Eastern Illinois University The Keep

September 1980

9-5-1980 Daily Eastern News: September 05, 1980 Eastern Illinois University

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This is brought to you for free and open access by the 1980 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in September by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. · The Daily FridaySept. 5, 1980 and warm with highs in will be sunny . the mid sos. Cloudy and warmer Friday night with low in the mid 60s. Sunny and warm Saturday, with Eastern News highs in the upper sos. Eastern llllnols University I Charleston, Ill. I Vol. 66, No. 9 / 20 Pages/ Two Sections

- Committee on Committees clears 'gray' from councils

by Laura Rzepka of the authority. Members contacted Thursday from Stephen Whitley, chairman of the the Council on Academic Affairs and Committee on Committees and former the Council on Teacher Education said CAA chairman, said the council's, there is no major difference between recommendations to Marvin were the newly defined policies and basically approved as they were procedures of the councils and those of written. "There may be changes in the past. language but not in intent,'' he aid. . s Ron Wohlstein, CAA chairman, ."M ore than anything, the council said the procedures "are pretty much clarified procedures that were un­ the same as they have always been." derstood but not written down in black The procedures are "quite ac­ and white," Whitley said. ceptable," he added. The temporary council had to decide · Because of a question of which "where the lines of authority are," he · council should have the final authority said. on approving courses, a temporary Louis Grado, a member of the council, the Committee. on Com­ Committee on Committees, said, "I mittees, was formed in April to look don't think that much was changed. into the operating procedures of those . It's really been the responsibiltiy of the councils and of the Council on CAA to be the final approving council Graduate Studies. on campus." "There were gray areas before but Patricia McAlister, former chairman the Committee on Committees of the COTE, said the COTE still has responded to the gray areas and cleared the same basic input as in the past. it up," Wohlstein said. Teacher education programs are still To eliminate discrepancies between the responsibility of the COTE but the the councils, the temporary committee council cannot approve courses except recommended ·and Eastern President those leading to certification by the

Daniel E. Marvin decided that the State Teachers' · Certification Board CAA has the final authority in ap­ and/ or· those accredited by the proving all undergraduate courses. National Council for Accreditation of In the past the CPTE could l!Pprove Teacher Education. alt courses related to teacher education Other members of the CAA and the and the CAA could approve all other COTE were either unavailable for undergraduate university courses. comment or were not familiar with the However, Marvin said this summer he new procedures. would like to see one council have all Paraphernalia ordinance lfirranticipation of Saturday's football game with �uth Dakota State, Ba d Harold Hillyer seems to be signaling for a touchdown.'Eastern's season begins at 1 p.m. at O'Brien Field. (News photo Paul Black) coul become invalid

by Susan Schlanser Such an amendment would prohibit changes A bill being discussed in a joint cities with a population of more than ELH planning committee of the Illinois House and 25,000 from adopting their own para Senate may render Charleston's drug phernalia ordinances. ecause of deficit paraphernalia ordinance invalid, the If the bill passes both the House and $4,000 chairman of the house committee on Senate according to the House's LoriWaddell Brinn. "Everything has seemed to the bill said Wednesday. amendments, Charleston's ordinance LH, Eastern's campus radio be running really well with the However,. the originator of the city will be void, Katz said. 'on, is in the midst of a books for the past one and a half ordinance, City Commissioner John However, Beusch disagreed, ex­ ganization concentrated on the years, until now," Moore said. Beusch, disagree, saying the city's plaining the city's ordinance was ting of financial ·records, Bill Hillyer, the new business ordinance is ''legal to the extent that it based on a plan comprised by the "on Manager Greg Moore said manager at WELH, is now in the has been tested on the national level.'' Federal Drug Enforcement Agency. esday. process of findingout exactly what The city ordinance, which was He said it has been used in several oore said investigations are Brinn did and which advertisers passed in May, 1980, outlawed the states including Indiana, Florida and conducted due to the recent have and have not paid for in air-· possession, sale and advertising of Ohio. ery of the station's deficit of time advertising, Moore said. paraphernalia, including items such as Beusch said some. paraphernalia t$4,000. Bririn could not be reached for bongs, roach ·clips and syringes. ordinances are not adopted because comment. Last · year_ was our most Tobacco papers and pipes were ex­ they are too vague, but Charleston's rous year in selling ad­ Moore said Hillyer will know the empted from the ordinance. specifies items that are used almost ing," Moore said, which is exact amount of the deficitby next Originally passed in the senate, the exclusively for drugs. Beusch said the reason for the surprised Wednesday at the station's ordinance does not outlaw tobacco state· bHI resembled Charleston's or­ · tions by the station executive board meeting. dinance but was then amended when it paper or pipes. ement in regard to the Moore said the station is run on reached the House. Rep. Harold Katz, Commenting on the provision made " t. a fall and spring budget system D-, said the bill, as it .came by the House that only the sale of eral problems have been where money is allpcated to the from the senate, could raise constitu­ smoking materials to minors be pro­ · . as possible causes for the station each school year� by the tional questiOns. He said some items hibited, Beusch said materials used in cit, beginning with the Apportionment Board. which can be associated with para­ connection with illegal drugs should ation of WELH adviser Moore explained that the budget phernalia, such as pipes and tobacco not be legally sold to any age group.

en Hofer last spring, Moore for the present fall semester has • papers, could also have innocent uses. "I don't see what the difference is if already been set at about $9,000, Though the Senate's plan would 18- or 20- or SO-year-olds use it. If it's e said Hofer did not which indicates that the station is prohibit sale of paraphernalia to the illegal, it should be illegal for any enough time to explaining in no danger of closing for the entire public, the amendments pro­ age," he said. Brinn, WELH business moment, he said. posed by the House would limit the Beusch said even if the bill passes in er, his responsibilities in "We will have to make up the unlawful sale of smoking materials to Springfield according to the amend­ position. deficit through increased ad­ minors only, Katz said. The House ments made by the House, Charles­ He should have asked someone vertising sales this semester," -also proposes an amendment to pre­ ton's city ordinance should still be help," Moore said about Moore said. empt any home-rule laws, he said. valid.

. ,. Friday Sept. 2 5, 1980 The Daily Eastern News Soviet officials jam iiiiiiiiiiiiiii(AP)iiimiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiie wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiis ___s--- h__ o__ rt__ siiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wes tern broadcasts Byrne gives thousand for str�ke relief $10 MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet radio jam­ news of the Polish unrest from Soviet CHICAGO - Mayor Jane Byrne has given Pope John Paul II a gift of mers, using loud garbled voices, listeners. $10,000 from her campaign fund and asked that it be used for Polish relief in grinding buzz-saw sounds and distor­ The jamming, however, has · · ; ted music, are having only mixed the wake of Poland'slabor strikes. · changed the situation substantially, The mayor handed a check to the pontiff Wednesday in St. Peter's Square· at success in their third week of efforts to Soviet citizens say. the Vatican after the pope's weekly-two-hour public audience. He greeted Byrne block out Western broadcasts to the "I used to listen to the Voice of ·warmly, coming down from the outdoor platform from which he had just Soviet Union, according to Western America all the time when I was addressed more than 5,000 people, including 14 Chicagoans in the mayor's monitors and Soviet listeners. working in the kitchen," says one party. Despite an investment in jamming Moscow woman. "It's so good to see you again,'' the pope said smiling. The two had met personnel and equipment that Soviet "Now you have to listen so carefully during the pope's visit last fall. sources believe has been extremely to hear anything through the noise that know a powerful city like Chicago has a woman mayor ,'' he expensive, Russian-language broad­ I listen a lot less." "It's good·to · said. casts by the Voice of America, the Another Muscovite predicts Soviet British Broadcasting Corp. and West citizens, sensing their government has Carter mends Jewish relations Germany's "German Wave" are still grown less tolerant of foreign broad­ slipping through to many Soviet casts, will now discuss less openly the WASHINGTON - One day after disclosing that Egypt and Israel had agreed citizens determined to hear them. fact that they listen to them. to resume Mideast peace negotiations stemming from the 1978 Camp David U.S., British and West German Jamming consists of super-imposing · accords, President Carter sought Thursday .to mend frayed relations with the diplomats have protested the interfer­ noise or garbled radio programs on top American Jewish community. ence to the Soviet government. But of the program to be drowned out. In his address to B'nai B'rith, the Jewish service organization, Carter was Soviet authorities publicly deny any Sources say that to blot out a foreign sure to strike back at GOP presidential nominee. Ronald Reagan, who asserted jamming is going on .. program on just one wavelength in one on Wednesday night that the president's Mideast policies had created a The drowning-out of Western part of a Soviet city, as many as three dangerous "flashpoint" in the Middle East and had led to increased influence in broadcasts began Aug. 20 during jamming transmitters may be nec­ ihe area by the Soviet Union. widespread worker strikes in Poland. essary, along with a central jamming Many Western analysts assumed the coordinator. Jai_I guards placed on probation interference was aimed at blocking WAUKEGAN, - Fourteen guards at the Lake County jail have been fired and seven guards placed on probation after "improprieties" were uncovered in Draft numbers an investigaton of an Aug. 10 escape of three inmates. increase Lake County Sheriff Tom Brown, who announced the dismissals Wednesday, said evidence disclosed many rule violations by guards and indicated that two from Vietnam era sign-up watch commanders and an assistant watch commander failed to provide proper training for guards. WASHING TON (AP) Compliance for an independent audit of the He said infractions included smuggling of contraband, including drugs, into with the government's new draft registration forms. the facility, granting of favors and special telephone privileges to some registration program is sharply im­ Restker baa . said earlier that he prisoners, and neglect of duty. proved over the Vietnam-era signup, would agree to such an audit, and the head of the Selective Service Lynn and Deputy Selective Service Senior citizensissue tickets system said Thursday. Director Brayton Harris indicated that CHICAGO - About a dozen senior citizens issued homemade parking Director Bernard Pestker said about Congress' General Accounting Office tickets downtown Thursday, charging that the city is lax in its enforcement of a 93 percent 6f eligible youths had would be an appropriate agency for the parking ban at bus stops. registered by three weeks after the job. Members of Metro Seniors in Action "ticketed" cars across from City Hall. initial July signup period. Comparable Lynn suggested that release of the One side of the tickets read "officer-arrest this lawbreaker," and the side figures for 1973, he said, showed an 83 · figures may have been aimed at percent compliance. facing the driver read "you are keeping a senior citizen off the bus." influencing congressional considera­ The action was taken prior to a meeting scheduled between the senior group The figures were immediately chal­ tion of appropriations for Selective and city officials, the group's president, Margaret Person, said. She said police lenged by the Rev. Barry Lynn, Service, which got underway Thurs­ and other city officials are not enforcing a March 1979 ordinance which says chairman of the Committee Against day. cars parked at bus stops will be towed. Registration and the Draft. He called A � . 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News staff Identification Statement Editor in Chief ...... '. ..Laura Fraembs News editor ...... Marsha Hausser The Daily Eastern News is published daily, Monday through Friday, at Managing editor ...... Ted Gregory Charleston, Illinois during the fall and spring semesters and twice weekly Night Staff Editorial Page·Editor ...... Herb Meeker · during the summer term, except durin9.school vacations or examinations, by Editor ...... Yvonne Beeler Administration editor ...... Melinda DeVries the students of Eastern Illinois University. Subscription price: $1 per Assistant editor .... JerryFallstrom Campus editor ...... Linda Charnesky o Government editor' ...... Yvonne Beeler semester, $2 for summer only, $20 for all year. The Daily Eastern News is a Wire editor...... Tim Schmidt City editor ...... Sandy Young member of the Associated Press, which is entitled to exclusive use of all Sports editor...... Andy Savoie Activities editor ...... Jane Meyer articles appearing in this paper.The opinions expressed on the editorial and Lab technician ...... Ed Gray Sports editor...... • ...... Andy Savoie op-ed pages are not necessarily those of the administration, faculty or Verge Editor...... Betsey Guzior student body. Phone 581 -281 2, Advertising phone 58 1 -2813. The Daily Copy editors ..... Vicki Shaw, Jodi Photo editor...... Ed Gray Eastern News editorial and business offices are located in the East Wing of Perko, Jean Kalinski, Scott Hain­ Advertising manager ...... Chris Goerlich the Student Services Building, Eastern Illinois University. Second class Ciiyulation manager ...... Scott Moyer zinger, Stacey Wells postage paid at Charleston , IL 61 920. Printed by Eastern Illinois University, Jkjsiness manager ...... Tony Dardano Charleston , IL 61 920. Adviser ...... David Reed

