Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

January 1968 Daily Egyptian 1968

1-31-1968 The aiD ly Egyptian, January 31, 1968 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_January1968 Volume 49, Issue 79

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, January 31, 1968." (Jan 1968).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1968 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in January 1968 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Heavy TU' rn~ut Asked' F)~ ' I- For Athletics. Voting .

. Three members of the SIU Board IOf emphasized that if lhe s tudent body takes Trustees and "the student body president a position on whether it would be willing have urged students to [Urn out Thursday to pay additional activity fees, the Board in large numbers to vOte in the referendum would be aided in thaI specific matter of on athletics. - EGYPTIAN the whole question. ' All agreed that 3 . large turnout would Ray Lenzi, student body president, e n­ give the Board a funher indication of stu­ couraged aU student s [Q cast ballots. ItStu~ \ dent feeU(lg on the controversial Question dent opinion could be the critical factor" Corbondale, Illinois of whether to escalate the SIU intercol­ in making the decision on athletics, Lenzi \. legiate athletics program. said. ' Students will be asked whether they favor Volume 49 Wedne.doy, January 31. 1968 Humber 79 Kenneth L. Davis. Board chairman from expansion of athletics, no expansion, or a Harrisburg, said a large wrnout would " r e_ decrease in e mPhaSiS{ athletics. lieve. pressure on the Board" and aid Board They will a lso-de are What amount of me mbers in making a decision. increase in actiVity e-es rheyl would be Dr. Manin Van Br own of Carbondale willing to bear to support the athletics u.s. Recaptures and Lindell C . Sturgis of Metropolis also program: none, $3.50, or more than $3.50. urged students to vote. Five St ud ~ nt r S~ nare pcs,itions will also ~'The Board would like [Q know the feel­ be filled. Polhng places will be announced ings of the students:' Sturgis said. He in Thurs day' s Egyptian. Saigon'. Embassy.

SAIGON (AP)- A VietCong joint chiefs of staff, Vietnam­ suicide squad seized and held ese navy headquarter:s, three parts of the U.S. E mbassy U.S. officers' billets, the PhU­ for six hours 'Wednesday be­ ippine E mbassy a nd the vi­ fore being wiped out by Ameri­ cinity of Tan S9Jl· Nh u{ Air can troops counterattacking base , ../ on fhe ground and from heli­ The embassy and its copters landing on the rQOf grounds were declar ed se­ of the building. . cured at 9:05 a.m. All the Viet Cong Com­ F ighting that had ripped -mandos were killed in the through the area near the heart embassy battle, climaxing a of the city for hdurs died series of guer rilla assaults out, -,:fUt other pockets of Viet and shellings in Saigon that Cong were holding out in other brought limited warfare deep areas. into the South Vietnamese cap­ ital. (Continued on Poge 8) Fir s t reports told of 17 Communist bodies counted on the em bassy grounds. Pictures Sough t At least four U.S. military ,policemen and several Ma­ rines also were reported By News Service killed. Simulta neous ly wit h the strikes against Saigon, the The University News Ser­ Reds ror the second straight vices has arranged for stu­ day exploded guer rilla dents with 5.0 g r ade averages during the fall quarter to have assaulls on cities up and down photographs mad e for [he country in an unprece­ hometown newspaper distri­ denred offe nsive against urban bution. They will be taken centers. on ,the second floor of Uni­ Aside from a propaganda ~ versity _ • show, the Red attacks appear­ A representative, for News H ELPFTL Mexican couple. c)'c lis t William J _ ~ l eacham as h e awaits· LJu' VISITORS - ,4. ed aimed at diverting allied Services will be on hand from Siva Lati. left. a nd a man who id entifi ed HealUt Sen'ice ambul a ncr, Hi s injuries \\'err Strenb'lh from the northern h imsetr only as Dic h e hi. com ro rt SIU student minor. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p,m . daily provinces where a major bat­ though Tuesday to take pic­ t le seemed imminent. Injuries Minor tures and to obtain information Among key buildings at­ peninent to a story. tacked in Saigon we r e Inde­ Lette r s have.been mailed to pendence P a la ce, w he re students who lnade an A av­ PreSident Nguyen Van Thieu e rage during the past quan e r Visitors Aid SIU Cyclist has offices. notifying them _ of the pI ans. Also s helled or attacked Dichehi, a young man who Lau, said that William J . Health Se r vice ambulance ar- with small-arms fire were identified htmself as a writer Meacham, L8 , of GLe n E LL yn, rived. - the building of the Vietnamese Gus Bode from the jungles of Mexico, was lying in the intersection A health service official said went to the aid of an SIU when they walked by and no Meacham was treated for student who had just bee n in one was offering assistance . minor abrasions a nd was in Egyptian to Prin t a mororcv:le and car col­ He and Miss Lati placed satisfactory condition. He lision Tuesday at the inter­ a package under Meacham's was to be released after treat­ section of Monroe and Uni­ head and covered him Wi th ment. Candidates' Views versity Avenue . Dichehi's sarape to keep him Carbondale police said that All candidates for the five Dichehi, and his friend. Siva warm umil the U ni v"er si t y a car driven by Mr s . Fern Student Senate seats being Cr abtree, Anna, was going contested in Thursday' s elec­ west on Monroe Street and tion aN invited to s ubmit City Povert·y Program Meacham was heading south written statements to the Daily on UniversHy Avenue when the Egyptian. accidem occurred at 3: 1° p.m. Meets Stiff Opposition Mrs. Crabtree w ~s issued The state ments should not a ticket for failing to yield exceed 75 wo r ds and should By George M. Killenberg perhaps federal and s tate funds the right-of-way, police said. b,e subl)"l itte9 to the newsroom could be used to pay for pan Gus says he's found the best Carbondale'S anti - poveny 'Pbe young Mexican couple by 3 p.m. today. State ments of the costs of tl}e program said they we r e fro m the received before the deadline way yet of cons uming l arge program, which was greeted rather th an have the c ity sup­ numbers of eggs; it' s called with praise and approval when jungles of Guerrero, a Mex­ will appear In the Thursday pon it entirely .. publicly unve il ed two weeks ican srace. morning Daily Egyptian. egg nog. ago, met with some stiff op­ Both- Mayor David Keene and position during last night's ' Councilman Fr ank Kirk de­ 'Not Interested' City Council meeting. fended the prqgram, arguing In a petition presented to that the existin& state and fed­ the Council, a group of 209 eral we lfare agencies cannot Rendleman Won't Seek Post citizens asked that any act ion provide the services the low , on the anti-poveny program income people of Carbondale John S. Rendleman, vice Gray has been rumor e d in the illinois Generai As­ be deferred until April J to require. president for business at­ planning [0 retire after seven sem bly. make sur e th at there ar e no . fairs, says be is not Inter- conseculive terms in the Hd uplications of allored fti'flds, Although Keene said that eated.1n running for Congress House . He will anQounce his Other political figures- re­ personnel, and services now the pr ogram s hould be imc from. the 2at repreaentative plans today. garded as possible candidates provided by various st ate and plemente d Immediately, he In- Y!8ts representative. Jo ..... " 31. 1968 _ Thr ... Charges Hied ',Police Use /-chemic.al \... To Subdue Man, 26 Louis Franks, 26, of 308 to be treated for cutS but E . Oak St •• e ntered pleas ,of gave e mployees s uch trouble guilty to three charges in that they could not tre at him. Jackson County Circuit Court F ran k s would nor answer Tuesday and was fined $30 when the ~lice asked him plus $5 COSt. about the cuts and began ube_ He was charged With dis­ ing loud and abusive" so the orde rly conduct, drunkenness officers placed him unde r ar­ and resis ting a r r es t after res[, police' said. Carbondale police were called The report says that Franks to Doctors Memorial Hospital shoved one officer away and Monday evening. refused to get into the patrol According to the police re­ car so the officer had to use po:rr, hospital officials said a che mical spray [Q resuain Franks came to the hospital bim. Classrooms at Southern 'Hills' HIT PAY DIRT-Phil Weigand. curator of ya!ions at the Kincaid site in MassacCoun,ty, North American archaeology for SIU's Museum. Representing the Middle Woodland hab,lta­ restores a largt' ceramic bowl unearUled by tion p eriod. the bowl was made by Indians Offered to Unity SIU graduate anthropology s tudents in exca- at least a thousand years ago, . . Grads Gain Field Experience SIU has offered three class- is completed In September. rooms at Soutbern Hills to Unity Point school!s located help tbe crowded Unlry Point sou t h..of Carbondale on U.S. Scbool take care of pupils 51. Anthropolog!-sts Hit Pay-Dirt living . at Southern Hills and The SIU Family Housing within the sru _farms area, Phase Three apartments near G,raduate anthropology stu­ and brush to make way for excavations) The mare rials according to John S. Rendle- Carbondale reservOir are ,.de nts he r e hit pay dire in the ir cultivation. collected last fall are being m an, -vice president for bus- about one third completed. Iness affairs. ' . firs t tas te of dig gin g- for­ Weigand thought this would analyze d and compared with credit as tbey excavate d in records of the University of Presently, 52 children IIve--' lowan to Speak afford his S tu d e n t s some at Southern Hills and attend the second largest Indian cer­ practical experience' to sup­ Chicago excavations as well emonial m ou nd s ite in 111 - as with the Museum's own Unity Point. Tbls figure Is . ' L 'Pleme- nt c I ass Ie c ( u r e ~. expected to rise to about 100 inois-rhe Kincaid pyramids The class made a ha If­ data from other Middle Wood­ OnGraln Sorgnum 'near, Metropllis. land s ites. within six months after the dozen week-end expeditions 304-unlt apanment comple x An Iowa State Unive rsity Di stu,rbed because anchro­ to the site last fall, uncove r ­ professor will be the guest pology srude nts srudylng field "One of the problems con :;: ~ ing a rich zone of Indian hab­ nected wirh rhe Middle Woo(l­ speaker at the Wednesday bot­ archaeology methods had little itation, cooking pits, hearths Wells to Lecture land archaeology has beer(pin­ any lecture in the Morris opportunity fo r field exper­ and r efuse. These yie lded iX>inttng [he dares of occupa­ Library Audltooum. ience, Phil Weigand, teache r not only mate rial of the Mis­ tion and of migration to vari­ On Saudia Arabia Vernon H. Reich of the ag­ of [he course and curator of SiS Sippi an culrure (b e tween ous locales, " Wie gand said. ronomy ... departme nt at Iowa North Ame rican Archaeology 1000 and 1600 A.D.l but also a "The EconomiC, Political State will speaIi on "Toe Rel­ fo r the SIU Mu seum, and Prof. " We found a large quantity s tratum of Middle Woodland of carbon material in [he [ras h and Soc I a I Life In Saudla arlve Stability of Popularlon Jo n Muller obtained a grant habitation dating back between and cooking pits and in [he Arabia·' wUI be the topic of Genetically Buffered vs. In­ fro m (he Graduare School to rhe time of Christ to about remnants of [he house which a lecture give n by Donald dividual Buffered Populations cover rhe cosr of stude nrs ' 900 A,D. , We igand said. rr ans plnarton. daily expens­ win permit us to make car ­ Wells. associate professor of of Grain Sorghum," at 3 p.m. Fragme nts of one ho use, EconomiCS, at 7:30 p.m. Wed­ The lecture, sponsored by es, mapping s upplies and film. some excelle nr ceramics in ­ bon - daring analyses. " A s ite becamE available as a nesday at 410 Skyllne Dove. the SIU Department of Botany c luding a large we ll - designe d Carbon- dating. analyzing by We i I s recent! y r etu med and the lectures and ente r­ Brooksville , Massac County, and artistic all y de c 0 r a t e d me ans of radioactiviry tests landowne r, Jo hn Paul Douglas. from a one ye ar assignment tainment com mittee. is open bowl and fragm

