Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

August 1967 Daily Egyptian 1967

8-24-1967 The aiD ly Egyptian, August 24, 1967 The aiD ly Egyptian Staff

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Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, August 24, 1967." (Aug 1967).

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Tour by In~pector 'Indicates Housing Needs Improvements

By Mike Killenberg sitUBted in the west central Second of a Series section of Carbondale. The owner of the house said At a bearing last week of that the rental price was $75 the stu~nt government hous- - a month. not including utlli­ ing comy,fsston, several stu- ties. It had a capacity of dent renters v oice complaints two students. of high cost, Inadequate .san- The exterior of the bulld­ itation and, "'slum level" con- ing neede.d,'J1 ajor r~ pair. Paint ditions of bff-calTf.:us housing. was peeliI,18-. several windows To deter mine ;the general were broke"n and the s iding wa.s condition of\off.3Campus hous- patched in a numbe r of places. lng, a Daily Egyptian report- In addition, the rain gutter er accompanied SIU housing on the east side of the house official James Duane on an had fallen down, . an out side inspection tour. Each dwel- fuse box was covered with ling must pass this inspec- dry g:rass, presenting a fire tlon before it Is approved as h a z a rd, and Instead 0 f off-campus housing. screens, sheets of clearplas - REMODELING OFFICES-Part the Dua,ne has planned to visit tic covered windows on the Office Building is currently be ing remodeled and sever al dwellings which had back porch. Cracks lined the will be the new office space tor the Graduate cl'mplafnts pending agafnst ceiling, water pipes were ex­ t~m, but when the owners posed in several places and were informed that a reporter the floors were warped. would accompany Duane, they Furnishing consiste.d of two b.u4 ----- ~nter Lists canceled ' the scheduled In- metal frame beds. When Duane spection. sat down on one of them to The five dwellings Inspect- fill out his report, it col­ ed were being considered for lapsed. The owner promised University .approval for the that it would be repaired and first time. They Included three that more furniture would be houses, a traUer and a sleep- moved in before the renters j 11 Ing room. . arrived for fall quarte r. ·YP.TI Fo::::::on The first building on the This particular house was Cafeteria facilities in the inspection tour was a one­ EG 111' University Center will remain story. four-room frame house (Continu~ on Poge 2) open during the term break SHJ,/I"IfM .9/tUui4 'Z(1fiq,t"'4I4 With the Oasis open only three Carbondale, IIlinoil days, Sept. 2, 16 and 17, of the SIU Security Officer's Condition va'cation perl6d. Thursday, August 24, 1967 Volume ~ Humber 2m Bowling and game facilitie~ Still Serious After Stab~ in tbe Olympic Room will be closed except Sept. 2, 16 and An SIU security officer re- Rlchard/ D.,-flOnton, 26, who Problems forTransfers 17. The bookstore will be mained in serious condition was on v.ac.m1.on, was stabbed open each day except Sept.3 Wednesday In a Springfield outside of a pawn shop about 4, and 10 following the regular hospital after being stabbed 6 p.m., according to the Se­ schedule of hours. I Monday evening in that city. curlty Police. Junior Colleges May Owner of the pawn shop, The Information desk will Theodore Rlseman, 65, has be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. City Wheel Tax been charged with attempted daily except Sat. 10 when the murder wl~ bail set at $50,- bUilding will be closed. &tended to Include 000, a Security Office spokes- Lose Accredition Building Hours follow: man said. Sept. 2, 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Most Non-ResUIents . The officer ,sa!d that no Sept. 3, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. reason for the stabbing had Prospective future transfer of I. board decides concern­ Sept. 4-8, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Effective January, 1968, been determined. Buhton and students to SIU from Chicago ing the recommendations giv­ Sept. 9, 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Carbondale w III raise its a friend had been in the pawn junior colleges may encounter e n the Chicago junior col­ Sept. 10, closed wheel taX fees and extend shop earlier but no . words problems In having their cred­ leges," she said. Sept. 11-12, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. coverage to most non-reSi­ were exchanged between the its transfe rred and accepted Sept 13-14, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. dents. This will include SIU security officer and shop own­ here. The executive board. 0 f e r. NeA's Commission on Col­ Sept. IS, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. students. Chicago's j u n i 0 r college leges and Universities voted Sept. 16, 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. All SIU students wbo are Buqton, who lives~ system is threatened with the Aug. 4 to place the 56-year­ S~Pt. 17. 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. allowed cars on campus or in Quoin. has been with e - loss of accreditation from the old system on probation. This Sept. 18. Normal schedule. the city will be required to curlty Office for two years. North Central Association of means that the Chicago junior purchase a vehicle sticker. C ~ 11 e g e san d Secondary college sustem must take Im­ Students who are residents of Gus Bod School s (NCA), according to mediate steps toward correct­ EgyptianPublishes other towns will also need such e an article In the Chicago Daily IngJcertaln defiCiencies cited a sticker. News. by NCA or lose Its good stand- Stories on Poliex The exception to this rule The Immediate reaction at lng, according to the Chicago will be non-residents who have SIU to this prospect was "walt Dally News. purchased vehicle stickers for their home t1]wn, according and see." " A probationary ruling by the Today' s , Dally Egyptian r.on­ to C orpor)lflon Cpu n s el The NCA is a private, ~vol- commission's executive board tains a number of p;.ories George Fleerlage. , unUry aSSOCiation aimed at is usually final, but an NCA bearlr.g on SIU's policies to­ Tbe action on the wheel improving education through spokesman insisted Monday ward, and opportunities for, t a x was taken at Tuesday self-regulation. that "the deCision is still un- Negroes. night's Carbondale CityCoun­ Each state has an institu- der consideration." Racial questions have con­ cil meeting. tion set up to recommend The reasons behind the fronted the community and the The council increased the accreditation fpr colleges~CA's ruling are based on a nation this summer, and a fee on automobiles from $3.50 to $6, trucks from a range universities in tbat state, ac- repon from ap eight-man ex­ number of impli~tions are cording to Sue Eberhart, as- amlnlng team that visited each posed for the campus com­ or· $5-$10 to $10-$26 and two s!stant registrar. lllinois' of- campus last spring. The re­ munity. wheel mo:orcycles and scoot­ ficlal state representatives to port rafsed questions about ers from $2.50 to $4. this institution have tbeir the following: Several stories on .these The council adopted an or­ headquarters atthe University Alleged, Inadequate facll- questions are published today; dinance that all abandoned ve­ of Illlnois·at Champaign. itles. ey explore policies of racial hicles will be Impounded by identification on University police With a $500 fine for The junior ~lleges In Chl- The administrative rei a- records, and information on the person responsible. cago have recently been tionship betwe.en the chancel­ opportunities for Negroes Action " was also taken to brought under the Junior CoI- lor's office and the various through SIU. prohibit parking on Eastgare lege \3'oard, which ranks all . cam pus e s , citing alleged Drive from south Wall Street Gus says he, wonder ed why junior G9ileges by letter shortcomings in autonomy for Entertainment and sportS to east 'Walnut Street and on- he hadn't seen, any bums. on ~~~d:'" B,C), Mrs. Eber- the branch campuses. are two of the stories; another the south side of east Oak the highwa ~ until somebody . on oppOrtunities In education Street from north Washing- told him 'h~ bums ,11 had mi­ "The Admlss,lons Office at Reported l~adequl1cles In wlll i'l!' publisbed in a subse- ton Avenue to north Marion grated to San Francisco With SIU wOuld . do wbatever the U. hlmdlln!! of public relations. qu~nt edition. Street. / ' . the res~ : ~f . (h£, hil'~ie ~ •. I ". "",.} ... ·A..,. ..· 24.:1967 O';ee SIU'e Top Athlete Insp~ction of Student Housing SIU Alumnus Dick Gregory Shows Need for Improvements Goes Fro1(! 'Rags to Riches' (Continu'" fro", Pa,. 1) . dltlon. Tbe kitchen was· mod­ "m and complete. However , his true ambition By Tom Kerber not approved In Its existing This house pass.¢ the In­ in life was to be a comedian, spectjon and was -tentatively The emen ainme!U profes­ and Gregory Immediately got condltlon but Duane said that with certain corrections It approved as an accepted liv­ s ion has enabled ma., y un­ a job at a night club on C bl­ Ing center pending final ap­ knowns to, as the sOng says, cago's south s ide for $10 a . could be made acceptable.' Although this dwelling Is not proval by Dean of Students from "rags to riches'" and night. After working ber e a Wilbur Moulton. Negro comedian and civil short time he decided to buy typical of off- campUs hous­ Ing, Duane pointed out tbat Conditions ofthl' three other rights worker Dick Gregory bls own night club- but un­ housing units on the Inspection has done just that. fortunately went broke. many approved housing units were of tbls type. . tour varied. Of the three, only Born In St. lAws In 1933, IDs flrst big brealc in show the sleeping room passed the Gregory was raised on re­ business came on Jan. 13,1961 I n contrast, the ' second bouse --pn the inspection was Inspection. Tbe remaining lief and later attended Sum "­ wben he substituted for a two dwellings had defiCiencies mer High School, wher e he friend at the Playboy Club, a .VwelV- k.ept, white frame, three-bedroom. stru';ture lo­ that had to be corrected be­ excelled in track. performed lJl.agnificently, and fore the ·Houslng Office would became an instant succeas. cated! outside the t lty limits His track ability was good on New Era Road. . consf!1e r them for approval. enough to merit scholarship . Since that time Gregory bas HjIl1Slng Director DennIs become known as the first The ren~al price of tbls offers from various schools, hOus),\ ':",""\, 1$120 a month, but Balgem ann explained that the but be accepted a tender from nationally known Negro stand­ University attempts t (, ap­ up comic and an ardent sup­ since 1$ bas a capacity of SlU and enrolled in 1952. t bree students, Its price per prove as many· bouslng units pnrter of the civil rights as possible · In order to give Wblle at Southern, Gregory movement. stUdent per month was com­ parable to the first house. the student renters a wide was able to break several His humerous approacb to selection .In price and quailty track records and in 1953 was the race problem and bls witty The exterior looked as though It bad bee,,' fresbly of housing. . presented the Hinlcley award issues - of - tbe -.JIay cOm­ Duane said there was no as SIU's outstanding athlete. mentary, have made him a painted, and a spacious lawn around the house was neatly typical kind of housing his In addition, Gregory foUnd top hit in nigbt club and TV DICK GREGORY office approved but explained time to perform at several shows through the country. trimmed. Inside, a good portion of that there. Is a Wide enough campus talent shows. where On tbe other hand, his in­ Band Needed to Play variety to fit almost jllIY taste. his ability as an entertainer fluence in tbe civil rights the house was wood paneled. There was a fireplace In the Tomorrow: Student-land­ was widely known and later movement has thrust him in Concert lord complaints. proved to be valuable exper­ the light of controversy. Op­ Int e rm i88 i~n\ living room and a picture window overlooking the front O il in Patagania ience i n his CAreer. entin!l mostly on bI ~ won Any band Interested In play­ finanCial resources, Gregory ing during intermission of yard. In 1907 oil was discovered After leaving SlU In 1956, The house was sparsely fur­ at Comodoro Rivadavia on he' served i n tbe arm y and has traveled throughouw he Tommy James and the Shon­ coun~r y deliver ing spe ech~~\ del1s' performance Sept nished, but the beds, chai1's, the Atlantic coas t of Pat- upon bls discharge went to tables were In good con- C blcago were he took a job leading marches and do i ~~~ 30 In the Arena should con~ as a POStal cle rk. He was wbatever possible to expand tact Cora Hilliard In the Stu­ fired shortly after because the rlgbts and pr!vileges of the dent Activities Office by 3 he poked fun at the mail ser­ Negro. p.m. Monday, Aug. 28. I'm Going vice. His verbal clashes with Chi- No further applications will cago mayor Richard Daley be taken after tbat date. Glee Club Concert have received national at- tention and In 1906 Gregory to Speedy's Daily Egyptian d • proclaimed he would oppose Pubilli bed In the De partment" of Journal- Scheduled Today Daley in the Mayora1 election 11m Tuesday through 5arurday throulboul although his plans never !':C8:1~~ ~'::', e:;!'In!~I~~1 ,,~~e r~~ T~night, The Glee Club will give a con­ materialized. .le aal bol1daYI by Southern lllinoll Unlver- cert at 8 p.m. today in Bal1- G A diversified personality, :!t!:I[~~~e~!:l~~~:=~ rooms A, H, and C of the r egory has managed to find I lblUry of tboo. e dJtori. $t8le meriii p,lbUlbed University Cencer:. the time to write a book en- bere do no!: neeellarlly refleer the opi nion Are You? The University Press wi1\ hold titled HOick Gregor y from the ~ ~n1::~t~tTlt1on or any department Of a luncheon at noon in the back of the bus'· published in EdJtor tal and buline .. offlcel located In T' ''~ S b Lalce Room of the University 1963, and appear in a Car- Bu.1 ldlna T-48. F Lac.a.l oHl eer , Ho"ard R. ,&C cara - Center. negte Hall cinema production Lo~~ t!:l~~nf!~i!~\ Obe" W. AlLen, Summer Musical Tickets will called " Sweet, Love, Biner:' ~:~I . S;~~~L ~r~~,~~~ ArePlaying continue in Ro om B of the Univer sity Center from 1 to Gregory came back to ~:~ae~~I':n'" :::e:~~ ~~ mn!·m~nc:: North of Deloto o n-H' wa 51 5 p.m. Southern In 1961 for home- The new Student Week Com­ cotning and r eturned two years f~;:iiiijij~iiii~=:;:;::~~~~~~~~=~~=~======~l later for twO performances at ',.' .T.j, L. N H 5 M Mcnee will meet from 7 [Q the Slu East St. Lou!s Aud- , .... 1 • •.;It.'~ • HELD OVERI• eve, ave 0 any 9:30 p.m . in Room E of the ltorium for the benefit of the People EnjoyedAMovieThil Muchl Universit y Center . Student Loan fund. CARBONDALE, Ad",i ..i a.: All Adults $1.50, Child, .. und.,. twelve 50, ILLINOIS Shaw Ti",es: 2:00 • • :55 • 7 :50 This Week's Dandy Deal.... T1k111IIIIWI ...... faa IIIIIrwlllll ll ~ n. Cheeseburger ..... 11'1 .._ ...... - -_. 1118 ...... 1 ~ Onion Rings

