ Ladies Si lver watctl in or near hectic aJmosphere and OVERHAUL Nati0"\31 FCXJd5 . reward. call S49{KIQJ. putting up with otlft!r SPECIALS 187«;9'3 peoples mistakes. So. III. Bicycle Co. ' Male IriSh SeIfer', r'() coU¥s, 1" 2 yrs. 106 N. Illinois ~U~ return. reward, .457-«139. -then this job isn't 549-7123 . The number you'll wa nt for you . . Female Siberian Husky, gray·White ./ ~'!'..;: ~d .~~ . ~~~ :~7G~ \ Three secretaries in the Profeui0"\31 piano tuning and repai r. Lost , black Ithr' billfold. need I 0 .• last 6 months haven't call S49·2752. 1601E reward, 0111 J im Steed, .s7·2177 to call to place a been able to handle it, 185(X;91 Film deveiQ:)ing. coler and black and Can YOU? . 'AotIite, also QlStan black and White Black fm. labrador reTriever in Requirements: printing, Neunlist·Nicolaides Sh.dio, vicinity ~ South Wall and So. Hills. MJrdale Shopping Center. I64JE has col lar and rabies 1ag. Recentl., ACT on file 5P1ved, reward. 451·2010. 21SOBG9'3 Afternoon wOrk block Exp. painter and car~ter . free est .. call after 6 p.m .. s..9-4655. 164.SE l.05f. black 51d rust 00behnIn malce in the vidnify of PIea:5arrt VaHey Rd. Passport. 1.0., applicatiCl'1 (res...,rne ) DAll Y II YPTIAIf I f you can handle this in Dec., reward offered. no ~flons photographs , one day service, asked. call 4!i1·7527. 1917G93 advertising secretary's Nelnlist· Nicolaides Studio, Mu-dale job come see me. Shoppirg Center, ph. ~ · S715 . 1646E l.05f. J mo. old kitten, mUtiCDIored, RQOfont;l Siamg - carpeoler ~~ ~1~; ' ~792V;, I~t JOHN CURTNER WOr1I _ Paneling 1918G9S ~ltng 5. A,,. ( 0"(1 ,110"'"9 ADVERTISING MGR. Electrocal Wl rmo 5. Palf'llll'llg Sr1dl.. 81001. &. COncretr Won ClAIIII/I~ DAI L Y EGYPTIAN F ree ~Iimale - FIf'I"'lClng AvaIl ~~9-t 713 o & R Home Improvements TNAT IfI Girls whO WCIUkt like to volunteer to wc::rt fer WtOB Rad io in public relatkm. and re::::ord invemory 'tJIo'Crl. . ~~~ i ~ r~r~; i a l: le:= t 0111 MiC1\ael Jaye at SJ6..2'161.l892C91 ~ week Old t:uPPY near U·Park. call rates. Sot9-6931. 8·5. 1 nOE Dan .453·5786. 1899H91 For fast professicnal service 0"1 your­ stereo. 8 trk. and aassette eq.Ji~l , Fc:a,n:j : ""'e come about 7 mtrrttrs W..-ted : Oepenc:iabIe pef"SCrI fOt' l;ght call JcI"n Fr~ , Frieses Ster'eo Ser· I"ousekeeping ..c babysiHing . must ~Mh:t~~II~n~oIlar . ~ I~ d'tllclren. hoL.rs to be arranged. ~~r.~. Vas Friends~ must haW! own trans .. 457..a509 after 5. 119'X91 [t:~TEKt\l~~ Il~T 1 TV-Radio-Stereo & TapelPlaver Service Jamie-<) the CiOrNl"l. Magicia-l. call AlJ1l-tORlZEO SERVICE STATlON fO" 451·1991 any occasiCl'1. 1765103 PANASONIC-SANYO & FI5l-fER AJlfNkn A.l 1 ~s Pyr.-nid E~cna 5erviat R.R. No 7 &423 H EY. FOXY! I''l ml N . d~ l rY'IO"INewEr.RcI GOT A FEW [ SilK". Ot'fIlKt:O J

=~~=at~~~' "P.m. 1&66£09

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Tetevisi~ fer ,...t. E · Z Rental (;en. ~ , 9SO W. Main. call 451 ... 127. V ...."" FEB. '4th