Activilies

Baha'i C lub program will fea- of Illinois, at 8 p. m. in the Act i v i tie s Programming ture a program e ntitled Agriculture Seminar Room. Baal d will mee t from 9 H And His Name Shall Be Department of Chemistry will to 10 p.m. in Room E of One" at 8 p.m. tonight at feature an inorganic sem- the University Center. M 0 r r i s Library Audi- inar featuring Otto Zeck SO,uthern P layers will , show tori urn. at 4 p.m. in Parkinson 204. morion picrures of coming SIU will playa basketbatl game Little Egypt Student Gr otto attractions from 8 a.m. 1O against Southwest Miss9uri will meet at 9 p.m. in Room 5 p.m. in Area H of the State at 8 p.m. in the Ar ena. \ C of th ~ University Center. University Center. The Freshmen game begins ' ... I' F 1 '1 Campus Folk Ans meeting at 6 p.m. Mccoun. ng ra ern. y will be held at 9 p.m. in Student Senate will meet at of the University 7:30 p.m. in Ballroom A Hofds Discussion Group ~~~;::r.D of the Univer sity Center. T hree members of Beta AI- Kappa Alpha Psi will hold The L~ a r n i n g Resources pha Psi, national professional ~ ticket sales from 8 a.m. Jiervifes wlll '"present the accounting fraternity. p re- to 5 p.m. in Ar ea H of Audulion Progra,m from 7 sented the discussion ropic (he Univer sity Center. p.m. ~o II l1.m. In FUrr "Common Body of Knowlege Weight lifting facilities for AuditOrium. for Certified Publlc Account- all male students will be '1 C utco meeting will be held ants~" Jan. lB. available from 2 to 19 p.m. from 5 to 11 p.m. in the P an icipating in the dis- in Univer sity School, Room Mississippi Room of the cussion were Dave Gesell of 17. University Center. Bullpit, lll.. Tom Hill of El- The Uni versity School Gym College of Education student gin and Bruce Aiello of Oak-' will be open for recreation teachers. will hold registra­ l awn. from 4 to 6:30 p.m. tion at 4 p.m. in the Gal­ lery Lounge. A meeting will be he ld from 4:30 to " p.m. in Ballroom A, with din(ler being served at 6 p.m. In Ballroom A of the Univer­ sHy Center ~ The Natural Gas Pipeline Co. luncheon will be held at 12 noon I n the take Room of the University Center. The Beth Jacob Sisterhood Normandy Amphibious Attack luncheon will be he ld at 12:30 p.m. in the Sa ngamon Room of the Univer sityCen­ PRESENTS: Shown on WSIU~TV Today ter. Rehabilitation Institute will The 20th Century presents Other programs: sponsor a Colloquium on D- Day Attack. the greatest "Behavior Therapy and/or l amphibious assault in world 4: 30 p.m . Relationship Therapy" by RlH'RN history. at 9:30 p.m~ today What's New: A displ ay of C :H. Patterson Univer sity OF TiII ... on WSIU-:rV, Chann.e l B. r ockets used by high school s[Ud ems I n Junior Rocketry. Page Announces LONG Forum Features 6:30 p.m. N.E.T. Journal: Student de­ Advisory Positions -WAY Important People bate on whether those who Ray Page, State Super­ oppose the U.S. policy in intendent of Public Instruc­ On WSIU Radio Vietnam should serve if tion, has announced the ap­ Bill "Greenwood will host drafted. pointment of 41 persons to TONIGHT NER Washington Forum. a serve on the new advisory series of forums featuring 8 p.m . Co un ci I for Instructional TE Passport 8: Wanderlust, a outstanding indiViduals of our Television and Radio. • recap of a 130-mile hike Representing SIU wilt" be "OUIGHT" time at 7:30 p. m . today on across California in "Death WSIU(FM). John Kurtz, assistant direc- a-II.M. Valley March." tOr of Broadcast Services; Othe r programs: Carl Planinc. coordinator for (:::=:;~=:;';:;;;;:;'~~~:;;~;';~=~~==l 10 p.m. Educationa l Television, and ca Intenel: "The Union Man" B:IO a.m. BUren Robbins, director of FM in the AM . presents a lQok into the Br oadcasr Services. [Tade union's influence in State Se n. J ohn G. Gilbert HELD OVE R 3:10 p.m. the United States , Austral­ of Carbondale wi ll represent BY POPULAR ia, and England. the area. Concert Hall: Mus i ca l ~Ii ..;t'. DEMAND ... scores of such co mposers as Paganini. Brahms. LAST HMES TODAY PH. 457·5615 POSTIVEL Y LAST Locke, and Sibelius . . SHOW TIM~S Wo lnul & S. Woll Sireel 7 DAYS!!! 5:30 p.m . 2:00 - 4 :1S MUSic for dining. 6 :20 - 8 :3'0 7:15 p.m. Guest of ~o u{h e rn. Dinner for School THURSDAY ~TE VARSITY Officials Planned Administrators of southern Illinois and Cook County pub­ lic schools where SIU student teacher s obtain classroom training will be guests "todayl , of the SlU College of Edu­ cation. Charles Heinz, assistant di­ rector of student teaching, said Dean Elmer J. Clark of ,"'I 1J!IlIO.1Mn&. dud.alll"" du.ltlt!l po1!lIIIollilljm is IIJllfytlidloflllllf IIII1i!1Ud 1 the College of Education and Charles D. Neal, chairman 20th CENTURY; fOX Presents AII Alii ROBSO~ DA\ ID ;; ~:;D;~' If0)UClI0 f~ of the Department of Student IXIlUY811. Pl:11JIIfS lJesen~ Teaching, will speak briefly ==~ to the group. C lark will dis- -.... rAR:ITN~ DU'Kf BURK[ 'jAif sl:Oili ~ RA~l ! "~~ ': 3:~~ ;:: ~ F~~ ll cuss the theory of placing the WUlIIM student teacher in the public HAiAR D ~~·.:.. ~ . ~ ~~tu . 1. ::: " :',' ~ '': l t L "l ,1\ ·'·· · .. ·:.-:·:·,~: _ \ , ":\ lIii'i1UiIIi" schoolThere. will be a dinn) er in MATI HElM asin IlIlilllilllllllRS DAV!D IHBAR, ~' Arr,Rt':l,\o. \ H . l, ~ " ,l .. r.,,:. -' _,. ... ,. ' ~ ~-~~ • •i-.". .." -.. ,s· " " , ".' . • lI0' .\ [ , m ay influe nce unive r s iry h istor ian who will judge our e r a limitations of s pace and the appar­ hous ing r egulat ions and othe r policies to a dcgr eC' nm bene ­ will say: whaL a srr a nge er a whe r e ent timeHn ess and r el evance o f the s mall disputcs all of which are in fi Cial to the purs ui r of kn owledge . rhe 1e fl was not the left. whe r e mat erial. Letters must be signed , no way incumbent upon learning. This leads to the Qu estion o f the right was no t the r ight. whe r e prefer abl)' typed', and s hould be no To this point we m ust seriously wh ethe r educ atIon is a m atte r [he cente r wa s nOI in the middle." l onger than 2S0· words. Contributors question the label haphazardly at­ of business o r learning, for too Former right-wing iso- 'sh ould r espec t the generalll ' accep­ t ached to institutions of " learn­ ofte n the buck dis places the book. lationi s ts we r e all for Ame rica's ing," . when in fact learning is Malcolm Muggeridge , an offi Cial t ed standards oLgood taste and the continu ed ime rve ntion in Southeast rights of o thers and are urged to smOt)1e r ed and ove rridden to the r epresenting students on the Bo ard· Asia. Forme r liberal one -world­ pr e fe r ence of othe r affections . of Truste es at Edinbu r gh Uni­ er s we r e calling upon the United mak e .their points in term s of issues Many of the pre- emine nt issues ve r Sity, r ecently s ummed rh ede­ States to pull back in the world. ra th er than p er sonalities . It is the of student rights r evol ve on the m ands of conte m po r a ry s tude nts : It s hows a growing willingness resp on sibility of the Egyptian to trifling fripperies and idle pr e­ " Ho w s ad, how m acabre and funn y on m03{ persons' parr to look at sel ec t the material t o b e used . C on­ ocCtlpations of " the wo rld out it is that all they put fo rwa rd s ituatio ns With a fresh and les!== tribulors al so should i nc lude ad­ ther e ," whe r e attentions and ambi­ s hould be a de m and for pot and partial e ye . dre s s and phone number \10 ith a tions of the m ultitudes lead to s uch pills . I expected of the m an­ From the Christian l e tter so that the identil) of th e dom4...nant matte r s as feti s his m, archistic follie s, audacious in­ SCience Monitor auth or c an be ,rerified . pat riotis m and comme r Cialism. tellectual exploration, etc , etc. T oo often these values are And what do I find? The s ame " The Making of a Martyr

Ai mo st any white of voting ;ge who lived ve n ed by another piece of statecraft, .a. r es.: in So uth carolint In 1950 was painfully aware olution calling on the South Carolina Con­ of the name of J Waties Waring. For many, gressional delegation to investigate the United the name was harde r to take than General Stares Supreme Court, and nothing came of William T. Sherman's or H.L. Menden·s. the Waring bill. As a Federal Judge, J. Watles Wa ring had T.he only reason we .brlng this up now betrayed his aristocr at iC! Charleston upbring­ Is that Judge Waring died last week, In New ing by opening the South Carolina D'emOs ratic York, at the age of 87. He had retired P arty to Negroes. Besides that, J.udge and from the Federal bench in 1952, after bavlng Mrs. Waring entertained Negroes socially in delivered a landmark dissent that broke' the rheir hom e and othe rwise behaved like a legal ground. for the Supreme Court's 1954 couple of Yankee Liberals. school desegregation ruling: The 1950 Soutb Carolina Legislature was After fifteen years. In exile,· J. Watles so exercised by the Judge ' s legal rulings Warl,ng was returned to Cbarleston for burfJl, and by the war~' s' un conventional social and we were just wondering wbedierbialD...... behavior that hi was introduced to provide men attended him In de.". ~ they did III Judge and Mrs. arlng one-way tickets by life, with bricks through his ...... 'fI8m1ng any mode of travel they wo uld acc ept to any crosses on h1~ awn, and ~ the I'Mt of It - . destin arion in the world outside the State that goes Into the moking of • ~ of South CarOlina. The bill, as we recall, martyr. was given long and praye r ful co n ~ideratfon. Baleb'. Atl_tac...tJtution B.~r then {he Legislat\lre ' s ~tten [ion was. di- ..1:. ,. ~ .~ Hm . M~.J; ., '."i ~ ~ort; IlIId More, :Jt's Looki.' ~ih , 'iI~. • >. ."'" Here' P ~j!~ 5 Pollution Continues La·ke MichigCln Is "Dyin 9

