Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC

February 1968 Daily Egyptian 1968

2-23-1968 The aiD ly Egyptian, February 23, 1968 Daily Egyptian Staff

Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_February1968 Volume 49, Issue 96

Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, February 23, 1968." (Feb 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 February 1968 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hearing P'lanned For Today On I C' Suspension Students have the opportun­ ing the which the Ie ity to vOiCtt their opinions has put fonh is switching on the proposed elimination operations which block Car­ of six illinois Central trains bondale streets would be cut to St. Louis during an inter­ down. state Commerce Commission Railroad un ion members bearing scheduled today. have opposed eliminating the Those who want to testify t r a in s because fewer jobs may sign up beginning at 7 a,m. would be available. In Room H of the University cen ~- r Qjc beginning at 7:15 a.m. In Room 102 of the Grant to Support Agrlc ture Building. The hearlng\ will begin at 9: 30 \ a.m. in J Muckelroy Auditor- Braille ~n'itent, ory ium. ) S tu aent government offj­ cials said .Thur sd ay that For Youngsters approximately 1,000 students have signed petitions protest­ Development of a Braille In­ in g discontinuance oft h e formal Reading Inventor y for trains. blind. children in grades one ENSEMBLE RECORDS--The Solo Ensem' poap HOWD Examiner for the hearing through six will be supported ble of the Collegium Musicum of the Univer­ left to richt are Howard Brown, Judith Nel­ will be Paul J. Clerman of in pan by a federal grant sity of Chicaco made a recording Thursday son , Robert Heinrjllson and David Eisen­ Washington, D. C. He said of $26,000 just received by on that will be,produced by the Uni­ bud. The concert will be sponsored by the Thursday the commission's SIU from the U.S. Office of versity Press. The group will present a con­ Department of Music. Adm1ssion is tree to deCision may come by May. Education. cert at 8 p. ro . tonight in the Home Econ- the public. (Photo by Steve Mills) The kix trains run daily The project, which will take between . Carbondale and St. three years to complete, will Louis and serve as connectors be headed .by Allen Berger, with IC trains from assistant p~J> fe sso r in the SIU and . I Reading Ceflter. illinois Centr", has p r 0- Existing standardized tests jj~'ity EGYPTIAN posed substitution with a bus in BraUlle are achievement service between St. Louis and rather than diagnostic instru­ Carbondale, which it would ments, Berger explains, and subsidize. the new BIR! wUl fOr the first An ICC hearing on the mat­ Southern I,llinois University time provid~ a me ans .... f ob­ ter was held Wednesday In taining c e r t a i n inform ation Carbandalo, 111. Friday, Fobruary 23,1968 Humber 96 i Volume 49 St. Lou s wh e re witnesses about the r e a din g strengths complained that eliminating and weaknesses of blind chil­ the trains would halt Pullm an dren which can not be deter­ Race Relalions Bill Discussed service which link.s with the mined by tests now Ln use. Ie's Panama Limited. cuTb~i~~~~~ Senate Finance Group to Design CaJ:!daJe Citizens Adnsoiy GUll Bode Committee have urged thar the trains nex be eliminated. The City Council further ID Plan for Non-Student ~pouses r.roposed that one round-trip ffirst-class" train be sub­ stituted for .the three round­ The Stu den t Sen ate has oppression and w h i [e ig­ of student government per­ trip tralns currently running. asked its finance comminee norance. ,. sonnel. The book is to be sold. IC figures show that 111,534 to draw up a paIn to a llow The b1l1 was amended ro The Se nate will seek to set passengers used the trains In students' spouses who are not remove the references to up a booth at the Spring Fes t­ 1966, and 110,375 in 1965. in school to participate in whites, but adjournment was ival to initiate HpubUc dis­ Figures for 1967 are not avail­ University activities. voted before fLnai action could cussion" with visiting high able. IC officials have cited The bill directing the com ­ be taken. . school and junior college stu­ a potential 1968 loss on the minee to establish the plan The Senate housing commit­ dents on the .fpresent situa­ trains of $312,000. wa s passed Wednesday night tee was directed [Q publish a tion" at StU. The recreation One argument for eliminat- -and seeks a means for the booklet rating housing avail­ and activities commtnee was non-student spouses to pay the able [Q students. The booklet made responsible for setting SIU activity fee and receive would include a variety of up the booth and determining A Look Inside an 10 card. facts, impressions of former what type of presentation i.t • • • Gymnasts avenge loss The bill says that at present residents, and observations will make . to Iowa, page 14. The Senate also commended the non-student spouses are • • • Letter from Student excluded from many activi­ Wilson to Discuss Leslie Trotter. volunteer Body PreSident, page 4. Gus say s - he has a special worker in the student gove·rn­ ties or must pay a high price · . . Weekend actiVities, interest in the train hear,ing ..... to participate. Theater's Function ment office. for his "great page 11. because people have been \ The Senate debated for more service" to the student body Kendrick Wilson, visiting · •• Preview of Evansville threatening to ranroad htm than 30 minutes on a bill in compiling results from the professor in the Theater De­ game, page 16. for yea-r-s . concerning H race relations women's hours que S t i a n­ partment. will discuss "The naires. and the role of the Senate and Function. of the Theater in white students." The bill Society" at the Carbondale Jerry Finney, chai:rman of Cited racial discord as Hthe Unitarian Fellowship at 10:30 the finance committee, an­ R. 8uckminsfer Fuller r esult of centuries of white a.m. Sunday. nounced that all applications Wilson, who is presently on by student groups for travel Policy Changes the University of Nebraska funds for the rest of the fiscal Gets Royal Gold Medal faculty, is a nationally recog­ y!' ar sbould be turned In to tlie To Benefit Holder nized authority on community stUdent government office by LONDON (AP)-R. Buck­ which he calls tensity struc­ theaters. the end of the month. minster Fuller, 72-year-old tures-were exhibited in New Present and future policy Alllerican design ~pglneer York's Museum of Modern bolders will benefit from sev­ SIU Security Office ServiDg who buOt the giant dome fortbe Art in 1960. eral recent changes in the Uni­ 0.5. Pavilion at Expo 67, has He probably is best known wen awarded the 1968 Royal for his geodesic dome form­ versity's group hospitaliza­ As Depository for Funds Gold Medal for architecture by made of metal, plastic or tion plan. Queen Elizabeth II, It was cardboard-which he uses to New SIU employees now The SIU Security Office 1s and Park Street, or, if large announced Thursday. give the largest possible en­ now being used as an over­ sums are Involved, by calling closed space in relation to the bi ve up to 90 days to jo I n nl,ght depository for Unl­ the office for transportation The award. recommended surface area. the group plan where, as vetslty funds collected too late assistance. by the Royal Institute of Brit­ The domes chamcterized previously. the time limit was for deposit with the Bursar. Security officials e mph 11- Isb Arcbttects, 1s lOr the pro­ the U.S. Pavilions at World sized that the servlC1' Is tOr motion of architecture. Fairs in Montreal last year 60 days. Any SIU office or organi­ overnight deposit only and all Fuller, research professor and at Kabul, Afghanistan, in ot design at S\U, has lectured I Another change removes the zation may use the service funds must be taken to tbe IQ56. by bringing the money to the Bursar's office immediately tbroughout the world on his The medal wUl be presented age limitation on coverage of Security Office, which Is lo­ the next morning for regular phUosopliy of structures. E It­ to Fuller by Institute Presi­ me ntally retarded dependents. cated at Washington Avenue deposit. amples of his new system- dent Sir Hugh WU'son June 18. ·P..,. 2 D AIJ,oV .EGVfJl ;ot.H ' Hunti n'!! 'Lt'"88t' in '1IIinois' Edelman Accepts Advisorship I Forestry Article Published To Student Employee Group Dwight R. t\tcCurdy, assist­ i967 master's degree gr~du­ Plains Park and Recreation

ant professor of forestry at ate of SIUJ are co-aU[hors of Conference at Colorado State Milton T. Edelman, pro­ prestden[ Ray Lenzi an­ SIll. and Herben Echelberger. a n art i c 1 e, "The Hun[ing Un i ve rs i ty, Fon Collins, fessor of economiCS, will nounced that in the ftJ tur e all Lease in Illinois," which ap­ Tuesday to Friday. He served serve as adviser [Q the re­ employees in [he student gov­ Health Education pears In the Fe bruary issue on a discus sion panel and con­ cently- approved Student Em­ ernmen t offi ce must be of the J ournal of Forestry. sulted with representatives of ployee ASSOCiation, accord­ "cleared" [hrough the asso­ The article Is based on the the U.S. Dep a rtment of Ing to John Singleterry, a cta[ion. Club Organizing author' s srudy of arrange­ interior's National P arlc Serv­ member of the group. A pre-professional organi­ men t s fo r leasing private ice and the Colorado Cente r After the group was Singleterry said the group zat ion for majors and graduate rural land In Dlinois for re­ for Research and Education approved b y the Stud e nt Is planning to announce i[s students in the departments c reational usage. about the groups' cooperative Senate recently, student body ,ac[ivlties 800n. of Health Education and Health McCurdy also paniclpated study on carrying capacities SciencE" is in the proces's of In the Rocky Mountain-High of national parks. Friday afternoon . being organized. ftr-:======::------..., R__ pus A meeting will be held 'i t Gate Opens At 7: 00 7:30 p.m .. Tuesday, in Arena & nite Room 12 1, for the purposes @.0.0:(J,O.O.O.W Show Starts At 7:30 of getting acquainted and or­ DRIVE·I .. THE~TRE ganizing. SUN . ~OO'" Arrange mems will be made , ) for all health majors to be J.~ __"""'~ I excused early from Tuesday night classes. Coeds May Tryout For WSIU Radio All SIU coeds a re invited to audition Saturday at the radio station {rom 9 a.m. ta 5 p.m. for a fu ll-day cele­ bration of leap year which will be held Thursday over WSIU (AM). H. William Haines , student station manager, said coeds R· um ~ us will opera[e [he equipmen[, Room announce, and hos[ aU pro­ gr amming for one day. Girls 213 E, Main will even wri[e, edi[, and pre­ sent rhe ne ws. Haines said.. ~ MID·AMERICA THEATRES ca:%I ' Ne o - Na zis m' W ill be OPEN 6 :30 ST A RT 7:00 I ncar To p ic of J ewis h Confab heater s ..l, dIScussion on [he subjec[ N OW SHO WiNG T HR U SU N DAY ttl ",\!pn - \.'az l~ m" wil l be ",p_m:"(l red D) [hE" J <'w i ~h S[U ­ What happens in this picture d ... ·m A. Sf:oc l!,J[ion at I : : ~ (I p . m . .. I'. ""10\,.0 Ida\ at ttl\.' Ht,r n\.·r I\"U!-'\', cannot ever be imagined 8tJ').!l. V. ashjngron. LATE SHOW THIS (not in 9 lives)! The discussion will be lead b) S id AppIewn o f l\ilurphys­ bo ro. FRI. & SAT.UTHE FOX Da il y Egyptian \" I •• l\n" no ., J ' ... ~ lr .. ,,..n -, cO" L>y ... ~ c:::l:' C? (:)~ everything :.='; :...... ",.,...... ,..'. .. '" " II .. •• U' ~ "u , ,, ... n lJ"n(,,~ I ,,,v,·tJ;U' . I .. 'I.... !oll ... ,. Ill",... " t)!VUI. 'eColJnll dllb" VERY VERY FUNNYI :>' "' .. ~ , 1• • ,,:1 II ' t. .. " .... nu.. I.· . Ill,'.... , .. ":1111 1, ; ·' . I ",," ~ ul lilt. t F'J>u .. r ~ : . III\. I.' bl>on • . :11" "" '''' ''<]'' ''' 10 . :01I "o.. nl .~' w , ita l l . 11m "Y ~· ' '' . .... "n. ) ABOUT 1'0 ... .. , . ;.~"nOtirl"lm .J (.o rll'I:.PI*rl>r'mt' . Mar , J"n ... · II. '-'", .rs" Km-m~')I"'r , O .. v,,1 • . M.or .. r .. lJ. O~vla I ' ~h' r m u . M~h:"f"' 1 1'",<,/. Ik .. n f<.buJlu n'. J,.... 1 i'to: nc- ho.-r. SEX!:' - l OS AHGCl£S TIMES Quality

