Eastern Illinois University The Keep

January 1986

1-23-1986 Daily Eastern News: January 23, 1986 Eastern Illinois University

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. .. will be mostly sunny, high in the The Daily . upper 30s or lower 40s, light southeast winds. Thursday night, fair and cold, low in the middle 20s. astern News �Y, increasing cloudiness, high in the middle 40s. stem Illinois Universi I Charleston Ill. 61920 I Vol. 71 N

Senators talk· with mayor on raid, tax plans Choate not seekin·g barage hike-Akins

StaffBy LARRY writer SMITH After meeting with Charleston Mayor Murray Choate for more than an hour Wednesday, three student senate representatives said they think the mayor is not looking to hike the legal age for entering the bars. The meeting was called after 18 Charleston police officers swept through ten bars popular with Eastern students last Thursday night in a raid resulting in the arrests of 39 persons for underaged drinking and entering licensed establishments as minors. After meeting with the· mayor, Student Body President Floyd Akins said the lesson to be learned .from the raids was: "Don't be stupid and get caught drinking-the mayor does not want to raise the age LARRY f>ETERSON Staff Photographer I of entry into the bars to 21.'' t- astrologer Marcella Ruble entertains night outside the Union Bookstore. Akins added that he w�s told police arrested 19 at the Union Happy Hour Wednesday and 20-year-olds only because the police saw the minors with drinks in their hands upon entering the bars. ame hurts Happy Hour's draw Choate would not comment late Wednesday on his plans for the bar entry age, but said the meeting went attributed the lag to the ball game. well and offered the student representatives a "nev. "Usually we're pretty filled up when we have perspective.'' tat the Union Happy Hour Wednesday Happy Hour. Maybe after the basketball game Earlier Choate had said raising the bar entry age tc hindered by tht:" Panther basketball gets out we'll fill up," Taflinger said. 21 was a possibility in light of the raids. was schedt1ledfor the same night. On the other hand, Dorothy Honeycutt of But, Board of Governors Representative Mike �nnouncer Matt Piescinski said the Mattoon, who along with her husband, Jack, Ashack said the mayor told the delegation if there are s crowc;f at the game was the biggest since offered computer pictures. just laughed and 19 and 20-year-olds in the bars, they have nothing to pointed at the long line when asked how business worry about if they are not holding drinks. pile the low Happy Hour attendance, was. · Ashack said he was told the police only arrested 18 dents said they enjoyed themselves. The Sugar Shack's business was "outrageous," year-olds along with those 19 and 20 who police saw k it was really nice. I had a great time," said senior Danine Polizzy, a cashier, who said: ''flagrantly'' drinking. da Tolbert, a freshman. "As soon as you say 'free food' people go crazy." Ashack cautioned, "if you're not 21, put down great, but there was a really bad The Sugar Shack gave more than 460 free your drink when the police come in." g conflict," said junior Jackie Thomas, Twinkies by 8 p.m., Polizzy said, adding that the Senate Speaker Joe O'Mera said Choate told him to the baketball game. Sugar Shack also ran specials on several items. the raids took;.place because of two groups-to keep homas said Happy Hour "was the best A crowd was gathered around palmist and underaged out-of-towners and to keep area high had on campus this year." astrologist Marcella Ruble, who gave free. palm schoolers out of Charleston bars. flinger, manager of the Union bowling readings. Akins said Choate had received phone calls from · Sophomore Kathy Bly, who had her palm read, despite the half-price bowling and parents in other towns and Students Against Drunk special, business was slow. Taflinger also (See GAME, page 12A) Driving, both reporting that underaged persons drive to Charleston to get in the bars. "The city isn't liable, but it reflects badly upon the sig hts on city," Akins said. "This is the same for parties-if an resets Nicaragua police catch unperage drinkers at parties the person TON (AP)-Presi- a package, and that's the extent of but has approved the main who is throwing the party will be liable as well." has "approved in it." outlines of the aid proposal. Akins added, though) "the mayor didn't say a plan 'to resume Reagan recently has stepped up The Central Intelligence Agency (police) were going to raid parties now." to rebels fighting the hi& campaign for public support gave the rebels undercover Police have added a computerized system to their Sandinista govern­ for efforts to cut off trade with military aid and advice during party enforcement, though. The system keeps �rack icaragua, a · White Nicaragua and to isolate the Reagan's first term. But Congress of offenses by address with lists of names and prior said Wednesday. Managua regime. The president last year turned down the problems at the address. , revealing the accuses Nicaragua of fomenting president's request for continued Two sergeants recently interviewed both said there ffensive on condition terrorism- and revolution in clandestine assistance. It approved was no formal crackdown on parties and insisted tified, said the plan Central America. instead a compromise program to they only responded to caJls on noise. million to $100 The president met Wednesday give the rebels $27 million in non­ Sgt. Ken Ramsey said, ,"Nothing would please me ould do away with a with 47 of the 53 Republicans who lethal assistance, such as clothing, more if we could go through a weekend without ban on paying for control the Senate, but Speakes medical supplies and food. busting a party-we arei instantly identified as the or weapons. said he did not detail his program The senior official said the plan most unpopular person at the party. se spokesman Larry of aid to the rebels. approved in • principle by the "So many people get excited when a cop's only, "The president The senior official who spoke president calls for about two­ around," Ramsey said. ; "But sometimes if they'd ays to support the anonymously Wednesday said the thirds of the total aid package to just listen to what's going on and to what they're movement there. president has not officially en­ be spent for weapons, am­ saying and to what we're saying," problems would with Congress for dorsed the specific,dollar amount, munition and ;other military aid. (See SENATd,RS,page 12A)

' .. veland State pounds EasSeet sports,er pagen 18 A; Thursday, January 23, 1986

J\ssoclatedPress Delegation concludes M�A hunt, State/Nadon/World warns against 'any false hopes' U.S., Japanese end flight talks WASHINGTON (AP)-Members of Congress member of the delegation that returned CHICAGO-Senators Paul Simon and Alan Dixon of who visited Vietnam and Laos "did not receive from the nine-day overseas tour, said Illinois urged the Reagan administration Wednesday to bar anything" to encourage the belief that American nesday: "It is my belief that it is very, ve Japanese air carriers from landing in the United States until servicemen are still being held prisoner there, the that there are some Americans there." Japan approves landing rights forUnited Airlines. · head of the delegation said Wednesday. But DeConcini refused to say whe "I don't want to raise any false hopes," Sen. believes these Americ�s actually are · U.S. and Japane8e negotiators broke off two days of talks p Tuesday without reaching agreement on whether Japan Frank Murkowski, R-Alaska, told a new con­ raising the possibility they may be def should receive new advantages for its own carriers in return ference called to report on the delegation's spectre the Pentagon long has acknowled for granting landing authority to United. recently concluded Southeast Asian tour. Murkowski said the delegation had Murkowski, chairman of the Senate Veterans reports that some Vietnamese were Chicago-based United, which arranged last April to ap purchase Pan American World Airway's Pacific division, Affairs Committee, said the panel will hold selling or bartering bones believed to be hearings next week on the possibility of American servicemen, but said he had been scheduled to begin flights on those routes Jan. 28. h Those plans have been postponed indefinitely. American prisoners remaining in captivity in details. Southeast Asia more than a decade after the end In some instances, Murkowski said, Gandhi trial ends, killers to die of the war. namese government wanting to get out A top Pentagon official had said last week that country ha� offered to produce bones NEW DELHI, India-A judge seated behind bulletproof the Vietnamese government has pledged to join government would permit them to leave. glass convicted three Sikhs on Wednesday and sentenced U.S. authorities in investigating nearly a hundred He noted that in recent months, the them to death for the murder of Prime Minister Indira "live-sighting reports" of Americans missing in namese government had asked the pop Gandhi in 1984. . Indochina. look hard for the remains of soldiers fr prevent a More than 200 ris.>t police guarded the jail to Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., another war. possible attack by Sikh militants and to enforce a 48-hour ban on public assembly that authorities imposed Tuesday in surrounding neighborhoods. tiostage.families gather in One of those convicted, a member of Mrs. Gandhi's · D.C. (AP)-Sen. Paul Simon, D­ personal guard was accused of firing shots in the garden of WASHINGTON "There are no dramatic answers," Simo Iil., told relativ s of the American hostages in the prime minister's residential compound. e but he raised the possibility of "some k" Lebanon Wednesday that lawmakers might hold informal, ad hoc hearings." informal hearings on the captives' situation. Family members said they were happy · Eleven guilty in Medicaid scam Sen. Alan Dixon, D-Ill., Rep. Norman outcome of their trip. "We are not giv' CHICAGO-Two pharmacists were convicted Wed­ Mineta, D-Calif., and the family members hope," said Sue Franceshini of Joliet, Ill., nesday along with nine other people,. including five discussed the possibility of hearings to "maintain of the Rev. Lawrence Martin Jenco. · physicians, of participating in a Medicaid scheme that the visibility of this thing," Simon said. She said the relatives' now-frequent v bilked the state out of almost $20 million. The relatives spent most of their day-the Washington-she has been 19 times si Pharmacists Morton Goldsmith of Skokie and Vito final one of a three-day visity-on Capitol Hill. March-are designed to keep the hostages' Sblendorio, formerly of Elmhurst, were found guilty of Earlier in their trip, they talked with John in the spotlight. operating a fraud that prosecutors said involved 22 clinic­ Poindexter, President Reagan's national security "All we know is it (visiting Washing! pharmacies selling sedatives and codeine-containing cough adviser and representatives of the Syrian and not harmed the hostages... bringing it syrup to drug addicts in poor Chicago neighborhoods. Algerian embassies. attention of the elected officials,'' she sai

Phi Gamma Nu Rush r�c�;;Ann CaspermeyerMatio� � 2· � Formal 5:30 Phipps 3 Karen Harper l TODAY Informal 9:00 Ikes Susan Rankins -TONITE JAN 29 Formal 5:30 Phipps � on Pledging · � � · Alpha Sigma Alpha Come Check Out S Love your, � the #l Business · · Sisters Fraternity �������·· L The Daily J

TheEastern Daily !;!'astern News is published daily, MondayNews through Friday, in Charleston, Illinois during the fall and spring semester and twice weekly during the summer term, except during school vacations or examinations, by the students of Eastern Illinois University. Subscription price: $15 per semester, $5 for summer only, $28 for all year. The Daily Eastern News is a member of the Associated Press, which is entitled to exclusive use of all articles appearing in this paper. The editorials on Page 4 represent the majority view of the editorial board; all other opinion pieces are signed. Phone (217) 581·2812. The Daily Eastern News editorial and business offices are located in the North Gym of the Buzzard Building, Eastern Illinois University. Second class postage paid at Charleston, IL 61920. USPS002250. Printed by Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, IL 61920.