CARBONDALE 6 a ..... H p .... : 6 0 .11'1.· I D ••• '.' b'AIt.T--!i'GTPTtlH New Programs Numerous Possibility of SIU as Graduate Institution , Causes Attention to Focus on New PoliciBIJ / By Alfred J. Wilson 'ance with ..the policy of the time for completion of Ph.D. Graduate Council. might be reduced; With the possibility that STU !fhe Graduate Council is graduate leve l courses in a may become a graduate orien- comIX>sed of ten elected me m- given field for the nonspe­ ted institution within the next bers from the Carbondale cialist; a plan for identify­ few years has caused more campus and six elected mem- ing three stages of progress .. and more attention to be fo- bers from tbe Edwardsyille in scudenr's work for the cused on the Graduate School. campus. Ph.D. ; subcommittees of the At this time no one is cer- The-, Co~cil meets Qnce a Research Committee; three tain -about me exact course montW.hltel'nating between (he application.s for establishment SIU will follow. but the Grad- two campuses. The Council is of cooperative research pro­ uate School is sure to play empowered to act as' agent' grams; methods of judging an ever-expanding role. for the Graduate Faculty with quality aJid productivity of [~- The Graduate Scbool enroll- delegat«p po.,er 'to for- sea:rcb; ""De Coleman Report; ment has increased 20 per mulate ~licX »lith regard to released time for research; cent in each of tbe las t two graduate \~ tudies and re- copyright policy; research years. Last spring quarter search. . .professorship; . the grading the total enrollment was 2,294. The New Program. Educa- sys,tem at the graduate level; (1,728 men and 566 women) tional PoliCies, and Researcb Graduate ,Scbool liaison witb uThe Graduate School is Committees do much of the the library ana interdiscipl1n­ HOUSING PROJECT PLAN-Nanette Smith of Washington, D,C" a _ tbe central agency for organ- basic work for the Council. ary doctoral programs. summer intern with the U.S. Department of Housing and UatPn De- izing and supervising the grad. During the past year nine velopment, looks over a site plan for SIU's new student-ataff fa- uate instructional program new programs for one or mily housing project. The $4 million apartment development is the toward the highest level of 90th campuses were approved 'MARLOW'S, first such college project financed through FHA and Miss Smith excellence," as stated in the G'bY the New Programs com­ t,84-6921 was assigned to do a magazine sto~ on it. She's shown with Paul Graduate School operating pa- ~ittee. The programs are as Isbell, right, University director of business services, and Billy pers. . ~ llow s : . Hudgens, Carbondale Campus director of business services:--Miss The IXlhcy of the Graduate 1. SpeClallS~ degree in secon- Smith is a graduate of' Howard University. \ School is formulated by the dary educ~tlon . " " Graduate Faculty which is 2. Master s degree m secon- ·llm- Class·les on WSIU-TV - composed of professors and daryeducation. _ F sociate professors. Otber 3. SpeClalty 10 counsehng and fl· I M·· , fa lty members may serve guidance as part of the Ph.D. 0 - eature Itt e Inlster - on the Graduate Faculty if In education. T F ~they are apprqved by the Gra- 4. Master's degree in psycho- Katherin~ Hepburn and John duate Dean acting in accord- logy. " Beal star ,in ' 'Little Minil?ter,' 5 p.m. 5. Master's degree as a ter­ on Film ClassiCS at 9:30 p.",. Tbe Friendly Giant. minal program in behavior on WSIU-TV. Baptists Schedule modification. 5:30 p.m. 6. Specialty In health educa­ \. Other program s: Underway for Peace:' "Sea­ tion in the area of adminis­ Power'. Glenn Ford nar­ Pre-School Retreat tration and social and phi­ 4:30 p.m. rates the story of how na­ losophical foundations as part What's New: ABC's of Coin val and Marine operations In New Complex of the Ph. D. in education. ColleCting provide for U.S. Defense. 7. Spec~alties " ljn Elementary education, secondary educa­ 6:30 p.m. "Christ In You, the H~e of Glory" is the theme of tion, heaith education and phy­ 'Man and World' Biography: The life of Eva Sical education in the area of Peron, one-time first lady the Baptist Pre-School Re­ curriculum 'and instruction as of Argentina. treat to be held in the new Slated on WSIU Baptist Student Center Sept. pan of the Ph.D. ineducation. 15-17. I 8. Master's degree in behav­ 7 p.m. ioral science. ""Man, The Explorer of The Creative Person. Executive Council planning -9. Sixth-year specialist cer­ Life,'" a look at why the old seSSions, devotional services, tificate in guidance. 7:30 p.m. separation of disciplines has a U get acquainted" social, a Other matters still under been abandoned, will be pre­ What's New: uThe History hootenanny and summer mis­ discussion by the Graduate . sented 0 n ' Man and His of Cotns." sionary reports will highlight Council include the need for World" at 2 p.m. on WSlU the weekend. graduate record examination Radio. 8 p.m. requirement for all graduate In These will be tbe first stu­ Other programs : Passport Eight: "Islands s tudents; procedu~es whereby the Sun." "dent activities performed in 9 p.m. the new $1 million Baptist 9:22 a.m. complex. Doctor Tell Me: Does the Menuhin Teaches: A re­ average patient expect toO hearsal of the first move­ All students desiring to at­ much from his doctor? ments of Mozart's "Eine tend should send a $2 r egis­ Kleine Nachtmusik'~ with tration fee to the Baptist Stu­ 10 a.m. string players from the dent Center hefore Sept. 11. Pop Conce rt. Royal College of Music Jun­ A remaining $2 cost will be ior Department Orchestra. collected upon arrival. 12:30 p.m. ~ews Report. Gate Opens 7:30 snow Starts At Dusk 3 p.m. Adults 1.50 This snow Music Hall.

5 p.m. Storyland. 8 p.m • .,Among tbe Scots: "Music of the People--an introduc­ tion to the folk music of Scotland.

till ' _KlRK-AIIN£m -&.KElIAWAY -_SCOURBY _W[SlIRflElD ... JACQUES AUBUCHON " OAH. y,:E'c;Y¥TfAH Daily Egyptian Editorial Page TRYING NOT TO CRACK J Battered Harwood Ave. Never Gets Improvem,ents