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19 saMGA ROADSTER ne. point, like n e . top, rodio , h ••t Mll1(OlALE fo Auto Sales , ~ .t. 51 North Hit, ~ • & Sat. '·:OAILY ·EGYPt' ... N - TONITE AND SAT Radio Concert Will Feature MARLOW'S Tonit. Starting At 7:1S PHONE 684·6921 Continuous Sat From 2:30 THEATRE MURPHYSBORf: Be'ethoven, Brahms Selections REG. ADM. $1.00 AND 50( T he Festival Quartet and 3: 10 p.m. · 'LOSERS" T

Visiting Scholar s: 201[an Shop With Crime Talk Rozsnyai . D AILY EGYPTIAN 2:30 p.m. Will Be Held Belgium Today. On Sunday LATE SHOW T.O~~ ;f V A R 5 I T Y "Cr im e o n the Campus" will be the s ubject of a lec­ cure to be pr esented in Mor­ r is Library Auditorium on Sunday ai 7 p.m. The speaker will be Wil­ liam T. Adams , associate di­ rector of the Joint Commis­ sion on Cor rect ional Man­ power T r aining Inc ., Wash­ ington, D.C . Adam s is a widely published author in [he field of corr ec­ tions. He has served on the Color ado Board of J uvenile BEHIND THE Parole and has acted as an SCAEAMS e d u e a ( ion a 1 consultant in AND THE tr ai ning pr ograms for govern­ HEADLINES ment employme nt agems and AAE THE Th," S HOYo'N J TI M ES DAILY for Volunteers in Service to Tue 5. ! PUPPET­ NOW A. 1:30 - 4:45 & 8 pm America (VISTA) . .AKEAS! He r ece ived his master' s degree in sociology from the They pull the Unj ver sity of Colorado in . t ri"e_ of the They live fast. drive faster mo.t unique end 1957. at which time he becam e socJoiogist at the Lookout ContrOYIII..-let and turn the world into Mo untain School for Boys a[ e"~_ o .R{ e nO B~ P(t(R WA 'tll !6 ofourti_" Golden, Colo . He later bt"'c ame a.c AIX,,"y AWARO WINNiNG their private playground! director of the school. a POSt O. Rt C1 OA Of lHf wo..A(;AM( he held through 1961 . F r om 1962 to 1966 he was dJrector of juvenile delinquent 1./ i'jIVERSAl PJt[S£i'j l S pr ogr ams fo r the Western In­ t e r s tat e CommiSSion for Higher Education in Boulder, PRIVILJ5GE Colo. "c".,eOleo- , Adams' appearance in sjX>n­ sored _jointly by the SIU Ce nter PAUL JONES · JEAN SHRIMPTON for the Study of C rime, De­ MARl( LON DON' JEREMY CHI LO' "AX BACON ' WILLIAM JOB linque ncy and Corrections, the Act i vi·[. e S Programming Board, and the Lectures and Entertainment Commirtee. The lecture is open ro the NOW AT THE VARSITY public. Students attending wi ll be gr anted convocation credit. HELD OVER BY POPULAR ACCLAIM! SHOW TIMES 2:00-3:50-5:35-7:30·9:15 WSlU-TV Show ALL ADULT ADMISSIONS S1.50 Condemns Society WINNER OF 7 ACADEMY For Indifference AWARD NOMINATIONS: "The 39th W imess," a fi I m Best P icture Best Supportin g Ac tress about society' s indiffer ence , wi ll be shown on NET Play­ Best Actor Best Screen Play house tonight at 10 p.m. o n Best Actress Best Director WSIU - TV. Channel 8. Best Cinematography

Other programs: £~.PH£ LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS ~ 5: 15 p.m. h,AJY.!!ENCE TURMAN __ '.. France- Panorama. 7:30 p.m. What' s New- Brave Boys. ,'\ \", \, 8 p.m. ~ Passpon 8: Vagaoond- En­ senada. Mexico. OFWINNERl J .KADEMY AWARDS ~~.l ' I .:" "

~ DOI'>\.:.., . U . ~~ ...... ~ .....~ ...... "-;:: . r u ~&. (l •..l GRADUATE _~~ h-"!'I ~ i ~ IJI >.IIrrOIt " !' · ...... ~.t r u~u • •~ . · ••. ,.. .11'1.<..: J ~" ! III $IJ ~ 1t 1'II." ",;vtSlOff' n oM[T1It OCO LOll 52 ALL pASSES Su s pended ANNE BANCIDFT."IIUSTIN IIIIFFIWI · UTIWIINE II8SS During This tAlLERWlLLINGHAM .~ BUCK HENRY PAUL SIMON Progrom

SiMON ."GARFUNKEl LAWRENCE TURMAN NATIONAL C£NERAl CORP FOX MIDWESIIHEATRES ~~~ . ~! ~~ghs TEcw.ro.()R< PANAVISOO" Letters Why Talce, Grad Students? To the Daily Egyptian: To s how our contempt for the brainwashing to which graduate In reference to the recem en­ school has subjected us, and to lightenme nt by the head of the demonstrate our indebtedness to Selective Service System concern­ Mr. Hershey for his long- overdue ing the inanity of obtaining a Ph.D. exposure of the truth concerning degree, it is only fitting that those our misguided academic aspira­ of us who are working toward or tions, let every graduate student. have attained that degree should therefore, immediately cast off re-examine our academic heri­ the shackles of graduate school tage. and volunteer for military duty. Before Mr. Hershey' s procla­ After all, a nation does not live mation on the worth of graduate by r esearch and teaching alone. education. it would have been un­ thinkable that graduate schools William O. Dw yer would be so u~ th i C al, so deceit­ ful a nd so r ~hl ess as to foster in us gr aduate students the mori­ vat ion to altain \ Ph.D. ; a degree Did No't Si gn which we have n¥l w been advi sed ) . is unnecessary a~ whi c h has he r e­ Comm i t t ee Letter tofore stood in rhe way of our developme nt as military me n. It is even more a larming [ 0 To the Da il y Egyptian: note [hat we . the future academ ia In the Fe b. 13 issue of the of America, wer e nor able to Daily Egyptian, a letter was pub­ r ealize as Mr. Hershey did that lished which was s upposedly signed "Henry Ford didn't have a Ph.D." by me, I had never seen the and to draw the s ubsequent and letter until it was published. obvious conclusion that we , too. could be s uccessful Without the . Although I agree with much that cumbersome ordeal of five years the letter said. I do not give it Of graduate education. my full suppon. Y wish ·to have my name retracted from the let­ ter. CrockUI, W•• hlnc:ton Star } ' ou See, Dad, I Was Helping tt,l' Friend john C arn' O Ul the Garbage ! Y also wish to suggest that more care be taxel. in the future to insure that nc11ette rs are publis hed Letter from Lenzi in the names of students who have nothing to do with them. Egyptian, 9belisk, Social Rules Mark Mabee To the Daily Egyptian: s uch control. Som e contend that dent le gislation for wo m en's hours (NOTE: T he letter in qu estion the paper's quality would be hun. by dir ectly following the will and was delive r ed to the Dail y Egyp­ I would I ike to takf' t his u ppor ­ This assumes that the re ar e not m andate of the 7,000 s tude nts who tian office by J ohn Foote , wh o 'lunity [ 0 discuss tWO curr ent stll­ il mung tht" IS ,non non-journalism fi lled out women's hou r s qu est!on­ ind icated that he spo ke fa T the oem guvt:'rnmcnl lS SU~ S with yuu. ~tu de nt s on thi s cam pus as many na ire s. e ntire committee . On that ba Sis, Tllust:: {wu lSSU~ 8 a r t' tilt:- ust' u j q U O:t liflt~ d wrilC!rs u s there a r c We arc c hanging the rule s so the l e tte r was publi s h ed in good activity fe es t u {he Uail y s uppu n ;,t Tnong t h~ l ef1.f; t h;) n ('.00 Journal ­ rh~[, e ffeCt ' ''!'''! S p r t n S Q uaner, fafrh, wfrh the assura n c e o f l\1r. Lgypuan and {he U belis k, a nd ~u ­ Ism s tudents. [here win no longer be hours r oore .) ciaJ rules . Ho w man\' of vou have seen in­ for ~o ph o m o re6 , j u n i a r s , and The E g~'Ptian has contended thal accurarE' c{)ve rage in the p r esent s eni o r s . "Vc- antic ipate fu ll ':0- we wam [U cut fees to end the Egyptian? T he n: IS no r e ason, ope ration with and r e spect of s tu­ paper. ThJS is nut t r ut:' . Our the n, [(I assum •.: !t·sser pcy rfo r m ­ dent opi nion by the administration goal s a re pusltive . We simpl y Take a Stand an cE' under a j(J im s tude/a - jour­ in e ffecting the s e r eg u 1 a t ion want to m ake the Egyptian a s tu­ nalIsm depan m t..: nt s ystem of co­ changes. dent newspaper. ope r ation. The- Egyptian s hould Again, then, we ar e nor trying T o the Daily Egyptian: At pr e s ent tht" Jou rn alism Dt" - be .a fi ner papc'r undt'T rhe s e c ir­ to destroy the Egyptian o r Obe ­ . panrfle nt picks tht' st aff and t" s ­ The lamenting of graduate stu­ cumstances. Vh· have only asked lisk. The c harge that thi s is an rablishes the tone of this campus dents and Univer s ity offi cials on for this change [0 makL'" a ~ tu ­ attempt on my part :0 furthe r the rec ent dr aft directive is barh r:t e ws paper. Most Am e ric an cam­ dent-financed paper a :,; tudent-run puses have student- run student my powe r and begin censor ship appalling and long ove rdue .. ·newspapers. This is true at Illi­ ne wspape r. 1s that so much? is absurd. The Egyptian will be no is and H.arvar d , for example . The issue of the Obelisk is three leve ls r e moved from Senate Th e question is not w h e r e You pay for the Daily Egyptian simple . Again, we are nor a,s king e ffect. The President of the Stu­ society' s future teache rs and lead­ for an e nd to the Obelisk. but with your activity fees. Why dent Body wil1 have no voice in e r s will come from, but wh en wi l1 s houldn't students run the news­ simply a finanCial change . At choosing the editor. Mo reove r. 1 society's future leade r s and edu­ pr ese nt, ever y st ude nt pays for paper? will have graduated by the time cato r s t ake a st and on perhaps the the Obelisk whether he get s one this pl an take s effect. We s imply most 'vita] i ssue of our time ­ We're asking unl y [0 name a o r not. Student activit y f ee s student editor and a majority of want ~ student news paper and an the Vietnam war. / (your money) finance the paper. the editorial boar d through an Obelisk paid for by those who want The student may then bu y the A group of intelligent people, im partial board selected by the it. paper at a lesser cost. The wh o re fu se ~·" t6 ~ take a st and on student senate . The Egypt ian, ln r egard to SOC ial rule s, we point is s imple: those who do s uch an issue which bleeds the then, would be three level s re­ only want community compliance not want an Obelisk s hould not ) with the rule: He wh o should lives, reso urce~ . and moral inC\ moved from political co n t r 0 1. have to pay for it. te grity of this country. do not It is now questionable whethe r the live by a rule s hould be the one We want a s imple sale of Obe­ to deserve .a J privileged sanctuary paper is at all r e moved from make it. lisks to all students who want from society. them without s ubsidization by the Ray Lenzi Letters Welcome students who d o not want them. Lawrence Fine In those ways we hope to save Student Body President Graduate Student It '5 Ol e policy 01 the Daily Egyp­ student money for pJ;ojec[s. es­ tian t.o en courace free discussion pecially educatio~al pro j e c t s, o f current problems and issues.Mem­ which benefit all students. bers of the Univer sily Community The question of social rules is Sho\lld Have Reviewed Play are i n vited to p articip ate with mem­ one which affects most, if not all bers of the news starr in students. p . we are fur­ To The Dally Egyptian: special s ets) s how s 3. lack of a stu­ comprehension of what a univer­ and the Once again you have demon­ s ity newspaper should be. _lIie1n~;: l:OoidIict review strated that the present managers This was one of the most im­ stu- of tbe Incapable of portant artistic e ve nts to occur d~~. ~cn~~j~~llr~m8ocl~ accurately on campus in r ecent years and modern the many people who attended we r e natural1y eager to see a profes­ sional r eviewer's comments, as were th ~ people who pm so much effort into making il the s uccess that it was. That yotl- chose not to r eview it was an insult to both groups .of your readers. If the £gyptian canrot adequate­ ly coY,er campus acdYities. It IIboaId be turned back' 10 the stu­ de:a='If.bo might do better Justice to IIWIY ~'mak1Dg.up the un! • . • • D P... . s Peace at Stake" Hunger Is the Enemy

