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October 1966 Daily Egyptian 1966

10-29-1966 The aiD ly Egyptian, October 29, 1966 Daily Egyptian Staff

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Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, October 29, 1966." (Oct 1966).

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1966 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in October 1966 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. D~ Ehf>1Uttt., The Twenties: SOUTHf'H ILLIHOIS U,,'v~'Slry Paradise Lost ~I •• 1111.. 66 Humber 29 Volume .48 ~ . October 29 , 19 " ... a zany, glorious, irresponsible

il •• kirl. above ill knee •. "

From Th. Tw.,tl •• THAT SIDE OF PARADISE : F . Scott Fitzgerold and John Held, J r. created the 20'5. . Fihgerald wrote it ond Held drew it .

The Twenties:

By Edward DeCourcy

Editor and Publisher, Newport (N .H. ) Argus-Cou ,;er 7 h t' 7 u r fl/j(, t. . New York: Ameri­ wa r m AugU St night in 1921) yo u will decade had e nd ed. Certainly the vast can Her itage P ublishing Co., In c., welcome American He ritage's The majority bought neither s tocks, and SI mon and Shuster, 1966. 11 2 Tu.eflllt' s , for a trip back to a time bonds, nor Florida r eal estate . .• pp. $1.95. of w,,\rmth and fun . you ar e not, The T We nl,if>s is great fun. get Th e Twentif> s and findoutwhat Lucius Beebe decrlbes Morian y's Perfods of history, like in­ it was r eally like. Wo nderful Saloon and the adventures ____ D ....~ ......

_ . _a-~~ dividuals, te nd to acquire r eputa­ Musical comedy, nove l, political of its pr oprietors and patrons in ~_ ftA I ." D\IUU f'n'. -...... tions, and In bo th cases they ar e argument, some histor ies, and ubi­ te rms that would make Carrie Nation ...... m .... _ ..... """,DCU. quitous press agents have fabricated _..n.,,- ~_ ...... T D", often exaggerated, frequentl y e r­ laugh. Robert Saudek: takes us back .. TW~ ftA.DCU

H ELO' S WORLD : F lat-chested girls, their boy fr iend s in raccoon coots and pork-pie hots, hip flo sh and sGxophon.,_ all wet. subjects of Held', pen .

Paradise Lost

story of Harding's Ohio Gang and the week than Wo rld Wa r I had cost the Teapot Do me Scandal by Bruce United St ates. Bliven. The squeamish among us c an find Fo r those who agr ee with Shake­ too many parallels between wh at spear e that " Wha t is past is pro­ America wa s saying and thinking logue," t his book can be disturbing. and doing then with what it is saying not mer el y for the compelling story and thi nking and doing now. of t he d r ead ful t e r ror of t he Ku Klux T he not- so- squeamls h will re­ Klan that chilled the good people of member that someho w, in s pite of the t wenties, but mor e for the sounds all the s tll y business an d econo mic insanity and political te rro r of the of Black Thursday, OCt, 24, 192 9, twenties, Ame r ica managed to sur­ when the Great Bull Market of Wa ll vive, and strong and healthy no w can Street c rashed to smithe r eens and look back on the folly of it s youth stockholder s lost more in s ingle four decades ago wtch a warm glow.

The Same Old Handbasket The follo wing comme ntary on the men with rheir hair combed straight diffe r ences between the yo uth of the back and a wide pan in the middle 20' s and tho se of today is reprinted found thal their inhibitions disap­ fro m Manhattan East. It was written peared rapidly with the use of JX>tor by J oseph C, Jahn, editor of the bootleg whiskey, and when they were Suffolk County (N. Y.l News. hard to get, hair tonic was a subst l- tute . We hear and r ead so much these The only r eal difference between days about the lack of control of then and now is that ther e we r e youth In s uch areas as sex, hal­ fewer yo ung people for adults to fret lucinator y drugs and social pr otest over in those days, a nd what they did that we tend to forget that there is with their lives wa s not gener ally really little new under the sun. cussed and discussed in ttle news­ Back in the 20's, when girls' paper s and magazines or by panel skins were nearly as brief as they groups on television. PTA' s did not are tOda y, their swains wer e called eXist, and, therefore . school people " lounge lizards: ' and Clara Bow had no one with whom to share was the sex sym bol, yo ung people philosophical concern over what was a nd sex went together lik.e ha m and going on after school hours . Seventh Ff'Om Th. T ....tl •• eggs. Those who danced the Charles­ and e ighth graders scribbled dirty ton and the Black Bottom off e r ed words on [he walls of boys' and FEMALE RIGHTS: These fou r girls have i"st been arrested. charg.d with the same sex message as do those girls ' r ooms then, JUSt as they do offending public decency . It was 1922. and p"blic beache, weren't ".eeI to who dance the F r ug and Monkey today. The sa me wordS, as a matter the new one.piece bathing suit. But a year later all the girls were w"ring today, only they did SO at closer of fact. tltom . quaners. It occurs to us that yo ung people Young people, who always have have always been going to hell In a and always will revolt against handbasket. but somehow they neve r author ity and social mores, toyed quite make it. You didn't, did you? with drugs In those days. Marijuana Come off it, now; you know you is by no means a new weed. Young didn't, , DAILY, r.· . EGYPTIAM.... .

-"AISL..Ir";t- Phi: "You say Jack is kicked o ut j ust because he is color blind? " Bete: " No , I said it was because he couldn't tell the difference be­ tween shades . He thought he was tossing a note in his girl's window and i t was the chaperone's. "

Bessie--Why did that youn g a ttOrney jilt you? Mabel -Technicality! He said some of my lines were not properl y filled out.

College

This was college humor, circa 1920. Sheiks s licked down their hair, flappers bobbed theirs; they took a s wig of bootleg gin and laughed their way Humor, 1920 throlllh four years of these kftee-slappere on college c ampuses allover the country. This was the er a of the college humo r magazine, which printed page after page of bad jokes and canoons and sketches copied from John He ld's in mass cir culation magazines lll::e Judge and Life. The ex- sheik who contributed these samples says, "We ren't we awful," but we think he secr etly believes the Jokes are sUll the cat's m eow. Some of the humo r magazines s urvived the 20's: Skt-U-Mah at Minnesota, Wisconsin' s Octopus , and the Stanford Chaparral, among mhers. But by and large they died not long after Valentino sem hi s last flapper s wooning. And humor has changed. Editorially we s hould make no Judgment on whether the c hange has been toward the mo r e sophisticated; personc-Jly, at the ris k of offending our contributor, we think: it has. But we have to be cautious. We'll be subject to the Judgment of history. too , and our child r e n may not think: muc h of elephant and bat Jokes and sick humor a la L~ nn y Bruce and Mon Sahl.

TaXI d river making a running broad Jump. COLLEGE MEN You get the Credit for the LEARBllRY Suit Prof. ( dis.cove1'ing daught.r He: How d id you get that on youn9 mon's 10"): Young blue mark on you r neck? lady, what doe, this meon ? She: Very pleasantly . Young Lady : Come bock in about thirty minutes , Dod . c.,Jh-.:,.:\· l1h·I\· ... ought to know by then . \ 11"1< t · 1.l';lrl'III',\ ·- -\ \ I· - l'1 l·.ltl't1 l.~ \" .11\ :":(' "Hello, is this the ~IYo. 1111 ' 1\ I ... II :til' \\ .. 11.1 \ I tion Army? • 111; 11 1.I'.,rI'lll'\ 1- 1111' l'It" "Yes , " "Your girl's foce is worth a , 01 \\1 ·11 fortune ." "Where they sove women ?" "Yes, it runs into a pretty "Yes ." figure." " Well , save me a blonde for tonight ."

.. ( "11.",, 111 .1/ 11/,11:, ' 1. ,,/1 . "I hove to buy some paper. {'III\I ,11/,1 I., "d' III I 1I1t';: , .1 Would you geot it here?" " How are a ll the little p igs II" ,,,II,"f" jj ll/1I "What difference don it down on the form?" mak.? If you get it a t e ither " F ine. And how are all the place they'll ream you ." pl edges at your house?" OWEN'S It "as been a rule 01 t"umb in Communist Eos· te,n Europe that one is Iree to criticize, buf only wit"in 9()Od Socialist bounds. One connot criticize communism as such, or the "ead 01 party or stote.