NEWS STAFF

Editor in chief ...... Dave McKinney Assistant Sports editor ...... Dan Verdun Managing editor ...... Kevin McDermott Verge editor...... Lisa Albarran News editor...... Lori Edwards Art director ...... Becky Michael � Associate news editor ...... Lisa Green Advertising manager ...... Tracy Poland Editorial page editor .....· •...Amy Zurawski Asst.advertising manager...... Kathy Keyth Activities editor ...... Michelle Mueller Sales manager ...... Cherie Suessen Administration ed .... Julie Cambria-Brechbill Promotions manager ...... Kelly Griffin Campus editor ...... Jean Wright Marketing manager ...... Jeanne Gurtowski City editor ...... , ...... Jim Allen Student businessmanager . Wendy Crickman Government editor...... Pamela Lill Editorial adviser ...... Mike Cordts Photo editor ...... Michael Sitarz Publications adviser ...... David Reed Sports editor ...... Jeff Long

NIGHT STAFF

Night editor ...... -. .. Jim Allen Sportseditor ...... Dobie Holland Assistant ...... Larry Smith Copy desk ...... Merryl Sinn Wire editor ...... Chrystal Philpott Jeannie Barbour, Kirsten Mangen, Debbie Photo editor...... Larry Peterson Pippit, Rick Lansing Thursda 23,1986 3A Pro-life demonstrators prot�st

ortion anniversary: on stairways of Supreme Court INGTON (AP)-Cheered on the building and knelt to pray and to began a long procession up Penn­ "Stop Terrorism in the Womb" and � · chant "Stop The Killing" and other sylvania A venue to the Capitol and the ent Reagan, thousands of "Pro-Choice Means No Choice for the ion demonstrators marched slogans. Supreme Court. Baby." Supreme Court Wednesday to They were warned they would be Already at the high court were 10 Many called for adoption' as an 13th anniversary of a land­ arrested if they remained, and after members of the National Organization alternative to abortion. ' sion they and the president several minutes police began taking for Women, silently holding aloft a And one woman held a placard with people into custody. banner reading, "Thank You Justice urned. a personal plea: "Give Your 'Un­ proud to stand with you in the Reagan praised the marchers and Blackmun for Keeping Abortion Safe wanted' Baby to Me." for the right to life," condemned abortion during a five­ and Legal" -a reference to Harry A. ch At the rally on the Ellipse, the told the crowd via a telephone minute speech interrupted frequently Blackmun, principal author of the s from biggest cheers a ide those for between the White House and by applause and shouts of approval. 1973 decision. Reagan were for Sen. Jesse Helms, ers where the marchers "We'll continue to work together The anti-abortion m:archers, who �-N.C., and for Rep. Mark yards away. with Congress to overturn the tragedy seemed about evenly divided between Siljander , R-Mich., who held his organizer Nellie Gray, crying of Roe vs. Wade," he said, referring to adults and children, were in obvious 8-month-old daug te and h r high how strong we are" to the the 1973 high court decision to allow good spirits, cheered by their own declared, "This is why I'm pro-life." rators, estimated the crowd at abortion. numbers and springlike weather. Helms told the group, "Let mt The president, who apposes abortion In stark contrast to Wednesday's assure you, you are having an impact." ,000. er, District of Columbia and except to save a mother's life, also upbeat mood, though, were the Earlier in the day, police arrested 30 k mate the crowd _voiced his support for a constitutional messages the marchers were arrying. Police esti d c anti-abortion demonstrators at a to-37,OOO �a bit more than amendment outlawing abortion and Near the head of the procession, local abortion clinic and the hospital t year's crowd, which Park said, "Each child who escapes the young people carried 13 white coffins office of a doctor who performs timated at 71,000. tragedy of abortion is an immeasurable symbolizing millions of abortions since abortions. of the protesters left to lobby victory.'' the Supreme Court decision. Police said the clinic was bombed of Congress after completing After listening to more than an hour · And signs raised high carried such about a year ago. mile march to the Supreme of similar remarks from members of words as: "Stop the American The National Organization for building. However, several Congress, the crowd left the parklike Holocaust," "Abortion Kills Babies," Women scheduled events in 97 cities. moved through police lines at Ellipse behind the White House and "No Exceptions, No Compromise," Senate puts fee hike proposals before students By StaffAMY writer CARR Eastern's student senate decided a special election will be held from 7:30 a,m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday in Coleman Hall to determine whether students will support increases in various student fees . Firstly, students will be asked to vote on a 50-cent increase that supports the Student Legal Service, This · service offers full-time Eastern student legal council and advice from a full-time lawyer and several in­ terns. The fee for this service is presently $2. According to the Student Legal Service Board of Directors, this fee has not been increased since the service began six years ago, Students will also be asked to vote on a proposed increase of the Eastern pharmacy fee. ·engineering major Mike Flesner studies Lounge Wednesday afternoon. The proposal asks students if they are opposed to tics in the University Union Bookstore increasing the fee from $2.50 to $3.50. The pharmacy is asking for the increase primarily due to the continued rise in cost of wholesale drugs dying helps grades-Workshop and a projected increase in operating costs. During the past year, the pharmacy filled these distractions. Most can't," Sterling said. prescriptions at a total cost of $60,987. They received In addition, Sterling said it is difficult to turn a total of $60,520 for this period, taking a loss of w his grade in bright red ink-'F.' Although down friends who want to go to the movies or out for $467. two hours studying for the exam the night a beer when an assignment is due, but "sometimes In other business brought before the student senate couldn't understand why he failed. you just have to say no." Wednesday, was a proposal to increase intramural 1ctitious situation rriay sound familiar to Although some students do not like a radio playing funds in order to fund improvements in the Lantz dents. But if Joe had pfanned a daily study while studying, Sanders said it is not a bad idea to Gym weight rootn. have soft wordless music playing. a few weeks before the exam, he wouid have Jeff Varney, Graduate Assistant for the In­ in obtaining a higher grade, two officials "There are two sides of the brain. The right side tramural Department, spoke to the senate about the workshop Tuesday. studies for the test and the left side has nothing to do need for new equipment. ly way to obtain high grades is by proper and gets bored, so it will start to distract the right Presently, most equipment in the weight room is · side,'' he explained. and execution, they said. old and inoperative, Varney said. He added that ling Center Director Bud Sanders and Julie "Soft and gentle music is good to play because it's there is an inadequate amount of dumbells and free from Testing Services, conducted a simple; you can't dance to it and it has no words" to weights. designed to ,help students learn effective sing along to, Sanders said. He said this type of The department would also like to see bikes added techniques. music is "superior to studying in a quiet place. " to the weight room due to the· fact that there is no g before finals is not the time study for Once a student has his environment conducive to equipment promoting aerobic exercise, Varney to earlier in the semester is, Sterling said. studying, he should make sure he is physically fit to added. is the time to improve your abilities," study. A petition regarding improvements has been Being in good shape helps many people to study, d Sanders told the 12 people who attended· drawn up and presented to students throughout the hop. Sterling &aid. "If you stay up all night, you throw past week. Approximately 1,100 signatures have been ics is not unlike footb ll game. The your schedule off. You won't be up physically to obtained so far, Varney said. a a o you concentr te ." This petition will be brought before the Ap­ n t say come to practice when a In addition, Sterling said daily exercise relieves ders said. "They have it down in black portionment Board at the Jan. 30 meeting. tensions and can only work for a student who is when they practice and when they have The improvements will cost approximately $15,000 trying to study. to $20,000, Varney said. This money would not only study times and test dates down in black Some additional points Sterling and Sanders be used for equipment, but to replace the floors in - is first step in obtaining high grades. suggested are: the room well. the as •Have a planned system� Students should decide the e to study, students should make sure Presently, "the wooden floors are warped, and control area distractions like radios, best time to study and stick to it. tend to come off the ground when you walk," he or stereos. •Study with regularity. Sterling stressed that students said. The Intramural Department would like to see have to decide if you can study well with (See STUDYING, page 12A) mats replace these floors, he added. Work necessary to fulfill King's.dream I remembered that dark day-the day Dr. Martin Luther. King Jr. was shot down by an assassin's Opinion bullet. At the time, I was only five years of age. Viewpoint: People ask me how I can remember that far back, but I knew than that this was something that I was never going to forget. I was doing what any other kid my age would be doing that day. I was watching the when I was suddenly frightened by a days when blacks protected themselves Flintstones a news bulletin. I knew that something was .wrong but whites and whites protected themselves a at that time I couldn't understand. blacks. But Dr. King showed us that we are As the years went by, I began to learn more same, that all men are created equal. about this great man hoping that I could live in the Dr. King was a man with a dream-a dr Editorials represent world he dreamed about. The world in which he which black and white men, Jews, Protestan want_ed to see his children judged by the content Catholics will all someday join hands to sing the majority opinion of their character and not by the color of their skin. freedom at last. I believe that this day will of the editorial board But we have a long way to go before we will all be and that men will all realize that we are free from racism and hatred. When I see South children. We have the same feelings, the Africa being torn apar( don't see freedom. When wants and the same I needs. I believe that this The Dally Eastern News I see nations protecting themselves against one will come, for we all have the same will tow another by using nuclear weapons, I don't see live and be free from prejudices of any kind 2 3, 1986 Thursday, January freedom. be able to love one another. As I reflect back on these past few years, I I believe that this day will come, for some realize how more important this past Monday see things as they are and say why. "I d should be to everyone. We can still rem�mber things that never were and say why not.

when there was no such thing as integration. The - d a te ' student body pres· Even distribution Floy Akins is E s rn s

necessary for fair water rate increase

Charleston's water rate hike may be inevitable, but Eastern should not be af­ ected by the increase in greater amounts t than other service users. The city claims Eastern's water rate is 25 percent below the cost of delivering the service, even though the university operates its ·own Ed.ttorlal holding tank and supplies its own water. pressure. Following a special meeting Friday, Charleston's: City Council unanimously placed on file a 50-page bond issue and proposal to increase water rates by 42 percent for private homes and 78 percent King bro·ught without hate for Eastern. . reform The move came after a Chicago-based I lived in a small town called Streamwood until I was firm, Speer Financial Inc., reported that seven years old. We moved out right around the time Eastern was paying only 7 5 percent of we adopted my sister, Kimberly, who is black. Off the record: regular water service costs and recom­ It was during that time that I was first told about mended the university's increase. Martin Luther King Jr. A minor civil rights bill had just been passed, and my father clipped the story out of The rate increase in and of itself is the newspaper and hung it on the refrigerator. justified.. The $4 million the hike will Then he tried to explain to my brothers and me rally on the evening news. That is the kind of generate has been earmarked for the badly what it meant, who King was and the definition of the I'm ashamed to admit, which King tried so needed repairs and updating of word "bigot." Unwisely, he cited our next-door end. Charleston's waste-water treatment plant. neighbors as prime examples of the latter. That is where my fascination with King lies, I wasted no time in finding the kids of the neighbors his greatness is most pronounced. To beli The city needs - the funds to leverage the . and calling them a name I didn't fully understand. The people of all races are equally human is mer other $6 million 'for the project from a Build next thing I remember was their father and my of intelligence. But to pursue that goal without Illinois grant. mother standing on the lawn, loudly using more bitter hatred toward the stubborn resistance · Charleston Mayor Murray Choate said the words I didn't understand. · minds-that is true greatness. city can take no other action to raise the Later, I found that my white friends assumed it was Police dogs unleashed on innocent OK to use the word "nigger"-and the many ad­ drinking fountains designated as "white money needed for the revamping of the jectives that went along with it-in my presence. "colored," a man like George Wallace finding treatment system. But, . the increase's Because my skin was as light as theirs, they support as a presidential candidate-even I approval could play havoc on Eastern's somehow assumed that my mind was as narrow. and too young to remember, find my blood pocketbook leaving the university in a As I grew older, I started to tell my "friends" about when I think about it. - i my sister and confront them with their ignorance. I can only imagine the anger I would feel if i financial crisis. Because the Illinois Board of Higher With the cowardice that always accompanies black in the 1 950s and 60s. I'm afraid I bigotry, they would turn red and babble their ex­ much quicker to embrace the violent Education already approved the FY87 ph1lo cuses. Malcolm X than the peaceful ones of Ki budget without provisions for the rate in­ I saw in their blushing faces an impossible ex­ fronting hatred with more hatred is a very hu crease, Eastern may have to take the pression-the expression a person who knows his and one that most of us-myself include money from reserve funds. hateful way of thinking is completely wrong and is cannot rise above. Choate said there was no way the city ashamed of it, but is powerless to change it. Yet King, with his words of peace in the King, I'm sure, would not have enjoyed watching violence, brought this nation further along could have met the budget deadline that as much as did. He recognized that bigotry is decades than it had gone in the previous because the city did not receive word of the l not just the hatred of one race toward another. years. The momentum he started is still mo state award until until · December when Bigotry breeds hatred on all sides, wherever it even in my lifetime I have seen it transfo Eastern's budget had already been sub­ touches. terracial family from a perceived societal th I've seen that hatred in my father toward our mere curiosity. _ mitted. But last year, there was strong oppo Because the treatment system im­ bigoted Streamwood neighbors. When they moved to California, I remember my dad wryly commenting creating a national holiday in King's honor, apparently are desperately provements that he hoped t_heir house slid into the ocean. made me angry as hell. Those are two in e raise should be approved, but it needed, th And bigotry has breeded hatred in me. The kind of that we still have a long way to go. be evenly distributed among all hatred that makes me forget my aversion to guns and -Kevin McDermott is managing editor should and a e users. wish I had an arsenal every time I see a Ku Klux Klan columnist for The Daily Eastern News. Charleston w t r , Thursday, January 23, 1986