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playing in the exciting Chicago "Rush Party' Rock 'n Roll band on '.' ActneThunder'' Sat.Sept 6 "Acme Thunder" has been in t at movie, been on TV a nd has the 11:00a.m. \single hit 'Lake Shore Drive' featuring · For rides or info the Aliotta brothers from the

Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah band Friday's 0 urEditorialsrepresentthemajorityopinionofoureditonalboa1 - page - , OpinionF I Commentary Sept. s, 1 980 The Daily Eastern News Sexism invades parking policy.�. Your Turn

The Campus Security staff's recent decision to arrangements to travel to and from their residence Wake up Betsey reserve for women 30 parking stickers for Lot E, halls, no.matter what time of day or night it is. Editor: In response to Betsey Guzior' locat�d behind the LSD complex, is a setback for The current process by which p�rking stickers comments on telethons (September Eastern. are issued to students is an effective one, and it is issue), in particular the ierry Le · Neither the security staff nor the university nondiscriminatory. By allotting stickers ·on MD telethon, may I make a few poin should provide special arrangements for certain housing date priority, the system works without I, for one, naive as it may be, beli people-whether they be men or women. favoring one individual qr group. that there - are those of us remaini who tolerate and, in fact, apprecia The reservation of the spaces was the resu.lt of This process has worked effectivety in the.past this yearly program. I will agree and will continue to work effectively in the future complaints from some women that the spaces one must investigate the validity of they had last year were too far away from their without any outside intervention from Campus multitude of charities that exist toda residence halls, making it dangerous to walk from Security. but the MDA can certainly stand up ' their cars at night. While it may be true that the police are only their value. The amount of money t r This action, even though it may have been trying to accommodate the needs of students in is actually channeled df ectly in research and therapy is phenomenal undertaken with good intentions, sets a the best possible way, if special arrangements are I, for one, salute those stars w dangerous precedent of favortism toward certain made for some students then others may begin - "come out" of their busy schedules groups. If women are given this special privilege, - making unreasonabje demands. help such a worthwhile cause. N what wm keep any other student group on . The campus police should leave the issuing of doubt their schedules are not as busy campus from asking for similar favors? stickers to each residence hall so that priority Betsey's, though, what with regular scheduled viewings of Bozo and In addition, college students should be mature date alone can be the determining factor on sales. Rayner. If the telethon interrup without the university looking. With this system, every student requesting a enough to get along these high intensity activities, MD after them. Women with spaces in distant lots sticker will be assured that the most equitable and possibly Jerry Lewis ·hi should be responsible enough to make their own proce$s was used in their distribution. apologize wholeheartedlv.

I, forone , feel that TV stations ai · live telethons are entitled to unexpec "goofs." After all, if The Dail e n � r" i C-. e r Eastern News can publish witho 6 B� proofreading (page 3, same iss S

You're Invited ••• AA ·elects new chairmen for falJ to Calvary .,.Marc Pacatte terviewed . Baptist Church

The Council on Academic Affairs · The CAA wil have a chance to meet ose Ron W ohlstein of the sociology with the first candidate, Joseph • For a ride call 345·2028 or 345·6642 epartment as its new chairman Larsen, director· of the School of Life Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Science at the University of Illinois, at ursday. Morning Worship 10:45 a,m. Wohlstein replaces Stephen-Whitley, 3 p.m. on Monday in the Charleston­ Sun. & Wed. evening at 7 p.m. ho served as chairman last year. Mattoon room of the University 'tley declined renomination saying Union. West Route 16 Charleston ere was "inherent danger" .in The other four candidates, two of ntinuing chairmanships. whom are fromEastern, will meet with Robert Hennings of the history the CAA when they visit Eastern. tment was chosen to replace Robert Smith, dean of the College of COLLEGE ward Corley as the CAA's vice Science, Math and Engineering at the 'rman. University of Nevada-Las Vegas, will STUDENTS Both Wohlstein and Hennings were be interviewed Thursdax and Friday; ed by acclaimation of the CAA, Margaret Soderberg, assistant to Improve your

· g the only nominations brought Eastern President Daniel E. Marvin, ore the council. will be interviewed Sept. 15 and 16; grades! Whitley commended the CAA on Staley Rives, assistant provost and Send $1.00 for your •super" work over the last year, and dean of the undergraduate institution 306-page, research paper council passed by agreement a Ronald Wohlsteln at Illinois State University will be catalog. All academic ure of "profound thanks" to for the vice president of interviewed Sept. 18 and 19; and candidates left subjects. 'tley. academic affairs position. The five Donald Lauda, dean of the School of In other business, the CAA will coming to Eastern during the next Technology at Eastern, will finish the ssed its meeting with the five individually in- interviews oiiSept . and Collegiate Research two weeks to be 22 23. P.O. Box 25097H eterans be�efits·exhausted for fiscal year Los Angeles, Ca. 90025 ------Diane Buchanan the l�ck of funds for September but are being introduced, Brooks. said. I Enclosed is $1.00. ·1 Veteran GI Bill benefits for 400 additional funding is still needed to If the Veterans Administration was Please rush the catalog. tern veterans are completely ex­ I I cover that loss in the new budget. able to off�r bett�r benefits, this m�g?t Name ______sted for the rest ·of the 1980 fiscal The funding problem. was fpreseen, act as an ce.ntive for people to JOtn I I m Address.______, which ends Sept. 30, Herb Brooks said but Congress has . not the . ilitary, Brooks said. � . . I City ______I ks, director of the veterans ad­ acted upon a request for the additional With more people enhstmg, the I State Zip . I . istration office said Thursday. - funding. draft could be avoided, he said. I------J No funds are available to veterans Even when additional funds are Illinois offers a veterans scholarship through September but they will be received, the problem of an under- program for vets who were residents ailable in October when the new . staffed operation is one of Brooks' before serving in the armed forces and Sweetheart year starts, Brooks said. main concerns, he said. The veteran who.are still residing in Illinois. They The Regional Veterans Administra­ office may be held up because of also should have served a minimum of Rose Special Office in Chicago informed Brooks having to process the backlog of cases 181 days and had an honorable t additional funding has been caused by the delays in funding. discharge, Brooks said. uested of Congress to cover the Already a 10 percent increase of the This scholarship pays the equivalent th of September, Brooks said. GI Bill for the new fiscal year has been of tuition and activity fees for four Brooks said funds could be taken approved.by Congress, and new bills years. the 1981 fiscal budget to cover Chinese group J.R. killer revealed in contest to host potluck Who shot J .R.? Results of the the chairmen saiq. The Eastern Illinois Chinese Student contest sponsored last week by , The committee met Wednesday Association will host a 'welcome new Eastern's John Anderson for to discuss campaign plans. A students' potluck dinner at 6 p.m. President Committee showed fundraising kegger is being Friday at the new Sister City Feng Shan Diana C. did. organized for the end of Sep- Park on 9th Street near Youngstown Junior Brenda Hamm and tember with a live band and Apartments. . sophomore Karen Smith, student drinks. Chinese faculty members and new $5.95 doz. boxed chairmen of the committee, an- A campus voter registration Chinese students are welcome to attend . nounced runner-ups of the contest drive, shuttle service to voting this annual event. A variety of chinese · who included Lee Harvey Oswald, booths on Election Day, and a $8�95 doz. vased dishes will be served at the dinner. Ronald · Reagan, the Ayatollah "publicity blitz" are also part of A discussion of the 1980 Double Ten Khomeini, and president of the the organization's futureplans , the Celebration and the founding date of Noble Flower Shop Sigma Chi fraternity. chairmen said. the Republic of China will be planned The contest was held to draw The committee will be meeting during the dinner. 503 attention to an Anderson booth in again at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Jefferson For further information, please the Union last week, as well as to University Union Charleston­ 345-7007 contact the secretary of the provide a little fun for students, Matton Room. 1 blk. association, Peggy Chiou at 348-0756. from Post _Of/ice

1980 ROC'SThe Largest LoungeLOUNGE in Illinois

Jerry Nikitas -owner John Ward- Owner The Daily Eastern News and the folio i extend their support to the1980 Panther FootballS � - 't- . game against the University of So�D. o