Press Freedom in Yugoslavia: A Test Case

By John T. Douner

Will the Yugoslav courts uphold country (the Soviet Union) into arrest tbe pressure of the police, Mlbajlo M!bajlov's rights, guaran­ derision. the whole project wlll he rUined. " teed by the country's constitution, to The charges stemmed from an His arrest undoubtedly will publish a pro - socialist but anti­ article In Delo , a Belgrade maga­ trigger that alarm. Communist and anti-Marxist maga­ zine, that, among other things, Though Mlhajlov is not cbarged zine? poInted out rhat the Russians used dire ctly In connectio n with any pub­ That is the big ques tion s haping Nazi -style death camps as early as llshlng indiscretion, he seems up before the gover nment of Presi­ 1921. In April, 1965, Mihajlov wa s des tine d for court on the larger con­ dent Tito. found guilty on both charges by a s titutional questions of freedom dis trict court in Zadar a nd sente nced Mihajlov, 31, writer and Slavonic fro m JX>llce harassmem and the right to nine months in prison. He also ro publls h. languages professor at the Univer­ was s uspended from the unive rsity siry of Zadar, was imprisoned at faculty. Mihajlov's publishing endeavors Z adar on the Adriatic sea coast on and his incarceration have put the eve of a meeting with his s up­ But he serve d only 37 da ys of the P resident Tim-who tries to main­ JX)rters at which his magazine, Free te rm. Mihajlov appealed hi s case to ta!n a respectable Image wltb both Voice, was to be launched. Mihajlov [be s upreme court of C roatia (the the West and Communist countries­ wa s charged wich violating a publtc­ Yugos lav republlc !n whic h Zadsr Is s quarely on the spot. Beaten once o rder law. His apartment was s ituate d) on constitutional grounds . 1n his own courts, Ttto must decide sear c hed and some of his writings In what was considered a daring whethe r the Communists will live up were confiscated. An a ssociate, ruling, without precedent In Com­ to their liberally worded constitution Marijan Batinic, was arres ted on the munist law. eve n in the most liberal o r whether domestic pollt!cal ex­ same charge and others were and pragmatic Communist country pedience will rule. 1n E as te rn Europe, the coun re­ harassed by militant Communist Tlto last month joined the liberal youths. 1 ~ meeting was canceled. ve rsed the convtction on the charge of insulting the Soviet Union and gave e lement of the League of Com­ But M!bajlov's friends s tili insist munists (the Yugoslav Communist Mlhajlov 3 5-month suspended sen­ tbat Free Voice will he puhl!shed. tence for distributing his article parry) and purged Vice-President This is not Mihajlov' s first brush after it bad been banned. The court Aleksaridar RanJcovlc and Svet!slav With the Yugoslav police and COUrts. acted despite the fact tbat Tito him­ Stfanovic, head of the secret p:>Uce, If it proves as successful as the last, s elf had denounced Mlbajlov as a from office and party for emplre­ Mlbajlov may Indeed soon be pub­ reactionary. bUlldlng, fomenting factional serlfe lishing. The young, devout anti­ and dragging thelr beels on de­ Later. last December, the same centralization. Communist writer was arrested 18 appellate caun ruled that Mihajlov's At that point, the president seemed months ago and cbarged with dis­ dismissal from Zadar university to step with Yugoslavia's galloping tributing an article after It bad been was lllegal - that in Yugoslavia, banned and of bringing a foreign liberalization. But in a speech to war wbere Ideological freellom Is veterans a few days later, Tiro guaranteed by the conStitution, a gave a hint of bow he might view Citizen could not be dismissed and Daily Egyptian Mlbajlov' s liberal polltlcal Ideas. deprived of his llveUhood because his Ideological outlook was ChrlBtlan .. I nsofar as liberalism Is con­ PltbU.hed in the Department at JournaLUm cerned, I consider It negative in Tuesday through saturday throughout the and not Marxist. The coun ordered .cbool )'lear, except durtng UrdYerslty vaca­ MlbaJlov reinstated in the unlverslry two ways,.. tbe president said, .. A tion per1oda, eumination weeks, uxt ~pl as an assistant professor. liberal view of dogmatic and cen­ holidaYI by Southern IIltnota University, The decision.. left old-guard Com­ eralist forces !s negative • • • We Cubonda1e, lU1noia 62901. Second cla •• postaF paJd at Carbondale, IllinolA 62901. munists sputtering. sball not be liberal toward certain Pollciel of lbe Egyptian are the l'elpon­ In announcing his publlshlng ven­ negative phenomena and influences slbWty of the editors. Statements ~Ushed ture last s prIng, Mlhajlov made it from the West. toward the introduc­ bere 00 not neceuaTUy renect tbe oplnlon clear that his editorial pol!cy would tion of Western ideologies. II of the admJ.n1auat1on or any de~nmen t at the Unlverslry. be socialist but anti-Communist and It bas been a rule of thumb in Editorial and business offices located in anti- Marxist, with the purpose of Communist wtone Building T-48. FlAcal officer, Howard R'". e nding one-party, [Otalitarlan Com­ Long. Telephone 453-2354. Is free to criticize. but only within Editona1 ConfererlC@ : Dianne B. Anderson, munist rule and paving the way for good SoclaUst bounds. One cannot Tlm W. Ayers, John Kevil Cole, Plmela meaningful elections. In a s tatement criticize communism as such, or the J . Amold , Jo hn M. Goodrtch, John W. released through Freedo.m House in head of parry or state. Epperhelmer, WU11am A. Klndt, Michae l New York, MlhaJlov wrote: L. Nauer, Marga'tet E. Pere z, L. Wade Tbat clearly Is wbat Mlbajlov bas Roop, Ronald E . Se reg, Laurel E. Wenh, ~ . Unless an alarm is sounded in set out to do. The question now is, Thomas B. Wood J I". the West immediately, which will wlll the rule stand In Yugoslavia?

R."rint.d fRlm Kansas C ity Time. ~'=z .. ", ...... " ,, ~#.tY .£t!r~W!'t : ...... " ". _.u. .. .. ~r~d"~ : : Daily Egyptian Book Scene Romance Anthropologist at Work And Color