By Robert Elsen tias themselves. Some 29 towns tilizers increases more nitrates Part of the funds needed for a and cities (Milwaukee , Racine, and phosphates are carried into project of this magnitude may Lake Michigan is dying from Lake Bluff and Gary are the larg­ the lake through tributaries by come from the federal govern­ pollution. It soon may follow the est) dally dump wastes directly runoff and soilwash from treated ment (up to 30 percent) and the path of total decay llke Its sis­ - into the l ake. Tentative govern­ agr icultural land. This enrichment bulk from the public. ter 'lake, Lake Erie, unless ac­ ment guldellnes dem and that by encourages growth of aquatic The only barrier left is the tion is taken to avoid this ca­ 1977, advanced treatment must r e­ plants, paI1lcularly a1g~e. people. If the publiC awakens from lamity. place their antiquated antipollution The algae "9;oon decays, causing its apathy, the lake may be re­ In 1964, -2,600 square miles of systems. nutrients to multiply and the lake's stored. If people deaf with the Lake Erie-over a quaner of the A s with industry, each city must natural dying process to ac­ problem as they have in the past, entire lake-was almost without do Its share and do it well If celerate . The plants absorb the Lake Michigan's demise is inevi­ oxygen and unable to support life the complete restoration of Lake oxygen needed by fish to survive, table. because of algae and plant growth Michigan is to be accomplislled and soon the fish, along with the On one hand the people are hesi­ fed by pollution from cities and successfully. .-- I Jake, will die. tant to support water pollution farms. For all practical purposes The antipollut ion p~gram Lm Other flagrant m iGuses are measu.res because of the pro­ the remaining three quaners is Germany highlights what one Chicago's lake shippers. For years hibitive costs, yet they want clean now considered dead. country did to attack the problem they have dumped raw wastes di- - water for drinking and r ecr eation­ The speea with which the po­ of usable water. r rectly inro the water. Private boat al use. A balance must be found. table portion of the lake decayed The Ruhr River basiil contains owners do the same. However, Lake Michigan's life hangs by points . out that expediency is nearly half of West Germany's in­ this may shonly come to a halt. . a thread. The savinp: of the lals:e needed if Lake Michigan's usable dustrial capacity. Yet the Ruhr Chicago's mayor, Richard J. Da­ is within the scope of this gener­ waters are not to follow SUit. River itself 1s only a compara­ ley, has proposed to ban s uch pro­ ation, howeve r. ~ What is needed The public' s first indication that tively narrow stream. With such, cedures in the near future. are strict controls and more co­ something was drastically wrong a small amount of water, one would Experts agree the l ake can be operation. If all inte rested bodies with Chicago's major water sup­ expect the highly competitive West saved, but it will take at least function as one, the job · can be plier C3Q1e last summer. During Germans to have turned the Ruhr 10 years and over $10 billion. compl ~t ed before it is tOO late. that time,' hundreds of thousands into a small, smelly ditch. of dying alewives (small silvery In fact, the Ruhr River is clean fish) were washed-up on to the enough to swim in and to pro­ beaches. The stench and conse­ duce fish. And with only mild quent health problems forced of­ treatment, it provides perfectly ficials to close the bea'ches to good drinking wate r. the public until favorable Winds This program was carried out and currents washed the fish away. by the Ruhr Association. Instead of These same officials declared establishing treatme nt require­ that the alewives died for some un­ ments or purification standards known biological reason. They and trying to enforce them, the would not say the lake was being Association simply fined. every polluted at a greate r rate than town and every industrial plant they had cared to admit. a s tiff levy proportional to the The fault dOes not lie with one amount of pollution they delivered offender. The perverters of our to the river. As a result the basin most valuable natural resource , has been cleaned up. The water water, are many. is used and reused, but is Is also Industrial plants along the south­ treated and r etreated. Possibly ern most tip of Lake Michigan the same method could be used have been cited as the worst of­ [0 accomplish rhe cleanup of Lake .fenders. The three largest com­ Michigan. ~ panies b I arne d for du mping The Army Corps of Engineers, pollutants into the lake are U.S. by decree, has stopped dumping Steel Corp., Inland Steel Co., and pOlluted canal dredgings into the Youf1gstown Sheet and Tube Co. lake for fear the oily s ubstances December 31, 1968, is the date will ruin the water s upplies of ·(set by a federal-state conference Chicago, Hammond, Whiting -and two years ago) to stop pollution. East Chicago. Until then the industrial wastes Knowingly or nm, the farmers such as acids and slag will continue surrounding the watershed area to clog the lake. of Lake Michigan have bee n add­ Industrialists argue they now ing pollutants for years. Their spend an adequate amount fo r water part in the destruction of the pollution. But actually they fall lake may come fro m any o r all short of the proposed mi llions of three sources: imprope r farm­ ne eded. ing practices; runoff from land The fact is. 250 industries now treated with synthetic fenilizers use Lake Michigan for an open and pesticides; o r inadequate sewer. Until · they r e move up to drainage from septic t ank in stal­ 95 perce nt of the wastes from lations. The fe nilizer s and pes­ the ir indisctiminate dumping. ad ­ ticides have caused the most de­ equate results will be impossible. trimental effect on the lake. S liI)'5ka.1. Chi eacO'5 American Next in Jine are the communi- As the use of chemic al fe r.:- And We Thought the :\Iewives We re Bad . What Kind of World? We Need Some New Ideas

By Robert M. HUL chins we need it or can use it and no ' and Impregnable. This Is wh y tarded, in whip . they learn to get Los Angeles T imes matte r how repulsive it is to our American education is what it is. along with one another and to get ~m o r a l sense. But if the production We have not needed education for ahead of one 'anothe r in a nice It seems to me [hat the gr eat­ of mate rial goods ceases to be individual success- me financial way and from which they emerge est opportunities in the history our mt:lin pr eoccupation, we can giams of the past often boasted as adjusted, but enterprising, well­ of the r ace await us all, They are perhaps gjve some attention to of their illiteracy-or for national tubbed citizens, r eady to team up ( the opportunity for e verybody to thinking about what we want and power and progress. We had tre­ Wi th their fe llow self-seekers on beco me human and the opportunity wh y. me ndous resources and a fine the American assembly line- this to make this planer a fir place for The Greek word for le isure is Constitution handed down to us by notion is a relic of an ignora·nt, e verybody to live in. the or igin of our word for school. founding fathers who, as it hap­ benighte d past that is now deader pened, were magnifice ntly edu­ than the dodo. We have to begin The great differ e nce betwee n the Leisury to the Athenians was not (' he · time spe nt staring at tele­ cated. We . have thus bee n able to the constuction of an educational indus trial system of toda y and that live on our intellectual capital. syste m devoted to the deve lop­ of the future could be that whe r eas viSion or driving aimlessly along the highway, catching glimpses of We can do so no longer • • ment of inJ-e llecr ual power. tOda y the machines dominate us , in What automation requires, what And we must commit ourselves the furure we could dominate them the countryside between the bill­ the international situation de­ to the idea of continuing educa­ for our huma n purposes. We live boards. Leisure meant the effort of the free man to develop his mands, what the new world and the tion throughout our lives. Edu­ now like the Turks of old, who new society call for is an enor­ catio n is the continuous develop­ were ruled by their slaves: highest human powers and to make his city free and just. mous increase in the inte llectual ment of our highest powers. In The automobile deter ~i n es the power of the nation. This also i.s the United States we have the shape of our society. The as­ We have a new society and a the answer to [he question of what r esources, we shall have the! sembly line determines the te mpo new world. What we need are some we are going to do with ourselves. le isure and we should be able. to of our lives . Military technology new ideas. ' The notion that education is a muster the intelligence to buittf compels us to manufacture what­ We have never had to think be­ kind of housing project in which a civilization as brilliant as the ever can be · mad e; ~ wh ether ot not · fore . ·We · 'Were powerful,· isolatt~ d }'oung peop~e are detained, or re- . G~~ek 's and far more I"S[in'g. O.+.ILY ·I;GYPTI 4 H J.nu. ')"31 , .l ~68 Nagel Named Associate Oedn On-Campus- ~ Job Interviews The following are on- campus job in'ter­ NILES TOW NS HI P COMMUNITY HIGH By SlU Board of Trustees views scheduled 31 University Placement )GHOOLS, Skokie, 111. ' w itli;m E . Nagel, assistant A nalive or Champaign, Ill., SCHOOL DISTRICT OF WEJ3STER GROVES, Services. For appointments and additional dean of SIU' s Divis ionof Tech- Nagel r eceived his bache lor's informatiOn imerested students rn3 Y phone Webster Groves. Mo. nical and Ad ult Education, has degree in industr ial education 453- 2391 -or srop by the P lacement Office CHICAGO CITY SCHOOLS, C hicago. been na med associate dean of from the Univer sity of Illi­ located at 5 1 J South G raham, Colle~eJ)quare . PROVISO TOWNSHIP HIGH SC HOOL, May­ wood, Ill.: Refer to February 6, 1968 date. the division by the Uni versity nois, master s from the Uni­ Building 8 ., Board of Trustees. ver sit y of Wichita, a nd is CH ICAGO TRIBUNE, Chicago: News r e - Nagel is in charge of fed- curre ntly working on his doc­ porters and advertising sales. ALEXANDER GRANT & COMPANY (CPA'S), er a lly-f inanced training pro- torate a[ SIU. February .5 Bloom ingtOn, Ill.: Accountants. gr a m s conducted by the Uni- A H Ith S . versity under rhe Manpower F .S. SER VICES, INCORPORATED, B!qom­ t ea erVlCe LESTER WI TTE 8, COMPANY,Chicago: Ac­ ington, Ill.: Farm s upply sales rr ain'e.,es. Development and Tra ining Act T.he Health Service r e poned countants. ALTON BOX BOARD COMPANY, Alton, Ill. at East St. Louis and at a the fo llowing admissions and SHELL COMPANIES, Houston, Texas: Chem­ Sales, production, administr ative, e n-_ Manpower Training Center in dis missals: , is[5. gineering, accounting a nd technical. the Ordill area of the Crab Ad m issions: Jan, 26, Bren­ ABC UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, Artesia, HYSTER COMPANY, Oak Br ook, 111 .: Ma nu­ O r c h ard National Wildlife da Lee, Neely "H all; Sue Gold ­ Calif. Check funhe r with Placeme nt facturing, mar retins, finance, a nd e ngi- Refuge near Marion. berg, 509 S. Wall 5,,; Jan. 27, Services. He joined the SIU facul7e in Frank Kowal, Rt. 2 Carbon- ARMOUR AGRICULTUR .~ L CHEMICAL M~~~r~~~6-- COMPAN~ '6t, Louis, Mo. : 196t as a n associate pro es- dale; Joseph E )more, 71 S. COMPANY: Agricultural che mical sales Research, man4!a.cturing. accounting and sor at the Vocational- Tech- Poplar; Jan. 28 , Dar l e n e trainees. s ales. nical Institute. Hicks, 405 E, College. HIGHLAND COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, High­ U.S. AIR IjORCE-AUDITOR GENERA L, Scott Dismissals: Jan. 27, Lo­ land , Illinois: High school math, E n­ AFB, Ill.: Internal auditors . Therapy Lecture lita Price, Woody Hall, who glish, physical education (men an~ w~m­ AETNA LIFE & CASUALITY Il:-ISURANC E was trans ferred to Doctors . en), junior high school math, E nglis h, COMPANY, St. Louis, Mo.: Sales manage ­ Slated Wed nesday Hospital; E dwa r d Ripmaster, primary and intermediate (eachers. memo 504 Hayes; Jean Faust, 400 COMMUNITY CONSOLIDATES SCHOOL THE MAYTAG C0tvlPANY, Newton, Iowa: C. H.. Patterson, professor W. Sycamo r e; Robert Frank­ DISTRICT 2 1, Whee ling, !1l. Sales, service, marketing and accounting. of educational psychology and hauser, 4165, University; and THE BENDIX CORPORATION, Kansas C ity, coordinator of the Rehabilita­ Brenda Lee , Neely Hall; J an. February 6 Mo.: Engineering. tion Counselor Training Pro­ 28, Darle ne Hicks. 405 E . EMPLOYERS INSURANCE OF WAUSAU, gram at the University of n­ COllege" ~ w~wa s trans ferred SHELL COMPANIES, Ho useon, Texas: Chem­ River Forest, 111.: C laims .aHjusting. linois, will speak at sru Wed­ to H o ld e~os pit al. ists. auditing, underwriting, safety, group r ep­ nesday evening un d e r the Re serve Room to Open CITY OF GARY SCHOOLS, Gary, Indiana: resentatives, sales corresponde nt, and sponso,rshlp of the SIU Reha- All areas of elementary and secondary field auditor. school. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, St. Louis, Mo.: bll~t:::~s~~st:~tt':;e a~thor of At Noo n o n Sundays HAyWARD UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, Stude nts interested in MAster's in Busi­ numerous books and 'articles The Reserve Room of Mor­ Hayward, Calif. ness Administration and Doctor ate in on the' subject of counselLng ris Ubrary will open at noon, LAKE PARK HIGH SCHOOL, Roselle , Ill­ Business Administration. and r ehabilitation. The topiC-Gn Sundays s tarting this Sun­ inois: of the talk will be uBehavior day. This change was all­ WILLME TTE P UBLIC SCHOOLS, Willmette, February 8 Therapy and/or Relationship nounced Monday by Robert Dlinois: All e le me ntary, junior high The rapy. Keel of the circulation ser- science , mather, English/social studies, C HEMICAL ABSTRACTS SERVICE, Co- The t alk, at 8 p.m. in the vice. The move is in answer typing, art, music, social worke r, phy,s ­ lumbus , Ohio: Editors for chemical in­ Seminar Room of the Agri- to a Stude nt Government re- ieal educatio n (men & wo men) a nd speCial formation services, and computer pro- " c ulture Building, quest. educatio n. grammers. ~------~=-----~ PROVISO TOWNSH IP HI G H SCHOOL, May­ U.S. GEOLOGICALSURVEY, C hampaign,IH.: St t T wood. Ill: C heck further with Placement E ngi neers, hydro logists, c he mists, geolo - ar S omorrow- Services. gists, and mathematic ians. COloLEGE LI fE INSURANCE COMPANY OF ARTHUR AN DERS EN &,COMPANY (CPA's), Thursday, Feb. 1 AMERICA, C hampaign. Ill: Sales a nd sales St. Louis, Mo.: Accountants. managem ent. MONSANTO COMPANY, St. louis, Mo.: Re­ COUNTRY COMPANIES, Mt. Vernon, Ill: fer to February 7, 1968 date. NA TIONAL BANK OF DETROIT, Detroit, P URDUE UNIVERSITY, Larayette , Ind.: Fi­ MiCh.: Comptrollership trainees, loan nancial m a nageme nt. accounting, auditi ng, ~4 analyst rrainees, Investm ent analysts. budgeting. data proceSSing, payroll, fringe branch management trainees. sysrem s ­ benefits, personnel and purchasing, con­ com p:.ner analyst, and trUSt aids. tract administration, systems . general Winter Sportswear GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, Schen­ business