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University � FoodServ -1•1t•11•1fll1Wl!:J.•1•t��')W� room Corn Festival opens Sidewalk Sale ! n traditional German style Friday & Saturday leith Palmgren Saturday begins with a 10,000 meter German polkas, bratwurst and running race at 9 p.m. Yoder said they m making-not to mention have received 200 entries already, r-will be the highlighted at- which is the biggest they have ever had. Riddell Football Shoes ions at the Arcola Broom Corn At 10 a.m. the "most important part

tival this weekend. · of the festival" will take place with Dale Yoder, chairman of the broom making in the broom tent, I 'val, said Arcola, which claims Yoder said. I REG $26.95 fas the largest producer of bro'oms Yoder said three or four people will . here in the world, began the be showing the public how brooms are Ii m Corn Festival in the late 1890's. made and demonstrating their uses. NOW $19.95 e festival was traditionally held in Yoder added that many of the I when the broom corn was har- brooms will be made to order so I d. customers can watch how their broom Yoder said broom corn is still grown is made. Arcola, but in smaller quantities. Arts and crafts will be sold on the 'co is now regarded as a major street and the beer tent will also open. I Etonic Tennis Shoes ucer of broom corn, he added. Country and western music will be I Yoder said the festival kicks off at 4 performed by Helen and Bill Scott at . Friday with the national sweeping 10 a.m. Saturday and all afternoon I Ladies Mens · I test. Yoder said 25 entrants, in Sunday, Yoder said. erent age categories, will sweep Later in the day there will be a I REG $19.95 REG $24.95 through a maze. The person parade during which more than 200 ping the most corn with the best entrants will walk down main street. I wins. A 20-dog hitch hooked up to a Also at 4 p.m. the beer tent will wagon will be in the parade. Yoder NOW $14.95 NOW $18.95 ure live German music and a said it is unusual to have 20 dogs I an bratwurst dinner. Beer will be hooked up together. I ed in cups, buckets and souvenir At 5 p.m. the Mattoon Mounters will perform a gymnastic exhibition on I ter in the evening Rudy Varju will the main stage. ' nt the musical entertainment for Yoder· said the festival opens at 11 Riddell Ladies<:asual he I evening. Yoder said Varju will a.m. Sunday with a show put on from orm shows at 5 p.m. and at 7 p.m. the 20-dog hitch, followed at 11:30 I ch will include "a little. bit of a.m. with a mini-tractor pull REG$20.95 hing." He explained the tractor pull will be NOW $1_1.95 " other special attraction at the for children and their small tractor 'val will be a "hurdy-gurdy" man. type vehicles. I r said this custom stems from Yoder said persons come to the ago when a man would carry an festival from all over Illinois and parts CHARLES L 19 0 T T 7)34S -47 1 7 grinder and a · monkey who of In diana. He said many students TH ng 600 7) MATT� ON,�!� ILL.� �61�938-LOCKER� ���� ROOM-CRO�P��SS !�CO. MALL-(�2 1� 234-4779 . d collect change. Then the man come from the Charleston and I. Champaign areas. E·T �<���;� d play. ,_:e;�@90!-llmlf:�H-'RK!liWI(�;��

Sidewalk Sale Visit Springhaven Open Friday Til 8:00 Sat 5:00 ti I Recreation & Campground °0 Jeans $ 8 values to s23oo Assorted Styles-including smal size Oshkosh Dungar I ees •

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. . ''... '' .., ...... ·. · . . The Daily Eastern News 8 Friday Sept. 5, J 980

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onnors reaches semis of Open NEW YORK (AP) - Jimmy Czechoslovakia. Come Meet the Men onnors took another step in his In women's play, ·18-year-old Hana ch toward a fourth U.S. Open Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia, the ennis championship Thursday, No. 9 seed, breezed into the semifinals ting Eliot Teltscher 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6- with a 6-2, 6-2 conquest of Barbara o gain a berth in the semifinals. Hallquist. Mandlikova -will play the The third-seeded Connors, who won winner of Thursday night's match 's event in 1974, 1976 and 1978 and between 15-year-old Andrea Jaeger

gotton at least · as far as the and Ivanna Madruga of Argentina. 'finals in each of the past .. seven Connors got more than he bargained s, will meet the winner of Thur- for in the unseeded Teltscher, a 21- y night's quarterfinal " match bet­ year-old Californian who hits with n defending champion John surprising power despite weighing only cEnroe and Ivan Lendl of 140 pounds. y _____fr om page 12

defensive back and a real tough · will see his share of playfo.g time, ive lineman, but we won't be Mudra said. away fromthe m," Mudra said. Perhaps the most hotly contested · pite South Dakota's one-game battle for starting posts existed bet­ start and strong defense, Mudra ween the _seven men vying for the four

· s excited about his Panthers' defensive back positions. des. Coming out on top were Rich Brown Our players seem more motivated and Kevin Jones at the cornerback into this season," Mudra said. positions and Don Pittman and Kevin have pushed themselves rather dray at the strong side and weak side rely on us." safety spots. of the motivation Mudra But Mudra said Wilbert James is a 'oned could stem from the in- strong second-stringer behind Jones. competition on the Panther Regardless of who starts for the , such as the battle for the No.1 Panther defense, Triplett is · still im- back spot. pressed with it. an Chuck Wright is slated to "Eastern has great individual talent. the helm Saturday, but the and a great defense. They've got their tent play of Northwestern entire defensive unit returning, in- fer Jeff Christensen keeps the eluding the guy that carries around that heated. sledge hammer (defensive end Pete emerging as Panther starters Catan)," Triplett said. "I really don't South Dakota opener are Ira think they have a single weak point.•• n, Alonzo Lee and Tom Triplett added, "Their offensive line Hope to see you tlaerelfl_ y, nudging out Bill Mines in the is exceptional too. They've probably king corps. got the most sophisticated passing For rides & info Call 345-9053 Mines, a Second-Team All-Mid- game we'll see."

· ent Conference player in "79,

A Diploma Could Be A· Passport To A Great Future

An Education can be the key to a successful career, but you may need in getting it. Whether you intend to make a furtherprogress in learning, embark on a career in a craft or profession, you will always need financial ce . Get to know us. And make us a part of your life. Whether its budget with a · g Money, in a so und program, or taking care of you� king Account, or advice and counseling, you will find us ready, willing able to help. FDIC.

Two locations

. 111 W. Lincoln 345-3966 701 6th St. 345-3977 ...... cc· NB�� , ,,,,,, Member F . D . l . C .

Lob_by Hours: 9-3 Fri · 9-3 Mon-Thurs 4-6:30 Fri - 9-1 2 Sat 10 Friday Sept. 5, J 980 The Daily Eastern News South Dakota prepares for Eastern with win . ' by Andy Savoie improvement after falling behind 14-0 Coyote fullback Rick McKeever The Coyotes punted 12 times for a The University of South Dakota in the first quarter. scored the TD on a two-yard run with 39.7 average, while the Chiefs punted warmed up for its Saturday grid Morningside's tailback, Brad Van just 45 seconds left in the second nine times for a 41.6 yard average. encounter with Eastern by defeating Roekel, gave the Chief' s their early quarter. Returning several of Morningside's Morningside College 16-14 in its lead with touchdown runs of 79 and The University of South Dakota punts was University of South Dako­ ta' s Tom opening game · two yards. gained 135 yards on the· ground in all Berry, who had five run However, the Coyotes' victory was ''They were both on sweeps to the and amassed 195 yards in total backs {or 51 yards and "had one Ion by no means easy. It took a 7-yard TD right and the cornerback fell down offense. return called back,'' Mahon said. pass from Dakota quarterback Chris both times," University of South Morningside gained 220 yards on Maho� also said the Coyotes sus Daniel to JeffDicus early in the fourth Dakota Sports' Information Director the ground, but only 12 through the air tained no serious injuries in th ·quarter to secure the win. Mike Mahan said. in accumulating 232 total offensive contest, although they are starting After an erratic first half, Daniel The Coyotes countered in the second yards. · Kerry Kurtenback at cornerback i finished the contest with seven com­ quarter with a 37-yard field goal by Because of this less-than-outstand­ place of Brian Bungum. pletions in 19 attempts for a total of 60 . Kurt Sible, then made it 14-10 with an ing offensive output, the two squads "Bungum hurt his hamstring before · yards. eight-play, 52-yard drive in the last punted 21 times in the contest. the Morningside game,'' Mahon said. Daniel's Leammates also showed three minutes of the first half.

Campus Clips

Intervarsity Christian Fellowship I

- �- meet The first meeting of the semester f

Intervarsity Christian Fellowship · be at 7 p.m. Friday in the Universi Union Charleston-Mattoon Room Everyone is welcome to attend. Fellowship of Christian Musicians gather A get-acquainted picnic will be he at 6 p.m. Sunday for the Fellowship Christian Musicians. Cost will be

· cents. Contact Norm Tpiel, Cin Sarver or Cindy Mauer for mo information. Morning services set for CCF

The Christian Collegiate Fellows ·

will · hold a non-denominatio worship service at 10:30 a.m. Sun in the University Union Chariest Mattoon Room. Everyone is welco CCF to offer cost supper A Sunday evening meal will served by members of the Christi Collegiate Fellowship at 5 p. Sunday at the Campus House, Eastern's women's cross country team, shown here p.m. Saturday south of Lantz . (News photo by Robin Grant Ave. Cost is $1, but free to fi during a recent practice, will host the EIU Alumni Meet at 5 Scholz) timers. Everyone is welcome.

Official Notices are paid for through the Office of University Relations . . Questions concerning notices should be directed to that Office.