Some day soon the jalopy entrances to the southern por­ ily travelled an eries on cam­ drivers of SIll will unite and tion of campus and has long pus. take up anns against the Uni­ been the c rudest excuse for Until that happens Carbon­ versity architects. Harwood a road on campus. dale wlll be a thriving spot ~nue is dowhright unfair for a shock absorber dealer to Volkswagen owners. Th e reasoning t hat con­ tQ set up residence. And the While construct ion crews struction of new buildings in bright new plushmobiles wlll are out blocking all entrances the Harwood Ave nu e vicinity continue to become jalopies to campus repairing drainage would mal)e-it economically a lot quicker. on two of the University's unfeasible is as old as the best avenues of motor vehiele street itself. Tom Wood traffic, Harwood remains Gne It's about time someone de­ of the biggest blemishes any­ cided to stan planning for wher e in Southern nlinois. now and resurfaced the street, Briefly Editorial It is one of only twO east which is one of the most heav- Once again, Red China's exper iment with nuclear Our Man Hoppe we apons has fallen on deaf ears among the peace-niles who scream ever y time the United States sets off a · nucle~ 01' Uncle Elbie Demonstrates weapon. Indianapolis S ~ Great Abilit ~ With His Chalk Do."1in,, Kan ••• Chy Slar By Arthur Hoppe to death by yellowjourna i sm. Then, fet's see, if I add 29 ounces of water... ~ Howdy there, folks. How Fourth Reporter : Isn't tha ' too much water, sir ? Letters to the Edito r ~:~ll?vi~::"ewf~~ ~~~th:~Ott~: Elbie (irately): NoW you're tootln' Jay Family--starring accusing me of, water ing the Conslod'er Stud t had limited financial means. individuals out of the housing 01 ' Elbie Jay, a straightfor­ milk. 1 don't thmk your pub- en S Find other means of s upport business for students. ward, no-nonsense feller Who lisher would be much pleased for an expanded athletic pro­ always makes two arid two to hear that his reporter was gram, if s uch expansion be William V. Moore come out four. Less'n a three expressing doubts about To the editor: considered in the beSt interest or a five would come in hand- America. (Without Counting, he It' would appear that one of of the students. Do n't tread on ier. ~ has til Y dumped assorted the students. Wrongful Gripes As we join up With Elbie spoonsful of sugar, powdered the most significant aspects of today he's holdin' a folksy egg yolk and other ingred­ the Repon of the Study Com­ Eric Brucker 01' press conference out in ients into the mixture, which mission of Intercollegiate Department of To the Editor: Athletics iS its impliCit re­ EconomiCS the ' kitchen. That's him with bubbles ominously.) I want I the apron on and the bottles you boys to go OUt and tell commend'ation that the SIU On Frida ~Augu st 18, 1967 in his hand, stirring the pot your r eaders what's RIGHT student body be taxed up to in tlje anrCle headlined" Re­ bubblin' on the stove'. about my formula. I'm not $1,151,403 per year for the Faculty Unheard . po'i!....llrges Big-Time Sports saying that cussing and doubt- SUpport of athletic activities. Status" you s tated: "Sixty­ This figure can be easily de­ To the editor: five per cent of the responding rived from datg in the repone student body indicated foot- Elbie: Step right in, boys. Each student now pays $15.00 I note with interest the for- ball was underemphasized. I was just making Lt'l El­ to the SWRF and to quote tbe mation 0 f the Carbondale -Fifty-five per cent of the hie's .formula and I figured r eport, "The CommiSSion be­ Housing Industry Organization faculty agreed." This last you might want [0 take another lieves this fee by definition is (C .H.I.O.) and their compo- sentence is incorrer:t. pictUre of me being a grand­ available to fund athletic fa­ sition of a list of grievances The questionaire used by the daddy--seeing as bow you've ciljties." Currently $2.00 of which they inte nd to present Study Commission on lnter­ only taken 3732 so far. the student activity fee is com­ ta the Housing Office of South- collegiate! Athletics does not mitted to the support of in­ First Reporter: Yes, sir. ern Illinois University. permit om;; to draw any <;an- But about Vietnam ~ .. tercollegiate athletics. The Elbie (irritably), is that any Commission recommends that The individuals who com- elus ion abo u t th e faculty pose this group have no jus- poSition on this matter. (If kind of a question [0 ask a thiS commitment he increased kindly 01' granddaddy who's by $3.50. Thus the Com­ tified grievances. Their only you r ead the Commission's mighty busy these !1ays making mission recommends that r eal complaint is that higher report carefully you will see his little tad's formula? Just each full time student be tax­ s [a ndards for acceptable that [hey did not indicate like millions of Democra[ic ed $20.50 per quarter. If we housing is cutting their prof- faculty support but only faculty u s~ the Commission' s fee its.. One man complains that 'staff support.) mothers all over this great paying student estimate of 56, SIU's regulations cost him The questionaire used by the $10,000 last year, but still land of ours? And Republicans, 166 and multiply by the fee manages to drive around in a commission classified respon­ too? Now, let's see, I take per student per quarter ($'20. 11 ounce s of milk and 8 ounces ARTH UR HOPPE 50) the total bill is $1,151,403. C adillacl He is the same in- dents in question two. Question of water, which makes I,?, At the individual level we dividual who bought an apart- two was as follows: (cq) ounces, only I want 32 ing is actually treason, but... can state that the normal grad­ ment bouse one block from I am a onces 'cause I got six four- (At this point, the fo r mula uate of Southern rrlJlSt attend the SIU campus several years I) student . ounce bottles, so ... Hand me gives a last vast sigh and· for at least 12 quaners or pay ago and promptly doubled the 2) faculty- staff that blackboard there. explodes all over the stove. up to $246 (12 x $20.50) for rent for each apartment. The 3) alumnus Second Reporte,: Excuse Without a pause, Elbie turns athletic programs in whcih he past yea~, severalofhishous - 4) other than a student, me, sir. Bu[ isn'n four times to the blackboard and puts may not participate or for es bur.ned down, and with them, facuIty-staff, or alum- six 24? ' down the figure " 218." Well, that matter even observe. the per sonal belongings of the nus Elbie (coldly), You te lling JUSt so you boys w" l have Surely there must be some occupants. Another "landlord a kindly old granddaddy how something to write about, I'll mistake; could the SID admin­ charges $200 a month plus do not know the opinion to make a tad's formula? explain my tax bill again. istration recommend that stu­ utilities . for a four-room of the faculty on this matter; Where did your paper stand Some folks seemed confused dents With limited financial aparonent. the Daily Egyptian does not when our boys we ~g in over figures last week, but means work 214 hours in the For the past 10 years, there know the opinion of the faculty Korea? 'turning to the black- this is the only one anybody student worK program ($246/ has been a Shortage of ade­ on this matter; the Study Com­ board) So, seeing as how I need keep in mind. 1.15 starting salary)" in orde.r quate housing for students at mission on Intercollegiate need 32 ounces I write down Fifth Reporter, (confused): to suppon athletics? If s uch a SIU. As long as this condi­ Athletics does not know, the the figure 7 on this black- Is that milk, water o.r billions heavy burden be placed on the tion existed, these individuals opinion of the faculty on this board here and... of dollars, sir? stUdents, shpuld athletics be were able to charge the Stu­ mauer; because the faculty, Third Reporter (puzzled): Elbie (happily back wher e the beneficiary? 'Surely the dents ridiculously high prices as ~ faculty, was never given Wh y ' 7' . sir? he counts so well): Nope, son. hiring of 100 more faculty for low standard housing. Now ~=in~~~~~~:~t.y to make / its Estlbeies\ (mPaatlt' eentaltY)t:hT"shatt"m'SemOYf That's the number ot-Con- members would go a lop.g way this canditon no longer exists be n gressmen we need voting toward answering the alleged and these individuals see a Charles G. Stalon how much milk I'm going to .. Aye." grievences against the faculty threat to their high profits Assistant Professor need. Now I take... presented in the Coleman re- and low,operating costs. of Economics Third Reporter: That ~eems pan.. n the image of SIU is slip­ awfully low, sir. Well, tune in again, folks. I'plead to the administration plUg as these me n claim·, then Elbie: You questioning my And , meannme, as you mosey to take these facts into ac­ Briefly Editorial it is panly due to the repu­ credibility? Seems to me it down the ' wlndin: trail of life, count. I plead to the president tation of Carbondal. as a ha ~ was your paper that ran that remember what Elbie's '01' whO bas belped make SIDwbat Yo~e r eached middle age - picture "r me holding up my granddaddy used to say: noth- "'it Is, a presiclellt who, atIeast Yen for " slum" h,ndlords .. It ' ould be poetiC· justice if wben your weightlifting con­ 'late d"8 by his ears eight in' beats dealln' with friends at One time, _ coacerned sists of standing up.- columns "n the front page. who count. Le",,'n it' s deaUn' 8bout. proYidlllg qaJity edu­ hi g her bousing standards PorJr tittle , ol~ dog, hounded I.,,!ith friends who can't. .. -cat!1on ; to 1:boIIe-....eets"'wbo ~oula CUiV'e every one,of these , Honon (Kas.) Headlight. 'The Art of Oscar Wild'e'

, The Art: of Oscar I/Iilde. by Epl­ of us know more about why he was his impressions into somi! durable fanio San Juan, Jr", Princeton. imprisoned than we do about HThe form. Wilde takes criticism as a N.J.: Princeton University Press. Ballad of Readinll Gaol." species of independent artistic crea­ 1967. 238 pp. $6.50. The Art of Oscar I/Iilde is a re­ tion. The critic as artist, relying action to, these tendencies. It 'comes on private intuitions. repro du ~s the When Oscar Wilde was writing, at a time of some renewal of critical work that he criticizes in a mode he was highly praised -by such men interest in Wilde, (the letters were that is never imitative, and part as Yeats and Joyce. 'Most students published in 1962) and is another of whose charm CQnsists in the of literature now, however. regard contribution toward a better. evalu­ rejection of any re ~'emb~nce be­ him as distinctly minor. He is ation of the work of Oscar WUde. tween the criticism and the work considered too me lodramatic, senti­ San Juan's book is an attempt at a criticized. In this way{ cri(ici;;Tn mental. and over-written. He is critical s tudy of Oscar Wilde with assumes exactly the same relation . out of fashion In both popular and the focus on his "art" rather than to creative work that creative !,*ork critical circles. When he does re ­ his personality. His method is the does to the world of percyPtion ceive attention. it is more often standard. if somewhat dated, method or of thought." PAUL SCHLUETER centered on his personality rather of the "New Critics." With very This section of the book is probably than his work. His personal ec­ linle biographical consideration he more successful than any of tbe centricities are better known. More gives the works close reading in the others. new critical fashion. Because of It is followed by a less helpful the amount of material he is dealing essay on the verse drama and a With. his reacUngs are frequently better section deallng with tbe much less delll.iled than those in comedies that brought financial and Sinclair Lewis: Filled -Up The Well·Wrought Urn. for example. critical success to Wilde. The essay Further, his readings are not first makes some general state­ equally successful or valuable. Some ments and re1l'tes Wilde's comedy No, Man Is only to serve to the school- Qj' Scribe and Sardou A Coherent The metal complex. and the "WeU\- made" play, then His bread is a tool; RevTewed by deals with each of the four plays His famUy and his sex w. C. Miilc/{efon separately. San Juan then ends the Sustain the great fO.rtunes, book with anessaydeaUngwith "The Artistic Vision Sicken or meager ponlons. Bauad of Reading Gaol." One could desire a more general conclusion Th e Art of Sinclair L e wis., by No. A Backward role thirty pages of the bo~ devoted to the book than this re'lding of the D. J, DooIey.- Lincoln: University Is death to dignity, to the early imitative verse. There poem provides. It is the trnalessay. of Nebraska Press. 1967. 286 pp. The body must be fed are quite a few poems to deal but not really a concluding essay. $2.25. On meat of mortality, with, and one is tempted to question , Physically the volume - is at­ To raise the level of water, whether. even in the interest of tractive and well-indexed. A little Most of the critical attention giv­ en in the past several decades to To flo~d with bewitching ,/;arter. completeness. it is worth all the more proof-reading might have effort. The essay on The Picture eliminated such e rrors as "He mid­ Sinclair Lewis has focussed. as did No. My belly's not too bigl of Dorian GraYf is more successful. dle class attitudes," which we do Mark Schorer's massive book of a More is the only plan. , San Juan uses advantageously tbe not expect in books from the Prince­ couple of years ago, on Lewis' Just let out the seam; more-or-Iess standard terminology ton press. This volume from that life rather than on his literature. Nothing is too big for man. of such critiCS as Edwin Muir and press will not cause a great change R.elatively little systematlc",tten­ Put away your cupl E.M. Forster as well as Henry of opinion with regard to Qscar tion has been give n to such the",­ It is quite fUled up, James. Wilde. and more particularly his . &fie- matters as are suggested by the major