I I \ ) ...

"Want a compahy that lets you follow through on your own ideas? See IBM :FeJJlouary 1st or 2nd!' " I was determined not to take a job where I'd be compartmentalized. That's one reason I chose IBM ," says George LeAl er. (George,. who has his B.S. in Engineering, it; -a Sys tems Engineering Manager in Marketing.) The job itself " You-start by studying a customer's business even before he orders equipment. Then it '::, up to you to come up with a system that solves the customer 's problems. You stay with it until it's insta ll ed and fully operational. You guide the customer every step of the way. So fo ll owing through on your own ideas is part of your job." 5,000 more managers " Another thing I like about working here i.the chance for advancement. For example, IBM has over 5,000 morc managers today than they had four years ago. And they need morc every day." We'd like to tell you more about the iBM story. We'll be interviewing on campus fO F'careers in Ma rketing, Computer Applications, Programming, Research and Development, Manufacturing, and Field Engineering. Sign up fo,an interview at your placement o ffi ce, even if you're headed for graduate school or milita ry service. And if you can't make a campus interview, send an . outline o f your interests and educational backgr(u'nd to Mr. C. J. Reiger, IBM Corporatio n. 100 South . Wacker Dri"", Chicago, Illinoi s 60606. lirn~ We'rt.: an equa l opportunity ~, employer.

( .

-,-, ; ~: -;-" : ,~/,,, ~) (LOOKING FOR SOh METHING?) .,:"~._~~rtL.;\)/F;:·-;-;J';-1 c heck t e ~" " - w=::~. '7 ' ~%d%~) "Daily Egyptian If£, 1 . -~ C I ass; f; e d.: Ads PageS DAll. Y EGYPTIAN Viet Cong ~apture; Then L~s ' ~ Embo} sy I the compound at daybreak but Abou( a dozen clattering By ...... 8 :55 a.m. ,rhe U.SJorces The e m bassy building was (Continued fr om PClge 1) were drive n off in the ir firs t he licopters s wooped in over had secured the ground of the badly s hot up a nd the Gr eat i 3nempr. A c ompany of the the rooftops of downtown embassy and troop s we r e Seal of the Unite d States was The Viet Cong embassy at­ U.S. 10151 Airborne Divi s ion Saigon to unload the lOI St working theiT way through the di s lodge d' from the wall above tacke r s entered the grounds then 1t' 3 S r us hed in. Airborne troops on the r oof building to f! us h our the re ­ the e mrance by bulle ts . of (he supposedly artackproof of the gleaming, white, e ight­ maining Vie t Congo AI las t re port fighting was ne w building by blowing a hole As the ~e farces inched f or ­ stor y building that was opened Associated Press phorogra­ s till goi ng o n ne ar Tan Son in a wall about 3 a. m. ward in bloody fighting. rhe only las t November {Q re place pher Dang Van PhuDe, who gOt Nhut airport in '[he s uburbs About twO companies of U .S. fietlcoprer a SR3 uit began about o ne wre c ke d by a pr~v i o u s in ~ id e the building, r epon e d of rhe City, with the. act ion milita ry police t r ie d to take 8:35 a.m, gue rrilI a anac k. bodies we r e strewn around (he centered around the western room s . perime te r , military officers Pueblo Cris is " He' said the Viet Cong ap­ s aid. parently poured into the com­ From Ban Me Thuo!. a pro~ - pound and on inro the building vincial capital in the ce ntral Proper Treatme'nt for Crew aft e r firing a r ocket that highlands a b o u t 160 mile s opened the hole ~n the outer northe as t of Saigon, Ass oci­ w .a ll. ated Pr e s s correspondem U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Le wi s M. Simo ns reponed the Reported by Whil-e {tIo-t!se Bunker was s afe l y sped aW j y Viet Cong anacked the re early fr om hi s r e sidence unde r We dnes day with riOt gas a nd WASHINGTON (AP) -T h e gre at hopes that diplomatic de nt' s handling of th e he avy security guard early mortar fire a nd fo11owed wi th White ' House, r eporting the procedures" will senle ~e situation. We dne sday when rhe Viet Cong a ground probe. USS Pueblo crew is b e i n g crisis brought about by Nonh HW e 've really gone com­ gue rrillas at acked and sei zed Simons said the Vie t Cong tJ:e'3ted properly, laid heavy Kore a' s se izure of the s hip pletel y mad if tbis r esults the embassy_ . r e ached rhe per im e t ~ r of a st r ess Tuesday on diplomatic and its 83-man crew. in a war," Fulbright said. Bunke r's re Sidence is about South Ve itnamese army he ad ­ e fforts to free the men. Fulbright, one of J ohnson' s He atte nded a White House five bloc ks from the embassy. quarters co mpound but did not Sen J. IV. Fu)bright. D- Ark .• sever est foreign policy break.!ast meeting with othe r U. S. offi c ials would s ay only pene trare it. He s aid the s aid Pre s ide nt J ohnson "has c ritics, e ndorsed the PreSi- congressional Democrats and that the 74-year- old Bunker co mpound a nd a U.S .. military came away saying he got the was safe. They r efu sed any a ssis tance c o til m an d c om~ impression that Johnson is so clue as [Q where he was takern. pound r eceive d some tear gas hopeful of avoiding military a lo ng with pe mortar fire. Chicago Approves Gun Laws actions that there w.as no talk. s im0o/ s aid a fire fight Of setting a deadline fo r dip- Queen Stripped broke out on o ne s ide of the CHICAGO (AP)- The C hi­ The Q[her ne w ordinance 10m atic success. U.S. co m pound but, as far as ~cago City Council approved extends the ,Present ban o n Fulbright talked with news­ was known, the r e we r e no (wo gun co ncro] ordinances carr ying concealed handguns me n after White House press Of New Title American ca s ualties . Tuesqay after a m e nd ing one [Q include r estric tions on secr e tary Geo rge Christian to make it conform to a ne w carrying rifles a nd shOlguns . said the government has re-HALLANDALE. Fla. (AP)­ U.S. Supreme Coun ruling. Even if not concealed, rifle s c e ived r eports t hat Cmdr. J o Ann Dare, a stripper at a The a me ndmem dre w fire and shotguns may nOt be car­ L loyd M . Bucher and his m e n Fan Laude rdale night club, fr o m three alde rme n. r ied in operable co ndition. a r e being properly treated Tuesday was stripped of he r Th e ordinance r equires • The pe naJry for vio latio ns I f and the wounded a r e being title: Queen of the Policemen' s owners of firearms [Q r egi s ­ would be a mandatory $500 give n medical car e." Ball. ter the m With Ihe city co l­ fine . Ch i e f George Emme ric k lector within 60 da ys . It was T he vote adopting both or­ Fou r m e mb e r s of . the said the Hallandale Police Be­ ame nded from the form orig­ dinances wa s -1 3-3. Pue blo' s c r ew wer e r e pone d tl'evole nt Association decided inally proposed b y Ma yor wou nded , one critically, w~n to c hoose another queen when The di ssC'nt e r s we r e Alde r­ N o r t h Korean patrol b~ts m embers learned the bare Ric hard J. Daley ro eXt' mpt me n A . A . Rayne r , Willia m regis tratiun of sawed-off s hot seized the vesse] J an. 22 ..and facts about Miss Dare , who C 0 u s in s J r. a nd Edwa rd guns', m achI ne- guns a nd othe r for ced it into Wonsan ha rbor. was sent to them by a pro- firearms banned by e Xi s ting Sche ll. How th·e men we r e hun is ~fe~s:s~i:on;a~l~m;O~d;el~a:ge:n:c~y;.::::;;::::;;;::::;:~;::;::~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~ law. RaynEr, a Negr o , told the not clear , but the r e has bee n r T he U.S. Suprt'm e Coun cound l he ha d r eason to be ­ s pec u] at ion th e ), may have ruled Monday that r t'quiri ng a lie ve "[he r t" is a grand con­ bE-en injured wh e n Buc he r set person 10 r egister 3n 1l1 0g31 spiracy to comrol o r com ain o ff f'xp)osive device s to de­ wea pon wuuld vlo)alL' .:on­ the blac k communi t\ of this $[roy som e' of the Pue blo's st ir-u llona l i m m uni t \ from Ci t y, " and that the o-rd lO3r.n· L" )C' c troni c intC' l1i g e> ncc gath­ self - incTJ m l nallon. . is "part of this cnnspirac~ . " t" rl ng g('a r .