OfFinancial Aidf Formsic ialapplication No form for admissionti ceto sCampus Interviews day of of ficial registration, whichever Insurance Notification Application forms for ISSO and teacher education should attend one All seniors who expect to finish the is later. Only those students enrolling BEOG are available in the Office of of these meetings. Elementary, Junior requirements for a degree by the end Prices for Fall Semester 1980 are minimum of twelve hours wil Financial Aids, Student Services High and Special Education meeting of the Summer Term, 1981 , should as follows: assessed a Student Accident Building, Room 12-B. time_s are 9:00 a.m. or 1 :00 p.m. attend one of the placement meetings Spouse and children ....$34 .50 Health Insurance premium · Sue Sparks McKenna Secondary education meetings will be listed below. Spouse only ...... 1 7. 60 therefore be eligible for insu Director of Financial Ai,ds at 10:00 a.m. or 2:00 p.m. The next B.S. in Business and all other Children only...... 17. 60 coverage. enrollment period will be Spring .Bachelor degree candidates, except Sue Sparks McKenna Guard/Militia Scholarships Semester, 1981 . Education and B.S. or B.A. with Director of Financial Aids Application for the Illinois National Ronald Leathers, Director Teacher Certification. All meetings Guard/Naval Militia Scholarship may Admission to; Teacher Education will be held in the Arcola-Tuscola Fall Refund Deadline Student Insurance Refund be obtained in the Office of Financial Rooms of the University Union: The last day to withdraw from Fall �tudents who can provide evi

Aids, Room 6-B, Student Services Affirmative Action Monday, Sept. 8 - 11:00 a.m. classes and receive a partial refund is · of having insurance comparable Building. The requir.etnents are as It is the policy of the University not Tuesday, Sept. 9-1:0 0 p.m. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 at 3:00 EIU Student Sickness and Ace' follows: to discriminate against anyone in Tuesday, Sept. 9 - 3:00 p.m. p.m.-TODAY; a partial refund in­ Insurance may request a "Petit' ' 1. Currently be an enlisted member. admission or employment on the basis Wednesday, Sept. 10-1 0:00 cludesall fees and tuition except Insurance Refund" form from an officer, through grade of capt�in, of race, color, religion, national origin, a.m. insurance. Office of Financial Aids, Room or a warrant officer, who has served ancestry, sex, age, arrest record. Thursday, Sept. 11· - 2:00 p.m. The last day to withdraw from the Student Services Building. for at least one year, in the Illinois veteran , handicapped, parental , Thursday, Sept. 11 - 4:00 p.m. University and receive a 50% refund Prepared in duplicate, the NationaLGuard or Naval Milita. marital or familial status. Anyone who Monday, Sept. 15-9:00 a.m. (50% of all le.es paid except in­ must be signed by both the s 2. Possess all necessary college or feels that they have grievance based Tuesday, Sept. 16-4:00 a.m. surance) is TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER and parent (if student is under university entrance requirements. on one of the above factors should Tuesday. Sept. 16 - 2:00 p.m. 16, 3:00 P.M. years of . age) and submitted'. 3.Apply to ISSC for the scholarship follow the academic, civil service, Thursday, Sept. 18-1 :00 p.m. Michael D. Taylor theOffice of Financial Aids, R and supply proper proof of eligibility. student or union grievance Thursday, Sept. 18-3:00 p.m. Director, Registration B, StudentServices Building. 4. Continue to be a member of the procedures which have been Friday, $ept. 19-4:00 p.m. tember 1 0, 1980 is the last Illinois National Guard/Naval Militia, or established. If assistance is needed, B.S. in Education. B.S. or B.A. Drop Deadline these petitions will be accept the educational benefits, according to please contact Jane Ziegler by calling degree with Teacher Certification. All The last day to drop a class andd Fall Semester 1980. law. must be terminated as of the 581 -5020, or 581 -2424. meetings will be held in the Arcola­ have noentry for the class on your Sue Sparks McK militia termination date . Payment The Affirmative Action Office is Tuscola Rooms of the University permanent r�cord is FRIDAY, Director of Financial oftuition and other fees allocated to located in Rm. 15, Student Sevices Union·: SEPTEMBER 5 at 4:30 P.M.­ the part of the term that is remaining Building. Office hours will be from Tuesday, Sept. 9 - 2:00 p.m. TODAY. after militia termination shall become 1 :00 to 4:40 p.m. daily. Thursday, Sept. 11 - 3:00 p.m. Michael D. Taylor Parking Lot Closure On the the responsibility of the applicant. Jane Ziegler Monday, Sept. 15 - 4:00 p.m. Director. Registration weekend of Septem and 20, Eastern John Flynn Director of Affirmative Action Wednesday, �ept. 17-10:00 will host the · Coles County Indus Associate Director Financial Aids a.m. Overload Fees trial Trade F Home If placement registration is delayed Overload fees will be assessed for Show in the University The complexity Student Health Insurance Application for Graduation one year beyond graduation, a fee of every semester hour over 1 8 still on a of this pr requires that the following Brochures describing - the student Application and reapplication for $25.00 is charged to'r�gister. student's schedule after FRIDAY, parki be closed all day Friday, Accident and Health Insurance graduation for Fall Semester 1980 James K(lott, Director SEPTEMBER 5, 1980. Un­ Sept 19: coverage for 80-81 are available in must be accomplished no later than Robert E. Jones, Asst. Director dergraduate Illinois residents will be Lot U-Around the Student Health Insurance Of­ the deadline of 4:30 p.m. on Friday, Career Planning & assessed $25.25 per semester hour University Union fice, Basement of Student Services September 5, 1980. The necessary Placement Center Title over 18 and non-residents of Illinois Lot U-East of Seventh Building, Room 7-B, Included in the forms are available in Records Office. will be assessed $75.75 per Street James E. Martin Lot D-East of Buzzard Buil brochure is an identification card Fall 1980 Dependent Insurance semester hour over 18. · adjacent to Ninth Street which can be presented at the time Registrar Married full-time students (12 hours A student. who has a scholarship Persons usually parki medical treatment is required . or more) are again reminded that if should check with the Financial Aids ng in lots may park in I Sue Sparks McKenna All Students they desire Sickness and Accident Office to see whether his scholarship other restricted on September Directore of Financial Aids A student obtaining employment on­ Insurance for dependents for Fall covers overload fees. 1 9 as space available. campus should be certain before Semester 1980, they must obtain an NOTE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5- We appreciate cooperation in this matter. Teacher Education Admission All (s)he starts working that a Student application in the Office of Financial TODAY-IS THE LAST DAY TO DROP students desiring to enter teacher Employment Authorization is sub­ Aids, Basement of Student Services. OVERLOAD HOURS TO AV OID John P preparation programs should meet in mitted to the Office of Financial Aids. Rm. 7-B, and make payment no later BEING CHARGED THE OVERLOAD Chief cf S the Buzzard Education Building Rm. 9-B. Student Services Building. than 3:30 p.m. September 10, 1980. FEE. auditorium on Sept. 18, 1980. Any Brenda Sweetin The effective date is ·the date of Michael D. Taylor Student Employment Counselor payment of the premium or the first Director, Registration student who has· not completed ihe . Please report classified ad errors immediatel/at 581- 281 2. A correct ad will appear in the next edition. Unless .Classified ads notified, we cannot be resp onsible for an incorrect ad after its first insertion. Daily Eastern News Friday Sept. 5, 1980 1 1

ROOMMATE NEEDED. Own room. One room efficiency apartment. Carman hall 2N residents of Fall Meet ya at "After Game Help Wanted $83 per mo. CALL 345·6370 or $1 50. 325 Madison. Heat , water, 79", sorry for misayings and Celebration" across from Power Plant 348·1736. trash furnished - 1-923·3095. problems to everyone, Pete and Reid, between 7th & 9th. or LPN charge nurse P9silion RM 265 -you know who. ______5 oom Plluant woridng conditlonJ. Two bedr furnished apartment ______a AU members of 1979 "LOOP" ,, e hourly wage. No Shift in Old Towne. Call 345·2363 from 1- Remember "After Game footb< team caH Jim at 581·5383 For Rent 5. Celebration" Saturday across from before Tuesday 9/9180. Please apply in person to · of nursing Hilltop Con· ______9 Power Plant. BEER-BAND-GREAT Center. U·STORE WAREHOUSE CO. We MUST RENT Oldetowne Apartment TIMES "After Game Celebration" rent mini-storage rooms, JARTRAN for 2. Two bedroom, dishwasher, 5 Where? ....:. Across from Power Plant ------,.---� 9/5 ______· While You L•rn · Sell Avon. Trucks and trailers, all kinds packing Cable TV, water included. Call 348· Happy Birthday Wendy from the Saturday. around classes. Call 345· car1ons and equipment for the do·it­ 1573. "Wild Ones". after5 p.m. yourself mover. S. Rt. 130 Believe it or not Chuck the Buck, acrossfrom Sister City Park entrance. Chester, You 'have it in writing. NO Your 20th Birthday Finally struck. So Phone Charleston, 345·3535. MESSING AROUND! Love ya, Lester. here is to you and· Lots of Luck, Mattoon 234-2833. For Sale ______5 Happy Birthday Elliott, Chuck!