acting against the American middle _ western, small town, for instance. but scarcely anyone has paid atten­ tion to such themes as they run throughout Lewis' work, or. for th at matter, to more profound themes. As a kind of effon to fill this -gap is Dooley's relatively brief (slightly more than 250 pages f9r all of Lewis' works) treatise'. Dooley Includes relevant biographical de­ tails, but does not emphasize these to the exclusion of more peninent critical observations. The various chapters of this book are devoted to major themes found in Lewis: revolt against Main S~reet, of course, '.is one of the anticipated ones, but others, on "an alien view of America" and "new life and end­ / less exile," describe tersely some of the ideas found in the later, usually overlooked, Lewis. The chief vinue of this book is that Lewis . despite his obvious and many faults as a writer, is considered as contributing to a co­ herent anistic vision. Dooley wisely avoids the tried and exhausted paths of thinking about Lewis. and as a consequence makes a distinct f;on­ tribution to a more balance view of Lewis tharf. has been available previously.

Qur Reviewers ARCTIC SHORE BIRDS: The Eskimo came to print­ the "new" art form to a high degree, relying making only recently, in 1957. when the painter . on centuries of tradition, myth and sk:Jll for their w.c. ~1iddl e [ &;;'iS a membo.' r of James Houston journeyed to the Canadian Eastern subje~ts. The story. with illustrations, including the Depanmem of English fa.:dry. Arctic and showed. a ·carver of ivory walrus tusks · the stencil above by Luktak, is told bylHouston In Paul Schlueter, 3 candidstt.' f l'\T how he could , secure printed images from his a beautiful new book, Eskimo Prints (Barre. Mass.: the Ph.D. in Englis h a! SIL'. i :.:: ()r'! ~ng~. Since then, Eskimo artists have developed " Barre Pub~ishjng , Co., 1967. 112 pp, $12.50). the faculty of · [he lNpanme m of E'nglisti: Adrian' College. Mich. ' Au;Oist::U,: 1961 " . Number of Degrees Issued Shows Steady Increase By Nancy scboenbeck awarded by sru, when eight candidates at Slu ba ve been specialist candidates will part­ that the Comm-ence ment will were granted in 1959. personally handed tbeir diplO­ Icipate ·1 n tbe processional not be held in MCAndrew Sta­ The qumber of degrees is­ mas, or diploma covers as with the platform party and dium as in former years. She Last June, 2,329 candidates said tbe Sept. 2 grJ!luation sued at S[U each year has ris­ applied for ·graduation at SIU they filed across the platform. faculty. en sharply since the early Bachelor' s a nd associate A spokesman for the Com­ will be held in the Arena compared with I, 196forsept. mencement committee said this ye r because of a light­ years of the University. 2. degree candidates will now Tbe first bacbelor's degree receive them from various the change is designed to re­ ing problem. Tbe MCAndrew was awarded in 190B--NO Records at the Registrar's . academic deans at locations duce the lengtb of the cere- Stadium ligbting system has were awarded that year. In Office sbow that the total num- on tbe floor of the sIU Arena. monies. . bee n inoperative since last the coming Sept. 2 commence­ ber of September graduates is They will be recognized at Mrs. Eberhart pointed OUt falL ment, the number of appli­ usually less than the number the Commencement by groups, cants for bachelor's degrees of June graduates. But Sue by scbools and colleges. . totals 719. Eberhan, assistant to the reg- Also these candidates will istrar, pointed out the number not panicipate in the pro­ SO'METH'.NG Master's degrees' were is­ of September graduates is in- cessional as in the past. On­ sued for the first time in creasing. This year's grad- ly doctoral and certificate of 1945. Applications for tbe uates will number more than GET .HOMEON Sept. 2 commencement show last summer'l', when sligbtly '58 Grad Accepts 388 candidates, over 1,000 received degree.,a" The 30 candidates for doc­ toral degree at the Septem­ sbe said. Baptist Position ber commencement bring the Besides increases in num- total of those degrees award­ bers of graduates,sIU'sCom- Donald DaviS, a 1958 grad­ ed in all of 1967 to 61. This mellF,ement bas also ~nd-:r- uate of SIU, has accepted a shows a sharp increase over gone.. changes In graduanon pro- programmer position on the tbe first doctoral degrees cedure • .The principal change Sunday School Board of the Sept. 2 is that graduates :r;e7' Southern Baptist Convention. ceiving bachelor's or ssoci..; Air Force Seeb ate degrees will not receive Aft er Davis received his diploma covers from the com­ bachelor of arts in Business mencement platform. at Southern be went on to earn Female Graduat~ Traditionally. all degree a Master of Religious Educa­ tion degree from Southern The United States Air Force Restoration Begun Baptist Tbeological Seminary is attempting to fill several ~ in Loulsville, Ky. hundred professional posi- Restoration has begun in His positoD of program- t ion s with female college Assembly Room oC Ln \: mer-systems assistant will graduates; Female college dependence Hall in Phi ~entall analyzing" designing, seniors within 7 months of adelphia, scene of the adop- l(l d programming business receiving bachelor',s degrees tion of the Declaration of In- s stems and maintain op­ are eligible to apply in ad- dependence andConstitutionof erating computer programs, dition to tbose already pos- ,tbe United States, He is to begin in September. sessing degrees, A few of the jobs open Jor YOUR CHOICE ... application include accounting and finance, data manage­ WHITEWALLS OR BLACKWALLS ment, procurement manage­ ment, mathematics,· chemis­ try, bebaviorial science, in­ $2 .• n .. up telligence and officer club ~~ management. Moi"e information may be OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY~ Plenly of 15" '7- obtained by contacting Msgt Donald O. Weckhorst; Tsgt Huston V. Macy 0 r ssgt Dwayne Donelson at 512 W. 7 DAYS A W'EEI Maln St_ in Carbondale from I PORTER -, BROS.~ 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p_m, Monday CAMPUS SHOPPING CENTER Ph. 549·2835 through Friday_ 4 N.ILLINOIS 549·1343 ·