A will hear request, for recital audit credit · their transcripts. "Delete . ·office for specific recital ·Also, the degree program in ·"Phase Out," where students would be placed on the attendance requirements and , Earth Science was given will no longer be enrolled ! in ic Department will transcripts of students who procedures for recording "Phase Out" status, because the program aad funding is a plan to offer audit fail the course. attendance.'' of a departmental realign­ cut. its recital course at Also, music students would In other business, three . ment. Last week, the CAA ap­ s meeting , of the · be required to take the course bachelor of science degrees Eastern reviews its un- ! proved a motion to schedule Academic Affairs for only five semesters. now offered by Eastern may . dergraduate programs each : the vote on the Schick's on · to get students to The proposal states that the be dropped following an . year and recommends to the recommendations for changes are to "bring the expected vote by the CAA on Board of Governors what Thursday's meeting. meets at 2 p.m. in department into compliance the program-status recom­ status each should be given. The CAA, along with the addition Arcola­ with the repertory requirement mendations of Vice President Most programs were given Council on Teacher oom. of the music accrediting for Academic Affairs Edgar one �f two "Status Quo" Education, the <;ouncil on 't is currently of­ association, the National Schick. , ratings, which means no major Graduate Studies and the " Recital 1103," Association of Schools of Bachelor's degree programs changes are expected. Council of Deans, review the music majoi:s . are .Music." in Geography and Physics The program status recommendations so any take each semester. The proposal asks that the Management Option were categories range from "Ex­ modifications can be made o the proposed change, general catalog be changed to given "Phase Out" status in pand," which recognizes bef re they are sent to the who pass the course read: "Students should check Schick's recommendation future enrollment growth and BOG for finalapproval. e "audit" credit on with the music department because of low enrollments. a need for additional funds, to lications board places Tim Lee at Warbler's helm Coles County and East-Central Illinois. be found. The department has received 6 to 8 ap­ The magazine would be printed on some type of plications. Tim Lee was named editor of the 1987 newsprint and would be about 20 pages, Ryan said. The business manager will oversee business a unanimous vote of the Student Advertising for magazine staff positions will begin operations and teach one course a semester, Reed by · ns Board Wednesday. Thursday. said. pointment, which is usually made in The board authorized the magazine to be overseen Dave McKinney, editor-in-chief of The Daily , was made early so work on next year's by Student Pulications. Eastern News, said an open house will be held for could begin, Warbler adviser Mary In addition, the board reviewed a tentative budget Freedom of the Campus Press Week from 2-5 p.m. said. for Fiscal Year '87. The proposed budget would have Friday at the News. arbler operates on a spring distribution expenditures of $390,000, Student Publications The week's purpose is to increase the awareness of with some spring events occurring too late Coordinator David Reed said. the campus· and city that student publications are ster to be included in the book.· The board will vote on a formal proposal of the entitled the same First Amendment rights as new editor being named in January, he can budget before it goes to the Apportionment Board on professional publications. "correct kind of coverage of spring events,'' March 13. Winson reported that the '86 yearbook is "right on said. Reports were made by the business manager and schedule.'' Th b )ff is aiming for a distribution date executive rd's officers interviewed the editor in chief of The Daily EasternNews. Managing in the last week of April, she said. recommended and that Lee be named as editor of The Warbler Diana Winson and Vehicle Fehrmann said 2,000 copies of the Vehicle were editor. The board accepted the recom­ editor John Fehrmann also addressed the board. distributed fall semester. The spring issue is unanimously. n Application deadline for a Student Pubications scheduled to come out the week before finals, he business, journalism instructor John Ryan business manager is Jan. 30, said Reed, who is said .. • oposal for a magazine, which would cover serving as business manager until a replacement can #'II tory Soci�ty, Eastern collec� second project grant education, said she was pleased about wider segment of society become more "The Things of a Child: Toys to the grant. aware of the attitude changes toward Tombstones," will investigate the Coles County Historical "We were very proud_ to receive a childhood and the impact of these material culture of childhood,'' astern's History Department grant last year as well as this year," changes, the proposal said. Holden said. The forum will be April Office of Continuing Holden said. A museum exhibit, a programmed 5, with several speakers making are-ona rampage of sorts. According to Holden, the writing of study guide and two public forums will ' "presentations pertaining to different the last two years, the the grant was a combined effort be offered by the society as a result of aspects of childhood play, and at- Society and the two between herself and history instructor the award. titudes towards death,'' she said. ts at Eastern have received Duane Elbert. The museum exhibit, "A Child's' The second presentation will be ounting to more than Holden attributed the grant award to World, 1820-1 980," will be displayed Sept. 26, and is titled, "Thinking Like \ several things. in Greenwood School Museum, 800 a Child: Kids and History." Holden ore recent grant of the "Duane and I did a good �ob with Hayes Ave., on March 23. The exhibit said this forum will "focus on in­ $7 ,000-was awarded by the the request. They like to see programs will include photographs, documents valving young people in working with umanities Council and will that take in community and the en­ and artifacts associated with the the past. a project titled, "When I vironment. The proposal was also changing role of children in society "Last year's grant was used in ild: Growing up in Illinois, beautifully printed. We pulled in the from 1820-1 980, Holden said. conjunction with Charleston's various attributes that Charleston has According to the proposal, in ad- : sesquicentennial celebration. We will director of the to offer." diti on to the study guide, two public , apply every year for a grant,'' she said. of continuing The program is designed to help a forums will be offered.

1£RBOWL TY NIGHT �n RUSH PARTY 75¢ JOIN the men of Sigma Pi MIXED and RINKS the lovely ladies of Alpha Gamma Delta for a splashing good time.

Today-Thursday · Partywith the 8 p.m. Buzzard Pool�··-� ·�� owling Club \- - � ..r- - n - a d : --___./ -:-----. ·�=-- -=====-­ uper Bowl Party . For_ Rides&· Info. call 345-9523 or 348-8009 g Fri: Naked Ray Gun -·

6A · Thursda The Dall Eastern Board prepar Debate pair ranked in top 1. 0of nation Union's The team of Dan Hintz, senior Victims Out of School." Each budg a AIDS By KIM KLUGA Eastern's Union Board will Staff writer from Oak Park, Wis., and Missy school is able to choose its own Eastern•s Debate Squad is Deem, junior from Parkersburg, and prepare a part of the a unlimited topic and gather resources preparing for competition this W. Va. also had a fine showing to establish a strong debate. Fiscal Year 1987 budget Thurs weekend at the University of defeating teams from Dartmouth Bryant said, "We have the ability Union Board Chairman Bill Louisville, after finishing with College, Sanford University, to qualify both teams and rank in the said the board will meet from 3- in the Scharer Room of the honors last weekend at the Robert D. University of North Carolina and the top 10 for the National Cham­ Uni Tisinger DeQate at· West Georgia University of Kentucky. pionship." He added that the· final bud College. "The is always influenced be presented to Verna Ar team There will be 300teams competing, of Jon-Pierre with intense Eastern's vice president The debate team preparation,'' Bryant and out of the 300, 62 teams will be � Frenza, a senior from Sterling said. The preparation deals with 30- chosen. Bryant said he believes ministration and finance, on Fe . Heights, Mich , and Jim Lucas, a 40 hours a week of research, which is Eastern has a positive attitude that senior from Tulsa, Okla., finished in completed in the library. When the they will qualify for a high ranking. ninth place in the Tisinger tour­ team returns from its tournament, Bryant said the debate team has a CHICAGO (AP)-Like Coca nament which was Jan. each individual is responsible to do a great deal of advantages that will aid and 17-19. the hot dog, American f The tournament in Louisville specific amount of research on the the students in their future vocation about to become- -a Chinese begins Saturday arid runs through weak points of the last debate. and that percent of the 80-90 And China's first look at "oli Monday. Each school has their own competitors become lawyers. This will feature the best of the Debate coach Mike Bryant said he argumentive speech for type of debate trains the students to Super Bowl. felt that this outstanding per­ "Educational Reform." · Eastern think and speak at a faster rate and T .L.I. International C formance will keep the team of chose the topic, "Reform Energy quick research skills are formed, he producing a telecast of the Forenza and Lucas among the top 10 Conservation." Other schools, such said. between the debate teams in th.e nation. as Northwestern, chose "Keeping New England Patriots for two provinces with 65 million

THURS

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perlearning methods PARTY & DANCE to LIVE D.J. every THURSDAY NIGHT at TED's playing • Miller Lite esented Wednesday your favorite '2 5 'I' POPCORf>J_ relation to their own learning ex­ Rock-N-Ro!I HOT DOGS perience. T-SHIRT GIVEAWAY DRAWING ·ques to improve learning Students often have negative Admission 50� 8-10 nted Wednesday as part feelings about their own learning 50� oz. bottle St. Pauli Girl 10 - close perlearning" seminar in the capabilities, which hinders the $1°0 12 75� learning process, he said. Jeminar was conducted by -5altmarsh said individuals need to '.Saltmarsh, educational be comfortable within themselves and guidance instructor, before adequate learning can take Sandwich place. ed to the techniques as "optimal learning, " "People who are terrified of the "superlearning. • • le�ning experience are generally sh, who spoke to an inadequate learners, " ,Saltmarsh Works! about 30 people, said said. Bakery - Deli '--S- of \_ leaniing consists of three The central process phase consists Super Bowl .. \ including the setting, the of making an overview of what ' processes and the final you're about to study, exposing Special yourself to the information and 1 preparing yourself to the point that of these phases is self­ foot SUBS $13.99 you could 24 hrs. notice please . nal, which when foil owed teach it yourself, Salt­ 3 • provide the individual with marsh said; Sandwich work, Buy a Sandwich I learning experience. "If you imagine yourself teaching "New'�. setting phase enables the the material, you will build your for or more and Get to create the necessary expectancy, " Saltmarsh said. $1.89

gical environment, The central process phase 12 Pepsi - FREE both A oz . y and externally. Saltmarsh represents the most active and i creative interaction Turke Chicken bel eves the setting phase is between the • y • critical optimal learner and the learning task. ------ely" to Ham a ' • • Corn Beef The final summ ry phase need to represents the last exposure of dents recognize what Roast Beef Pastrami fortable S certain parts of the material which • • for them," alt­ said. maximize ld be "They should should be reinforced. This shou ALL for comfort and support when done about one week after the $1.89 to down study.'' initial reading and associates in­ Hard Salami . eover, Saltmarsh said ternal ideas with new terminology in ...... $1. 69 e order to e ng Subs · Bologna . ts need to create positiv reach th lo -term ...... $1.99 $1.09 images in their minds in memory, Saltmarsh said. Salami...... $1. 09 choice of lettuce, mayo, tomato plus onion, cheese 10¢ extra 700 W. Lincoln A works on friends-hips organization becomes stagnant. He said he has a few things planned work on this. One of the events that to he has scheduled for Thursday is a trustwalk. The RHA will resume with its regular meeting next Thursday at 5 p.m. in Thomas Hall.

COOD SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY

·$650 ..