______30 RELAX and ENJOY at "After Game Carpet your room with a remnant 5 Rent a mini storage as low as $1 5 Celebration" Saturday. Birthright Cares · Gives Free '--�� from Carlyle Interiors Unlimited. opening! Position available per month. · Phone 345-7746 . West pregnancy test Monday thru Friday Located 2 miles west of Charleston ished local band. Lead Rte. 16. Sis, Hope you have an extra special 3:00 to 7:00 · 348·8551 . on Rte. 16. Open 8·6 Monday oo 18th B·Day. Glad you're here. Greg. ------12/12 and/or keyboard, vocals ______. Rooms for boys in students house. through Saturday. Phone 345· 7746. . Male or female. Country 5 Look foFWard to "After Game ______00 , top 40, variety. Contact Double $75, private rooms, $1 50. Good Luck Pink Panthers on our Celebration" Saturday. 1971 Blazer. $800 or best offer. 1-5588. Call .345-71 71, or 348·8269. first performance this Saturday. Love ______00 581 ·3905. Bo. Join the men of Delta Chi at their 5 Large 2 bedroom furnished apt., ______5 Friday 4 o'clock Rush Par1y with the 197 4 Pinto 2 Dr - Excellent gas excellent condition, $320. Call 345- Happy Birthday; Donk - from a little · women of Sigma Sigma Sigma. 71 71 , or 348·8269. mileage - runs perfect - $950 Call yellow bird at EIU! ! 348·0005 after 5:00 PM. ______oo ______5 Karen - Boozette misses you '------�4 ______12 e to read , laugh & play with Two bedroom apar1ment $200/mo. "Happy Birthday, Lora Rose!" dreadfully. Don't let her - pay the . old. Prefer 8-1 , Mon. - Utilities included. Call 345·951 9. "How's it feel to be in UNIQA high?" ransom! The Kidnappers . Love, Sis! , but other schedules ______5 Furnished house. $1 00/month per Announcements . Need own car. Call 348- Start your weekend off right with the student. Own . Room. Call al· Thomas, Thanks for the best 8 Delta Sigs. 25¢ Hot Dogs. Today at FREE COLLEGE TUITION, plus ' ternoon/evenings 345·5976. months of my life. Don't worry, I love 4:00. 1705 9th Street, 345·9884. ______8 monthly income on part time basis. you more than you could imagine. ______5 Can also to ROTC Program Partially furnished apt 3 students. belong You're GREAT!! Love. Forever and PHI BETA LAMBDA will hold their and be eligible for $100 ROTC $85 each. Call 345·7181 after 5 PM. Ever, Debbie. first meeting on September 1 O in the ----'------_ monthly income. Total monthly in- -__ 5 Charleston-Mattoon Rm at 6:30 p.m. 2 bedroom unfurnished townhouse come up to $185 passible. Contact Join the men of Delta Chi at their 5 ______5 ------� 1 yr. lease families. Youngstowne Illinois Arn;iy National Guard. Mattoon TIME/FULL TIME - YOUR Friday 4 o'clock Rush Party with the New Baby Snakes - Welcome 345-2363 or After 5 pm 345-9267 Armory 217-258-6381 . $10 to $1 5 per hour to . women of Sigma Sigma Sigma. abroad - we love you! ·Gin Mill 00 19 selling Aloe Vera skin care ______5 Molesters. Needed 1 female roommate for KEEP ABORTION SAFE AND FOREVER RADIANCE - First Baptist Church, . yth and Oldtowne Apt. Spacious 5 room apt. LEGAL · Join Naral-Free Referals. Y RADIANCE. 348-8876. Harrison. Worship: 9:30 a.m. Sunday The Pikes invite you to join them fully furnished, dishwasher, central air 345·9285. School: 10:35 a.m. College class - and the women of Delta Zeta for a ______11 and large balconey. For further in· 00 student membership . choir; teach 4:00 Club today! 962 10th St. JACQUELINE BENNETT DANCE formation contact Mrs. Smith in the Sunday School. Transportation ______5 Housing o.ffice. CENTER CHILDREN'S Ballet, Jazz provided - call 345-5977; 345-2856; Join the men of Delta Chi at their ______.a and Tap. PRE TEEN-Jazz; TEEN and 345'.5081 . Friday 4 o'clock Rush Party with the Two unfurnished town houses 2 ADULT-Ballet, Jazz, Tap. Beginning ______FRI only/10/2 women of Sigma Sigma Sigma. to and from Cowden area ·-· - n r i advancea-revel!l f or _ e room- . va1-1 a bl e- ta -& i te med aTeQ" b d .:_A.' - iotf o . Be there Saturday - "After Game ------��---5 class· Ph · 783·2483 · 9/27 /80. Families only. Youngstowne age 4 & up. Information for fall classes Celebration." 30 Kegs-Band-Good 5 Free quart of Coke with large pizza Call 345·2363 1 ·5 PM. 345-7182. Times. delivery or ______12 pickup. Adducci's Pizza. ______9 345·91 41 , 345-9393. Room to SHARE 2 Rms. All utilities VAUGHN AUCTION HOUSE public Live Band at "After Game PA ID. Furn 5 bfock fr campus. Call sale every Friday night 7 p .. West on Celebration" Saturday. A. 16, Charleston. General store 7 Jim 348-8335 ______5 - days a week. New and used furniture, ______----5 Book Sale, Saturday, September 6. _ appliances, tools, misc. Flea market One bedroom apartment, stove- ' Parking lot, corner Lincoln & Lost and Found refrigerator, near Eastern. Ma rried every Sun. and free setup! Call 345· University, 9-1 . Hardbacks, couple, 345·4846. 4714. paperbacks, supplemental texts; all ______10 ______10 cheap! Lost: Brown wallet-Need Con- needed for Managerial Richey Auction Service Route 16, For rent one bedroom upstairs apt. ______5 tents! Reward. Call Bob Uhler-345- class in Effingham with large livingroom and separate Ashmore, ILAuction sale every 7200. Lakeland College. Tues. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES entrance. 1 or 2 females or married Thursday night 7 p.m. New and used 345·5955. Address andstuff envelopes at home. y o furniture store · open Monday thru couple. Appl in per5 n. Gates· $800 per month, passible. Offer, . Lost: Keys on Stevenson Tower . 9 Friday 8 to 5 Saturday 8 to 1 . Phone Preston Appliance Store, 714 send $1(refundable) to: Triple "S", key ring. lf found call581 ·5685. 349-8822. Monroe 869·S1 6 Juniper, Pinon Hills, CA 5 00 -----'------Lost while blind! 12 ------. 92372. Brown checkbook. 3 Bedroom house 4 blks from To all of the people who attended ______5 Call Doug Richard 345-7954 campus. Room for 2 males. Each gets our party Sunday, thanks for coming. The Pikes invite you to join them (Reward!). Lets do it again soon!Th.e 11th St. own room. $100 a month Sept. rent and the women of Delta Zeta for a ______5 FREE!! Call 345-3380 or 345-4344 Blue house. 4:00 Club today! 962 10th St. Lost: Girls 1977 high school class

______5 ______5 ring, red stone. Call weekdays, 348- ______5 ESBURY __ 0695, 345-7706. ______8 7HOU6ffT I NOW,O! CI<.., IHA V&NO /NTE3N - I a/a...t..,IT JIJ5T Lost: Set of 3 keys on leather key AN06R'30N !£T'5NrJT 813 TION Of {)JM/Ne. I /'3N'T /XJNE . chain. Help! 348· 1380. Ask for Deb. SUPPORJER.5 UNP/£4'3ANT. IAlJN7 ORJNK 7D A HE SHOl/W ______a ONL.Y l/KEl? YOU!XJN'T HA� M4NIA/HO 8eTRlf'IEiJ HA�STl/CX � ...... _...._...... _..�.._...._.._ WHrr& IA/INC. . TO COMB 70 7HE3/'3 H WN mRTY! IT ()(JT. \ ��, \. '#. PA l

NAME: -�� P HON E : 

ADDRESS: Place ad and money in envelope and deposit in Eastern News box in Union or bring to News Office in Student ______AN D RUN FOR Services Building by 2 p.m. the day before it is to run .

• ' I ·� • • ' t • . ·'· . -...,· .. . t

Sept. 5, 1980 12

by Dave Claypool If optimism won football games, the University of South Dakota Coyotes would not stand a charice against Eastern in the Panthers' season opener Saturday at 1 :30 p.m. at O'Brie1_1 Stadium. "To beat Eastern we'll .have to break their legs and work them over the heads with ball bats," South Dakota State head coach Dave Triplett said. "The extra game we've played might be the only thing that keeps us in the game Saturday." . -The Coyotes got a head start on their 1980 season when they played host to Morningside College last Monday Eastem's football team, shown here in a scrimmage last night. · jersied players are, from left . to right, Kevin Jones (4 After fighting back from a 14-point weekend, will square off with the University _of South Tom Murray (57) and Pete Catan (83). (News photo by first quarter deficit, Triplett's . club Dakota at 1 :30 p.m. Saturday at O'Brien Stadium. Dark- Gray) wound up on top 16-14 on a fourth­ second half. said. "We've got a lot of young ball Besides bearing the usual import quarter touchdown pass: The about-face of the Coyotes was players on our team and things didn't of an opening game, a .Panther South Dakota allowed a whopping as much a mystery to Triplett as start clicking for them until the second would extend Eastern's victory st 232 yards in the first half, but bounced anyone. half." over non-conference opponents to back after intermission to stifle · "I wondered myself why we had the Despite Triplett's pess1m1sm, over the past two years. , Morningside to zero net yards in the big turnaround defensively," Triplett Panther head coach Darrell Mudra It would also put Mudra's grid match will does not think Saturday's on their way toward their third str · be a pushover for his squad. winning season, a . feat an Eas Cobb cut by Hami lton Tiger-Cats "South Dakota has a solid team. football team has not accomplish They don't have any real superstars in 40 years. Former Eastern running back Zuger said. their lineup, but the y're a scrappy But in order to win Satur Poke Cobb was given his un­ Zuger said the Tiger-Cats ballclub.. They proved that in their Eastern will have to deal with conditional release Monday by the released Cobb because the team game against Morni�gside," Mudra Dakota's defense, which may be Hamilton . Tiger-Cats of the picked up American lineman Bob said. strong point of the team. Canadian Football League. Harris and American running back The· Panther mentor added, "I "Defensively, we have· to Just last week, Cobb was the Boobie Graves, thus giving believe they are as good as they were a stronger inside. But we have starting fullback for the Tiger­ Hamilton more Americans than it year ago, but they don't have the speed defensively and Cats. But he was released because could carry. individual talent. If you'll remember, continue our tradition Hamilton had more than 15 Zuger said Harris was added to we had a tough time moving the ball on strong defensive units," Americans, which is the maximum the roster after one of the team's them last year when we had everyone skipper said. amount allowed on each team's Canadian offensive linemen was back fromour championship squad." Mudra also commended the roster. injured, and Clark was picked up Last year, in the 1979 opener for Dakota defense. "He seemed to perform well. It Aug. 22 after he was released by both teams, Poke Cobb .rushed for 197 "I believe they will be strong was more of a numbers . thing," the Los Angeles Rams of the yards and scored two touchdowns in defense this year. They have a Hamilton Player Coordinator Joe National Football League. leading the Panthers to a 24-15 victory. (See LEERY, page9) Over 100 runners expected in Panther Open by Dan Brannan marathon champion Frank Shorter in Pana this summer, so Nance is a very last Saturday," Woodall said. Anywhere from 100 to 125 runners the 20 kilometer Chicago Classic race legitimate runner,'' Woodall said. Woodall also said five fres . 11th are expected to compete in the this summer. Woodall said Bandy finished in the should do well in the meet. following the annual Panther Open Another returning alumnus is Mike top three or four in every road race he They are Nick Whiteside, Paul , south of football game .Saturday Viano. has run in this summer, so he should Dave Huston, John Gassman O'Brien Field. "Mike just graduated from E�stern also be tough in the meet. Scott Stogdill. country coach Eastern's men's cross and he has· been running well in road Woodall expects his six. lettermen Former Eastern standout said the meet is an open Tom Woodall races this summer/' Woodall said. from last year's squad to lead Eastern's Rorem won the meet. last year run and he is encouraging all runners Woodall also mentioned Casey team in the meet. record time of 19:30 and W four-mile event. to take part in the Reinking and John Mcinerny as The lettermen are Bob Feller, Larry expects that time to be plush Fifteen to 20 alumni runners from e . favorites to place well for the alumni. Shuldt, Tim · Warneke, Mik year. in the Eastern are expected to take part Mcinerny, a former NCAA Division Beresford, Chuck Eliott and Terry "Our real interest in this meet. II All-American, is now coaching cross Donahue. giving us a kick-off fol: the start Leading ·the way for the alumni country at Crystal Lake High School. Woodall said he also expects good season," Woodall said. "We w Division II runners is four-time NCAA Woodall also lists Dave Nance and things in the meet from Perry Edinger, see who will run for us next All-American Joe Sh�ran. Bill Bandy as two other alumni coming Jim Scruton, Jase Travis, Mark against Southeast Missouri." Sheeran exceede the 20 kilometer to the meet. d W enneker and Jeff Wagner. Woodall also said Pat O'B · record by two Panther Pant course . "Sheeran and Nance went first and ''All of these runners averaged former Eastern head football and at 1976 Olympic seconds. He also be second in an eight-mile road race in under five minutes a mile for five miles coach in the 1940' s will start the Eastern hooters wi.11 b e serious in exhi bition by Holly Headland trying to improve people." past. We are in better condition, Mosnia was captain of the P Most exhibition games are usually Several recent Eastern graduates younger and are used to playing in 1974 when they placed not taken too seriously, but when such as Ross Ongaro, John Baretta, professional-level soccer. If some of nationally. He is currently coac Eastern's soccer squad participates in John Schram and George Gorleku will the other. players were returning that high school team, Hyndman said the Miklovic alumni game at 11 a.m. not be returning for the contest were used to high-level competition it Markulin began playing � Saturday at Lakeside Field, the contest because they · are playing in would be harder, but we'll win," hooters in 1968, and in 1969 he will not be taken lightly. professional soccer leagues and have Hyndman said. of the most valuable players ' "We are going to be playing a games they cannot miss, Hyndman Among the alumni returning are Bob national championship game, serious game in this scrimmage,'' said. Huber, Chuck Weisberg, Cizo Mosnict man said. Markulin is also c fi Eastern soccer coach Sc eHas Hynd­ Although Hyndman is confident of a and Nick Markulin, Hyndman said. high school team. man said. "It is a way for all the Panther win, many talented players Huber was captain of the 1969 The Miklovic game is nam alumni to come back and keep the will be returning to test the Eastern national championship team and one of Eastern's past soccer feeling of friendship and unity with the hooters' skill. Weisberg was an All-American goalie who was killed in . a helicopter program. I will be trying to get all my "We'll win. We have won in the during his stay at Eastern. while in the Marines. players into the game. We will be - On the �erge of-· ��������

. The DailyEa stern News A supplement to TheDaily th Eastern News/8 pages Eastern 'Charleston, ll ol e lllWelnols University / I e. . 88 keo 9 /Sec , nd Friday,' Sept. N · · V . ond Section/ 8 Pages 5, 1 980

· Is there a town•. ' ie-student War?-

page 5

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ad Love' cool�s_up ·complete weel�end I . . I

heat wove _ entertainment page3 page 7.

' . Happenings 2 Friday, Sept. 5, 1 980 The ll:lily Eastern News/On th� Verge _ _ _

, 1 , , , , 1 , "Midnight Desires" - Midnight R.B. Sundowners - Shows start 9 ,.. 11 . Time Theater Friday and Saturday :30 p.m. Friday, Rich and Randy; Mattoon. Rated x. . Music. Saturday, Jim Danahue. -�/ 0000000,0,o-, • I • E Movies�0 I It I "Smokey and the Bandit · 11" Charleston Holiday Inn - Don Starring Burt Reynolds, Sally Field. 5, · Ted's Warehouse - Acme Thunder Taylor appearing in the Zodiac Lounge Stallion" - 5 p.m., "The Black 7 and 9 p.m. Triple Cinemas Mattoon. 9 p.m. to close Friday and Saturday. 8;30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Triple Cinemas Saturday and Sunday matinee 2 p.m. Mattoon. Saturday and Sunday Rated PG.

matinee 2:15 p.m. Rated G. · "I Do, I Do" - A musical by Harvey Schmidt. Featuring Peggy "The Shining" - Starring Jack "Caddyshack" - Starring Chevy (Burke) Gire and Michael Boyna. 8 , Chase, Bill Murray. 5:15, 7:15 and Nicholson. 7 and 9:25 p.m. Time p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. 9:15 p.m. Triple Cinemas Mattoon. Theater Mattoon. Saturday and Sunday mat'inee2 p.m. Rated R. Sunday, Doudna Fine Arts Center Saturday . and Sunday matinee 2:30 Theater. Tickets, $3.50 for · adults, p.m. Rated R. · Theater'B$2.50 for youths and $2 for students at "Rocky II" - Starring Sylvester the Fine Arts ticket office. For in­ Stallone, Talia Shire. 6:30 and 9 p.m; formation, call 581-3110. "She's 19 and Ready" and "Ready, University Union Grand Ballroom. Willing and Able" _ 8 p.m. Skyway Drive-In M�.ttoon. Rated R. "Battle Beyond the Stars" "Cheerleader's Wild Weekend" and 'Starring Richard Thomas and George "Swap Meet" - 7:45 p.m. Friday, Peppard. 7 and 9 p.m. Will Rogers Saturday and Sunday at the Charleston . Theater. Saturday and Sunday matinee Football University of South Drive-In. Rated R. at 2 p.m. Rated PG. Dakota, 1:30 p.m. Saturday, O'Brien Sports Stadium. Tickets availableat the gate.

"A Man and His Drawings" - By . Soccer - Miklovic Alumni Game, Carl Wilen and the Central Illinois 11 a.m. Saturday. Soccer field, south Consortium Exhibition, now through of Lantz. Sept. Z8 at the Paul Sargent Art

-Art Gallery. Gallery hours 9-5 Monday Women's Cross Country - Alumni Men's Cross Country - Panther through Friday. Closed Saturday. Open and Alumni Dual, 4 p.m. Meet, 5 p.m. Saturday. South of Lantz Noon to 4 p.in.Sunday .

On the Cover Verge Staff

Editor ...... Betsey Guzior Ass't editor ...... Holly Headland Our cover this week is an Lab Technician ...... Ed Gray . illustration of the conflict between Artist ...... Rich the Charleston resident and the Lo Eastern student. Copy desk ...... Andy Robeznieks Vicki Shaw

are having a THE PLEASI N' PEOPLE PLACE ! 909 S. 18th 815 Broadway Charleston�II. Mattoon, 11. 348-0176 235-3128 A Very "Special" Thanks For Our Customers ------o n -�------, r c upo

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a . :\ ' J, 1 .and meet winner! dine-in or carry-out ONLY Not valid on deliveries for rides and info co ll: ------�- · coupon ·------345-9020 345-9032 Verge DoilyEa stern News/On the Friday, Sept. 5, 1980 dt dons her rocl� shoes w.ith 'Mod Love' onsto , choppy guitar solo from Mark LOVE/LINDA RONSTADT frightenin . A merican teenagers felt begins the song, "They say I'm short g also contributed three .. Mad Love'' has a lot of people safer with wimps like Journey and nothing but a party girl,'' confessing to Goldenberg who ying 'Linda Ronstadt has gone Olivia Newton-John. being called a party girl but not ad­ tunes to the album. punk or , .' Wrong! Geting a butch haircut But punk did have its influence: mitting that she reallv is . But none of this talk about really matters. y make you look like a punk but it Like a new pair of shoes-it was On "Mad Love" we can still find the roles Linda assumes all that. Very n't make you sound like one. something f or Linda to try. But those Linda chasing men {"How Do I Make Her voice transcends got the pipes! n't get me wrong-I love Linda with shoes could come off tomorrow. Her You") and being jilted ("Hurts So simply, the lady has candy and my heart-but she could never be a next album might be straight acoustic Bad"). "How Do I Make You" is the "Mad Love" is perfect ear need to know. k. folk and it would still be a killer. best song on the record. It features a that's all you Linda isn't angry enough and too much a perfectionist to make a real punk album. Instead, "Mad Love" comes off as power pop. It is also the least-produced, hardest-rocking album , Ronstadt has made. It benefit from a John Stocl�mon unity of vision on the part of her and =· � producer Peter Asher. A consistency in sound and song selection hold the k (not "New Wave," a broader album together. more ambiguous term) emerged as . A tight sounding five-man band presion of the freustrations of the plays throughout; very few guest stars lish working class. By sit in. Almost all the sngs are new. Two "tion-it is political . It's not were copyrighted in 1965� one in '77, 'c to make-out by; if you listen to fi\:'ein '79 and two this year. lyrics (when you can understand It may be significant· that all the ) they make you very un- songs on "Mad Love" were written by ortable. men. Most are cast in the neuter gender t the best thing about punk rock is . which poses no problems for a female way it sounds. We're talking singer, but three were written from a . ·we're talking bass ntoes guy's point of view. g their way to China. We're One of these, Elvis Costello's "Party guitars buzzsawing through Girl," was declaration of. love by •N\exicanF ood• e forestpreserv es. Costello to the parry girl. Ronstadt has Ribs• Sandwiches k never really made it in this changed the song by singing it in the Strawberry Bread•Salads•and More try. It was too radical and a little first person, by becoming the girl. She �g��!p3 ��3!

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The Kamera Box II 207 Lincoln Charleston . 348-8656 e Daily Eastern News/On the Verge Friday , Sept. 5, 1980 5

tudent invasion helps l"\eep Charleston afloat. .. Pegg.v Schneider As a reflection of the bar's _ -- •.. � - The start of another fall allegiance to the students, mester has brought Marty's is closed during the � ;- � usands of EIU students to breaks· in the semesters, as is 1 mp us, · and forced Ike's Little Campus in the I leston residents to re• University Village. I ;'"· . �st to increased business, Eastern students' reactions wded restaurants, and to Charleston and its citizens ·8B��-= fiecongested avenues. ·range from favorable to less Frank Clinton, president of so. Charleston Chamber of Greg Boyer, a graduate erce, said he feels that student from Oakland, said he