_ ...... ijJ. .£x1 .• 7--._. .' ..-- _ .-)'-..... S4f.ml.l6I5E / ,Friday, ·Saturday Acti¥it-ies ECKANKAR Friday So. DI . Film Society : · ., Juliet of Starting Your Own Business. 9 a.m ...Student Center Inllroom....A . The Path of, Total Aw"areness .. ~ ... 'Recreation and Intramurals: ~!:S~~i~~t ~~D~e~o~~I~~~ ~ Transfer Guest .Day : Meeting ~.. Pulliam gym , weight room, ae- G . TeSti Cal da G I Registration. 9 a .m . to 3 p.m., pre.sents , tivity room 4-11 p.m.; Pool 8 p.m. ~3~atioo~~ye~pn!'~nt T~~:.a8 Student Ceuter .\uditorium. to mJd.njgbt ; Women's Gym 7 to 10 a .m . to' S p.m., Morris Library Black History Week : 1 :30 to 3:30 p.rn : - Ubrary Auditoriwu. -, p.m., Student Center RiverRooms ~ A DAY WITH ECK. Lost anything? Check the Lost and Air Force Officer's Qualification and Black· Fire Dancers and two Lectures. . music. . . . books. _ . poetrY'" (. Found! Student In- (AFOQT): 8 a .m ., Dept of Cent~r Te~ t 1974 formation Desk.. . . . Aerospace Studies. 807 S. ~~:~~:I.~akes~u(J~~te to ~:n~:;' February 2. otisia InterventIon Center: I No . Universil~ Ballrooms-C and D. . pr~le~ is-too small; operates Southern Players: " Mrs Well That SGAC· Children's Film: · .;Ki1I. ~ i day Inn Afternoon $2.50 ECKANKAR • ~Y 8 p.m. to 2 a.m., 457 -~ . Ends WeB" , 8 p.m .• University napped' ''. "2 p .m .• Student Center E. Main ' Evening S2:SO P.O. Box S32S Iraman Student Assoc: Meetmg. 6 Theater Communications BaJlroom D .. free. • .' "\ All Day ss.oo to 11 'p .m., · Student Activities Building.' . Basketball: SIU vs Illioois State. Carbaldale ~ Las Vegas NV 89102 Room·A. . !IIi!chell Gallery: Exhibit of wo.-k 7:30 p.rn .. Sill Arena. dlildren ~ free IV~: Meeting, 7 to 9 p.m .• Student by fiTst and second year graduate SGAC Film: "Malting It", 8 and 10 . Activities ~s C & J? stdenls. open reception:" to 9 p.m ., Student Center Auditorium. Gr~ul~~~:",cilStu~::;:mg ' ~e:i'!'~ w~~e;,~o~:s~ib~l1~ SIU vs SW S!. Sponsored by the Souther"n Illinois sa~ng Society Mississi.ppi Room. Baptist. 7 p.m .. Women's Gym. Black Htstory We.ek ~. 1 p.m., WRA: 2"to 3 p . ~. swim team ; 3 to 6 Student Center A~tonum . p.m. gymQastics team ; 4 to 5:30 Women's Gymnast;lcs : 7:30 p.m., p.rn : varsity basketbaU. . sru ·vs Grand V1«:W. StU ~rena . EAZ-N Coffee house, free en- $CAC Flim: W.C. Fields Festival, 8 tertainment,9 p.m. to I a.m., Joh)l ~ ·p.m., Student Center Ballroom D. Salanik, guitar, and Paul Kelly, • story teUert from 10:30-11 :30 p.m., Sem i IIflr 1I1111f'rI Wesley Gommunity House, 8t6,S. Anyone inlerested in bflng • full· Illinois across from McDonald s. time attendant fer a handicapped Students fer Jesus: Meeting, 7:30 ·student shOuld attend .. trainee -.... ~a-::oo . Shl.dent Christian Faun- . seminar al lI-::I) a.m. Salurday in M.O.V.E .• Daeee;...··OuUaws .. 8 to 12 Home Ec, room 118. Beginning fall semester. ap­ R:.m ., Student Center Roman Room . / proximately 400 ne.. · ~ndicapped students will be coming to· SIU , and 101)'0( these students will be needing ~~~te~o~~ii;~t;:!~ i~:~~m!;~~~ call 457·8796 or 457·7501: full-tIme- attendants. Philosophy Club : 7 to to - 1lMi Specialized Student Services M~ln& , will.be hiring attendants for the full F~~~·s~~~oT:unic:~~0~~u3~~~ .. 2-semester yeat . .and normal in­ Stuqent-Cfiftstian Foundation. ,- comes range yearly f{Om $1.200 (0 ParaChute Club: film·"Masfers of meeting ..... iIl explain the Sky" and \ 'Is it a ~port'~" . 7 to .$1~~rJay·s 10 p.m .. Morris Auditorium . the duties involved in being a full" Departmental Semtnar. Chemistry. time attendant. and Hiram Zayas. Associate Dean'fOm Roady and !:\ ,,,u.. ".·"pl.· rl U1I1.. 11i.1I 1I 0 h,><.I)' r,· ad ~