- - - Charleston - 909 18th St. - 348-7515 -

=- - - - PRESENT THIS COUPON WHEN PICKING UP ORDER - ,. 11111111111111111111111111111111 Thursday's Report errors lmmecll•tely •t 511·211 2. •PPMr In th• next A wlll edition. UnlHI c•nnot responsible for en Incorrect s be •d Insertion. O..dllne 2 p.m. previous d•y. SA \ )anuary.23, 1986\ Classified ads ' a Offered For Rent -Thursday's MServices fiI• �----- PROFESSIONAL RESUME 3 bedroom house, close to FOR SALE: PACKAGES: Quality papers, campus, 2 rooms open for Yamaha Amp with has 4 big selection, excellent ­ 2 girls. Prefer upperlevet speakers Best ser offer. vice. PATTON QUIK PRINT students or grads. . Ph 345· 348- 1 072 , West Park 345-6331 . 3232 days. Plaza. ______1100 · ______1 100 Canon AP300 Ty ping-word processing 3 house for 3 bedroom Typewriter. Four service: resumes, term students available spring weels and Supplies Digest papers, etc. Call "My semester 1 block to campus. Like new cond. TV Crossword Secretary" 345· 1150. RENTAL SERVICES 345· $350.00. 345-79881 ---....._.______1/24 3100. p.m. 4:00 p.m. p.m. ( 1965) Amusing parody of GUITAR LESSONS NOW ______1/28 1:30 the 2-JeoParcfy! 2-Happy Days Old West, aboutvengeance OFFERED. BEGIN· Rooms for- girls. Large nice Commodore 64 NING-MAY BE IN· home 1 blocks fromcampus, 3-Qulncy 3-PM Magazine turning a rancher's daughter Y. printer. Asking $5 TERMEDIATE-LErS TALK. summer '86·'87 school year. offer. Call 235-62 9-Transformers 9-Bob Newhart Into an outlaw leader. & FOLK AND POP STYLES. 348- 1654 after 4. 5:30. 12-3·2·1 Contact 1 �Ice Is Right 10:00 .m. .P TOM-581-5775. ______1/29 1 5--Dlffrent Strokes 1 5--Wheel of Fortune 2,3, 10, 15, 1 7-News ______1/24 1 and 2 bedroom apartments 29 Gal. Aquariu 17-Love Connection 17-Newlywed Game 9-WKRP In Cincinnati available now. Phone 348· set up, $1 15.00 neg.; 38-1 Dream of Jeannie 38-College Basketball 12-Doctor Who 7746. aquarium-complete 4:05 p.m. 1:35 p.m. 38-Twilight Zone Help Wanted ______1 00 $75.00. Ph. 345-2 FEMALE SUBLEASER1 5--Leave lt to Beaver • 5--Sanford a:nd 10:30 p.m. ft Son TUTOR NEEDED AC· NEEDED NOW, $75, NICE NEW MICRO-USE 4:30 p.m. • 7:00 p.m. 2, 1 5--Tonight COUTING 2200. CALL TUES. HOUSE, OWN ROOM, CALL BOOK FOR OAP 2-People's Court 2, 1 5--Cosby Show 3-Simon Simon 2175; & OR THURS. 3846. JULIE 34 - 1 482 . $28 . YOURS FOR 9-G.I. Joe 3,9-College Basketball 9-Trapper John, M.O. ______5 S 1/1 6,21 ,23 ______1/ 24 DEBBIE345· 7168. 10-WKRP in Cincinnati 10-Magnum P .I. 1 o-Night Heat 2 Bedroom apartment for 2 1 I 12-8esame Street 12-llllnois Press 12-Movle: "The Letter." rent lease. Deposit no pets. Sansui 100W 1 5--Jeffersons 17,38-Movie: "Grease 2" (1940) Bette Davis gives a }lides/Riders 345-9606. receiver $1 10. DUAL 1 7-Entertainment Tonight (1982) spells high jinks and fascinating performance as a ______1/24 with Shure cartri 38-Flying Nun romance with Rydell High woman who commits a crime For Rent 3Br house, 91 2 Both, $1 50. 345-2 Division, Charleston, partially 4:35 p.m. School's undistinguished of passion, then pretends It Ride needed to Oak Lawn (or 5. Lincoln Mall) on 1-24. Call furnished, has large kitchen, 5--Beverly Hillbillies Class of '61 . was self-defense. Terri at 345-7 439. . large backyard. Avail. Fall 86, 5:00 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 11.:....wKRP in Cincinnati ______1/23 Females only. 948-5318, after 2,1 o-News 5--Movie: "Monte Walsh." 38-Sanford and Son 5p.m. 3-Newscope (1970) Robust humor and 11:00 p.m. ______1 /24 Times sharp characterization 1 7-Nightline Summer Subleaser(s) 9-Good Roommates .1 5--Jeopardyl distinguish this portrait of 38-Jimmy Swaggart needed for nice, one bedroom 1 7-People's Court bewildered middle-aged 11:05 p.m. ftSUBLEASER NEEDED. apartment located one block from campus, on 7th Street. 38-Let's Make a Deal cowboys in a changing West. 5-Movie: "Gambit." (1 966) Large house block from . · Y. Call 345- 1694. 5:05 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Watch for the plot twists in campus. $1 1 5.00 mo. plus utilities. ______2/3 5--Andy Griffith 2, 15--Family Ties this sly spy spoof about a Call 345-1368 or 348-7504. Spacious 4 Room Apt. 5:30 p.m. 12-Newton's Apple daring robbery caper in Hong $2 1 5.00 a month, all utilities LOST: Ladies ______1/29 2,3, 1o,15, 1 7-News 8:00 p.m. Kong. Rommate Needed. New, 2 included. Call 345-1 198. with busted black 9-Jeffersons 2, 1 5--Cheers ______1/23 Building. 11:30 p.m. bedroom apartment. · block the Science 1 2-Nightly Business Report 1 0-Simon Simon 2, 1 5--Late Night With David Y. Modern two bedroom call Pat at 5779. & from Buzzard. OWN ROOM! 38-Perfect Match 1 2-Jacques Cousteau Letterman 345-131 7. apartment. Rent payed through January. Low utilities, quiet Lost at Roe's on 5:35 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 3-Hart to Hart ______1/24 neighbors: Call for information. Levi's jean jacket 5--Carol Burnett and Friends 2, 1 5--Night Court 9-Movie: "The Unforgiven." 2010 11th. 345-5792. keys in pocket. 8:00 p.m. 8:50 p.m. (1960) John Huston directed Pl ______1/27 either to Daily Eastern 2..:..wheel of Fortune 1 2-Prairie Pathways this striking, unusual tale of For Rent 5 Room house for rent: 21 5 call 348-04 71 . 3, 15, 1 7-News 9:00 p.m. racial prejudice between 5th St. $250. per month. 9-Barney Miller 2, 1 5--Hill Street Blues Indians and whites in post­ tiSUMMER AND FALL ______1/29 1 o-Newlywed Game 3, 1 0-Knots Landing Civil War Texas. APARTMENTS AVAILABLE NOW. Several good locations. 12-MacNeil, Lehrer 9-News 1 7-0ne Day At A Time Phone 345-7746. Newshour 1 2-Mystery! 38-Nightline ______1/00 Found: Set o 38-Entertainment Tonight 17,38-20/20 11:40 p.m. ��---����F<_> _r_S ale Summer and fall, 2 bedroom __ f k WATERBED-King with 6 Cardinal 1982 8:05 p.m. 9:05 p.m. 10-Movie: "Mr. Sycamore" furnished. Heritage Woods drawer pedestal. Wave control Champions key ring. 5--Mary Tyler Moore 5--Movie: "Cat Ballou." (1975) location. Will be newly mattress. $540 value. Best claim at the Daily redecorated; 4 people. Year reasonable offer. Dirk 5653. News.

lease. 348-7746. ______72 Author of mania l 45 Londoner's _ 1/24 ACROSS 13 Pyro ca ______1/00 EL ECTRIC PORTABLE "Things I act molasses Pequod's FURNISHED HOUSE TWO TYPEWRITER. AS GOOD AS 1 Remember" : A son of Isaac 49 Small measure captain 18 SEPARATE BEDROOMS, NEW. ERASER KEY. $1 45. Melodyfor 51 Powder 5 Item discussed 1975 19 TWO MALE RO OMMATES CALL 581 -2329. 73 Sign of Moffo 52 Formal by Lucretius REQUESTED, CLOSE TO _____..:..... __ 1 /24 boredom 24 Box agreement 9 City in Marion CAMPUS, $140 per person J.V.C. INTEGRATED AM· Pair of Mens 25 Doctrines 53 Patriot Deane T Co., Fla. per month. RON TARVIN 21 7- PLIFER, INEXPENSIVE. 345· were lost Sat. DOWN 27 First hite Factory 345-31 00, TOM MALAY 217- Sheltered inlet W 54 9503 AFTER NOON KEEP Mom's-Fell out 14 Townshend House golfer 55 Insect form 348-8729. 15 Broadway 1 TRYING. Jacket-If you - Georgiao r Cal. Direct ______1/24 ______1/27 Please Return them play : :1767 28 56 1966-69 2 Santa's Hither attention (to) PINETREE APT. SUBLEASE Traynor 80 watt Bass Amp, C 345-7607. Or bri 16 wacs feature 29 A exclamation 30 pen 59 Adjective for a AVAIL. NOW. CALL 348· Mint condition, $100. SHURE the Panther Loung Startof a An 1820 1'Z Asseverate name sou 7629. SM 57 Mic, $50. 348-5527. there. quotation 3 40bserved 31 Corrupt 61 Invisible ______1 /30 ______1/24 Skin lesions 20 5 0rg. for aG.P. Gowiddie is emanation 21 Famed hill in 34 6Small boy one 62 Marshy inlet Meath 7 Pretermits Bibliophile's 63 Hagman's 22 Pres. 36 -. 8Cartouche purchase Genieon TV ashington W 9 Entertainer 37 Cuckoo's 65 Slick Endures 23 Tony a o ce ent substance Campus clips 26 Best seller by nn un m Raven's cry Deciduous F uently, to Dr. X: 10 38 66 req lnter-Verslty Christian Fellowship will meet Tuesdays beginning Jan. 28 from 1965 Bit from "Poor shaders Keats 1 :30 Quotation : 11 at 6:45 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 23 in the University at the Speech and Hearing Clinic, 28 Richard's 40 A cheese 67 American ' Part II Union West Ballroom. anyone interested who is experi lmanac " 42 Narrow Indian 31 Arpart A k Phi Beta Lambda will have a meeting Thur­ ficulties hearing. 12 Cake section opening 32 Conger sday, January 23 at 6:30 p.m. in the Oak room Easter Press Club (Society of P Pot builder in Union. New members are welcome. We will be Journalists, Sigma elta Chi) 33 D wil Quotation : going to Caesar's for pizza after the meeting so meeting Thurs. , Jan. 23 at 6:30 p.m. 11 35 Part III plan to attend. room 207. The organization's jou Cattle pen Alpha Phi Omege will have an informative festival continues with the showing 39 of ' 41 Shoals meeting Thurs. , Jan. 23 at 7 p.m. in Life of Malice," starring Paul Newman 43 Burinor Science room 301 . Come find out about our co­ Fields. New members are welcome. gimlet National Service Fraternity. For info call E.l.U. Ancient, Medieval and 44 End of ed A Michelle, 3332 or Kathy 348-0749. Society will have a general meeting quotation Phi Beta Sigma Fr•l Inc. will have a informal 23 at 7 p.m. in Coleman Hall room 46 Comet's smoker Jan. 23 at 7 p.m. at the Black House. persons interested in study and r appendage UB Concerts will have a meeting Jan. 23 -at the middle ages and Renaissance are 47 Silent attend. 48 Rainbow 7:30 p.m. in the University Union Effingham goddess Room, for anyone interested in ushering for the · John Cafferty Concert. If you cannot attend, Campus Clips are publish Broods ed dally SO please call 581 -3829 (Student Activities) charge, as a public service to the 53 Malice ask Fix the roof for Dave. should be submitted to 56 The Dally 57 Dockers' org. Delta Sigma Pl will have a formal speaker and office by noon one business day ulme recruitment function Jan. 23 at 7 p.m. in be published (or date of event) . S8C n the 60Let Union Gallery. Open to all Pre-Business and should include event, name of 14Author of Business majors. Resumes should be turned in organization (spelled out - no quotation at or before meetings. abbreviations), date, time and place Smithy's item plus siy other pertinent information. 68 Rugby Club will have an organizational Fissure meeting Jan. 23 at 7:30 p.m. in the Union of submitter must II phc)ne number be 70 Hall or family Walkway. Anyone interested should attend for Clips containing conflicting or follower information. formation will not be run if submitter 71 Flat Phi Gamma Nu will have a formal rush contacted. Clips will be edited Thursday, Jan. 23 at 5:30 p.m. In Phipp's available. Clips submitted after noon Lecture Hall. Informal Will be at 9 p.m. tonight in day cannot be guaranteed publicallon. Ike's basement. be run one day only for any event. No 98 Lip R•dlng will be held be taken by phone. See page for answers Fl'M ci..... Thursday's R errors tmmedlataly at A correct ad eport 581·2812. will appear In th• next edition. Uni••• notified, wa cannot rffponalblafor an Incorrect ad attar Its flrat ba Insertion. l>Mdlln• p.m. pravlou1 day. Classified ads 2 9A

Announct'.'mt'.'nts �, �------Announcrmf'nt.. Announct'.'mt'.'nts Announct'.'mt'.'nts <)} <}:An nounct'.'mt'.'nts ..., <}.