m has a · "very large enjoys the small town at­ omic impact" on the mosphere and the way unity. ''people care.'' 'They provide a ·necessary The story is different for force, in fast food Joy, a senior from Decatur urants and clothing who declined to give her name. , for the service of other She has "encountered many nts," he said. townspeople who are verbally linton said as the prejudiced against EIU vcrsity grows in students for tearing up their lation, the comunity lawns and things.'' ds, enabling more water "It's not a town I'd want to sewer facilities and ex- live in," she added. d police and fire Crowded restaurants are tion. seen as the biggest disad­ e influx "has increased vantage of the increased volume considerably, population by two residents of provides us better the community, Stan Jones, rtunities to make a 21, and Denise Cougill, 20. t", said Darryll Beaman, Eugene Edwards, of 1603 er of Eisner's, 612 W. 7th, across from the campu s, In. concedes that "it gets kind of an declined to . reveal lonesome when (the students) re's profits. are gone for the summer''. ve Kinnaird, owner and Edwards, a 31-year resident, mont, Police Chief Maurice Johnson said er of Marty's, 1660 4th, said that living near the Students may create a crime problem when recently. (News file photo) manager of Mother's, 506 campus and the endless they live in a college town, as illustrated in this appreciates the comings and goings did not search by Charleston poncemen Steve Dair­ cause any special problems for St., a 39-year resident, has parking violations increased with the increase. t Marty's, across from him, except for an occasional found that living near the by 40 percent or more with the The department constantly pus, we almost totally car blocking his driveway. campus has been a "nice influx of students, Charleston receives complaints form ts, d on EIU students for "We have had no trouble experience" over the years, Chief of Police Maurice · citizens about the studen css. Without them, we with the kids," said Edwards. except when students take Johnson said. Tickets and Johnson said. dn't be here. We feel a "We have been nice; .and they short cuts across the lawn and arrests also incr:ease, he said. ·Enforcing the drinking age, of Eastern,'' Kinnaird have been nice." wear paths into the grass. The department steps up its he said "has been no real E. S. Phipps of 205 Grant Traffic accidents and patrols, Johnson said, to deal problem.'' ut has emotional strain for townie-students The Charleston Civil War is raging. complain - about - Chucktown For those of you who haven't made it because - it's - so - boring disease. to the front yet, let me explain that I But somehow I don't like it when refer to the perpetual battle between 'almost every Eastern student' besides US, the loyal true-blue ElU students me does the complaining. I guess it's the privilege of residence-someone who only lives here to go to Eastern Laura had better not insult sixteen years of inypast ! However, the existence of that past Fraembs history also causes a problem for me. When I'm identifying with the and THEM; the life form known as students, I want to be able to engage in "townies." a typical pastime, complaining and No major problem-'except for ' moaning about instructors. people like me. But that's hard to do when some of You see, I just can't decide which those instructors are parents of kids I group's flag I should be flying. Sure, grew up with. Even worse is the feeling I'm going on my fourth year as an of being buttonholed by a fellow Eastern student and . consider myself student to be told my father, a teacher But I'm also a sixteen-year one of US. here, is either a) hilarious b) tough or resident of Charleston, and that makes c) crazy. . me one of THEM. Believe me, it's not My personal civil war even extends middle by a easy being split down the to times when Eastern is not in session. civil war like this one. Of course, I often join in the For instance, consider the way I feel Charleston sigh of relief. No more itself. The about the word "townie," traffic, no more crowds to fight part of me that identifies with Eastern through in the bars! students uses this label · frequently; . But then I realize that many after all, it is a nice handy name fo members of those crowds are my close non-students. friends and I'm lonely when they're · · But the Charleston in me hates the not around. a word-h te the way it sounds and the I realize that the war I'm engaged in way it's used by most students. is just one of. many such conflicts When I. tell other students where I'm which are inevitable when people from from, they never fail to reply (with all over the state congregate in one either an amazed, sympathetic or town. And if I had a chance to start all , sneering tone-all of which I resent) over again, I'd still be one of those , "Oh, so you're a TOWNIE." people. .. And I refuse to be ashamed about I guess the problem is that while I'm ton residents John Melton and Bud Easter work on construction. at the my hometown. I'll admit that I, along officially one of US now, there's still a tian Church. Frank Clinton of the Charleston Chamber of Commerce with alomost every pastern student, lot of THEM left in me. yment is oftest by the student population ..(Ne ws photo by Paul suffer occasionally from the let's -

\ 8:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. (Grant Williams) withers a 2,3, 10, 1 5,20,38-News 11-Cross·Wits after being exposed to a ------Friday's 9-Andy Griffith 1 2-Bonaventure Consumer strange mist. 1 1-All in the Family Travel 1 1 -Movie- "Stowaway to the 1 2-Dick Cavett 9:00 p.m. Moon." (1975) The 17-Joker's Wild 2-Man Called Sloane escapades of an 11·year-old 38-Brady Bunch 3, 1 0-Dallas on a manned ·space capsule DailyEa stern News 6:30 p.m. 9-News headed for the moon: Michael The 2-Happy Days Again 1 1-Joker's Wild link, Lloyd Bridges. Ent& 3-MASH 11:40 p.m. ttOinm&n Television­ t 12-Non Fiction 6 Friday, Sept. 5, 1980 On. the Verge 9-Dick Van Dyke documentary 1 ?-America's Top 1 O 10, 1 7-Tic Tac Dough 15,20-Combat in the 38-Don Kirshner's Rock 1 1-Hogan's Heroes Classroom Concert CROSSWORD PUZZLE 1 2-McNeil/lehrer Report 9:30 p.m. Mldnlglit Edited by EUGENE T. MALESKA 1 5-Channel 1 5 Reports 11-News Midnight Special 38-Prisoner Cell Block H 9:50 p.m. 12:10 a.m. ACROSS 61 Where Hyde 13 Pizzeria 42 Supportersof 7:00 p.m. 17, 38-To Be Announced 2, 10-Movie- "El Cid." presided : 1938- proprietor's Mary Queen of 2, 1 5,20-Facts of life 10:00 p.m. (1961) conclusion. 1 Ballyhoo 45 need Scots, to their 3, 10-lncredible Hulk 2,3, 10, 15, 1 7,20,38-News 17-PTL Ch,ib 11 Oscar Wilde 62 -- fortitude 14 Actress Cheryl foes 9-Miss Young International 12:25 a.m. subject 9-Dick Van Dyke 63 Giant star of 21 A place in the 45 River; dam or Pageant 15 "And sold my yore 11-After Benny, Thames 1 7-Movie- "little Laura and sun reservoir in 11-Gunsmoke --for a 64 Evaluation 22 Legal rights s.c. Presents Big John." (1973) Exploits of Song": 1 2-Twilight Zone the John AShley Gang. Fabian 23 Capek opus 48 -- up 1 2-Dick Cavett 1 7, 38-Benson FitzGerald 24 They need (familiarizes) 10:30 p.m. Forte, Karen Black. DOWN 7:30 p.m. 16 Menlo Park good 50 Wind-borne 2, 1 5,20-Tonight 1:05 a.m. name 1 -- school memories loam deposit 2, 1 5,20-Me and Maxx 3-Movie- "Seven Keys to 11-News 17 In time 1 2-Wall Street Week 2 Dream, in 25 Snake that 51 Tone -- Baldpate." (1929) Author 1:30 a.m. 18 Made to pay Dijon · sounds 52 Marilyn Horne 17, 38-Pilot (Richard Dix) finding anything 2-News through the 3Unabashed augmentative offering 8:00 p.m. but seclusion at an abandoned 1:35 a.m. nose 4 Paronomasia 26 Witticism or 53 Academic 2, 1 5,20-Speak Up America inn. Miriam Seegar. Margaret 9-News 19 Sword's 5 Gains through banter achievements : 3, 1 0-Dukes of Hazzard Livingston. 11-Movie- "The Creature's surpasser effort 28 Full of zeal Abbr. 1 1-Tic Tac Dough 9, 1 1-Prisoner: Cell Block H Revenge." (1971) Horror tale 20 Medieval 6 Asian bovines 29 School dance 54 Formicary 1 2-Washington Week in 10-U .S. Open Tennis Update of a mad doctor working with helmet 7 Cossack chief 31 Milton from occupants Review ABC News brain transplants. Kent Taylor. 21 Hellhound 8 Khartoum's N.Y.C. 55 Radius, for one 1 2-Captioned 17, 38-Movie- "Killer 1:55 a.m. 22 Miss Kirk river 32 Kind of ring or 56 Locale of the 1 7 ,38-Fridays Grizzly." a bear terrorizes 23 Employed Ma 9 Simple Simon, band Zagros 11:00 p.m. 2-Don Kirshner's tourists in a national park. Bell's princess e.g. 35 Plods along Mountains 2, 1 0-Avengers Concert 24 Rabbit fur (1976) Christopher George, 10 Word with 37"' . · love but 57 Knightly sport 9-Movie- "The Incredible . 27 O.T. book . Andrew Prine. where or way only -- !": 59 "Angela --," Shrinking Man." ( 1969) A man 30 Warp yarn 11 French actor Byron 1928 song 33 Takes life easy Jean 40 Acronym in 60 Alastair --, 34 Creator of 12 Testimony the news British actor "The African that is 41 Greeting Queen" contestable gesture 36 Commercial center of Southern Yemen 37 Start of a cheer 38 100cente simi 39 Colleague of Wallace and Safer 42 Stockholders ' get-togethers 43 Group in h.s. ·44 Dermal orifices Tune into the 46 Author Eastern News Turnbull 47 Stupefied, in a way 49 Jungfrau's each day f r locale o Doonesbury! 51 Kind of button 53 City on the Hong 55 Snaffle 58 Scraps for a snarleyyow 59 Instructional method for the young

(For answers, see page 7)