By Amero Pietila A m arked r eduction has OC- . In tbeory. the r evolutionary pop­ the UN Conference on T r a d e curred in the infant death rate. ulation growth could be sropped and Development in Geneva, in This is the stor y you don't see The world population is increas­ or mastered by birth control. In 1964. serve d as an eye- opent:=r on t he from page of your d ail y ingly younger, with higher propor­ practice, howe ver. hunger. illiter­ of wQat may happen if this gap newspaper: Agai n today, an tions in the lower age categories acy, unemplo yme nt, poverty, and cannot be bridged. estimjlted 10 to 70 ,000 peop l e chat are unproductive econo mically ignorance are fatally allied With In the fier y discussion In Ge neva, will die of hunge r. Two thirds and place . a heavy burden on edu­ traditional moral and r e ligious many repr esentatives accused the of the people of the world will cational facilities . taboos and pre judices against the developed nations of ove r spending go to sleep tonight undernourished. use of contraceptive s . money on m ilitary rather than / The UN estimate put s [he world on economic assistance . The de ­ population at 3. 4 billion. By the Mankind Losing Birth control on ~ !a rger scale ve loped nations were also charged [ UT n of the century it is believe d is o nl y today beco".'-!,.ng possible with neglecting the pr.,o ble m s of it will r each 6.6 billion. and accepted in the industrialized the deve loping o nes. ) Western world .. wher eo'verpopula­ More ominous is that 5.4 billion The UN Food and Agricultural tion and undernourishment are not of the 6.6 billion in the year 2,000 Or ganization warns that mankind such problems. will be living in what we call is losing the race between pop­ ulation growth and food pr oduction. Impels to Revolt "developing" countries . as com­ Ther e j s going to be enough An increasing number of scientists pared with the 2.5 billion living space ill this globe fo r the 6.6 there now. maintain that in a decade hunger billion people in 2,000, but in Curr ently. the se cond UN TAD will be the most important issue conference j s m ee tin g in New population g t h has order to feed those people, food World r o w in inte rnational politics. been heaviest in the deve loping production in the F ar East mUSL Delhi. When Mrs. Gandhi opened areas and is considerably large r Forty OUt of each 100 babies be more than quadrupled. In the it this month, she said: t h a n pro j eered increased f 0 0 d in India die before their fifth Middle East and Latin America uPeace cannOt be ens ured in production. By the year 2,000, birthday, according to FAD, The it must be tripled and in Africa this world unless we erase the the population of Latin America agency estimates tbat human need doubled. harshness of the growing contrast is estimated to grow 194 per cent. is 25 grams of albumen a day. between the rich a nd the poor. The figure in Africa is 181 per 1n India a nd Red China the people "Unless we sen.se the urge ncy ce nt, in Asia 99 per cent. The get six -grams a day, in Peru 14 and use our energy to e r adicate figure in (he Unite d Sta tes 78 grams, in Egypt and Pakistan 11 Peace Corps Helps the economic cau ~ which make per cent, and 24 per cent in grams, and in the Congo five 1 for conflict, men and women will Europe. grams. be impelled to r eVOlt, and to use It is ironical that the main The United Natio n s with ·its vi o l e nt m eans to bring about industry of most countr ies s uffer­ special agenCie s is doing a tre­ change." 900 Million Children ing from undernourishment 1s ag­ mendous job in trying to make Human needs ar e an e stimated ricplture . But primitive tool s . tomorrow brighter. Much of this 2,600 calories a day. Ag ain to­ laCK of fertilizer s. prejudices de ­ work is invisible and lies in the night, only 38 pe r cent of man­ There are some 900 million shadow as focus us ually is on UN riving from ignorance, conditions to children under the age of 15 li ¥ing kind goes sleep nour ished; for of land ownership bar development. headquarters in New York. The 42 per cent it is the same old 1n the world tOday. Half of the m U.S. government sponsored Peace growi ng lullaby of hunger and 20 will searve to deaCh. . In past year s the United States Corps is doing a dedicated job. per cent rna y die of hunger or The JXlpularion s tr ucture of the has poured mor e agricultural aid too. into developi ng countries than any diseases caused by it d uri n g world is changing eve n more dis­ the night. a dvantageous l y. This fs a som e ­ other nation. Now . even this aid But 1n spite of these efforts, what natural c o nseque nce of new i s decreas·ing drastically because the gap between rich industrialized Yet . eve n they may have ended m e d ica l and p U Dl te h e alth of domestic economic problems nacions an d the hav e -n o t s is their day' praying, "Give us day programs. and war in Vietnam. wide ning. For many observers. by day our dally bread."

L.e"'e Uey . ChrlsUan.Sclomce Monllor

Bookends 'Not That. ICe En'r Does 'Ie \Iu ch Good' B.\ILY· EGyp,TJAill "BR T AS IN A" an ev,en-ing of theatre dance Feb. 22-24 UN IVERSITY THEATER 8P.M. Rob f'rt Ross Banquet Talk STUDENTS $1.50 NO ~-STUDENTS $2.00 \ ) Will Feature TICKETS AT UNIVERSIJ V CENTER AND Ad Assistant A Chi c ago advertising specialist will be the featured THEATER BOX OFFICE speaker [Qnight at the annual Advertising Recognition Week banquet at the Ramada Inn, Marion. The 7 p.m. banguet i s the climax of the 1968 Advertising Recognition Week on campus. The event is sponsored by membe r s of Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi. nation­ al professional advertising frate rnities for men and wo­ men. The guest speaker, Robe rt Ross, ~s a vice president and assistant to Leo Burnett of Leo Burnen Company, Chicago ad­ vertising agency. Prior [0 hi s present poSition, Ross served as c r eative di rector for the agency. Befor e moving to Chi cago in · the earl \' \QSO' s , Ross o wned and operated hls o wn agency tn New York. H e is chairman of the central region of t he American Association of Advertising Agencies and a member of the national boa rd. ,..",...- '. - . .. - - . Speakers Program . ' To Sponsor Talk By Nazi leader If head (he you Man Koehl, of want personality Ame rican Nazi pany will s peak at I p.m. Monday in a ballroom of the University • Center. Hi s tOpiC will be " National In a bathing-suit- Socialism vs. Democ r atic Decade nce." His appearance is being sponsor ed by Student Government through ItS con­ troversial s peakers program. Koehl rook over leaders hip Try petti of the American Nazi Party after Commander George Lin­ coln Rockwell was assassi­ nated Aug. 25. He previously ... and then see what happens! wa s national secretary. Koehl joined the Pany in 1960 and wa s manager of the Chicago office before becom­ ing national secretary. A biography states that he model, Phyllis Green wa s previous ly a member of various right wing organiza­ tions, but left them because he was dissatisfied with the "political cowardice a nd lack of unco mpromising commit­ ment to National Socialist i7cJrJl)~J. _ . - 4 . . . ~ ') 'J~ . iI -

, Sherry Brame Marie Dupigny-Leigh PaulA C unn18gbam Cel estin e Jobnson Merl e Sa mu els

Kappa Alpha Psi Sweetheart Coronation Set

Swee the art of the K a p p a The can did a [ e s include T~cke[s may be purchased Alpha Psi social fraternity Sherry Brame , Sheha Brooks, from any associate of [he will be crowned Saturday night Paula Cunningham, Mer I e at the 17 th Annual Sweetheart's Samuels and Rosalyn Garnes . fraternity_ TransJX>rtation Ball to be held at the Travel They are all sophomores from Lodge Motel in Ma rion", Chicago. Other candidates are will be provided by 51U buses The retiring s weetheart, Cele stine Johnson, a junior leaving the Univers iryCenter. from Chicago, and Marie Miss Hazel Scon from Car­ Contact [he house for further bondale , wil1 c rown the win­ Dupigny- Leigh, a graduate ner. from Marovia, L ir:ria. informatio,.'

CALL PARTY-PAK 457 -4733 p ... a DAILY EGYPTIAN Fob.oo" 23, 1968 LBJ Submits $10.4 Billion Cities Program