Ac r o ss Suez Cana l Egypt Battles Israel ,In Artillery Duel

TEL A V I V , Is r ael (A P) - tanks were knock(' d OUI. Fiv(' Egyptian :::iou r ces s aid a pre­ lsraeii'and Egyptian tank s a nd ls rae if soldie r s were wound- lim:na r y s urvey in [he so uth­ artille r y e xhanged flr e .for 90 ed. L' rn portion Qf the cana l show­ minutes acros s thesuez Canal The Egypt ia n arm y com - ed .thert' we r e tOo many ob­ Tuesda y in the he avie st e n- munique m ade no m C' nlion of swelL's . The natur e of these gage~nt alo ng the troubled cas ualties, but s aid one of the obs Lacles was not give n, but water wa y since las t October. launc hes was damaged. This some are belie ved to be s ma ll New ,Arrival The finng began when Egypt co ntradicted earlie r Egypt ian s hips s unk by Ihe Egyptians sent four la unc hes into the r e ports tha t the (our la unc he s LO bloc k Ihe canal in the Is­ northe zo.n pan of the cana l to r e turned s afe ly LO Is mailia. rae H-Arab war. of Perma-Press Sport look for obstacles barring the Fighting . .fina lly s topped in As it would take con­ wa y of 15 for eign ships , response to a n appea l by Lt. s ide r able time to clear the stranded in the wate rwa y since Gen. Odd Bull, the Unite d Na- southern portion, the Egypt­ Shi.rts, New Patterns the June war. tions c hief truce s upervi sor, ians planned to s urvey the Is rae l had agreed to a clear- who happened to be visiting nonhern pan of the canal to Reg . $5,95 ' ing operationinonlythesouth_ in Cairo. Egyptian source's see if it would be easier to 95 e rn pan of the canal a nd had s aid he had ordered his ob- free the fore ign vesse ls. the SALE - Two Cfor S7 warned Sunday thal any at- servers on the canal to pre - Sources said. tem pt in the north would be pare a de tailed r e port of the Without confirm ation in Is- r esisted. clash. rael, the Egyptians said the The launches had pr oceeded Explaining (he auempt to plan was fo r warded to Bull New Arrival of about a mile nonh fro m their make a s uevey in the north- and that the Israelis had s taning point at Ismailia, ern pan of the can a J, (hf" agree d. additional stock on the midway in the canal, when .Is- ~~~~ __"!!:!!""!!~:-.;.:..;;.;._~...;..;... ____~-=~~ rae li troops on the east bank: famc;,)U s two-ply fired warning shors. tennis sweater Israel says the Egyptians on the east bank the n opened in bur gundy, up with artille r y and the fire' was r e turne d. A n Egyptian white or navy communique said I s rae Ii troops were the filjSt to open firf: on Egypt jan P Qs ition s PECIAL $12 .95 north of Isn;tai lia. Open 9 a.m. to 9 p. m. Tanks JOIned the artille r y Murda/e Shopp ing Center in the due l. An Israeli army spo!!'sman said ,~QJ;;gyp t ia n January 31, '1968 DAI LY EGY PTiAM P .9,· Three' Bodies Uncovered '-j -~, " obDylan~ In Arkansas Prison Probe GUM,MINS PRISON FARM. MeanwhUe, a grim, explo r- the r e have been burials that lire'Byrds. - ArI<. 4AP) - A forme r Slu atory digging operation was were other than legal," said faculty member. Thomas O. halted for the time being on Munon. who launched the in­ Murton, is leading a gruesome the prison grounds. S tat e quiry. investigation into the history pOlice t oo~ charge of the in­ Prison legends told of con­ The of this prison as the Arkan- vestigation and said that, be­ victs slain in sadistic out­ sas prison superintend ent. fore r esuming, they "'need to bursts, the ir bodies consigned A convict who led prison of- see WA3t we have firs t." to unmarked graves and the Buckinghams. ficials to an unmarked grave- ' On Monday. Johnson led of­ victims described as escapees yard in which three . skele- ficials to the unmarked graves who neve r were recaptured. tons were found Monday said of three men, (he remains Supe rintendent Munon has today he pad helped bury 10 encased in coffins buried in c a II ed t h e Arkansas State The Union Gap. or 12 inmates on the prison the rich soil of the Arkansas penitentiary system a "throw­ grounds in the 19405. He River bottoms . The prison back to the Middle Ages." said most of the m had been farm is 60 miles southeast More than 200 inmates, he shot or beaten to de ath. of Little Rock. said, have been listed as un­ Tai Mahal. Reuben Johnson, 59, a hefty A fo rm e r prison bo a rd apprebe(:tded iIl _ ~sc apes dating 6-footer who first went to membe r said the s ke letons baa to) I ~. prison in 1937 for killing his might be pan of a paupers' Dr. Eaward Barren Jr., the brother, said that years ago graveyard. prison physician. said earlier: Peaches-and he helped bury 10 or 12 con- Former Prison Supt. Dan If I fe e 1 r easonably cenain victs who were If shot With a D. Stephens said he was aware dJere are more bodies out pistol, a shotgun or just beaten all along that there was an there • •• as many as laO, Herb. to death:' old prison cemetery in the if not more •• . Most of them we r e Negroes, .area where the bodies we re HI have also been told that Johnson said, adding: "But found , one headless, one with sometimes if an inmate had They're part of the they killed some -white ones the head s m ashed and a third something 'against another one on Labor Day in 1940. They wi th .legs broken, ap­ he could arrange a payoff to Columbia Rock Machine. killed a bunch of them-I' d parently to fit the body into get rid of the other man. These The Rock Machine never sleeps. say about.20 • • • the casket. sound like wild s tories, but N ig ht and day you con-hear it. ._____ oWe w e r ea 11 scared . Stephens said the burials this today could lend some I thought I was going to get dated back many year s, and credibilit y to them. ThIS is The beat is relentless. ./ it. A lot of mornings l thought that no convi.cts were buried really 18th century." Because those at work within it are, I wouldn't come back to the at Cummins during his tenure A sharp-tongued penologist, bUilding." in i 964-65. Munon. 39, was hired by Gov. 80. DYL..t.III ~ Prison r ecords showed that The search for bodies was Winthrop Rock e f~ ller I a S t 36 m en escaped Sept. 2, 1940, launched on the basis of ru­ year as assistant s upe rinten­ and that one man was killed mo rs t hat flicke r ed a nd dent at Tucker prison. Afte r tryinglto escape. The r ecords flared for years in the dark ins tituting refo rm s there, he \:.:~~~:: also s howed that 24 escapees recesses of the farm where was n am e d superintende nt i,., ?" were r ecaptured quickly, and 1,300 .prisoners are incarce ­ earlier this month of th e a prison staff member said rated. prison sys t em, r esponsible it was possible othe r s were t. According t o testimon- fo r Cummins as well as Tuc k­ , ' r ecaptured later. i31s of inmates on the farm ••• er. . , Bob Dyloil. lohn Wesle y HOle/ing. T Tyi ng their w ings in Larger Veteran Benefi ts Urged His new one Country ond Westefn Soaring . . _ WASHI NGTON (I.: P)- Pres ­ e rans who train fo r publi c salary-SHO a monrh ro r the ident Johnson asked Congress service jobs. firs t school year. 560 a munth Tuesday to he lp m ake it easier In a special m _· ~sag~ . John ­ for [he second. " THE UNION GAP ~~",,"..cun for veterans to bu y bener son noted that thC' present The Preside ll( 31so as ke d WOMAN. WOMAN horPcs and to s ubs idize Vl? t- 5/.500 ceilingon the maximum Congress [Q acr favo r Jbly on gU3ranree on GI ho me loa ns twO propusals hI? presente d is 18 yea r s old and said it last Yt..>'a r: Police Ordered is no longer 3dl.' quare . He asked fo r 3 510.000 ceili ng. - To inc r (;'ase servicema n' s To Shoot Bombers gruup life in s urance from a The c hief C' x('cu!ive also m aximum ufSIO,OOOw a rangc proposed a wholly ne w pro­ of 512,000-$30,000, dep<'nding EAST ST. LOUIS (AP)- East gram to he lp financC' training 5t: on individual pay- ml-'an ing POllfoits. Louis po lice are unde r of ve le rans "10 t C' a c h the orders to s hoot any persons rank. A rock recita l c hildren of the poo r. 10 hdp - To " protect the ve te ran se(;'n thrOWing a firebomb at man u nde r !"r renglh p o li e e property or commining any agaims di s p r u po f( i o n at e fo r ces and fire depa rt m·. nts. pension losse;; [ha t cou ld re­ othe r actof arson or atte mpted to do m1;'a ningful wo rk in local s ul t from incr.:ascs in othe r arson. hospita ls " and lobeco ml." fu ll ­ in cu m e s u c h as Social "Anyone seen throwing a ti..(l1t· specialis ts in antipoV e rty firebom!:l in East St. Louis work. Security. " }\nothe r Johnson propos al­ will not be questi oned. We John son gave this e xample will s hoot Dim, " Police Co m ­ a n(' w one - wuufd offe r vo­ of how the program would wo rk c ational rehabilitation bene­ missioner Ru ssell Beebe sa,id fo r a vC[eran wanting to reach afte r issuing the o rde r r",'on­ fits 10 st..>' rvice-disabled ve t ­ in a deprived a rea: . e r a ns r·ece iving part -time day night. " While he is ge rting rhe to be- (raining. Be nefits now are "There's going law will schooli ng rhat qu alify him limite d (Q full -lime trainees. and order'and if the-re ' s not, for re ac hing. he will draw the re's going to be some additional ben('fit s of 550 a Electric blues. Golden Duets. killing," the comm issione r munth for e Ve rh mp nrh he s aid. Sensational. " love Is Strange .. agrees 10 teach-up to three and " Two liM Ie Kids." Beebe issue d the orde r to Blow Yourself years of s uch extra benefit s . s hoot s ho.nl y afte r twO fire­ "While he is act uall y on the To bombs we r e hu rled into a .Jhe Contemporary Sound on job re ac hing. he will draw a Up POSTER SIZE COLUMBIA R E CORDS~ je welry Store and an ins ur ­ s pecial training allowance, in ance company office. The 2 ft. x, ] ft. addit i o n ro hi s r eg ul a r devices did not ignite. Get yOur own BLO·UP Photo The jewelry store owne r, Poster. Send any Btack .a nd White Eugene E. Re inige r, 39, killed WHERE'S or Color Photo from wallet si ze SAVE $3.3 to 8 l( t o , or any negotive from one man and wounde d another ZWI CK'S MEN·S? 1 2% I( 2 4 to 4 l( 5 inches. We during a robbe r y attempt Sat­ will send you a 2 ft. M 3 ft . BU'y A NY $3.79 RECORD FOR 65( urday. . He had been 'robbed BlO· UP . perfect POP ART r of Sl4.000 in cashandjewele r y 7155. poster $4.95 Ppd. WHEN YOU BUY ANY OF THE in November. t\ ~nd any ond White or Color Photo 'tram "I " .III; 5" 10 8" .I Univers ity II 10" or any nf'~a t ive l'A x RECORDS LISTED ABOVE 3 14 tn 4" MS". we will ~e nd SALE GOOD THRU SAT " " you ~ 3 ft . M 4 ft . OlO-UP . ," $7 ,95 Ppd, , ",- ' " Block Add N .Y . or N .J. Soles TaM ~VolhwGgen No C. o. o. South of Moo Sena Check or Money O,der to: Italion Style Ivy Enterprises, Inc. Epps Molors " .r f' ~\ D eP t _51~ Gu!!'"".!~ . N. J. Highway 13-E'jlsl Original Photo or Negative returned. ph 457 -2184 lwirk' • . Contact us to be Blo··Up Rep. Overseas Delivery Avai lable an your Campus , ® MEN'S STORE Ja.u~ry 3]', 1968