StrQn~er and Friend: Th.e Way of inte rest in movies as culture pat­ In' Reprint an An. thropologist by Hortense terns); and an African copper-min­ Powdermaar. New York: Nonon Ing township In Northern Rhode sia J~).. t~ ~\~ ~;{ I and Co., 1966. 311 pp. $6.50 (now Zamblal In 1953-54 (where From Scotland to Silverado by Raben LOuis Stevenson; ed. James she attempted to study the influence @ There's plenty of methodology of the m ass media In social change). J ~ ~\.~c¥-.O~ .. ~i@ , D. Han. C ambridge, Massachusetts; literature concerned with how social This lx>ok Is no l1terary maste r­ 01'1i O:T IJ I The Belknap Press of Harvard Uni­ scientists ought to think, feel and piece, but it is inte r e sting as a j ~ \: ~ ~D:J ~ versity Press, 1966. 287 pp. act In the field. but, 1n the mind candid, over-the-teacups- sort of of Anthropologist Hortense Powder­ r epon about the feelings of one Whe n essays or shon book.s are maker, not enough has been written anthropologist, of he r discourage­ U ~~~ ·;j r eprinted from the collected edition about the actual thoughts and feelings ments and pleasures, of he r e rrors of an author's works, the r eader is of the field worker. and achievements, as s he s teps into always moved to question why, par­ In S tran~ e r and Friend: Th e IJ-ay and out of SOCieties, participating. t icularly when tbe collected edition of an A nthropologi6t • s he lays bare observing and intervie wing. Is easily available . It Is wIth tbis query that ODe approaches From her professional soul to present. Especially valuable to the social ,t ~, 1 especially for young anthropologists scientist ar e the first chapte r, which Scot land to Silverado , James 0 • and other young social workers, a tells about life influence s that go From The T wenties Hart' s handsome reprinting of case history of --how an ant:hro­ Into the making of an anthropolo­ Raben Louis Stevenson's The polog1s[ lives, works, and learns; gist, and the last chapter which Amateu r Emip,rant and Th e Si lv­ how he thinks and feels In the field." de scribes some of the new tech­ e rado Squatters , Stevenson's ac­ Tbls knowledge Is especially Impor­ niques In anthropology. the tre atment of people as propeny. counts of his trip to and r esidence tant In the field of anthropology EspecIally inte resting to the lay the debasement of taste, and the In California In 1879- 1880. Was this which employs the "participant ob­ reader is Dr. Powder make r's ac­ whole dehumanization whic h occur­ servation" methOd , the he a rt of count of her field r esear ch experi­ r ed in the m ak ing of most movies ences in Mississippi. In the chapter were foreign to my values ... Of ). entitled " Seeds of the Negro Revolu­ She did produce tWO s uccessful Reviewed by Re viewed oy tion," s he comment s on the signifi­ books from these field experiences: Cu rtis Doltl Mari: Lipper cance of the data s he collected in A{ler Freedo m: A Cultural Sr.ud'y in 1934 as they are viewed In the the lJeep South (Viking Press, context of the current Civil Rights 1939), and Hollywood, the Dream struggle in this country. She even Fa CI O,) (Little Brown & Co" 1950). which Is involvement (Friend) and advances the theor y that "the open About her inVOlve ments , Dr . Pow­ reprint necessary? On the whole , detachment (Strange r ). "To under­ de fiance of Negro men to white men dermaker has a ready answer: m y answer Is no. stand a strange SOCiet y," Dr. Pow­ who r efu se to grant them Civ il rights "Conscious involvement s ar e not a The book is full of r o mance and denna.ker obse rves, "the anthro­ may not be un connected with the handicap for the social scientist . color. Stevenso n, ill and nearly pologist has traditionally immersed changing sexual mo r es" tn the South. UnconSCiO US ones ar e always dan­ pennile ss but drawn by love and himseU in it. " Because of this, s he " ConSide rable evidence existed ger ous ." longing, almost kills himself in his adds, "a description of the field then," s he writes, " that sexual r e ­ passionate journey from Scotland lat ions between white men and Negr o worker Is in order s ince his per­ to California to woo and wed his sonaUty is pan of the research wo men were decreasing and that belovejl Fanny Osbourne (at the ..- being studied." ext ramarital and premar ital r e la­ Movie Director's time the wife of another man!). With The Ustrange societ ies" in which t ions among whites we r e in­ an odd group of fellow-passenge r s Dr. Powde nnaker Imme rsed herself c r easing. " he cr osses the Atlantic in a filthy were a late Stone-Age Melanesian The r eader might feel that An­ Cooking Secrets immigr ant ship, debarks in cold, society in the southwest PaCifi c thr opologist Powdermaker became rainy New York, and then e ndures (the village of Lesu on [he island tOO emotionally involved in Mis­ Cooking Ir ull L ove (wd Papril.a the half-starvation and bitter rigo r s of New Ireland) in 1929-3-0; a rural s issippi (whe r e "it was impossible by J oseph Paste rnak. New Yo rk: of a trjp across [he continent in an Mississippi community (lndianola)­ to escape the inhe r ent social prob- Bernard Gels Associates, 1966. almost incredibly primitive im­ half Negro and half whlre--In 1933- lems"), and In Holl ywood (" . . . how $5.95. migrant r ailr o ad train. Arrived, 14; Holl ywood, Calif" In 1946-47 dee ply 1 had hated the pl ace ... rhe he lives for some months among (research that g r e w out of her fraudule nce of the human relations. If you want [0 glamorize yo ur the quaint characters of old Mexi­ carrots, o r want a conversation can Monterez and then With his ne w pi ece, like Spinach Roulade, you' ll bride and her son "squats " in a find it in Movie Director Joseph ri ckety abandoned bunkhouse on a Paste rnak' s cookbook Cooking If ir.h mountainside in the ghost mining L () I ' t' and Paprika town SJIverado. Ste ve nso n's narrative is al so in­ Mr. Paste rnak presents these te r esting in its r eve lation of the recipes, gathe r ed fro m famlly and attitudes toward the United States friends, 1n a comfy, chit- chat man­ of an upper-class Briton of his ner , telling yo u, in anecdotes scat­ day. He is distressed by the lack te r ed throughout the book, who gave of class distinctio n in American which r eCipe to whom. He becomes life (he is not always r ecognized quite lyrical wh en he tells that caviar and treated as a "gentlema n"); he served In blinis is a " combination s ees only rudeness and incivility in of fl avors that s ings like Mario Ame r ican manners; in Monterez he L anza sang." The bltnis recipe is observes the melting pot in action in cluded 3S well as Pot Roast a la but Is openl y prejudiced against the Daniel1 . Chicken Liver Pilaf, and Irish, the Chinese, and the Indians; Szekely Guylas. If yo~ JUSt coul dn't he describes the more picturesque fin d a recipe fo r Alb&co r e you ' ll inhabitants of Amer ica With con­ find Ir he r e. (lr' s a fish,) descending a musement. He is im­ One l1ttle secr et he doesn't r eveal : pressed, as most Europeans we r e , How he fin ds time to di r ect movies With the vast spaces and scenic and cook as much as he claims he magnifice nce of the country. but does. at ootto m he thoroughly dislikes Ir. Margo Rieman, author of Twell!t' F urthe rmore , Professor Hart, Com pan ) Dinn e rs and whose chairman of the Department of En­ gUsh ar the Unive r sity of California , Berkeley. and editor of the familiar Oxford CompC1{;ion, to Americ an Reviewed by L il,eralure , nas printed (or the first Mollie Eli" ume whal Stevenson actUally wrote, r estoring from manuscr ipts and early editions r ealistic and bitter passages excised by bowdlerizing editor s . This textual work is a specialt y is cookbooks helped adapr needed task carefull y done , and these fine continental recipes to the Han' s introduction is full, well Ame rican ki tchen. written, and perhaps even more It' s true these r eCipes contain interesting than Stevenso n' s text. love and paprika but the title shoul d Yet in the end this r e mains a have included ··Spirlts ." Mr. Pas­ s light anecdotal book of interest te rnak's r ecipes ar e laced with principally to special devotees of them. A cake recipe I' m not going Stevenson or amateurs of Califor­ to try because it r equires more nia local color. It has no r ea) than one to rte form, c alls for three depth of criticism, and its charac­ diffe r ent liqueurs. teristically Stevensonian straining after the cheerful light touch in the Recipes aside, the a necdotes make midst of miser y becomes wearing. engaging r eading and on The Harvard Press could, I think, the premise that one good recipe have found a more important book Photo by John Boron is wo rth the price of a cookbook to include as pan of its John Harvard the n this one is wo rth bu ying. Library of r eprints. -,

Paris D;ary' Re~o~C,s' ;' \ ~ ;' ~ (1 A Music;~hsM' us;ri~s · - -'