AUSTIN, Tt"x. (AP)-Presi­ Some of [he program was time on grounds that H soar­ building 26 million new homes ducements to buUd the other dent Johnson arr3ckl!d "the new, some of it old. All of ing interest rates win cripple and apartmel\ts in 10 years. 20 million units. c r isis of the c hies" Thurs­ it was pulled together 1n a the home-building industry" This, he said, will meet an One fact of the pres idential day With a S10• .; billion pack­ maSSi ve, complicated mes­ and the tax boost will help enormous national need. program for cities 1s aimed age of help in [he fields of sage to C6ngress that was prevent this because it is at If red lining" practices by housing, poVerty. transporta­ nearly twice as long 3S the anti-inflationary. Six of the 26 million homes which some insurance com­ tion and n or i nsurancc" . one tbe President delivered Johnson a Iso asked Con­ would be subSidized by the panies mark off slum areas If {he program goes through on the State of the Union last gress for a new housing and government, in part at least. and r efuse to insure proper­ in its entirety. {he eventual month. urban developme nt act that They would replace what the ty and businesses of the r e si­ price rag might r un ( 0 $30 Again, Johnson calJed for would write H a charter of President called "the shame­ dents. or $35 billions, some officials boosting income (axes through renewed hope for the Amer­ ful s ub standard units of Johnson call e d f o r com­ beHt:' ve . a 10 per cent surcharge, thiS ican city" and set a goal of mis e r ~ ' where more than 20 panies and states to set up mUllan Americans live . Pri­ pooling arrangements vate industry would get in- to spre ad the risks. Teachers' Strike Continues Decorate Your Room TALLAHASSEE, F la . (AP)­ One- third of Florida's pub­ its f o r c e of teacher s who Tahitian-Style Repor ts that Flor ida teachers s ta yed in the classrooms plus lic schools r e mained closed Check from our wide collection of: wer e beginning ro r eturn to am id continued reports that substitutes and volunteers and their classroom s duri ng the many of the volunteer reach­ warned that" anyone attempt­ ·Tahitian Decor fourth day of a statewide walk­ er s were having trouble con­ ing to coer ce these volunteers our were called "good news " trolti ng st udents. had better watch out ." ·Fishnets : Thursday . by S, a [e School Gov. C laude Kirk, picketed Kirk announced in Jackson­ SUpt . Floyd C hr isrian. by high school s tudents as he Ville that he was r eactivating ·Lamps But Florida Education As­ attend ed a luncheon in Winte r a 30-member study gro up sociation officials said rhe Haven, blamed unnamed lead­ appointed last fall to r eview ·Shells repqrts wer e "deliberate ers for " stir r ing up the child- the state' s over-all education­ rumors to try to br eak the r e n. " al syste m and make r ecom­ ·u,conut Heads teacher s and frighten them He conte nded the state was me ndations for cha nges. He back." winning the teacher battle with said the commis sio n's new r eport world be made avail­ ;t,t(J1I1)S able to next regularly scbed­ Albuquerque Teachers uled session of the legisla­ Open 9 o.m, to 9 p. m" Murdole Shopping Cent er ture. in April 1969. Stage Protest Strike ALBUQU ERQUE, N. M, (AP) for classes ,Thursday, appar­ - The 78,000 pupils In Albuqu­ ently for a head count of e r que's public school s were te ac he r s . Ther e we r e so fe w, ~~ sem hom e T h u r s day as he closed the schools. teachers stayed away from classr oom s and demanded more state money fo r s chool s. 11," T~ e Cit y' s 2,900- te acher c lassr oom aSSOCiation jumped a Monday noon de adline issued bv the New Mexico Educ ation A'ssoCiation to Go \,. 0 a v i d C argo fo r a r e p1 y on It s de ­ mand fo r a special le gi s latfve session on s c hool financIng. The t e a c her 5 announced the ir walkout \Ved n e sdav night, but Supt. Roben Chi s: holm asked pup il s to r epo n WFRE LOOKING FOR PEOPLEWIIH SPRING ABIT OF THE HAPPENS MAVERICK NOW! IN THE" (We're, a bit of a maverick ourselves.) ~ Because -Allstate h as never been me n and women with the.-ffesh conte nt to d o t hings the way ideas and a mbition t o b ecome they ve a lways been done , we're part of our manageme nt team, some t i m e~ ca lled the rn a verick of Are you a bit of a mave ric k? A t l)e insura nce bus iness. person who d oesn 't a utomatically We ' re the company that led the:' settle for the status QUo? The n fight fo r lower insurance rates by conside r a career with Alls tate. c utting red t Hpe a nd needless We need people no w lregardles...; 1ioutiqu~ frill s , The company that m a d e of their majors 1 in Marke ting, In­ IIlsurance 1.>O licies easie r to read vestment. Fina nce, Underwriting, and understand , Public R elatio ns , Communica­ And thi" kind of pioneering has tions. Personnel. L a ..... a nd R e­ Try on the spicy new clas­ pa id off, In just 35 years, Allstate sear c h , , A s t a rt in any of the has grown from a handful of cus­ career1' is the first step towa rd a sics, exciting coordinates, tomers to mon> than e ight million key pos ition ill :\\I state's m a nage­ ancl .Iegant <:o5uols for policyholders, Our 8a l e~ h ave ment. ) Springtime at Gold ..,itn"s . more than tripJe fi ts ,including tht..· to yot.l .•. from usl We like a ble growth is due to peopJe ­ fa m ousStoars Profit Sharing Pla n !. " mave ricks" who shared our phi­ T o J:et a ll lht' fal:t..~ . see o ur to make you leeIc: breautiful. losophy. Richt now, we're looking Personnel M it nage r when he '!, in- (and even make you smilel) for people 'of the same s tril>e - tervicwing t)n l:a mpu!', ~tate is interviewing: T~~ .5day, March 5. a. ~eer, too, ·hands with A,llstate· IIinciis' -' ih, ; 'Ii.' F•• ory 23, 1968 DAILY EGYPTIAN Po,. 9

• modern McNamara Makes Public equipment • pleasant almosphere Tonkin Gulf Testimony • dat.s WASHINGTON (AP)-Sec- Vietnamese bases and were a The Pentagon said the tran­ play free retary of Defense Robert S. prelude to major U.S. Inter­ script was received at 10 "McNamara ordered Pemagon vention in Southeast Asia. 3.m. Thursday and a team security censors Thursday to McNamara prefte nted a pre­ of security review specialists BILLIARDS clear rapidly his controver- pared. 21 - page stateme nt to went to work on it immediate­ ~ ______Campu 5 Shopping Center sial testimony on the 1964 the Senate panel Tuesday. but ly. Gulf of Tonkin incidents for Fulbright said lacer the de­ "The security review pro­ prompt public disclosure. tense failed [Q demon- cedure will be completed today Sen. J. W. Fulbright, strate the American s hip s so [hat the entire transcript, D-Ark., chairman of the Sen- were attacked Aug. 4, 1964. with only the deletions neces­ Save - Save - Save ate Foreign Relations Com- As is routine. the tran­ sary to safeguard intelligence mittee, urged speedy r elease script of McNamara's an­ collection, can be released of [h e t ran 5 c rip t a f swers to questions bad to be tonight by the committee," a McNamara's gi v e -8 n d-take. submitted through the security Defense Departmem s [a t e­ Bring In This Ad And Get ' with senators over the ques- r evie w process to glean out ment said. tioned North Vietnamese at- information that might be val- However. the acrual release tacks on two U.S. ships. uable co an enemy. time will be set by the com­ The incidents prompted the McNam ara directed that it minee. the United States to I au n c h be sanitized "on an expidited A committee source said I reprisal air attacks on North basis." the transcript will not be re­ 8 Ibs. Dry Cleaning leased before next week, after Brass Questions Value committee member s have had a chance to review it. For $1.50!! : McNamara gave rather e laborate detail in his pr p­ - I Of Khe Sanh Bombing pared comments as to Offer Good thru Thur., Feb. 29 whether the Aug. 4 attack on KHE SANH, Vietnam (AP) seen in the same area. Some the U.S. des troyers Maddox . Open Mon. thru Sat. 9-5 -Some u.s. Marine officers have been destroyed but many and Turner Joy had indeed question the effectiveness of more remain. occurred. the massive aerial bombing A e ria I bo mbardme nt and We hf;lve ex perienced re-supply of the e n ci r c l e d This, a second incidem. was campaign that is supposed to a key one. McNamara said give them the upper hand base is the cornerstone of the the administration had not re ­ personnel to spot and U.S. Command's defensiv e against a 40.000-man 'enemy t a I i ate d against the North plan for the Khe Sanh area help you force encircling [his combat Vietnamese when, two day s base. where 5,000 Marines and 500 South Vietnamese troops are ear l ie r. the Maddox was Despite what the Air Force anacked because "we believed calls the greatest bombing dug in. it possible that it had r esulted Weather has been a major campaign in histOry, Commu­ from a miscalculation or an Birkholz LaundJY n1st truck convoys still are fa ctor working against the Air \ SI1 S. Illinois .. Force, Marine' and Na v y impulsive act of a local com­ moving through Laos and into mander." South Vietnam with ammuni­ planes attempting to support ------tion and s upplies for the North Khe Sanh. During one four­ Fulbright s a i d, however, Vietnamese forces. day period, no bombers could McNamara had engage d in Supply [r u c k s have been make visual runs in the area. .. selective declassification" Meet At The Moo spotted as close as twO mUes They were fOTced to bomb by of certain secr e t information from [he Khe 5anh base. 50- radar based on skecchy in­ to show only one s ide of the ...'1s t-built tanks also have been telligence . s tory. Open 1112 JIM·S PIZZA PALACE ALL PIZZAS HAVE CHEESE Friday & Saturday olher days Iii 12:30 Sm . 12 '" Lg . 14 '" Sm . 12'" Lg . 1 $1.35 $1.90 Bacon $1.60 $ I'L~ Do ALL THE: TALKING- SINe!: 'lOLl. Onion 1.35 1.90 Green Pepper 1.60 H A \J E N'T ('OT fI Jim 's Special 1.60 2 .40 Mushroora 1.60 u.N\"ER5\T~ p'Rp.\\1 Sausage 1.60 2.40 Tuna Fish 1.60 'fo SPEAK.\. Pepperoni 1.60 2.40 Shrimp Kosher Salami 1.60 2 .40 An c: hovies 1.60 Beef 1.60 2.40 Friday Special 2.00

House Special 2 .503.50 3()( Extra for All Combinations. WE DELIVER Seating Capacity: OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