... 112. -tloily ~, FeIJn.y I, 187• . Cindermen in Kansa s m eet . .,. " "By John Morrissey not even going to SC,O re if he doesn't freshmen who ha\'egone under 1:55 : - Daily Egyptian Sports Writer ~a;r~ _ ~ni~aB~~~~~tnC?.. ~ ' Pat Cook. Leo Trzesnisk and Bob Koenigstein. The SIU track'team-departs from Kansas long jumpers who offeted lhe champions hip Circuit thiS him tough competition last ..... eek. Another Nebraskan. Dan Speck. t weekendwilha stopofC m La\lrorence. ~ of~. OalUlY ,Sea)' . ca~e nn i~ h ed second last week in the 100 Kan. The Salukis square of( (here In WIth ~ IIlch of ~~ng OlympIC with a 2:12A effort. SIU's AI a triangurct r with Kansas and _ champl~ Randy ,WIII!a:ms of USC, Stancza.k has already ~~ 2: 12.1 th(s . Nebraska. two learns that figured with a 25-foot 4:mch J,ump- ~e season, but didn't make the trip to heavily in la st wetk's U.S. Track other . Theo Hamilton. ued BroWn 5 the USTFF meet. Cjlfl McPherson and F ield Federation ( U5TFF ) best jump at 24'7 but fmished cI SIU done 2:13 :4. , ~ p ionships . .. behind hin:' because Brow n's ~ ~ ~: 's going to · be a \'ery tough second-bes4. Jump was betle!" . The undefeated Salu~ mile rt.t3Y meet ," Coach Lew Hartzog said. . team of Terry Erickson._ Eddie s urveying l.he probable event Mike Monroe has gone under 31 S.unon, Wayne Carmody and Brown J ""1Tlatch ups in Saturday '$ contes.t . seconds in botli of his 300 ra ces . t~u s will be challenged mainly by railing " Kansas is loa ded in the field fa r , but has met top competition on the inside curve of the Allen events." !"ast week's meet res ults both times and fini shed in rUMer-up Fieldhouse track. Hartzog said it is show they aren ' t ~oing badly in spots. Saturday he gets another shot im possible to lean into turns at high sprints, either. And Nebras ka is at Mark Lutz in the 300 and in the 60. s peeds, a nd relay times are ex­ expected _to contribute tough Lutz ran 30.3 and put 8 half second pected to reflect the obstacle. competition in the middle distances. between him and the rest of the 300 • The host Jayhawks have three fi eld in t he USTFF meet. Monroe " If we could run a mite relay of jumpers who ha ve "'C leared seven finished fourth in 30.9. feet. Two of them Big Eight Champ Both Kansas and Nebraska placed ~;: :~~'~!7~~ t ~~~~~~~3~idi~ Barry Schur and Randy Smith are learns in the VSTFF two-mile relay. its t ..... ooutings so far and averaged a four-poinl margin of ,'ictory. . ~~r~~~I:i~~ rnu~~U~~f ~~~~k~;~ sn~~ornd ;~4~ ~ ;~ · 6 ~~~ meet' by a freshman teammate . . UST FF results point to fast races In the Opell 4010. Ha rtzog has en­ Keith Guinn, who " '00 the high jump SaturdaY·'·'n the 880· and