The Paris Diary of Ned Rorem. Harris. all of wbqm cam~ under th~ New York: George Brazlller, 1966. direct Influence of Nadia Boulanger_ 240 pp. $5,95. By 1951, Rorem was led to write of this world-renowned pedagog: HHer sister having been her final Tbere are many historical ex­ treasure. she's ever after shunned amples of composers of music leav­ all others of that sex (all but those Ing literary records of a personal stooges who solfege like machine nature for posterity to study and guns but have the talent. of octopI), ponder. These have rangecl tn content and symhollcally espoused each from the brief, searing Heiligen­ gentle youth In her vicinity __ • s tad t T e s tm en t of Beethoven, con­ Only a female ___ could bave built cerntng his growing deafness, to the within herself the most spectacular voll1Pl InOus bravado of Wagner's M ein L e be n. On the contemporary Reviewed "y scene tbls autobiographical I~gacy Robert Mu.lI", tncludes StraVinsky's Chronoques d e rna vie • Most composers bave also left reams of correspondence musical m ~tier in tbe world today for collectors to collate and edit. . . • The flame's extinction . . . Whether in the form of letters, came In the late forties wben the diaries, or straight autobiography, new young Americans emigrated to these documents provide important Paris like good shepherds bearing clues and insights intO the deve lop­ \lublous f.ifts. But they found • . • ment of musical c r eattvity and the they didn t now need ber. " relations of the composer to society Besides focusing brilliantly on the in general. social and artistic whirl of "big Th e Paris Diary of Ned Ha rem names" Ro rem 'mingled with (VI­ Is one such contemporary work. comtesse Marie Laure de Noailles, Indians-born, Rorem's music was Francis Poulenc, Cocteau. Georges first imroduced {Q SIU audiences AuriC. Noel Lee), the Paris Diary when Nell Tangeman, anist-in­ also reveals youthful personal prob­ residence in 1958 sang various lems In a most remarkable manne r. of his songs at recital appearances The author seems obsessed witb on campus. Rorem's reputation 3S a sexual ad1ustment.. alcoholism. and a NED ROREM composer still rests pr1marlly gnawing sense of creative im­ on his vocal output! whether his potency. His emotional proclivities Faulkner-Cowley Correspondence literary e f for t will outshine are toward members of his own sex; his musical contributions Is an he 1B frequently c1runt or recover­ unanswerable question. but the ex­ Inll from bangovers; doubts about Is a Fascinating Interchange tremely readable and highly his cuatIve potential consistently interesting material of the Diary ~ague him. WbIl~ winning open The Faulkner-Co wley File. edited Faulkner answers: ..... I open the should be stimulating to anyone In­ il:.ceptance In the most Ulustrious by Malcolm Cowley. New York: envelopes to get the return postage tent on probing the qualities of crea­ of artistic and cultural Circles, be The Viking Press, 1966. 184 pp. stamps (If any) and dump the letters tive musicianship, particularly as reveals constantly. with a tinge of $5.00. tn the desk drawer, to be read when tbey relate to an American trans­ self-pity. his ever-present In­ (usually twice a year) tbe drawer planted temporarily to a European securtties. By 1946 William Faulkner's overflows." But Faulkne r, past his musical climate. "I'U always be a spoiled Child," seventeen books were out of print. prime as a writer and stUl un­ Rorem's self-confessions and be ..rlt~s "If I am a significant His JXlpu.lar reputation was that of a acknowledged, Is obviously pleased. comments on his experiences in Amertcan composer, it is because decadent Southern author of a at Cowley's inte rest. And be lB even France and, to a lesser extent, I've never tried to be New . . . Is Hdlny" book called S an c lllory. more pleased, a few months later, other countries in Europe, are not It true tbat I use people? .. . Being Aparl from sympathetic essays by when, havtng stirred new attention comparsble In depth to the soul's myself a coward, a cheat. a weak­ Conrad Aiken and George Manon with the essay, Cowley writes that lament recorded 80 poetically and kneed opportunist, stingy and dls­ O'Donn ell, Uterary critiCs had done V1.k1.ng wants to publish a P ortable tragically in Beethoven's Testa­ bonest-I despise tbl'se things .. , edition of his work. Then the fas­ ment. On the other hand, it Is I think more of sex than of music." cinating interchange: Cowley me­ not as detailed or Ugbt-beaned a Tbls amblval~ce between super­ thOOlcaU y sear ching for thematic record of personal trivia as can be ego and drastic self deprecation Is Reviewed by patterns and representative selec­ found in some of Mozan's letters. the dominant recurring theme In the JolIn M. How.11 tions; Faulkner whimsically con­ It impresses one ratber as an honest, diary. Por tbe young In bean, of tradicting the evidence of the texts unashamedly frank: mirror of ex­ any cbronological age, Rorem's by interpreting his stories as they tremely subjective youthful mus­ prose should strike a sympathetic had grown in his imagination rather Ings, during a critical period of response. Evidently none of the little to alter this misconception. than as they had existed at the time artistic development (May, 1951, tribulations, real or lmagln~, Nothing did more [ 0 r ed r ess these of publication. through October, 1955-ages 28 to appear to have affected his com­ grievances and to Ulumlnate Faulk­ Unfortunately, the r e was little 32). ner's vast accomplishments than positional output and the great etry. the most difficult of all classic legacy and its cransforma­ sistant in [he Department of Jour­ the writings and translations of his Chinese literary forms. It is proba­ tion to the modern literary move­ nalism. predecessors, but his sources are bly due to this dexterity the first ment Is unfonunately missing. in SIU approved living centers from the day you move in until January 1967-meal tickets available.

Be our guest at.... DARTMOUTH HALL for men at 508 S. Wall AUBURN HALL for women at 504 S: Graham OXFORD HALL For details contact... for men at 505 S. Graham Realestate 201 E. Main

457-7134 457-2134 457-2135

Or Contact... Howard Lambert Bob Hisgen Dennis Immen

457-5086 549-5245 457-7694 · j Recording Notes ' Basie and Friends

By Bob Budler recording: " It wa s a pleasant ex­ Copley Ne ws Service perimem which turned inco enjoy­ ment. " Singing groups are making It big on records these days. A group that ALONG ALBUM AL LE Y could come up a r e al "sleeper" is the Alan Copeland Singe rs, who are THIS IS J O STAFFORD (Dot)- At featured in a new Count Bas ie album, one time Jo Stafford was one of the " Baste Swingin' -Voices Singin' "on top s ong s tylis ts on wax. In this A BC Records. set, she s hows s he has los t none of The album is we ll-planned and the he r singing s avvy. He r smooth, e mpathy betwe en Bas ie and Copeland "smokey" sound still comes through is reflected in both [he temlXls and on tune s like " If I Had You," the choice of material. Tempos are, "E very Night the Sun Goes (n," of coti'rse. Ba s ie ' s paramount con­ "Moon Song, " "I'd Climb the High­ cern and he sets the beat throughout est Mountain" and "Cry, Cry , Conozca a su Vecino this sharp seL Darling" are included. Copeland's writing Is witty, har­ THE NEW OLD SWEET SONGS­ monically astlJte, and tasteful. His FRAN!( DEVOL (ABC Records)- If objective is to move or e xhilarate you like golden oldIes this album by Los Cimarrones de Panama the listener by those artis tic and DeVol's Rainbow Strings sure will musical me ans whic h will bring him please you. Twenty-eight tunes are back to the r ecord again ctnd again. arranged in two and three song sets De tal magnitud fueron los abuBos organiza la r ebeU6n e hutda de otro Copeland, who did all the writing for that are nostalgic from the opening y cr{menes que los colonizadores gropo de esclavos negro s en el the Mode rnaires, is r e ally coming "When It '~ Springtime In the espanol es comotieron con l as IX>b­ Archlplelago de las P e rlas del Golro imo hi s own as an arrange r these Rockies," to the closing take on lactones ind(genas de America que, de Pa n am~ y este grupo funda un days. "Toot Toot Toots Ie (Goodbye)." ante el mdlce acusador de Fray palenque en el Golro de San Miguel. While " Down by the Old Mill LAI{A'S THEME - GU ANTAN­ Banolome de las Casas y de arras La Corona utUlzo todo tipo Stream" doesn' t eve n ge t a me ntion AM ERA - THE BRASS RING (Dunhlll) voces ene rgtcas de protesta. Espana de recursos para amedrentarlos. in the line r notes, Alan's updating - This Is the Tijuana sound and se conmov16 y respondto estable­ hasta Ue go a r ecurrtr al descuar­ of this old standard is a s tandout adaptation of the style co L ara's ctendo sus Leyes de [ndJas que t en {an ttzamiento de uno de los negros s ide. His imagination also wo rks Theme (Somewhere My Love) may un altO contentdo de justlcta social. capturados, en publico, bajo las ove nime on " Ha ppiness Is, " " One make the curre nt click c atch on Aunque estas famosas leyes fueron 6rgene s del Capitan Francisco Car­ For My Baby," " Candy" and "You . on once again. Otber songs styled acepcadas en prlnclpla, no se r eno. Sin embargo, tales ho rro res Ar e My Suns hIne." the Alpert-way include "Guaman­ llegar'On a cumpl1r, sin embargo no pus te r on freno al bandole r ismo Ba s ie's pi ano is e ver pr esent and amera," also a s tngle s mash, tuvie ron un a enorme tmponanc la. de los c imarrones. the rhythm section and voice s are principal me nte en las decis ion pos­ A rlnales del Siglo XVI y prime r aide d by ocher me m ber s of the "Patrlcia," ··Who's Afraid, " "Cal­ te rio r de l Rey Carlos V de s ubstitutr decenlo del xvn los c imarrones se Bas ie band. All-time great tr umpet­ ifornia Dre amin'," and " Theme aI indio por abongenes arrlc anos, organtzan en un a s angrtenta e r Roy E ldridge's muted horn Is an from Born F ree. " pues se obse rv6 que el indio no m" narqufa dirlgida JXl T el ~ ey ne gro, invaluable fa ctor on " Uncil I Met FROM NASHVI L LE WITH LOVE­ estaba bie n capactrado C(sic amente Domingo Congo, la cual Ie trae You," a number wrine n by F r eddie CHET ATKINS (RC A-Vlctor)- Thls para aguanta r las arduas labares muchas perdtdas de vld as y de Gr eene , whose guitar is heard on is a great guitar album . "Mr. del c ampo. As( se estableclo un vB r equezas a las colonla5 espanolas. e ve r y perfo rmance. Guitar" shows his vinuos ity as he [rafteo de negros . y constgo un nuevo A la mue rte de tal Re y, 1 0 ~ c1mar­ At times, the r e are pass ages plays some linle known tunes along elemento etnico en el nuevo con­ r ones entran finalmente en un which ask a gre at de al of the 12 with some standards. " I Love tinente, para obtene r con s us manos penodo de paz, dedlc ando s e aI s inge r s (s ix male , s ix fe male), but Paris," "AI- Di-La," "Stranger on y fuerza bruta 10 que los coloni­ cultivo de l a tierra y me jorando the r e are no tricks fo r tricks ' s ake , the Sbore" and "The Song From zadores espanoles se negaron sus relac lones con los demas grupos no needless e xhibitio nism. Moulln Rouge" are bes t known. a hace r JXlr s f mismos debtdo a su de la colonia, r ecibiendo en com­ The COUnt chose we ll in select­ "From Nashville with Love," menosprec to a1 trabajo , pr e jutctos pensaci6n de parte de la Cor ona ing Copeland as his collaborator. "Englis h Leather," "After the de nobleza, y ansJas de rtquezas Espanola. [fe rras y ocros Ba s ie's own unders tated comme nt Tears" and '"Romance" rate best y de ,honor es. Esto es, el cultivo privlleglos. tells the re al s to r y of this fine among le sser known sides . de las tte rras y explotac ton de las minas. EI comer c lo de abo rfgene s afric anos como e sclavos estuvo Te levisi ons' Week primero en manos de los portU­ gueses y veneciaoos, y poste rtor­ mente a cargo de franceses, ingleses y holandes e s. Aunque muchos de los esclavos negros quizas en­ A Week at the Movies contraron en Panama cond iciones climacologtcas s tmilares a las de Movies are the main anraclion o n an NBC News s peCial, is the first Madame Chiang Kal- shek, (9:30 sus tie rras, especlalmente aquellos te levision during the upcoming week. of [WO r eports on the 1966 campaign.. p.m., Ch. 8) provenientes del centro del con­ - better movie s [han usual, at any This one look. s at the battles for tinente africano, esco no fu e b3J. s amo rate. governorships, (5:30 p,m" Ch. 6) WEDNESDAY sufic iente para allviar el dolo r de Sunda y. nigh! C hannel 3 will Pres ident Johnson' s trip is the haber sido prtvados de s u l1be rtad, feature EUa Kazan' s " East of subject or a CBS special report by News in Perspective presents el haber sido transponados en Eden," a 1955 film based on John ,-,>rre spondent C harles Cplllngwoo