.Pizza Bar Coming Soon

UNIVERSITY SQUARE The Moo's Manager Jack Baird SIU Alumnus Pap 10 DAILY 'EGYP TI AN On-Campus Job Intervie'ws f!kt:s The following a r e on-campus job inte r­ LA GRANGE PARK SCHOOL DISTRIGT, La views scheduled at Unive r sity Pl acement G range Park, HI.: Eleme ntary and junior Girl of the Week Services. For appoimments and additional high teachers, elementary guidance coun­ info rmation inte r ested students may phone selo r s , consultant s, social worke r s and 453-2391 or srap by the Placement Office librarians. located at 511 South Graham , College Square , PARK FOREST ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, Bulldlng B. P ark Fore st, Ill.: All ele m entary areas, j un ior high English, reading, math, science, Feb. 26 industrial ans, home economies, Fre nc h, LQMB ARD, ILLINOIS SC HOOLS, Lombard, Physic al Educ ation/ Health (girls ' ), teach­ Ill.: All elementa r y areas; [CacheT for e r s fo r the hard of hea ring, educabl e educabl e m entall y handi c apped and speech mentall y handic apped, pe r ceptually handi­ correction ist. c apped, speec h corr ection, instrumental COLLINS RADIO COMP AN Y: Accounting, and voc al music , physical education (el­ Syste ms & procedures and production su­ e m e nta r y> , r eading s pecialists, social work pervision. a nd librarians . CENl'RAL SOYA COMPANY, INC .: Sales, FAUTLESS CASTER COMPANY: Indus tri­ ::J.CCQu nting , production, mar k e tin &, and al s a les trainees. c ustomer service. LI BBY, McNE ILL & LIBBY: Sales, ac- WEST VIRG INI A PULP AND PAPER: En ­ counting, agric ulture & food technology gineering, engineering [ (' c h n 0 l o g y and r esearc h and o~ r ations research. che mlStrv . GENE RAL TE LEPHONE COMPANY OF TtfE CEGO'CORPORAT ION: Technical s ales, ILLINOI S: Engineers (tec hn ology grad ­ production management, systems anal ysis . uates), programmers (math majors), ac­ Candidates should have good mathematical ­ countanrs, sales and bus iness trainees. technical aptitude, and p r e f e r a b I Y have EMEHSON E LF CTRIC COMPAN Y: Account­ some pre-enginee ring courses. -ing, purc ha s i ng. s ales, manage me nt and ABE); CO RP ORATION: Sales, acoounring marketing. and management. GE NE HAL AMFRICAN TR ANSPORTATION AC E L E C T RO N I C S DlVISION - Gene r al CO H PORA TlON: AccountIng, all engineers MotOr s Corpo ration: Syste m s anal ysis, for R 8; 0, all tec hnology majo r s for prod. compute r programming and compute r de­ mgmt., tec h. s ales. MBA'S (tech. BS) sign. PROCTOR & GA MBLE MFG. COM PANY: TH E TR AVELERS INSU RAN CE COMPANI ES: St. Loui s, Mo , : P lant management, engi­ Underwriting, sales, manageme nt trainees nee ring, r esearch & developme nt, and indus trial engineers. and c laims . • T e d's G irl of t he Wee" is s lim 5-foOl 7 Terry B e l­ REUBEN H. DON 'ELLEY T ELEPHONE DI­ PR OCTOR & GA MBLE COMPANY: Field ford . a j unior majoring in a rt fro m C hicago, Ill inois , REC TOR Y COMPANY : Refer to Feb. 27 advertis ing representatives. Shoc king pink is a. fa\'o rile colo r fo r Terry. wh o date. PROCTOR & GAM BLE MAG. COMPANY, SI. a lso e njo.ys painting in oils and free-l a n ce mo de l ­ Louis , Mo. : Da ta P r ocessing and sys- CONTINENTAL IL LINOIS NA TIONA L BAN K: ing , T he commercial art fie ld ha s a tre at in s tore Fin ance, econo miCS, accounting, market­ (e m s analys(/ pr ogrammer. when s h e ~ raduat€'s! ing , busine~s admini 8trar ion. and libe ral . Marc h I, 1968 arts f or OI .'- the- job training in int e rn a­ This Vinlag€' American dress , a vailable in a \' a r­ tional banking. bond, com mercial le nd ing, iC't) of co lors , is pf'rfec t for th e s pring days a t Sil' . invest ment s , operations r esearc h , markN ­ lIRflANA ';CHOOL DISTRICT Pli O, Urbana , ..\11 S i t girls a re T ed'~ G irls , '\ nd h (' makes them h appy ing and dat a pr ocessing. Illinois : All e le mentary le ve ls , junior '" ith bra nd nam(' s at extr a lo w prices , HA RR I ~ TRl'S T & SA VI NGS Fl .~ NK: Op- hip: h an. indu ~ tr ial arts, ho me economi cs, t:' r at i n n ~ management program. Rus inf' s~ mat h . 1· Ils;!; l i ~h . senior high hio}ogy, social The Place to go r e l at ed maj [ lr ~ and others interested in ~ fud i C' !-- . world hi !"lOr~ , c i v i cs , I ' . "', Hi s ro ry, bank OP1..' T.JtlOn!-o manage'mL' n! positions. ....p:1n l:::h . F n~\i :::h , rea c her!": 0 1 t? duca hle for B r and s You know Prcl'~.ram prov ides t'X p OSUTt' t o a ll r.13jur nlC'l lIalh handl l: apped, spo;>ec h l:orre~ llon, fun ctio ns UI b •.m kmg t-mphasizing m3I1<.1gl'­ ~" .... I all~ ma l adjusted . sc huol p SYl..: h o l o~ls l rial II;".,;hnlqul' s . o r p sychol op, i l"l Inre rn. YOUNG MEN'S CH RISTI AN ASSOC IATION: Recre ation , LA & S, Physical Education ma­ ;;Ol 'TH 11:-ND COMMUNITY SCHOOL CO R­ Ju r s fo r posi [i on~ in Tec n ' arion and IcadeT­ PORA 'JI()N, ~our h BC'nd. Ind. : All area ::: ship tr am in~ pnl~ r am . (,f e lC'mc'man . sC'condan and Sf'C',: i31 l,dul·a.lnn. . f- e b . ~ lJ I:XTl-R ~\ ED I 'Tl:. ~('H(J ()I DbTRICT I1 FM ' ­ l U\1i'\ ttIL';"'l" . MI . l h.-ml.-' n:-- , \lhh. : :\1 1 11 Ill :"-. AI I I ~ l ' li l Ie ";('HOOI .... J)\ .... 1 RI ("] 1: 11, \ ": dlna h , III. · .Ju n jor hl)o1;h \an~uage 3 1'{ J"; , Sp,,:c lal ...~ d uc.) tl qn .i rl..:.)~ . I,nman a nd 11ll\?rml'cila lC" )1.ra d e s . e ] t~ m en- r Ll~ 1 (UM\1l " I I Y ~l HOI ll _:-. , !-l lnl , MI ....' h. : PhOWRR POWER 1:11\ vl . ... al mu .... i~ . All a r ~d!" 11 1 ~\.'cl':1d..l n ~Chl'() 1. CITY OF DE \ RB llR:x Pl BLlL ';CHlllll.';, D(:d r hflrn , \1Ich. : ,\ 11 sC'cnnd ..ln vncat lona] I~ OAH J) {lJ' I l)I 1(' \ n ni\. I ~A I T1MUHI ~ U . /I .-If'unlt' !I/" .a n'd S , anu t· }t'fTlt- nt a r: It'3C hl,.:. r.;:~:;.. ______' _·( _)(_"_ 1_\_· ,_ , _o_"_'!":_"_"_' _~_la_' ._. _ A_I_I_,_' I_e_m_c_n_,_a .;ry " /1/,,,,.lIul l l1 I " ",II" \" 11 ' dn r f,'flfl/II ;! NAACP Chapter Tryouts for Play Jr. ,h ./, u fl'"1 ,'r To Hold Banquet 'fl ", " ,,//" /' ''lJr.. nCROWN OF SHADOWS" 1I 1t"/1 thlll ,'/II"'I-!' /I' " J hL nt· ..... I . f(, rmtd C a rbtln­ 1( ' ."

IN THE INFORMAL L Brou'n & while colton coal·dress DIALOGUE AT Modeled by Barbara Rong ren THE WELL L "' 111 Colon .. ' HII.J ll nd D. Sllnd~ r~ ('h ...... h Mr. an d Mr •. A d t lph \It •• 1., r. al a . t'- (' .. nl m .... t in~ i n M iami. Mr • . Wall ... , " th .. '&eueiee~~ mllnact'r o r I hO' "' .. n lu c k \· Fr . .. d Ch,,· I< .. n R".lauranl i n Cllrb o> ndal .. . 101 S. Wash' Bening .'Ul16.I>."1' Dealer's Cost Clearance SALE- ':o~temporary Package Oih!d Walnut Compone nt Delu xe Consoles Li st Cost Stereo Li s t Cost S289 95 S19907 SO and man y others S2SO S177 Compon ent Component St ereo Somsonite Stereo Sam soni te Oxford Gray- AM 'FM! FM Oxford Gray Stereo Tuner Garrard Changer Cos t L ist 50 Cost S'I:\LL n ORLD- "h ~n Dr . .'\ntho n~· L anza taltler, a proressor of educ ation who is blind, S199 S14165 (righ t) of " ashinglOn, D.C . . vi s ited th E' C ar­ work ~ d togethe r to develop a T urkish Braille bonda lt' campus h E" mN Sinan Ene . SIl" s tudent S!'stem and l y p ~ wr i te r . L a nza was on campul'lo Portable Portabl e from Turk ('~ and OHIo Son of a man with wh om to \'is it (h I:' orrices of th(' SII ' Oivi sion or Inter· Stereo·Drop · a-motic StereO A)el ux .. Lanza had \\ ork t'd in Ankara. L an7.B and Enc's nationa l ServicE'S. AM/FM/FM Dr6p ~ o - matic StU Business Group Hosts Regional Meeting Stereo Tuner & Garrard ­ Garrard Changer Changer L ist Cos t Li It P rice R ep r es e n tar i v e s of 21 In orde r to le nd s pice to a junior fr o m campu's c hapre r s of Alpha rh e confe r e nce, a compure r ­ Kappa Psi, p rofe ssional bu si­ ized manageme nt ga me will r-==,;.;;.------..., ness fr are rnity, a r e atte nding be played between th e us'o,t£!!! . ~~ [he midwe!'=t r egional frate rni­ delegate- rea m s from the var­ ey confe r ence whi~h s ta n ed ious uni ve rsities. They wi ll Stereo Oeluxe Mono · Automati c be g ive n fic titious corpora­ Thursda\' in Carbondale . The Luggage Case SR · chapte r is ser ving as host tions to ·'manage. " The reams Blue fo r (he meeting ..... hic h will end will feed the ir data through Cabinet luggage Case Su nd ay. the SIU compute r s and the Garrard Changer The [he me of The conl e r ­ •. cor poration" whic h shows en":-L' held at the H o l!da~ Inn t he "'\,,--' Sl fina ncial hC'a ll h al will b(' " Expand mg BUSiness thl ..::'nd of the pe rind WI ns . DimenSions of the 1970 's, " Each c hapte r Will have one accor dmg to J a m""5 WIl::-o n, offi Cial representative . SIU' s Mono·Monuel Mono · Monuel program ~ halrman ('I f the e ­ vote Will be c ast by Jam (' s .... en 1. lhv maIn spc'a ke r , Battery lAC Attache Case Ro be n O . Po hl , VI Ce." pre sI ­ L ist Cos t de nt of Ihe LaSa lle Nati onal Bank , C hicago. WIll direci hi s It's Gonna Be A Blast! 95 25 talk to the theme, Wilson said. So hurry S34 S Pohl Will also be i nllia te d I nt o Ih e frater nit\ a s an on out tonightl T ope Recorder Masterwork - 7" reel honoran me mber , ·W 11 s on _ _ .,,, The Battery- A C Deluxe · 2 speed added. The main business of the 2 speed · 3" reel Tape Recorder conferenc"e Will be the e lec­ _ 'P Saturday Eveni tion of the r egIona l offi cer s , the pr e sentati o n of the : p~ W SIick8 " Regional Eff ICI e ncy Rat ing - are Playing Award" and the disc ussion ~ of questions of po li c ~ r e lating 9:30 pm to 1:30 am Powered, speed to the fra ter "'t\ . The eff ic­ SATURDAY 3 Trons·cei ver Ie ncy award w!li be pre sented 7" reel Communicati ons System 10 pm to 2 am lO [he chapte r sele-ct ed by the L i st Co s t Li st Cos t n a t I o n a I headquane r s for ha vi ng attaIned Ihe hIghest 5 miles North on Highway 51 at DeSoto 95 5D eff ietenc y rating fOT the activ­ .. S129 S9097 S7S SS2 ities In whi ch the c hapler partiCipated dunng the 1966- Standard Cossette Panasonic 67 school year. lBJ's Original Recorder with case Tape Recorders The SIU c ha pt e r , founded & 3 topes in 1959, won the r eg i ona l Li st Cost award from 1962 thr ough 1964 consecutive ly a nd was judged number o ne in the nation in 1965 a nd 1966. Wilson satd . N' Tope Cartridge Un its· Make How Many Elements? •• 4 &8 track tapes Che m ist s have discove r ed MUG 103. poss ibl y 104. chemical L;" $169.95 Co .. $149.95 e le m e nts. *ITL SAUSAGE $1.25 8 Track Auto Cartridge Un it s . . \\:::.- MUSHROOM $1.00 .. - -. ~. - ~ u " Co" _...... I' I • ., -.....J *ANCHOVIE $1.25 $119.95 $79.85