lOoo-ya rd tered M.onr oe. Ge rald Smith and Roger Chadwick Kansan Tom Sca\'uzzo should be a yet this year. Hartz.og said Hancock first in the USTFF open 880 at 1:52 .0. to ugh chall enge. a nd added Lu tz will ha\'c to be in top form . " He's' ~ SIU will counter-Saturday with three may also run the 440 . I/;g" Iwni t" 0111'(11/ Big 10 proliucps 36 ,NFL liraj" picks '3 ill Hancock, shown ·here runn ing the 120 yard high hurdles during last year's outdoor tracis.-season, is Stu 's only hopeful . • By The Associa&ed Press . _ Ohio Slate's three first round first ·round choices among the eight for a place in the high jump at the indoor triangular mee! at Buckeyes tapped by the pros . selections were offensive tackle Led by' Cochad.pions Michigan Michigan's looe first-round choice John Hicks No. 3 bv New York's Lawrence Kan. Saturday . (Staff photo by Denrii~ Makes.) and Ohio State , the Big Ten Giants ; linebacker Rick Middleton produced 36 selections·17 within the ~:I~ag~;~e~: b~a~!e ~~;~ No. 8 by New Orleans, a nd rlfSt five rounds -i n the National Bears_as the Dh first·round draftee Linebacker No. "9 Football League drart which con· ' TIME ~ SPECIAL after the Bears claimed linef)ackec.r by Derwl'<. V ALUE I duded W.ednesday. Waymond Bryant or Tenn ess~ Othet high oonrerence picks were I , Michigan had the most picked State as the fou nh choice. Cour in the second round ­ ,I OYer the 17 rounds, nine.. but Rose Third-place Minnesota and Pur­ Michigan's.eaul Seals New Orleans Bowl champion Ohio State fla d three due ~ had four players p i c.k~ : ~ Ed Shuttleswortb Baltimore ; Northwestern and MichJgan Stale Minnesota's Keilh Fahnhors{ San M i ~ II ~S() l a p layer three ap i~; Wisconsin and lIIinois Francisco and Michigan State's Bill two each a~ndiana one, defensive Si mpson. _ tackle Carl Barzilauskas. who was Los Angeles-and tbird-roWld pick Insta · Mat lc COlor la uds WI<·,t the Big Ten's only other first-round Steve Craig DC "Northwestern Min · J'unlng. Plug-In Cir­ selection. nesota. CU it Modules. solid N,.EW. YORK ,l AP I - Ask Min, stafe chaSSIS (except nes8ta cornerback Bobby Bryant 4 lubes) Walnut gram about the possible development oC pont cabinet the new World Football League arid W l'e~ l e l' ssee k im provem e nt he positively glows. Does he like the ide3 of some SIU's wrestlers will try to im­ A • match to walch Friday night prove ~ their 3-7-1 recgrd when will be at m pounds. when Saluki . F~C:Ut:~gu!~r NO~~ H ~~~:;~ ~ they take on the Iowa State Mark Wei sen ( U · 6· 1), m eet s' " Sure J do." said Bryant. " Right Cyclones. Friday night. rollowed by Cyclone Rich Binick (9-H) ). " Mark oow, it looks like they 're Cor real and a meet with Nebraska Saturday. has indicated what his ability can Model WPSO04K } il they are, salaries will be higher in ·'Cood.itiming wiU be ooe of the be. he really puts things together. J19 both 'leagues." del..e rmining factors in this the way he war-ks en his feet." Long Bryant. in town to accept th e Ufe wee!tend's competition." Coach Jim said. ' Saver of the Month Award for his Long