~6()( per -hour~ \ \ Date. play free FEATURE~. TECHNICOLOR" SANDIlAMIW <@n O'KELLY'S 409 5, lilinoi. TIMES :. SnVA'KOSCINA .;""'..:.' ~ Ammo Du~p Explodes ' ~ ' Hami~"'& fiRd carm:it:~l'i '-' Draft Status Face Review. Killing 2 Near Saigon NEW YORK (AP)- The SAIGON. South Viet Nam draft defe rments of actor American soldiers were ldlIed George Hamilton and civil (AP)- An eanhshakl.ng explo­ and 10 injured. rtgbts le ade r Stokely Carmi­ sion ripped up an ammunition The blas t blackened a s ur­ dump Friday night in a supply chael , are up for re-exam­ rounding jungle and br oke win­ !nation by their local drart area for two U.S. infantry di­ dows 1n Saigon, 12 mUes away. visions. boards. U.s. authorities on the scene HamOtan, 27, a fre quent First reports said two said [hey expected a heavier e scon of Lynda Bird J ohn­ casualty toll. Large numbe rs son, has been orde red to of American troops are sta­ re­ Carrier Crew port for a physical exam i­ tioned in tbe are a, just off the nation a week from Monday. main highway fro m Saigon to Dumps Bombs Cape St. Jacques. The r e also He has been Classlfied 3A, is a large American bospital defe rred from service unde r categor y dealing with u there. a ex_ tre me hardship". To Save Ship Pfc. Louis R. LaCr oix. 19. of Somer set, Mass., said he Carmichael. 25, is claSSi­ SU BI C BA Y, Philippines was SOO feet away fro m the fied as 1Y , as not currently (AP )-T he aircr aft carrie r blast and it knocked him down. Or iskany came perilousl y If} hear d a couple of ma­ WARRIOR-Jen ­ close to being blown out ofthe chine gun rounds befor e the nifer J ohns on, 21-year~l d Un i­ .Modern Equipment Gulf of Tonkin by he w own explosion," he told a reporter. versity of Washington coed, bombs when she caught f i r e U.s. troops had just finished s ays s he wants to be 8 combat . ,Pleasant Atmosphere two days ago, it was learned a hunt-and-kill mis sion a­ soldier. ' J ennifer is auditing Friday, galns[ Viet Co ng guerillas In he r seventh and ei ghth courses • Dates play free But a band of sailor s , some the area. in mi li tary science at the uni­ in [he ir teens , saved the s hip. The explOSion, at 9 p.m. , versity. One of the ROTC in ­ They stood the ir ground sent a huge orange ba ll r oll­ structors said she outs hot many against wh ite hot fl a mes and ing into the night sky. In cade ts with a military rifl e thre w alx)U( 300 bo mbs intO Saigon it looked like s unset. recenU y. (AP Photo) the sea, Capt. J ohn H. Iar r obino of BILLIARDS C~.~ j n c...t_ Newton, Mass•• the skippe r, De Gaulle Lauds Frenchmen, c redited his c r e wmen With a "fantastic feat" In getting rid Blasts German, U. S. Policy of 5OO- pound, I,OOO-pound an d SPECIAL SHOW! 2,OOO- pound bombs whic h lay PARIS (AP ) - P r esident De Gaulle also said the La s t t ime today at 1 :30 pm only within the r eac h of fl ames. C harle s de Gaulle F r iday lec­ Uni ted States must promptly Lt, J. g. Ron Thurs man, 32, tured the Ame ricans on Asia halt the bombing of No rth of Mascot, Tenn .• told an in­ and the Germans on Europe, Viet Nam because .. France tervie wer : • 'If those bombs lauded his own country's inde ­ cannot stand to see a s mall had gone off, we'd have lost pende nce, and lold Fre nchmen people bo mbarded by a gr eat the Ship," they ne ver had it so good.. power ." The fl ame- scarred Or is­ Winding up his semiannua l De Gaulle said he was giving kany. vete ran of mo r e than 10 news confer ence - an un­ his adivce to Amer ica as a GIRLS! months of wa r off North Viet Dr oken s tatement which r an frie nd. SONGS! Nam, r e ac hed [his U, S. na val mor e than an hour - De Gaulle " We are s aying all thiS base F riday co st a rt under­ warned F r ench VOlers to give because of o ur friendship for GIRLSI goliig r e pairs. hi m a new major icy in ne xt America, a friends hip wh ich FUNI T o t he m el anchol y not es of year's legislative e lections or fr om the beginning has led us t aps , the carrie r sent 43 of he r risk a relapse Into pre-Gaul­ . ceaselessly to try to turn IN c r e w-35 officer s and 8enlist ­ list chaos. America from this de adly e n­ ed men-home for burial, their Speaking of AS ia, he as­ te rpr ise." coffins tlraped with American sened the Americans cannOt Speaking of Europe, De TICKLE ME fl ags. win 1n Vi et am - but cannOl Gaul le blamed West Ger­ The 45,ooo- ton carrie r, a be destr oyed by their foes, ma ny' s preference for close PLUS! a " beep-beep" ROADRUNNER REVUE! veteran of the Kor ean Wa r , and should quickl y withdraw Washington ties fo r the lack of steamed 650 miles he r e fr o m their troops as a step toward mor e cooperation between ADMISSION : (to II) SO , . ( 12 & 0.0') 75, her st at ion in the Gu lf of self - derermina[Jon fo r the Fr ance and Bonn. He accused Tonk. in off No rth Viet Nam. e mbanled count r y under in­ Bonn of putting its Atlantic A Civilian construction su­ ternational guar a ntees. links above the Fr e nch-W est perv isor , George C. Oaklund. He said the United Stares Ger many cooper ation treaty, looked at the damage and said: should recognize Communist and asserte d the evolution of uThis Is a tremendous Job. t Chi na, then aid its e mry into European economic unity r e ­ don't think we have the man­ the United Na£ions , and in­ quires a "European" Europe. power to t ackl e an yt hing like s ure itS participation in any He r eiter ated that by next this." So utheast Asia settle ment . He April I all fo r eign troops said s uch a C hinese r ole is and bases will have been I Today's Weather I essential to pea ce . ousted fr om Fra nce. and that SUN . TlIRU TUES. AT 2: 15- 4:30-6:45& 8:40 Panly cloudy and a little coole r today. Highs tn the LATE -_/\-- m id 60s. Outlook fo r Sunday: s unny and cool. The r ecor d high for this date is 85 degr ees SHOW _DE/.~N set in 1950. The recor d low Is 16 degr ees set in 1962 accor d­ In g to the SIU Climatology L aOO r atory. From the man who made the

Academy Award Winning "AstOnLshingly frank! DANCE " THE SKY ABOVE. A n unabashed look at real · lif~ THE MUD BELOW/* sex. Remarkably uninir.iblted After the Game and speCific In itrrecording of the way lovers talk and touch and think!"