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(APl - forces shot down 10 U.S. ,of· civilians were killed or The parents of a Navy flier planes Wednesday - - r"ight wounded in rocket 'lfuacks that said roday their son, a South­ raids on the Communist ca~ wer "possibly the most vi­ e rn Illinois University grad­ Ital--and Hlcilled · or cap- GJent bombings of the entire uate, was one of four aviators tured many' of the Ameri- war." shot down over Red C hl na. can crewmen. ". U.S. combat maps showed Mr. and Mrs. Dale Scott of If true this would be thelT no raid on Hanoi that day and nearby West Deer Township biggest one-day bag of Amer- a Pentagon spokesman in said the Defense Deparcment . ican afrcraft in the war. :I'hey, ' Washington said he had 00- informed them ¢eir son, Lt. felled a record eight planes, thing on it. Pilots say damage j.g. Dain V. SCott, 25. was with 13crewmen,Dec.2 ,19~. reported by the North Viet­ missing after his A6 fighter iJ'bere was no confirmation namese in the past has on jet went down Monday just fi6m tmerican authorities in occasion .turned out to have above the North Vietnamese Salgo of such lo!,scs 1'1 the resulted from their own sur­ border. inten"ified campafgn to wreck 'facea O-air missiles and anti­ No~h v~e "'!I's war bases , af~ shells. , SCOtt joined the Navy in and ~ s uppl hnes. Nor was ' ", 1963 after graduation from th e r~ 1m . ediate comment on - Ground actlon inSide South Slu and had been assigned to the olalm in the dispatch, Vietnam again was Ught and the carrier U.5 ..5. Constella­ from the Nonb Vietnam News scattered. The pattern of the tiqn since June. Agency, that Hanoi was a tar- war from official ~nounce ­ Peking radio r eported that get. ments and : commumques was one m an parachuted from one The agency quot~d the the famthar one that has of the two fighters which Foreign Ministry of the Ho emer ged over the past several . crashed in Red China. The Chi Minh regime as charging weeks. other three were r · ~sumed that U.S. air raids in the Allied troops were conduct- dead. 1 a s t three days killed or ing 36 ground operations of The Scott's said they were wounded "more than 100 ci- "battalion size or l~rger , but · vilians" :lit the HanOi area, had little success in finding not told whether their son was meaning in the capital and large number s of the enemy. dead or alive. He was a on its outskirts. navigator. The Soviet· news agency The enemy strategy ' also Tass, also reporting another twas the same: 100 rounds of Italian Tax Quadruple8 raid ' on Hanoi, followed up mortar fire late Tuesday night with a statement attributed to on U.S. Marine positions just ROME (APl -Indirect tax south of the demilitarized zone revenues quadrupled in Italy in official Soviet quarters tbat ffevf!ry new step of the United with two Marines ,killed, 16 14 years, according to official BEFORE HEARING-H, Rap Brown looks out over his handcuffed States to escalate the war in wounded; enemy casualties statistics, and now amount to undetermined. more than 60 per cen,t of all wrists as he sits in a van on his way to his recent hearing. He Vietnam will inevitably lead taxes collected. The 1965 was arrested recently on a federal gun charge. Brown's lawyers to the necessary retaliatory figure, the latest available, won their argument that the bail of 525,000 was too high. Brown steps." amounted to $ 7.2 billion. Tass did not spell out what was released after t!'e hearing on his reduced bail. (AP Photo) such reta1!atory steps might be, but said: "The dangerous­ ri e s s 0 f this short-sighted Chicago Integration Plan Okayed course of Washingto~ Ues in the fact that it further ag­ CHICAGO (APl--A vast plan bus for the cransferred . ele­ predominantly Negro blocks, gravates t'he international sit­ to further racial integration mentary school pupils from implying no white 'c.hildren uation and may bring the world in Chicago's public schools by and to a convenient point in would ride the free-' buses. to a dangerous point." busing and other rn.eans was th e i r home neighborhoods. --Place limits on the num­ Officially announced U.S. approved Wednesday by the They would ride buses at pub­ be r 0 f minority cbildren raids t uesday ranged from tbe Board of Education. lic expense. The board would switched to new schools--15 suburbs of Hanoi to within Members endorsed it with consider paying the fare of per cent in ~be element ary 30 miles of Red China's fron­ such comments as "bold", shifted high schoolers. schools and 25 per cent , in tier. Soviet correspondents in "wonderful" and Hgoodbye The r eport mentioned only the high schools. Hanoi said American planes orecast: neighborhood school." Supt. James F. Redmond 90° Today and his staff presented a 150- page report which aimed, HoHer . among many O[her things , at transporting children to ob­ ·NOW I,NOWI tain greater r acial mix and Tomorrow! fmproving the quality of teach­ ing in slum sections. Don't Sweat... The pI'anners suggested that The Daily Egyptian the school system: Come to- --Stake out »redominantly Negro geographic blocs in is deliv'ered to Carbondale integrated school attendance Six Hundred areas, and transfer pupils liv­ ing ther e each year to schools subscribers on the in other areas of the city '3reeman Hwhere integration would be day of publication!· achieved." . ~ Extra Cool - - Provide transportation by Now you can have th e Daily E gy pt­ ian deli vered BY MAIL, the same day • Ai; Conditioning TURNED DOWN? it is published, to your ' Ca rbondale • Swimming Pool ~C~ home. (Same day service not avail­ AUTO INSURANC E outside Carbondale postal area .) Uni versity news, s tudent views, and For Study Comfort ~.""'~"';:.~ -' informative advertising fi vf:" days a week for four full quarters--only Contact S6 .00. 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Ch'ina Hopes to Further Strife In U.S'. by Using Exile, M~ils W.\SHINGTON (AP) - Com­ governme nt of assassination muni:::1 China ha ::: u $l."' d an of the President. Amerkall 3d\'OC3tl.'" of black Because of le gal restric­ r('l,"~ lli on- and-the U.S. mails­ tions, the officials s aid, they to tn" to fan racial strife in are unable to determine the l l.S •. cities and turn Negroes extent of Crus ader's circu­ 3~ in$[ whites ' in Vietna m. lation. ~ From Peking, Negro exile One official said, howeve r, Roben F. Williams has mailed "a hell of a lot of the m come into Nl!gro districts a pro­ in." paganda leaflet conraininv tips A,Detroit: de tective said he on arson and destruction, and purchased copies of the Cru­ advising Negro Gl~ to "elim­ sade'r- in a bookstore in the inate" their white com rades heart of the area torn by in Vietnam. rioting last month. .• The enemy I and is The 42 -year-old Williams, America and America is tbe one of the fi!J! of the Negro bl ack man's banleground," Kiilitams , fled to Cuba six wrote Williams in the latest years ago allegedly [0 avoid available edition of his publi­ a charge of kidnaping during cation ··Crusader." a racial disturbance in his Knowledgeable sources hometown of Monroe. N.C. her e said it i s obvious that having set up his propaganda I d P t ge operarion in Peking, Williams ncrease 08 a is unde r orders and control of the Red Chinese. A Washingron posral Rates Given Boost spokesman said Wr:dnesday it isof course too late to do any­ WASHINGTON (AP) - The thing about the latest edition House POSt Office Commiaee of the Crus ader which is la­ rejected lower beled as having been published increases for in Peking in May. nesday and moved He said however the Post enough extra Office probably would consult the cost of a with the Customs Bureau and raise for the J ustice Departme nt to see which faces if tuture editions could be By what me mbers described . barred lawfully. The 12-page as a substantial vote, the com­ Th is is on invitatian to all interested students to ride thi s bus to folder COntains a rundown on mittee approved third-class Un iverSity City ~nd see the fa~ilities that m-ake it th e mo st complet. methods for clogging sewer rates which had been r ecom­ tiving center at SIU . lines and highways, burning mended by the Jobnson ad­ The bus leaves the Un iversity Center on the half hour{8 :30, 9:30, public. facillries and s maShing ministration in a package Hc. through -4 :30): Just get on and tell the driver you want to look us windows wit h 0 u t getting raising r ates for all classes over. He'll give you free transportation out and back. (Incide ntally, even caughr. of rna.H. . It also says that Ame r ican though we furnish this free service to our res idents, Un iversity City is Negroes s hould refuse ro fighr The third-class rate- cover­ closer to Old Main than any of the Greek Row houses are!) in Vietnam. But it s ays those ing such things as bulk mail­ who are "trapped into" ser­ ing of C;3talogs, circulars and ving should uthrow a monkey samples-would be boosted next wrench inro those murderous January frorn the present rnin- ~::::::~~::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;:;::::;:~~r======1 oper ations ... imum rate of 2 7/ 8 cents to r Further, it says _ Uthey 3.8 cents, With corresponding ------~ should eliminate as many of increases in the per pound rare DAILY EGYPTIAN SUBSCRIPTION COUPON their real e nemies as they from 12 ro 16 cents for books can at the front so that these ~gdce~~~a~~~sCi~~~ I ~~:" 18, ro JYOUR NAME ______racis ts will nOt be able to return home and intensify the The postal rates s ubcom­ ADDRESS ______---- -=~- brutalization and exrermin- minee, acting along lines ation of black people ro rhe soughr by rhe large third-class CITY ______STATE _ _ _ ZIP CODE ___ extent that the y are curre nt- mailers, had earlier approved ly exterminating the Vietna- a three - phase raise which Please send subscription to: mese people. II would have put the bulk. rate \..... Posral, customs and Jus- ar 3.5 cents in 1970-below NAME ______tice Department officials say what the administration sought their aurhorlry to police In- for 1968 and costing $53.7 ADDREU ______coming propaganda has been million in anticipated new rev­ 1 , sharply restricted in.. recent enue. CITY ______STA TE _____ ZIP CODE ___ years by Supre me Court de- The committee uphe ld a I Please s.,d coupon and $2.00 Check To cisions on f~eedo m of expres- sub - committee deciSion to I sion. e liminate a special lower rate 5-3-67 THE DAILY EGYPTIAN-BLDG. T. 48 _I A post office source said for single - piece third - class ~------the pos tal jurisdiction begins mail, such as parce ls under after maLerial has been 16 ounces and greeting cards cleared by customs. A customs mailed in unsealed envelopes. This C01jlpon, plus just $2.00, spokesman satd such material The rate will go from four is barred at the ports of en- c, m s for the first tWO ounces try only if it is treasonablew six cents, a penny more will thank Mom and'Dad or advocates overthrow of the than the administration asked. Ifive days a week. e~ DAILY EGYPTIAN EYEWEAR SOU T H .: R N IL L IN n I S 11 N I \' I:: R S IT Y. Your eyewear will be 3 Volume .. 8 C l.tbondale. Ill. 1'und.y. Aucuat 22. 1967 Number 20S ways correct at Conrad: ... Because it will s~nd them a copy of your college parer e '!.ery day it's printed. ~ for a whole term. With a gift s ubs cription ~ 1• .Cor:re~.c::- .::,:: ' i m6ROuGH EYE" So, why don't you_iust clip out the coupon, moil it in with , hi ...... 11'1 , ,EXAMINATION two bucks (or b. a sport, and .enclose six dollars for four terms)? Mom, Dad, brothers, sist.rs, grandma.s, grandpas, aunh, uncles, girl fri ends, boy frierHIs or. just a few of the people whO" might _ be int.rest.d. Moil it in today. ~~~~~2~ES~ ! ~ ~3~ ~ ( NRAD OPTICAL SUBSCRIBE TODAY DAlt Y/EG·YP rIA i I

AUp.t U, '1961 . DAlt.'\" EGYP-TIOUC·· :. p..,.lJ . • ::. '.'

MORRELL ... KREY ... HUNTER

REG., DRIP, PULV., ELECTRA-PERK . FVLlY MAXWELL HOUSE r------, .COFFEE PRICES O~ THIS AD ARE GOOD THURSDAY, t'OOK6 FRIDAY & SATURDAY, C . AUGUST 24, 25, & 26. , 1.Lb. Can 69 MaINSTANT ...... 11 HOUle-Sa COFFEE .... 10c on 6-01. ______, Jar .82' c DELUXE Regular or Drip . lb. Full Shank Half •••••• _lb.O' ® COFFEE Shank Portion •••••• __ lb." BuH Portion ••• ~ ••••• lb.O' lb. $1~29 ·Cent.r S.ction ••••••• Ib .• 2Can Wafer Center Slices •• ~ lb . 75· . Mixed Fruit, Strawberry, Raspberry, IGA TABLERITE Block Raspberry, Strawberry Punch, Cherry, Block Cherry, Concord Grope, ·.CHUCK Or~ ge, Lemon , Lime, 5liQC . O ~ nge Pineapple Strawberry 80nona DELICIOUS F;~Q~h ; Ground Btef •• __ lb.59' 'STEAKS ----Lb.~ FLAVORS IGA TOO leRite Quarter Hunter · Krey . MDyro .. -A/C / Iy the Piece Sliced Pork Loin ______lb.75- Larg. Bolo_gna_l';;-:~ ••• lb.53' JELL·O (,.,h iru ' I~o' IG\TobleRite ) Morrell-Ale Iy the Piece JE ..... , Shced Bacon •.• ___ i-lb. Pkg 79' Braunsc ....iger ••• __ .lb.53' .. " •• • ~ I ~('I;lI ' f1 l k ., ... ·r --' . .3 3-oz. 2·5'C QUICK - ~?9K TREA TS Pkgs. 80C PER POUND h1'--- Beef Cubed Steaks PRE,SIFTED ENRICHED Bread.d Veal Steaks $1~ PILl-SBURY FLOUR Br.aded Pork St.aks 1'0 . • 00 Breaded Chuck Wagon St.aks... ' P:;:';' 5i:~49C ) CHICKEN - BEEF - TURKEY BANQUET IPOT PIES

... Off LABel ), c sen BLUE BONNET IARGARINE. _____ •••••• ~~ .. FLEISHIANNS·IARGARINE •• _••••• _•• _____ lb." 6. for UIBRECHT .CHEESE'CAIE. _____ •••• _•• 17-oL" S 00 IGA PECAI COFFEE CAIE ••••• _••• _•• __ 13...... '® BREAD-16-oz. loaf.5for l· • FRESH LEION ROLL".u'Q'59' __ ';_~_. ______O' large Crisp Solid Heads Colorado Iceberg LETTUCE •••• ~ .2heads2t California '. f in•• t-Il u. a.ib.r Loreto Cr;.p St.la. Grap.s ___ • _____ lb:29' !.~!!!I&~~;;:...: ____ 2._2t' ~ .' Foodliner . Fr ..... frDm MichigDn to youl Extro Lorge ...... 1 ••• _•• _ ••• 2.. .• 1620 W. Ma.in (' Gr.a P.".rs'. __ 4..,29' Fnb~ ~-s . ,o."______..."", . 5I.:i... 1.• V .. . .. , •• .• ...... • •: '.~ .. ~ .• , •••• : 't .: '.. • ...... 'Open 9a.m._to ?p.~ ...... ' ~" " " "'" ...... /