______St. here we come!! Love, Ang. 0062. 7:00 p.m. in the Union Gallery thday! Hope you have a ,RFc-1/3 1 great 1/23 1/23 and find out why. For more day. Love your Phi S g KEEP ABORTION LEGAL ______i Sisters. __1/ 24 DAVID GRAC HAN: Rugby Club-Organizational information call Rick 348· AND SAFE. Join NARAL. Free SPRING BREAK 86..1 123 s skateboard. · Congratulations on pledging Meeting· Thursday Jan. 23 at 0761 or Chris 581-5533. Or referal . 345-9285. Ft. s wheels. SIGMA Pl! I'm proud of you! 7:30 in the Union walkway. All come to the table in the Union. Lauderdale 119 & ___c /M· · ROO 186. D�v·ana no Love, Angela. members and anyone in· ______1 /23 For info call 5 Reward. Pri! 345- 40 4 . 345-7395. ______1/23 terested should attend. Rugby Club· Organizational If you still want to join the ------1 '24 1!24 Amercan Marketing Marty's jersies are in! Get Do you like helping people? meeting-Thursday Jan. 23 at RECREATIONAL ==�,.,_. BONES AT Pick up Association, come to the 1st yours while they last. $5. Join ALPH Pl OMEGA, 7:30 in the Union walkway. ·All ROC'S SAT. ESON! Daily Eastern speaker meeting on Tue. Jan ______1/24 National service Fraternity. For members and anyone in· ------__ lhe � 1 24 SIG Pl'S: We had a blast more info call Michelle 581 · terested should attend 28 in the Charleston- Mattoon JEMmlE DORAN: playing the "newly met" game! 3332 or Kathy 348-0749. on getting Rm. at 7:00p.m. Final Dues ------1 1 23 Conqratulat1ons after Thanks, love the A-PHIS. ______1/24 -,...,-Never been in a tanning bed? pinned' Love, will be collected that night your TR1·SIG . the speaker meeting. 1/ 23 Traynor 80 watt Bass Amp, Come to THE TOODYWINKLE ______TRIO· s1ste�s ______1/ 28 TONIGHT: Graffiti Party in Mint condition, $100. SHURE your most convient -- - '23 NAKED RAYGON-Tomorr· The Subway with Sigma Nu SM57 Mic, $50. 348·5527. salon for a free 1 5 minute ow at PAGE ONE. Doors open and the Ladies of Sigma Sigma ______1 /24. tanning session. Offer expires Think Spring! Spring Basket Feb. Located in the at 8:30. Free Beer until' 9:15 Sigma 8P.M.-Wear T-shirt 2. plus 2 opeining acts. $4.50. suitable for Graffiti. Bouquet.· overflowing with University Village. 348-5812. -- 1 /24 ______1/24 ______1/23 warm thoughts! only $9.95 ______.,--- 1/23 jacket near PANHEL LEG'S CONTEST GOT COLD FEET? Tarble Daisys! Baby's Breath! and Re· i IMPORTANT vote in the Union Walkway Arts Cent�r Gift Shop has hand usable Basket! Noble's Flower Puzzle -348- 1580 . Today . Votes: 1 Winner knit slippers and slipper socks Shop. 345· 7007. Answers ¢. B ;.___ _ 1/25 announced in the Grand to keep your feet toasty warm . ______1/ 27 cAH VA • IllA T 0 iiIo c'A� Hall, Ballroom tonight at 7:00p.m. Priced at $4.30 and $5. 75. DANA ALFREDO, 0 E • AME I RAD A R Coleman I L V cigarette case. ______1/23 ______1/ 23 Congr atulations on pledging THE H E A -D r SA W A S & s 0 R E G ·m at the Daily Loving, childless, young ALPHA SIGMA TAU ! Get •L s - AR A• E 0 STOP BY THE BAKE SALE -- A S T S ., N T E RN IN BUZZARD! TODAY! couple interested in adopting psyched for GREAT times TH u p - L-E D E• DA DAF -- ______1/23 an infant. If you know of ahead. Love, your big sis, E E I B AN T E •o T H E CR F L Alpha Phi ANYONE considering placing a Ginger. • R E E I lS • T 0 0 H E A R T• T A - UM Omega-Leadership, Friend· child for adoption, please call ______1/23 -- I I L I - F L R S • T T E R S ship Service. For info call COLLECT 309·699-6337 TAUS! TONIGHT WEAR S E --- & I L E N •RIll ET ARL Michelle 3332 or Kathy 348· after 4:30 P.M. Privacy JEANS AND NICE A• A C L EF -- E A SL E 0749. respected. SWEATERS! SMILE! A RV 0 I CHl E OUF CAU D AN I R E T I T R E E WILi WAI.KERSHOPPING CENTER•MMlllS ______1/23 ______1/27 1/23 .L V STA E I E R T E I AWN Who: PHI GAMMA NU The ______Professional Business by Berke Breathed Fraternity. What: Our Spring BLOOM COUNTY ,______.....;;;...- Rush. Where: Phipp's Lecture .1 Hall at 5:30p.m. Why: H€ H€11Rtl IW Ol'llS rtlt.1<.

:::r u ST/ ;:: /A'1$LE +-fONIC LPF�-·. $t.U;:E L.OOKS $TO�MY C>UI TM E !<: E" , L-O<::> KS ;L.. I t::: E Ac:s RE"AT'"Ji' f'.Y O ""DC 17.���'f�� �AU f'Ir�--..-- ification of:

cents per word first 14 day , 1 O cents each consecutive day thereafter words). Student rate half Chanelle's Daily 10 price - paid for in advance. be PLEASE: no Wo.-tc.� it, �OU Lost amounts less than $1.00. & wood pee.Ker- 'i !\­ are run o.oonro.-c\ot�e.s\ FREE for three days. andmoney in envelope and deposit box in Union tern News by 2 p.m. before it is to run. The Ne s ss day w the right to edit or refuse ads con· lous or inbad taste. (Student rate half - DNo OYes

DCash OCheck 1nursaay s Report errors Immediately at 581·2812. A will appear In the next edition. Un .... cannot reaponalble for an Incorrect be Id Insertion. Deadline p.m. previousday. 2 1 OA January2 3, 1 986 • Classified ads ; Announcemenas Announcements Announc�menrs AnnoWKemen1s AnnoWKem�nasl

COUPON COUPON Aj

Stilt· Interested in Joining the Right Fraternity?

This is Your Last Chance! Delta Chi Formal k S mo er

Tonight at 9:00 p. at the House Congratulations 848 6th Street · Hoop Team For Rides Info on def�ating KA'¥ & 56-35 Call 345-9053 Thursday, jan·uary 23, 1 986

UniversityBo ard �0� �\ ,, , ....'!>� (,\'<� presents ••• OHN CAFFER TY AND THE � BEA VER BROWN BAND

·thguest lash Kahan'' TICKETS ET YOUR NOW!!! Thursday, January 23, 1986

·senators.______from page 1 decrease. and alcohol. "The party calls literally take of: Commissioner Wayne Lanman also checks, said ficers . away from building he is interested in pursuing a ::.n business checks-the kind of activi�ies "junk food" tax on fastfood sales. c: I curve we should be doing," Ramsey said. O'Mera said, "We are concerned ::r::l "There are a lot better things to do about slight (possible) misuses; 'M-F s100 S!l Lawson l than bust parties." (students) are a voting minority and •6: 30-5 Byrd's FREE SHIR TS the Hall O'Mera said they also discussed hopefully that will change in the future at. 8-12 issue of home rule, which referendum for students." __* ,,. BUTTONS & SIGNS r was placed on the ballot fo the March On the meeting with the mayor, All Day primaries. "We wanted to find out Ashack concluded, "We're hopeful what it entails," O'Mera said. that we can have more meetings in the If home rule is passed, it would future, possibly once or twice a provide the city council with additional month," Ashack said. A ll three Big Days taxing ower . Commissioners have representatives expressed a willingness 3 p s hinted that they are interested in to meet with the mayor more often. placing sales taxes on food, cigarettes, Thurs-Fri-Sat

Game______from page 1 said "Some· of the (predictions) did Breitbarth complained that the show take it all and seem to correlate. · I don't started 10 minutes late and said, "It literally-I think its· lot of fun." wasn't very good." a price Arrow Comedian Al Katz spoke on varied Anita Craig, director of student 1/2 Shi subjects such as . generics, parents activities, said the scheduling conflict Get a ("they're all the same") and childhood with the basketball game was Free Scarf haircuts. unavoidable. How funny was Katz's act? It Craig said she has since talked to s1 0 seemed to be a matter of opinion. Ron Paap, associate athletic director, Many Other Sale Items Freshman Katy .Sailer said simply, to try to avoid scheduling conflicts in nior John the future. 25 Mens Su "He was good," but ju its 2 Groups Wo s Studying�------· from page 3 79 study every day and not cram before an · When taking a test, Sterling and Sport·Coat exam. Sanders said students should answer W�mbley s •Study the most difficult subject first. the questions they know first and then $ •Know yourself and the instructor. spend more time on reasoning and 3 s39 & Sterling said students should ask thinking out the questions that present Ties friends about certain instructors so them with difficulty. they know what to expect. The best way for students to get rid Dress Pants *1 0 She said it is not cheating to obtain a of test anxiety is "preparation, more Sport Shirts *5 test an instructor has given before. preparation and then more SHAFER "If its a good teacher, he'll change preparation," Sanders said. the test anyway," Sterling said.