TODAY "A ten.der and lusty study of ilJve. 'Dear J ohn ' is a tour de force of erotiC realism . Lovemaking banter .. . as explu:it as the law allows,'"

" A ltogether il is a stunning pu:ture. a compelling picture.' A fran k and Unin hibited exposition of the on·rush of physLcal deSi re. One after arwther sceM expands upon the brash techniques of courtship and t.heciarn{JTOUS fulfillment 0/ desirf!!" tt _ 8c.Wy C.-thor. N 'T,--. Everybody will be there this afternoon

RUMPUS ROOM ~~R~-;g. r',. n Sio mal llOf esenl~ 'DE ARJOHtrI slal!ln~J.1r I K ulltan4Chn S:lna Srnolhn 213 E. Main duec led by lars ~ agnu ~ lrndgten ,hom a nowel by ()lIe lansberg ' prooUrC!"C b, A8 Sanare.. A.le1lt'ttna RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDI91CES ! '. Even Time

The serIes of lectures on Controlled HThe Civil Rights Revolution" w1ll close Sunday at the Uni­ tarian Fellowship at Univer­ At Southern sity Avenue and Elm Street. By Wade Roop Melvin S. Brooks, associate professor of sociology. will SIIJ students will gain an discuss "CIvil Rights Goals hour of sleep Sunday wltb the and Strategies, " He will speak at 10:30 a.m, change [Q scandard time from Daylight Savings Time, but An open forum discussion on Don Satterlee of Murpbys­ the series will be held from 3 boro will lose about 24 hours. to 4:30 p.m. Sunday, Those who spoke in the series will Satterlee, area e ngineer for parricipate. Simplex Time Recorder Co., will have nine destinations in Coffee w1ll be served fol­ southern Illinois and south­ lowing the discussion period. east Missouri between 4 p.m. Saturday and 4 p.m. Sunday. He will be r esetting clocks and time mechanisms. He will spend elgbt of the 24 hours on 1lfE MARCHING SALUKIS the SIIJ campus, he said. GUll'" of Cardinal. "To me, the time change abouldn'( be allowed," Satter­ Juicy, Red Delicious, lee sa1d. Marching Salukis to Be Televised Monday Golden DeliCious, Jonathan, Rolling clocks back one hour SIU's field band, the March­ major, will lead the Marching " new sound" and the " new and Winesap on the sru campus 1s not as Ing Salulcls, will be nationally Salukis through the routlnes look" Is the Rythm on Wheels complex an operaUon as might televised on CBS at 8:30 p.m. and songs which will be pre­ section. which provides a ... APPLES be expected. Herman Sum­ Monday before the Cardlnal­ sented Ln the Homecomlng complete battery of percus­ mers, physical plant engineer, Chicago Bears football game show today. ston lnstruments to round out SW~ET said a master control unit lo­ and during the half time Slnce adopting a "new look" the concert band capablllltles, cated In tbe Pbyslcal Plant The Marching Salulds, di­ and a Hnew sound" in 1961. "This Rythm on Wheels *APPLE CIDER bandles tbe enUre change pro­ rected by Michael Hanes, will the !?IU unit, composed of section gives us the same r e ­ Great for Parti ... , cess. Summers said the mast­ be tbe guests of tbe St. Louis 11 0 members, has attracted sources that a concen band er unit Is simply "pro­ Cardinals Monday night In nationwide attention and has has." said Hanes. who 1s 10 OPEN DAILY grammed." just like every­ Busch Memorial Stadium In played numerous guest-atrist his second year as director thing else on campus. St. Louis. engagements at band cliniCS of the Marching Salukls. OperaUng from the master u This performance is to and professional spons e­ The next out-of-town per­ McGU.E'S unit are approximatel y 600 acquaint people with the ver­ vents. formance for the Marchlng clocks on campus, 74 of them satillry of a large band," said The characteristic which Saluids will be at the SIIJ­ FRUIT In ODe building. Each clocl: J act Montgomery, a junior distinguishes SIU's band from Southwest Missouri football operates OD the standard 120- Nov . 19 at Springfield, MARKR from Alton, m. other college marchlng bands nly' Mil •• South of C' dol •. Rt . ~ volt elecrrlcalsystem on cam­ Montgomery. the drum pus, but a "blgh frequency dinnerIs tbe jackblackets andworn red by plaid the rliniiiiT?1iiiiiiEiii~7lV'~~~R~~ carrier signal" 1s sent out Speed Reading lower brass, woodwlnd, upper through tbe electrical system brass and percussion units. v1a the master unit. This Black Homburg hats complete master signal controls the Classes Listed the "formal" aspect of the clocks on a 12-hour baSiS, band. • Check Cashing resetting them each time 6 Speed reading classes will In Another element of both the • Notary Publi < o'clock rolls around. if [hey be offered for five weeks winter quaner, the Readlng should need resertlng. • Money Orden Center has announced. • Titl. S., vic. In describing the necessary The classes will meet for eOriver', Lieen •• changes [0 standard time for two hours a week for fiv e the campus. Sanerlee said weeks, according to Allen • Publ i c Stenograph.r a simple adjustmem in the Berger, director of College .2 Day lie ... ,. Plat. master unit will be made at Read10g Services. Servic. 2 a.m. Sunday here. the offi­ The anttcipated stan10g • T rav.I ... , Checks etal ti me the change In hour date Is the week of Jan. 23. arrives. Then for the r e­ The follow1og secttons have Se. Us For " Full Cov.roge" mainder of the eight hours. been tentatively scheduled: Store Hours he w1ll check the progression Sectton one, Monday and Wed­ Aut 0 & Motor Scoot et' 9-6 Daily of the changes in clocks in nesday from II [0 1l:50 a.m.; me various campus buildings. section two, Tuesday and 1NSURAt«:E .Pey your Gas, Light, Phone, and Water Bills hre He said it may take up to Thursday from 2 to 2:50p.m.; F lncr.ci ol Responsibil i ty F ilings two days for the clocks to be and section three Tuesday and completely readjusted, con­ Thursday from 7: 30 to 8: 30 EA SY PAYMENT PLANS sidering tbat they correct p.m. WELCOME themse lves only rwtce daily. The day sections are open FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY to registered STU students POLICIES only. The evening section has been scheduled for faculty and FRANKLIN ALUMNI community. Students and faculty 10- INSURANCE terested must r egister at the Reading Center, Wham Edu­ AGENCY cation Building. Registration 703 S. IIlinoi, JIoV • . w1ll be on a first come, ftrst Phon 0 (57·«6 I serve basts.

AGAIN, AGAIN, AGAIN!! for the 29th YEAR "PAT" PATTERSON · ,,~~~! c:"':.: 79 • Reol Choc:J..en GflJvy $3 AND YOUR MERCHANTS • Hot Rolli DISPLAY HOMECOMING BANNERS CLOTHES "Come Clean" For You at EAST UWELCOME ALUMNI" GATE Decorating the Street8 and Store8 forfast service 1105W.MAIN of Ph. 549-3394 CARBONDALE Carbondale .31_1.11! , .] 1.1' I!!!' 18 i,.!.,' l!i 'Hi.'! iii' P... I

Alumni Events Reign on Weekend

Saturday Tbe Southern Players will and 8: 30 p.m. in Morris present II Arms and the q Llhrary Auditorium. Women's Recreation Associa­ Mann at 8 p.m. in the Play­ tion Homecoming Varsity vs house of the C ommunlc.

denham's

401 SOUTH ILLINOIS

a winter's tail ...