.P...,. .)2 DAILY EGYf'J.IAIII Alumni Office Race Never Question Ignores Race For Graduate 'School In DealinQs "Race bas bever been a ship and fellowship QiOgrams According lO °li Ser- questlol! in the Graduate Will f!J.9 ber verify that at this vice s Dir~lcrvr~ It ·: ~':"i Odan­ le ll, there is no ;.U:;linctlon of School," said Milton T. Edel-University, race plays no parr races m 3. j e on alumni man, assI stant dean of the In 'determlning any of the pol­ Graduate School. U ~dmit- icies or r equlrer:nenrs for ad­ records. ranee to tbe Graduate School mi 8sion. Odanie ll was asked [0 name Is strictly on academic ac- • The application form for ad- Negro graduates who now hold complishment," he ' em- mission to graduate study or imponant positions in the var­ phaslzed. for graduate fellowsbips has ' iOllS occupations. The application form'S for no space for Identifying race. '''.1 couldn't tell 'yc..u \~' h ich alumni we have on file is a ad~slon to the Graduate The forms do not require the scho.. b l ~d to the assis[anr- applicant to submit a photo- Negro or which is a w!:lile," graph. · said Odaniell. t. We never The raciai policy atSJUis list this information on our NAACP) .toP I.an reco rds .f ~ Me .... bership Drive ~;~~~~t~Si~oe~~~~~ch~~i '·When I correspond with l r . basis. an alumni, I know his name Carb6Dd~ / m1nisters have ~======~ a nd possibly his occupation'" been invited to a meeting of II bur ex.<:ept i n cases of per­ the National Association for sonal acquaintances, I never the Advancement of Colored know his r ace," said Odaniell. People Friday evening at 7 .s•• p.m. In the A.M.E. cburch, 16 Campu. ROTC 316 E . Jackson. . Carl Mosley. chairman of the Carbondale NAACP, said IPPS Member. Eligible the meeting is to set a da:te for a membership drive. For Comminion. The meeting is open to the The SIU branch of the Air Force Reserve Officer Train­ ---\ ing Corp has announced that Highw ay 13 East 16 ROTC ·menbers are can­ coast-co- coast in ·457.2184 didates for commissIons, in $20.70 for thr~ 98S.481l the U.S. Air Force. According to Moses D. Lee, A! ..· man 1s t Class at Southern. tl :~ se commissions mus t be approved by Congress before GIRLS they take effect. All. of the candidates will why pay more? graduate from Southern at the At WILSON MANOR it's only$300 with meals e nd Qf thiS quarter. THEIR NUlMBE,R--Lie"tenants and $160 without meals. Tht' g:'aduates _!;i hould r e ­ graduate, and Mary E . Miller. were towa f eight officers promoted ce ive the!,,: commissions as from second to first lieutenant on the 8th day of the 8th month at second ! ~ £utenants on Sept. at the U.S. Women' s Army Corps Center. Ft. McClellan, Ala. Lt. 7. Aftel· that they will leave PRIVATE ROOMS for techn·. .::a l training at vari­ Race teaches ~'_neral military subjects and Lt. Miller is a platoon , at no extra ·cost' OllS bases in the U.S. officer. The names of those getting promotions were listed ~ the 708 W. FREEMAN " Within 3. year . JX>ss ibly 18th paragra ph of Speciall Order 1;8!9.:.-______..:. __ ~=====:::::======~~======~ 3 monchs . ttley will. begin active duty in the Air For ce, II Harri.burg Man said Lee. Three of the candidate s will A.ppointed A.rea attend pilot schooL They are Booke&·Supply William R. Caldwell, John A. Economy Planner Russell, and Roy G. Survillas . J William J. Blackman will Gene H. Graves, director a ttend navigator school and of th~ Illinois Department of Now Buy;·" g ... J ames L. Mazander will par- Business and Economic De­ ticipaui in weather training. velopment. has apJX>inted Joe Lee s aid that since the Upchurch of Harrisburg as college ROTC program is sO' project coordinator for the long the candidates will not regional economic develop­ have to attend Hboot camp." mem program being conducted The other candidates from in Southern Illinois . SIU are Ste phen D. Ebbs, Ger- Upchurch, 31, will work with old W. Ha mple man, Lawrence counties in the eastern and W. Hanfl and, Ra lph M.Hltch- southernmost partsofthe pro­ ens, James H. Killion III, jecr area. He will be ,based USED De nnis R. Kuhle nge l. Darrell at the department's He rrin L . Logan, Roben W. Men- office. estrina, Raymond L. Reed II , An SIU graduate 10 manage­ Kenneth R. Wheat and Ray- ment, Upchlrchpreviously wa!: mond J . Dinne rville . .,assistant office manager for a . tHo Id ' Vprivate insurance adjusting M o rrI 5 0 company and a revenue officer BOO.IS for the Inte rnal Revenue $er- Grad Reception vice. A r ece ption in honor of the The project is a continuation Se ptember graduating class of a Departme nt program to . of 1967 wi ll be he ld from qualify multi-county regions 4 to 5:30 p.m. Sept. 2 at of high une mployme nt for spe­ the home of Pres ide nt Delyte cial federal funds to accelerate W. Morris. ' are a deve lopment. The reCeption is being given .S. Illinois by Mr. and Mrs. MQ.!.!..i.s....and t he faculty of SIU. "- rbondale In the e vent of r ain .the r e­ ception will be held atthe Uni ­ versity Center in Ballroom A, Band C. STU DENT RENT ALS Aportments - Domti tories Trailers

... 11 Air Conditioned • Southern., Illinois Coli GALE WILLIAMS Bo.ok & S · UPR.~Y CO. RENTALS / c/ o, Corbonda l. MobilrHome Sol •• fit . ti l.wa,- 51- .&57-44 22 SIU Ed'ucator Will Represent Colleges at Youth Conference An SIU educator will r e- King said [h e: m '.:(; li ~ will present American -coll eges be [I') fjT}P ways YfJurh drr)urd and universities at a nation- the world ca n hc.: Jr. [t,rrJugtJ wide conference on youth in personal Be(if)" tf) (JY C: T crJ m '; Hartford, Conn •• Oct. 22-24. obstacles (f) social ju:-tic'.: , John E. King. professor of ec...o nomic prrJ g n:: ~:...: . and fhl i­ higher education, will anend tical s tability. as the American Council on Education's re presentative on King came trJSJl ': th i ~" ~ prjr. g the United States National af[er ser ving a ~ pr(; s id(:nt (A Comrru,ssion for UNESCO Kansas State T"ach"" Co l ­ (United( N~ons Educational, lege of Emporia and th" (Cni ­ Scientific,( and Cultural Or- versity of ~yoming" He is ganization;), which will be " past presidenLoftht: American TV TEACHING WORKSHOP-An education work­ holding its 12th national con- Associatiq1 of CollegeS for ucation Department, Albany. From left are Lucy ference Teacher .Education. s hop entitled uClassroom TV Teaching" was McConnell of rural Harrisburg, LaVerne Jones conducted last week at SIU. It included these of Galatia, Oma Lee Pobbs of Thompsonville, students from the southeastern part of the state, Campion, and Kent Baird of rural Eldorado. The shownii, instructot Lee Campion, who directs course showed how TV can bring into the class­ the diy' on of education, New York State Ed- room resources not otherwise available. Scbo arsbips. Loa n s. Grants 1\ Guitar@"",""Amolifiers' ==_=:5Irin8s- Mikes-Accessorie s _____ Race Not Opportunity Factor

scholarships.None of the studentapplications loans for or Illinois SUlteMi. litar:~ S,ohc>l!lr - student employment offered ~i~o~n~s~f~o~r~f~in~a~n~c~ia~l~a~s~s~iS~t~a~n~c;e~, ~:::~~N~a:t~io:n:a~I~D:e:fe:n:s:eJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l through the Unive~sity require a statement of race or sub­ mission of a photograph of the applicant. All of the applications con­ sidered in thiS study ask for Phone 549-3396 U.s. citizenship. nThe Illinois State Military S810larship re­ quires Illinois citzenship and residenc;y. " Applications obtained at the Office hf Student Work and Financial Assistance demand information concerning the in­ come of applicants, as well as the income of their parents, if the applicant is a dependent. All scholarships and loan plans considered in this study are awarded on the basis of financial need. Scholarships under consid­ eration were the United StU­ dent Aid Funds loan plan, student work and financia1 as­ sistance junior college . scholarship, SIU nurs ing Stu­ dem loan, applicatioras for stu­ dent employment, SIU applica- Colored Geologic Map-offe[ed Free A new geologic map of il­ linois primed in color will be of imme nse value to SIU grad­ uate s tudents in geology for fie ld problems, says Daniel Miller, chairman of the De­ partm~nt of Geology, The map, which is available ,!,ithout charge from the llli­ nols State Geological Survey in Urbana, also is highly valu­ able to mining and oil indus­ tries, as well as to botanists and agriculturalists, he says. Production of the map r e pre"­ sents a great deal of work and is "a major contribution "to the people of Illinois. It is the first complete revision of the map in 20 years. Miller says the map is 41 by 57 . shows the di!ltribution state's bed rock geology in color, at a scale of one inch to eight miles. It also con­ tains geologic columns show­ ing the horizontal layering of the rock forma.tions, the coal veins, and other s ubs urface fe atures in cross - sections that help to explain the geology of the state. The map shows the major areas of rock fau lti~g, tM limits of glaciation, and r e­ veals on small map inserts the dis tribution of different kinds of sedIments during four an­ cient periods in the geologic past. Counties, cities, towns 602 ,E. College and railroads are shown on a township grid for reference purposes. ', .. ' D'AIt.'i! EGYPtl,," . ····Au... '~. 1961 Tower8 Confident of Winning Team F.ootba·IIPractice Goes Into Full Swing OverBreak