Keeping F ee Presses ee F1i \I I I We bel ieve the most import partof a fraternity is the brotherhood within. We',-, convinced ou1•s can't be b Stop by and see why we are t men of

Pl KAPPJrAL.,_PHA . ' I

I • ' r I • ! . . I WOllm at the Pike H TONIGHT: · 962 1�0th S For 7 :30 pem. Rl�q'g�Q1° IY•YOlllIS WILC

Shop The News Classifieds! Thursday's SRRE!!� Sect�on B, 8 Pages

Fourthand long: veland State overpowers Jeff Long

nthers 1 12-89 to gain first After 11 years, irginia, the city of Cleveland does have ' to cheer about. waiting is finally eland State Vikings set sail to a 112-89 ver Eastern Wednesday in front of a h 6,235 fans in Lantz Gym. 'n raised the Vikings' record to 15-2 over for Bear fan d 5-0 in the AMCU-8, giving Cleveland possession of first place. · When Phil Collins sings "I've been waiting for 1 his thers slipped to 12:5 overall and 4-1 in · moment all my life," he's not necessarily addrcs�ing ence. Chicago Bear · fans, although the line applies quite 're the team to beat in our conference," well. Now it's not every Bear fan that's been supporter coach Rick Samuels said. "They're very a what they do." through thick and (more often) thin. Many of the -;pectatingpassengers on the Super Bowl shuffle have d State utilized its strong transition ull-court pressure defense and bench .:ome out of the paint only recently. It's fascinating en route to racking up the highest point how a few wins can turn a million- cynics into a r scored by an opponent playing at million fanatics. Then there are those who've braved the element of nd State coach Kevin Mackey, who losing. Grin and Bear it has been their slogan to live his transition style of play west with him by, because next year was always better. ton College where · he was an assistant, The lean years were not a total loss, however. As m was hitting...on all cylinders. an addicted follower of the Bears since 1974, I've pressure was good. We went to the missed only as many games as has not e ran our fastbreak pretty well, (and) we started (1). So the memories have piled up. Among our half-court offense," Mackey said. the most vivid: s a team effort all the way, " he said. 1977 season-This was the first time in 14 years th wore them down. We play 40 minutes that the Bears had made the playoffs, and what an re . We take a cumulative toll on a team." improbable route they took to get their wild-card bid. Is, who refused to allow his players to be There it was the ninth game of the season, against Kansas City. The Bears were a meager 3-5, appearing d following the game, said he believed est was decided by the Vikings' pressure to be headed nowhere. and their ability to control the offensive Losing 27-21 with only seconds remaining, much­ ing. PAUL KLATT Staff Photographer maligned Bob Avellini hurled a pass into were too anxious against the· press early," I the end zone, the last-gasp variety, where it found · ' said. "We looked, but didn't see in a Eastern s Kevin Duckworth puts in two of his Greg Latta, tight end. Touchdown Bears with three career-high points for a losing cause as the e had people open, but just couldn't find 24 · - seconds showing on the clock. Panthers fell 112-89 to .Cieveland State. That heroic moment propelled the Bears to five · their style of play you can't do anything more. consecutive wins. On the final week, it took a gamble: a spin dribble, those kinds of Collins, who shot 15-for-20 from the floor, tied Bob Thomas field goal against the Giants in the snow you've got to take those out of your . a Lantz Gym record for most field goals set by and ice of the Meadowlands. In overtime. e and play solid fundamental basket- Eastern's Craig DeWitt in 1979. Despite the odds being stacked against them, the "Collins is one of the finest swingmen in the Bears were in the playoffs, where Dallas quickly e career highs for Jon Collins (33 points) ccuntry," Mackey said. "We'd like to have disposed of them in the first round. But Bear fans 'n Duckworth (24), the Panthers couldn't Collins on our team." finally had the fulfillment of a playoff team, other the balanced scoring of Cleveland State. than the fact that they were there. · Cleveland State (112) Vikings scored in double figures led by Bryant 1 2-2 4, McFadden 9 5·6 23, Smith 11 3-6·25, That stretch of six wins was also highlighted by a Clinton Smith's 25 points. Mudd 2 8-11 12, Ransey 5 2-4 12, Hood 3 1·1 7, Stewart 2 super-human effort by Walter Payton, then a third­ an guard Ken McFadden, who didn't O·O 4, Corbin 4 2-2 10, Crawford 3 2-2 8, Salters 2 2·2 6, year pro. Sweetness rushed for an NFL record 275 h school basketball, added 23 points. Sweeney 0 1·2 1. Totals 42·76 28-38 112. yards on 40 carries against the Minnesota Vikings, a Eastern (89) ds Eric Mudd and Clinton Ransey each mark still standing, in record books and memory. Crook 5 O·O 10 , Collins 15 3·4 33, K. Duckworth 1 4.4 o in 12 for the high-powered Cleveland 24, Evans 1 1-2 3, West 1 2-4 4, Taylor 4 1-1 9, Murptiy1 O· 1978 season-Bear fans were licking their chops ffense which leads Division-I in team O 2, Strickland O 0-0 0, R. Duckworth 1 0·1 2, Beck 0-0 o o, Peavey 1 O·O 2. Totals 39-67 11-18 89. Rebounds-C Vikings scored in the contest, their sixth SU 39 (Mudd 8), Eastern 36 (Duckworth 13). Turnovers-Eastern 25, CSU 9. Assists-Eastern 19 (Taylor days. Nine players netted points for the 10 10 ). CSU 14 (Bryant, McFadden 3). A-6,235. tmlde ahon aided by acupuncturist, ised buttocks is talk of the town RLEANS (AP)-Chicago quarterback Jim news is traditionally rare. got his acupuncturist Wednesday and · . It · became more so Monday after McMahon be ready, sore buttocks or not, to play in complained that team officials wouldn't allow uper Bowl. Hiroshi Shiriashi, the acupuncturist whose treat­ t gonna miss this game. I'd never want to ments he said had helped ease the pain, to flyto New game," MtMahon told reporters· from Orleans. But the Bears relented Wednesday and said

e sunglasses that have become· the Shiriashi was flying here from Chicago to treat of his rebellious persona. McMahon and four of his 'teammates prior to y because of the treatments I'll be getting. Sunday's NFL championship game against the New because once you get on the field the England Patriots. starts pumping and you put the game out "If that's what it takes to have our quarterback . d." play as well as he can in the most important game ise on McMahon's rear end, incurred when ofthe year, we're all for it," Bears President Mike ck by the helmet of the Rams' Jim Collins Mccaskey said. C title game, has been the major topic of Moreover the Bears appeared seriously concerned. in this pre-Super Bowl · week when hard I, Thursday, January 23, 1986 ·EID1n111nnn111m1nmn1111tu11UJJ111U11l n1nn11111m�1 - - - =

= - - -· - -· - SIGMA TA - - U � ------GAMMA ------Op ------Get in on - - -

- - th ground floor of - e - the Journalism Department's - - - - - new magazine. We -

- - - - - need staff writers, - - - photographers, ·editors, - - - - artists/ designers.

- - - - Meeting p. . Jan. - - 7 m 29 - - Buzzard ildi g. - 104 S. Bu n - - - A Step Ahead No experience necessary. ------For see - of the Rest! - more info J. Ryan �1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111� 125 B.B. Journalism Instructo

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AND RECREATION ' l·M SPORTS Lantz Building Rm 14 DIRECTOR: Dr: Dave Outler ASST. DIRECTOR: Julie Smith SECRETARY: Carol Baley PHONE: 581 -2821

RACQUETBALL SINGLES (MEN, WOMEN) ...... T 0 DAY!!! Volleyball (Co-Rec) ...... Wed. , Jan. 29th Bowling (Men, Women) ...... : .....Wed. , Jan. 29th Water Polo (Men, Women) ...... : ...... Thurs. , Feb. 6th Schedule: , AEROMon-Thurs: 8BI p.m.-9: 1CS 5 p.m. Separate Men's Women's Singles RACQUETBALL INFORMATION: & Friday: 1 p.m.-2: 15 p.m. competition. Five member round robin tourneys followed by single Sunday: 3 p.m.-4:1 5 p.m. elimination tourneys to determine All-University Champions. MUST PLAY 3 or more MATCHES TO BE PLACED IN THE PLAYOFF TOURNEYS. Match HELD IN LANTZ FIELDHOUSE = best 2 of 3 games. Racquetball Sport Club members who play off-campus FREE!! NO CHARGE!! tourneys are ineligible. SPONSORED BY THE DIVISION OF INTRAMURAL SPORTS AND SW DENT RECREATION VOLLEYBALL: Co-Rec leagues played on Lantz Decks. Six teams per league. League times are: Mon./Wed. at 7:15 p.m., 8:00 p.m. and 8:45 Open to all students and faculty/staff p. m. and Tues. /Thurs. same times. STANDING BASED ON PERCENT OF with 1 985-86 Recreation Card GAMES WON . All teams enter playoffs.

BOWLING: Enter at Intramural Office. Leagues are: Monday, 4-6 p.m. - Men's Independent -SUPER HOOPS- Tuesday, 4-6 p.m. -Women's Sorority 3 on 3 SUPER HOOPS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT Thursday, 4-6 p.m. - Men's Fraternity Friday, 4-6 p.m. -Women's Independent Sponsored by Schick & EIU Intramural Sports Round robin * Single elimination tournament held on league play followed by roll-offs for teams winning % or more of * Saturday Sunday, Feb. 1 2 in the afternoons. games. Shirts to team champions plus individual high average, series & game & & * Men's Women's Division; 32 teams in each, for both men & women. Four players per team; 3 game match. 75% Han­ & dicap. so SIGN UP EARLY. DEADLINE WILL BE Cost is 70¢ per line plus shoes cost 25¢. Rules at 1-M Office. . * FRIDAY, Jan. 31st. . * WINNERS MOVE ON TO REGIONAL COMPETITION. WATER POLO: Played at Buzzard Pool. Separate Men's & Women's leagues with.6 on a team. Men play without innertubes; women. use tubes. Matches *PRIZES PARTICIPANTS MUST BE EIU STUDENTS played Tuesday & Thursday evenings after 7 p.m. GOOD CHANCE FOR A GROUP OF GIRLS TO WIN 1-M CHAMPION SHIRTS SINCE WE USUALLY ' TRI . THE WRESTLING ROOM IN LANTZ IS OPEN MONDAY T THURSDAY FROM 7 to 9 p.m. FOR INTRAMURAL THE INTRAMURAL FREE THROW CONTEST WILL BE HELD ON WED: WRESTU PRACTICE. NESDAY, FEBRUARY 1 2th. MORE INFO NEXT WEEK MEET IS TUES. & WED. FEB. 18-1 9. ally Eastern News Thursday, January 23, 1 986 38 omen cagers battle_ defending champ ISU Hynd recovers from ankle injury "Stiles and Sue Welman post up and shoot really well," Hilke said. important Gateway Conference Meanwhile, Turner is second in p between defending league Redbird scoring (11 .4) and steals (29) . 'on Illinois State and Eastern She leads the team in assists with 34. fold at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Lindbeck adds a balanced eight 13 Gym. points-per-game peformance and Redbirds are 8-7 overall and 4- 1 assists. conference, following a sluggish The good news for Eastern is that 6- 2 center �ue Hynd returns after missing ever, the losses were to top­ the Bradley and Western games with a Michigan State, Arizona, sprained ankle. State, Wisconsin and con­ Freshman guard Sheryl Bonsett also foe Drake. returns after a bout with the flu. Redbirds presently hold third Both Hynd and Bonsett are two the Gateway, with an offensive players who were beginning to gell in that may give the . Panther the Panther lineup before being fits . sidelined, Hilke said. y're very quick down the Hynd scores at 11.5 points game a ' said coach Bobbie Hilke. while grabbing 5.9 rebounds. Bonsett pass very well and they are great add 8.2 points per game to the Pan­ They pass until somebody's s. thers attack. en they fire . Hilke said Chris Aldrige is doubtful e have to play the transition for Thursday's game. appears that It with them. We have to get back Aldridge caught the flu bug Tuesday ense," Hilke added .. from her recovering teammate Bonsett. will be lead by senior guard Ann Brown will start in Aldridge's Turner, junior center Juli spot, along with Lisa Tyler at foward y and sophomore forward Amber and Melanie Hatfield will be the other k. guard . leads the Redbirds in scoring A win could place the Panthers in a LARRY PETERSON Staff Photographer I points per game), field goal third place tie with ISU while a loss Panther Chris Aldridge fires a jumper during a recent contest at Lantz Gym . tage (.506), eight blocked shots could make an already tough schedule Aldridge has been labelled as a questionable starter for Thursday's contest after steals. even tougher, Hilke said. coming down with the flu. applers extend dual meet streak to seven straight