HER MAJESTY- - Nancy Sundedand is reigning over the 1966H_. coming festi vities this weekend . She was crowned Thrusday ni ght in Shryock Auditorium. Miss Sunderland is a senior from Alton.

Ir s a college man 's best fnend-tMe Your eyewear will be 3 popular long ·tad look plus the aulhenllc CPO look. both ,n one versatile shirt I wa)'~ correct at Conrad: Great for before., dunng. and after-clas s, Irs tai lored of rugged wool With 1. Correct Preacription bullon·down patc h pockets , navy anChor Oullon s. RiCh mellon solids Of co lorfu l 2. Correct r~ plaids. S.M,L,X L. About $13.95 3.Correct~ DA Y service available for moet eyewear • 9 60 Ir------, OONTACl' UJ'tjES I p------II TpOROlJGH EYE I I '6950 I I ~AnON I I ,""y nnt·No Ex... a 0.0•• _ : : .350 : L ------~CONRAD OPTICAL------~ lbJirk anb ~olb.5mitb 411 $. Iliinois·Dr. Jo· Tre, Optometrist 457-4919 J-Off Camp". 16th and Monroe, Herrin·Dr. Conrad, Optometrist 942·5500

....- . - ' :. '::.' .:. ~' :.'.~,::::::: :: . . . , •• , •• • ••• • ••• • •• _ • • 0 ...... , •• •• •• ,. " ' ~." ' . " " , ...... o ...... ~ •• • ...: T.·>:~~';·:~ · :·.~ · : · :· :·:·:';' ;7"":·;·::-'" .•...' :• .' :: : ~ •. :;..~~::; : : ';;;~ 14 Pa.,iD"; Game W ea" SIU Freshmen Show GUITARSv ... ___ .. Strong Rushing Attack 10 _ SElECT FROM By Bill Ki ndt Snyder, a 6-1, 200-pounder from LaGrange. Snyder gained • Mlrtin SlU' s freshman football 253 yards in three game s, FlotTepo&E_ team finished the season with a averaging 4,. yards a carry. 1-2 r ecord which might have Against the Louisville Car­ • Gibson been changed somewhat if the dinals , Snyder racke d up 100 Full Line Top N...... entire host of freshmen had yards rushing. GuM ... & AmpIIfion been able to play the season Ge ne Pace was the number wlth tbe freshman team. two rusher with 48 ya rds for an average of yards a • Fender However. Coach Joe Lutz 2.2 Top of ..- LIM E_ had to play e ach game with a carry. Flot Tepo & AmpIIfion mak.e - shift team because Pace also led the pass r e­ many of his boys played With ceiver s, nabbing four passes the varsity. The only game in for 72 yards and was tied for • Gretsch the ream lead 1n scoring with tom .... 501_ All which Lutz had the benefit of Gulf... & AmpIIfioro the entire frash team was the six JX>inr s. Charles Goro and game they won, beating South­ Jim McKay also scored six west Missouri State 6-0. points. • Mosrite The F_ VonIurwIModoI The SaluJti frosh featured a Bill VanNattan quarter­ -6 IIring & exduohoo _ rugged running attack but had backed the frosh most of tbe virtually no passing offense. way. He completed nine out of Of tbe 781 yards gained, only 33 passes for 124 yards and • Guilt! The Fino GuId LIM of _ 195 were made through [he air. gained an additional 17 yards Tbey outrushed the opposi­ on the quanerbackoption play. Top"'_ tion, 586 yards to 405 yards The Salukj frosh managed 37 'but were out gunned in pass­ first downs against 39 by the , Strings Ing, 195 to 457. oppone nts . Of the total, seve n The leading rusher for the were made by passing and 24 Salut1a ..... fuJIback Mike by rushing, Accessories TWIRLERS TO PERFORM- -SIU's twirlers will perform during ba lftime of the pro football game Monday night in St. Louis . They Music are , left to right , Cheryl Mifflin , Marion ; Cindy Nolen, Carbondale; J ohnny Blake, Rantoul ; Dee Park , Metropolis; Marge Beleckis, Chicago, and Lynda Von Kriegs field , Brookfield, seated. PARKER Badminton Tournament Scheduled MUSIC CO. The Intramural Office has tournament may be acquired announced that it will hold a by calling at the Intramural badminton tourname nt Monday Office, Room 128inthe Arena . and Tuesday at 8 p.m. In the Arena. All students who wish to enter s hould r e port to Roo m FOR A LIVELY 125 in the Are na a t 7:45 p.m. for the drawings . The tournament will be a HALLOWEEN PARTY single e liminarion tourna­ Rules governing the TRY OUR ICE CREAM WITCHES SPEED WASH & JACK-O-LANTERNS SHIRT LAUNDRY AND

CLEANUP FOR HOMECOMING--Members of the STU maintenance CLEANERS force were busy yesterday cleaning the Mc Andrew St ad ium stands in preparation fo r today ' s game with East Carolina Sta te . Kl ck~ 214 S. UNIVERS IT Y off is scheduled fo r 1:30 p.m. r------.-I:======::::: Field Hockey Set From Bach to the Beatles"" We Have Halloween The sru wom en's fiel d hock­ ey team will play an alumnae From Dylon to Dorsey", , Cakes and Party Logs team at 8 a.m, today at the Wall Street field. We have the records you want The game has been an annual FOR THE VERY BEST IT'S Homecom ing event since 1939. etp's -45 's Need les to fit all makes Last ye ar the SIU varsity won 2- 0. Mon . & Thurs.. Se.ou.completelineof 11 · 11 , -. . .j stereos and Colo. T.V. Fri..& Sat. AROUND 11 . Midnit. Sunday THE • . Williams Store 12· II CLOCK 212 S. Illinois Accident Plan • 2 .. Hr., Fulhlme Pnttectlon • Por' in Addition to Ot+.er In.uronce