By Tom Wood against Northeast Missouri at 'Tlght end is a question Greg Johnson and Chip Mar­ certain .,ariances, ~will be a 1:30 p.m. Sept. 16 In McAndrew mark. Terry Cotham Is a low will compete for end as­ 6-2-t'-1. If yoJ think' Carbondale is Stadium. proven blocker, but has yet signments. Hohs, a starter There are three hard weeks desened during the break be­ to establisb himself' as a re­ last· season, suffered a broken of practice ahead for tbe Salu­ tween summer and fall quar­ Coach Dick Towers is con­ ceiver according to Towers. ' jaw in spring practice, but Is lois prior to the Initial test, ters take a little ride out to fident the Salukis can bring With Agnew definitely out expected to be ready. All. which will kick off the tough­ the new summer football camp Southern its first winning team but Johnson have varsity ex­ est schedule In SIU football of the Salukis some time. in six years. , He will have 24 of the picture, quanerback appears to be up for' grahs perience. history, and Towers expects About the time most stu­ lettermen returning from last Veterans Carl Mau<;lc: and all thoughts to turn toward year's 4-5-1 squad. between junior letterman Tim dents will tie boPRlng the train Kelly and transfer Barry Bob ·Robens and transfer Bill foothall next week and remain for the long ride borne, about Camp opens Wednesday with Stine. Kelly will also handle Pbl;Ilips have the Inside track occupied with football through­ 65 football hopefuls will be a picture - taking session and the place-kicking duties again. at J(lneilacker. Towers also out the camp. migrating to their Little Gras­ practice begins the next morn­ rated Mauck, 6_4 and 235, all There · isn't much else a Ameri'can material ~ . sy habitat for three weeks of Ing. Tbe sqlfad will eat and The running back positions fello~;I can think about back in two-a-day practices prior to sleep at Little Grassy Facil­ boastmore depth than any other The defensive backfield Is the ""eluded woods of Little the opening of the 1967 season Ities In addition to practicfhg position on the club. Roger short in e~rience. Veterans Grassy. there. Kuna, Charles Pemberton, Larry\ ~ol' / Eddie Richards, Keith Leigh, Doug Hollinger Chuck t!9ro and transfer Pat W oJllf Capdntramural Bass Fishing Tbey will get Into town about and John Quillen will all vie Morris are joined by sopho­ once a week for a movie. for starting roles. Tom Wirth mores Ed Edelman and Ed Tennu Ch.ampion.hip Towers wants the atmosphere and Hill Williams will compete Wallner as candidates athalf­ Remains/Good to be all husiness for the for the fullback slot. back and sarety. Ling Wong defeated Jim Ho­ pre-season practices. Towers expects the -Salu~ men to capture the intramural August weather that ·has had The defens~ve line will be kis to operate from the T­ tennis championship. Wong newspaper writers dusting off Tbe Salukls have already anchored by tackle transfers formation with an unbalanced won three of four sets against their superlatives --coolest, suffered an unexpected set­ Ken Doyan, 6-5 and 240 pounds line right and a split e nd. Homen 7-5, 6-8, 7'-5 and 6-1 wettest, pleasantest-- appar­ back In losing letterman Wally from George Washington, The defensive alllVlment. with to win the c~ampionship. ently also has had a salubrious Agnew, Gerry Glesel, Jim An­ Gary Wilber, 6-4 and 2118 effect on the game fish dwel­ derson and Bill Sanders from Eastern (Okla.) A &-Nl. ling in Southern Illinois lakes, tbrough grades. Towers sald and Mike McGregor, 6-1 and JOB OPP'ORTUNITJES Largemouth bass, while still 225 from Coffeyville (Kan.) Insisting that lures be offered "We had really count sition. . HALL ing a medium running plug. Junior college transfer Jim At Crah Orchard Lake, Malone, 6-0, 190, is the pre­ for ..en 11015 Wall 457 -2.169 where Pelthmann and Reid season choice to start. CUt - into the bass population Split end and flanker are with (heir. Bomber VB. worm all but nailed down by John To place YOUR ad, use this handy ORD.ER FORM contest, the jug fishermen are Ference and Tom Massey, the baving t~ir inni!)gs, catching leading Saluki receivers last . INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMP.LETlNG ORDER channel catfish up to ten season. Massey must show he -Co mplete s eclions \ - 5 u s in& ballpoin t pen. pounds on their free-floating has adequately recovered -Print in a ll C APITAL LETTERS. off rings. Reid and his plastic from a serious ankle injury " 1 DAY -In sec tion 5: worm won the contest. 70 to last season. 3 DAYS One number o r leller per s pac e 53 for Pelthrnann and tbe Bom­ 0 0 n o t u s e s eperale space for punclullti on 5 C;,YS Skip space s bel ween words ber. Although hopelessly be- New Hours Scheduled Count a n y p a rt or a line a s a lull line. bind In numbersofflsh,·Pelth- ·Mo ney c annot be rdunded if ad is c a ncelled. mann was a winner In pound'-J' For SIU Boat Dock ' Ollily Egyptian re.oen·e s the r i ghl t o rej e c t IIny age, 101 to 84. adv oerli . ing copy. Down Metropolis way and Effective Sept. I and last­ up the east side of tbe state, ing until further notice, the in the hard~d forests, boat dock at the Lake-on-the I DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFI§p ADVERTISING ORDER FORM squirrel hun*,g bas super­ Campus will be open from 1-7 Moil order fonn ",ith remittonce to Doily Egyption. Bldg. T _48. SIU ceded fishing as the favored p.m. daily. A shortage of life • spon. Judging by the almost NAME ______DATE ______constant patter of nut hulls on the change ne- tbe leaves in Toompson's ADDRESS PHONE NO. Woods, at Southern. Illinois UnlYerslty, the squirrels are 4 CHECK ENCLOSED cutting n~ts but are~ OEmployment 0 FOR T o rind yu ur C<;lo; l, find In the lush foliage. One anted . 0 Sarvi m u llip ly l o tal number u r line s time s r osl p er line hunter near Metropolis did •." i n dict

W e buy and sell usl'd furnit ure. Ph. Check thls- Married student s S60/ Rms. for men. Located 307 W. Col- 549_1 782, BA I438 mo" Grad. studs, $45/ mo., accepted lege. Reasonabh! prices. Ph. 549- FORSALE living cente r men un dergnds . $30. 2835 or 457-8680. BB I546 1966 C He n I 24cc. A- I condo 2300 Chuck's Renuls, 549-3374, 104 S. college ' gi rl to assist hand.lcapped ml. New- $540; sell-S140. Ph. Q- H 17. Marlon. BBI515 Fum. apts. M'boro. I bdnn. and student in dail), living activities. Fall Golf clubs. Brand ne w, neve r used. BAI 540 efficiency. Ph. 549-2835 or 4. qu an er. Share T. P. room. S15O.oo Still In plastic cqver. Sell for hair. Mod . furn ished apanrJ7ent 3nd mo­ BBI547 per month. Call 3-8291. 3626 . Call 7_4334. BB 1305 Traile r, 8 ), 40 , ~ood condit ion. Phone bile homes. A/condltOned. Accepted " 57_561 5. BAI551 Hvlng cente r. Apply at 409 E. Wal­ Furnished apt. Ph. 549- 2975. Res­ '67 Honda, Excellent condition. Be£( B91516 ponsible tenants only. BBI548 :,~~;~ rnee;:,u~xt~~~~n~r;. B~g~.: offer Ph. 9- 381 3. 3620 Herrin Hou se, on high hill, beauti­ trailer ct. We need help for fall full y landscaped, 3 bc-droom custom­ New mod .. furnished, alr- cond., ' 2- qt.r. Call 7- 5741. 3649 1961 Chevy. Good cond. Great gas built br'ck ranch, full fin ished base­ Rooms for boys with cooking privi­ bedroom house. Located on old Rt. saver . Best offer. Call 9-3868.3621 ment, bath 1 1/ 2, double gnagc- , leges, 204 S. Maple . Ph. 7-555". 13 opposite drive - In theatre. Julius Pan time sunlng Fall, must be extras galore. Priced reduced for BBI528 Wides. Ph. 68"-4886. BB I 552 married & planning to live in an­ 1965 Har. DaY. Sprint H.. 250 cc. quick sale. Alexander Real Estate, other town with a Vnlv. other than Ex. condo 8000 mt. Call S49- 3981. 109 S. 13th St .. Herrin. Call 942- Accepted living center for men and Shawnee House- newly decorated. C'dale, for t he next tWO yrs. 7 hrs. 3622 2334. Anytime. BAI557 women. Finest food and 3ccommoda­ Al.C for men • 805 W . Freeman. per mo. $800/ yr . Call 1-4334 Tues.­ (ions. IClO% carpeted; all air condi­ 457-2032. BB1553 Thurs. between 10-11 A.M. BC1436 42 x -B tr. Good condition. Reason­ Herrin House, near WJPF, 3 bed­ tioned; Indoor s wimming pool; ten­ able . New gas furnace. 7-5215.3623 rooms, full basement, nice cabinets, nl s - ba s ketball-volleyball COUrtS; C'dale rooms. Approved. Boys only. Upon graduation don't be left with garage, I acre . SIO,OOO. Alexander laundromat In each building; rathskel­ S7 / wk. Meals available. Ph. 7- 7342. out a Job. See Downstate Personnel German Shepard, 6 mo. Housebroken. Real Estate, 109 S. 13th St .. Herrin, lar; music practice room ; recr eat.lon BB I556 Scrdce today. Now in 2 locations. EKceUent marlclngs for show. Obed­ Can 942-2334. Anytime. BAI558 building: free bus service to campus 210 Benlng Sq. C'dale, 549-3366 and Ience training begun. AKC registered. and recreation areas. University Cit)' Unlv. approved housing for 2 girls. 112 N. Main EdwardsvUle, IIl1nols. Pure breed. Call. 549-4644. 3625 Boat, Carbondale. 16 foot Dura Craft, Res idence Halls. 602 E. College. $BO / term. Cooking prlv. Call 7_7094. 656-4744. BCI539 with 70 h.p. moter with dude traU­ 549-3396. BBI529 BB IS60 1947 Ford Coupe $75. 7-7612 after 5. er. If you are wanting a boat here Grad ... married couple or Tesponslble 3631 Is a real bu)'. $495. Phone 9-3690. Egyptian Sand s. Efficiency apart­ Murphysboro, 4 room unfu.rnlshed girl, 2 wks from Sept 4, live in BAI559 faculty home with 2 children. Re­ 1966 X-6 Suzuki 250 ce. EKcellent ments for men and women of SJU. bouse . Newly carpeted, new gas fur­ condo with new scrambler pipes. low Approved housing located (en min­ nace. & new bath room. Couple pre­ ferences required. Ph. 457-5036. BCI549 mUeage, Dalona helmet. Call 9-4713. utes from campus. Individually atr ferred. Phone 684-6951. BBI561 363' FOR RENT conditioned, private bath and modem cooking facilities, $165.00 per quar­ C'dale duplex, fum. 402 W. Oalt. The city of Carl;)(>ndal~ Is seek.ing applicants to flll th& follOWing po­ '66 Bndgestone fraU 90. Good coniil­ ter. Contact Benlng Real Estate. 201 Grad. students or married couple. , -,uiation& requ ire thai all Call 684-2451 after 5:30. BBI562 sitions: Water and/or sewerage plant tlon. Priced to sell or best offer. ~ niVer&ity East ~aln , phone 457_2134. BB I534 Call S49-6180 or 453-2878. BUI &i ntle und ... ,roduale .tud .... l. mu&t live tralnee-S5,33O to $5,640; Water Me­ Matheny. 3636 in Aocupt.cl Living Centen, a 51,ned Accepted living center for Mf n-Lln­ ter Readers-$5.33O to $5,640. Last date of application, August 29, 1967 cantTod far wh ich 111'0'&1 b. fil ec! _1ft. coin Village. $155.00 per quarter. All WANTED '65 Flat. 11000 . 4 dr. sedan. EK­ ttae OH,C_pul HaUling QHiu . modem, air conditioned, panelled ef­ at 5:00 p.m. Liberal fringe bene­ ceUent condition. $900 or best. Ph. fic iency apanments. Call Bening Real fits and retirement program. Ex­ 1-2923. 3637 HouaetraDers for single males. ALC. Estate , 201 East Main, phone 457- cellent career opportunities. 0b­ Roxanne traDer coun . Also house­ 2134 or call manager at S49-1793. tain details and application form at 1956 Chev. 4 dr., auto trani .. 283 traDers and t.railer spaces for mar­ BBI535 City Manager's Office, City Hall, '1-8. Excellent condo Call 6St-3396 ried ceuples. A/ C. 457-6405 or 9- Phone S49-5302, Ext. 278 (Note: Sal­ aft. 5 p.m. 3638 3478. 3566 Transponatlon needed-Dally round aries shown are beginning and slx month steps.) BC I 550 The best In dormtory IIvlng--Room trip. Ride from C'dale to Marlon, Rooms for men. Good location, cook­ du.rtng Fall term. Sought by student Pontiac 1963. Except:lonal condition. and Board-- S320.oo per quarter. In­ Make offer. 3-2756 or 9- 3732. 3639 Ing, s upervised. 513 So. Beveridge. teacher at Marlon Jr. HI. Share all ROJ?Cr Research. Nat. kno w. Opin- cludes twenty meals per week, all 100' poll finn wants permanent pan­ Call anytime 457-7769. 3605 utUltles furnished. Oxford Hai.! for travel eKpenses. Call 9-1735 after 6 p.m. 3629 time woman interviewe r for 'C'dale Men--Aubum Hall for Women. See Desoto traUer space for rent.. One area. Must have use of car. No !~~r~,~:: ~~ ~d~~~~~ Bening Real Estate, ""201 East Main- selling involved. Write Box ' 3. c / o 401 W. College after 5. 3640 fuJI lot $20/ mo. Ph. 867-2453. 3641 451-2134 or call Manager, 549-1049. FIling cabinet, used 2 or 4 draw~ r . !n any condlton. Call 549-5826. 3630 Daily Egypdan. BCI55S 1966 Suzuki 8Oc.c. 4,700 mt. Good Married student, 10 x 45 mobUe borne. '-...:: 881536 condtdon. $185 or best offer. Ph. 2 bedroom $85. See 31 13· Town and Return of blue Samsonlte PUllman Sleep .late and get to class on time. SERVICES OFFERED 9-1001. 3646 Country Tr. Ct. or phone 457_8665. suitcase taken from attic of 6fI9 College View Dorm. 408 W. Mill. S. Unlv. July 23-Aug. 15. Re ward. stUdents t=at the na8h you can 3642 acceJic:ed liVing center forme,n.Over­ ian TR~A 1966, Pull equip., Ex. condo No questlOn8 ~ Call 9-2856. 3643 looks tbe campus. TV lounge, Stud y Will sell. $950 457- 4735. 3647 What's I wtth WU90n Hall? It's for Lounge, comfortable living. Single ~~~~h;~;e~!:t:'S:eD~~,::: men arid It's great. Check i t out Housing wanted. Sr. girl wants apt. half price special costs you 9~/mo. for summer and fall terms. Located rooms $150 per quarter, Double with others or private rm. 9-5984. or 3 1/2 cents a day. CaU 457- close, at the com er of Park &: Wall. rooms $120 per quarter. Call 9_ . 3651 5741 . 3652 ~~:r~e!~I~~ju~~:Le:c;, 4589 or 7-6622. Come see us. BB1537 ph)' winner on track and strip, co=mea Contact Don muc.as. 457-2169. With beImet, sprockets. etc. $310. B81233 Going south? Need a ride to Dothan, LOST See Sl:eve ~r 506 E. College Ivy Hall 708 W. MOl accept'ed liv­ Ala. or Atlan~a Inte r . Airport. Will ' 19. 3653 Efficiency apl:s. and rooms for male ing center for men. Closest to clas­ help drive and s hare expense. Want Lost: Tiger, a large brown shepherd­ single undergrade. UnlversJty ap­ ses. Single and double rooms. All to leave between 2- 7 Sept... COntact collie. Female, white teet. Last seen 1964 All.ate Vespa, 125cc. Top con­ proved. Low rate, near VTI on bus the comforts of home plus more. . Rex Bivens by call1ng 9_7044 aft. 7 •. follOwing student on Pari:: St.. Hill • dition with extras. Call 9-4100. 3654 stop. Can e rville Motel 985-2811. Cooking facilities. Call 9-4589 or 1_ 3656 Reward. Ph. 9-6040 after 5:00 p.m. • B81442 662~. BBt538 1965 Shaw-Wynn mobUe home, 57 Small apt., or room with cooking r' """ x 12. 'carpeted, air condlUoned, in- .# Girls. dormitory. 400 S. Graham: Carbondale modem rooms for men pdvUeges or apt. in return for work. Blacle male h-abrador Retriever. VI­ cludes washer and dryer, K10 Pleas­ Cooklng privUeges. Quarter contract or_women. Approved for undergrad­ Call collect 613-7438 or write BID : inlty, highway 51 and Cedar Creek ant HUI Tr. Ct.. Call 9-3021 for $110 per quarter. Phone 7-7263. uates. Call 457-4401 or 457-8632. P ula, 9ro KnoxvUle Ave., Peoria. Rd. Reward. Ph. 549-~6St evenings. appointme~1t . • 3655 BBI494 BB I545 m. BFl464, BGl554 August U, 1967 SIU Negro Athletes Gain Money, Fame, Prestige