Wednesday night, was defeated by (150) beat Southwest's. 'P!Jl King 6-2. got pinned in the third period by Elijaw• Southwest's John Shumate 8-7. Then McFarland (158), who holds Dukes to close the gap to 25-15. - rn's wrestling team continued Southwest lead the meet 3-0, but Eastern's best individual record at 21- In the heavyweight class Eastern"s beaten 6-3 whipped Greg Carr 17-2. Demetrious Harper improved his streak in dual meets as Eastern took the lead after Loren 2, dominated Southwest Missouri Garrett's opponent had to forfeit. Eastern's Ozzie Porter (167) won on individual record to 14-5-3 by over- day night 28-15. Dean Souder (134) then came on to a forfeit. powering Gary Messenger 7-4. erall Southwest had a pretty score an 8-0 victory over the Bears' "So far our opponents have been "Coach McCausland is doing a great team, but we wrestled with such Kent Maris and increased Eastern's pretty tough, but the future holds job at keeping us motivated," Mc­ 'ty that we simply dominated our lead to 10-3. larger and tougher opponents for us, " Farland said. "At this point in the nt," said Eastern senior and SWMO narrowed the margin to 10-6 McFarland said, referring to this season it has become second nature for erican hopeful Chris Me­ when Jeff Giles (142) defeated weekend's Southwest Missouri In- us to strive to give 110 percent every meet. d. Eastern's record now stands Eastern's Paul Cysewski 9-4. vitational. nmarked 7-0 record. Eastern went on to take a com­ The Panthers' Marty Molina (177) "The 7-0 record really gives us tern's Craig Sterr (1 18), who had manding 25-6 lead, winning the next lost a tough match to SWMO's John incentive to remain undefeated and to three victories prior to three weight classes. Keith Presley Frangoulis 12-5. And Rob Kelly (190) do well on the mat," McFarland said. k of r------r------1��------, 345-44 18 oach Eddy's I CE .�9�!=1 !I $12-PIECE.69 $12-PIECE.69 !I $12-PIE.69 !I LL off Greek merchandise 10% COUPON COUPON COUPON I I Original Recipe or I 2 ( 2 pieces of chicken (Original R cipe or 2 pieces of chicken (Original Recipe or pieces of chicken . . 11 Over $10,000 Stock of l Extra Crispy) • 1 individual servin� g of . Extra Crispy) • 1 individual serving of I Extra Crispy} • 1 1ndtvidual serving of in • I mashed potatoes and gravy • fresh- . mashed potatoes and gravy • fresh- mashed potatoes and gravy fresh· baked Butterm for only $ 1 . 69 I baked Buttermilk Biscuit for only $ 1 . 69 I ilk Biscuit for only $1 .69 baked Buttermilk Biscuit . . I I package per with this coupon. umit one package per with this coupon. um it one package per with this coupon. um1t one I 1 r mer. Greek Jewelry coupon, four coupons per customer. coupon, four coupons per customer. coupon, four coupons per custo I I Good on combination white/dark orders Good on combination white/dark orders Good on combination white/dark orders I only. Customer pays all • pays all only Customer pays all only. Customer : . , � f lo. ,,,,.._� 1 Reggies offers cigarettes for 95• per pack applicable sales tax. b- applicable sales tax. applicable sales tax. ,,,,,_.._� 8 ·.._V res 2-6-66 u Ir ��j�res 2-6-66 -,,� ��i:es 2-6- 6 i ��i� I Any card except Valentine's purchased coupon good - I coupon good _ coupon good I 1 �. *''" I c; *" r �.� only 11 KFC .i..'-� , only 11 KFC only at KFC � ,.vc.1" �<: � �-,,6- I �� �� store In store In #_�c.1 � � I I store In � I of 95• or more get a Charleston. v Charleston. I FREE STAMP I 11, Charleston. I. I �- -��----� ---·----�------..._ - -.. � • • • • --- ••••••coupon • • ••� ...... _ •• r • •••••iii 'wt . tu Be A Leader : ncheon Specials I Be A Friend Mon.-Sat. 11-2 : Be .JI I • 99 .. Of Service $Chopp ed Sir : • loin • Stea k-n-Stuff 8.c: 80�1 W. Lincoln : g Fish Platter '00 Alpha Phi ORlega • 345_3 1 1 7 :::s National Service Fraternity 8 Stea CO-ED I • k-n-M ushrooms open a y o 1·1 1 I -9 I . 7:00 LS 301 I Chicken - fry Stea Info meeting Thurs • k I : For more info call- Michelle 581-3332 FREE DRINK · OPEN Kathy 348-0749 :1 WITH . MEAL I SUNDAYS I :1 I I 1. •••• • .. ••• • • •• Coynnn •••••• • ••••••-': ·4 Thursday, January 23., 1_986 The Dally Eastern N

Explosive Cleveland State starting Bulls scout eye to bel ievers across the nation make \ talent at Lantz SByports JEFF editor LONG BySports JEFF editor LONG team has made Cleveland State's basketball Among the 6,235 fans who packed into this season, and L believers every where they've gone Gym Wednesday_ night was a man not ther Eastern was no exception. spectate necessarily. He was there to pick pla Eastern at The Vikings, 15-2, simply outplayed apart. Several long-time Lantz Gym .Wednesday night. Billy McKinney, a former NBA player was the best team w observers felt Cleveland State now a scout for the Chicagp Bulls, made the they've ever seen play at Lantz. down from the windy city to critique Eastern coach Rick "Probably so," conceded Eastern Cleveland State and check out their indivi what they do." Samuels. "They're very good at talents. nation in scoring with a Cleveland State leads the In particular, McKinney had . his eye beat De Paul by 15, 94.4 average. The Vikings earlier Eastern's Kevin Duckworth for most at Michigan and Ohio of with their only losses coming " evening. Duckworth, a 7-0, 280-pound State. c · did not disappoint, scoring a career-high to be a great team," said "We have the potential points and grabbing 13 rebounds. He was brother I Viking forward ClintonRansey, whose older 15 from the field. Kelvin plays for the NBA's New Jersey Nets. "With "Being a 7-foot center we thought we'd the talent we've got there's no limit to what we can down to see what he has to offer,'' Mc · do." said. "He's got the potential where he could by the NIT last The Vikings were overlooked out a pro team." still don't feel season despite a 21-8 mark. They McKinney felt Duckworth's weight would although they were they've got the respect deserved, present a problem for playing pro ball, but latest poll. ranked 16th by USA Today in its he needed better quickness. said Viking "Credibility comes with winning," "A guy that big won't get pushed around now are finally coach Kevin Mackey. "People often," said McKinney. "His weight would De Paul starting to notice. I think the win over people off the boards.'' · opened a lot of eyes. McKinney also expressed an interest in "We're not a secret in the coaching fraternity. The ward Jon Collins, an All-American can · we can do is win attention is nice, but the best thing and Eastern's leading scorer with a 2-1 .8 ave care of itself. That's our next game and the rest takes Collins scored 33 on Wednesday. what. I t�ll the players." . "Right now we (Bulls) are looking for A big part of Cleveland State's success comes from . c and point guards," McKinney said. " ut double figures B C its depth. Five players scored in has also impressed us." altogether. Wednesday, with 11 players scoring Despite Eastern and Cleveland State "Our style of play relies on depth and quickness," relatively small compared to college bask Mackey said. "We force the tempo. That's why we ,;,. JEFF LONG Sports Editor powerhouses, McKinney says that has lead the nation in scoring, which has helped us get a I bearing on how they scout. little more exposure." Cleveland State coach Kevin Mackey shouts in­ "I feel too much importance is plac · · ".We get everyone in the flow of the offense," �tructions to his players during Wednesday night's where a guy goes to school," McKinney added Ransey, who scored 12 points. game.

MOONLIGHT M ADNESS SALE- I Thurs� Jan. 23 7 pm-? "YOUR JO LLY HABERDASHER" l/2 Price 5.00 SWEATERS DRESS SHIRTS 407 LI NCOLN AVENUE CASUAL SHIRTS CHARLESTON, ILLINOIS &1920 PH ONE 217 345-6944 RACK SHIRTS LEVI CORDUROYS JEANS SELECTED SUITS calling ODDS & ENDS all OFF NIGH.T LEVI 203 303JEANS ALL RUSSELL THLETJi Gl: OVES OWLS A HA TS T- SHIRTS MUFFLERS See us for special orders JERSEYS silk screening TIE S ·HOODED special trans ers SWEATSHI BELTS dorm f SWEA T PA1VTS greek sewn SOCKS & EIU EASTERNJA CKE on letters ' y EuternNe ws Thursday, Ja,nuary 23, 1 986 5 8

'n' at the Fridge ' ducks queries on Perry s offensive role tkRLEANSa (AP)-Ask Mike defensive tackle in the Bears' last eight Tuesday. the commercials, but he..says, "lt's· all when William ''The games of the season and i1,1 the two "No, not at all," said Perry when in fun." playoff victories over the New asked if he was getting tired of being Most of the fun could end for "The r" Perry will again become shutout in the team offense and York Giants and Los Angeles Rams. hounded by the press. "It's great." Refrigerator" Sunday when he will his gap-toothed smile, Will he get a shot at offense, a Ditka have to play against New o Bears coach breaks into a Perry, with England currently is known as much for his manuever that helped him explode as a veteran guard John Hannah, a just have to wait and see, series of television commercials- as his celebrity? perennial Pro Bowler. " said Ditka, who enjoys the football exploits. "I don't know, but I don't think "I'd have to say my work will be cut on Sunday" out for me," Perry said to se game if he can keep the Advertisers were quick to latch onto we'll try any trick plays "I'll have guessing. his sudden fame and nickname and when the Bears take on the New do my job." are the New England have him selling everything from _England Patriots in the Super Bowl. Hannah was injured and did not will not put in any extra hamburgers to soft drinks ·to Although assistant coach Buddy play when the Bears defeated the . draft Patriots 7 in the second the fending the offensive ex­ automobiles and underwear. Even­ Ryan called Perry ·"a fat, wasted 20- game of tually; he probably will earn more choice" when the Bears made him their season. Perry played in a rry. th t game but · the four­ No. 1 pick last spring, Ryan holds no saw little action. 1, however, be concerned from his commercials than "At the time I was le 308-pounder's role on year, $1.3 million contract he grudges. playing a Ii: t negotiated with the Bears last summer. "We get along great," said Perry. behind (Steve) McMichae! and (Dan) , for all his celebrity, Perry Perry also is the main target of the "He pats me on the back and kids me Hampton and that was it," Perry Jar football player. media blitz that has hit' the Super Bowl. all the time." recalled. "Then everything happened ho reported as a 350-pound He clearly outdrew everyone, even His teammates also kid him about so fast." t of Clemson, started at Walter Payton, during interviews road cars return adding super style t9 Super Bowl ORLEANS (AP)-While The Caritas, is due in from Chicago on "The car was built with a mahogany given by the American Society of Friday. paneling interior. It has never been Interior Decorators. The car is done in zip in by jet for the Super restored, because it has always been in art deco, the geometric style that t a hundred roll along in "There's nothing-well, maybe a rivate railroad cars, eating few things-more wonderful · than use," said Floyd Tayloe of Bir­ prevailed in the 1920s. aeals, watching the miles sitting out on a warm summer night, mingham, who leases the car. Each car sleeps eight. Each carries a ked to sleep at night by the going across the countryside, waving at "It has been constantly maintained. crew of two-a chef and someone to the Gods." Air conditioning was added, of course, serve meals and drinks, make beds and of the moving pleasure The King Cotton, car built in 1916, and a sewage treatment system." take care of the passengers' comfort. a rolls in from Birmingham on Thur­ The Caritas was built in 1948 as a Johnson, a physicist specializing in way rich people traveled 60 · when the National Football sday, the first of 13 private cars Pullman car. Johnson gave into a data storage, said he travels by jet for rang from the mind of scheduled in for. the Super Bowl, said lifelong dream in 1983, bought the car, business purposes, but goes by train s. When the Four Hor­ Amtrak spokeswoman Debbie Mar­ had it rebuilt and turned it over to for pleasure. pled Notre Dame op­ ciniak. designer Tom Bolin to have its interior "Ever since I could remember, ever d Grantland Rice wrote The King Cotton is now owned by done. since I was a small child, I've had the the Columbus & Greenville Railroad, The Caritas and Bolin, a member of bug," he said. "I traveled with: n'iy , time warp," said Clark which runs across Mississippi from the Planning and Design Inc. of M in­ parents by train, and we lived near the Denver, whose private car, Alabama line to the Arkansas border. neapolis, won the $10,000 first prize railroad tracks in Minneapolis. �ch am]!/51 UniversityVi llage Shoe Store TODAY starti ng at 10 a.m .... PEMMY CLEARANCE SALE! ! Closed at 5 p.m., but re-opening at 7 p.m. for FINAL MARKDOWNS \J * Sale ends at Midnight * Choose from a storewide selection * Buy any pair of shoes pay top dollaran d get the second pair of equal value 0( less for