Koenigste1n to condu~t7 ' Symph0"l)to PI,oy c2.f Convo

The University S.y.mphonic approximate ly 65 pl a ye T 5 years wirh bands in the Air Band" Nick J. Koenigstein con- from alJ schools and depan­ Force, he received hi s Mas ­ duering, will perform its first menrs of the University. ter of ' MU Sic degree from concert of the year at the Koenigsrein is in' hi s firs t We st Virginia Un ive r sity. In University Convocations set year with (be Deparrmt" il l of addition to dire cti ng the Sym­ for 10 a. m. and] p.m. 'Thurs- Music at SJU. He w a~ dire'c­ phonic band he ·is also direc­ day in Shryock ' Auditor) um. tor o( bands at Eastern Ken- tor of rhe Ma r ching) Sa luki s The program will i ~l Ud e ru cky Un ive(sity JOT II year s. and the Saluki Pe p Ba nd. works com'posedorlgin.-a ty for He recie ved his Bachelor's The Convocation program band as well 35 (Tanseri 'ons deg'ree at Western Kentucky include s the fo llowing co mp­ of compos itions from 0 he r Univers ity. After fou r years os itions wrine n o riginally for media . _ of teaChing insrru'm E" ntai m us- band: ~ ~ A .Festival Pre lude " The band i s comprised of ic in public sch.ools and four by Alfre d Reed, " Norwegian 'M arch'V aldr e's ' " b) Johannes Hanssen, " Pre lude and F ugue Egg Eater Calls Off Attempt in F - Minor" by H.ouston Bright. "Toccata M:nziaJe " Hand L uke , ~ ' did not eat 50 by R. Vaughn- Williams , and more Monday night 'as he !lad ~'B e nguin e fo r Band" byGJe nn planned. Osser . 4 • Re itman said he had lost Also on the program ar e interest in t h e. p r o j e c t. ','E nigma Varia tion ~ , Var. V EarHer he had announced that (Nimrod IX," by Edward El­ At Health Service h e would eat th e egg s gar, " Cho rale and Capriccio" scrambled, instead of hard by Cae sar Giovanni,ni , and The University He alth Ser ­ boiled as originally. He is a "Man of LaMancha." (Se lec­ vice reponed the admina nce membe r of Tau Kappa Epsilon ,tions) by Le igh :" Erickson. and dis missal of the follow- fr a t ~ mlty. ing s tudents. .,) ~Talk Ad missions : Cfiarle s Rod­ Physicist Presents ocker, Wright I; Billy Sla ugh­ I have found the most Physician Volunteers ters, 311 W . Walnut; Barbara .--- ' Seamon, Neely Hall; John Des­ Symposium' P~per wonderful laundry! ma r etz. B09me r In; Kamran Simply marv"fous. .. Services -to Vietnam f\ghili, 708 IN. Mill. .' Physicist L. C. Marshall of You all sh.ould try SIU pre sented a paper for t An SIU physician wil1 give Di s missals : Sam Voduy, POlYClEAN Dr. Clark, son of Mr. and Saluki Arms; Connie Johnson, Lloyd V. Be rkner ' Me mori al free me dical se rvice ( 0 South Mrs. Thomas A. Clark of Neely Hall; Sue Go ldberg. 509 Symposium at the a nn u a 1 Vietnamese civilians un d e r ~o c kfor d , gradu ated fro m the S. Wa ll; Joseph Elmo re , S. meeting of the American As­ the Volunteer Phvsician Pro­ Unive rsity of IHinois and r e .. Popular; Barbara Se a m o n, sociation for the Adv ancement g r am, Feb. 12 [0 April 12. ceived hi s M . D. fro m the Neely Hall. of ScienCe In New York City. . Dr'. Thom as William Cla rk , Schoo l of Medicine at the native of Rockford, i s 'a mo lg unive rsiry in 1963. In 1954- se ve n physicians who VI.' i l l 50 he' wo rked as an e nlis ted -wQrk in a Sourh Vietnam hos­ mun in n ' naval hospiral pital in a provincia l a r (' a F lo rida . w hi c his pcutel y ~ h o n of Befo r e' coming to SIU in m ~ d ica J doctors. 1965, he sc rved as inre rn a nd The, program is s po n~o r e d by [he U.S. Age ncy fo r Ime r ­ reside nt for two years at the SL Franc is Hos pital in Peoria. national .Deve l o pm ~ n l in co­ operation with rhe Am('riCCin He i s a ph ysician witb [he Medical Associatio!l . ~ (Ude nt Health Service. Women's Ensemble to Sing '5' Variety of Music, Sunday "'BPIITIpm. pm; TONIGHT, Jan.31, 4 to' 8 A conce n by-rhe Unive r s ity A- L itt l e, Tal k -A-Littl e " Wome n's E nsemble direcred from rhe Broadway musical, b ~' Robe n Kingsbury wi ll be "The Music Man," by Mere­ give n at STU Sunday al 4 p.m. dith Wilson. ALL YOu. CAN EAT in 5hrvock Au dirorium, Grel­ The concen is open to the c hen Saathoff of Burlington, public free of charge . only Iowa is the a c c om pa n i s t. Members of {he Uni ve r s ity Male ""Glee Cl ub win as sis t in Fraternity Pledges the conce rt. A group of songs by Schu­ bert , and ., A Thought Like 20 New Members Music " by Koepke plus " The Alpha Kappa p si, pro­ H ea~ TI s are Te Jling" from fessional bU Siness fraternity, Haydn' s i< The Crearion" wi)) '3 nnounced Mo nday that 20 new co mprise (he firs t half of [he pledges were accepted in a con ~ rt. After the intermis­ "very s u c cessful winter THAT'S RIGHT sion (be errsemble will s ing 7'- rus h. " l" . s uch songs as " As Long As The: ple dges include, Mike S ta~ting this Wednesday and He Needs ·Me." "Swing Low Abbott, Bruce. Ai"e,Jlo, George Sweet Charity:: " Oo-Re-Mi" W. Beck, W I I I I a m Callion, e!'ery following Wedneaday and " Bye Bye Blue s ." A Thomas M. Cissell, F re d highlight of the con ::c r~ will Esch, ' Stanton M. Fowle r, all the foh , slaw, french. fri~a be the perforina ,1ce of "Pick- 'Robert Har.rlson, Jeff .Hol­ .'>c. mes, Lonnie Johns, Casey R. and bread you can ealfor'only Theta Xi Elects Kemper, . Ken Heideen. Rayr' . / mond Neyrlnck, Donald Oakes, Knott p'resident Jerry Orrill', Paul E. Ransom, James Scotr, Henry Stuttley. The PINE ' ROOM J act Knott was r e c e n [ I Y Garry L: VanMeter,. and ,MI­ e lected president of 'rheta XI chael Yamnitz. of, the L8J STEAK HOUSE F r aternity. , . Other officers include Steve Kre lle. internal v.p.; 4' Do n Glenn, external v.p.; Larry Haynes , secre tary; Ron Glenn. [re a'au re r; Steve Pe r r y, scholarship c hairmt.in; Lee 5~ ward, pledge t~aine r; F.I­ lio ~ "Collier, stewart; -Bi II Mandernack, h&u € manager;: Rod KniE:ri ~ m, sbcial chair­ man and Puss Graziano, al officer. I y ComitO rwaSinitiated, II efr'ate,.~ '" l;;.:;.. IIII~!! ~~' as 'Peace Corps dire'ctO r in p r':~I~i:~ a ;o~~in:~ci~f~~~a~~ Ir ~ n. Cousins has also he ld . Earlham College. ,Richmond, pos itions with the Agency for Ind., will discuss the social Inte rnational Deve'iopl1)ent and sociological implicalions the Ame rican Frie nds Se rvice community development in Committee in India and Pa~­ developing countries at a istan. ",-C:OIJ.oq,.,um Friday. The s(lCiology Club and Ihe . Cousins, who will be- viSit­ Community Development Club ing.-SIU on Thursday ana Fri­ are sponsoring the program. day. bolds a Ph.n. in soci­ II will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. oiogy .from Yale- UniversilY. in lhe main lounge of College Prior to taking his JX>sitiQn Sq u are. Dorm A. 506 S. . al Earlham College. he served Graham 51. 'Clinical Nutrition' Subject NAMED ' ASSOCIATE D EAN--E. J. Sima •• conducted by'-1;1V at St. Louis aod , left. dean of the Div! ston of Tecbnical and OrdHl under reberal Man power Development Adult.. E ducation. confers with William E. and Training Act conteacts. Nacel bad Nagel, newly-appointed "associate dean of served s ince September 1966 as an ass'1stant divisioD. In cbarge of training programs delUl Of Talk By·Hospital Sp~nsor Dr. Jac\C Metcoff, chair­ on the Scientific A d vis a r y 'Return8 Wouldn' t Increa8e', i man of the Department of Board of !he Nalional Kidney Pediatrics at I Michael Re~se Disease Foundation, and as ' . Hospilal in Chicago. will lec­ oons41tant in pediatrics to the lure al SIU al 7:30 p.m. Feb. Surgeon Generakofthe Bureau 20 ' in StUdio Theater in Uni­ of Medicinejprlhe U.S. Navy. Library Nixes No FIne Dliy versity Scbool. Dr. Metca{f, an authority on t---' human l'\U[rition. will -1:alk 01].. By Dennis Kuczajda been checked out, staff mem- new edition shoulcYbe ordered. clinical nutrition. Sponsored Does this bers Ihen search library If Ihe book is OUI of prim, -'by Ihe Am'etlcan Medical As­ Although Ihe Chicago .Pub­ shelves for misfiling. Com- an ad Is placed in Ihe An- socialion. Ihe.leclures by Mel­ lie Library's recent "fine man filing ,errors include in- tiquarian Book-man, a widely coff will be delivered at four .....-'make sense ' free" day nerred the return correct shelving of books with Circulated journal. The ll- Illinois and Mis-souri colleges of nearly 100,000 losl books, #'f" and u g" annotations and bra):,y tben considers quo- in February to s timulate an Morris Library Assislanl Li­ mix-ups over the numbers tations offer ed by various interest a~ong ,stUdents. in to'you? brartan SI d n e y Matthews six and nine. dealers. Besides hiS c~alTmanShlp at doesn't ttUnk: the idea would Some books lurn up .al Ihe During Ihe 1966-67 fiscal ' Ihe Michael Heese Hospilal, have comparable s uccess 'or end of the quarter on shelves year Morris Library re- Dr . ,e,tcoff IS -a p~ofessor of value ~ t SIU. where they have . been hidden placed 632 books from quo- i:batncs,aqhe Chicago Med­ uI've . discussed the -idea by students.. rations alone. Matthews was c~l, School. ,He also serves wilh Mr. F.s. R:andall (Mor­ The search procedure con- unable to reveal the COSt of hmcal nutrltion and allied ris Library direcror) and we tinues 16 weeks before the these books.. . . medical sciences. However. 'don"r really see how it woul d book is officially declared As for figures on how many the leet,ure will. be open to be of much belp with our stu­ mis ~ing. Then the department books are missing from the tbe pubhc. dent body," Matthews said. head decides whether another entire library Matthews also The problem of se((ing a copy should be ordered or, as was unable 10 ;"'mment. 8ayh's Talk Changed proper da¥ during lhe quarter in the case of texts, an entirely ' Regarding the possibility of Due to a conflict in ~ngage­ also arises. Matthews be­ hase to Lecture an Invenlory, Ma!!hews said, me ms, Senator Birch Bayh of lieves, ~ since a mid-quarter C firm not sure that many are Indiana. originally scheduled Let's accept the idea that you jinefreeday mighlencourage Here February 9 missing .in Ihe firsl place. Also to speak to SIU Convocation delinquent students 10 hold') il would he difficull 10 ' do an audiences on February 15, will need life insurance .•• now. And on to the books. An end quar- The lee t u r e by Harold i nventory because of the size now appear on March 7. ' you'll need it moreits' the years ter day could cause confusion. Cbase, law expert and pro- of our staff and the number Senator Bayh will speak at go by. . "We bad an experience a fessor of government at the of books in cir culation at one 10 a.m. and I p.m. in Shry­ number of years ago 'tn which University of Minnesota, will time." ock AuditOrium. we did away with fines:' Mat- be Feb. 9 instead of Friday One of the smartest things you thews remembers. uTbe re- as listed in Tuesday's Daily can do now is to-talk to your sult was chaos." Egyptian. College life repleser:-tative. Let · Maubews said the prese nt Chase will speak on uThe him tell you about the BENE­ process for recovering lost LSJ Brand on Appointment FACTOR; the life insurance pol­ books Is very Ihorough. • of Federal Judges" al 7:30 icy that is ind ivid ually tailored to U a sludent cannol lind a p.m. in Room 131 of Lawson your specific neeas . . book, he need only go 10 Ihe Hall. His informalion is Ihe department" office on that floor result of studies for his forth­ You' are a prefe r ~ed risko:-that and inquire. coming book on the appoint- means your life insurance will A search is begun by check- me m of federal judges. cost you less. You can benefit ing the Print-Out, a computer All graduate students and listing repording all library any interested persons are from deferred deposits. holdings. If Ihe hook has nOI . inviled 10 a[(end Ihe l~clure. College life'serves .Coll ege Men excl USively. That's why you should get in lauch with the S:x:pert Sy~wear College Life representative; A THOROUGH EYE don't wait for him to call you , EXAMINATION WILL BRINGYOIJ 1. Correct Preacriplion 2. Correcl FillinK 3. Correct Appearance Service available for iDoilt . eyewear , wbile you wait r Re;'o:abte- 1 " . -CON£~T Price3 I L. LENSES ------I -- -- , Don MdUII., CONRAD' OPTICAL . . 512 W. Mo i" 41 I S. tllinois-OrIe; I!. Jotre Optometrist 457·4919 Phone 549,2189- 16.th . o,!~ M~nroe"Herrin-Dr . Co,.~d, Optometri~t 9'2-5500 Carbondale; Ill. ~ , / Moliere's Cot~dy 'Misarthrope' Modernized lor' Laboratory Stage When the lights shine on the produced in theaters all over in mod dress. Latest mod center stage of the SIU Lab- the world and is considered styles such as beU - bottom oratory Theatre in the Corn- as identifiable co comedy as s lacks, min i skins, go-go munic3rions Building Friday HHamler" is to tragedy. The boots and chain belts will be night, be prepared for a 300- play's main theme involves a worn. The set will ·also be year-old playas modern as man dealing with a society e nha'1ced with Hymel ' s idea today's hippie. ' with false conve ntions; he is of a mod interpretation" by The pl ay. "Misanthr.ope, i' therefore anti-social and a large mod art paintings hang­ is a 17th centur y Frencp misfic. - ing over the audience on all comedy. It will be updatecf-t Hymel claims that to his four sides (the stage is sur"­ to COincide with roday's fas[- knowledge, this is the first rounded by the audience). The paced socie ty by presenting tifne (he play has been done purpose of the paintings is to the e ntire cast in mod dress. give the audience .a feeling of It wi ll run through Sunday Scholarship Fu'nd acru al1y being in the same night.~ room with the actors. A ~M sa.nThro.pe" Is ac- To Honor Hoffman musical background of modern (.claim ""--by the Critics to be A check establishing a fund .... jazz will also be included. Jean MOl.ierw m ast erpiece. for the Paul M. Hoffman Me­ The seating capacity of the The play was produced in 1666. morial scholarship was pre­ -t heater is 100 with three per­ rZephir' in (Buddy) Hymel. sented to William McKeefery, formances starring af.l 8 p.m. graduate assistant in theatre, dean of the School of Business. Tickets have been on sale who produ ced and directed Hoffman, chairman bf the since Jan. 24 at the Theate r the play, sa id, " 1 feel wher e- Depanment of MarkeCing, was Box Office and University as time has brought abour a killed in an auCQ accidem last Center. All seats are Sl. change in OUT 3nirudes in year. The fund was started Hymel, a native of New Or­ society. society itself never by family and friends i-n the leans, received hi s bachelor's .. - degree in theatre at Louisiana changes. The mud dress will School of Bus,i ness. 'MISA.NTHROPE' CAST· Three- prinCipals from the- upcoming SlU po in r up [he comemporary .. State University. He started produ c t~on or i\1olierp's "The Misanthrope" are caught during a asPects of the play." , Child Education Group his colJ ege cyeer at South­ rehearsal ror the pl ~ ' which opens a lhrep-night run Friday. The)" Hymel we nt on ro sa ' that eastern Lo.u4~ iana CoIl e g e are MahlJ'n Nix. Bill Pageant , and Bob 7..a,\'. Direct ed bJ' gradu­ what happened 300 years ago To Hear School Head where he took up pre-law. ate student Zephirin Hyme l. the comedy is being performed in mod is basically the same roday. The Asso.ciarion for Child­ Afre r realizing that he was costumes and settings. Basic problems aflove, hypoc­ hood Education will #m eet i.n more inte r e sted in the dra­ risy. mo ney-Ius} and fashion the fourth grade room at tJni­ matics and not the legalities Federal Research Cutbacks consciousness appear today as versity School at 7:30 p.m. involved in law, he decided then. He also explained, the Thursday. to s\fi tch to thea tre. play is funnier oday rhan it Lawre nce Marrin. superin­ -After graduating from LrSU. Won't Hurt SIU, Dean Says wa~ in the 17rh cenrury be­ tendent of Carbondale school s. he was awarded an acting as­ cause "we can laugh at our­ will speak on the " Desirable sistantship from the SIU The ... The large ,decrease in fed­ lional Defe nse Education Act selves through OUT develop­ Qualities of a Teacher." All ater Departme nt. He hopes eral spending aimed at r e ­ aid to r esearch amounting to m (;on t of more l ibera l at­ students and faculty are i n­ to receive hi s M.A . degree search programs fur 1968 is 45 per cent has been affected tirudes. " vited. in August. not expected to serio us lyaf­ at all univer sities. Last year "Misamhrope" has bee n fect SIU. SIU had 32 programs s up­ W-i l1iam Simeone. dean of IX'Tled b) 'DEA; this year SIU Air Society to Present graduate school, said that r ece ived 18 s uch programs. ) Meel A I The Mo. while SIU r e search programs Dean Simeone said the fate Flag to University .Park have already felt i. ne squeeze of SIU' s three National Aero­ D r ought about by r ecent cur nautics and Space Administra­ An A rn e ric a n flag will be Open 1112 backs in federal aid to re­ tion projects is uncertain. give n to the University Park searCh, the problem is not Dean Simeone thinks that r esidence area in the' name of a serious one at SlUe He government aid to research the Arnold Ai r Society at 1:30 explained that while fede ral in the universities is only p.m. Sunday. The fl ag will be Friday & Saturd s uppoq is important to r e­ beginning and in the future presented by the SOCiety's other doys til 12, 30 search programs, STU ' s policy it will be I mperative . He Views pledge. class at a cer emony . regarding r esear ch provides the present decr ease in at the University Park fl ag- for substantia] investments in­ government spending on re- ~';'::=='iiiiiiii;;:::;iii-'iiiiiiiiiil the programs from school sear ch as temporary and, I::: funds other than federal re­ while serious, it is no cause GUS BODE MA'f HAVE B[£N sear ch grants. SIU·s selec­ for alarm. tion of programs and s ub­ He said the graduate school HERE LONGER T~f\N t'\E BUT sequent investments in them is making no alterations in provide the school's involve­ its policies concerning ad­ 1 \.. HWE M ORE TO S "OW ment in r esearch With a stable missions because of the cut ______~~ __ FOR ~ . operating basis, Dean Sime­ back. All quaHfied students one said. are still e ncouraged to apply .... A genera~ CUt back in Na- for support. AQUA 0 ~ 2 NET vo r n 0 c: / aU MBI's C ...Z /' ~ ... 0 ~ .. n ...... m are nollhe same ... vo '"V Qii .... Investigate Washington University ... 0 ~ All M.B.A. programs are not alike. The Master of 2 Business .Administration Program at Washington Uni­ / versity has an experienced and nationallv known fac ~ ulty. Big enough to offer the very best in graduale instruction. it haS' been kept small enough to :permit anentian to the needs of individual studen~ . • The . Graduate School of Business offers a unique M .B .A. program design~ especially to meet the-need of'.graduates of non-business undergraduate ~hools ' such as engineering and ' liberal arts. . (