said. referring to the rad that Iowa State has a 6--4 dual reoord hlo'o interceptions in Minnesota's 27· minor injuries plagued the SaJukis this season and last year the Bob Doerr TV and Appliance 10 National Football ConCerence Saturday in their 18·14 loss to In· Cyclones trounced the Salukis 4H). V\c'tory over Dallas. said most oflhe diana State. Nebraska is 3--2 on the season. Last Murdale Shopping Center players he's tal.ked to hope the new "One thipg I like is in a couple of season SIU decisioned Nebraska 21). league gets cIr the ground. weeks we'll go down to about one Sky diving movies shown meet a' week and that will give us \ time to mndition and train more," The SIU Parachute Club is spon­ l...oog said. " It will also ~ive u... a soring t\i'O movi ~ at 7 p.m. Friday dlance to work on our execution and in Morris Auditorium. really.knock out some or those little The movies will deal with sky ihJngs that we have performed diving and admission is free. • poorl y. " BURIER BOY 908 w. Main 8ig 80!} 8,,'g.,

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By Mark Tupper ,,;thout the ban off;n.;.,ely." Lambert five in the overtime session to win the Daily E~tilUl Sports Writer said the Salukis were not aggressive game. enough on the boards, allowing Evan· Since that game, Illinois State has Wednesday's 77-63 -beating at Evan· sville to grab too many rebounds. recovered to win regularly and improve sville coupled with the 67-'64 loss at " I guarantee we' ll be a more theic. record to a Current 1()'7 mark. Creighton, Saturday, has established aggressive team this weekend." Lam· Saturday night they whipped ""arshall, the Salukis first losing streak of the bert said of the contests with Illinois. 103.j(O. It was Marshall 's second loss in seasoo. Tb o: t wo·game slip has dropped State ana Centenary. 15 games. SIU 's record to 114, and that record The meeting with Willois State will be Going into Saturday's game with the will be seriously tested when the the second ambert did a good job," Lambert said . " But players gOl into the scoring column. State and SIU over an eight-day period. we..... did not l!OlI good job of moving SIU out-scored illinoiS State seven to Tipoff for both games is 7:35 p.m. • WOtlWtI ('og('r,~ plOI/. , S I .1' d "m>(> If ' (>('~' (>"d gOIl/I' .~ a e OJ . Pa res to McDonallJ 's The SIU women cagers take to the court here Friday for games with South· b ' k · d I NL wes~Baptist College before traveling to Terre Haute for aames against Indiana urge r . It.. ng appro t"e Jy State. Friday's games are scheduled for 5 SCOTTSDALE 1\riz. tAP I - National The action ended on · a~ain . off-again million figure. but Kroc hlid said earlier p.m . w,th the B team seemg acllon and League club ~' ner s approved attempts to _move the money· losing U,at it was "in the ballpark." . the A team baWlOg at 7 p.m . ' Both unanimously Th~da y the sale of the Padres to Washington. Smith agreed last Ma y to sell the games w,lI be played 10 the Women s San Diego Padres to /!:Imburget' ~ycO(ln Feeney said the league ftiIn,. ""*"-y 1. 197.