By Tom Wood has be come an effective ex­ in the neighborhood of$30,OOO minor league ball, With hopes Most of these athletes had ample of imergratlon. for .the one- year pact. of br.eaking into tbe big-time. mod.est back.grounds,~ut we re SIU has/played a part inone The list of SIU Negro ath­ A big factor in Frazier's C barlie Vaugban" wbo holds .given an opponup.ity and work­ of the fastest growing pheno­ letes who have made good in being drafted first by the several 5J!luki bardcourt re­ ed hard to utilize it to me best menaof the century -athletics, me professional ranks, thanks Knicks was Southern's ap­ cords, bas played with the of their ability. ooth professional and ama­ to exposure at Southern, is as pearance and subsequent v1~­ St. Louis Hawks and Detroit teur. long as both of Clarence tory in the National Invitation Pistons of the National Bas­ Most universities and col­ Smith's arms. Tournament in New York this ketball AssOciation and re­ -In the Majors leges have been major con­ Probably the most success­ season. He said he will .come cently moved over to the new tributors to the boom in in­ ful are Sam Silas and Walt back to finish his degree work American Basketball Associ- National League tercollegiate.athletics and the Frazier. next summ~r . ation. " resultant expansiori' of profes­ Silas was a football stand­ W L Pel. G B Frazier found it a bit hard More ...... r ecent Saluki faot- St . Louis .. .626 sional sports. out at Carbondale before sign­ to believe he had achieved "balle'fs w)1o played in the pros Clnclniu l "67 .5-40 10 1/ 2 l ChIcago 68 60 .531 11 1/ 2 This cataclysmic growth ing as a free agent with the such notoriety so 800 n after are Jim Battle, a guard with " San Franc isco .. .520 13 has produced big money, big Cardinals. Silas has acbieved deciding, as an Atlanta school- the Minnesota VikiIlgs, and Atlanta 6' "58 .517 13 1/ 2 beadaches and big opportun­ stardom in the'NationaI Foot­ boy, that he wanted to be a Carver Shannon, a halfback Phll a d e~ 6' .512 I. P itubu 60 "6. .486 171/ 2 ities. Probably the most im­ ball League, making theall­ professional basketball play- at Lo s~ Ange le» . Los Ang es 55 6 • •4 55 'I portant of the three Is oppor­ pro team in 1965. He has ac>­ er. While th s o-called minor Houston 73 .-4i 6 , Ne",,' Yo rk .398 . tunities, because that's what quired some real estate in sports ti ~e not produced any •"• " " money's all about. Carbondale and calls this town Other SIU Negro athle tes recent professionals (there is Ame r ican .League who are currently e njoying little opponunity for profes­ Yo' L Pet. GB The opportunity to achieve his home in the off season. Chicago ·68 . 53 .562 a college degree or obtain a One of Silas' biggest de­ Similar success are former sionalism in most), ther have Boston 69 Sol .561 sires is to settle down here Saluki fo otball stars, Hous- been some notable Negro per­ Mlnneaou 67 54 .554 I lucrative living has bee n ope n­ Detroit 68 55 .553 I ed to many athletes, who could and become a succe ssful bus­ ton Antwine, now a tackle former s , who have gained-n3- California 63 61 .SOB 6 1/ 2 not have r eached such heights inessman after he retires. With the Buffalo Bills, and tional r ecognition. Washington 59 65 . .f76 10 1/ 2 Clevel and 59 66 .472 II had they not been able to cap­ P"razier recently algned a Ames Bullocks, a back at Most prominent of thes e Baltimor e 56 68 . !l 52 13 1/ 2 Pittsburgh. are Oscar Moore, me forme= Ne w York 54 69 .01 39 15 italize on their athletic dex­ contract with me New York Kansas Cit y terity. Knickerbockers of the Na­ Boyd O'Neal and George Olympian and current Saluld 53 71 . 427 16 1/ 2 Athletics led the way in tional Basketball As sociation. McNeil are former baske.!i track star, and Jim Dupree, Wednesday's games nol included. breaking the color barrier and His bonus was believed to be ball players. who are pia yin" \ anOther Olympian. Exp~ong Building Plan

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP) Hecker has been Installing a Obe could be traded before The defense was the worst -- Is maldng no new passing game and Is con- Idhg. In the league In 1966, sur- predictions about the second centratlng on offense. Angelo Cola, passed oniy by tbe New York year of the Atlanta Palcons' The Palcons' running at- and Billy Maring figure to be Giants In giving up points. building program but hefig- tack wasn't bad last year with Johnson's chief targets al- Jim Nonon, picked up from Apples ures the club will be In "the Junior Coffe y and Ernie though much depends on the San" Pranclsco In a trade, Watermelon. midst - of the race In three Wheelwright doing the big job. experiment with Moore. - should help tbe front line at Tomatoe. or four years. The addition of Tom -Moore, Jimmy Jordan, a 6-1.200- one endpositlon,speilingelth- uWe caught three teams- former Green Bay and Los pound rookie from Florida er or 36- ~:O~b o r eztrac i New York, St. Louis and MIn- Angeles Ram back, and the has been used as a receiver year- old Sam Williams. Sweet Apple Cider nesota-without their quaner- experiment with Ron Smith but he also is a runner. Bill Chuck Sieminski and l

3 . LONG T~M CREDIT TO QUALIFIED SOUTHERN ILLINOlS UNlVERSI1Y w. w.. co .... Th.:.. Credit S11JDENTS ", " _ no payments for 90 Canl., days! *Town & Country Charge *$to Clair Motional Bonk *Illinois a-kchargo Vic Koenig Chevr;o/et -c-m.1 ." ' "CWqe-lt Canl

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