Scholarships and assistantships are available. Send for / 8n Jllostrated brochure and discover that all .. M.BA ... IW09rams are not alike. Z ~ "39(130Z. o The Moo's Manager .. r~.sentative will be on campus u W~n.sday, February 7, 1968 ' ~ OPEN 9 A.M. TO II P.M. 9:30 a .m. to 5 p.m. . Jack Baird iil!!l"Con"ocf Placement OHice ~-....; ••• --. ..t 7 DAYS AWEEK SIU AluBlnu " .' '

THE ANNUAL

$17C9oo.*

* $25.00 DEPOr BALANCE BEFORE FEB. 21 ~p~eIA~

MARION TO FREEPORT GRAND' BAHAMA ISLAND VIA JET-POWERED ./ *ROUND TRIP JET­ ELECTRA. * ' S~VEN NIGHTS - ' AT THE BEAUTIFUL BRAND NEW "HOUDAY INN" (4 'PER ROOM) i!lGHT ON THE OCEAN - ONE MilE LONG WI;iITE SAND I!EACH - MAGNIFICENT POOL - SAILING - DEEP SEA FISHING - SCUBA DIVING - TENNIS - GOLF - SKEET ETC . (NAME YOUR DREAM ). -' * GROUND TRANSPORTATION -:- AIRPORT TO HOTEL AND BACK TO AIRPORT. * SPECIAL LOW MEAL PRICES - A CHOICE OF EATING l J;ACES - NOT A CAPTIVE OF ONE HOTEL. <" . *MUSIC & DANCING -IN YOUR HOTEL OR A FEW St EPS AWAY. *CASINOS _ DUTY FREE SHOPS - MEET STUDENTS FROM OTHER SCHOOLS.

DEPART - SATURDAY MARCH 16 RETURN - SATURDAY MARCH 23

STAY- IN THE CENTER OF THINGS' ON FREEPORTS NEW MIRACLE MILE BEACH - SIGN UP EARLY "SPACE LIMITED"

SPONSORED AND ESCORTED BY UNIVERSITY SERVICES ASSOCIATION INC.

A NOTFOR PROFIT C9RPORAnON T~AR HERE ------~- APPLICATION N~ME: _____-,--- ____'_ CAMPUS ADDRESS:

AG\,E: __ MAL E 0 FEMALE 0 PHONE: ______SINGLED MARRIED 0 I WANT TO ROOM WITH: CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVES I. _____~c =-----_ JEFF SMITH OR AL, GORDON \ 708 E. COLLEGE TRAILER NO. 14 / 2, ______CARBO.NDALE, ILLINOIS PHONE 618-549-4817 3. ______

( TOUR ARRANGED BY GROUP TRAVEL ASSOCIATES INC. 53 W. JACKSON BLVD .. CHICAGO ILL PH- 922-3030 AN lATA AN~ ATC APPROVED & BONDED AGENCY, CA·MPUS REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE IN f STUDENT UNION - 9 - 4., THURSDAY ,FEB. 1'.