I *OnUXE $1.50 r ~ ') ~.J ~ ~ ... ~ AI bu ms (From Spec ial George "Ias hingtan Table) '------'~-- ~ * ANY COMBINATION li st Oi scount So les P ri c e APPLES 25( 25( EXTRA 54.98 53.57 52.70 $5 .98 S4.37 4 PM Till Closing 53.29 S6 . 9 ~ S4.99 53.92 The ~INE R' O~ of The L8J ST~AKHO '~S Pbv;a MI44ic e~ Mon. thru Sat. 9 o.m. to 9 p.m. 'e xcept n"... - n~ to 9 p . m ~ P..;,.:U: SIU Education Group Seminar on Banking Future To Feature CIlicago Officials Working Extra Hours Two top officials 0 f the La- finance , w i ll moderate (he Members of SlU's educa­ sonnel on the job in ti me of Salle National Bank of C hi- discussion. tion team in Viemam. reponed crisis and unavoidab l e cago will be featured in an­ SIU School of Busi ness Sem­ Darr, born in Oak Par k. safe a week ago, have joined absence of many Vietnamese joined LaSalle National in government employees. both employees. Letter s told of inar on "The Future of Bank­ ing" from 3 to 4:30 p.m. 1946 as assistant cashier and American and Vietnamese, in curfews for the native people , was elected president in 1 96 4~ working a seven- day w ee k in some sections starring as Friday in confer ence room 121 o f the Classrooms He has been active in banking d uri n g curre nt battling in early as 2 p.m., which forced activities. Saigon. these workers to leave thei r building. This information was re­ jobs long before quitting (ime. To participate are Milton Pohl is in charge o f mar­ ceived in letters to F red The SIU Inte rnationa l Stu ­ Darr. president, and Robert keting, r esear ch, and deve l­ Armistead, SIU associat e dent Cente r hasJearned from Poh!, vice preSident, of the opme nt at LaSa lle . professor of education who the Agency for International Chicago bank. Dean Robert is an adViser in the Inter­ Development in Was W" I o n ROME ECONOMffiT- M~ ~i ~~~~~~s ~asth~n~t~~o~I: To Settle a Stomach: national Student Center. that the families of 16 uf the Margaret Miller. SIU grad­ Armistead returned home in Vietnamese students stud yi ng uate. has been promoted to fa culty members and imer­ Thomas J effe r son, third the s ummer of 1967 after on Carbondale ca mpus have starr home econom ist for Ut e ested students to attend all President of the United States spending six year s a sa n been checked out. E leve n May tag Co., Newton. Iowa. or part of the program and and architect of Ame r ican in­ educational adviser in Saigon. families we r e found safe . Miss Miller, who graduated take part in a question and depend ence , had a sure cur e L ette r s arriv e d from There wa s no immediate in 1967, joined the compan.)' answe r ses s io n. Edward L. for indigestion- - " rfde a few William F . Wethe r ingtOn, dep­ word concerni t he we lfare starr last September. Winn. associate professor of miles on a spirited ho r se :' Ut y chief of the SIU party. of the and a yo ung V ie t n a rn e s e woman, Vy Thuy Ninh, a n Otapel interpreter fo r the team who bas plans to enter "SChool of at SIU this summer. Her stud y will be supported by a $300 Saint Paul s c holarship from r he Carbondale Kiwanis club, and The Apostle by contributions from team members and others. Sunday Wo rs hip The se ven- day week was 10 .. 45 am neceSSitated, one letter said, by pressure of a heavy work load. a desire to have per- Dwin~er to Speak Sermon: At Math Meeting "LOVE MAK ES TH E Philip Dwinger, prpfessor of mathemat ics at the Untver­ DIFFERENCE" sity of n linois, Chicago Cir cle campus, will speak on " The Amalgamation Theory" at a mathematics colloquium at 4:15 p.m. Today In Room A422. Technology Bulldlng. The Un iverSity The Department of M athe ­ Com mun ity is m ar ies of sru, assisted b y C ord ially invited the Office of SpecIa l Meet­ ing s and S pe ake r s , will s po n­ sor the colloquium. An open The Lu theran house will be held at 8:30 p.m . Friday at the L awr ence Student (£nter Kuipe r ses, 904 Taylo r Dr. , 700 South University Carbondale.

Why A Gant Shirt? tie's fair game, and if you're out to bog h im ~J r the Turn Beca use a Gant shirt is more than some· thing to hang a tie on . It's a stimulan t to Around Dance, you'll wanl Ihe perfeci s iolking oulfil. ma ke you feel g00d . look good throughout the day. That's .:here.=s: come in : s uper fashions by the zillion . Because a Ga nt shlrt-Irom its soltly Ilared And when you're looking !hi! good, he couldn ' t refuse , button·down collar (Q its trim Hugger body - is tai lored with Singular preCis ion . 01 all, al all! Beca use the fabriCS in Ga nt shirts have tHan in a gentlemanly manner; are exclusive and wea r superbly. This is wh y we carry a complete selection of Gant sh irts. It's al so why men of impec· cable taste come to us for Gant . THE (~l'IIOOSI~ CAMPUS SHOPPING CENTU T t.dlilon .l ( or Men Thinclads Eye Conference Champi~nship , A first p lace finish will be whiCh Southern has a good zie in [he 440 will be fresh­ :l dist inct possibility when chance of winning. Added were man Willie Richards from Coa.:h L€' w Hartzog and his the diSlance me dley relay, the Chicago. indoor track learn journey two-mile relay, the 35- pound Vernon will also partici­ to So uth Bend, I.nd., for {he weight throw and the triple pate i n t he broad jump along Central Collegiate ­ jump. With freshman Ivery Lewis. ship Saturday. John Vernon, who poste d a Bobby Morrow. Blll Gard­ Hart zog, whose squad fin­ 5 1-foO[ jump at Louisville's ine r and Dale Gardner will i shed rhi(,.d in the confer ence Mas 0 n-Dixon Games last enter in the 600- yard dash championships l ast yea r. said weekend, is a good be t [Q finish while fre shman Larry Cascia that NOtre Dam e and West ern firs t in the triple jump event. and senior Rich 'Ellison com­ Michigan are (he (earns SIU Mark C ox has thrown the pete in the pole vault. will have' {Q beat. SOUlhern has 35-pound we1ghr we ll r ecently Sophomor e Mel Holman will be en a member of I he eee, and, in Lhe Mason-Dixon e nte r in the 2-mile run a nd which holds a meet annuall y. Games, had s everal scrarches Gle n Ujiye, a freshman from for sev~ n year s. ove r the SO-foor mark. Burlington, .Onr., Canada and " It'll be a rough meet," High jumpe r Mitch Living­ Sreve Thomas ~ro m Peoria said Hartzog. or the 1~ Olher s tO n WIll be going for his will be competing in the 880. schools entered at least 15 third s t raight Central Col­ The mile r e la y will con­ individuals will be of national l egiate t itl e. Livingston won sis t of MacKenzie, The l J ef­ coll egiale caliber. he ex­ (he e vent las t year with a fe ries, Willie Richardson, and plained. 6- 8 1/2 leap and [hi s season e ither Morrow or Denni s Go­ " It will probably take about he's accomplished 6- 8. mez. taO or 65 pOints 10 win the SIU' s 44 0 r e cord holde r, Fil Bla c kison will compete meet," he added. " The kids Ross MacKenzie will a lso be in the s hOt' put event With wi ll have to be tough, but I defending a C entl-alCo llegiate He rman Gary and Jim Thomas think w e'rL~ going to scor e title. He won ' the 440 last working in high and low some points if the fr eshmen season with a time of :49. 1 hurdle e ve m s . come thr ough." and this year he's bee n c locked Compe ting with L ivingston F our e vent s ha ve been added at 49 s econds . in the high jump will be RiCh [Q the championships, two of Participating with MacKen- Lieschne r. Gymnasts Avenge

TIlINCLAD GETS READY--Ross MacKenzie , SJU's top Earlier Loss to Iowa e ntr)' in the 440. will attempt ~o derend his rirst place tiUe in the annual "Central Colle giate Conference C hampions hips SIU Gymnastics Coach Bill onl y a team average of 24.05, rings by a scor e of 8 1.1 5 ro lo be held Salurday al South Bend, MacKenzie won lh(> · Me ade made one o[ the under­ [ 0 score a respectable 26 .35 80.85. e \'ent las t year clocking in at a lime of :49. 1 s[a(emem s of [he year follow­ on the sidehorse Wednesday. SIU cam e back in r r a m p ing his ream ' s 189.1 5 to 187. 15 The Salukis also improve d though, to take a 107.95 to win ove r Iowa W e d n e s da y in the high bar, moving from 106. 75 lead. night. 2f: .1 5 to 27.10 in (he tw o Iowa could scor e o nl y 25.60 li lt was a ve r y. ve r y nice meets. on the trampoline . wi n," Me ade said, Wit h a grin " The r e wer ~ no individual The trampoline score was ~ thaI seemed IO cover hi s en­ 5 1 a r s ." Meade sa'id. ' -the also in s harp contras l to the tI r e face. who le team wa s gre at, " first meeting whe n SIU scored ~ T he victor\ meam mon' "Larry Cio~kos z did a fine onl y 25.1 5 a nd the Hawkeyes than 'raIsing ove r a ll r e ­ job in vaUlting," Medde said, scored 26.05, we ll above the i r ~tht' "as he scored an 8. ',1 . He a lso average. LEON WE88 cor d [ 0 8-1 for (he season. did we ll in floor exercise Coach Meade would like to It avenged an earlier loss to Iowa thai had s napped a 68 and should help in the future savor this viClory for a while , GIVES YOU in that event." Ciolkosz had but the Saluk is h a v ~ two dua l dual me e t winning SIr e a k. Iowa ' s recor d IS now l O- I. bee n inse rted into those (WO meet s this weeke nd, against ATOUGH Me ade had s taled before [ht" events for the first ti m e by Colorade to night a nd A ir Mea<1e. Force Saturda y. Bot h will m~ et thaI the pressure would CHOICE "I always like to throw the be o n the road. Meade e x­ be on Iowa to repeat its earlier ne w boys in under pressure ," p:.:oc ts li ttle trOUble in winning pe rf ormanc~. FollOWing SIU's Meade said, "becaus e this is Ihe two meers. Win, he . Indic ated t h a I 1 h e whe r e they' ve gOl to pr o v C "We should close our dua l Hawke v~s had nO I held up rhe m selves. meet seaso n wilh four more under iht.:' pr~ssur e . "La'5t year it was the sam \.' Vic t or i es ," Me ade sa id. He mdlcated t hai I o w a's fo r Ge ne Ke lher in fl oor cx- Aft e r the wee ke nd m C'ets. brt: aklng polO! rna) ha vt' been e rcis(:' when I threw him a- SIU fa c,,-'s Ind iana Stare March on chI:' Sldt:!horst: when" in t ht' gal nsl Mi chigan Slare in a 1 and l111 inois Marc h 8. ~ar l l\:" r meetIng t hl:' Hawkt'yes big meel," Meade feco llected. ~ "l~hat will gi ve us f i \ c' had run up high totals. uKelber hadn't r E'a ll y vi clorie s in a r ow," Meade TOYOTA Iowa could muster u n I \' produced until rhal poi nt, and said, possibl y thinki ng of a­ CORONA. a '26'.7tJ team aver age In rhe I told him this wa:; it. and othe r 08 dua l m eC' l vIctory 2-door hardtop sldehorsl:' competition, whic h he ca me thr ough for US . " I oS::.lr:.:e;,;a::k~. ______..;;:;;;;;;;; or • was 1.tJ5 poim less than It Ke l ber is now the rop man • 4-door sedan s,o red in the Arena tW O for the Saluk is In floor e x­ w ee k ~ ago . Marc Siollman e r Cise, proving 1l a,gai nsl Iowa It's Whats Happening! . 'iC Keilh McCanless we r e as he score 9. 25 to win the Bit Savings on both Toyola'! ( W 0 ... is surprises for Iow a. e ve nt. • 2-c:1oor h. rdtop, the lowest as they managed onl y 8.8 a nd The Salukls c aptured three Tonight at the SIU ARENA priced hardtop in Ameri? • 4-c:Ioor .edlln, room for 5 7.5 scores r especlivel y. In fir s ts : Ke lber in fl oor ex­ ED ",ith "-door convenience the first meeting SIOHman and e r c isc. Dale Hardt In tram po­ BOTH CORONAS OFFER McC anless' each scored 9.45 AMES line and Paul Ma yer l ie d for • :~~. u~~~~ ~npt,~n;~ m arks . firs t with Nei l Schmitt of Iowa Top · Eo s y li s t eni n g ' on the paralle l bars Wilh a At ti st of 1967 - Bi Ilboord · ~:er;~~:~:h~:~~~ - Southern on Ihe Other hand covered se.t.; plu!IOh, tlol~)' r e bounded fr o m poo r 9.15. Mogo~ine ,_" -c"rpeted interior performance in (h e fir s t SIU trailed at only one poi or • loIp to 30 miles per Cilllon Recording such hit s os.. economy meeting, in which they scor e d during the m eet, followinR: still " """0 Wi II 'An swer" • ~~nO:!~ie$~:n:~[~m'iI~~f: :~ \ ·.n option' " My Cup Runne th Over" TOUCh choice! S.vinc,_i,e AND I eilher Coron .. I, the rich! Choice 'or you, Saluki HARRY Sedan pr ic.~ s start at Currency 715 s. JAMES U~iversity Exchange • Ch.cks Coshed ~ l.Io ••y Ord.rs LEON WE·BB • I~o"'ry Pub!;c • ~ !:~:r~erLvii;:n5. New Rt.13 :West • License Plates Mar-ion, Illinois • 2 ,Day Plates Service , Phone . ~ 993-2183 !:,:~::::~~.~1. 'pAIL.Y ~G.YI!TIAN :;t . Pa!me" Sees BradJey as KnickiStar