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• • Harrison Ford is John Book. • A big citycop. A smallcountry boy. • Theyhave nothing in commonbut ... a murder. • • • Thank-you • Y • our • For • • A PA RAMOUNT PICTURE Support TNCopyright t MCMLXXXV 8y Paramount P1ctures Corporat1on : ,,I .\� } . ! ®" All Rights Reserved :ft·'""-=- • e • • Last • "Harrison Ford is Back" Night ! •i Satu�day, 6:30 - 9:00 p.m. EIU Lady Panthers Grand Ballroom !: •• vs . Admission $1.00 = Illinois State

Due to John Caffe rty • .:; '· , iI 7:30 : Special Saturday Showi. ng - r:�_,,_$';.U �l::�.; ···.� . y.. Lantz ' ·� . ,UNIV ...... 111 ...... �� BEARS �� SUPER BOWL . XX ��� PRE-GAME PARTY ��� �� THURSDAY 8:00 .,. ON TOP OF THE ROC ��� �� �� - UPERBOWL XX-BEARS VS. PATRIOTS Sl PERBOWL XX-BEARS VS. PATRIOTS SUPgj· , � · . 1st QUARTER QUARTER � · i . 2nd 1 BEERS BEERS ;X O� 20� T � �x 8-9 P.M. 9-1 0 P.M. � m1 m � QUARTER QUARTER \i 3rd 4th � � 0 BEERS 11-CLOSE � �'· ::i 25� 10-1 1 P. M. . ANYTHING GOES :: ·:;�OHf.lYd "SA StfY38-XX 1MOBtf3dnSS101tf.1Yd "SA StfY38-XX 1M08tf3dns5101 � 1/2 OFF COVER IF YOU WEAR ANYTHING BEARS' DO O R PRIZES & SPECIALS: Watermelons, etc .

* NEWLY RESTOCKED • STATIONER . & REMODELED 20% OFF BIG BLUE SPIRIT • PENNANTS • MUGS & GLASSWARE • STADIUM Follow the Bears' road to Super Bowl XX CUSHIONS in The Daily Eastern News sports pages! • ALL 20% OFF

.... ,,,. .. ' ' • � ...... --...... =-=-....- - • «!> Thursday, January 23, 1 986 78

rom page 1 an encore and a new act in the waiting. derailing. t if their coach, Jack Pardee, had I remember leaving Soldier Field that day with the So the Bears were in again, only to make a fast 'ns and was replaced by a guy (Neill scoreboard showing Washington on top of Dallas 1 7- exit. Again. At least this time they went down

's constantly mistaken for the being 0 in the second quarter. Radios were everywhere, fighting. � emoon? tuned into the game which held the Bears' faJe. 1984 season-Five fruitless years later, the Bears ked rosy when the Bears vaulted out Later, I was sitting on the train with a transistor won a division title and returned to the playoffs. A t wins. Then came the swoon, with radio no bigger than a closed fist. The fuzzy team that had been renamed 'Mice of the Midway' , prompting high-hoped Bear fans reception made the suspense worse. With five . was beginning to regain its old monster image, partly old frame of mind. . minutes remaining, Washington held a 34-21 lead. due to their new iron-fisted coach, Mike ; Ditka. Perhaps the most _ m'emorable, Things lookeq bleak for the Bears. If you've read this far, surely you understand the final game of the regular season in The Cowboys must have been Bear fans because tendencies of the Bears in the playoffs. 'er Field. the comeback they put together was incredible, and is 1977 they're blown away in the first game. 1979 · d-card, the Bears needed to beat St. to this day. A quick touchdown reduced they come close to winning the first one. 1984 they 30 to make up a point differential Washington's lead to 34-28 and Bear fans praxe .cJ.:;�· win the first and are manhandled in the second. This Washington Redskins lost, or else By now nearly all the train's passeli�rs

6-10 ·345- 1 511 7 Days a Week! STARTS FRIDAY! Friendly Service At Competitive Prices r DRIVE _QN IN-to Mike's MIKHAIL BARYSHNIKOV

GREGORY HINES

Two men. Willing to risk their lives for freedom and each other. COLUMBIA PICTURES

TOMORROW 4:30 • 7:1 0 • 9:35

..,. I ST ARTS FRIDAY_! .'/(e /w.,· a (i'/a ., /,;110 .1·eroice. ,,..,. . .. , J!te ;, a 6ft,.,., . .2 16vi1nw !tcw1 ·e.

·'7ftf!elher lh'('/ 'IIe.n ·eetl/h e /,;11 i/s KING OF , /r#;/ri/I , , .

• . . . •. ,11., . \ � HAUFF PAT HAMILTON (Decatur· Eisenhower) , junior, scored 29 CROWN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES Preseni. A MARIMARK PRODUCTION points and had eight steals as the "MY CHAUFFEUR" Lady Panthers split a pair of starring DEBORAH FOREMAN SAM JONES . SEAN McCLORY . PENN TELLER Gateway contests. · & lalso starring HOWARD HESSEMANI and E.G. MARSHALL as WITHERSPOON Produced by MARILYN J. TENSER Co-producer MICHAEL BENNETT Written and Directed by DAVID BEAIRD Director of Photography HARRY MATHIAS ••HTRICRD Edited·hy RICHARD E. WESTOVER E...... 3 R ® "''l:..:::i=��- Color hy Deluxe .&A Crown I nternational Pictures Release TOMORROW 5:00 • 7:2 81: Thursday, January 2 3, 198.6.

Scoreboard· Reportscores to 58 1 •

BasketbaU Basketball Sportslo g football Hockey

10. Nev·Uls Vegas 17·2 669 THURSDAY K.O. return• No Yda Avg ' TD 11. Kentucky 14·2 659 WOMEN'S BASKETBALL-Eastern hosts llHnois State, Gault 22 577 26.2 1. EliaternN ConferenceBA 12. Georgetown 13·3 487 7:30 p.m. Gentry 18 466 25.9 1 o\llantlc Dlvlalon '13. l.oulavllle 11·4 440 Taylor 1 18 18.0 0 W L Pct. GB 14. l.oullliana State 16·2 432 McKinnon 1 16 16 .0 0 Boston 30 8 .789 15. Purdue 16·3 346 FRIDAY Sanders 1 10 10.0 0 CHICAGO MEN'S SWIMMING-Eastern hosts Brad e , LantzPool, Philadelphia 27 '14 .859 4% 16. Notre Deme 10·2 337 l y ST. LOUIS 25 17 .595 7 New Jersey 17. Bradley 18·1 302 4p.m. Minnesota Washington 21 21 .500 11 16·4 144 Toronto 18. Ala.-Bi lngham Scoring TD PAT FG Pis New York 15 27 .357 17 rm 15·3 111 WRESTLING-Eastern at Southwest Missouri . 19. Tex. ·El Paso Butler 0 51 37 144 Detroit 20. 14·3 Vir Tech 105 Pay1on 11 0 0 66 Central gina Dlvlalon SPORTS ON RADIO I TV McKinnon 7 0 0 42 Milwaukee 28 15 .851 Others receiving votes in order: PRO HOCK�Y-Chlcago Black Hawks at Buffalo Sabres, Fuller 5 0 0 30 Edmonton 22 17 . 564 4 At Ian ts Richmond, Indiana, Illinois, Navy, Iowa, WBBM·1V (780), 6:30 p.m. McMahon 4 0 0 24 Calgary Detroit 19 22 .463 8 Minnesota, Boston College, Alabama, Thomas 4 0 0 24 Los Angeles Cleveland 18 23 .439 9 Winnipeg Marquette, Auburn, Tennessee, Virginia, Gentry 3 0 0 18 CHICAGO 1·5 28 .349 13 Arl'Y New Jersey at Utah Women Final Bears Statistics Pittsburgh at Edmonton Seattle at Portland Panther Statistics Receiving No Yds Avg TD Thursday'• Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Rushing Alt Yds Avg TD Collins 52 549 10.6 2 Tuesday's results Men Winnipeg at Boston Aldridge 15 114 41 269 17.9 Payton 324 1551 4.8 9 Morgan 39 760 19.5 5 New York 1 21 , Golden State 114 Toronto at Hartford Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Hatfield 15 94 32 220 14.7 Su hey 115 471 4.1 1 Fryar 39 670 17.2 LA Clippers 97, San Antonio 96 Quebec at NY Rangers Collins 16 126 62 31 4 19.!) . Hynd 13 62 25 149 11.5 McMahon 47 252 5.4 3 Ramsey 28 285 10.2 1 Utah 11 7, Denver 114(OT) Detro1I at Philadelpn1a KDckwrth 16 111 59 281 17.6 Bon sett 14 43 27 113 8.1 Gentry 30 160 5.3 2 CJames 27 360 . 13.3 2 Sacramento 1 19, Dallas 110 Montreal at Minnesota Crook 16 91 31 213 13.3 Tyler 15 51 18 120 8.0 Thomas 31 125 4.0 4 Jones 21 237 11.3 2 Houston 1 oo, Seattle 96 ST. LOUIS at Los A Taylor 13 35 24 94 7.2 Hamilton 14 40 5 85 6.1 Sanders 25 104 4.2 1 Dawson 17 148 8.7 0 Evans 16 44 11 99 6.2 Webb 9 12 t2 36 4.0 Fuller 24 77 3.2 5 Starring 16 235 14.7 0 Leaders Vance t5 20 19 59 3.9 Newman 12 12 9 33 2.8 Gault 5 18 3.6 0 Williams 9 163 18.1 0 NBA Murphy 9 17 14 26 2.9 Walsh 13 12 10 34 2.6 Perry 5 7 1.4 2 Hawthorne 3 42 14.0 0 (Tl)rough J•n. 20) RDckwrth 5 5 1 11 2.2 Cavanagh 9 10 2 22 2.4 Tomczak 2 � 1.5 0 Weathers 2 18 9.0 0 West 16 16 2 34 2.1 Ethridge 6 4 6 14 2.3 McKinnon 0 0.0 0 Tatupu 2 16 8.0 0 G PTS AVG St

A TTENTION STUDENTS !

East · side of square Downtown Charleston Fea turing: Mexican and American Food! Salad Bar

Daily Lunch Specials For more info. stop by table in union lobby today from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. or call Rick 348-0761 or · Mon-Thurs 5-7 pm Chris 581-5533 DRAFT BEER 14 oz. 75�

1· Free Chips & Salsa Carry out also available ·.Please Bring 345-2223 Mon-Thur 10-9 pm Fri-Sat 10-10 pm Resume.