• No Age Limit!! • Low Rote. FOR ALL YOUR INSUR ..... CE ------NEEDS SEE FRANKLIN o,pen n days a week INSURANCE AGENCY twenty-four hours a day 703 S. IIliflO i. A" • . JILLA"ID C.MPU~ SoHOPPIHG CENTER Ph ••• ~57 .U61 .)"Pf,*!J.~~ .!.9" I ,Pa(l""1S '-oJJiiOJki'm"...... StiJJi.LS : :;~ TO ' B~ Cluhen 1H~ (U)fl~D ,.. ~ &U-~ 4~ARS ".D.. CHIII5f'At-I 'TtIOOt4HT ~ ~ ~~ '1WO fHOOSMIO Soon for '67 1(~R5 O~D .. YOU ':;AIJ'r tff'(t.1 The selection of the 1967 A 8 ABE: IIJ fH£ WOot:J6 1'0 SIU baseball batgirls will CHOP OCWIJ A 1Rt£ 'iii'" IS begin soon, according to Pat Hall, who will supervise the 4 ~""iOlJ 1,/>4£S ~R ~/J ITS group next year. 5A&f 8Orf/.f .. The inlt!al group selected last spring was the idea of baseball coach Joe Lutz. The girls rece!ved national publi­ city and were a chief attraction at the ballgames. Dut!es. of the batgirls are Pirate8 Lead Their Conference similar to those of batboys, although a dash of glamour is added ~o the tasks. Salukis Face Team With Speed, Depth The selections w1l1 be made on the basis of personality, t interest In the game, respon­ (Continued from Pave 16) yards rushing on 29 tries and bona fide All- America can­ juries sustained last week.. has completed 14 of 24 pass­ didate. Moran is only a Junior Quarterback Wally Agnew will sibility shown and appearance. backs usually has a hand in and stands 6 feet 1 and weighs see no more action this season "I will talk with any girl that (O[al. es for 274 yards. The wingback and fullback 230-pounds. due to a bad knee. who Wishes to be considered:' Fullback George Gay has said Miss Hall. "I w!ll ar­ also throw often in the East BeSides Agnew, Charles rushed 61 times for 274 yards The Pirates are considered range to go to e ach dormi­ Carolina offense and both are Pemberton and Tom Wirth are a major college football team tory to talk to the girls and and thrown 21 passes, com­ utilized regularly as pass re­ pleting 10 for III yards. and their schedule reflects both hobbled with injuries and will have a time arranged suit­ ceivers. The Pirates run Bailey's replacement will can It, with William and Mary, are listed as doubtlul start­ able tG them for an interview." out of 15 different offensive probably be sophomore Dennis George Washington, Fur­ ers. Any girl interested !s asked formations. Young. who has gained 129 man, the C iradel, Nonheast Terry Cotham and R!ch to phone Miss Hall at 549-4117. In the defensive sec­ Louisiana, Richmond, David­ Joyce. both freshman. will Data Processing ondary Bob Ellis is second in son. Southern Mississ ippi and replace El1asik and Sander s. Weigbt Room Available the country in pass inter­ Louisville also represented The Saluk!s lose five years' ceptions wi th six, which he on it. experience at these tWO Saturday and Sunday Has 2-Game Lead has r eturned for a total of 41 yards. East Carolina has scor ed pos!tions. Students may use the we1ght Rainsberger said that the lifting room at McA ndrew Sta­ In FacuJty Bowling The Pirate offe nsive line 20 points a game thus far dium each da y fro m 1-3 p.m., weighs in at 203- pound s a and he ld opponents to 10. injuries w!ll probably limit the SlU offense by about 40 a nd 6 - 9 p.m .. and 1,30 - 5 p.m. Data P r ocessing moved ima man from tackle to tackle In combaring the EastCaro­ per cent. This means that the on Saturdays and Sundays. first place this week in the and includes excellent block- tina attack, the Salukis will be defense will be carrying an However. this weekend the Faculty-Staff Bowling League e!'"S. according to Rainsber- counting on several inex­ even heavier load this week. facilities will not be with a two- game lead over ger. On defense the Pirates perienced r eplaceme nts to lill C hemistry. usually go With a six man the big gaps left in the Data Processing has a 13- 3 line that averages about 205- offe nsive line by injuries . r ecord. followed by C he mi su)' pounds. They have a middle Saluki capta!n Jo hn E Ua- with 11-5. Rehab is third at linebacker and a rover. sLk. right tackle, and right 10-6. East Carolina rates defen- guard Bill Sanders are out for The high individual series sive tackle Kevin Moran a . the season with knee in- was 545 by Earl Glosser. Counseling-Testing, and (he high individual game was 229 by Harold Deadman. C hem­ SWEATERS isrry. only Financial Assistance rolled .1000/0Lambswool a 2,900 for the high rea m Optician series and c: hemisrry r ecord­ • V-Neck Pullovers OFFICE HOURS · 9, 00 to 5130 Doily ed a 1,063 for the high team THE "KEE"TO GOOD VISION game. CONT ACTS: $59 .50 Following the fi r st three in • Excellent Quality the standings are Dut ch CALL GLASSES FROM $12 .70 Masters, 9- 7; Financial As­ • Brand New-Not Seconds 453-8473 549-2822 sistance, 9- 7; Counseling­ Testing, 7- 9; VTI, 7-9; Uni­ 13 Colors-All Sizes versity Cente r, 6-1 0 ; Alley Cats. 6-1 0; and Zoology. 2-14. DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFIED ADS Q~ ~ ..:..._____ T_h_._D_a_i..:ly~E::gyPtiO~ ~ ~·::~.~: , ~d·c :in~l~ otn~ :~!:=~ a~~y od~::~~:: ::~: . a ~: r::~~d;lI: con::!~: ea~:~~n o r men. Op~nu n h y al so- .. . Hay" (bas(' meOl) afler .. ';; W , I mile past un lY. farms. Plum b- !O wo rk hours convenlen! to your FOR SALE p.m. ~ 4 1 lng , bath, hoI war e r ,eleclric Hy, space schedule . E a r n S3 to S4 per hour hea le r fu rnIshed, Opport unity fo r out- servic ing Fuller Brush cus tomers In ~\.-'" Golf c lub~. Arand n... \~... n;:'ye r used I t;l05 f10nda 90. G raduati ng. must se ll. door wo rk as pa n of rent. Ca ll 457- thi s a rea, Prefer Sluden! with IS ,.ILII In plast iC coy(·r . ..,... 11 fa t ha U. 549-2090. 544 ~ I J7 eyenlngs. 49 1 hours and loca l address rhru June t- )( ct"li<-m ('hflS(ma :; gift. ( ;,11 7 _ 1967, Ca ll now. ~q· 3 2 87. 551 n 14. 44 (1 /'ok n'" Single room fo r rent wi th C ar bondale' ; o rmllor y, new 2 me n cook: lng pnvlkges, Unsupervised. 2 pe r room, at r cond., private bath. ~y' ,:'~:~ lurn )' ou r u!'ed tnmk Irack ~hoe-s o r block s fro m ca m pus. 549· 2oCX), 545 S 12 5 per qlr . Also ap( s . and ne w 10llSO L05T ruba 101<1 cash las!' "c-ll ttx'm now. mobile homes lor rent. Air condo If 'wnd Ill.- hand ) claSS lf lt'd ao fo rm In l qOb PO n(lac Tempest C; prinl. Ai r. Gale Williams mana ge r, Call 457 Small br own beagle. " Lor ' " c hildren found In !Oda~ ',. I g) poan. SOl 5000 m iles. Save SI IOO. 457·5:\0 • . 44 22 o r 6 87 · 1257. 492 heart broken. Reward. C a11457-602Q. ,"0 S28 Portrait of the Montb IQM ~2)(IO mobile home, Alr- c()nd. Men ' s s ingle room for rem, with gas!' hear. underpl nrot'O. Re.dy fo r Oc ­ ' 58 Cus hman "coote r. 8 hp. S80.50 . cooking privi leges. Unsupervised. 2 L08t : Small. br own c hihuahua dog c U Jla nC ~ _ Call ~ 4 9 _ 1 0l1 0 after 4 p.m. Call Ji m , 549-27toO o r see at i 0 5 blocks f rom campus . 549- 2690. 534 from 000 F ree man. Re wa rd. Belongs $. 3.200 wll h aIr cond. , S3000 Wllhoul. S t a ~. ~ 7 to rwo s mall c hJl dr en, C Olli 7·'bOO. 520 Wall Street Quadrangte a, luxury apts. m JQo~ Honda CB · l bO, like new. Many Now accep(ing wi nter and spring con­ A"A ~ CC. 'b5 2000 ml. Greal e xt ras. scrambler - bars, windshield, tracts . Fall qtr. prorated. 1207 S. condnlon. S- 70. 522 side -stand, rteo pre am Clutc h. Ca ll Wall. P h, 4.5 7-4 123. 548 EMPLOYMENT WANTED 549-3740. Allk fo r Bob. 549 1905 11.1 GB. Good cond illon, e )(tr.s. Rea sona ble , Phone 9 _1 081 afte r 5;00. Ba bysitting I~ my home. Graduate New c amerG, reve re 8 mm ; 220 V . WANTED wife . Malibu Village, 9-3664. 536 523 auto matic , fa n · fo r ced heater ; new , foa m , baby mauress, high cha ir. You're bou nd to gl:t results from 'tl 3 Vol ks wagen · new itene ra tor ' 1%5 549 - 380 2. 550 your classified ad- o ve r 111,000 sru ­ dents and fa culty read the Dally SERVICES OFFERED J 25 Ducat!. Ph. F mll) 3-235 01 bo: lween Egyp(lan ads daily, 504 I ~. 52~ 20 h, "f " Scow s ailboat , \ 500, in­ Three kinens , 2 male and I fema le . Can 7-5904. F r ee. 537 cluding s ail. Ca ll 45i-6477. 552 Ride wamed to Anna State Hos pital , Co mple te s tereo componem sel , J Thur. and F r l. 81 I p.m ....tII share Look, pal, If m y 25(' car Wa6h lan ~' I)EX' ... Ieclrolux s weeper. S5 expo Call Dan 457-5873. 531 2-pc. ;;ec llona l. ku ctK>n table and mont hs old. Garrard change r , 3-4741. doesn' l ge l your car or cyc le cle an, you ge t your bread back. Bob's new (hollr". Phone 54"'- 41 51. 532 '56 Male to take o ve r winter nouslng Z5(' ca r .... ash behind Mu rda le. Go contrac t. Umv. approved, I 1/ 2blocks 1 n 1- Tnumph. '57 h · lOp, o' drlve , New ~ Ir d dog. Brlnany s panie l, AKC. allead and Iry itl 539 off c ampus . ~9- 5 791. Ask fer J ohn. II r('s. palm . cu rt aI nS, carpet upho. H. J.. Za pp, Box I iO, Cambria. 985- so25 . FlTm , \· 2488, Jon McC lain. 5J ~ Z() -;'3 . 558 sewing. a lterallons , d r ess ma king. ''" Both men and women. C al l 549- 1%5 Honela