NEW YORK (AP) - John switches. You've got to use Palmer, .46, 6-foot-5 and spons television commenta­ cent. That kind of shooting HBud" Palmer. an old P rince­ your hands and push off. stlll Hollywood-handsome, is tor and doing television com­ today wouldn't earn a bench ton Tiger who made It with "Most fans don't realize the Commissioner of Public mercials. job with t·he Kni cks. Bradley the New York Knlcks 21 years that Bill has been with the Events for Mayor Lindsay for Palmer led the Knicks in is shooting about 45 per cent ago, predicts Tiger Bill Brad­ club only since the end of last $1 a year. field goal percentage In 1946- and stlll Is struggling to carr) ley will blossom out as a star year. He has [0 learn to He n;l akes his living as a 47 with an average of 30 per his weight with the c lub. with the current Knlcks of the mesh with his teammates. National Basketball Associa­ That' 5 what you learn to do tion. In training camp. BlIl didn' t o place YOUR a HGive him a little time to have any training camp. INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPLETING ORDER catch up and loosen up and HHe also didn't have much CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES you'll see a vast improve­ playing in the two years at -Complele ."elio n" I· S u5inC ball p~" n l ., .. n. ment," safdPalmer. checity·s Oxford, where fie studied 35 ( Minlm'llTl-2 lin".) o Prinl in all CAPITAL LETTERS official greeter. a Rhodes Scholar. Sure he 1 DAY ...... JS~ p"r line On" numbrr or lelle! prr .pa e~ uHe's having his troubles played with the Italian 3 DAYS .. (Con ..,e Uil Ye ) ...... • 6Sf P'" line CQ not 1.1 ." s "'P . ral" spac- " fo, pu n clu."",r: with defense,"' said Palmer Simmenthal Club In Europe S kip .p.cr " b"I"'"l'TI "-Ord 5 Thursday. "but with more play but that caliber of play Is 5 DAYS .. ( ConueuliYe) ...... •• 8S~ per lin e COunl .ny pan of a lin" a . a full lin" . DEADlltiES oM ont'y canno t bt' ' ''funded if ad u conct' lled. he'll be one of the best. Play­ nothing compared to what you "Caliy Eeyplian '".,,'n:1o Ih .. "Chl 10 r"J .. n . n)· W"d. th"" Sal. ad .. t .... o day. prior 10 publical ion. adYertl"lne COP )' . ing defense is hard work. It' 5 have to face in the NBA. Tue •.• d...... : . Frld • . a thanlcless task. And It takes Here the pros are bigger, teamwork. You ' ve got to yell fas ter and stronger and they'll when you're caught In the s hoot your eyes out." I DAILY EGYPTIAN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM University of Evansville Rated Sixth Moil order form with remittonc e to Doily Egyptio", Bldg. T.48. SIU NAME ______~------DATE------In AP College Division Cage Poll ADDRESS PHONE NO. 2 ...... KIND OF AD '\.3 RUN AD 4 CHECK ENClO Sf D The Universit y of Evans­ 1. Long Island U. 145 vllle, which is SIU's Satur­ 2. Kentucky Wesleyan 113 o For Sole DEmployrne", o P ersonal 0 , ' DAY FOR iJ """ " .. ,. day night opponent in the 3. McNeese State 93 WOMed o Services q J DAyS mullJply l o, a \ num tw. t> t hn ....,. 'i,::'>'·S < .. ~ . ;~ •• :~ .. • • i ndicated undt' r ' alt' • . f or .. ~ .. m J'! .. : 1 , . _ ' _n Ar ena. is ranked sixth in the 4. Pan American 69 DEntertoinmenl Offered d S DAYS II n vt' lin" ad fo . ft ,,.. dJl}'. , ... ud r·,. ' . ! !J_' latest AP College Division 5. Trinity, Tex. 59 allow J da)'11 fo , ad ( 85c" S). O. a '''''·0 lint' ad fo, lh ..... c .. , ~ • .". !-. OHeip Wanted 0 Wonted t o II'lIIn if S I.JO (6S".2). Milumu", " , >; 1 f Jr .. n . c , ,.. 7.0.1'. P oll. 6. Evansvllle 55 mailed On top is Long Island Uni­ 7. Norfolk State 51. versity which garnered 145 8. Southwestern La. 45 writes cast by the nation's 9. illinois State 31 sponwriters. 10. Guilford 27 Ken tu c k y Wesleyan h e l d second place with three votes Holds No . 2 NCAA Post for the top position and 113 points. The Panthers from University Park, Pa. (AP)­ Owensboro. Ky .• have a 17-3 Penn State athletiC director mark. Ernest B. McCoy has been r e­ elected secretary-treasurer The Top T en, ba sed o n of (he NationalCollegiate Ath­ game s through Feb. 17 and leric Association. The POSt is wtal points on a LO-9-8. etc ., regarded as the s.econd highest basis: in the NCAA . Daily Eg·yptian Clas.sified ·Action Ads The Daily Egyptian ruerves the right to reject any advertising copy. No refunds on concell.d ods

Studio couch, e lectric toa s ter, l' kille t Appr oved 2- rm. eutc lency apt. for 2 Wanted, with ne w degree Inengtneer­ T~p l cop)' plastic mas te r s a llow you tl,; pe r colato r. Ph. 45i - 8394. 1999f3A girls. Panelled, air condo Ayailable Ing . Locate Springfield o r Quad­ [0 type perfecf copy for thesIs or FOR SALE Spring qtr. Ph. 9- 6952 after 6 p. m. cit leI;. S7800 minimum, service fee di ssertation at a low cos!. Reserve s· wide 2 bedroom traile r with a ir. 199388 paid. Colltact Ke n, Downs tale Per­ your kit now. Ph. 7-5i5i . 4220E Golf clubs. Brand ne w. never used. Also ' 59 Chevy 0 cyl. Call 45, -408 5. sonne l service. Phone 549-3366. Stlll In pla s tic cove T. Se ll fo r half. H 99A ' 8C Call i -4334. IS5iBA WANTED 1965 Chevy 2 dT. Bucke t sealS. 4 Male atlendant for s p. qtr. [0 assis t We buy and selt used furniture. Ca ll sp. , 32" wide ovals . Have to see r e hJlh. s tudent· and s hare T P room. 549-1782. 1933BA to apprec iate . Call 457--14 77 after 2 cont racts spring quarter. 600 For ~o re Info. c all 453-4745. 4506C Deaf persons who lip read to par­ 5 p.m. 4500A W . Freeman. 549- 4704. 44 7313 ticipate in research projec t on com­ 15,000 BTU air condhioner. 0 mos. munication patterns . TJme and place old, good as new. $,1 SO. Ca ll 549- 1965 mo bUe home IOx55. Refurnished ',,=-,,-::,,-.,-:-'::-,70 5O::-.--'5'-P-"'-0.- .-,-,"- .-,-.-= , will be arranged for convenience of 1098 aft. o. 1979BA in colonial decor. beautiful condo 18, m~ out. 9-2S53 after 5 p.m. EMPLOYMENT partic ipants. $3.00 per hour. Write 500 BTU air conditione r , also TV ...... 45008 R. Jones, Behavior Re search Lah., Good buy. Call 9-45 15 atrer 5. 1000 N. Main. Anna, TIl., or call 4503A Child- care In my home. Ca rterville. colle ct (833-67 13) for appoimment. Days . Call ctd5-3556. 4507D J986BF Antique c hina , glass. c locks . a rt ob­ Mustang 1965 2 plus 2 H-D sus pen­ )eCUi . .The Anrique , 204 N. DI vIs ion, Student Teacher needs ride week days s ion 289 cu. in. 225 HP , mag wheels, Wilson Hall s till has s pace avaHable Cane rville . Open Sunda y 2-4. 44 i l A [0 Murphys boro spring quaner. Call s liver hlue. 7:75 ' tires . Call 542- fo r Spring QtT. 1101 S. Wall. 457- SERVICES OFFERED Judy 549 -4106. ""Jl5F 4860 afte r 6 p.m. Du QUOin, illin­ 21 69. 1 865B8 New furniture at us ed prices. Beds , ois . 450QA c hai.rs , eesks , nlghls tands, lamps , Typing - IBM. Experience w/ term, .-Cirl to take over conrract Logan Hall &: other misc. furniture -was bought 1959 V8 Chevy a uto m31lc fr a ns . Good s pr ing quane r. Off -campus r oom thesiS. dJssen. Fas t, e fUclent. 9- sprillg qu.arter. Call Glenda p - i027. for do rm- neve r used. Ma y be seen rransport8[lon, heare r. radio. S125. fo r one male. S90/ quarte r. 549 - 3850. J975BE 4522F at Carbondale Mobile Ho me Park, N. Take gu ns 111 trade. Call be seen at 2748. 45058 5 1, Phone 549-3000. 44 7i A Gloye Factory 8 [0 5. 45 14 A Goodye ar s hock absorbers Ins ralled. Man to take ove r conrract at 60S W. $0.95 e ach. Ford, Chev., Plymouth. LOST Like new Gibson gultarfor sale . F ree Honda CB 160. E xceptional condi­ F r eeman. $11 8 a term includes Po n e r Bros. Tire Center, 324 N. il­ ca se included, only S99.95. Call T .G. tion. Ne w c lutch. :ear wheel. Call utilirles a nd cooking prlvt.1e ge s. Ph. linois Ave . , 549- 1342. 1985BE a( 9- 3253 P )" :amlds 113A . 44 7SA 3·3205, 4515A ~ S7- 4 960 . 451 0B Man's gold warch with gold mesh sewing and alteratio ns . 20 years e x­ baDd, Hamilton. Lost Tbur.aft.2- 15. Trailer Carbondale 8'x48'. air condi­ 1'960 Fo rd. Air condo Runs good. perience. Call 9 - 4034. I 992BE Large r e ward. Call aft. 5 549-2386. tioned, e xcellent condition. Secn by S! 25 or beSt offe r . Jim 5-4 9-4864. L "81C appointme nt o nl y. Call 457- 263 1 451 bA Let us type or print your te rm .--' . Carbondale $1500. 44 79A paper, thes is. The Authors Office, Loos e leaf noteblok In U. Center 1141 / 2 5 , JlII.nols. 9-6931. 1996BE conta.lns ,a.~1 qtr' s note s . Re ward. Srel"eo system: Ga rr3rd lab- BO , SOW Wanted; one ~rl to share traUe r Dian 7- 7855 or 9-5789. 451tG Harman Kardon amp, 2 books hlf. s pie r . FOR RENT with t'lr0 orher s fo r s pring. 9- 4844. Income ta:ll: pre paration hy appolnt­ 51 90. Pete 9- 5, 3·204; ; eve. 7-5972. ) 4518B menlo Call 457-5943 Betty Silvanla, Black a nd white mixed hreed female ('"" • .. 489A U";,,eu;ty ,e9ulotio" ••equire thololl 1-4 00 W. Walnut. 2000BE terTie r. No collar. Ple ase call Y- \ " "vleund"'V.aduote nuden" mu .. ' Ilye Approved apt. space· open. 509 S. Wa ll 4406. Reward. 452JG 64 VW. Call 7-4603 or see a l Gates i" """pled L, ,,i"9 un te", a s igned :--. t. Spring qtr. 9 - 4297. Gir13. 451g e Downstate Personne l Service C 'dale Lane . I)e!,; offer. ·H90A ' 0""0" for which mU lt be filed with ;, ro£e ssional placement service is the OIf.Campus Hou.ing Office. Gi.rl wante d to s ha.r e very nice un.­ readj to place you with branch of­ FOUND 1961 Olds 88 COIIV. E xcelle nt ~ th approve d apartment with one girl. fices In E dwardsville and Rockfo rd. Ins ide & out.. Full jX:Iwe r. As king Girl to "lake over T P contr act for S 5 ~ a month. Phone 549-3803. 4520 B Ph. for appro o r Stop hy. 103 5. Wash­ 5600. call 9·5218af[er5p.m. H91 A spring quane r. Call 3 - 8532. 45048 ington. ~4 o -3366. Open 9-5 week­ On S. G raham St., 1965 c las .. rinl; days, 9- 1 Sat. 2BE He rricks Hig~ CCchool. ldentlfy 1n1- pnnable t)'J)e"'riler and Erma 22 New apt. s paoe for glrls. Spr. a'1.d / or HHf WANTED tia !s, Claim at ~ Il y Egyptian, T - 48. cal. piSlOl. Good colldJtion. Call s ummer term. 50Q S. Wall. Ph. i · · Ele ctro.llc J" e pair service. Tv, 4513H after 6 p.m. 9-2941 Audrey. 44Q3A 7263. 1956BB stereo, organ, recorders. Licensed. S ru~nl o:ouple. &e rious and r e liable. Rel)abJe. .Call 549- 63S6 a nYtime. Royal portable typewriter .. It.h cas e. Women; 2 rm. khchen a pt. fe r s pr. Automobile, room and hoard ~n ell;­ 4387E Excellent condition. Call 7-6296 qtr. SI 55/ term. 6vac.ancies . Ptole my c hange for general housekeeping. ENTERTAINMENT after 5 p. m.. 4494A Towers . ~ S. Rawlings . 7 -64"; 1. P hone 942-3331 between 7-10 a.m. Portraits painted pastels . 22'126". 1080 138 n r p.m. I ~I Be $15. Call 3-3642. 4523E Horses for pleasure riding. Board­ Pontbc 1961 2 dr. HT. Good condJ­ Ing horses. Riding lessons by ap- d o n. Must sell immedJarely. CaU Men 2 man k..llchen aprs. for spr. St. Louts consrrucdon and e nginee r­ Getting marrled? Need a photogra­ pointment. W. Chautau(!:Ja . 457- 9-3 178. 4495A qu. SI55/ term. -tvacancies. Lincoln Ing finn has operong for ayoung.am­ pher? CaU 549-1844 for beautiful 2503. 1987BI Manor. 509 S. Ash. 9-1369. 1981BB bltlous eng1neer, 25-35, WIL'l 2-3 color pictures. Former professional 1965 mobile home. IOx55. Fum.lsh­ years expeTience preferred but will photographer now working fo r degree Hl~ome presents roller soeing, ed, cent.u.l air, many extras. $3595. I rm. etf. apr. Grad. s tudent only. train tbe Tight: man. Engineering at SIU. 4524E 6:30-7:00, daOCin@ 9-1. OM or. Fri. See ar 2i RoltAlUlC" cr call 9-1094. 2 ml. fro m Unlv. Center. Ph. 549- degree required. Exper1er.ce In buUd­ pl us The Long IsLalld Sound on Sat. 449iA 44SI. 19838B ing deSign. estimating and constrUc ­ Cus to m tMlorlng-spec1a.1 attn. to 1997BI don desirable. Salary $10,000- 15,- young men's -a lterations, tapering, 1964 CorVette CODV. 4 8p., 365 hp. Spring tenn-2 approved .;Ieeping 000. wm pay for your move to St. e tc. Fa~m CUStOm tal10r and Need a ride to the HiPPOdrome? For Low mUeS. very good condo $2250 4 males. 7- 4277 or 7-6307. Louis. • Send compleU! resume to furrier. 211 1/ 2 S. Ill. Ave . Rm. bus service caJl "Cleze" 3- 3631. o r best offer. 549-2651. H98A 19908B Box 103 E gyptian. t995SC 118. 4525F. LlmUed space avaiJable. 199881 DAILY EGYPTI .... N 23,1968 Sal ' ki~ Aces Re~ew Lt)~ Rivalry Saturday