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Fred A�taire, 1 ?-Community 1 7 (Virginia Mayo) being chased 38-Area Focus Audrey Hepburn; music by the by both police · aAd 1:00 p.m. hoods.Magenbruch: '(JFriday, Sept!� . 5, 1 eao {!!9 Gershwins; Paris location­ Benny 7 filming. 9-Baseball Warm-up Goodman. 9-Movie-"The Blue Max" 1 2-Great Performances 1 2-Muppet Show 17, 38-Baseball - A's vs. 3:55 p.m. 6:30 p.m. ( 1966) World War 1 story 38-ln Search of ruthless German Orioles or Angels vs. Yankees 6:00 p.m. 11-Movie- "Horse 2-Pop Goesthe Country about a · 1:15 p.m. 2, 15,20-Disney's Feathers." (1932) The Marx 3-Family Feud fighter pilot (George Peppard) Wonderful 12:00 p.m. 9-Baseball - Reds vs. Cubs World brothers at college. Groucho's 9-Dick Van Dyke determined to win flying 5,2D-Baseball Warmup, dress, 1:45 p.m. 3, 1 0-60 Minutes the' dean , Zeppo his son, 1 0-Muppet Show honors . Ursula An I, Reds vs. Cubs 11-Movie '�Fail Safe" (1964) 1 1 -Showdown at OK Corral Chico and the silent Harpo his 11-$100,000 Name That James Mason, Willi-Jeremy vie: "Once Upon a Based on the Eugene Bur­ 12-Japan : The aides. Tune Kemp. Changing " Comedy (1958). Dan dick-Harvey Wheeler best Tradition 4:00 p.m. 31-Gong Show 1 0-Marty Robbins' Spotlight . and Dick Martin are a seller, this tense doomsday 1 7, 38-Those Ama 2-NFL Review andPreview 7:00 p.m. 1 2-Yesterday's Witness zing of zany outlaws who thriller focuses on the af­ Animals 1 2-Movie- "The Fallen Idol." 2, 1 5,20-Buck Rogers 1 7-Big Valley money to feed the cattle Cat termath of an accidental 8:30 p.m. (Enlish 1948) An am­ 3, 1 0-WKRP in Cincinnati 1 9-Movie-"The stolen. Martha Hyer nuclear attack on Moscow. 1 2-House That NASA bassador's son (Bobby 9-Wild Kingdom Creature" (1973) TV-movie Built 12:1 5 p.m. Henry Fonda; Walter Matthau; 7:00 p.m. Henrey) lies to protect a butler 1 1 -Country Roads dealing with murder, witchcraft ,2D-BasebaJI Reds vs. . Black: Dan O'Herlihy; Bogan: 2, 1 5,20-CHiPs (Ralph Richardson) when his 1 2-Austin City Limits and an ancient Egyptian curse Frank Overton; Cascio: Fritz 3, 1 0-Archie Bunk shrewish wife (Sonia Dresdel) 17,3 8-Love Boat David Hedison , Meredith er's Place . Weaver; Grady: Edward Binns. 1 1-SolidGold is killed. Julie: Michele 7:30 p.m. Baxter, Stuart Whitman 2:30 p.m. 1 2-Evening Morgan. 3, 1 0-Tim Conway Hester: Gale Sondergaard at Pops 12-Sitcom: The Adventures 15,20-Batman . 9-tn Search Of Sherry: Renne Jarrett 7:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. of Garry Marshall 3, 1 0-0ne 1 7-This Week in Baseball 8:00 p.m. 11:00 p.m. Day at a Time Wide World of Sports 3:00 p.m. 1 7-Movie 4:30 p.m. 2, 1 5,20,25-Bob Hope 2, 1 5,20,-News "The Longest 1:55 p.m. 2, 15, 20-NFL Football Yard"Bur 15,20-Superman 3, 1 0-Movie "Hustle"­ 1 0-Jackie Gleason t Reynolds quar­ vie-Western "Indian Broncos vs. Eagles teracks 17-Love, American Style (1975) A veteran cast wades 11:30 p.m. a team of convicts in a (1964) Perils of a young 3, 1 0-U.S. Open Tennis no-hol 25-Joker! Joker! Joker! through urban crime and 2, 1 5,20-Saturday Night Live ds-barred game f-to-be (Johnny 12- Here's to Your Health against 5:00 p.m. corruption as police investigate 1 0-Movie "Home in ln­ prison guards ) and the colt he 3:30 p.m. 2-Hee Haw a teen-age girl's apparent diana"( 1944) Coltbreeding 8:00 p.m. I. Hevatanu: Jay 1 2-0ld Houseworks 2, 1 5,20 1 5,2o-saturday Report suicide. and coltish romance down on -Emmy Awards 1 7-Six Million Dollar Man 5:30 9-People to People the farm. Lon Mccallister, 3, 10-Alice 38-Close Up 9-The 9-To Be Announced 12-Movie "Love Me or Leave Walter Brennan, Jeanne Crain, Palace 4:00 p.m. 12-M 11,- Carol Burnett and Me" (1955) Doris Day as June Haver. a Football 1 2-Victory Garden Friends . singer Ruth Etting, with James 1 7-Six Million Dollar Man 38-Perry Mason Answers to puzzle 1 2-Dessert's Broken Silence. Gagney stealing the show as · 4:05 p.m. 15, 20, 25-NBC News her possessive mentor, Marty Sunday p R 11-Movie"Billie"(1 965)Patty 0 p A G A N 0 A • G A 0 L 1 7-Dick Van Dyke Snyder. R E p 12:00 a.m. Duke plays a tomboy whose u T A T I 0 N • A L V A 38-Sha Na Na 1 7 ,38-Love Boat E E T L L y Oilers V N U A • B L E 0 2, 15, 20-NFL Football exploits threaten to sabotage p E 6:00 p.m. 8:30 p.n1. N• A R M E r • F I E 'N D vs. Steelers her father's campaign for �.3, 1 0,31-News 9-Maude •• • L I S A•• R A N G•- 3, 10-NFL Football Bears vs. mayor. Jim Backus, Jane L I M B B 9-Love American Style 9:00 p.m. A P N A H U •A Green Bay Packers Greer, Warren Berlinger. I 0 L E S S T E R 1 1-Dance Fever 2, 15,20,25-Miss America O E .£..Q 9-Twilight Zone 4:30 p.m. A N• L I R A 1 2-Jazz at the Maintenance Pagean't R E A s 0 N E 0 0 L S 11-Movie: "Marshal of 9-Sfar Trek I� Shop 9-Big Al's Doggs S R S - p 0 R ii.:E S G N E S Madrid"(1971 )TV-movie c­ 1 2-Julie Child and Company W E 15, 1 9,20- Hee Haw 1 7,38-Fantasy Island -A D••A ii L p s•-- from "Cade's County" I C 0 I B I T 10:00 p.m. ompiled 1 7-Dick Van Dyke PIA N •H A N • 1 7-Big Valley 0 RIT episodes involving a Chicano 5:00 p.m. s • M 0 N T E S s 0 R I 38-Combat in the Classroom 3,9, 10, 1 7,31 ,38-News El I Lloyd suspect and an ex­ 12-Wild, Wild World of 1 IR E • N T E S T I N A L murder M A Y S 1 2-Good Neighbors A S S E s s ME N T con who thinks he's Billy the Animals

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.Eastern Illinois Panthers· Going In Style! To the 1980 NCAA Championship Old Style Backs the Pcinthers TheDa ilyEa stern News 8 Friday, Sept. 5, 1980

Sleuth supplies for the facility have become t Dull Men hove it, victims of missions impossible, according to t Defense Audit Agency which _oversees the An but they don't flaunt it Arundel County operations for the Pentagon. The group's audit uncovered "erroneo SEATILE - It's very easy' to join the Dull postings, inaccurate storage locker listin Men's Club of the Northwest. Even the most inadequate physical and accounting contro · (AP) fascinating people can qualify. inactive repair program and lack of controls ov "Belonging doesn't mean you can't be in­ the disposal of office furniture.'' teresting/ ' said Gerald Cutler, club president. "It Therefore, the audit concluded "office furnitu · just means you can't flaunt it," was not properly accounted for and was subject Cutler himself was active in film and theater, theft or misuse." a model for a local agency, has a Brights The audit failed to reveal much about the sec worked as commercial pilot's license and hopes to become a snoopers' agency, noting only that it iiwentori pilot for Alaska Airlines. $456,000 worth of furniture rather than listing "But why brag?" he said. "You don't tell us He hitchhil"'ed the U.S. numbers of chairs and typing tables. a_bout your latest film or research paper, and we · just tq soy nothing Of the $192,000 worth of wooden furnit - don't show you slides of our vacation in Nepal, inventoried, $29,000 was not in its proper pla OK?" NORFOLK, Va. - Charles A. Szychowskiaa and there were "discrepancies" in an additio For some people, Cutler admitted, dullness $14,000 worth, according to the report. hitchhiked all the way from his home- in California requires diligence. to say nothing in Norfolk. "What if one is - already interesting?" his Szychowskiaa, 28, has been going around saying t Phoenix resident organiza ional literature asks. "Can he or she be nothing for three and one half years. He can speak, helped?" but he doesn't want to until he can get things The group accepts members "who have done it straight in his mind. gets charged from bil wish to be all and now, slightly jaded and balding, His next goal is to work his own way across the z i PHOENIX, Ari . . - For his newly rented f n a situation where there is nothing left to prove.'' Atlantic Ocean on a ship so he can say nothiitg in bedroom house, · Ike Pitrat was expecting · Cutler, 27, got his start in organized dullness in a a uti Europe - preferably in French or German, if he bill of about $12. classically dull manner. He - read about it in a can learn a foreign language. Instead, the city of Phoenix served him newspaper and wrote founder Joseph Troise in San up a Szychowskiaa communicates by writing. He for $10,355.61. Francisco: "I don't disco or drink and until recently hands strangers a note that_ states in neat _ hand­ That includes $2,548.61 for water, $101.74 fi thought a menage a trois was a French pastry. writing, "I'm well. My name is Mr. Charles A state tax, $63.39 city tax, $5,888. 74 for sewer i Szychowskiaa of La Sierra, California. I'm 28 years and $1,752.60 fortrash pickups. usted family seel"'s old." Exha _ Plus $5.33 for "previous amount." He stopped speaking thre and onel half years ago vacation from vocation to improve himself in whatever way such discipline would effect an improvement. One cent ordrdding ROANOKE, Va. - Brian and Patricia Hooten, That's what he wrote on the yellow legal pad their five children, a cousin and a family friend just when asked why he says nothing. wanted to get home to Miami and end a disastrous ·Leaf stays cheap He also wrote that his refusal to utter a sound vacation. isn't related to any cult or religion. CHICAGO Instead they found themselves watching their - Quick, now, what can you buy No particular incident motivated him to keep his a penny these days? station wagon burn on lnterstate 81 outside mouth shut, he wrote. He just decided he wouldn't Still costing one cent Roanoke on Saturday. · is the gumball, and it speak until he was ready. stay at that price, "This whole thing has turned out to be a disaster an official of the Leaf He isn't sure when that will be, although when he fectionary Co. said Wednesday from the night we left,'' said Hooten, recuperating . speaks again, it will be in a foreign language, he Leaf claims to- from an attack of viral hepatitis that hospitalized be the world's largest gum wrote. producer, turning out 97 him for three days in Gettysburg, Pa., last week. 5 million of them a year. Although company Mrs. Hooten and two children also suffered from officials said they are pa twice as much hepatitis, accompanied by 104-degree temperatures. They spy on others, for a pound of sugar than in y past, they The Hootens had been told when they reached a are holding the line on the price of t gum balls. relative's home in Maine that their house in Miami but lose own furniture Nostalgia had been burglarized two days after they left. plays a big part in it. Ray Av executive And the family dog, upset because the family was ANNAPOLIS, Md. - The National Security vice president said: ''As I grew up, was a gone, tried to jump a fence and broke a leg, Hooten Agency, that super-secret spy shop that keeps tabs very important part of my life, being abl said. on everybody else with the use of sophisticated put that penny in that gumball machine ...and certainly "I guess you could say we've had our electronic surveillance equipment, apparently can't will try to stay with it as long as we memories," Mrs. Hooten said. keep track of its own wooden desks and chairs. and we have no plans to abandon that line." ii� .al��.al *We deliver! 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