. / < 27Saluki Teams' To) Invatie Iowa Two SIU winter sports events, and Neil Armstrong. teams will engage in com­ a fine backsrroker a petition Thursday with Iowa State U ni ver si t y at Ames, SIU wrest lers will have Iowa. scam time in which to reSt following their match Thurs­ Coach . Jim W ilk ins 0 n ' s wrestlers and Ray Essick's day night.. They are entered swim mers will both be seek­ in the University of Nebras­ ka's 16-team inVitational Fri- ing [Q offset losing records .. The Saluki grapplers, 1- 3 day and Saturday. < in dual competition this SIU wrest l er·s fell to - season, will match up against Bloomsbur'g (Pa.) State, a respectable Cyclone team­ 15-14, earlier ·in the week. whose only loss in eight duals Foil ow i ng are results by this season was a 15- 14 de­ weight and scores: ciSion to Oklahoma State­ i n ni~e weight divisions. l1S-·Heim, Bloomsburg Steve Sarossy will repre­ State, decisioned Steve sent SIU in the 123-pound Sarossy, SIU 6-1. division; Rich Allen, 130; A1 130- Prosseda. Qlooms - , Murdoch, 137; Rich Casey, bur g, 12, Rich Allan, SIU, 9. 145; Tom Duke, 152; Julian 137- R u s so, Bloomsburg, Gabriel, 160; Al Lipper, 167; II, Al Murdoch, SIU, 5. Ben Cooper, 177, and Bob 145- Richard Casey, SIU, Roop. or Rich Seloover, heav- decisioned Peters, Blooms- yweight. . burg, 16-5. . Meanwhile, ESSick's team 152-Guerst. B l ooms ­ T HRIHH NG HIS WEIGHT A ROUND--Jim _ of the hammer throw competition. T hrowing will have litS hands full with burg, 12, Tom Duke, 'SIU, 4. Bixby", a member of SlUt s track team. gets the hammer is "no easy task. It weifhs 35 the defending Big Eight swim­ ready to release the steel ball which is' part 160-Thomps'on, Blooms­ pounds. ming ·championsa burg, 7, r.ufk, SIU, 2. .IWe expect it to go right 167-AI Upper, SIU, deci­ down to the wire," . Essick ~:.~~ea Wallace, Bloomsburg, saida "[t's going to be a Better Season Expe~ted thriller ." 177- Ben Cooper; SIU, de­ The Salukis, 2- 3 in dual cisioned Coleman. B 100 m s - meets, expect their strongest YS,15-4_ . challenge to come fr()m Jim As Track Season Opens Corsworth, indiVidual medley In the heavyweights, Ric h­ and butterfly specialist; Bruce ard Seloover. SlU, pinned J~n ­ With three st andout re turn­ :'The r e ' s no doubt about ' Chicago he beat Bob Crosby, Lechle:r;, a sprinter ett, Bloomsburg, with 1;56 ees, Track Coach Lew Hart­ it," Hartzog said, "MacKen­ Loyola's 300-yard world-rec­ In the 100- - yard remaining .. zog is ' antic ipating "a good zie is in peak form a nd. bar­ ord holder, and a nchor-ed deal better squad than a year ring injuries, s hould be one SlU's mile relay swimming ago." when So urhernoffi ciall y of the finest quane r - milers team with a 47.5 time. opens its 1968 indoor lrack in tht' co untry {hi s yea r." Triple Jump star John season Thursday night agai ns t So f ar Ihis winte r MacKen­ non is anothe r SlU [he l)nive r s iry . of Kansas at zi e has turne d in three stand­ for national honors . . Lawrence. o ut performances. Ve rnon, . a two-year letter­ Ro ss MacKe'nzie. veteran He won ove r nat ion a II y­ man from Asple y, England. is qu a rt e r - miter from 8al ­ ranked Webs te r Johnson with a fully recovered from a leg mo:-aJ, Canada , is the Sa Ju ­ 49-second flat performa nce injury that hinde re d him last kis' rop candidate for national effort in mid-Decemb.?r. He season. honors this season. was second behink Pan-A m He' was a double winner in M·acKenzie, who reache d the c hamp Vince Matthews in the a recent Chicago meet, cap­ semi - fina ls in the 440-yard SaO -yard e venr at the Se nior turing the long jump in addi­ evem last year. was a me]Tl­ Bowl meet by virwe of turn­ tion to hi s specialty. be r of the Canadian Pan-Am ing in an identical 56.7 time . Hi s career best in the triple this summe r. In his final winter outinp; in jump is 48'9 1/ 2". . Mitche ll Livingston, a na ­ tive of Decatur, also has a lombardi to Tell Plans possibility of ranking among the top high jumpe r s in the coun try. A t Press Conference Othe r letterme- n who will be participating this year are Jeff GREEN BAY, Wis_ (AP)­ A Packer spokesman, who Duxbury. distan ce runn e r Vince Lombardi is expected announced plans Monday for from Me lbourne, Australia; to announce Thursday his de­ the dinne r and news confer­ Rich EIJison-, Be rwyn. pole Cision as to whether he will ence , declined to say more vaulter; Dale Ga rdne r. middle remain as head coach of the than that the coach and gen­ distance runner from Dewey, Green Bay Packers profes­ eral manage r would speak. Okla:, and hurdler Herman ~!.:. ;, .... i football team. Rumors have abounded for Gary from St. Louis . Lon}b'ardi earlier this week the past twO months that Lom­ summoned the press and the bardi. who coached the P ack­ Hanzog r a nk s Kansas Green Bay Packer board of ers to championships in five among {he nation's finest directors to dinner Thursday of the past seven seasons, teams . night-art invitation that pro­ would not coach the Packers H OW T H E C ROWD SEES I T --Thi s shop o f Lind a Metbeny a voked new speculation that again in, 196"8_ On Fe b. 10, the Salulc.is will member of the Ch ambana Gymnastics C l ub wh ich l ost to SI U he would step down as coach compe te in both the Michigan on ~ri day , shows how th e c ro wd saw the. action . . PJayin g th e of the world champions_ The most persistent rumor State Relays and the Kansas p iano is B ob H ~es. H ayes was called lOto action because has the Brooklyn-born Lom­ Fros h-Junior College Invita­ the tape r ecorder that Chambana e mpl oy~ to play music for bardi surrendering the coach­ tional. the free exercise even t. broke. Top Heavyweights ing reins to an aSSistant, prob-· ablX Phil Bengtson, the de­ 0)))1,. \ To Fight Saturday fensive coach. Lorn bardi would then remain in Green I SYLYANIA, Ohio (AP) - Bay as generaJ. manager_ When the heavyweight elimi­ nation tournament goes into Lombardi has indicated he DIJIK'IDY' introduces its next-to- last bout Saturday, would sray 1n Green Bay. but has not said in what capa€ity. It will feature the t WO I top heavyweight s In the W 0 r i d Boxing Associat ion' s ratings On ~ Day Service released Monday. Thad Spencer of San Fran­ SETTLEMOIR'S cisco holds the No. 1 spot, and Jerry Quarry of Los An­ geles is listed No_ 2 in the WBA ' s monthly rat~'n s. The winner of their sem' inal bout will t ake on thir ran k e d Midnight Tues. J im my Ellis of Louisville, SHOE huge for the \,!BA version of ihru Ky., all "'0/* KUaranLeed t h .c: heavywe ight champion­ Banana Split ship_ Midnight Thurs. ~o ~_ .I 5, Beban Snub~ed; 30th Pick -q,PmD,.Qjt

. NEW VORl( (AP) - Gary victories against five defea~s players in 17 rounds. The Cincinnati, wjth special pri­ North Cpolina State, Boscon , Beban, honored 435 Heisman and. two ties in three years, clubs we're given 15 minutes vileges \E aUingl for first and and defensive end Kevin Hardy Trophy winner and outstand- finally was taken by the Los each to make up their minds last pick ~ in each round after of Nor.'"e Dam ~. New Orleans •. ing collegian of the year, was Angeles Rams high in the in the first two rounds, but a the fir st, plus specials, 'grab­ before they finall y got around bypass~d until the 30th pick second round. Tl'le--hometown five-minute deadIine was in bed Bob Johnson, Tennesse~'s [Q a back. Tuesday in the pro draft as Rams had no choice in the effect for later rounds. Clubs 235-pound All-Ame rica cen­ Larry Csonkfi of Syracuse, the American and National first round. having yielded drafted by telephone thr ough ter in the first round. called by Coach Ben Schwarrz­ Football Leagues emphasized ' it to Detroit last fall in the representatives at the meet - wa lder the m03t valuable back interior linemen and defen- deal for defensive (a c k 1 e ing in a New York hotel. The clubs picked defensive he ever had, was grabbed No. sive plilyers. Roger Brown. . To get Yary the Viking.s end Claude Humphrey of Ten­ B .in the draf[ by the Miami The honor of being No. I ROIllan Gabriel is the Rams' used the special bonu,s pick nessee A& I,Atlant a;offensive Dolphins. in .the pro selections wen[ 'well-established quarterback. tbey got from the New York ,tackle R u s s Washington of The first Quarterbac k taken to RO.n Vary. the 6-ioot-5. It had peen expected that Be- Giants. along with two first- JMi.ssouri, San Diego; l in e­ was Greg Landry, the 6-3, 26l-pound offensive tackle of ban would be a top first- round round picks in 1967. in the ~backer FFed Carr of Texas­ 190-pounder from Massachu ­ Southern G...alifornia's national selection. but apparen[ly most deal for Fran Tarkenton last &1 Paso. G'reeri Bay; defen­ setts who was picked by the ' champions. Five Trojans of the pros thought otherwise, year. stve tackle Dennis Byrd of Detroit were among the 27 picked in Before the second combined the first round. draft is completed, probably Beban. the running quarter- sometime Wednesday night, back who directed UCLA to 23 the pros will have picked 462 INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPLETING ORDER Swimming Tournament Scheduled; .. "Compl.,a " t;.C'lionll 1·5' Ullin, ballpo,nt p f'n, "Ponl in ali CAPI'f.... L LETTERS " In "~clion 5: Intramural Eligibility Deadline On~ number or lellet p~ . "paC'~ D o n OI 1.1 11., lI

The Da ily Eg"yptian reserves the ri ght to re ject any a ~vertjsi n 9 c6py. No refunds on cance lled ads.

2 ' 52 Chevys. Exc. condo I '66 273 acres N. of De SOtO, Ideal for camp Wanled. Ba'Jysitt.lng In my home. competent hypnotist,for work.. Phone -FOR SALE Honda 150. Windshield &: helmet. area of slod farm. / S. Park Ave., Call 457-6286. 1918BE 9-5846 asle for PhU or Mike. 4340F Ph. 7-6368. 4338... Herrin, 2 story hrlck. equipped as GoU clubs. 8rand new, never used. home or office, extra lot, commer­ The Hippodrome beams you love. St11l in plastic cover. SeU for haU. 1955 Plymouth. C lean, quiet, good cial or income./ Spacious colonial 19298E , Call 7_4334. 1857B ... radio and tires. $1 00. 457-8847. 4 bedroom, close to schools, beautl­ 434SA fullnterior. Quicle sale wanted .... Iex­ Typewrher. S[andard Underwood 5. ander Real Estate, 109 S. 13th Typing - IBM. Exper ience w/rerm, Riders to Lauderde.le spr. br. Leave Li.ke new. $125 or orter. Ph. 9- St ., Herrin, Illinois. Pbone 942-2334 theses, dlesen. Fast. efficient. 9. Marcb 1.6. bade 26. Prlv. plane. 6 2 guage Ithaca shotgun. Less than one 3850. 1934BE •4440. I 1925B ... box of shelle ·shot. $65. Ph. 7-7982. or 942-6851 anytlme.- 1~24BB people. 7 hours .each way. $85 • 4346A 9-4086. 4342F SWinger camera and N_gauge uain " . Have your term paper or thesis pro­ set. Phone 684-4834 (let ring.) 1962 Fairlane. Real good "S hape. 260 FOR RENT fessionally tYPed. The Author's Of­ Set of 14 In. Ford chrome wheels. 19308... fice, 114 1/ 2 S. UUno16. 9-6931 until Prefer MusLall8 styled steel. Chr. V8 wo!l 10.000 miles. Standard 5. 19358E trans. $500. Ph. 1-867- 2113. 4347A rev., mags considered• . Write Larry Free brand QII'fi\e shoes, holsery, pur­ Uot;".",lty ref1Vlcrl;ons tequi,. that ell Crisler c/o v. Russell Rt. 5, C'dale. &eS. Discounts to l OIJfo. The ... uthor' s 4343F 1961 Ford 4 dr. Radio, wsw, 2 new Fast. efHc1eru repair for TV. tape. OCf1c:e. 114 1/2 S. illinois 9-6Q31 . f~nll:f:,:,:::t'L1.,~~· c:,cI=:~ ";,u::9~:; stereo-anything electronIc. Experi- . dres. $350. 3-5371 day, 9-4890 night. eonfroct lot whiell must be liIecI with One ttrlto share large traUer. Good 19318'" 43

~-:iJW\ , L~ ______...; ______.J. :~~'\DI . . 1 SLOCK NORTH OF I.e. PASSENGER DEPOT , ' ronner star for SIU DOW a Knick erbot:k ers in the National Bas· AT JACKSON ST, R.R. maSSING . is shown above i n action wh ile playja c . CARIONDALE, ILL :,