By Dave Pa lermo Purple Aces came back {O tie out of ICC comention, 1l 0- ":4 . the game , Hartman's 'troops at Evansville . The vit tory {n ­ While So uthern's chances of failed ro cash in on numerous creased EvanSville ' s season s naring an NTT bid are practi ­ opportunitie s ~o pulI back on r ecord to 18-5. calJy nill, the season is far rop. "We s hook off the doldr um s from over with Saturday's in­ Forwa r d and leading scorer and came alive in the last vasion of E vansville . Dick Garrett also had an off game , " [he veteran McCutch­ Along with the fact that past night from the floor hitting a n s aid. games between the rwo teams only four of 19 s hots and mis­ "The three -ga me loss s kid -have us ually resulted in hard sing his only free thro w inc luded defeats to Ke ntucky .fought contests, the upcoming attempt. Wesleyan and Butler and can­ game will have a touch of re ­ If Garrett comes il p with hi s not be considered dis graces. " venge. us ual performance and the he added. "But the last game Evansville holds a rhree ­ tea m could avoid another off of that s kid was against India!1a game edge in the l ong stand­ night from [he floor, the s it­ State whe r e we played badly. Ing series, 23-20, including a uation could be r eversed. Our defe nse was terrible while '5 2-45 vicrory over the Salu­ Evans vil1e Coa ch Arad Mc­ the Syca m ores' defensive k is earlie r in the year. CU lc ha n would like for Sa luki game was the best we've faced Coach Arad McC utchan cre­ fans {O believe that he is mo r e all year. " di ts his uVa m pire Five " r e ­ concerned with the upcoming A preliminary ga rTe between s erve unit With the e arlier e with Indiana Collegiate the tw o freShmen teams wil l victor y, but Coach Jack Hart­ onfe r e nce foe DePauw Uni ­ be pl ayed beginning ar 5, 45. m an feel s orherwise . v s ity than with SJU. "I didn' t think we played ~«\fhe big factor," said Mc ­ we ll in [he game except fo r C ut ~ han , His to try and ta ke College'j3asketball the firs t 15 minutes," s aid theflJU game seriously and a t :/Scores ' Hartman. .. The system may the same time not overlook Duke 50, Wake Fe1-esl 41 give them a s light physical the next game we play against Miami, Oh io. 55, Xavier, e dge but I don ' t feel it was De Pauw whkh will dec ide the the dec iding factor. " conference championship." Ohio, 52 Massachusetts 70, R ho d e SAF:E SITUATION--Evansville regulars Kat' Moore ( 20 ) H art man also dis agreed The Purple Aces will take and Jeer) MaUlne!,} have th e siLualion well in hand as they With M CC utc han' s philos ophy an 8-3 conference record Is la nd 68 c ombin e [or a rebound in a game play ed earlier wiUl SUi , that the r es e r v e s ys tem against the Tigers on March 2. ~ G eo rg e Washington 65. Georgetown, D.C ., 6 1 T he Salukis lost th e- hard-[ought contest, 52-45. but will causes a psycologJcal e ff~ ct A win would g'ive McCutc han aUempt to avenge the defeat Saturda) at 8 p . m . when th t.' on the team in that they are a share of the ICC title along Ton.ight'. Gamps IWO t e ams m cet at Ule SI L Arena. thinking about why the ftve ­ with Indiana Stace. Denver at Air porce for-five e xchange is be i n g Tues day the Purple Aces Harvard ac Princeton used in s tead of what they s na-pped 8 three-game losing Oregon at California s hould be rhlnklng a bout. s treak in bounc ing Ball State Final P1ayoff~ Set "I don ' t feel h ' s effective Oregon State at Stanford in that sense," comme nted Hartman. "EspeCiall y whe n the other team is prepared For Intramurals for i t." T he Intramural baske tball '\nlmaJ s (6-0, MRH); AHen In the la st meeting between the TWO reams , rhe Salukfs c hampions hip will he played 111 (6-0 , MRH) vs. TuTtl e~ fUT the flr st t i m t:' bef oTt:: an ( 4-(J , Ind.). had o ne a t the ir coldesl s hoot­ ing games of r:he season con­ seu var s ity contest when [he Trophi~s will be p resenc ed Saiukls mee t Centenarv Col- cu che first and second place necting on o nl y 19 of 58 fteld lege t\1arch I . . teams a n (] the outstancH ng goal anem pts faT a cool .32 L a r r y Schaake, a g raduate m anager during half time of precemage. ", SSlStant In the- Intramural t he var s ity game. They held a 22-12 Ieadearli­ (.J ~fic e . h ald tnat t ht- flnals er in the ga me and, when rhe will ~e s ta~ecl at t" ;J• .,.... to In " f ' rf;'~ ,1 ge ttl n p l a rger ". r 1') W0 5" \ina s hOWing tht.- c... aI ­ ib£. r o f imramural baskelb,dl" DAIRYQUEEN ? lav ~~ at SIL . ' -hl!- l'JU rnament which wlD FOR THE BEST IN SUNDAES r:; ~ c i d>:, t hE.- t w o finalist s p.elS Jndl;? r '" 2V ':> unoav ana will AND SHAKES '-un t l-: r ouin T uesaay. WE PACK EVERv..T-H '~ G TO GO 'Jf n"",:" b tearTI:: In tnt ~ la~,"Jff ~, 15 flaVt- Pf: 1iE' c t rt:'­ Weather Report c o r ds. T he c OrTIblnt:'d r!:'c ur d OPEN lla.m. til IIp.m. 'J( [ht" 6 teafT'l~ is y/ win~ .:i nc unh une of:'1ea l. Thf;" WH!­ DAIRY QUEEN .. :508 S. ILLINOIS n(:o'r "Jt '~ac h 'Jf rhf: 1 6 d jv J s l (m~ -SALE- of rht' fou r It'a brut'~ 4 r t" )Ji::. 11 1- c lpant:;. r hf:' lectgucs c r t:: FraH: rnny. Men' s Hl:Sldent.!; Ride the ·FR .. bus to Murdale arbondale Weather Repor Hall s, () ff - Carnpu~ Du r m and Indtpend(mt. every Saturday Until Tuesday - Cold. T he "first rfJun d paI rings rlJllow: 26 Friendly Sto re. to Serve You . Sigma PI .. A" (i- U, P r al) ~inal nearan ... O' of re·!!ular s tO(~ Mal,> vs. \1, s fit s (6- fJ, Inc. ); FfJrest Casual. j ean s and Hopsack an-d Kalama7.0o. Hall ()- (J , Do r m ) vs. Kappa Al pha P si " B" (7- 0, 'Fr at): SA VE THIS SCHEDULE Indi ans ( 5-0, Ind . > vs. Ve[s ... BUJJDY Bl C~SA L E·" Club (6-0 , In d.); Dribblers (5-1, MRH) vs. Bills (6-0, 2 ItJr price of one plu s $1; 00. Ind .). Suk es Dukes (7-0, Ind.) vs. "007" (6-0, Do r Po Final t.:I earance of Lambswool S ... eater ~. Flash and Friends Reg. 812.95. Friday & Saturda) only _. $7.95. vs. LO-Ufers Brown Gods